1. A Blueprint For Madness

1. A Blueprint For Madness

Released Tuesday, 9th February 2021
 3 people rated this episode
1. A Blueprint For Madness

1. A Blueprint For Madness

1. A Blueprint For Madness

1. A Blueprint For Madness

Tuesday, 9th February 2021
 3 people rated this episode
Rate Episode

Episode Transcript

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0:00

Tomorrow's Monsters as a production

0:02

of My Heart Radio Flynn Picture Company,

0:05

Psycopia Pictures and Upper Room

0:07

Productions, Monday

0:12

Mars

0:14

to subject oh three b tomorrow.

0:17

Jessup. We are currently

0:19

at hours

0:21

without sleep. Patient reporting

0:23

agitation and lack of focus, several hours

0:26

sooner than the last dose. Are

0:28

you feeling a tired

0:34

coming down? I think any

0:36

side effects since last night? Um?

0:40

A little ringing in my ear?

0:43

Which one so

0:47

the left ear? Anything

0:50

else? Mood

0:52

swings? Are

0:54

you upset? No?

0:58

But you are cry Why

1:00

are you just

1:05

emotional? The

1:07

voices too? Voices?

1:12

Yeah? Have

1:14

you talked to Dr Berkeley about that? I'm

1:18

not gonna tell you that. Excuse me?

1:21

No, um no, no, no

1:23

not let me call Dr Berkeley. Don't. I don't

1:25

need your shrink. Sorry,

1:30

I'm fine, really, I'm fine, okay,

1:37

And you haven't been feeling ill physically

1:40

ill. Look, can

1:43

we get on with it and dose me already? We can do the Dog and

1:45

Pony show some other time. Yeah,

1:47

it's important to collect these data points before.

1:50

I'm sorry. I'm

1:52

sorry. I just need the

1:54

fog to go away, all

1:59

right? All right.

2:02

For the record, this is round thirteen with

2:04

dosage of two full exposures five

2:08

PRF five seconds each, eyes

2:11

forward, deep, breath

2:15

ready, Yes, here's

2:18

exposure one.

2:22

Keep breathing tomorrow, tomorrow,

2:28

tomorrow. Okay,

2:37

that was exposure one. Patient

2:39

is responsive. Heart rate spike to two, but

2:41

seems to be stabilizing. Okay,

2:45

let's go through the questions. What

2:47

was your first thought? M Red

2:51

balloons? What did you smell? Cut

2:53

grass? Any tinkling feeters?

2:55

Sleep in phase two?

2:59

Breathe deep, let the blood

3:01

get back to your head. I don't remember

3:03

starting that one. I

3:06

went deep that time, ready

3:10

for exposure to yes,

3:15

okay, and three two

3:18

and it

3:22

was number thirteen. Administered tomorrow

3:31

ship goodmorrow,

3:39

h m

3:59

hm M Christ.

4:14

Where am I? Would you like me

4:16

to go online to determine location?

4:18

No, stay offline. Just tell

4:21

me the last man mark? Can we passed twenty

4:25

eight miles west of Urica, Nevada? Anything

4:28

else I can help with? Pull over?

