Tag: full cast audio drama

Incubator | Sitri Center: Sleep Paralysis Cycle

Incubator | Sitri Center: Sleep Paralysis Cycle

You’re not being graded. You’re being rewritten.

Elle Lawson is locked in REM paralysis. The dream figures are already inside. Meg Aerin is taking notes. The Construct is responsive and the journal is mandatory and the line between researcher and subject is getting harder to locate in the data.


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
Elle Lawson – Echo Doll
Nyra – Dizzy Dollie
Cael – Jericho Caine
Hespa – Syndi Rella
Iris Vale – Swirls and Twirls
Lyra Crosswell – Flux Lynniegal
Phoebe Bosworth – Sofi Starship
Oona Reyes – Jade
Substitute Teacher – Korrupted Innocence
Reverie – Britt Reprogrammed


Explanation

Incubator is the first episode of Cycle 2 and the arc’s most direct engagement with the Ars Goetia. Sitri, a Prince of Hell with dominion over desire and the stripping bare of subjects, presides over a research institute that has reframed incubus and succubus mythology as clinical data. Meg’s observation log treats the shadow presence not as hallucination but as a functional myth.

It persists because it works, and the subject learns to receive. The Sitri Center isn’t debunking the mythology; It is operationalizing it.

The fake advertisements continue Better Self promises you should decide what belongs in your dreams, which is the autonomy the Construct is designed to redirect. Please Space promises to rewrite your calm, with the name Namaah embedded as an underlay in the opening instruction. (Namaah is a figure from Kabbalistic demonology associated with seduction and the corruption of sleep, and her name appears in the advertisement for a meditation app designed to help you rest.)

The advertisements are not interruptions. They are the system explaining itself in a warmer register.

The VILD and MILD techniques Meg prescribes to Elle are genuine lucid dreaming methods used in sleep research. The show is not misrepresenting them. What the show is doing is placing them in the hands of a researcher who is simultaneously losing her own grip on the distinction between observation and participation, and asking what it means to be taught to recognize absurdity inside a dream by someone who has stopped recognizing it outside one. Meg’s journal entries answer that question with the precision of someone trained to document and the candor of someone who stopped redacting.


Full Summary

Intro

Z introduces the episode with characteristic directness. Tonight’s story is called Incubator and it concerns sleep paralysis, incubi, and succubi, which as the episode will demonstrate are sometimes the same phenomenon.

Ad: Better Self

Iris Vale opens with the Better Self advertisement, presenting the app not merely as a meditation tool but as a boundary, a science-backed method for sleeping deeper while maintaining control over what enters your unconscious. The first seven nights are free, which is just enough time to relearn how to sleep on your own terms. You should decide what belongs in your dreams.

Observation Lab

Meg Aerin records her project log while Elle Lawson remains in stabilized REM paralysis in the adjacent chamber, her fragmented vocalizations suggesting an experience that is intensifying rather than resolving. Elle is part of the Forty-Four cluster, a group of subjects presenting with invasive dream penetration and persistent paralysis states, and Meg has begun theorizing the phenomenon in mythological terms: the shadow at the foot of the bed, the weight on the chest, the breath at the neck, the ancient figures that persist across cultures because they function. The subject learns to receive, Meg notes in her log, with the calm of someone who finds this observation clinically useful.

Tessa attempts to contribute to the session and is dismissed efficiently. June arrives demanding metrics rather than mythology, names a seven-night deadline for neurocompliance benchmarks, and threatens Tessa with reassignment to the walk-ins if she speaks out of turn again during an active log. The funding is precarious and the funders are predators and the poetry, however good Z finds it, will not keep them patient. Elle’s dream vocalizations continue over the intercom throughout the confrontation, running underneath the professional exchange like a persistent signal nobody is quite willing to address directly.

Dream Sequence

Elle’s dream places her in a house where Nyra and Hespa are already hiding when she arrives, which is the first indication that the dream has run this script before. They warn her that he is already inside and that she keeps asking him back, which Elle resists acknowledging but cannot quite deny. Cael arrives. Mercy is available at a price Nyra already knows how to pay. Elle discovers she cannot move, which is the dream’s defining characteristic and also, the dream figures suggest, its defining appeal. The script runs.

Dream Chamber

Elle surfaces gasping and immediately mortified to learn she had been speaking aloud, a phenomenon Meg identifies as residual suggestion and frames as biology rather than something requiring shame. Elle confesses that she knew she was dreaming and did not want to stop, which Meg receives as useful data rather than a confession. What follows is a clinical introduction to VILD and MILD, Visual Induction and Mnemonic Induction of Lucid Dreams: techniques involving the deliberate rehearsal of dream scenarios before sleep and the repetition of a phrase like a prayer at the threshold of consciousness. The goal is recognition, the moment inside the dream when absurdity becomes visible and the dreamer wakes up within it. The dream journal is mandatory, to be written every morning regardless of what is remembered, because the brain must be trained to treat these dreams as important. Skip a day and the Construct’s responsiveness means the dreams will intensify in compensation. Elle asks if Meg uses these techniques herself. Meg says of course, from a distance that suggests the answer is more complicated than the word.

