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Chapter 31 - The TV Station

Cielo learned quickly that in the city, "Production Assistant" does not mean assisting production.

It means:

assisting everything… all at once… with urgency… and no clear instructions.

Jessa summed it up perfectly on the phone:

"So basically, you're a human shortcut."

Cielo stared at the stack of papers in her hands.

"I prefer 'manual system integration.'"

"That sounds worse."

"It is more accurate."

You're with her again, standing in front of a tall building with a giant LED screen outside.

A TV station.

Louder than offices.

Faster than school.

More chaotic than both combined.

Inside, everything moves like a scene already in the middle of filming.

Cables on the floor.

People with headsets running like deadlines are physically chasing them.

Someone shouting:

"LIVE IN FIVE!"

No one knows where five is.

But everyone is running toward it anyway.

"Cielo!" someone calls.

She turns.

A woman hands her a stack of cue sheets.

"Sort these by segment. Match with the script. Check if talent arrived. Also coffee."

Cielo blinks.

"…That is four jobs."

The woman is already walking away.

"Welcome to broadcast."

You follow her deeper into the station.

It feels less like a workplace and more like a system that survived multiple crashes but refuses to shut down.

Cielo sits at a desk labeled:

PRODUCTION ASSISTANT (READ: EVERYTHING ELSE)

She opens the papers.

No order.

No standard format.

Different handwriting. Different logic systems. Different chaos languages fighting for dominance.

"This is not standardized," she mutters.

A guy beside her laughs.

"Nothing here is standardized."

That's Kevin.

Same Kevin.

Quiet Kevin.

The one who also ended up here from an IT course that somehow led to everything except IT.

"You're here too?" Cielo asks.

He shrugs.

"No IT job. So… TV station."

Cielo nods slowly.

"System migration failure."

He smiles faintly.

"Yeah. Something like that."

And just like that—

two people trained to think in structured systems are now inside a building that runs on urgency, instinct, and panic memory.

A voice echoes through the hallway:

"WE NEED GRAPHICS FIXED!"

Another:

"SCRIPT CHANGED AGAIN!"

Another:

"WHERE IS THE TALENT?!"

Cielo stands.

Walks.

Fixes.

Adjusts.

Carries.

Not because she was trained for this exact chaos—

but because she recognizes something familiar:

When everything is broken, someone becomes the temporary structure.

You watch her move between rooms.

Control room: blinking screens and shouted instructions.

Editing bay: lives compressed into seconds.

Hallway: people eating instant noodles like it's a scheduled break.

At one point, a producer shoves a USB into her hand.

"Transfer this to editing. Now."

Cielo looks at it.

Then at the five other tasks already in her arms.

"…Which priority level is this?"

"All priority."

She nods.

"Then I will sequence it logically."

He's already gone.

Of course he is.

Jessa calls during a rare five-minute break.

"You sound tired," she says.

Cielo leans against a wall near the fire exit.

"I am operational."

"That is not an emotion."

"It is a current state."

Jessa laughs.

"So how's TV life?"

Cielo looks back through the glass doors.

Someone is running with a microphone.

Someone is fixing makeup under emergency lighting.

Someone is quietly panicking because they might go live with the wrong file.

"It is unstable," she says.

"And you?"

Cielo pauses.

"I am becoming the buffer system."

That night, the broadcast goes live.

Cielo is not on camera.

She is behind it.

Holding together timing, cues, graphics, scripts, and human panic.

"Cue talent in 3… 2… 1…"

Everything works.

Barely.

But it works.

When it ends, relief spreads through the control room like someone finally exhaled after holding their breath for an hour.

Someone taps her shoulder.

"Good job," Kevin says quietly.

Cielo nods.

"I prevented failure propagation."

He smiles.

"That's one way to put it."

You walk with her outside after shift.

The city night feels different here.

Less heat.

More noise.

More life that doesn't pause for exhaustion.

"You still talk like you're coding," Kevin says as they walk.

Cielo thinks.

"I am still thinking in systems."

He nods.

"That explains a lot."

They walk in silence after that.

Not awkward.

Just… aligned.

Later, in her small room—

Cielo opens her notebook.

Hands slightly sore.

Mind still running through cues, timing, errors, fixes.

She writes.

Entry: The TV Station

Today I learned that reality is a live broadcast.

Nothing is rehearsed. Everything is urgent.

She pauses.

Then adds:

And somehow… it still continues.

Another pause.

Longer.

I used to think I needed control.

Now I think I just need to keep things from collapsing completely.

She closes the notebook.

Leans back.

Exhales.

Outside, the city keeps broadcasting itself.

No edits.

No rehearsals.

No clean cuts.

And Cielo—

once a girl who preferred systems that obeyed—

is now part of one that never stops changing.

Not controlling it.

Not mastering it.

Just holding it together.

One cue.

One file.

One moment at a time.

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