4:31

Okay? Pulling over for

4:33

safety. Please keep your seat belt on until

4:36

I come to a complete stop. It's

4:44

January, January seven

4:47

am. Everywhere

4:50

I look, I see monsters and ghosts, headlights

4:54

in the rear view. It

4:56

feels like everyone is out to get me. M's

5:00

in any runs in the world. At

5:02

least there's there one

5:04

of the benefits of taking backwards less

5:07

chances for me to get tagged by facial recognition

5:09

or motion idea. I'm

5:12

using old unalog paper maps. My

5:15

father taught me to use them instead of virtual maps

5:17

when you need to stay off the radar, which is exactly

5:19

why I have to do. I'm also avoiding

5:22

all major interstates and stities, which makes me

5:24

harder to track, but

5:26

it will take longer. It's the

5:28

best chance I have to make it across country to Arlington,

5:31

Virginia without getting calls. At

5:36

least the scenic son

5:38

is coming up now and sage

5:40

brush for days this

5:44

drive. You know, it's the

5:46

first chance I've had to think to put all

5:48

the pieces together in my head. I

5:52

wasn't sure where to begin, but

5:54

now I know. Let

5:56

me play you something. This

6:01

is Dr Cassandra Berkeley. It's Sunday, June

6:03

six, Session three, subject

6:06

Max Fuller. Okay,

6:10

let's revisit the lake, the

6:13

frozen lake. I

6:15

don't see why we need to throw on that. Let's

6:17

close your eyes. Okay,

6:21

good, a deep breath.

6:26

Good, Now

6:30

you are there. Tell

6:32

me what you see, not

6:34

what you remember, but what

6:37

you see a

6:41

boy.

6:44

Where is the boy? He's

6:47

lying flat on a finch she device

6:50

cracking beneath him,

6:52

spreading his arms and legs out as wide

6:55

as possible. He's

6:57

taking slow, shallow

7:01

breath. He's trying to distribute

7:03

the weight evenly so it doesn't fall through the eyes. This

7:06

is struggling. Is Max to remain

7:08

lifeless? Max Follow? Any small

7:11

motion is an excerpt from his hychiatric session.

7:14

I've been listening to it looking

7:16

for new clues. He's praying for someone

7:18

to see

7:21

him out there, to

7:23

see him before it gets dark,

7:27

and what if you want? Most

7:30

of all, he

7:32

wants father. And

7:36

now it's true. This actually happened to Max

7:38

Follow when he was a child. I know because

7:40

he told me one night as a guy

7:42

on his own product. This

7:44

is a blueprint for madness. This is

7:46

how monsters gets made. My

7:50

name is Jack

7:54

Jack Lock. I'm

7:57

not a journalist, so the telling of this maybe

7:59

a little distract printed. I'm not

8:01

a neuroscientist or a bioengineer.

8:04

So I almost was once and so I

8:06

can offer some perspective in that regard. So

8:10

am I other than a

8:12

fee for an addict, A con manner,

8:14

conspirator and I'm nothing

8:17

man and nobody

8:20

that. Despite this, I'm asking you to believe

8:22

exactly what I'm going to tell you. You You may

8:26

know Max Fuller, but

8:28

you probably have no idea what kind of man he really

8:30

is. But you need to know.

8:33

It is vitally important that you know that

8:35

the world knows who Max Fuller really is,

8:38

and that he may be responsible for the single

8:40

greatest spike in human evolution since the

8:42

dawn of mankind. It

8:44

hasn't happened to emper. Oh, it's

8:46

about to. You see. Max Fuller's

8:48

work is going to change the world,

8:52

and we need to stop him at all costs.

8:56

All right, But I'm

8:58

getting ahead of myself, and I

9:00

need to catch you up because I don't have

9:03

much time left, and several

9:05

people already did. We

9:14

have some breaking news in southwest Oakland right

9:16

now a death investigation. A woman's body

9:19

was found this morning in an appearance suicide.

9:21

Officers have non confirmment as of yet

9:24

to be a homicide. Orders were trying to determine

9:26

how this man fell some thirteen stories

9:28

to his death. As soon as we have more

9:31

information, will bring it to you. Some of them

9:33

died of apparent suicides or

9:35

within three months of completing the first

9:37

clinical trial of Maths Fullest human

9:40

enhancement products. Of

9:42

course, this is a connection the CORPS never made,

9:44

or maybe we're not allowed to. Coincidentally,

9:48

around that time Max Fullest startup Next

9:50

Corps was ordered to temporarily suspend

9:52

testing by the Human Enhancement Administration

9:55

for violating safety protocourse. It

9:58

was legally at least minor refraction

10:02

disappointed that the A has chosen

10:04

to penalize Next Court, but in good

10:07

faith, we will openly welcome the investigation

10:10

and will further continue to comply

10:12

with a d e A and

10:14

f d A guidelines as we developed our

10:17

product pipeline. We welcome.

