(Part 2) Top products from r/HannibalTV

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We found 14 product mentions on r/HannibalTV. We ranked the 34 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Top comments that mention products on r/HannibalTV:

u/kmfh244 · 3 pointsr/HannibalTV

Found it on Amazon thanks to /u/DangerCocktail .
It's a bit pricy but it's gorgeous.

u/shrewlaura · 3 pointsr/HannibalTV

I used this mold and only filled the stag part with chocolate. I don't have a recipe. I just made regular vanilla cupcakes and then cut a hole in each one and filled them with raspberry filling. You could do it with any flavors. Just make sure you save the top part of the cupcake to put back on after you fill it, otherwise your frosting won't go on.

u/i_am_thoms_meme · 1 pointr/HannibalTV

On a related note I have the Game of Thrones cook book and it is amazing. Since this series is as equally about food, I see a cook book coming out as long as it doesn't get cancelled before season 3.

u/blueberry_finn · 1 pointr/HannibalTV

I've never seen any list floating around on the Internet, but maybe there is one? It's just something I notice when the camera hovers on him at his desk. This is one of them that I can remember now, from the last episode.

u/d4mini0n · 1 pointr/HannibalTV

Actually, band saws for butchery are pretty common.

u/Sporkicide · 2 pointsr/HannibalTV

The following list are books from retired members of the FBI Behavioral Science Unit - Jack Crawford's real-life equivalents:

Sexual Homicide - Patterns and Motives

Journey Into Darkness

Mindhunter

Anatomy of Motive

Whoever Fights Monsters

Dark Dreams

All of them go into detail in describing how cases were analyzed to develop profiles of unknown killers, the different categories of killers, and how the thought processes of a serial killer work. It's not that they are evil incarnate or unpredictable violent beings - there is usually some kind of logic there that makes perfect sense once you realize that they just aren't playing with the same set of rules as everyone else.

If you just want to talk about manipulation:

Social Engineering: The Art of Human Hacking

u/[deleted] · 4 pointsr/HannibalTV

So psychoanalysis deals almost exclusively with the unconscious mind. For more on this I would highly recommend reading: Man And His Symbols By: Carl Gustav Jung. You can buy it here.. This book will change you fucking life btw.

This subject alone would take about a decade to get through.

So profiling started with the cataloguing of killers who killed more than one person. Someone got the bright idea to talk with them to get info to aid helping others who killed multiple people. The term “serial killer” didn’t really pop up till the early 80’s. There was literally no technical term to describe them until them in law enforcement. So then they went and interviewed the killers and asked them a ridiculous amount of questions (even going so far as to ask about diet). Then they took all that info and put it into a database. So when you hear about “profiling”, all that means is that according to the database this person is most likely to blame. That’s it. Study pattern. It’s the same thing doctors do. But to be quite frank, the doctors were way ahead on this shit, but the FEDS didn’t trust that a doctor could give them useful information to use in their job as a cop. Lame.

But on the flip side, you have the psychologists who are always interested in uncommon things. So for quite a while, millions were banging about trying to “figure” serial killers out. Psychology is the youngest of the sciences. So right up until the late 70’s psychiatrists were doing whatever the fuck they wanted to people.

One study in particular that was a bastardization of The Monster Study, gave electro shocks to an infant who vomited a lot. And by a lot, we are talking 50-60 times a day at his worst. He was about to die from wasting away. The study sought to cure a deathly ill child who could not stop vomiting. So the doctors decided to see if conditioning could be used to treat the boy. So they decided to administer shocks (excessively high shocks administered to his bare wrist and bare ankle) to the infants bare skin every time he puked or gagged. What’s most shocking is that it fucking worked. The kid stopped puking and he made a full recovery. To read more about the horrible fucking things doctors have done check this out.

Although be warned, some of the things covered are pretty fucking horrible so forewarned is forearmed.

Unethical practices are largely no done today in the states. With the ISRB, that shit can’t happen anymore.

The profiles are great. It deals with symptomology of mental disorders so you get the psychological aspect and the procedural bits are in the background.

If you should have any additional questions I would be happy to answer.