Harold and Fred (They Make Ladies Dead) was a cartoon strip in a 2001 issue of
Viz comic, also featuring serial killer
Fred West. Some relatives of Shipman's victims voiced anger at the cartoon. A documentary
Harold Shipman: Doctor Death, with new witness testimony, was shown by
ITV as part of its
Crime & Punishment strand on 26 April 2018. The programme was criticised as offering "little new insight". "D.A.W.", the twentieth episode of
Season 3 of the American TV series
Law & Order: Criminal Intent, is inspired by the Harold Shipman murders. Season 4, Episode 12 of ''World's Most Evil Killers'' covered Harold Shipman, briefly describing his life, his murder of Kathleen Grundy, the work connecting the murder of Grundy to several others that resulted in his January 2020 conviction on 15 counts of murder (and one count of forgery), and the subsequent
Shipman Inquiry. It ends with a list of the 218 people identified as his victims during the Inquiry. A play titled
Beyond Belief – Scenes from the Shipman Inquiry, written by Dennis Woolf and directed by Chris Honer, was performed at the Library Theatre, Manchester, from 20 October to 22 November 2004. The script of the play comprised edited verbatim extracts from
the Shipman Inquiry, spoken by actors playing the witnesses and lawyers at the inquiry. This provided a "stark narrative" that focused on personal tragedies. A BBC drama-documentary,
Harold Shipman, starring Ian Brooker in the title role was broadcast in April 2014. The satirical artist
Cold War Steve regularly features Shipman in his work.
The Shipman Files: A Very British Crime Story, a three-part documentary by Chris Wilson, was broadcast on
BBC Two on three consecutive nights between 28 and 30 September 2020, and focussed on Shipman's victims and how he went undetected for so long. Podcast episode "Catching a Killer Doctor" from the
Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford podcast series features the story of Harold Shipman and how detection could have been made much earlier with good statistical models. Shipman was mentioned in the
2022 Wakefield by-election when Conservative candidate Nadeem Ahmed highlighted his local connections, following Shipman's suicide in Wakefield prison, claiming that voters should "trust Tories like they do GPs after Harold Shipman". In 2023, DeadHappy, a
Leicester-based
life insurance firm, was criticised for using an image of Shipman in one of its advertisements. The Advertising Standards Authority received more than 70 complaints about the advert. In 2025, Shipman was referenced in the third episode of
series 3 of The Traitors, a reality television game show where "faithful" contestants are tasked with finding and banishing the titular "Traitors". During the roundtable discussion, medical doctor Kasim Ahmed was accused of being a Traitor by fellow contestant Jake Brown, who claimed that it would "make sense" for Ahmed to "save lives during the day" while "murdering by night" within the narrative of the show. Ahmed then stated that he believed Brown was "basically calling [him] Harold Shipman". This moment caused Shipman to trend on social media. ==See also==