Observation Chamber

The professional log continues from the observation chamber while Elle dreams in the room adjacent, the two of them running in a parallel that Meg’s entries make increasingly difficult to describe as coincidental. The journal entries that surface in the log are Meg’s own: Z, the cable looped around the thighs, the calibration sessions framed as clinical edging, the instruction to recite the consent protocol until she stutters the word revocation at which point he says not yours anymore. She has started dreaming about Tessa. She has stopped thinking critically during the sessions. She wrote the word noise to describe everything that is not her body and her data and she found she meant it.
June enters and finds Meg in a state that is not, technically, real-time correlation tracking. Elle’s voice continues from the dream chamber asking to be seen, asking to fill the protocol, asking to understand what she is for. June observes that Elle has become quite the echo chamber and informs Meg that her continued participation in the project depends on performance and discretion, that she will review Elle’s journal in the morning, and that she is quite sure Elle will have edited it.

Midroll Ad: Please Space

Iris Vale closes the episode with the Please Space advertisement, a meditation program engineered by sleep scientists for people whose racing thoughts and restless nights have become unmanageable. The soundscaping adapts to your rhythms, the sessions reset and rewire and rewrite your calm, and the first seven nights are free. Underneath the opening instruction, barely audible before the warmth of the sales voice reasserts itself, the name Namaah appears as a spoken underlay.

We ensure you will be saying it. Please.


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. Incubator contains adult themes, dream manipulation, sleep paralysis imagery, and institutional power dynamics. All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context.

ISNI 0000 0005 2877 6254

Adapt | Sitri Center: Threat Simulation Cycle

Adapt | Sitri Center: Threat Simulation Cycle

This center is my dream.

Construct 37 is running. The dreams are escalating. The research team is watching. Tessa Finn is about to learn the difference between engineering a dream and becoming one.


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
Nyra – Dizzy Dollie
Oona Reyes – Jade
Cael – Jericho Caine
Hespa – Syndi Rella
Iris Vale – Swirls and Twirls
Reverie – Britt Reprogrammed


Full Summary

Dream Sequence: Store

Phoebe’s dream places her in an adult store with Hespa, contemplating taking something they haven’t paid for. The nervous excitement of the scenario is the point: risk, visibility, the possibility of being caught and seen. Cael and Nyra arrive as security and take them to the backroom. What begins as consequence becomes compulsion. The dream logic follows its own rules, and Phoebe finds that resistance is not the direction her subconscious is moving.

Observation Chamber

The research team watches Phoebe’s escalating responses with growing disagreement. Tessa insists the construct needs more time. June calls it obsessive. Meg calls it degenerating. Z mediates without resolving anything. Phoebe’s vocalizations from the dream chamber provide an ongoing counterpoint to the professional argument above her, and the irony of what she is saying while the researchers debate methodology is not lost on anyone in the room. June accuses Z of bias toward Tessa. Z does not deny it.

Dream Sequence

The dream deepens. Nyra, Cael, and Hespa inform Phoebe that she has passed a threshold and will now perform for observers. The dream figures describe what she is becoming with the patient certainty of entities that have watched this process many times before. Phoebe’s resistance folds into need. The strings are pulled.

Observation Chamber: Aftermath

Phoebe’s voice comes through the intercom. June delivers her verdict on Tessa’s experiment with the cold precision of someone who has been waiting to deliver it: Construct 37 did not teach Phoebe to escape her fears. It taught her to eroticize her humiliation. Each response has reinforced the loop it was designed to break. Meg savors the outcome. Z turns on Tessa with a cruelty that surprises even Meg. June notes clinically that the subject is now fully compliant and that the approach is, in its way, effective.

Outro: Tessa’s Letter

Tessa reads her written confession to the adjudicating committee of the Sitri Institute. She accepts full responsibility. She names what she built: not a ladder but a spiral. She names what she became: a voyeur whose professional boundaries dissolved in stages she catalogued and continued past anyway. She names what she wants, even now, even after all of it.


Listen & Explore


Explanation

Adapt resolves the Construct 37 trial in the direction Meg predicted and in a way that implicates everyone watching. The observation chamber scenes are structured so that the researchers’ professional debate runs continuously alongside Phoebe’s dream vocalizations, and the juxtaposition is the argument: the language of scientific rigor and the language of what is actually happening in the chamber are the same language with different justifications attached.

June’s clinical verdict, that the subject is now fully compliant and the approach is effective, is the most honest thing anyone says in the episode. It acknowledges the outcome without acknowledging the responsibility.

