He never shows his face. Just the silhouette — cigarette smoke, gold light, the faint hum of machinery. They call him The Drone Magician: part illusionist, part engineer of desire. Every drone he commands is an accomplice, every reflection a signature.
No one knows where he operates from — penthouse, bunker, or server farm — only that when his work appears, cities seem to pause. Screens flicker. Lights sync. Even time feels rehearsed. He doesn’t perform for applause; he performs to remind the world who’s really in control.
In Hollywood Drones, he’s not a man. He’s a myth filmed in real time.