10:19

The product pipeline that Max Fuller is

10:21

referring to is his entire menu of

10:23

mind apps, the sort of software

10:26

platform that feeds directly to the human

10:28

brain, reprogramming our new

10:30

code and allowing us to author ourselves

10:32

and enhance our existence in ways that were previously

10:35

unimaginable, creating

10:37

what Max Follo caused his human

10:39

two point oh. But you

10:41

know, no one's ever thinking how the side effects not

10:44

just for the individual, what are the repercussions

10:46

for civilization when we give corporations

10:49

direct access to our fucking brains. At

10:52

what point are we no longer just consumers?

10:54

At what point do we become their

10:56

product? No

10:59

one thing. Even though they never

11:01

stopped testing these mind apps, it's not too late.

11:04

It's not too late to stop when Max Fellers started.

11:08

But of course I need to

11:10

get to him first, and

11:12

I'm almost off time. Jenny,

11:18

Hello Jack, let's

11:20

go. Please buckle your seatbelt,

11:47

brax foller. Everybody. Imagine

11:58

getting a third more out of life.

12:03

More time. Our

12:05

greatest resource, greater

12:08

than energy, food, air,

12:11

anything, really is

12:13

simply time, time

12:16

to do the things you really care about. And

12:19

I'm not talking about living longer now,

12:22

I'm talking about living better, fuller.

12:27

Imagine a world that never

12:30

sleeps. Literally

12:34

Thomas Edison did, and

12:36

so did my father. And

12:39

we've been up to something very special

12:41

at Next Corporate, a secret

12:43

project called shut

12:45

Up Secret

12:49

until now. It's

12:51

a safe application with one very

12:53

simple benefit. You

12:57

never have to sleep again. M

13:08

Max Fuller has been developing these technologies

13:11

for over a decade, and

13:13

now it should be pointed out that these sources of

13:15

efforts have been going on for the vast bulk of

13:18

human history. Indigenous

13:20

cultures have been using plants to alter consciousness

13:22

for centuries, and humans have been

13:24

drinking caffeine for as long as we've been able to heat

13:27

water. Now you jumped

13:29

to a few decades ago, the entire conscious

13:31

world was living on adorable wars

13:34

steroids and modafinil, Noah

13:36

tropics, and an endless h a list of other

13:38

barely legal designer drugs. Then

13:41

we advancements of Noah tropics, stacks

13:43

and AI chip implants. We were able to treat

13:46

the orders better than ever and boost

13:48

our abilities in incredible ways. Cochleay

13:51

implants drastically improved our hearing

13:54

Corny when plants that allowed us to see in

13:56

the dark. And then came the brain

13:58

computer interface, and

14:00

then no technology gave us thought. With we

14:04

started to become cyborgs, a superhuman.

14:07

We could think faster and run farther

14:09

than humans ever had. But

14:13

none of the drugs of the past compared to Max Fuller

14:15

concuctions. And by the time

14:17

Max made that keynote speech, Next

14:20

Corp had already been courted by Adria as

14:23

well as the governments of China and India. Only

14:25

at this point, none of these clients,

14:27

none of these investors, had any idea how far

14:30

along in the process. Next Corp was except

14:33

his own team and well

14:36

met

14:38

Fuller. You must be

14:40

Jack and it's Mr not

14:42

doctor. My father was doctor four. This

14:45

is from the first time I met him.

14:47

I was interviewing for a position at his company,

14:50

Next Corp. And she's not one to ever be impressed.

14:53

Oh good, Um, I worked hard on it. Yes,

14:58

so you're from London origin. Only

15:01

when did you make the jump over to the Bay.

