How Much Can I Make? — Real Jobs. Real Stories. Career Insights
How Much Can I Make? with Mirav Ozeri is the podcast that pulls back the curtain on real jobs, real people, and real earnings.
Each week, Mirav interviews professionals from every corner of the working world — HVAC pros, cybersecurity experts, boutique hotel owners, mediums, musicians, dietitians, filmmakers and more — to reveal what it’s really like to do their job.
You’ll hear how they got started, what training or degrees they needed, how they broke into the business, what challenges they face, and how much they make.
Whether you’re exploring a career change, starting a side hustle, or just curious what others earn, this show delivers practical advice, inspiring stories, and insider insights straight from the people doing the work.
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Nominated for 2026 Women in Podcasting Award.
How Much Can I Make? — Real Jobs. Real Stories. Career Insights
Inside The Career Of a Death Investigator
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We talk with legendary NYC death investigator Barbara Butcher about what it really takes to walk into a death scene, read the evidence, and help the dead get justice. We also get honest about the human cost, the pay, and what she learned from 23 years and more than 5,500 investigations. Barbara shares the realities of forensic investigation, the emotional toll of the job, how people enter this career field, and how much death investigators can make in cities like New York and across the U.S.
If you enjoyed this episode, head over to how much can I make that info and check out our unique and unusual careers category →
Connect with Barbara Butcher:
Instagram - @butcher.barbara
X - @OCMEForensics - https://x.com/OCMEForensics
Facebook Page - @barbarabutcherofficial - https://www.facebook.com/BarbaraButcherOfficialPage/
Website: https://www.barbarabutcherofficial.com/
Barbar's book: What The Dead Know →
Netflix Series: Homicide New York →
Watch Barbara on Oxygen’s new true-crime series: “The Death Investigator with Barbara Butcher” →
"How Much Can I Make?" Is nominated for 2026 Women in Podcasting Award!
Music credit: Kate Pierson & Monica Nation
A Teaser Death Scene Mystery
SPEAKER_00A very wealthy man died at home. In his bed, there was insulin and uh syringe, and he was a diabetic, so it was okay that he had insulin, but there was a little scrap of paper next to him on the bed that just said sorry.
Welcome And What A Death Investigator Does
Mirav Ozeri - HostHi, welcome back to How Much Can I Make, the podcast about jobs and careers. I'm your host, Miravozeri. Before we get into today's episode, I want to mention that next week's show will be about music sync, how songs get placed in movies, TV shows, commercials, streaming. So if you're thinking about a career in music or wondering how people actually make money in the industry, definitely check that one out. But today we're talking death. Literally. My guest, Barbara Butcher, spent 23 years investigating over 5,500 death scenes in New York City. She worked ground zero after 9-11 and wrote a memoir about it all. She's a death investigator, author with TV shows on Netflix, Oxygen, and Sun, hopefully, NBC. And honestly, that was the most fascinating conversation I've had on this show. So let's hear it from Barbara. What is it like being a death investigator? Thank you very much for coming on the show. Let's start by telling us what is a death investigator, then we'll get to all the other stuff. What do you do when you come to a death scene?
SPEAKER_00I work for the New York City Medical Examiner's office. Anytime someone died alone or traumatically, like a gunshot wound, stab wound, a homicide, suicide, accident, I'd go to investigate. I'd go to the scene. And my job there was to figure out the cause and manner of death. But actually, the medical examiner, the forensic pathologist, they're the ones who determine the cause of death. So for instance, if a they see on their table in the morning, ready for autopsy, a young man with a gunshot wound to his head. That's fine. That's a cause of death. But was it a homicide, a suicide, or an accident? I have seen people accidentally shoot themselves right between the eyes. Young man out on East Houston Street had bought his first gun, a cheap revolver, Saturday night special. He was spinning it on his finger like a cowboy to show off for his friends, and it flew off his hands, and the hammer hit on the pavement and shot him straight between the eyes. And killed him. And killed him. So what I do is I go to the scene and I figure out was this a homicide, an accident, or suicide, even. And so I examine the body. And the body, in any scene, the body belongs to me. The scene belongs to the police. But of course, we work cooperatively, but it's an independent investigation. I'll examine the body, I'll look for trauma, head wounds, bullet wounds, stab wounds, signs of poisoning, of anything like that. And I'll do my photographs, I'll determine the time of death by checking for liver mortise, rigor mortis, and alga mortis, the temperature of the body, the stiffness of it, all these things. And then I look around the scene with the police. So when I'm doing my examination, I pull them over the crime scene unit. Here, guys, look, look what I'm seeing. Look at the angle of the abrasion around this bullet ring. This came from below. And I'll show them everything. Then we go around the apartment. They'll show me blood spatter or drugs they found in the refrigerator. And we work together. I document it all. I write a report. And I send my report and the photographs to the forensic pathologist who's going to autopsy the case. So now they have an informed investigation. They have the context for the death. And it's so interesting.
