The monitor went black. A perfect, velvet cut to black. For 0.4 seconds, there was silence. Then, the New York feed roared to life. The crowd in Times Square erupted. The audio ramped down smoothly, avoiding the digital screech of a hard cut. The confetti cannons fired on screen exactly as the London audio faded to a whisper.
She pulled up a secondary window: . The little green dot was solid. The controller had a direct API handshake. It wasn't just watching the clock; it was holding the clock. It had told vMix to disregard its own internal timer and wait for the script’s absolute authority.
23:59:45. She saw the data packet. Her script sent a heartbeat ping to the time server: Are you still the truth? The response came back: I am the truth. vmix utc controller
The hum of the server room was usually a comfort to Mira. It was the heartbeat of Global News 24 , a low, constant thrum that promised order. But tonight, the master clock on the wall—the one synced to the US Naval Observatory—read 23:47 UTC. In thirteen minutes, their live New Year’s Eve broadcast would begin, cascading across time zones from London to New York.
Nothing happened in her hands. She didn't move. The monitor went black
At 23:58 UTC, the producer, Leo, leaned over her shoulder. His voice was a gravelly whisper. "You sure about this, kid? Big Ben is wobbly tonight. Their uplink has a 300ms jitter."
Mira’s fingers hovered over the keyboard. She could hit "Abort." She could do it manually. It was terrifying to surrender control to a Python script on a drizzly Tuesday in a server room. Then, the New York feed roared to life
> SUCCESS: Global Handshake completed. No drift detected. Happy New Year.
The final two seconds felt like an eternity. She watched her laptop’s system clock digits tick over.
It was seamless. Ghost-like.