15:03

We moved to Irvine first and my moments we've already

15:05

and then in a position opened up inside California

15:08

and a week later we were on a plane and

15:10

that's how the Jetty began. Master's in computational

15:13

neuroscience from UCS background

15:15

in signal processing and fought where

15:18

and you were with Stabano

15:21

crime yes three years which

15:24

product lines where you want? So for the first year

15:26

I worked on the new were still head tip. That

15:28

was a big one, yea. It was their best

15:30

performing product. So I've ran and

15:32

I was on the research team for the Natilist X, which

15:35

that was crazy. But so I left before it went

15:37

to market. What made you leave? Honestly

15:40

everything was moving too slow. Well,

15:43

yeah, that's that's the entire business. Isn't

15:45

it. You You have a thousand hoops to jump through before

15:47

you even moved to animal testing, and then

15:50

more before you even get to your first I

15:52

don't mean that. I mean I don't think anyone

15:55

that was working with was forward

15:57

thinking. Now, I

15:59

mean is what about the bottom line? I mean, I get

16:01

it they have a mandated their shareholders to

16:03

make money, but I also believe corporations

16:06

have a responsibility of their community. Go

16:08

on, well, look

16:11

that they aren't really trying to help people. I

16:13

mean, they're not in the business of helping quadruplegics

16:15

operate wheel chairs with their brains. And then come on, see,

16:18

that's what my thesis was based on. I wrote

16:20

this whole theory, your

16:23

thesis. I read it, so I know

16:25

what you're talking about. Yes,

16:29

look elined about your

16:31

resume, because I didn't want you to be nervous.

16:34

I mean you're qualified, sure, but frankly

16:36

I have interns here with more impressive resumes.

16:39

Oh so I wanted to

16:41

hear you out. Can

16:45

you build on a little bit for me? Build

16:47

one your thesis?

16:51

Oh, I'm yeah, absolutely

16:54

sure. So that the first process

16:56

and shift away from CPUs was new

16:59

networks, right, So and

17:01

even though the code and computers trying new ways to

17:03

mirror a human cognitive function, the

17:05

goal never changed. See, we still wanted to turn

17:07

machines into humans instead of having humans

17:09

become more like machines. I'm gonna stop her.

17:12

I'm sorry, Jack, I'm

17:14

not looking for a history lesson. I'm

17:17

looking for new ideas me too, and

17:19

frankly, that's why I want to work here with

17:21

you, Mr Fuller, and I do appreciate that,

17:23

Jack, I really do thank you, but unfortunately

17:27

that's not enough. I like

17:29

where your head is at, thinking outside

17:31

of the box. But from

17:33

what I can tell, you've

17:35

been dragging this thesis around with you

17:38

for a few years now, and it might make for

17:40

an impressive conversation at a dinner

17:42

party. But I need people with new ideas,

17:45

people motivated by something greater

17:48

than I'm

17:51

sorry. It's

17:54

shit. Hang on, I'm

17:56

sorry, Mr Fuller. I

17:58

should have been up from

18:00

the reason I want, the

18:03

reason I have to be here at

18:05

next Corp. It's my mother.

18:09

She's dying and mind

18:12

is going. They can't figure out, and I don't.

18:14

I didn't expect you to be able to do anything, okay,

18:17

but I thought I'm so

18:19

dumb. I I just thought that maybe maybe

18:23

one. I

18:26

don't even know now. I don't

18:28

know what I was even looking for or why the

18:30

hell you would give half a ship. But

18:32

you, sir, you are light years ahead

18:35

of others. Mr Fullana, and I

18:37

do have ideas. I do for days, and I

18:39

am motivated. But I understand your hesitation

18:41

and thank you for your time, man, and it means

18:43

way and

18:46

shut the door. This

18:48

is all bullshit. Of course, my

18:51

mother is alive and well and living in a three bedroom,

18:53

sipilit and level ranch in Arizona. I

18:55

did feel guilty about using that

18:58

I did, but how the hell else do you get

19:00

into a place like this? The science behind

19:02

what Max is doing is so complex as to be mind

19:04

bunding. My background only took

19:06

me so far. And like Max said,

19:08

I was qualified, but so what? And

19:11

honestly, there was no amount of preparation I could have

19:13

done here. So

19:15

I did what I had to do. I took a different track. I'm

19:18

nothink if not resourceful. I

19:21

did enough research to assume Max had a softball

19:24

of vulnerability. If

19:26

you don't know Max, you've probably at least heard of his father,

19:29

Dr Walter Fuller, His

19:31

groundbreaking research into the link between Alzheimer's

19:34

disease and sleep deprivation earned him worldwide

19:36

fame and a Noble prize in medicine.