Mirav Ozeri - HostWow. I have a million more questions now because, first of all, how did you learn to analyze everything and to see for little things and little science? How did you learn that? On the job, or is it did you go to school or what?
SPEAKER_00It's a lot of both. In order to be a death investigator, when I started out in 92, you had to have a medical background, a physician assistant. And then they gave us on-the-job training. For three months, I went out on every case with senior investigators. And I went to NYPD Homicide School, Criminal Investigation School. And then I went to the FBI Academy to do their scene course for a week. And so I kept learning all the time because I loved my job and I wanted to be good at it.
Mirav Ozeri - HostOf course. So then you just went and applied to the medical examinator office or?
SPEAKER_00No, what happened is it's kind of odd how I got the job. I had been working in surgery, and then I was made a hospital director, and I was very bored. I like action, surgery, death, homicide, whatever. I went to a career counseling service, and they gave me all those tests: Minnesota multiphasic, Briggs Myers personality preference, whatever. And at the end of the test, my counselor said, you should actually be a poultry veterinarian or a coroner. I said, Why poultry? He said, With your patients, if they don't get better, you get really it affects you very deeply. So if you work with puppies and kittens, your heart would break if they didn't get better. But chickens, they have beady little eyes. No one cares about them. And so you wouldn't get upset if they died. And it's like, wait a minute, I'll take the dead people.
unknownI don't kill the chickens.
SPEAKER_00So I I said say corner, medical examiner's investigator, and I said they're already dead. It won't upset me too much, but I forgot. They have families, and we have to interact with them. That's heartbreaking. And a lot of times we identify with victims very much. A woman my age, staffed, raped, murdered, any of those things. It affects me very much. So that's the downside of what is one of the most interesting jobs in the world.
Reading A Life To Solve A Death
Mirav Ozeri - HostIt must have affected you. You've done it for 23 years, right? Yeah. And you were on I read 5,500 cases and 680 homicides in New York. What I wanted to know when you started to describe what you see when you first come in, what are you looking for that will surprise people that people wouldn't think that you do?
SPEAKER_00In order to figure out how a person died, first I now have to know how they lived. Oh. So when I walk into a scene, I stand at the doorway and I take my hands off my ears and put them over my mouth. No questions, no talking. I just take in the whole zeitgeist of the scene. If I see white powder on a table and little scales and packets and lots of tattoos on the deceased person, I'm studying the same drug dealer. So that bespeaks a certain kind of death, right?
Mirav Ozeri - HostA possibility at least.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, it's either a homicide or an overdose. But if I go into a nice Upper West Side apartment with PBS Channel 13 tote bags and birkin stocks and lots of books on the shelves, that's a whole nother kind of life. And that life tells me not much chance of being a homicide victim. So I'll look for other things. I and I look for everything. I look at the food, the medication, their clothes. I get a sense of how people live. Then it helps me to figure out how they died.
Mirav Ozeri - HostDo you walk in together with the police or you walk in first and then the police comes? The police call me.
SPEAKER_00The police notified dispatcher that they got a homicide in the 2-3 precinct, and they're there already. They've blocked off the scene, and they're taking names of everybody who comes in. They're interviewing witnesses. And then when I get there, I do my examination because they're not supposed to mess up the scene at all, till I guess.
Families Truth And Testifying In Court
Mirav Ozeri - HostThat brings me to another question because you're there pretty much at the beginning, but then grieving families or friends or lovers or wives, husbands come in. How do you deal with the details of whether a crime or suicide or whatever? And the families. How do you combine?
