During the next live broadcast (a highly anticipated “comeback special” sponsored by a melatonin gummy brand), the girls didn’t sleep. They stayed awake. They pulled out their phones and streamed the audience .
“They’re not watching us sleep,” Luna typed one night. “They’re watching themselves. We’re just mirrors.”
Luna, 17, was a fencer who slept with her épée under her bed. Sofi, 16, was a horror fanatic whose nightlight was a looping GIF of a zombie from The Last of Us . Marisol, 18, was a k-pop stan who fell asleep every night to Chasing That Feeling by Tomorrow X Together. The show’s tagline was: “Where their dreams end, your entertainment begins.”
Sofi held up a mirror to the camera. “You’re the ones who can’t look away,” she said. Luna read the live chat aloud—every creepy, obsessive, or lonely comment. Marisol played a k-pop song backwards, revealing a hidden track that said: “Your attention is not love.” During the next live broadcast (a highly anticipated
Then they spoke. In unison.
And somewhere, in a quiet bedroom, three girls finally slept peacefully, knowing that the most radical act in entertainment is simply choosing when to wake up.
The feed cut to black. Cronos claimed a “technical error,” but the clip went viral. #LasDormidas trended for weeks. Fan edits appeared on TikTok—dark synthwave remixes of the girls’ breathing, layered with audio from Black Mirror episodes. “They’re not watching us sleep,” Luna typed one night
“We see you.”
Producers offered them a reality show: Awake: The Dormidas Awaken . A movie deal was pitched: The Sleepover Protocol , directed by the showrunner of Squid Game . A podcast called Dream Catching dissected every second of their sleep—REM cycles, pillow creases, the way Marisol whispered “oppa” in her sleep.
The viewers were stunned. The chat froze. Then, slowly, the numbers dropped. 10 million. 5 million. 100,000. Zero. Sofi, 16, was a horror fanatic whose nightlight
The girls never agreed to any of it. Their parents had signed the original Cronos waiver for a small stipend. But the girls had found each other through a secret Discord server—the only place they could talk without being watched.
So they decided to flip the script.