When the image returns, it’s in baseline profile—no B‑frames, no predictive frames, just a single frozen I‑frame of his own reflection in a dark window.
ffmpeg -i reality.mp4 -c:v libopenh264 -b:v 500k -profile:v baseline -r 24 obsession.mkv
you – Season 1, Episode 2: "OpenH264" Codec Reference: OpenH264 (Cisco Systems, BSD-2-Clause License) Thematic Motif: Compression, Artifacts, and the Illusion of Fidelity you s01e02 openh264
A monologue occurs while he watches a video call she has with her mother, recorded via WebRTC (which often uses OpenH264). The video drops to 240p, stutters, and loses audio sync. He says: "They tell you high bitrate means high truth. But bandwidth is a lie. Even at 4K, you’re only seeing 24 still images per second stitched together by a lie called persistence of vision. Love is the same. We fill the gaps between frames with assumption. I assumed she was happy. I assumed she wanted me. But those were just... interpolated frames. Guesswork." Climax – The Lost I‑Frame
The episode ends on a terminal cursor blinking. The log reads: [libopenh264] frame loss detected. 1432 packets dropped. When the image returns, it’s in baseline profile—no
In this episode, our narrator (You) is no longer just a passive observer. He has begun "encoding" the people around him—forcing complex, messy human beings into a low-bitrate, H.264-compliant version of themselves that fits his own narrative. The episode asks: When you compress a person into an object of obsession, what gets lost in translation?
The episode opens with a close-up of a security camera’s lens, its red recording light flickering. Our protagonist is reviewing raw footage from a coffee shop’s NVR (Network Video Recorder). He freezes on a single perfect frame of the love interest—what codec engineers call an I‑frame: a complete, uncompressed image that all subsequent predictions will rely on. "This," he whispers, "is the only honest second. Everything after this is just... difference data." He says: "They tell you high bitrate means high truth
Picking up immediately after the premiere’s reveal, Episode 2, "OpenH264," deconstructs the series’ central metaphor: the act of watching someone is never lossless. The episode’s title references the open-source video codec widely used in WebRTC, Zoom, and browser-based recording—a tool that compresses raw visual data into a streamable, viewable format, but at the cost of dropping subtle frames, introducing blocky artifacts, and smoothing over critical detail.