A high-energy performance event at Boggs Social & Supply.

Lanah saw that tweet at 2 a.m., alone in her apartment, eating cold noodles. She stared at the screen. For five years, she'd fixed other people's stories. Now, for the first time, the story had fixed something in her.

The essence of entertainment and popular media lies in their ability to engage, educate, and entertain the audience. Lanah Frias, through Trans500, seems to be working towards these goals. Her approach to content creation likely involves:

Looking ahead, Frias is developing a half-hour dramedy pilot for a streaming service—a move from independent web content to traditional television. The show, tentatively titled "Center Stage," follows a young trans stage manager at a regional theater where everything goes wrong: lost costumes, unrequited crushes, and a ghost who only haunts the prop department. It is, by all accounts, a love letter to theater kids of all identities, and it represents a significant step outward from the Trans500 ecosystem into legacy media.