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One week before the Doggies, Rex is assigned a fluff piece: "Top 10 Fire Hydrants of the Lower East Side." Boring. But while filming, he overhears a coded transmission over a broken squeaky toy frequency. Coco’s assistant, a shifty Chihuahua named Nervous Nigel , accidentally leaks the plan: Coco has hacked the voting system using a discarded smart collar. She’s going to win every category—Best Sniffer, Best Tail Wag, Best Sploot—by making it look like a grassroots campaign.

Coco Chanel (Standard Poodle, 47 Instagram filters on her real face). She hosts The Coco Life , a show about "luxury lounging." In reality, Coco hates other dogs, despises dirt, and thinks fetch is "beneath her." She wants to win the Golden Bone for "Most Influential Canine" —not for glory, but because the prize is a lifetime supply of Royal Paté , which she plans to hoard and then resell on the black market (the "bark market"). doggvision

Every fire hydrant hides a camera. Every squeaky toy is a microphone. For years, humans have had no idea that dogs run the world’s most sophisticated media empire: Doggvision (DGV). Broadcasting 24/7 from firehouses, dog parks, and the inside of couches, DGV delivers essential content to canine audiences: The Morning Bark (weather report: how many good smells are blowing in), Chew & Tell (product reviews for indestructible toys), and the crown jewel— The Golden Bone Awards (aka "The Doggies"). One week before the Doggies, Rex is assigned

Coco is banned from Doggvision (she starts a podcast no one listens to). Rex gets promoted to Senior Anchor of Paw & Order . But he turns it down. Instead, he launches a new show: "Real Dogs, Real Dirt," where he investigates stories from ground level—sniffing, rolling, and digging. The final shot: Rex lying in a sunny patch, chewing a shoe, as the DGV chyron reads: "Be the dog you needed when you were a puppy." She’s going to win every category—Best Sniffer, Best

A single cat, wearing a tiny earpiece, watches from a windowsill. She smiles. "Phase Two," she meows. And behind her, a wall of monitors shows every dog channel now under feline surveillance. Tagline: They fetch the news. You just live in it.

The voting wasn't just hacked—it was reversed. The real winner, an elderly three-legged mutt named Grandpa Gus who just sits on a porch and wags at kids, actually won by a landslide. Coco’s attempt to steal the vote exposed her own fraud.

Live on air. The Golden Bone ceremony is packed. Every breed from Great Danes to Chihuahuas watches. Coco is about to be announced the winner when Rex storms the stage with a live feed from his hidden camera—inside Coco’s penthouse. The network airs, uncut, to millions: Coco barking at a mail carrier through a window (rude), ignoring a dropped hot dog (suspicious), and worst of all… licking her own butt on camera without shame? No, the real crime: Nigel, under pressure, confesses to the hack while Coco tries to bribe him with a stale Milk-Bone.