SPEAKER_00That's the hard part. First, I have to in if the family's at the scene, I have to interview them. And that's really difficult because you have to show compassion and empathy. But at the same time, one of them could be the killer. Right. So I've interviewed husbands who wives were killed, strangled. And I say, I'm so sorry. This must be just crushing for you. And I just need to ask you what time you got home from work. And so it's very sticky. And then sometimes the family will come to me afterwards to discuss the case, or to the medical examiner. And I remember one time this family, their son, had died in a fire. And they asked me, did he suffer? And I was like, Oh damn, I was new to the job. I didn't know what to say. Because most people would say, Oh no, he died instantly. I went to my boss, I said, Chief, they want to know the details. He said, Give them the truth and nothing but the truth. Once you lie even once about a small thing, your word is no good for anything else they want to know. So they're imagining a horrible burning to death, and that's not really what happened. Tell them the truth. So I did. I said, look, he had second degree, some little third degree burns on his hands, and no doubt they were painful. However, he died from smoke inhalation, as most people do in a fire. And that would be choking, but he would that smoke is awful. But he would pass out relatively quickly and just die from smoke inhalation and not feel any pain. They were like, Oh, thank God, oh thank God, we thought he was trapped and burning. Whatever they imagine is so much worse than the truth. So that was an important lesson that of course.
Mirav Ozeri - HostDid it happen that you had to go to court to testify? What is that? What that? Because you're here with the families again, right?
SPEAKER_00Yes, and the families are sitting there in the spectator section of the and I have to say things that I don't want them to know. I had a case of a little girl, there was a serial killer in East Harlem, killing teenage girls and adolescent girls. Rape them, strangle them. This girl was raped, strangled, set on fire.
Mirav Ozeri - HostOoh.
SPEAKER_00Yeah. It was awful. And when they finally arrested him after his 13th murder, or whatever it was, I had to testify in court. Now, her mother, the girl's mother, was there with the father and sisters and brothers, and I had to describe how I found her.
Mirav Ozeri - HostOh my god.
SPEAKER_00She was in cinders, and it was it was absolutely horrifying what I had to say. And I just saw the mother's face, and I was thinking, oh god, what can I? I have to tell this the truth about this. But this is so painful for that woman. And I just I told as best I could without any goriness. I explained the deaths.
Mirav Ozeri - HostBefore I continue with all the other questions, when you go home at the end of a day like that, either at court or what you saw in Harlem with a girl, or when you get home, I know you don't drink. What do you do when you get home? Sometimes I cry.
SPEAKER_00Well the truth is, here's what we do. In all those years of seeing horror, tragedy, destruction, and death, I learn to drop a shield. Okay. I close off my emotions. If I walk in and I see something horrifying, it comes right down, like a plexiglass shield. I don't feel it. I don't think about the victims as what they suffered. I turn myself into a forensic investigating robot. The only way to do it. Yeah. And I tell myself, the only way I can be of use to this victim is to get them justice. Do the best exam I can, gather the best evidence I can. So that's what I do. Unfortunately, when you close your heart down for 20-something years, it's kind of hard to go home and reopen it. Well, you'll work on it. Yeah, I I went through numerous relationships where it just didn't work because I couldn't be vulnerable or speak. Yeah, there's a downside to every job. Every job job I think is one of the most interesting in the world, and I loved every second of it. But there is a price, and that price is part of your humanity. I mentor some young people who are going into the business, and I always tell them, take care of yourself first.
Mirav Ozeri - HostSo what would you say is the most important skill for somebody who wants that job?
SPEAKER_00The ability to detach, but on my first autopsy, it was a little girl, eight years old, strangled, raped. Eight years old? Yeah. And I asked the forensic pathologist, I said, Jackie, how do you stand this every single day? Seeing this kind of horror and tragedy. She said, Barbara, if you want to make it here, when you leave here every day, go home and surround yourself with things of beauty, nature, art, music, food, love, all those things. And I thought, oh, that's so hippie trippy. So I didn't listen. But then after a while, I got a little house upstate, a little shack. Oh, and that helped a little. Oh, it helps so much. I hugged trees. I had a beautiful tree. I got a dog, two cats, and it helped me a lot.
