Sora 2 A low-resolution video recording of a cartoon TV show playing on an old cable television from the early 2000s. The animation style resembles a familiar, family-friendly cartoon with simple shapes and bright colors. The TV screen flickers slightly, with faint static, scan lines, and analog noise. As the broadcast continues, the cartoon characters subtly change: their eyes linger too long, pupils slightly misaligned, smiles stretch unnaturally wide. Facial proportions slowly distort while the animation remains smooth and calm. The characters stop blinking correctly. Background music becomes faint and warped. Suddenly the characters turn their heads toward the viewer, breaking the fourth wall. Their faces become hyper-detailed and uncanny, textures too realistic for a cartoon — visible pores, wet eyes, stiff expressions. The lighting inside the cartoon darkens while the room around the TV remains silent. The camera is static, as if recorded on a VHS tape. Color bleeding, compression artifacts, and frame drops increase. The atmosphere becomes deeply unsettling, evoking analog horror, uncanny valley, and corrupted childhood nostalgia.