The Drey Dossier

Drey

The Drey Dossier is an independent investigative project tracing how power operates through systems most people never see. Using open-source intelligence (OSINT), each episode follows money flows, corporate structures, surveillance architecture, and the technology shaping government and everyday life. This feed features the audio versions of Drey YouTube investigations, with the same reporting, same receipts, released alongside YouTube and Substack.

  1. 25. FEB.

    We Should All Be Freaking Out About CNN

    Paramount just bid thirty-one dollars a share for Warner Bros. Discovery, and every outlet in Hollywood is covering it as the biggest media deal in history. Who gets HBO. Who gets Batman. Whether movies stay in theaters. Meanwhile, on October 1st, 2025, someone quietly filed three brand new LLCs in Delaware with CNN's name on them, twenty days before the company announced it was open to a sale, and nobody has ever reported on them. The original CNN entities just signed onto $17.5 billion in bank debt as collateral. The new ones signed nothing. Two versions of CNN's corporate structure now sit in Delaware: one locked down by sixteen banks, and one completely clean.This piece traces the documentary evidence underneath the bidding war, from the Delaware filings to a merger agreement carve-out that gives WBD authority over CNN right now, to an unnamed buyer in the proxy statement who was never told the process ended, to the president saying it is "imperative that CNN be sold," and asks the question that nobody covering this deal seems interested in asking: what has already been arranged for CNN while everyone was watching the show?If you want the full reporting, the sourcing, and every filing linked so you can check the work yourself, everything is on the Substack below. That's also the best way to support the work so I can keep doing this.Substack: thedreydossier.substack.comFollow me onTikTok: /thedreydossierInstagram: /thedreydossierIndependent journalism only exists if people can actually see it, so if this connected some dots, share it with someone. Thanks for being here.

    19 Min.
  2. 21. FEB.

    Has Anyone Seen Milo?

    Amazon spent millions putting a lost dog in front of a hundred million people during the Super Bowl. The ad was thirty seconds long, emotionally bulletproof, and a perfectly accurate depiction of a networked AI surveillance system activating across an entire residential neighborhood. They just made sure you were crying when you saw it.Meanwhile, in Tucson, an 84-year-old woman had been missing for over a week. Her Nest doorbell footage was declared unrecoverable by local law enforcement. Then the FBI pulled images from what Google called "residual data located in backend systems," which is a very polite way of saying "deleted" doesn't mean what any of us thought it meant.This piece traces the architecture underneath the doorbell camera, from Ring's Search Party feature to Flock Safety's twenty billion monthly license plate scans to Discord requiring 200 million users to submit their face or their papers, and asks the question nobody in the Super Bowl ad wanted you to think about: who else do the cameras see when they're looking for the dog?If you want the full reporting, the sourcing, and the deeper infrastructure story, everything is on the Substack below. That's also the best way to support the work so I can keep doing this.Substack: thedreydossier.substack.comFollow me onTikTok: / thedreydossierInstagram: / thedreydossierIndependent journalism only exists if people can actually see it, so if this connected some dots, share it with someone. Thanks for being here.

    32 Min.

Info

The Drey Dossier is an independent investigative project tracing how power operates through systems most people never see. Using open-source intelligence (OSINT), each episode follows money flows, corporate structures, surveillance architecture, and the technology shaping government and everyday life. This feed features the audio versions of Drey YouTube investigations, with the same reporting, same receipts, released alongside YouTube and Substack.

Das gefällt dir vielleicht auch