
Dr. Ari Gartin is a clinical and forensic psychologist exploring trauma, deception, and media. She writes on mental health, true crime, and the uncanny—where psychology meets culture, and survival becomes story. .
| Platform | Pricing | Freemium | Publishes | Daily | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Issues | 172 | Founded | a year ago | Last Issue | 4 days ago |
| Active | |||||

The historical roots of Munchausen syndrome trace back to work of Richard Asher, who first described the condition in 1951. He named it after Baron Munchausen, known for telling elaborate and exaggerated tales. Asher observed patients who m...
In recent years, there has been a meaningful shift in attention toward survivors of medical child abuse. Historically, the literature focused primarily on perpetrators and identification of the abuse itself. Survivors, by contrast, remained...
The South Carolina Supreme Court’s decision to overturn the murder convictions of Alex Murdaugh represents a significant legal and psychological development within one of the most publicly consumed criminal cases in recent American history....
When the cheating scandal now widely referred to as “Scandoval” emerged across social media and reality television, the public response rapidly exceeded what would typically be expected from an interpersonal affair involving reality televis...
The film The Glass Castle, based on the memoir by Jeannette Walls, is best understood as a longitudinal developmental narrative in which instability is not episodic but structurally embedded within the caregiving environment. The storyline...
Subscribers, engagement, traffic and sponsorship for The Investigative Psychologist.
| Subscribers | Engagement | 74 | Monthly Web Visits | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Accepts Sponsors | Estimated Cost per Ad | ||||
The writers behind this newsletter.
Dr. Ari is a mental health and forensic consultant writing on diagnosis, deception, crime and media, and Munchausen by Proxy. If you or someone you know suspects Munchausen by Proxy, please reach directly out to me at [email protected]
You can find recent issues that have been published by The Investigative Psychologist on Reletter by scrolling up to where it says Latest Issues. Tap on the link for any of the most recent emails or hit More Issues to see older ones.
To see how many people subscribe to The Investigative Psychologist, simply upgrade your Reletter account. We provide readership numbers and lots of other stats for this newsletter so you can decide if it's worth reaching out to.
Newsletter advertising can be extremely effective when it's done right. Before you pitch The Investigative Psychologist as a potential sponsor or partner, make sure that you've done your research and checked its newsletter stats with Reletter.
Then, personalize one of our winning pitching templates and send it to the right person using the contact info provided.
Newsletter ad rates (or CPM) vary depending on many factors, including industry, number of subscribers, open rate, ad placement and more.
To find out how much an ad will cost, contact The Investigative Psychologist using the contact information provided and ask for a copy of their media kit.
Scroll up to where it says Related Newsletters to see other publications like The Investigative Psychologist. You can also search our email newsletter directory to discover other newsletters that cover the topics you're interested in.
Reletter provides this newsletter's website URL above, where you will often find their contact information. We also provide links to associated social media accounts and pitching templates so you can reach out fast.