
webworm
The Political Aspirations of Webworm
Don't worry, it's not what you think.
webworm
Don't worry, it's not what you think.
Hot off the presses - some new Webworm Merch for your bod
There's been a bit of reporting about Webworm leaving Substack, and I wanted to clarify a few things that got missed.
I meet Kala, a woman digging a tunnel under her suburban home.
We tend to love things that can’t love us back.
Both John and Brent Cameron have found welcoming Christian arms in Australia.
I have been spending time with the CEO of Alcor, and he wants to vitrify you.
David Farrier's weird investigations, quirks & oddities delivered direct to your inbox!
In this first Webworm not powered by Substack, a time to ask me whatever you want, and new Webworm merch drop.
The last of Michael Organ? No.
Why I have gone out on my own, and why I need you more than ever!
And how the world's worst people still don't understand what it means.
Webworm was in court as the man reckoned with both his actions, and the media.
"I think it’s OK to admit: you may love your job, but work? Not so good."
The real reason so many don't care about starving Palestinian kids.
Following Sean Plunket's horrific tweets about starving children, the multi-millionaire Wright family springs into action.
It's grimy, dirty, and slow. A confusing, infuriating, puzzling mess.
Webworm can report that "The Platform" has lost the financial support of Wayne Wright Jr.
“You had to army crawl to get from one room to the other."
A dream documentary slipped through my fingers, and maybe that's OK.