19:39

A powerful man, big

19:42

shoes to fill within.

19:44

Our plan is a step by step process

19:46

with which we hope to tackle the effects

19:48

of the disease and dramatically improve the quality

19:51

of life of its sufferers. And eventually,

19:53

with Britain determination turned

19:56

the tide on this illness. And when the war

19:58

against Alzheimer's and for all, he

20:01

wasn't blowing smoke. You

20:03

may know the names of some of the life saving

20:05

treatments that resulted from water Fullness research.

20:08

Hell, you probably know one of the five million people

20:10

affected each year by the disease, and

20:12

he won the prize when he changed the delivery system.

20:15

Dr Walter Fuller is the recipient

20:17

of this year's Nobel Prize for Outstanding

20:19

Discovery in the field of Life Sciences, physiology

20:22

and Medicine. The annual award was

20:24

presented today to Dr Fuller for uncovering

20:27

the link between dementia and sleep deprivation

20:29

and the development of Thought Weare, which uses

20:32

nanotechnology to regulate hormone

20:34

levels in the human brain. The nanites,

20:37

as we call them, act as a bridge

20:40

between regions of our brain and

20:42

help regulates serotonin, melatonin,

20:45

and dopamine levels. So the

20:48

technology really has implications for treating

20:50

a variety of diseases, including depression,

20:53

Parkinson's dementia, Alzheimer's.

20:56

What you may not know about water is

20:59

the tragedy can ironic attorney's life talk

21:01

and Welcome to World News Tonight. I'm Jane

21:04

Coleman. We begin tonight with devastating

21:06

news from the medical community. Neuroscientist

21:09

and Nobel laureate Walter Fuller has passed

21:11

away sadly after a long battle

21:13

with the very disease he worked so hard

21:16

to eradicate. The guy died

21:18

of Alzheimer's. Walter Fuller

21:20

for all of his brilliance and determination

21:23

for the lives he saved with his innovations,

21:26

Walter Fuller's personal life was a disaster,

21:29

a story of loss of lifelong

21:32

despair, of taking all of his pain

21:34

and channeling me into his research. He

21:38

was survived by his only liven relative, my

21:41

son Max Fuller.

21:46

Strong stuff here British

21:50

Blood. I captured this week's after getting

21:52

my foot in the door next Core I

21:54

earned Max fullest trust, and

21:56

I had every office might Mom

21:58

took me out to Arizona. That was long go man

22:01

in. At the time, I wasn't sure what he confided

22:03

in me, but I can see now that he was

22:06

desperate. He needed

22:08

an that I do you have any siblings and

22:11

a friend? H Yeah,

22:14

it was a vulnerability. I was happy to exploit,

22:18

just the one. What did he do? He's

22:22

dead? I'm

22:25

sorry? Did it mean to no? No, no,

22:27

no, no, no no, no, no, It's okay. It

22:30

was a long time ago, a

22:32

long long time ago. Were you close? I

22:35

mean identical twins?

22:38

So yeah, but it

22:40

was complicated. It's always complicated,

22:43

though. What was he like? If

22:45

that's not too forward, it's

22:48

okay, um

22:51

m hmm. Benjamin

22:55

he was. He

22:57

was a kind of bully.

23:00

Ben detested fear. If

23:03

you were afraid of something, he'd

23:06

get in your head, pick on

23:08

you, work

23:11

on you until you gave in, especially

23:16

when it came to a game of chicken mhm.

