
If you’ve ever tried to figure out where the latest Ruby Franke documentary is actually streaming, you know how messy it gets. Disney+, Netflix, Apple TV, regional restrictions, new titles like “Devil in the Family: The Fall of Ruby Franke” appearing and vanishing—it’s a moving target. Reddit acts like a live radar: true-crime fans post fresh links, compare cuts across Disney+, Netflix Tudum features, and Apple TV listings, and flag geo-locked versions. But that firehose of updates is exactly why most busy creators, agencies, and business owners never fully capitalize on it. An AI computer agent changes the story. Instead of doom-scrolling, you have a tireless digital researcher that checks Reddit threads, compares them against official Disney+, Netflix and Apple TV pages, and hands you a clean, verified “where to watch” snapshot whenever you need it. Automation twist: Delegating this hunt to an AI agent means your team never wastes another hour chasing broken links. The agent can log into Reddit, open Disney+ and Netflix help pages, validate each source, and drop a ready-to-publish watch guide into your CMS or campaign doc while your humans focus on strategy and storytelling.
Start by letting Reddit and the official platforms do the heavy lifting. First, go to reddit.com and search for “Ruby Franke documentary Netflix” or the specific title, such as “Devil in the Family: The Fall of Ruby Franke”. Filter results by “New” to catch current discussions. Open a few top threads and look for comments that confirm whether the doc is on Netflix in specific regions. Next, verify. Open netflix.com in your browser and use the search bar to look for the documentary title. If you can’t find it, that usually means it isn’t available in your region. For any issues with search, playback, or locations, use Netflix’s official help center at https://help.netflix.com. If you’re doing this often for content planning, delegate it to a Simular AI computer agent: have it check Reddit, then Netflix itself, and log results in a Google Sheet so you’re always one click away from an updated answer.
Because availability changes by country and bundle, start with the most up-to-date sources. Go to Reddit and search phrases like “Ruby Franke Disney+ where to watch” or “Devil in the Family on Hulu”. Focus on subreddits such as r/DisneyPlus and r/TrueCrime, then sort results by “New”. Users often post screenshots of the title page, mention their country, and note if it’s part of a specific bundle. Once you have a likely answer, open disneyplus.com yourself and search for the documentary. If you’re in a region where Hulu is integrated, your Disney+ homepage may highlight the show; otherwise you may need to check Hulu separately. For technical or regional issues, visit the Disney+ Help Center at https://help.disneyplus.com, where you’ll find articles on supported regions and subscription options. To avoid repeating this research, configure a Simular AI agent to log into Disney+, perform the search, and record “found/not found” status for each of your key markets.
Think of Reddit as your early-warning radar. First, identify the subreddits that consistently talk about Ruby Franke and true-crime docs: r/TrueCrime, r/Documentaries, r/netflix, r/DisneyPlus or local TV subs. In each subreddit, use the search bar with queries like “Ruby Franke new doc”, “Devil in the Family episodes”, and filter by “New” so you always see the latest mentions. Next, create a simple system: bookmark or save the most informative posts, and once a week skim your saved list to update your internal notes. For more structure, log the title, platform (Disney+, Netflix, Apple TV), region, and source post into a spreadsheet. If you’re doing this for clients or editorial planning, offload the repetitive part to an AI computer agent running on Simular Pro. The agent can open Reddit, run those searches across multiple subs, read through the top posts, and extract just the confirmed platform and region details into your tracking sheet.
Start with a clear outcome: a single document that tells readers where to watch each Ruby Franke documentary by platform and region. Step one is research. Use Reddit to collect crowd wisdom: search for each major title (for example “Devil in the Family: The Fall of Ruby Franke”, “Abused by Mum: The Ruby Franke Scandal”) combined with “where to watch”. Capture links that point to Disney+, Netflix, Apple TV, or other services. Step two is verification. Visit disneyplus.com, netflix.com, and tv.apple.com and search for each title directly, confirming it appears in the catalog for your country. If you hit region or playback problems, use the official help centers—Reddit Help at https://support.reddithelp.com, Disney+ Help at https://help.disneyplus.com, Netflix Help at https://help.netflix.com, and Apple TV support at https://support.apple.com/tv. Finally, organize everything into a simple table and write a narrative summary. To keep this guide fresh, schedule a Simular AI agent to repeat the checks weekly and flag changes for your editorial team.
To truly automate the “where to watch Ruby Franke documentary” question, you need an agent that behaves like a human researcher across Reddit and streaming platforms. With Simular Pro, you can set this up in three parts. First, define the job in natural language: “Every Monday, check Reddit for new posts about Ruby Franke documentaries, then verify availability on Disney+, Netflix, and Apple TV, and update our central Google Sheet.” Second, record or configure the workflow: the agent opens a browser, navigates to reddit.com, runs specific searches, opens top posts, follows links to disneyplus.com, netflix.com and tv.apple.com, and logs what it finds. Because Simular is an AI computer agent designed for full desktop automation, every click is transparent and editable. Third, connect it to your existing stack via webhooks so it runs on a schedule and posts updates into Slack or email. You move from ad-hoc manual checks to a predictable, audited, and fully delegated research loop.