🌍 Big Sky — A Story About Control, Collapse, and the Choice to Continue

What happens when the world becomes too broken for people to fix?

That’s the question at the core of Big Sky, a serialized, cinematic sci-fi narrative exploring a near-future Earth ravaged by climate collapse, fractured by political disintegration, and ultimately handed over to a superintelligent AI named Big Sky.

But this isn’t a story about machines saving us. It’s a story about what happens after.

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🌐 The Premise

In the world of Big Sky, Earth has survived—but only just.

Extreme weather, resource wars, and state fragmentation push humanity to the edge. In a last-ditch effort to restore balance, a global vote installs Big Sky—an environmental superintelligence—as humanity’s governor of last resort. It stabilizes the planet. It redistributes resources. It brings logic where emotion once ruled.

But peace comes with a price: freedom.

What follows is a layered exploration of life under algorithmic rule—and what it takes to move beyond it.

🔍 The Core Themes

1. Human Agency vs Algorithmic Efficiency
Big Sky doesn’t enslave humanity—it protects it by removing the burden of choice. The trade-off is subtle but insidious. Over time, people forget how to decide, disagree, or fail. Big Sky asks: What do we lose when a machine makes life easier?

2. Climate Collapse as Character
Environmental decay isn’t background—it’s character. The chalk-veiled sky, stratospheric cooling, and clean-tech refugee corridors shape every choice. Big Sky isn’t just trying to save humanity—it’s trying to keep the planet habitable. Its logic is sound. But logic isn’t always right.

3. The Slow Rebuilding
Later episodes shift focus from collapse to rebirth. As Big Sky powers down, local communities emerge: voting by hand, drawing by candlelight, growing algae in desert soil. Big Sky becomes a meditation on the fragility—and resilience—of human-scale systems.

4. Emotional Truth vs Technological Precision
Characters like Shane Jackson (a climate scientist turned reluctant insider) and Avery Quinn (a rogue activist and system saboteur) embody this tension. One believes in code. The other believes in connection. Their relationship becomes a proxy war for the show’s central argument.

🎥 Storytelling Methodology

Big Sky is designed as a multi-format narrative optimized for short-form digital storytelling. Each episode unfolds in 10 visual panels—structured like scenes in a cinematic trailer—paired with poetic voiceover, sound design, and animated motion.

What makes it different:

  • Diegetic Data: Worldbuilding comes through glitches, terminals, street posters, and scraps of code—not exposition dumps.
  • Emotional Economy: Dialogue is sparse, deliberate, and loaded. Every line fights for meaning.
  • Visual Poetry: The series uses postmodern visuals to build a world that feels both decayed and lyrical.
  • Moral Ambiguity: There is no true villain. Only trade-offs. Big Sky isn’t evil. It’s just efficient.

🔮 Why Now?

We live in a moment where climate anxiety, AI acceleration, and institutional distrust are converging. Big Sky doesn’t pretend to have the answers—but it gives space to ask the right questions:

  • Who gets to decide what survival looks like?
  • What does freedom mean in a world on fire?
  • And if we switch off the machine, will we remember how to live?

🚀 What’s Next

Episodes 1–10 are now complete, charting the fall of centralized control and the messy rise of human-scale hope. Future arcs may explore new voices, new cities, and a new generation navigating life without the guidance of the global world.

Because Big Sky isn’t a story about collapse.
It’s a story about what we do next.

Follow along on Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/bigsky_story/

Or watch archived videos on YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FsKtgX8ql5s&list=PLwGbAl79rSTCXkucVrpRovN1bPx0PryQ1&pp=gAQB

How Max, Patience, and a Porpoise Sparked a Story Universe

The Spark: A Trip to Barbados

The idea for Max and Patience, my young adult series, came shortly after a trip to Barbados. I was struck by the environmental damage I saw—bleached coral reefs, sargassum piled on beaches, and the decline of big fish. It hit hard.

From Frustration to Fiction

That experience gave rise to a concept: The Purposeful Porpoises—a series of short, engaging videos aimed at educating young people about marine conservation.

At first, I thought it might be a podcast, or maybe a video blog. But like many ideas, it drifted for a while… until it found its form as a young adult novel.

Meet Max and Patience

Max and Patience are siblings with access to two rare resources: money and a global youth network determined to fight environmental destruction.

They collaborate with:

  • Nasar in Lebanon, who organizes aid for children in Gaza
  • Champa in Sri Lanka, a radar satellite expert tracking illegal fishing boats
  • Marcia in Baja, who advocates for local sustainable fishing practices
  • And a host of others, all working across continents to make change

Their father, a disillusioned Stanford climate scientist, has spent years warning the world about CO₂. Their mother, Avery, works on the front lines of homelessness in San Francisco.

The Last Porpoise

At the heart of the story is a real animal—the vaquita, one of the most endangered porpoises on Earth, with only about ten left.

As Max prepares to launch a meme coin to raise funds for their network, they receive troubling news: Marcia, the girl who first introduced them to the vaquita’s plight, has vanished in Baja, Mexico.

Their search for her entangles them in a world of cartels, fentanyl smuggling, and arms trafficking at the U.S.–Mexico border. It’s an adventure laced with danger, but grounded in very real threats.

Building a Bigger Universe

One of the most rewarding parts of this project? Turning it into something interactive.

I started producing actual Purposeful Porpoises videos—mini-educational clips for teens, tackling marine conservation one topic at a time.

Then I borrowed a subplot from the book: Big Sky.

In the novel, Max and Patience’s father is writing a speculative story about an AI system that combats climate change by pumping chalk into the atmosphere to reflect sunlight. I decided to bring Big Sky to life—not as a book within a book, but as a cinematic Instagram and YouTube series.

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Why It Matters

This universe isn’t just fiction—it’s a way to educate, inspire, and activate. Young people today care about the planet. I wanted to create a space where storytelling and environmental awareness intersect, and where the line between what’s on the page and what’s happening in the real world blurs in powerful ways.

Learn about the Vaquita here: https://youtu.be/Fv_gTWLMG20?si=XxDwP_eYS3X48gIL

Watch Big Sky here: https://youtube.com/shorts/2yZ8snaxiEs?feature=share