"What if the gods never left?"
Enter the MysteryHumanity was engineered by the Protosapiens — towering 20-to-30-foot beings who evolved on Earth millions of years before us. They built the pyramids. They created the energy grid. They made us.
Driven by qualities their creators never predicted — pride, wrath, ingenuity — humans rose up and slaughtered their gods in a rebellion so violent it shaped every myth and religion on Earth.
In the aftermath, a shadowy group called the Custodians buried the truth. They fabricated every religious doctrine. They engineered every holy war. They rewrote history itself. The presidents, CEOs, and popes who appear to run the world are unwitting pawns who don't have a clue.
But the Protosapiens never truly disappeared. A small tribe survives — hidden in plain sight, camouflaged as the mountains themselves — watching, waiting, and subtly guiding humanity's evolution. Until now.
The Great Flood was a Custodian-ordered purge. The Tower of Babel was divide-and-conquer. The Garden of Eden was propaganda. Space exploration is a distraction — the answers lie beneath our feet.
Harambe. Brexit. Trump. The pandemic. P'Nut the squirrel. Timeline shifts engineered by desperate Protosapiens fraying reality itself. Every Mandela Effect is a scar in the fabric of the world.
Dogs weren't bred by humans. They were engineered by the Protosapiens to observe us. Man's best friend? Think again. The suburbs, the white picket fence, the 9-to-5 — all of it is a cage designed to feel like freedom.
Stone-like skin. Glowing veins. Six-fingered hands. They don't hide underground — they are the mountains. Their arms buried under millennia of rock and soil, dormant but alive, waiting.
The Protosapiens evolve on Earth alongside dinosaurs. Not extraterrestrial — Earth's true first civilization. They survive the asteroid event and emerge to reshape the planet.
Humans are engineered as one of many species — alongside the Anunnaki, Neanderthals, Denisovans, and stranger failures. Australia becomes their R&D lab. The duckbilled platypus is, quite literally, a rough draft.
The Custodians — human collaborators — manipulate the masses into rising against their creators. The Protosapiens, small in number, are overwhelmed. All but a hidden tribe are destroyed.
When humanity turns on the Custodians, they respond with stolen Protosapien technology. 95% of humans are wiped out. The Custodians survive inside the pyramids and rebuild civilization — with themselves in control.
Every religion fabricated. Every holy war instigated. Every excavation suppressed. Göbekli Tepe banned for 150 years. The LHC unknowingly built atop Protosapien ruins. The timeline frays.
The pyramids were never tombs. Göbekli Tepe, Stonehenge, Teotihuacan, Yonaguni, Nan Madol — they're nodes in a global energy network harnessing geomagnetic fields, piezoelectric effects, and acoustic resonance.
The Large Hadron Collider sits on dormant Protosapien structures. The "discoveries" aren't from collisions — they're from what's beneath. Every anomaly is the grid flickering back to life.
Brilliant, disillusioned, and about to break the law. Elara conducts a covert excavation at Göbekli Tepe — a site banned for over 150 years — alone, with no safety net. What she finds will unravel everything.
Think Brad Pitt in The Big Short — subdued intensity, quiet cynicism, controlled chaos. Former journalist blacklisted for exposing pharmaceutical corruption. He coined "Protosapiens." He's close to the truth — but doesn't know about the Custodians.
The only person alive who knows the complete history. Torn between maintaining the status quo and exposing everything to stop what's coming.
Massive. Translucent. Ghostlike in dense fog. Broke from the surviving tribe, convinced humanity is a failed experiment. Feeds truth fragments through artifacts and dreams. His endgame: force humanity to face its origins — or be destroyed.
Charismatic. Controlled. A senior Custodian operative who genuinely believes the truth would destroy civilization. He's not evil — he's afraid. And that makes him far more dangerous than any fanatic.
Paced like 24. Mysterious like Prometheus. Paranoid like The X-Files. Every episode ends with a revelation that recontextualizes everything before it.
Months before the series premieres, fictional podcasts, news outlets, and interactive content appear in the real world. Characters build authentic audiences before threads converge around the mythology.
By the time the show airs, audiences won't be sure where fiction ends and reality begins.
Launch all podcasts with unrelated backlogs. Build authentic personas. No story connections.
All podcasts reference the same Göbekli Tepe article. Curiosity builds. Threads cross.
Ben's media tour. Smear campaign. Subterranean chambers discovered. Ben vindicated.
Full convergence. Glitches. Broadcast interruptions. Fiction bleeds into reality. The series premieres.
Ancient mysteries. Suppressed knowledge. Ben coined "Protosapiens" — but he doesn't know the half of it. His theories are close enough to be dangerous, and wrong enough to be tragic.
A lighthearted morning show that has no idea what it's about to stumble into. Mikey believes in Bigfoot. Jules is a sarcastic ex-journalist with her signature coffee mug. Her growing curiosity becomes the bridge.
A bearded psychologist exploring near-death experiences and the unknown with quiet warmth. His vintage wristwatch and handwritten journal hide a growing awareness that something ancient is communicating.
Oxford-educated rational skeptic. Bestselling debunker. Dismantles conspiracies with calm precision — until the evidence starts piling up. His final episode: an anonymous package containing an artifact he can't explain.
The CNN parallel. Custodian-controlled without knowing it. Publishes the Week 5 Göbekli Tepe article. Later dismisses Ben as a dangerous influencer.
The NYT/Atlantic parallel. Publishes the devastating smear: "The Dangerous World of Ben Cross: Inside the Conspiracy Machine."
The Infowars parallel. First to publish Protosapien leads. Defends Ben fiercely. Mixes real clues with Custodian-planted misinformation.
The BuzzFeed/Vice parallel. Lighthearted conspiracy coverage that stumbles onto real threads. Accidentally becomes the most important outlet in the story.
Transmedia ARGs have driven some of the most successful launches in entertainment history. The Silent Architects doesn't just use the ARG as marketing — it makes the ARG the product, building audiences months before the first frame airs.
Target audience: fans of Westworld, Dark, Prometheus, The X-Files. Podcast listeners. Conspiracy enthusiasts. Anyone who's ever Googled "Göbekli Tepe" at 2 AM.