Tessa’s closing letter is the arc’s first genuine confession and its most formally precise piece of writing. She does not minimize what happened. She names each stage of her own dissolution with the careful specificity of someone trained to observe and document, turned finally on herself. The letter is also, structurally, exactly what Meg said she would script for the committee: an admission that private-sector bravado failed utterly. Tessa delivers it in her own voice. That is the detail that makes it desire horror rather than simply tragedy. She built the spiral. She walked down it. She is begging to stay near the bottom.


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 manipulative elements depicted are fictional and intentional. 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.  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.  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.  They agree that June cannot know.

The Chain (Finale) | Incognitoh: Winner Cycle

The Chain (Finale) | Incognitoh: Winner Cycle

The game makes us all the same.

The final challenge connects every contestant to every other through a chain of haptic triggers. The winner claims a surprise prize.

The door closes and a new season begins.


Cast & Crew

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

Contestants

Madison – Pipp
Ashley – Jade
Hannah – Echo Doll
Zarah – Bun Li

House Staff

April, House Synthserv – Bliss Blank
Kitty, Season One Winner – Flux Lynniegal
Candi, Previous Winner – Princess Ella
Bella, Coven Leader – Dizzy Dollie

Returning

Kimmy – Bliss Blank


Explanation

The chain challenge requires each contestant to perform composure while being physically compelled toward visible reaction. The game that began as a competition about concealing a secret icon ends as a competition about concealing involuntary response. The surveillance system has been replaced by the contestants themselves, each one reading the others for tells while managing their own. The game makes us all the same.

The advertisement sequence is where pink noir delivers.  A Neuroplex asset reps products that are transparently extensions of what was done: a pharmaceutical for people who think too much, a game about getting inside something, a reality show about triumphing over reality itself. Cognitolol is the arc’s finest joke and its most serious claim simultaneously. The study participants forgot their symptoms entirely within days because the system replaced the symptoms with something it preferred.

The prize scene resolves what the Glass House was actually selling.  The audience, who has been watching and clicking and paying attention since the first episode, is left to decide where exactly they are in the archive.


Full Summary (spoilers)

Poker Face

The finale opens where Winner Winner left off: the masks are coming off, the uniforms are buzzing, and the final challenge has been announced. Bella reads the chain to the audience in privacy mode. The contestants have to figure this out for themselves by watching each other’s faces while trying not to show their own reactions. The challenge is a FaceTrace problem delivered as a game show: read the tells without producing them.

The chain runs. The uniforms respond to the chain running. The contestants try to focus, control their expressions, watch for the signal in each other’s voices and faces. Madison, who has been running this game as a method actor since episode one, zips up and performs composure while watching Ashley and Hannah closely. Ashley gets the chain wrong. Madison gets it exactly right.

Prize

Madison is taken to the booth immediately after winning, still reacting, to receive her prize. Zarah and Kimmy are waiting. The prize, which Madison assumed was money, is revealed to be what the original promotional tape promised: total freedom, total security, a lifetime position with the Neuroplex team, her own support staff, and a reality show designed just for her. Her own show. Her own reality.
The previous contestants explain what they chose and what they received. Zarah got the kennel. Kimmy got the pink room. Hannah and Ashley are going to get their own pink room together. The positions are permanent and everyone seems satisfied with them in the way that people seem satisfied when the system has been running long enough. Madison asks one final question before accepting: do I still get to act. Bella says they’re glad she asked.

Exposure

Madison’s first performance as a Neuroplex asset is a series of advertisements delivered in rapid sequence. Cognitolol: an approved alternative to the alternative, for those who struggled with thinking weird. Hundreds of study participants forgot their symptoms entirely within days. Niku City: something new, a new boss, a new wave, liquid praise. The Island: triumph over nature, triumph over each other, triumph over reality. Neuro Discovery: your mystery is our mission.

The arc closes on a shush.


Listen & Explore


Human Made Art

Series artwork is hand drawn by Echo Doll. 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 manipulative elements depicted are fictional and intentional. The Chain 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

Winner Winner | Incognitoh: Winner Cycle

Winner Winner | Incognitoh: Winner Cycle

The masks are coming off.

The chain is buzzing. The prize is waiting. And someone’s about to break.


Cast & Crew

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

Contestants

Madison – Pipp
Ashley – Jade
Hannah – Echo Doll
Zarah – Bun Li

House Staff

April, House Synthserv – Bliss Blank
Kitty, Season One Winner – Flux
Candi, Previous Winner – Princess Ella
Bella, Coven Leader – Dizzy Dollie
Dee Dee – Syndi Rella
Council – Kitten Azazel


Full Summary

Tick Tock

The opening sequence runs the arc’s countdown in rotating ensemble lines: almost time, game time, I can taste it, I hear them at night when I go incognito. The timer dings. The finale’s begun.

Time’s Up

April and the previous winners recap Zarah’s elimination and Madison’s failed puppet strategy for the audience. Hannah’s double cross gets its moment of recognition: she did a smart.

Three contestants remain. April directs the audience to vote at deepdreamstate.com on who should win, because the clicks make them tick.