9-11 Recovery And The Toll
Mirav Ozeri - HostI can imagine. But 9-11 kind of stupid. This was, I was just gonna ask you about 9-11 because you were first on the scene there, and there mass casualty. How do you deal with that?
SPEAKER_00Oh, that was a tough one. The fear of every single American, especially New Yorkers, especially those of us who were down there, we're thinking about attacks. There's jets going overhead and there's soldiers everywhere carrying machine guns and all kinds of stuff. There was a terror of all in all of us.
Mirav Ozeri - HostYes, I remember. Yes.
SPEAKER_00So that was predominant. But then when I started seeing what happened to the people, we didn't rec I was in charge of recovery at that time, recovering human remains. Yes. And that was not good. Fortunately, we get therapy for free for the rest of my life. Oh, that's good.
Mirav Ozeri - HostAnd how long's the investigation uh of 9-11, the collecting and all of that? How long did it take?
SPEAKER_00Initially, a year and a half before we were able to clear everything out, all the body parts, all the rubble, columns and things. But then, I think it was almost two years later, we found tiny little bits of bone on the roof of the Deutsche Bank. And then we found some in the electric manholes and where the gas and electric and cable is. Somebody found some other human remains. So now we went back and dug up the entire West Side Highway. What? For two weeks we had it alternately closed. We dug up this the original scene again. We went through the dirt, the bedrock, everything, and we went through every manhole for a half mile around the area. And we found more things, more rich human remains, mostly the small bones. And then you match them with the DNA to the deceased? Yeah, sure. You can actually get the DNA advanced so wildly in that time. The techniques and the technology, and we were able to get DNA from tiny little bones or from teeth, things like that.
Mirav Ozeri - HostSo it was really so you were involved in that for a year and a half. That's a long time to deal with such masks, with whatever we went through on 9-11. Wow. It was. And of course, my relationship broke up.
SPEAKER_00Of course. Can you imagine? I see these horrible things. Just heartbreaking. And then I come home and my partner says, I can't stand this the paint color in this kitchen anymore. You're gonna have to paint this. And I'm like, Do you have any idea what I did today? And that's not fair. They don't sign up. I do.
A Typical Day Then Pay Today
Mirav Ozeri - HostI want to know, is there a typical day in your work? What's your typical day at the job like?
SPEAKER_00Back then, let's see, in the early 90s, we were getting what was it, 2,430-something homicides a year. Now we're lucky if we get 315. Back then everybody was getting killed because of drugs.
Mirav Ozeri - HostIt went down during the 2000s.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, oh, it's way down now. New York is a very safe city. Oh, so the day was I might pick up a hospital case. A doctor would call in and they say that they brought in a guy with stab wounds. I couldn't save him. And I'd get all the medical information from them and then work with the police to get the rest. But the best days is when I was out, I was on tour. Tour meaning I'd be out in the streets all day.
Mirav Ozeri - HostNot any particular case, just touring the neighborhood?
SPEAKER_00No, just when it I'd be out and they'd call me for a case on the radio. We didn't have cell phones. So really, this is way back. And they'd call me with a case and I'd go to that case and investigate it. And I'd be writing up my reports in the car when we get another call. There's an elderly woman, her apartment's been ransacked. She's laying in the bed, but she doesn't look right. And I'd go over there and do that one. And then I'd start to head out to lunch. And then I'd get my Kentucky fried chicken or my McDonald's. And they'd say, uh, Barbara, you've got a homicide in the Lower East Side. You gotta go right now. They're waiting for you. And I'd put down the chicken and go out. So it was a very back then it was a very strenuous job. Nowadays, everything is so much better. They have a fleet of vehicles ready for the investigators to run out, no more looking for a driver. Although I did have a driver back then, which I enjoyed. Now I could do my paperwork in the car. Right. But I'd do a bunch of cases and I'd come back to the office and try to write my reports in time to go home, but we always worked overtime. In fact, the New York Post used to put out a list of the top 10 overtime earners in New York City every year. And twice I was number three. Wow. This is imagine. I was working 80 hours a week and loving every second of it.
Mirav Ozeri - HostThis is what I want to know, because it's how much can you make is our show, and people tune in to learn how much money they can earn. If somebody starts at that job, what can they make at the beginning and the middle and end?