23:20

The day my brother died, it

23:24

was winter and it was way too late

23:26

to go out. Dad

23:28

said no to walking out on

23:30

the ice, and Ben

23:34

had to prove him wrong, definitely,

23:38

and so we went out three

23:41

steps at a time he

23:45

takes three, I

23:47

take three, just

23:50

like that. At

23:53

one point, another

23:56

step, I saw that we were too

23:58

far from the shore, or if

24:02

we fell through, we wouldn't be able to touch the bottom.

24:05

And I remember looking at that shoreline

24:08

of snow melting on

24:10

the bank, air freezing

24:12

in my lungs, and

24:17

there was a sound, a

24:21

small explosion. I

24:28

thought maybe a tree branch had

24:30

cracked up, And

24:33

that was just my mind protecting me from what

24:35

really happened. When

24:41

I turned back around, Ben was gone. One

24:45

second, he's on the ice, and then

24:47

there's just a dark hole and

24:49

a crack running underneath

24:52

my feet. Cheers.

24:56

Anyway, I

24:58

really did assume Max, which is softening on me,

25:02

laying down his guard. But

25:04

in retrospect I can't help but one day, if he was

25:06

tipping me off to something bright

25:09

and driven, strong willed

25:11

and stubborn, but there was

25:13

still a quiet and timid boy inside.

25:15

There was still this broken kid who

25:17

had survived the ice that day. I

25:20

mean, maybe in a way he was paying homage to his

25:22

brother drowned so long ago

25:24

in the frigid Midwestern lake. Or

25:27

you know, maybe he was trying to prove himself, proving

25:30

his own significance. Yeah,

25:33

First to his father, who apparently never

25:35

got over the loss and maybe blamed

25:37

his surviving song for what had happened out on the first

25:39

and late that day, and the second

25:42

to himself. Either

25:46

ways, it drove Max

25:48

to be the man he is today, A fast talking

25:50

genius, a visionary for sure.

25:53

Wait shut

25:55

the door again.

25:58

This is from my initial Shoup inter view with

26:00

Max right off that I lied to him about my mother

26:02

suffering from the same disease that killed his father

26:06

so he would hire me. Just

26:08

wait to say, how

26:13

long? How

26:16

long has she been sick? How

26:18

long is shiv la omph

26:22

property she's

26:24

been fogging for a while? Who?

26:31

Just so we're clear, you know, I can't save her,

26:33

right, I

26:35

don't know. I

26:37

mean whatever she's sick with. If the doctors

26:40

don't know, then I don't know either. I'm

26:43

not And I'm sorry about that. I really

26:45

am.

26:48

Thank you. I know how

26:50

it feels. I know how it feels

26:52

to see something that was once

26:54

so vital just

26:58

drain away. When

27:00

my father got sick, it was like

27:02

watching his entire essence just dissipate.

27:07

Moman is the same she

27:10

used to have this laugh M

27:15

so funny. I

27:20

kind of. You can't help her. That's

27:23

not why. I mean, why are you here?

27:26

Because I don't want this to happen to anyone

27:29

else. Well,

27:34

we don't need another intern, but no,

27:36

with your skill set, there

27:39

is a lot you can do. We've

27:41

got a massive meeting coming up for potential

27:44

clients and investors, and

27:46

I'm going to be busy on the product, but I'm also the

27:48

face of this company. It's um it's it's

27:51

very hard being two people at once. So

27:54

maybe you can shadow

27:56

me, be like my body

27:59

man, help me bridge the gaps between

28:01

departments.

28:03

Well, more like a like

28:05

a hawk. I'd say I need someone

28:08

with a thirty thousand foot view from

28:10

all sides. I mean, you're a structural man, good

28:13

with systems. You can help with everything from logistics

28:15

and cost analysis to helping

28:18

me with my personal schedule. I

28:20

can do that, and you're not above making

28:23

coffee. I make a very

28:25

banging clothee. Okay,

28:28

okay, I'm I'm

28:31

I'm taking a chance here. I

28:33

know and I understand that I won't for this up.

