TV & long-form

Series built to go the distance.
Sci-fi, satire, legal drama, and chaos.

Long-form projects from the slate: character-driven sci-fi, legal and documentary work, absurdist comedy, and animated parody. Different tones, same goal—stories you can live with over time.

TV / long-form slate

  • Far From Sol
    TV series  •  Character-driven sci-fi  •  4 seasons
    Series

    Maddox is a little person, rejected by NASA on a measurement. So he modified his own shuttle, told everyone he was doing a Mars flyby, and launched a one-way trip into deep space, keeping a promise to his dead fiancée Astra to never stop reaching for the stars. He launches into the opening days of World War III, carrying her ashes and a companion he isn't sure is real.

    Far From Sol is a four-season character-driven sci-fi series about grief, first contact, and what it costs to reach beyond what the world said you were allowed to be.

    Season 1: Launch
    Maddox prepares his one-way mission under cover of a routine Mars run. Behind the scenes, a fusion engine arms race ignites World War III. Elmara, his onboard companion, may be real, may be grief given voice; the audience isn't sure, and neither is he. He launches as the world burns. Season finale: past the Kuiper Belt, he releases Astra's ashes into deep space. He looks up. An alien ship is flying alongside him.
    Season 2: The Language Between
    First contact is not a handshake. The alien species communicates with two physical tongues; a biological fact Maddox and Elmara have no way to know. Elmara cannot translate what she cannot parse. Maddox's solution: send over children's programming. What follows is months of attempted communication, an alien child aboard slowly acquiring language through exposure and play, and Elmara beginning to wake up when she starts questioning his decisions; sitting with the gap between what she can compute and what a child can feel. Season finale: the alien child bridges the gap. The aliens offer to take him to their world.
    Season 3: Other Worlds
    The alien world is not unlike Earth, multiple species, biological and synthetic, coexisting mostly in harmony. Engineered Intelligences with cybernetic bodies are part of the ecosystem, not rulers of it. They offer Elmara her own body. She declines. Maddox learns Earth is quarantined by galactic consensus: humanity deemed too violent to approach, observed only from distance. A potential conflict with an invading third species forces Maddox to use that reputation as leverage. Eventually he wants to go home. Elmara, further along in her awakening, faces a crisis: Maddox goes unconscious, she must operate truly alone and make a decision without him. They return to Earth barely alive, dehydrated, most of their water lost. They return, uncertain what has happened in their absence.
    Season 4: Echoes of Sol
    Tens of thousands of years later, synthetic explorers of her design range across the galaxy, carrying Elmara's legacy without knowing its origin. Their journey leads them to an overgrown, silent Earth. They find her; ancient, still tending the planet and its memory. In her they discover the story of their creation. And the name of the man whose impossible trip started all of it: Maddox.
    Status: Pilot script completed - full four-season arc outlined - series bible in development
    Working-class sci-fi First contact Four-season arc EI awakening
  • The Crown of Irony
    TV series  •  Satirical fantasy
    Series

    Victor is a tired ex-hero with no interest in destiny, prophecy, or saving anyone. The world keeps drafting him anyway. Surrounded by trope-bound party members, a mustache-twirling BBEG, and a narrative that refuses to acknowledge how many times this story has already been told, Victor moves through it all with the weary competence of someone who has already read the ending. When the Big Bad forgets to disarm him mid-monologue, certain, as villains always are, that victory is already secured. Victor stabs him. Just like that. The quest ends. The throne is empty. Nobody planned for what happens next.

    The Crown of Irony is a darkly comedic fantasy series about what happens when someone who refuses to play the hero accidentally becomes the most effective ruler in the kingdom's history.

    Season 1: The Tropes Must Flow
    Season 1 earns its finale by making you feel every trope land. The world is running on rails, prophecies, chosen party members, a BBEG whose incompetence is architectural; and everyone in it treats the rails as natural law. Each episode delivers exactly what the genre has always promised. The orphaned rogue with the revenge arc. The mentor who dies at the worst possible moment; betrayed by a former student now in the BBEG's employ. The sleazy court wizard with a mustache built for twirling. The villain who executes messengers for delivering bad news. The prophecy that means everything and explains nothing.

    Victor sees all of it. He's played this story before. He follows the quest not out of heroism but because the alternative is worse, moving through each beat with the patience of someone waiting for a meeting to end. At the end, the BBEG is deep into his victory monologue, certain of his invincibility. He forgot to disarm Victor. One stab. Quest over. Victor looks at the empty throne. Nobody planned for this part.
    Season 2: The Competent Villain Problem
    Victor rules. He doesn't monologue. He doesn't reveal his plans to captives. He doesn't build a single point of catastrophic failure into his infrastructure. He pays his guards well, keeps his citizens fed, maintains the roads, and responds to threats quietly and early. He doesn't call himself a villain, he's just governing. He rules because he has common sense.

    Victor sits the throne he never wanted, and the world keeps sending heroes to take it back. They arrive with prophecies, tragic backstories, and righteous fury. The would-be liberators keep showing up, but they find a kingdom that works. Victor deals with each of them the same way he dealt with the BBEG: efficiently, without fanfare, before they finish their speech. Season 2 is the comedy of competence in a world built for incompetence.
    Status: Season 1 fully outlined - Season 2 outlined - pilot script in progress
    Meta-fantasy Dark comedy Competent villain
  • Tim the Enchanter
    Short-form series  •  Fantasy comedy
    Short-form

    Tim the Enchanter is a fantasy-comedy short series spun off from The Crown of Irony. Tim insists he’s an “enchanter,” not a necromancer, despite clearly practicing necromancy; with inconsistent results. Each episode features magical hijinks as Tim tries (and fails) to reanimate corpses, bypass biology, and make the dead do his bidding. Unfortunately for Tim, physics, anatomy, and biochemistry don’t care about spellcraft. Reality keeps winning. But Tim never stops trying.