SPEAKER_00If someone wants to be a death investigator, they will have studied some forensic science. You no longer have to be a physician or a physician assistant, but you have to have experience in trauma. Of course. A lot of forensic anthropologists with master's degrees, they are now investigators. And things are very technical now. So they no longer re write reports in the car, they do everything on iPhone. Take the pictures, get the family to sign the identification, put all their notes down, get the names of all the cars. They do everything on a phone. And that's amazing to me. And it goes right back to the office. So they don't have to write a report necessarily. It's much easier now. And they they make less than what you made at the beginning? No. No, they they make a lot more now when I started out. What does a beginner make? Right now, I think it's a hundred thousand, a hundred and ten thousand to start. Before overtime. Yeah.
Mirav Ozeri - HostAnd uh when somebody has ten years' experience, how much can they make then?
SPEAKER_00I think it goes up to 130, 140 around there.
Mirav Ozeri - HostAnd then over time you can kill it. It's not a bad job at all.
SPEAKER_00No, it's not.
Mirav Ozeri - HostIt's solving a puzzle every day.
SPEAKER_00If you have the ability to do these kinds of things, and very few people do, let's be honest. It's a taxing job. It's taxing. But if you can do it, you should try it. Because you see things that no one else has ever seen. Some of them are absolutely horrible. But other things are like the way people live. I've been in Fifth Avenue Duplexes, where the woman is dead in the bed in a beautiful black, beautiful satin jacket. The walls are oval. It's a circular room. And there's art, good art, impressionist art hung all around her. And her son, he said, Look, she her doctor is not around. She died suddenly. I just want, I hope you check around and see everything's okay. And it was, it was a natural death. But he saw me looking at the art and said, Would you like to take a look? My mother would enjoy it. And I said, Oh no, I can't impose upon you. He said, No, please. She would like to know that you liked. Wow. And I went, I saw this incredible art. Not one hour later, when I finished that case, I was on the lower east side, crawling in the basement of an abandoned building to pull out some poor. Drug addict who would overdose on a pile of trash. You know what was funny? After seeing that art, I noticed the beauty in this pile of trash. There were red plastic cups, there was blue spaghetti boxes, there was white paper. I noticed the colors. It was so interesting to me because I was seeing differently. That's gonna do that.
Mirav Ozeri - HostThat is a great story. Is there a case that particularly stayed with you all those years?
SPEAKER_00There are quite a few that I can't really shake and they still upset me, but I have a brilliant therapist that it's uh DBT, prolonged exposure, blah blah. Uh good therapy for PTSD, and it actually works. So now I'm able to think about them. I don't want to, but if they pop up, I'm okay. And mostly that was when children were killed. Oh, yes. Yeah, murdered children, murdered children, yeah. When the whole family is dead. That's usually drugs. Somebody comes in looking for something and they just start shooting people. That was years and years ago. Years ago. But I can't get it out of my head.
Mirav Ozeri - HostYou've been involved in 5,500 cases. Was there a case that you couldn't solve? You couldn't find out, there were no answers, it was covered up with really tell me one.
SPEAKER_00This one still pisses me off. A very wealthy man died at home in his bed. There was insulin and uh syringe. His daughter had come home early from school and found him, and he was a diabetic, and so it was okay that he had insulin, but there was a little scrap of paper next to him on the bed that just said sorry. And the daughter, she was very young, 14, 15, and she called her mother. Her mother had uh, I think it was a boutique on Madison Avenue, and the mother walked home when she got home. She called her husband's psychiatrist, and he walked over. Nobody called 911. They strolled to the house, to this huge loft. Was it a cahoots with the wife and the psychologist? Look, I'm just saying that when I they were sitting in the in the den or the family room, wherever it was, and the woman was in a Chanel suit. She was exquisite, blonde, perfect, tanned. The psychiatrist was in a bespoke suit, very well tailored. He too had this blonde, streaky hair, very handsome. And the energy between them, the chemistry, was palpable. I could feel their chemistry. Really? Oh, I we had a hell of a time questioning them because they were superior beings. They were rich and yeah.
Mirav Ozeri - HostRich. So eventually they called the police, and police called you, and you came to the scene.
SPEAKER_00And sure enough, he died of an insulin overdose. But did he do it or did somebody else do it? Did they change the insulin? I don't know, and I never will. And that makes me mad.