28:35

I swear this means

28:37

a lot. Mr Fuller, you can call

28:40

me Max. Yeah,

28:42

maxed in. Well, I guess we'd better

28:44

send you back down if helts and paved work. Huh, okay,

28:48

sounds great. Oh

28:50

and hey Jack, Yeah, we're

28:52

dealing with some sensitive ship here, and

28:55

I have to be able to trust the people around

28:57

me. The truth is

28:59

that I'm gonna need another set of

29:01

eyes around here. Sometimes I'm so blinded

29:03

by the work I get a little lost. I

29:06

could really use a designated

29:10

driver, so to speak. So

29:14

we need to trust each other with

29:17

the truth, even

29:20

if it's a little uncomfortable.

29:25

Agreed, Agreed.

29:31

Max has a aside

29:34

to him, a certain softness to him, a kindness.

29:37

When I brought up my mother's illness, his eyes would

29:40

he took it so hard even I almost

29:42

believed my story. But again,

29:45

my mother is alive and healthy. And whereas

29:48

the reason I gave for pursuing this job went technically

29:50

on the level, there was a touch of

29:52

truth. Now.

29:54

Max is reckless during

29:56

human trials under his watchful Why

29:58

has something happened? His subjects

30:01

walked away, changed damaged.

30:03

Three of his subjects committed suicide, at

30:06

least that was the official cause of death. One

30:10

of them,

30:14

one of them was my brother Michael.

30:22

I saw him heading to find Max journa.

30:27

Tell me the last male marker we passed Mile

30:30

Marker Speed

30:32

up. Please. Max

30:35

Fuller created a series of miracles

30:37

in these labs. But these mind apps

30:39

come with a steep price, and

30:41

from what I've seen, that steep price

30:43

wouldn't want to be paid again and again

30:45

with anyone who uses them.

30:48

Max Fuller must be stopped,

30:53

and I'm the man who stopped him.

31:04

Tomorrow's Monsters starring

31:06

John Boyega as Jack Locke, Darren

31:08

Chris as Max Fuller, Marley

31:10

Shelton as Cass Berkeley, Clark

31:13

Gregg as Walter Fuller, saw

31:15

and Guja as David Truesdale,

31:17

Nicholas Takowski as Finn Connolly,

31:20

Claire Bronson as dr Abbie Reynolds,

31:23

David Chen as Michael Corbin, zu,

31:25

Hila Elettar as Jenna, Victor

31:28

Rivera as Eddie Binder, Robert

31:30

Praalgo as Agent Batty, Steve

31:33

Coulter as Senator Berkeley, wrote

31:35

A. Griffiths as Rainy Webb, with

31:37

additional performances by Helen Abel,

31:40

Jason Williams, Michael Anthony, Robin

31:42

Bloodworth, and Teresa Davis. Our

31:45

first assistant director is Michael Monty.

31:47

Our second assistant director is Sarah Klein, sound

31:51

and music by Ben Lovett. Additional

31:53

sound design and editing by Benjamin

31:55

Belcolm, Justin Robowski and Mike

31:58

Reagan. Casting Jessica

32:00

Fox thig pen Our. Executive

32:02

producers are Scott Sheldon, Shelby

32:05

Thomas, Alexander Williams, and Matthew

32:07

Frederick. Written by Dan

32:09

Bush and Nicholas Takowski, Created

32:12

by Dan Bush and Conald Byrne. Directed

32:15

by Dan Bush, Produced

32:17

by both Flynt, dan Bush and John

32:19

Boyega. Tomorrow's

32:21

Monsters is a production of Igheart Radio,

32:24

Flynn Picture Company, Psycopia Pictures,

32:26

and Upper Room Productions.

32:29

For more podcasts from my Heart Radio, visit

32:32

the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,

32:35

or wherever you listen to podcasts.

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