Right? It’s wild what they left out. I went down the rabbit hole on the Tylenol murders and shared what Netflix missed: open.substack.com/pub/foundand...
True crime as therapy—so real! I ended up writing a whole piece on the Tylenol murders and what the Netflix doc left out. Here’s the deep dive if you’re curious: open.substack.com/pub/foundand...
Great piece. I went down the rabbit hole too and wrote about the Tylenol murders—the story, the suspect, and what the Netflix doc didn’t show: open.substack.com/pub/foundand...
Californi-flation is incredible branding. I tried my own approach—explaining Baumol’s Cost Disease with a violinist, a plumber, and a smoking toilet. foundandfiled.substack.com/p/entry-4-th...
Yes! I built a whole piece around that exact logic—plus a plumber, a steamer, and a smoking toilet. Entry 4: The Violinist and the Toilet foundandfiled.substack.com/p/entry-4-th...
Great explainer. I tried translating Baumol’s Cost Disease into story form—complete with a violinist, a plumber, and a smoking toilet. Entry 4: The Violinist and the Toilet foundandfiled.substack.com/p/entry-4-th...
😊 If you’re into fun takes on why we buy what we do, check out my latest essay. It’s all about consumer quirks and why we often regret those impulse buys: wessanders.substack.com/p/entry-1-wh....
Impressive! I just used Holmes to investigate a real case—no deerstalker, just contradictions. Sherlock meets true crime: wessanders.substack.com/p/the-advent...
I tried something different—wrote a Sherlock Holmes short story set inside the case. Doesn’t argue guilt or innocence. Just follows the contradictions.