legacy media
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The Room
The Room

Halsia was not unaffected. The past few years had been a flurry of practice and learning; she’d gotten good with the old digital camera, but today her eyes felt weak, her fingers slow. She raised the lens for a picture of two of the older reporters sharing a word, but couldn’t get the shot right.
“Yeah, that one’s kinda shit,” came a voice behind her. Her grandfather had a way of sneaking up on people, despite the half-bent waddle he did in his old age. She gave her shoulder a squeeze. “It’s not you. Kerla’s bad in this lighting. And Rex looks like a dumbass anywhere.”
“Heard that, ya bastard,” came the shot back from across the room.
“Suck my foot, you old slug.”
“Don’t threaten me with a good time. Not in front of your granddaughter.”
He smiled. She exhaled. “Everything okay?”
“Yeah, uh.” She fidgeted with the camera. “I, um- messed up one of the connections. The one by the Galactic Museum. It had- Avez told me how the little thingy has to fit right in the jack, and it was kind of at this weird angle, and it turned green so I think it’s okay, but I feel like I should check on it, or something, because-”
“Halsia,” he said, “don’t worry about it. We’re here. It’s happening. Nothing’s perfect; nothing can be. Otherwise we wouldn’t be here. But we make do. We’ve been here before, but, y’know – the arc of history is long, but oh, does it ever bend.”
Her grandfather had seen the galaxy twice over, the Alliance thrice. His was a gaze that found truth, weeded out falsehood. But here, he created truth: from that moment, she trusted things would be okay, no matter what happened here.
Her smile turned a touch silly. “I’m writing that one down.”
“Oh, Force you are. Kids these days can’t write a word themselves, aye.” He gave her a rough pat on the shoulder, then a comforting squeeze as he made the rounds. For all the years written across his face, his expressions kept that larger-than-life quality to them; he drew a smile out of everyone in the room within the next ten minutes. Soon they were loose, laughing, alive. Halsia’s grip loosened, her gaze sharpened, and she caught a dozen moments of her grandfather and his old friends.
She thought of her own. No one in the room had illusions about what they were about to do -- and yet, somehow, she knew Jedi, knew people out there who were making a difference. She felt small, and yet, this was one of those little things, the ones that built rebellions, that toppled empires. It was monumental to her.
Hal (SIA plant) Today at 7:25 PM

hey uhhhhh im about to do something dangerous
so if we don’t chat a while that’s why
wish me luck
They held their breath again when her grandfather took his seat, the low seat in the interview room he somehow made look like a throne. He put on the headset, gave a “Testing, testing,” got his thumbs up from the booth, and everything got rolling.
Halsia found a seat on the tech side by Avez, the wiry Rodian’s fingers walking like insects across the control board. “Alright, folks. Booting in three, two… power draw stable. Routing in three, two… and we’re in, Imperial frequencies locked. Ready for override.”
A look to the man inside. He gave the thumbs up.
“Alrighty,” Rex said. “Let’s make it count. We’re live in five, four…” Three, two…
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The Cast
Across Coruscant and beyond, anywhere Imperial Holovision or the other main propaganda channels were cast, the feed cut black for a brief moment, before returning the weathered visage of the one and only Halifax Hewitt. Despite the pace of the Core through his past half-decade of retirement, many would still recognize him – the most iconic HNN anchor of all time, a prolific reporter and journalist. He’d interviewed the Sword of the Jedi, multiple Chancellors, years upon years of Senators. Since the Alliance’s inception, if you turned on a news broadcast at any point, there was a fifty-fifty chance it was Halifax on the holo. No paragon or warrior on the battlefield, but he, too, was a symbol of the Alliance. The Cast
A broad smile. “Gooooooooooood morning, afternoon, and evening my friends. This is Halifax Hewitt, coming to you live from Coruscant. We’re taking a break from our regularly scheduled Imperial programming for a special broadcast today – we’ll be chatting with some of the top experts and reporters on the current state of the Empire and the Alliance.
“We here at what used to be HNN take a lot of pride in our integrity. We’ve had our faults and slip ups – I still owe Mr. Tambor an apology for my role in that story about his progeny – but our goal here, and, I hope, the goal of any journalistic and public media institution, is to speak the truth. It’s to lay it out on the table. When power speaks, it tends to override all else – and that’s a hard thing to meet. It’s a blanket. Ideology is about tying things together, making things make sense; truth is in the holes, the gaps we find. Imperialism’s one hell of a blanket, but Force, are the gaps everywhere.
“So let’s take a look. I’ve got an all-star lineup with me today, and we’ll be digging into some big topics, talking Solipsis, the Grand Vizier, the Empire, Jedi, the Senate, the Core, and more. I hope you’ll stay with us 'til the end.
“Our first guest today is a tour de force. We worked together for nearly two decades, and she still had the smarts and writing chops to turn around and become a professor of history at GCU. She reported for years on the Sith Empire and New Imperial Order, and has written ten galactic best-sellers on imperialism. Her ABY 900 book, PR-OPS: How Imperial Lies Spread in the Core, tackles some of the most important issues in political and Senate discourse, and puts them in the broader historical context of prior Imperial regimes, the compromises made by the early Alliance, and the deep-rooted problems with how we think about what makes good government. She’s currently working on a collection of essays on the so-called Emperor himself. Here she is: the one and only Kerla Zellsin. Kerla, welcome to the show.”
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The Streets
As soon as Zek heard the broadcast start, he was on his guard, expecting Imperial intsec to be swarming the place immediately. Instead, there was confusion; many "what just happened"s, "is this on the schedule"s. HNN's- now Imperial Holovision's- main office was awash in that usual mid-day blank light, a warm feed of nothing nutritious to the Empire's new citizenry. Many people's memory was short, or so they claimed; those who stood to benefit from the Empire's takeover made their choice quickly. The Streets
In this office, it was the worst anchors, the laziest writers, now backed by a fresh team of propagandists. Everyone toed the party line. Most of the real talent was long gone.
But Zek remembered. He remembered the first time Star Destroyers hung low over the Senate Plaza, and then the time when one came bursting through it. For all their talk of strength, prosperity, and freedom, he knew what the Imperials were.
So he stayed at his desk, doing his best not to sweat -- his best not to let anyone know how one of the many signal routers was strapped into his very terminal, using Imperial broadcast power to transmit Halifax's words across the Empire.
I'll post some extra vignettes to flesh out bits on how they're managing to hijack Imperial broadcasts, but honestly, dress it up however you'd like. All I'd like is a couple posts before they get caught -- or make their great escape. Mostly I'll be posting the broadcast.
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Kyric
Damien Dooku
Sol Dara
Capris Halcyon
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