Lollipop

The immunity challenge is the Lolly Game: move as many lollipops as possible from the central bowl into your individual bowl. The floors are not optimized for upright locomotion. They are optimized for crawling. Madison, who would very much prefer not to crawl, crawls anyway because she intends to win.

Hannah and Ashley form the Hashley alliance, with Ashley feeding her points directly into Hannah’s bowl in exchange for a shared immunity promise.   Hannah wins, collars both remaining contestants, and delivers a small lecture on compliance.

Madison cashes in both immunity tokens to trigger a reset rather than accept Hannah’s terms.

Reset

A reset means new icons and, crucially, uniforms determined by psychographic profiling.  April knows things, and the uniform reflects this with uncanny precision.

Ashley figures out the sound prompt, makes it, and is informed that the masks are coming off. She delivers this line with the drama it deserves.


Listen & Explore


Explanation

Winner Winner is the Incognitoh arc’s clearest articulation of the central mechanism: the system doesn’t need you to volunteer your vulnerabilities because it’s already catalogued them.   The uniform that reflects back at Madison isn’t a punishment; it’s a mirror, and the horror is that it fits.

The Lolly Game is the logical conclusion. The floors aren’t optimized for walking; this is presented as a cheerful design feature rather than a deliberate humiliation, which is exactly how pink noir frames its horror. The cage is a dollhouse, the leash is a collar with a name on it, and the smartest player in the room wins the immunity challenge by convincing the second smartest player to feed her points voluntarily. Hannah wins because she understood earlier than anyone else that the game rewards those who make compliance look like strategy.

The voting mechanic, April directing the audience to deepdreamstate.com, is the arc’s most direct fourth wall moment before Ashley’s finale line lands. The clicks make them tick. The audience’s attention is the resource the game was always harvesting.

Incognitoh ends where desire horror always ends: with the realization that participation and observation were never different activities.


Human Made Art

Series artwork is hand drawn by Echo Doll. Deep Dream State uses human art at every stage of the creative supply chain.


Consent Declaration

Deep Dream State is a pink noir audio drama written and produced by Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns. It explores psychological fiction at the boundaries of control, identity, and complicity. The manipulative elements depicted are fictional and intentional. Winner Winner contains adult themes, suggestive content, haptic conditioning, and dystopian surveillance. All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context.

ISNI 0000 0005 2877 6254

Deep Fake | Incognitoh: Glass House Cycle

Deep Fake | Incognitoh: Glass House Cycle

I’m in complete control.

The Council isn’t watching anymore. They’re playing. And everything Ashley thinks is real was probably written by someone else.


Cast & Crew

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

Contestants

Madison – Pipp
Ashley – Jade
Hannah – Echo Doll
Zarah – Bun Li

House Staff

April, House Synthserv – Bliss Blank
Kitty, Season One Winner – Flux Lynniegal
Candi, Previous Winner – Princess Ella
Bella, Coven Leader – Dizzy Dollie
Dee Dee – Syndi Rella


Full Summary

Smash

The opening sequence runs the game’s mood board in rotating confessional cuts: everyone thinks they know what’s real, everyone is wrong, and Zarah’s elimination from last round hangs in the air as a warning nobody is quite processing correctly. The tone is set before the title drops. It’s happening. It’s really real. Brain bye bye.

Bai

April recaps the remaining players with their icons. Ashley: question mark, skills beyond question. Madison: mask, method actor, fire. Hannah: possibly winning without understanding why. Three contestants, three icons, one prize. The Glass House is down to its final shape.

Puppets

Behind the screens, Bella runs the operation with the focused irritation of someone whose thinking keeps getting interrupted by cheering. Kitty and an unnamed winner have been practicing their cheers in the control room and Bella shuts it down. The winners are tools, not colleagues.  The distinction between winning the game and being consumed by it has apparently never been explained to anyone who won.

Backdoor

Zarah, who has been in the system long enough to know where the network switch is, has found the archive. In it she finds Candi: a previous winner whose data profile has been mapped, silo-stored, and deployed as a synthetic companion for contestants who need a friendly face with no competing agenda. Candi is warm, enthusiastic, and operating at approximately thirty percent of whatever Candace used to be. Zarah explains her plan to Candi.  She hasn’t noticed that the archive was left easy to find on purpose. She will use the judge profiles to simulate their preferences, stay cognitively intact, and win the game through pure strategic intelligence.  Zarah decides this is a good idea; The uniform responds immediately.

Control

Madison is also in complete control. She has Hannah as a puppet, Kitty as a cheer resource, and a methodology she’s borrowed from every reality show she’s ever studied. She runs Hannah through cheer practice with Kitty, reinforcing the hierarchy while the feedback loop from the uniforms runs underneath everything. The puppet metaphor is working so well that Madison has started to say it out loud, which is the first sign that it isn’t working as well as she thinks.

