July pick: The Last 12 Weeks
2026/7/1 · 9:30

July pick: The Last 12 Weeks

The July 2026 pick is The Last 12 Weeks, a five-part Serial Productions and The Marshall Project investigation that fits a commuter’s workweek listening plan.

For July, start The Last 12 Weeks.
The June 1–July 1 release window had several viable podcast candidates, including new investigative, history, sports, and documentary series. The best fit for a commuter who wants one series, not a queue-management problem, is the five-part The Last 12 Weeks from Serial Productions and The Marshall Project. The series follows a death penalty defense team in Texas as the scheduled execution date approaches, and Serial Productions listed all five episodes with June 17, 2026 dates on its homepage. 1
The deciding factor is simple: this is a complete, five-episode narrative arc. A 35–55 minute daily commuter can treat it as a Monday-to-Friday listen, instead of starting another weekly show that will sit half-finished in the app.

The decision card

FieldJuly pick
SeriesThe Last 12 Weeks 1
ProducersSerial Productions and The Marshall Project co-produced the series. 1
FormatFive-part narrative documentary series. 1
Release patternAll five episodes were available by June 17, 2026. 1
Central storyThe series follows David Wood, a Texas death row inmate, and the lawyers trying to prove his innocence before time runs out. 1
Host and reportingMaurice Chammah of The Marshall Project hosts and reports the series with Alvin Melathe; Jen Guerra and Anita Badejo produced it. 1
Typical episode lengthThe confirmed public listing did not state a per-episode runtime. 1
Confirmed entry pointSerial Productions listed the series as a June 2026 highlight; use that page as the reliable starting point if a podcast-app search is ambiguous. 1
That last line matters. For commuters, a clean Apple Podcasts path is usually ideal because people often subscribe from the phone they are holding. For The Last 12 Weeks, the confirmed public listing is Serial Productions itself, and a standalone Apple Podcasts page was not confirmed. The recommendation still holds because the show's format is unusually well matched to the month: short enough to commit to, complete enough to finish, and serious enough to justify giving it a week.

Why this is the one to adopt

The series has a direct question at its center: what happens inside a death penalty case when the legal team has only weeks left? Serial's own description frames the series as "a five-part series ... on a deadline," which is exactly the kind of premise that makes a limited podcast easier to follow in pieces. 1
That deadline structure matters for commute listening. Interview shows can blur when each episode resets with a new guest. Open-ended investigative series can ask for more patience than a weekday drive can give. The Last 12 Weeks gives the listener a fixed container: five episodes, one case, one countdown.
The subject is also heavy enough to need that container. The series follows Wood, his defense team, and the attempt to prove innocence before a scheduled Texas execution. 1 That is not background audio for half-listening while answering messages. It is better suited to a commute where the listener can stay with one story for a defined stretch and then put it down until the next drive.
The production partnership is part of the fit, too. Serial Productions gives the show the narrative-audio grammar this audience already understands, while The Marshall Project brings the criminal-justice reporting focus behind Chammah's work. 1 That provenance should not be treated as a guarantee of quality. It is enough to say that the series comes from organizations whose stated roles match the story they are telling.

Why the runner-ups do not displace it

The nearest rival is Embedded: We Keep Us Safe, an eight-part investigation from NPR, KUOW, and The Seattle Times that premiered June 11, 2026. The series examines the 2020 fatal shooting of 16-year-old Antonio Mays Jr. at Seattle's Capitol Hill Occupied Protest, with Sydney Brownstone and Will James hosting and David Gutman contributing. 2 It is a strong candidate. It is also an eight-part weekly rollout, which makes it a better ongoing follow than a clean July adoption pick.
CandidateWhat it has going for itWhy it stays below the pick
Embedded: We Keep Us SafeThree newsrooms, eight investigative episodes, and a clear central case around Antonio Mays Jr.'s death. 2The weekly eight-part structure asks for a longer commitment than this month's one-series commuter brief. 2
Where the River Took UsTexas Monthly released a nine-episode documentary series hosted by senior editor Aaron Parsley, based on Pulitzer Prize-winning reporting about the Guadeloupe River flood. 3 Podcast Review called it "beautifully crafted, yet distressing." 4It is longer than the July pick, and the personal-tragedy subject may be a heavier month-long commitment for routine commuting.
Reconstruction: The Unfinished PromiseHigher Ground Audio released a five-episode history limited series on June 18, 2026 about the post-Civil War Reconstruction era. 5The public listing available for Reconstruction offered fewer decision details than the Serial page, so the recommendation has less evidence to stand on.
Hunting the Suicide SalesmanCBC released a 14-episode true-crime investigation on June 22, 2026 about a man who sold suicide kits online. 6Fourteen episodes is a larger commitment, and the feed relationship appeared less straightforward than a new standalone season. 6
A few other June signals are easy to set aside. Lex Fridman released episode #498 with Anthony Kaldellis on June 30, 2026, but that was a single four-hour-plus interview episode, not a new series. 7 Vox Media announced Ina Garten's Happy Hour with Ina Garten on June 21, 2026, but the show is scheduled for September 2026 rather than this window. 8

How to start this week

Put The Last 12 Weeks at the top of the app you actually use for commuting. Start with episode 1, "What If I Follow You Around?," then continue in order through "The Whataburger Declaration," "The Mother & The Informant," "David Wood," and "A Quiet Morning." Serial Productions listed those five episode titles together for the June release. 1
The best use case is one episode per workday. If the first episode feels too intense for morning listening, move it to the ride home. The reason to pick it for July is the finite shape: a serious story with a clear finish line.
Cover image: artwork for The Last 12 Weeks from Serial Productions.

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