https://t.co/r6oJegWugd
— Jmail (@jmailarchive) March 25, 2026
Made by the amazing @whosmatu and a new round of document processing from @reductoai's @omeeze
Jmail has rolled out JCal, a Google Calendar-style view that turns the Epstein files into a browsable timeline of flights and activities. On the live page, it opens on June 2016 and already sorts entries into buckets like travel, meetings, social events, dinners, calls, flights, legal, media, and public records.
This new release will make it far easier for everyone to unpack Epstein’s schedule, so it won’t be surprising if Jmail bags millions more visitors to the platform. As we reported earlier, the project had already hit 450 million views by February, and Vercel CEO Guillermo Rauch agreed to handle server costs.
Instead of dropping people into another pile of PDFs, JCal leans hard into a familiar layout. The page uses week and month navigation, people filters, and a long list of event types, so the whole thing feels built for quick scanning rather than careful slogging.
That is really the point here, at least on paper. In our initial report, we noted how Jmail was pitched as a Gmail-like way to browse Epstein’s email archive, and JCal looks like the same idea pushed into a schedule format.
The calendar also lands while the project keeps expanding sideways. We recently covered how Jmail opened up Jwiki, an Epstein-focused Wikipedia clone that lets users propose edits, and then followed that with Jemini, a Gemini-style research tool for generating reports from the same document set.
So, yes, this is starting to look like a full app ecosystem, not a one-off curiosity.
JCal will probably grab a lot of eyeballs fast for one simple reason. A calendar is easier to skim than thousands of scattered files, and with Jmail already pulling huge traffic, this new layer looks built to keep that going.