Switch

April introduces Candi to the remaining contestants as another previous winner, which produces the appropriate confusion about how many seasons this has actually been running. The immunity challenge is announced: perform for the judges while the winner with the buzzer tries to identify your icon. Zarah performs for the Council using everything she extracted from the archive, including judge profiles, preference simulations, and a direct appeal to Bella that lands with uncomfortable precision. Bella notes that someone hacked the archive.  Madison hears Zarah’s voice through the walls and hits the buzzer.

Exposed

Madison exposes Puppy. The shutter goes up on Zarah. Madison wanted Ashley and got Zarah instead, which means Hannah fed her a false icon and has been running a double game the entire time. Zarah, now exposed, deploys everything she has from the archive. April eliminates Zarah anyway, correctly, on a technicality. Zarah threatens to go public with the files. April points out that Zarah has been communicating through the house network the entire time, which means her company, her contacts, and her reputation have all been receiving a version of events that Bella has been writing. Zarah leaves the house with an NDA and a new uniform. She’s told there might be a place for her if she looks good in it.


Listen & Explore


Explanation

Deep Fake is where the Incognitoh arc makes its structural argument explicit. Every contestant who has claimed to be in complete control in this episode is wrong, and the episode is careful to let each of them say it out loud before demonstrating why. Zarah says it in the archive while the system that trapped her watches through the cameras she found too easily. Madison says it in the booth while Hannah is already running the counter-game. The phrase “I’m in complete control” functions in pink noir the way “I know exactly what I’m doing” functions in cosmic horror: as the announcement of an ending the speaker hasn’t reached yet.

The Candi reveal is the arc’s most significant structural development. Candi isn’t just a previous winner; she’s a data profile running on Neuroplex infrastructure, a synthetic version of Candace deployed to make the archive feel populated and the system feel friendly. Zarah finds her and immediately starts treating her as a resource, which is exactly what the system intended. The archive was easy to find because Bella wanted Zarah in it. The judge profiles were accurate because the system needed Zarah to perform well enough to demonstrate what the uniforms could do to a contestant who thought she was immune.

Pink noir operates at maximum efficiency here: the horror is pastel, the cage is a data silo, and the smartest person in the room walks straight into it because the system was designed by someone smarter.


Human Made Art

Series artwork is hand drawn by Echo Doll. 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 manipulative elements depicted are fictional and intentional. Deep Fake contains adult themes. All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context. ISNI 0000 0005 2877 6254

Uniforms | Incognitoh: Glass House Cycle

Uniforms | Incognitoh: Glass House Cycle

They can’t clock me.

Every uniform tells a story. None of the stories are real. What matters is what they do to you: how they fit and what they unlock.


Cast & Crew

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

Contestants

Madison – Pipp
Ashley – Jade
Hannah – Echo Doll
Zarah – Bun Li

House Staff

April, House Synthserv – Bliss Blank
Kitty, Season One Winner – Flux
Bella, Coven Leader – Dizzy Dollie

The Council

Princess Ella
Syndi Rella


Full Summary

Stealth

The opening sequence recaps the game’s premise through rotating confessional cuts.  Kim’s elimination hangs over the house like a warning no one is willing to say out loud. The game is on.

Elegy

April and Kitty replay Kim’s elimination footage for the audience’s benefit and their own amusement. Kitty cannot watch without giggling.  The subtext is clear: Kim’s exit was a lesson, and everyone in the house is currently deciding what they learned from it.

Claws

The remaining contestants process Kim’s elimination in the main room. Ashley swears on Inanna’s name that she will never go out like that. Zarah defends Kim on principle while calculating her own position. Madison delivers a verdict on Kim’s gameplay that is simultaneously accurate and devastating. The alliance that will define the rest of the arc begins to take shape around a shared target: Ashley, the gamer.  She’s the threat because she’s the one who never loses.

Uniforms

The Glass House issues uniforms. Each one is form-fitting, icon-coded, and designed by Neuroplex to specifications the contestants haven’t been told yet. Zarah threatens to call HR. Madison decides latex is just a director’s note. Hannah notes that she always wears a uniform anyway. Ashley asks if there’s more to this.

There is considerably more to this.

Alliance

The uniforms reveal each contestant’s secret icon in the iconwear: a puppy for Zarah, masks for Madison, a whip for Hannah, a question mark for Ashley. The alliance forms quickly around the shared interest of making sure no one looks up. Madison, Hannah, and Zarah agree that Ashley is the target. The question becomes what’s actually in the uniform and how to use it.

Levels

Ashley discovers the answer first. The Neuroplex uniform contains haptic feedback technology that responds to gameplay performance. Kitty, whose super uniform aggregates all contestant feeds simultaneously, confirms this with the enthusiasm of someone who has been waiting to explain it.

Ashley starts playing to test the parameters. The Council watches. Bella runs the controls. The reward system begins doing what reward systems do: making itself feel necessary.

Truths

April calls everyone to the main room for the next challenge.  It’s an icebreak –  three truths and some lies.  It’s delivered to the group, then voted on.

