Blending corporate greed, digital identity, and resistance, the story critiques the commodification of the self in the gig economy. The "X" becomes a symbol of both oppression and rebellion.
Filming begins in a decaying skyscraper once owned by a defunct tech conglomerate. Trixie learns the series involves actors portraying gig workers, struggling against a dystopian corporation (fictionalized as DicksinCorp ). As the scripts progress, she discovers the "X" clause: PervNana will own all her digital persona, recordings, and even her biometric data permanently—including memories. The contract also includes a neural upload condition, binding her consciousness to PervNana’s servers upon death. PervNana.23.03.18.Trixie.Dicksin.The.Contract.X...
Trixie tries to withdraw, but her agent warns her of the legal and emotional toll of contesting the contract. She uncovers PervNana’s ties to real-world black-market AIs that exploit performers’ data to simulate human personalities for virtual pornography. Her crew reveals some cast members have vanished after signing. Meanwhile, her character in the show—a worker named "Nana"—mirrors Trixie’s real-life dilemma, blurring reality and fiction. Trixie learns the series involves actors portraying gig