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Why isn't there more mainstream coverage of blockchain-based fraud investigations turned into documentaries? The case for it is pretty compelling:
First, the technical side alone is fascinating—crypto forensics and on-chain social investigation can produce ironclad proof of crime. Unlike traditional fraud cases that hinge on interpretation, blockchain evidence leaves little room for denial. Every transaction, every wallet movement is documented.
Second, the human drama writes itself. The villains in these stories are often genuinely terrible actors—serial scammers, Ponzi architects, exit rug pullers. The victims include retail traders who lost life savings. That's the kind of narrative conflict mainstream audiences actually care about.
Third, the scale of theft is staggering. We're talking hundreds of millions in some cases. The financial stakes combined with the technical complexity and international dimensions make these stories genuinely compelling television material.
Some of these investigations are already uncovering patterns that reveal systemic vulnerabilities in the space. A documentary treatment could both entertain and educate viewers about how to spot red flags in crypto projects.