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He Knows How to Report a Pothole — The Dais · Story Seed Studios
A neighborhood street at golden hour. Eight community members — one in a wheelchair — stand around a glowing pothole, holding tools and notepads, looking ready to help.
The Dais · The Map · Episode 2 · March 2026

He Knows How to Report
a Pothole

There is a man somewhere who was taught how this works. His dad explained it. The rest of us are clicking the broken button.

Somewhere in Colorado Springs, there is a man who is not confused by any of this.

He knows which form to file. He knows the clerk's email. He knows that if the online portal spins indefinitely and produces nothing, you call 719-385-7458. He knows what a CORA request is, and when to send one, and what to ask for when he does.

He is not a politician. He is not a lawyer. He is not even particularly remarkable. He just had a dad who explained how things actually work — not the textbook things. Not George Washington and the three branches in theory. The branch that touches your street. The one with a phone number.

Ambrocius Bodacious Bocephus — a small wide-eyed creature in a slightly-too-tall hat — steps off a bus into a sunlit Colorado Springs street, suitcase in hand, looking around with cautious curiosity.
Ambrocius arrives. He has a hat. He wore it anyway. This is important to know.

Most of us were taught history. We learned about George Washington — his wooden teeth (false, but persistent), his leadership, possibly his syphilis (debated, surprisingly compelling at 14, entirely useless at a Planning Commission hearing).

We did not learn how to attend a county meeting. We did not learn what a BOCC is, or what the Community Development Advisory Committee does, or how to submit a written comment that ends up in a public record. We did not learn that there is a form for that, a deadline for that, and a person at a desk waiting for exactly that — who has been waiting with decreasing optimism for quite some time.

"The system requires users. Not metaphorically. Literally."

Episode 2 of The Map follows Ambrocius Bodacious Bocephus, a creature of extraordinary civic ambition, as he attempts to report a pothole through the city's online portal. The portal does what portals do. It thinks about it. It commits to the process of thinking with genuine dedication and no visible result.

He eventually calls Public Works directly. The phone works. The pothole gets logged.

The system had more than one door. He just had to find it.

This is the gap. Not between good people and bad people, or between the powerful and the powerless. The gap between the man whose dad handed him a map, and everyone else — who didn't know there was one, who found the button, clicked it, watched it spin, and went back inside.

The whole ask

Four to twelve hours a year. That's it. One meeting and one written comment at the low end. Once a month at the high end — enough that the board starts to recognize your name, which is when things begin to shift.

0.05% of your year. 8,760 hours exist. You are being asked for twelve of them. The people currently showing up are doing all of it — for everyone — because the chairs are empty. If ten more people showed up consistently, the load would be ten times lighter for the people already there.

The guide we built is the thing his dad gave him, for everyone else. Real names. Real emails. The rooms that matter. What to say when you get there, and what to do if you end up in the wrong one — which happens, and is fine, and is still showing up.

The Map · Episode 2 He Must Have Clicked It Wrong Ambrocius. A pothole. A portal that went dark. And the difference between courage and honor. Watch Now → Companion Guide How to Show Up — and What to Say The map his dad gave him. For everyone else. Real emails, real meeting times, already written for you. Read the Guide →
Ambrocius stepping off the bus — thumbnail for The Map Episode 2
The Dais · The Map · Episode 2
He Must Have Clicked It Wrong

A story about a creature, a pothole, a portal that went dark, and the difference between courage and honor.

Watch Episode →
The whole ask
4 hours / year minimum
One meeting. One comment.
12 hours / year — scholarship
Once a month. They'll know your name.
0.05% of your year
8,760 hours exist. We want twelve.
The Map Series

A special edition of The Dais on housing, civic geography, and who controls what in El Paso County — and why it matters to everyone who lives here, even temporarily.

Episode 3 coming soon.

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