Mirav Ozeri - HostSo you had to report it as death from insulin. That's all you could have done, right? Probable suicide by insulin, yeah. Apparent suicide, we call it.
SPEAKER_00Apparently, and that haunts you. I can see why. Oh, it does. It makes me so mad. I think about the poor guy being so depressed and sad, and maybe his wife is out with another man, his psychiatrist, who he trusted. Wow. What could be more depressing?
Mirav Ozeri - HostAnd you had a case that took you a while and finally you cracked it and you were jumping up and down?
SPEAKER_00Yes, it just happened. 32 years ago, a woman and her daughter were found strangled at home. And with oxygen tubing, the mother was ill. And they were both strangled, pushed down onto the floor, and pushed down onto the bed. And it was brutal. The daughter was uh developmentally disabled, and they had a home health aid, and the home health aide came in and found them, called the police and they called me. When I came in, I noticed that on the by the kitchen sink they had curl activator. They were doing their hair together. They had like the lotion was still in their hair. So it's a mother-daughter on a Saturday night. They had dinner, they were doing their hair together. It was a nice evening. Someone came in and killed them. So now, the first thing I said to the cops is Does the home health aide have a boyfriend? And they said, Yeah. I said, There's your guy. Wow. Because she has the keys. He could easily take them. He could come in and rob them, right? And kill them. But who the hell would do that? You know how much he got, by the way?$12. So there was DNA on the oxygen tubing that was used to strangle, but it didn't match anything in CODIS, the national database. Okay. Where all the DNA is. Okay. And for all these 30 years, it never hit anything. And then suddenly, two years ago, it hit. And who did it hit to? The boyfriend of the home health aid system. How did it hit all of a sudden? Because he had been arrested now on a minor assault charge. Now his DNA was in the system after 30 years. It hit and they went and arrested him. First, they got what they call a discard sample. They wait till he throws away a cigarette. And they got a swab from him eventually when they arrested him and it matched to him. So they called me and said, You got to come into court and testify on this one. I'm like, wow, this is so long ago. But I remember it. I remember it because it pissed me off that someone would kill a mother and a daughter doing their hair and having a nice evening. So I was very happy to sit up on that witness stand and look at him and talk about the cruelty of it, how hard he pulled that oxygen tubing, how he knelt on her back as he pushed her into the floor, all those things. How many years did he get? He got two life sentences. Oh, good. Now he's, I think he's 70 or something or 60, whatever. No, he'll never walk free again.
Mirav Ozeri - HostIs it possible to come into a scene, take uh with AI, take the whole movie, every little detail, feed it to AI, and he will solve the problem?
SPEAKER_00No. No. They've thought about it and they've worked, you know, their AI people are working on this. What they were working on was just ways to make the photographs come alive that take the photos of a scene and do a virtual reality on it so that you can. And this started years ago. We used to do it with CADCAM engineering software, okay. Where you could reconstruct the room that the people could look at it now on a jury and see where the victim was, say where the gun the gunshot residue was, where the bullet holes were. Now, this new show I'm working on, we're going to solve cold cases using a team of experts, including me. And we will use genetic genealogy and DNA, and we'll create a virtual crime scene.
Mirav Ozeri - HostSo it won't be a reality TV. It won't be it's a reality TV, but it won't be a real scene. It'll be it's reality TV.
SPEAKER_00Everything we say is true. Okay. But you won't see the actual scene. But you will walk through it with us. I have to have these special glasses on, and I see everything, and the audience will see with me.
Mirav Ozeri - HostOh my god, I have to see this show when it's coming out. Yeah. But we we're shooting a pilot in July, so we don't know. Okay. All right. So you have the scene. Um Yeah, I'm sorry, I stopped you. It's really interesting. So you have a mock scene and you they see it through your eyes. Yeah, yeah. I see it and they see it. Isn't that something? Wow. And as you see it, you say you I think that this and this because the bullet came this direction or that direction.