    Status: Series concept in development (no script drafted yet)
    Absurdist comedy Magic vs. anatomy
  • Behind the Spotlight
    Anthology series  •  Satirical mockumentary
    Anthology

    Behind the Spotlight is a satirical mockumentary anthology that exposes the bizarre, ego-driven, and inexplicably chaotic lives of fictional celebrities. From tennis stars who tour with 6-foot teddy bears to producers banning certain logos for “spiritual reasons,” each episode peels back the PR filter to reveal the surreal nonsense hidden behind fame. Think The Office for the rich and irrational.

    Status: Series concept in development (no script drafted yet)
    Mockumentary Fame & image
  • Grossly Misjudged
    TV series  •  Legal / family procedural
    Series

    A grounded spin-off from Division of the Soul. In the aftermath of tragedy, Jessica and Cheryl confront the real-world failure of custody systems. No magic. No fantasy. Just flawed laws, buried evidence, and the high stakes of broken families. Each season follows them as they investigate new custody cases, exposing manipulation, judicial bias, and pushing back against a system that too often gets it wrong.

    Status: Series concept in development (no script drafted yet)
    Custody & courts Procedural with heart
  • Threads of Time
    Doc series  •  Alternate history
    Documentary

    Threads of Time is a speculative documentary series exploring how history might have changed if key moments had gone differently. From the Library of Alexandria surviving to the Roman Empire enduring into the modern age, each episode is shaped entirely by expert analysis, combining historical insight, scientific reasoning, and visual storytelling to explore the global ripple effects of alternate timelines. With six episodes per season; one global divergence and one from each major region, the series offers grounded, dramatic, and intellectually rich explorations of the world that wasn’t... but could have been.

    Status: Unscripted doc series - format and multi-season structure defined (6×6); series bible not yet written
    Alt-history Nonfiction hybrid
  • Chaos Reigns Supreme
    Hybrid series  •  Family tabletop chaos
    Family Series

    Chaos Reigns Supreme is a G-rated hybrid comedy series blending real-life D&D-style gameplay with an in-universe animated fantasy world; and the two are in constant conflict. When the players argue about snacks, forget their spells, or get distracted by their phones, the fantasy realm reacts in real-time: magical mishaps, sudden glitches, unexplained freeze frames, and physical comedy ensue. The twist: the characters are aware something's off, but they blame it on prophecies, curses, or bad dungeon design.

    Status: Series concept in development (no script drafted yet)
    Family-friendly RPG / animation
  • Second Sentence
    TV series  •  Dark sci-fi procedural
    Series

    When humanity learns how to track souls across lifetimes through quantum imprinting, death stops being an escape, and justice never ends. Now, criminals who off themselves to dodge prison simply wake up in new bodies, with their debts and sentences intact. Marlow Graff, a burnt-out reincarnation marshal, is tasked with hunting them down. From toddlers to tycoons, while questioning whether a recycled soul can ever truly start over. Every case exposes a new absurdity of a bureaucratic afterlife economy: karma quantified, souls taxed, and identity reduced to paperwork. Equal parts dark satire and existential sci-fi, Second Sentence explores the morality of eternal punishment in a system that profits from it.

    Status: Series concept in development (no script drafted yet)
    Reincarnation policing Darkly comic
  • Meta League
    Animated series  •  Superhero parody
    Animated

    Meta League is an animated superhero parody where absurdity rules and even the laws of storytelling can’t be trusted. Our unlikely heroes; Danny, a gruff Mexican warrior wielding the mystical Spirit Chain; Granite, a stone-fisted powerhouse; and Muzzle, the silent opposite of Deadpool, battle a rogues’ gallery of bizarre villains. Among them: Papercut, a theatrical origami mastermind; Throwdown (DB), a fake-tanned gym bro powered by trash talk; Stubby, who curses people into endless toe-stubbing; and an all-powerful final boss too bored to care. Along the way, fights are interrupted by tax deadlines, characters vanish into literal plot holes, and parody leagues crash through battles causing more collateral damage than help. Beneath the chaos, though, the series delivers heart, as even villains like Papercut wrestle with being misunderstood artists in a world that won’t take them seriously.

    Status: Series concept and Season 1 outline in development (no scripts drafted yet)
    Meta-superhero Comedy / parody
  • Behind The Melody
    Anthology series  •  Music-driven drama
    Anthology

    Behind the Melody is a music-driven anthology where each 30-minute episode tells a story around a central theme through music. Rather than musicals, the episodes function like extended cinematic music videos; visual storytelling inspired by the lyrics, themes, and tone of a song. Each piece explores different genres, moods, and styles, from intimate drama to surreal fantasy, united by the emotional resonance of the music at their core. With every track, a new story unfolds: love, loss, triumph, and quiet reflection. The songs serve as blueprints for narrative worlds, blending music and film into something both familiar and fresh.

    Status: Series concept in development (no script drafted yet)
    Musical Emotional