We Don’t Watch. We Break It Down.
There’s no shortage of cold case content online. Thousands of videos. Interviews. Interrogations. Breakdowns. Opinions. The problem isn’t access to information anymore—it’s what to do with it.
That’s where this project begins.
The Kurt & Tandee podcast isn’t about retelling cases. It’s about examining them. Looking at decisions. Looking at structure. Looking at what matters—and what gets missed.
This first video is an introduction—not just to the podcast, but to a different way of approaching cold cases. A way that moves beyond watching and into structured analysis.
Because the reality is simple: you can’t investigate anything if you’re just consuming it.
From Watching to Analyzing
Most people approach cold case content passively. They watch. They listen. They move on.
But real investigation doesn’t work like that. It requires structure. Organization. The ability to break information into parts, connect it, and revisit it.
That’s the gap this project is built around.
Introducing Tandee Lens
Tandee Lens is a browser extension you can download from the Chrome Web Store. It’s designed to analyze YouTube videos the way an investigator would—turning long-form content into structured, usable information.
Instead of just watching a video, Tandee Lens helps you:
- Break content into meaningful segments
- Identify key moments and timelines
- Focus on behavior, decisions, and patterns
- Turn hours of footage into something you can actually work with
It’s built for anyone serious about understanding cases—whether you’re a hobbyist, researcher, or professional.
Because the issue was never a lack of information. It was a lack of structure.
The Video
This introduction video walks through that idea—why the current approach to cold case content falls short, and how a structured method changes what you’re able to see.
Watch it here:
▶️ Kurt & Tandee – Introduction to Cold Case Analysis
This is just the starting point. Future episodes will move into actual cases, applying this approach in real scenarios—breaking down what happened, what mattered, and what may have been overlooked.
We don’t watch.
We break it down.
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