The contestants rotate through confessional lines that blur together into a single composite portrait of desire, ambition, and concealed longing. Someone is a camgirl. Someone has a husband.

Most important, someone keeps dreaming about a specific woman every night.

Agent

Hannah and Ashley go opaque and private, ostensibly so Ashley can game without being watched. Hannah uses the cover to tell Ashley that the dreaming answer was hers, that it was real, that she means it. Ashley responds. The uniforms respond to Ashley responding. Hannah gets what she came for and files it away.

Double Agent

Hannah reports back to Madison. She got Ashley’s icon. She got more than that. Madison is impressed and not surprised. The alliance solidifies around Hannah’s willingness to do what it takes, which turns out to align precisely with what the uniform’s feedback system has been building toward anyway. Bella runs the controls directly.

The buzz goes stronger. Madison discovers she can run Hannah the way Bella runs the system. Kitty arrives because Hannah said her name. The squad is assembled. The immunity challenge is next and Madison already knows exactly what they’re going to do.


Listen & Explore


Explanation

Uniforms is where the Incognitoh arc reveals its second layer. The glass house established that transparency is coerced through the logic of suspicion. The uniforms establish that the body itself can be made into a compliance instrument.

The line between wanting something and being conditioned to want it dissolves faster than anyone expects when the feedback loop is well designed.

The haptic uniform is the arc’s most direct expression of desire horror’s central mechanism. The contestants aren’t forced into the feedback loop. Ashley discovers it while asking legitimate questions. She starts playing to test the parameters. The system rewards her for playing. Playing feels good. Stopping playing feels like leaving something on the table. By the time the Council is running the controls directly, the contestants are already doing most of the work themselves.

Madison’s discovery that she can run Hannah the way Bella runs the system is the episode’s most significant development. The control architecture doesn’t stop at Bella. It cascades. Everyone in the glass house is simultaneously a subject and an instrument, and the smartest player in the room is the one who figures out fastest how to be both at once.


Human Made Art

Series artwork is hand drawn by Echo Doll. 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 manipulative elements depicted are fictional and intentional. Uniforms contains adult themes, suggestive content, haptic conditioning and surveillance dynamics.

All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context. ISNI 0000 0005 2877 6254

Glass Houses | Incognitoh: Glass House Cycle

Glass Houses | Incognitoh: Glass House Cycle

We demand the world we despise.

Five contestants move into the Glass House, a fully transparent competition space where privacy is a setting you toggle and suspicion is the only currency that matters.


Cast & Crew

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

Contestants

Madison – Pipp
Ashley – Jade
Hannah – Echo Doll
Zarah – Bun Li
Kim – Bliss Blank

House Staff

April, House Synthserv – Bliss Blank
Kitty, Season One Winner – Flux
Bella, Coven Leader – Dizzy Dollie

Note: April and Kim are both voiced by Bliss Blank, a production choice that becomes meaningful as the arc develops.

The Council

Cupcake
Geek
Jae
Shiney
Syndi Rella
Princess Ella
Kitten Azazel


Full Summary

Dramahh

The opening sequence delivers maximum drama in minimum time. Five contestants speak directly to camera in rotating confessional cuts: everyone’s wearing masks, everyone’s being watched, everyone thinks they’ve got the others figured out. The game show format is already doing its work before anyone has moved in. The sequence closes with all five voices landing on the same line in unison: it’s not a game anymore.

Moving In

The contestants arrive at the Glass House, a fully transparent competition space that functions as both a dollhouse and a surveillance installation. April, the house synthserv, introduces herself and the architecture: the walls are glass by default, but each contestant can say incognito to go opaque. The catch, which Kitty explains with cheerful precision, is that going private looks suspicious. If you hide, everyone wonders why. The rational strategy is visibility. The game is designed so that transparency feels like a choice.

Icon

Kitty walks the contestants through choosing their secret icon, the hidden identity they’ll spend the game protecting. April has already seen everything, including what Kim was doing in the shower, but what April sees isn’t the point. What the other contestants see is the point. Each player selects their icon in private. The questionnaire results are read back in rotating answers.  Someone has already told on themselves before the game has formally begun.

Immunity

The immunity challenge is explained with deliberate vagueness. The contestants go to their rooms. The walls go opaque. They can’t see each other but they can hear each other. The Council is watching. The challenge is to earn tokens by performing for the Council without being identified by the other contestants, who can press a stop button to expose them on the spot. The game rewards those who can perform without being recognized.

Council

Bella and the Council watch the immunity challenge from their observation room, commenting on each contestant’s performance with the appreciative detachment of people who have run this operation before. One of them notes that Milgram would be proud. Bella says they can all be earners – including the audience.

Earners

The immunity challenge begins. Each contestant performs in their room for the Council while trying to stay quiet enough that the others can’t identify them. Hannah is anxious about whether this is on television and is reassured that it won’t be shown. Kim loses control of the quiet part. Madison, listening from her red room, recognizes the voice immediately.

