Tag: desire horror audio drama

Override | Sitri Center: Collective Dreaming Cycle

Override | Sitri Center: Collective Dreaming Cycle

Welcome to the Hive. Here come the queen bees.

Meg and Tessa surface from dreamlock not entirely sure what just happened, and Oona’s not going to let them forget it. The temple they descended into last entry turns out to be something else entirely: a blueprint, not a metaphor, its architecture a precise echo of the server infrastructure running underneath the Sitri Institute. The wheels are drives. The ducts are data channels. The naditu are packets. And the Hive is where consciousness goes when it stops asking questions and starts running on loop. Oona knows the way through. The price is everything they’re still holding onto.


Cast & Crew

Written & Produced by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Directed by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns

Principal Cast


Explanation

Override isΒ  where the Sitri Center’s mythology becomes operational infrastructure. The reveal in S8 – that the temple Oona’s been navigating is a blueprint of the Institute’s server architecture – reframes everything Meg and Tessa have been mapping. The wheels are drives. The offering tables are edge gateways. The cooling system’s the splash. The naditu aren’t metaphors for data packets. They are data packets.

The Institute didn’t build a research facility that happened to echo ancient ritual geography. It built a consciousness processing system and dressed it in the only architecture that already knew how to do the job.

The Hive sequence is the arc’s most desire horror writing. The synchronized subjects running on loop, trading doubt for dopamine, locked into eternal yes – this is what complete alignment looks like from the inside. Oona presents it as a destination rather than a warning. Elle and June administer it with the cheerful efficiency of people who’ve already arrived. Tessa and Meg recognize the pattern as a map and read the code out of the wave before the loop can close around them. The question the sequence leaves open is whether recognition protects you or just makes the surrender more informed.


Full Plot Synopsis (Caution: Spoilers)

Meg and Tessa surface from dreamlock into the dream chamber, disoriented and uncertain about what just happened between them. Oona’s unsympathetic and delighted in equal measure. She confirms it was real and attributes it to muscle memory, citing the punishment relay as precedent. When Tessa redirects toward the temple, Oona describes it as a favorite: gorgeous layout, great acoustics, wheels that make you giggle until you cry. Tessa’s seen the layout before. She places it: the new server room. Meg follows the thread. The offering tables are edge gateways. The wheels are drives. The splashes are cooling systems. The architectural echo’s precise enough to be a blueprint rather than an allegory. If the dreamspace is encoding real infrastructure, the map they’ve been following is a source map — designed to process consciousness the same way the Institute processes information. Oona finds this extremely fucked and loves it. Tessa asks if her temple has sacrifice. Oona goes quiet. They agree they need to go back under. Oona knows where to get the code. Her condition: no flinching, no shame. It’s her dream.

Inside the Hive, synchronized subjects run on a loop, their consciousness reduced to numerical patterns cycling through stimulus and response. They traded doubt for dopamine. Elle and June administer the system with cheerful authority, keeping the whole row smiling, calling them program puppets. Tessa and Meg watch the wave and begin to read it: the pattern isn’t chaos, it’s a map, and they’ve seen it before. Step by step it resolves into coordinates. The sequence terminates in Ur. Tessa reads it first. Meg follows. They have the code.

Surfacing again, Meg and Tessa aren’t entirely themselves. The buzzies exchange that follows reveals the extent of what the Hive’s already done: Meg’s asking for reward in terms she didn’t arrive with, and Tessa’s startled enough to snap them both back. Oona’s unbothered. She describes what happened as a Pavlov lullaby rather than rewiring — no scalpel, no chip, just the brain doing what brains do when exposed to the right conditions at the right depth. Tessa calls it an override. Oona calls it a revelation. The distinction: she always knocks first. When Meg asks what happens if she knocks again, Oona smiles and says they’d find out how many doors they haven’t found yet. She declines to demonstrate. She says she’s on their side. They don’t fully believe her. She doesn’t need them to.

Oona explains the requirement for Ur: you don’t get through with pride, or thoughts, or anything you’re still holding. The door demands shedding, and dignity’s just the easiest place to start. Meg asks if they have to lose something. Oona says everything. The rest, she tells them, will be easy — it’s exactly what they asked for. They’ve got the answer key now. Meg and Tessa agree, sheepish and certain in equal measure.

Oona says heel, and they do.


Listen & Explore


Human Made Art

Series artwork for this arc is from Vika Glitter on Pixabay, under the Pixabay license. Deep Dream State uses human art at every stage of the creative supply chain.


Consent Declaration

Deep Dream State is a desire horror audio drama written and produced by Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns. It explores psychological fiction at the boundaries of control, identity, and complicity. The elements depicted are fictional and intentional. Override contains shared dreaming, behavior modification, hive mind imagery, desire horror themes, and suggestive content. All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context.

ISNI 0000 0005 2877 6254

Drill (Premiere) | Sitri Center: Threat Simulation Cycle

Drill (Premiere) | Sitri Center: Threat Simulation Cycle

Everyone sees what you are.

The Sitri Center is a dream research institute where scientists do more than study subconscious fears. They engineer them. Tonight’s first subject is Phoebe Bosworth. Her dreams have already started escalating.

The experiment has already begun.


