On a single IPL match day, more money changes hands illegally than many small nations' daily GDP.
The masterminds?
A network of bookies who've built a $150 billion shadow economy.
Here's how they corrupted India's national obsession: 🧵
India loves cricket. It's not just a sport—it's a religion.
But beneath the passionate fandom lies a parallel economy that operates in the shadows:
A massive betting network that moves more money in a single IPL season than many corporations make in a year.
The numbers are staggering:
• $6 billion bet annually (FICCI estimates)
• 80% focused on cricket alone
• Larger than the GDP of many small nations
• 12x bigger than India's entire legal gambling industry
Yet this empire has no offices, no CEOs, and officially doesn't exist.
This bottle costs $20,000 and has a 7-year waitlist.
It started with a French perfumer's catastrophic mistake in 1820.
Now royal families fight to own it.
Here's how one accident created the most valuable liquid on earth 🧵
In August 1820 a young apprentice named Pierre-François Pascal Guerlain accidentally mixed two incompatible solutions in King Louis XVIII's royal laboratory.
At first it seemed as a horror of the mistake.
Behind the scenes, something extraordinary happened:
The world's most remarkable fragrance was born.
Guerlain had inadvertently created what perfume historian Luca Turin would later call "the error that changed perfumery forever."
The accidental formula wasn't destroyed – it was treasured.
By 1872, Queen Victoria had granted a royal warrant to the Crown Perfumery Company, documenting the formula's importance.