Jeffrey Epstein is dead. But the investigations around his network continue to ripple outward in fragments—court documents, depositions, redactions, speculation. As documents are unsealed (and pile up to the height of the Eiffel Tower, we are told), names begin to trend. The public rhythm is oddly familiar: a cyclical surge of attention whenever files are released or reinterpreted. The legal process inches forward, the spectacle gallops. Primetime tickers pulse with the words ‘explosive’ and ‘revealed’. Social media turns micro-forensic: flight logs are examined, associations mapped, timelines reconstructed, dots connected. There is outrage, disbelief, and a grim kind of satisfaction and smugness at the possibility that someone rich and powerful might finally be exposed.