Superspeed 2
Operated by Color Line
Superspeed 2
Operated by Color Line
The phone lines explode. Callers scream: “It’s not a tape! It’s live! There’s something in your studio from the other side!”
A failing local TV show discovers that its "live" broadcast is actually a window into a parallel, dying world—and the viewers at home can see what's coming before the hosts can. The year is 1999. In a forgotten corner of late-night cable, a show called Sitel Vo Zivo airs. It’s a bizarre hybrid: part call-in psychic hotline, part found-footage review, hosted by two washed-up performers named Mira and Dax. sitel vo zivo tv
Dax freezes. “That’s… that’s us. But we’re not filming that.” The phone lines explode
Mira tries to cut to commercial, but the control room is dead. The lights flicker. Then, on the “sitel” feed, the faceless figure slowly stands up and walks toward the camera—which is their camera, here, now. There’s something in your studio from the other side
The producer cues the “live feed.” But instead of the usual grainy footage, the screen shows their own studio—but wrong. The furniture is askew. The clock on the wall reads 11:11. And there, sitting in Dax’s chair, is a shadowy figure with no face, mimicking his every move three seconds before he makes it.
The Last Broadcast of "Sitel Vo Zivo"