Simon Whistler
Simon Whistler is one of the most widely watched voices in educational storytelling, reaching over 50 million viewers monthly across a network of more than a dozen YouTube channels, including Biographics, Highlight History, and Today I Found Out.
About Simon
Born in south-east England and now based in the Czech Republic, Simon built his career on making complex subjects genuinely accessible without sacrificing depth. His approach to storytelling goes beyond surface-level summaries, exploring the strategic logic, historical context, and human consequences that shape how cases unfold.
Casual Criminalist is where that curiosity turns toward true crime, criminal investigations, and the architecture of how cases get built — and how they go cold.
The Whistlerverse
MEGAPROJECTS
Deep dives into mankind's largest engineering achievements and infrastructure systems.
ENGINEERING / HISTORYSIDEPROJECTS
Focused explainers on smaller innovations, inventions, and overlooked technical breakthroughs.
TRUE CRIMETHE CASUAL CRIMINALIST
Long-form case breakdowns covering motive, method, and aftermath.
TRUE CRIMEINTO THE SHADOWS
Darker historical stories, disappearances, and controversial episodes from modern history.
MYSTERIES / GEOGRAPHYDECODING THE UNKNOWN
Investigations into mysteries, unexplained claims, and speculative history topics.
MYSTERIES / GEOGRAPHYPLACES
Global geography and place-based storytelling across regions and cultures.
GEOPOLITICS / CONFLICTHOMEFRONTS
Geopolitics, modern conflict, military history, and the civilian and societal dimensions of global events.
SPACECELESTIUM
Accessible, visually rich explorations of space science and cosmic phenomena.
ENTERTAINMENT / GENERAL KNOWLEDGETODAY I FOUND OUT
General knowledge explainers spanning history, science, culture, and unusual facts.
ENTERTAINMENT / GENERAL KNOWLEDGEBRAIN BLAZE
Fast-paced comedic commentary on bizarre stories and internet oddities.
Latest from Casual Criminalist
The Bricked House on Hadley Lane
A walled-off basement, a missing-persons report no one followed, and three decades of the wrong question being asked.
The Juror Who Asked the Wrong Question
On day six of deliberation she sent a note to the judge. The note was sealed, read, and filed. Eleven months later a clerk pulled it from a box of trial exhibits, and the appeal pivoted on what it asked.
Gerald Vinton Trained His Own Jury
He didn't bribe them and he didn't intimidate them. He spent two years sending pamphlets to every adult registered to vote in three counties. By the time he was indicted, the jury pool was his.
What The Second Search Warrant Found
The first warrant was for a phone. The second was for a chest freezer. Most prosecutions hinge on what the second warrant turns up — and on whether a judge signs it.
How A Museum Heist Actually Works
The Hollywood version is wire harnesses and laser grids. The real version is a Tuesday at 4:47 a.m., a service door, and someone on the inside who had reasons.