SPEAKER_00You actually like a case I'm working on now, I can't figure out where the perpetrator stood and where the victim was, because it's such a small tight area. Thinking, how could they both get in there? But yet the blood spatter tells me that they were there. I know where she died. So it's walking through that scene. I look at the floor diagrams, it doesn't tell me much. It says 22 inches across, but I want to feel it. I want to walk through it. Then I can really feel that scene just as I do when it's a fresh scene, and I walk in and I understand it. My other show, The Death Investigator with Barbara Butcher, that's on oxygen and excellent show. I saw it. Thank you. And there, we don't have virtual reality, but we do show me and the detective going back to the scene. Yeah. The actual word happened, and we're showing the audience the photos, and we're describing how it was solved and what the evidence means. So you learn a lot about the feelings. Some of these detectives, going back to a scene from 10, 15 years ago, they cry. It's really hard to keep your scientific mind focused in the moment and still allow the humanity to come in because you need your emotional mind to also think through the possibilities. What would make someone batter an old mother? What would make someone batter her face? Usually it's the son is a drug addict and she says no more money. And rage in a killing. And that's not something you can see with a microscope or with a DNA. But when you're there, you see it, you feel it, you absorb it, and it leaves you on the right path.
Mirav Ozeri - HostWhich brings me to your book. You wrote a book, What the Dead Know, which I read the first week it came out, a total page turner. I remembered a lot of the cases you mentioned there. Really a fantastic book. But what do you think we can learn from the dead?
SPEAKER_00I think there's two things I learned. One was a professional thing, and that is that only they know how they really died. So it's up to me to interpret everything that's about them, around them, investigate that, everything about the body. And they will somehow let me know, but only they know that. But the main thing I learned is I had worked as a kid when I was in high school with whole hospice care and elderly people dying. And I say, What's the one thing you regret? And they said, Always. I worried so much, and it did absolutely nothing to change my work. I should say that to myself. Yes, there's worry is the most useless emotion there. Absolutely is. And then they said things like, I wish I didn't yell at my kids to clean up their rooms. What was the difference? Sometimes when I saw people, especially who had died of accidents, I saw a look in their eyes, startled. Why did I drive drunk? Why did I decide to stick my head in this garbage chute? It's just this feeling I have that most people have a moment of infinite regret right before they died. And I don't ever want to have, I don't want to have that at all.
Mirav Ozeri - HostYour book was published by Simon and Schuster. How did this come about?
New Chapter, TV shows, reinventing yourself after retiring
SPEAKER_00Well, it's yeah, it is interesting and amazing, isn't it? Because it's such a top-notch publisher. But I have a really good agent, uh, Kathy Schneider at uh Rottrosen Literary Agency. How did you get the agent? Well, because my friend Kate White, she writes mysteries and thrillers, and she was the editor of Cosmo for like 12 years. I used to help her with the forensics in her book. So she had a dinner party for me and invited some agents and publicists and people. You know, she said, Barbara, go ahead, tell them stories. So I got the agent who got me the publisher. She even had a little bidding war. Three publishers bidding for it. And I was like, wow, this is incredible. Absolutely incredible.
Mirav Ozeri - HostSo you have the two series that we mentioned, one on Netflix, both excellent, one on oxygen. How did it come about? You all of a sudden, out of nowhere, all over the TV, every time I open, I see Barbara Butcher.
SPEAKER_00It's funny, isn't it? Yeah, I uh after I wrote the book, it came out in 2023 in June. Why did you write the book, by the way? I wrote it over COVID mostly.
Mirav Ozeri - HostOh, you were just bored, you had nothing to do?
SPEAKER_00Yeah, I had no, I had a con I was retired then. I had a consulting uh business for doing investigations on uh homicides and accidents where there was some controversy. Okay. That was a good job. That was a fun, fun job. But yeah, I there was no more nobody was suing anybody. There was nothing going on. So I decided it was time to write the book that I had been thinking about for years.
Mirav Ozeri - HostOkay.
SPEAKER_00Sat down and wrote it. And when it came out in June of 23, it did well. I was very happy about that. I got a lot of speaking engagements and things, and that was nice. And then a producer from Netflix called me and said, Look, we're doing a documentary series, a docuseries called Homicide New York about cases. And the detectives that we're working with say that you should be here because these were your cases, too. I said, Okay, sure. What are you paying? Nothing. Oh, they didn't pay? No, because if it's a documentary or a docuseries, you're not supposed to be paid because it's supposed to be real and there's no no buying somebody. I'll give you$10,000 if you say his mother did it. Whatever. I said, All right, I want to do it anyway. It looks like it'll be interesting. And I did, and it was a Dick Wolf production. So Dick Wolf saw me on that show and said, All right, why don't we think about getting her a show of her own? So from the Netflix show, I got the unscripted show, The True Crimes That I've Done, called The Death Investigator.