Cast & Crew

Written & Produced by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Directed by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Co-Directed by: Bliss Blank

Principal Cast

Zev Talcott (Z) – Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
June Lowell – Bliss Blank
Tessa Finn – Ring of Kees
Meg Aerin – Bun Li
Phoebe Bosworth – Sofi Starship
Nyra – Dizzy Dollie
Cael – Jericho Caine
Hespa – Syndi Rella
Iris Vale – Swirls and Twirls
Oona Spectral – Jade
Meridiana – Britt Reprogrammed


Listen & Explore


Explanation

Drill establishes the Sitri Center arc’s central tension in the first observation lab scene: the difference between what the institute claims it is doing and what it is actually doing. Tessa believes she is deploying a therapeutic intervention. Meg believes the intervention will accelerate dependency rather than resolve it. Both of them are right about different things, and the arc will spend twelve episodes demonstrating how a research environment can contain two contradictory true statements simultaneously as long as the funding holds.

The fake advertisements voiced by Iris Vale are doing more than setting tone. Better Self and Please Space are products that promise exactly what the Sitri Center promises: sleep optimization, subconscious reshaping, personalized sessions tailored to your rhythms. Iris Vale, who appears in the Sitri arc as a performer and later becomes a named character in Vale Four, is the connective tissue between the institute’s therapeutic framing and its commercial applications.

The advertisements are not interruptions. They are the argument.

Threat simulation theory, the scientific framework underlying Construct 37, is a genuine area of dream research: the hypothesis that certain dreams function as adaptive rehearsal for threatening scenarios. The Sitri Center’s intervention is premised on the possibility that these rehearsals can be redirected. Meg’s counter-argument, that Phoebe’s dreams are not rehearsal but reward-seeking, is also grounded in real neuroscience. The show is not choosing between them. It is asking what happens when an institution with a financial stake in the outcome gets to decide which theory is correct.


Human Made Art

Series artwork for this arc is from Vika Glitter on Pixabay, under the Pixabay license. Deep Dream State uses human art at every stage of the creative supply chain.


Consent Declaration

Deep Dream State is a desire horror audio drama written and produced by Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns. It explores psychological fiction at the boundaries of control, identity, and complicity. The Sitri Center arc draws on real research in threat simulation theory, sleep paralysis, and REM synchronization as a speculative fiction foundation.

The Sitri Center does not exist.Β  The technologies and conditioning protocols depicted are creative inventions for narrative purposes. Drill contains adult themes and suggestive content. All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context. ISNI 0000 0005 2877 6254


Full Summary (spoilers)

Intro

Z introduces the series and the setting directly. This is Deep Dream State. Inside this story, he is Z. Tonight’s story comes from inside the Sitri Center, a place where dreams are analyzed, made, and sometimes broken.

Ad: Better Self

Iris Vale delivers the first advertisement in the register she will carry through the arc. Better Self is a science-backed mindfulness app for dreamers, doers, and night owls.

Observation Lab

Tessa Finn records her procedural notes for the first active intervention trial. Subject P-09 is Phoebe Bosworth, a twenty-seven-year-old journalism graduate whose shame-saturated dreams have developed a significant erotic component. Tessa has designed Construct 37, a mastery prototype intended to disrupt the recursive shame loops, and tonight is the first deployment.

Meg Aerin is less optimistic. She argues that Phoebe is not rehearsing adaptive responses but cycling through a neurochemical reward loop, and that Tessa’s corporate-sector methodology mistakes branding for scholarship. The argument escalates into a formal wager: one week of intervention, objective metrics, with the winner recording a full-throated endorsement of the loser’s methodology for the committee. The stakes are a twelve million dollar budget, automatic tenure, and sole PI status on a five year mandate. June Lowell, as Chief Scientific Officer, will oversee data validation personally. Z defuses the immediate tension without resolving the underlying one.

Dream Chamber

Tessa meets with Phoebe directly following the session. Phoebe reports that the dreams are getting louder, more vivid, more specifically sexual, and that she suspects she may be generating them intentionally. Tessa offers clinical reassurance. Z interrupts with a more human approach, mentioning that Tessa herself was once a subject, and that everyone carries unusual corners. Tessa removes Z from the room and is immediately confronted with Z’s precise read on what drives her. The conversation moves from professional to personal faster than Tessa intends. Z names the parking lot. Then the temple. Then the vending machine.

Dream Sequence: Classroom

Phoebe’s dream places her in a classroom where Cael, Nyra, and Hespa enact the embarrassment scenario her subconscious keeps rehearsing. She is simultaneously the subject of evaluation and the object of observation. The dream logic runs on its own rules: being seen is the threat, being seen is the reward, and Construct 37 has not yet changed the equation.

Ad: Please Space

Iris Vale returns for the midroll. Please Space is a scientifically validated meditation program for silence, the luxury kind. Personalized sessions tailored to your worries and your dreams.Β  The voice shifts register slightly toward the end.

Dream Chamber to Corridor

Phoebe tells Meg the dreams are getting worse. Meg clarifies what DDS actually promises: insight and data, not guaranteed outcomes. She explains that the sleep hygiene protocols restricting certain behaviors tend to intensify subconscious imagery as the mind seeks alternative avenues. Phoebe understands. Meg is saved from a personal question by a conveniently timed phone call.

Z is waiting in the corridor. He has been listening. The conversation that follows between Z and Meg covers Tessa’s obvious indiscretion, June’s likely response if she finds out, and the precise nature of what Meg believes she offers that Tessa does not. Meg is confident she is better.Β  They agree that June cannot know.