In a jungle where satellite signals barely reached and the air hummed with drones instead of just insects, Daniel Park stepped carefully through the thick green shadows. He wasn’t an explorer in the old sense—he was a wildlife documentarian livestreaming rare species to millions of viewers around the world.
His smartwatch blinked with weak signal bars. His phone camera streamed everything.
“Alright guys,” Daniel whispered to the tiny lens clipped to his shirt. “Deep in the rainforest. This area hasn’t been filmed before.”
Leaves rustled.
At first he thought it was wind. Then the sound came again—heavy, deliberate.
Daniel turned slowly.
Behind him, sliding silently over wet roots and fallen branches, was a massive snake. Its body was thicker than his leg, its scales dark and glossy like polished armor.
“A big one,” Daniel murmured, trying to stay calm for the audience. “Possibly a constrictor…”
The chat on his livestream exploded with comments.
Before he could step away, the snake struck—not with fangs, but with speed. Its body looped around him once, twice, three times.
Daniel’s camera tilted wildly as he fell.
“Okay… okay… this is not part of the show,” he gasped.
The snake tightened. Not crushing yet, but powerful enough that he could barely move his arms.
His smartwatch detected the sudden spike in his heart rate and automatically sent an emergency signal to his team’s base camp two kilometers away.
Above the jungle canopy, a small rescue drone launched.
Back on the forest floor, Daniel forced himself to stay still. Years of wildlife training flashed through his mind.
Don’t panic. Constrictors react to struggle.

He spoke slowly into the camera.
“If anyone’s still watching… lesson number one… don’t fight the snake.”
Minutes felt like hours. The massive coils shifted around him, testing, adjusting.
Then came a distant buzzing.
The snake lifted its head.
A bright red drone burst through the branches overhead, its speakers blaring a sharp ultrasonic pulse designed to scare large animals.
Startled, the snake loosened its grip.
Daniel rolled away, scrambling across the mud as the enormous reptile slid back into the dark green undergrowth, disappearing like a living shadow.
Breathing hard, Daniel looked straight into the camera.
The livestream counter read: 12.4 million viewers.
He laughed weakly.
“Okay… new rule,” he said. “Next episode… we film penguins.” 🐧