Mirav Ozeri - HostYou did get paid for that one. It wasn't a documentary really. Yeah, okay. I got for that. Yeah.
SPEAKER_00Yeah. I'm not rich yet, but hey, you will be. So they said, All right, let's put together a series based on her cases. And I've been doing that. We have a second season. We're filming this summer.
Mirav Ozeri - HostOh, really? I didn't know. Now there's a whole new show coming. The one you described.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, the cold case show. We're shooting a pilot in July. We'll see if that goes. And here's the biggest news of all Dick Wolfe is producing, he produced and filmed a pilot for NBC based on me. Oh my god. On my life, on my adventures. Oh my god. First of all, Dick Wolf is huge, but I hope they pick it. Oh, I hope it goes to series. This will be wonderful. And you know who's playing me? Taylor Schilling. What from the Oh really? Yes, she's the blonde. She's starred in that for years. And she is unbelievably good in this. Unbelievably good. So you have to be on the set as a consultant, right? I'm a co-executive producer, so I have to be there to show them how to do things the correct way and set up the scene. And I spend a couple of hours with her showing her how to use the equipment. I taught her how to roll a body over, even if it's a big heavy person. You may have to use physics, but I never thought about that. Yeah, it's difficult, sure. But I know how to do it. And I showed Taylor, and she's amazing in this show. She gets all the layers the interesting stuff, the happy stuff, the exciting stuff, and also the inside stuff.
Mirav Ozeri - HostI'm sure you didn't imagine that. You thought you would release the book and fine.
SPEAKER_00But I want to tell your audience that I'm older, a bit older. And all these things started late in life. The job, I was certainly a grown adult with lots of experience and other things behind me, but this new life, this chapter, is extraordinary.
Legacy Late Career Success And Closing
Mirav Ozeri - HostAmazing. Which brings me to the last question I want to ask you because you spend your life servicing other people that cannot speak for themselves, actually, for the dead. What would you like your legacy to be about?
SPEAKER_00Oh wow. No one's ever asked me that before. Here I am. I'm asking. My legacy, I would like it to be that I cared, that I worked hard to get justice, and that I reinvented my life over and over. I had no idea whatsoever that I could ever have a TV show. That would seem ridiculous.
Mirav Ozeri - HostAnd now you have two and a third coming.
SPEAKER_00Right. And a podcast coming. My God. Do you know the name of the podcast?
Mirav Ozeri - HostWhat will be the title, the name?
SPEAKER_00I think it's gonna be the Death Investigator, also. Okay it's gonna be yeah, it's gonna be we'll have the TV version and then the podcast version. But it will be different cases.
Mirav Ozeri - HostOh, it's different. Very successful, I think. Podcast crime podcasts are the number one. I uh you know wow, Barbara!
SPEAKER_00Unbelievable. You know what I miss though? In all this excitement and wonderful new work, I miss being out on a scene with the cops, with the detectives. I miss those guys and those women. I miss having that immediate effect on justice, on history, on whatever it is. I was very, I felt very relevant in the world. Um and all I could do now is share my experience.
Mirav Ozeri - HostAnd I think a big part of it is that you worked in service of people. I think, and that's why it comes back to you also to really put yourself in that situation and day in and day out, the little girl, the little boy that you said, oh my god, I'm gonna have a nightmares just from hearing your stories. I cannot even imagine what it's like for you.
SPEAKER_00Now it's all good now. And just remember, it's never too late to do what you want to do.
Mirav Ozeri - HostThere you go. All right, listeners, you heard it from the life investigator now, not the death investigator. Thank you so much.
SPEAKER_00Thank you, Marat.
Mirav Ozeri - HostYeah. That's it for today. If you enjoyed this episode, head over to how much can I make that info and check out our unique and unusual careers category. You will hear behind the scenes conversation with people doing some truly fascinating work. And I will see you next week on how much can I make.