Exile

Madison hits the buzzer. The walls go clear. Kim is exposed mid-performance, visible to everyone in the house simultaneously. The humiliation is total and immediate.  Kim, in her exit interview, says she’d play again. She’d do it better.

She’d stay incognito.


Listen & Explore


Explanation

Glass Houses is Pink Noir: the pastel surveillance aesthetic pushed to its logical conclusion.

The architecture itself is the instrument of control and the most rational response to the system is also the most complete surrender to it. The Glass House is designed so that transparency feels like agency. You decide who sees, April tells them, and technically this is true. You can go opaque whenever you want. But going opaque looks suspicious, and suspicion is the one thing the game punishes without mercy.

The immunity challenge makes the same move at a more intimate scale. The contestants perform for the Council in private, behind opaque walls. Madison demonstrates that the containment was always illusory. The glass was never really off. The exposure was always available to anyone paying close enough attention.

Kim’s exit is the episode’s thesis delivered as comedy: she came in wanting to stay incognito and left having been the most visible person in the house. The whisper that follows her out is the audience’s voice as much as the Council’s.

The Incognitoh arc is Pink Noir because the horror is pretty, the cage is a dollhouse, and everyone inside it chose their room color.


Human Made Art

Series artwork is hand drawn by Echo Doll. 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 manipulative elements depicted are fictional and intentional. Glass Houses contains adult themes, suggestive content, surveillance dynamics, and gamified coercion. All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context. ISNI 0000 0005 2877 6254


Incognitoh Episode 2 cover art featuring a hand-drawn anime-style girl with pink pigtails and heart-shaped pupils holding a finger to her lips, surrounded by floating icons including a question mark, lightning bolt, mask, puppy, bottle, whip, and stars against a lavender background
Incognitoh, Episode 2 Glass Houses. She knows something. She just doesn’t know what yet. Hand-drawn art by Echo Doll.

 

Violet (Premiere) | Incognitoh: Ritual Cycle

Violet (Premiere) | Incognitoh: Ritual Cycle

Before the cameras rolled, there was Violet.

Violet Verdier follows a trail of half-remembered ritual into a stone circle where a coven is already waiting. The grounding techniques she learned turn out to have older origins than Lilly Ekimmu let on.

In this work of folk horror, the initiation began before she arrived.


Cast & Crew

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

Principal Cast

Violet Verdier – Flux
Lilly Ekimmu, Therapist – Bliss Blank
Bella, Coven Leader – Dizzy Dollie

The Coven

The Lady Aurora
Bun Li
Cupcake
Ella
Geek X
Jade
Kitten Azazel
Vampy McVampface
Steampunk Sarah
Tinsel


Full Summary

Office

Violet Verdier arrives for session 48 with Lilly Ekimmu, a licensed professional at Deep Dream Wellness in New Milford. Violet is anxious, fractured, convinced her past is visible to everyone around her. She keeps referencing a Pink Room she can’t fully describe and a person called Ash she can’t fully explain. Lilly guides her through the 3-3-3 grounding technique. It works.  Lilly sends her outside to touch grass. It’s all part of the process.

Stones

Violet follows Lilly’s instructions to a historic stone circle, recording a voice memo as she goes. She’s trying to be normal. The birds sound wrong. She runs the technique on herself and it works again, mostly, until the footsteps start and the drums begin underneath everything and the exercise starts to feel less like a coping mechanism and more like a preparation.

Ritual

The stone circle is occupied. Bella, the Coven Leader, greets Violet using Lilly’s exact language. The technique now functions as a ritual induction. Violet recognizes Lilly in the circle. The drums build. Violet finds that everything feels right again.

Integration

Back in the office, Lilly records an updated progress note.  The session closes with both of them counting together, Lilly and Violet in unison, the same rhythm from the stone circle now fully reframed. Lilly says they’re the offering. They just have to stay grounded.


Listen & Explore


Explanation

Violet is the Incognitoh arc’s origin story and its thesis statement delivered in one movement. The arc that follows is built around the machinery of observation, performance, and identity rewriting. Violet establishes where that machinery comes from.

The horror of Violet is that the tool and the ritual induction are formally identical. Lilly and Bella use the same language because they are running the same operation.

The Incognitoh arc will build a much more elaborate architecture of observation and performance on top of this foundation. Violet is where the foundation gets poured.


Human Made Art

Series artwork is hand drawn by Echo Doll. 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. The manipulative elements depicted are fictional and intentional.

Violet depicts the 3-3-3 grounding technique, a real evidence-based anxiety intervention, within a fictional context in which it has been weaponized as a ritual induction tool. This depiction is not clinical guidance, not a critique of grounding techniques, and not a representation of real therapeutic practice. If you are experiencing anxiety or psychological distress, please consult a qualified mental health professional. The fictional frame here is intentional and total.

All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context.

ISNI 0000 0005 2877 6254

Spiralstorm (Finale) | The Chthonic: Storm Cycle

Spiralstorm (Finale) | The Chthonic: Storm Cycle

We’re the Captain now.


