How it works

Brief to broadcast
in 12 hours.

You name the topic. We write the script, source every clip from a named institutional archive, fact-check every claim, sign every frame, and deliver a broadcast-ready documentary — with a full chain of custody.

01
Your input

You submit
a brief.

Tell us what the documentary is about — a topic, an audience, a tone. That's all you need. No script, no footage, no storyboard. One sentence is enough.

You can also specify which archives to prioritise, add key messages to include, or flag things to avoid. The more context you give, the more precise the output.

Sample brief
Topic The Apollo 11 Moon Landing
Audience General · Ages 14+
Tone Documentary
Duration 3 minutes
Preferred sources NASA, NARA
02
Script

We write the script.
You approve it.

The script is generated from research — not from templates. Every claim is structured for downstream fact-checking. The narration is written to match the tone, audience, and duration you specified.

You see the full script before a single frame renders. Edit it, request changes, or approve it as-is. Nothing moves forward without your sign-off.

Script preview Awaiting approval

"On July 20, 1969, Commander Neil Armstrong became the first human being to set foot on the surface of the Moon. The Apollo 11 mission, launched four days earlier from Kennedy Space Center, carried Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins aboard a Saturn V rocket..."

— 14 claims extracted · ready for fact-check

03
Verification

Every claim
is verified.

The fact-checking engine extracts every factual claim from the script and routes each one to the most authoritative source. A claim about Apollo 11 goes to NASA. A claim about a historical figure goes to the Library of Congress. A medical claim goes to the CDC.

Claims that can't be verified are flagged or rewritten. Nothing unverified makes it to the final production.

Fact-check report ● 14 / 14 verified
Neil Armstrong, first on Moon ✓ NASA/JSC
Launch date: July 16, 1969 ✓ NARA
Saturn V rocket ✓ NASA/MSFC
Kennedy Space Center launch ✓ NASA/KSC
+ 10 more claims verified
04
Sourcing

Footage sourced
from named archives.

For each segment of narration, the engine searches 30+ institutional archives for the most relevant, highest-quality archival clip. Every clip is matched semantically — not by keyword — using visual intelligence that scores how well a frame matches the spoken content.

Every clip is logged with its source archive, accession number, licence status, and download timestamp. No synthetic footage. No stock libraries. No mystery sources.

Sources used Apollo 11 · 8 clips
NASA / JSC — AS11-40-5903 — Public domain
Library of Congress / MBRS — mbrs-00284 — Public domain
Smithsonian / NASM — 19-4471 — Public domain
National Archives / NARA — 306-SSM-4F — Public domain
+ 4 more clips sourced
05
Production

Narrated, graded,
and assembled.

The script is narrated with broadcast-quality voice synthesis, matched to your chosen tone and language. Clips are colour-graded, timed to the narration, and assembled with titles, transitions, and a music bed.

The output is delivered in three formats simultaneously — 16:9 for broadcast and web, 9:16 for social, and 1:1 for feeds — each properly framed and captioned.

Deliverables
Broadcast-ready MP4 — 1080p in 16:9, 9:16, and 1:1
Professional narration — matched to your tone preset
SRT caption file — accessibility and syndication ready
Licensed music bed — royalty-free, cleared for commercial use
06
Signed & sealed

Signed, sealed,
and delivered.

Before delivery, every frame is cryptographically signed with a C2PA provenance manifest — the same standard used by the BBC, Adobe, and Microsoft. The manifest is publicly verifiable and permanently links each clip to its source archive.

You receive the video, the manifest, the rights clearance report, and the fact-check results — everything your legal team, your editors, and your audience need to trust what they're watching.

Your delivery package ● Signed
Broadcast-ready MP4 — three aspect ratios
C2PA provenance manifest — cryptographically signed
Rights clearance report — every clip documented
Fact-check report — claims verified against archives
SRT caption file — accessibility ready
Script transcript — full narration text

See it for yourself.

Request a free pilot — one documentary, delivered in 12 hours, no obligation. Judge the quality on your own terms.

Request your free pilot →