
Age: 43
male
Daniel Lopatin (born July 25, 1982), best known as Oneohtrix Point Never or OPN, is an American electronic music producer, composer, singer, and songwriter.[2][8] He began his career in the early 2000s as part of Brooklyn's noise music scene and later received early acclaim for the synthesizer-based compilation Rifts (2009) as well as the influential vaporwave side-project Chuck Person's Eccojams Vol. 1 (2010). His work since has experimented with tropes from an eclectic range of musical genres and eras, and has featured sample-based composition and complex MIDI production.[9] Lopatin signed with Warp Records in 2013, and has since released studio albums on the label to critical praise. He has also contributed production work to various artists, most extensively the Weeknd, Moses Sumney, and Soccer Mommy. He has composed film scores, most prominently in collaboration with the Safdie brothers on the films Good Time (2017), Uncut Gems (2019), and Marty Supreme (2025); the former won him the Soundtrack Award at the 2017 Cannes Film Festival.[10]

In a hyper-connected future where reality is streamed and curated by AI, Truman “Tru” Ellis lives an idyllic life in the seemingly perfect city of New Arcadia—unaware that every moment of his existence is being broadcast to billions. Raised since birth inside an immersive, AI-controlled simulation called EdenStream, Tru is the only real human in a world populated by synthetic actors and subscriber-controlled avatars. But when glitches in the system begin to disrupt his carefully programmed routine, Truman starts questioning the world around him, triggering a crisis that could upend the most popular entertainment property on Earth. As Truman seeks the truth, the AI controlling the show—CHRYSALIS—adjusts the narrative in real time to keep him compliant, while viewers across the globe debate whether to help him escape or keep watching. Blending psychological sci-fi with sharp social commentary, The Truman Show explores the ethics of digital entertainment, algorithmic control, and the human cost of living in a world designed for clicks.