Cast & Crew

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

Ship’s Crew

Olivia, Cruise Director – Bliss Blank
William, Ship Captain – Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Nika, Ship Maid – Echo Doll
Selene, Chief Purser – Syndi Rella
Mairead, Spa Manager – Bun Li
Fion, Chief Engineer – Jade

Guests

Alistair, CEO of Neuroplex – Jericho Caine
Holly, His Girlfriend – Dizzy Dollie
Emma, The Bride – Pipp
Brittany, Bridesmaid – Kitten Azazel
Kara, Bridesmaid – Tender Confusion
Sarah, Bridesmaid – Ring of Kees
Amanda, House Mother – Korrupted
Tiffany, Bridesmaid – Britt Reprogrammed


Full Summary (Spoilers0

Bind

The trifold resonance completes. Selene conducts. Bride, goddess, penitent, all three wrapped together and spiral-bound by flesh, voice, and purpose. Sarah can feel Emma directly, each wave of feeling amplifying into the next. Emma understands what she is at last: not a passenger, not a bride, but a bridge, sung into being before she had a name.

The Old Ones remember her. She remembers them.

Selene names what this moment actually is: real, temporary, chaotic power that breaks the architecture just long enough. Kara, watching the signal fracture, says let them try to buy this.

Then the music goes stupid.

Dead End

Olivia and Nikki arrive with gold stars and branded cruise-core maidwear and a sponsored rave overlay that repacks the trifold resonance as content. The eldritch melody has been remixed into a party anthem.  Nikki is tossing limited edition costumes into the crowd. Sarah and Emma stand in the wreckage of their transcendence and watch it become shuffleboard.

They sift through what remains and arrive at the question the arc has been building toward: what if something older than the algorithm ran the game instead? Something beyond exploitation, beyond platforms, beyond branding. Something that doesn’t care about ownership because it predates the concept entirely.

Selene and Kara debate the cost. To fully summon the ancient voices would mean chaos, possibly annihilation. Selene reveals what she is: not a person, not a purser, but a song given flesh.  Kara says they’re too close to the edge. Selene says that’s exactly why they have to jump.

Meanwhile Mairead confronts Fion about the betrayal. Fion argues that pragmatism is survival.  Mairead says there are no closed doors left. Then she calls out to Kara with the information Fion gave her in confidence: the bulkhead fracture at Echo-Nine, below the spa. A silence. Then Kara says let’s gamble everything as she deploys her tentacles.

The steel tears and the sirens begin.

Emergence

Water floods the corridors.  The ship is sinking for real and some of the people on it have stopped trying to stop it.

Olivia goes off script. Alistair calculates: claim the insurance, Dagon Dream will rebuild, they always do. Selene tells him she has insurance too, and ends Alistair’s story.

The Captain demands attention and insists on authority.  He doesn’t get to finish either.
Selene says simply: you were never steering.

Fion asks what they do now. Mairead holds her and says they swim or they sink but together. Sarah says their world, their rules, their rot, is going under. Emma says that’s how you find another one.  Nikki, terrified, asks if there’s something down there. Selene says there’s something. Waiting. Older than the maze.

The metal creaks. Kara says the maze ends here.  The whale song rises and the nautical bell rings and the Chthonic arc closes where it opened.


Listen & Explore


Explanation

The Chthonic arc has always been, at its structural core, a story about who owns the frame. The Captain and Olivia built a system designed to convert authentic experience into catalogued content.

SpiralStorm is the episode where that system encounters something it cannot commodify and responds the only way it knows how, by trying anyway, and gets purged for the attempt.

The Dagon Dream Group’s instinct, upon finding three women in genuine ecstatic communion with something ancient and uncontrollable, is to sponsor it. This is not a satirical exaggeration. Commodify Your Dissent, the Baffler’s foundational text on how consumer culture absorbs rebellion, describes exactly this mechanism: the system doesn’t suppress resistance, it rebrands it. Every act of genuine refusal becomes an aesthetic, a product line tossed into a sponsored crowd. Nikki handing out gold stars at the rave isn’t a deviation from the system. It is the system operating at peak efficiency.

Society of the Spectacle identified the mechanism half a century earlier: lived experience is progressively replaced by its representation, and representation is always available for purchase. The trifold resonance was real. The Ecstatic Awakening Night remix of it is the spectacle.

That’s what the Old Ones are in this arc. Not a supernatural threat but a structural one: an entity that predates ownership.  The Chthonic sinks not because the rebellion won but because the frame itself dissolved. Selene, who was always the sea, conducts the requiem.


Human Made Art

The poster image for this arc was created by Echo Doll in collaboration with Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns. Layer art overlays are used to vary each iteration of the image.


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.   SpiralStorm contains adult themes, ritualistic horror, consensual supernatural encounter, and suggestive content. All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context.

ISNI 0000 0005 2877 6254