We're 20 minutes into the future in a Fringer wasteland at night, with montage-stacks of tvs showing eerie sequences of images. A Fringer woman mutters instructions into a microphone - to whom, we don't yet know.

At first, it was skateboarding. Then it was boarding on crudely motorized skateboards. Then it was a rougher street sport where the accidental collisions became deliberate moves as skaters worked to knock each other off their boards. And when the sports promoters got ahold of it, it turned into an underground blood sport where the "rakers" are armed with steel claws to enhance the damage while gamblers wager on their bouts. A young "raker" stops to look at a TV, and finds himself talking to Max.

Max has become concerned about the homicidal madman he sees running around and laying waste to 100 people an hour. Since the whole world is television to him, he doesn't realize that "Missile Mike" is a violent TV show - part of Network 23's children's programming - and not reality. With his new control of Network 23's computers and broadcasting, he pops up here and there, querying the viewers about the effects of this mindless violence on the mindless.

When Theora receives a frantic phone call from her sister-in-law Winnie, she comes running to help only to find that Winnie will not tell her where her estranged brother Shawn is. Theora traces him to the posh restaurant where he works, only to find he has lost his job as a busboy... and to get an ugly hint that he's involved with raking.

Theora's abrupt departure from her station leaves Murray, out of practice and inept, to cover Edison Carter on a story - an attempt to catch the "Bureau Burner" arsonist. Murray's clumsiness with the newer equipment causes them to fail. Theora's unexplained departure infuriates Murray, who orders her put on suspension or fired, even though Carter objects.

Concerned, Carter tries to convince Bryce Lynch to make an end run on Network 23's security and show him the security tape of Theora at her workstation. Bryce dithers; suddenly the material is up on the monitor, courtesy of a chuckling Max Headroom. With that and a look at Theora's personnel record, which mentions several unknown items of interest including her brother, Carter takes off in search of her. In the meantime, Shawn has been badly hurt in a raking match.

When Carter catches up with Theora at the restaurant, just as she's learned that her brother no longer works there, she is angry at being followed. She tells him that she lived for 12 years in state homes, and was adopted but left Shawn behind - something for which he's never forgiven her.

It's then that we find out that Jack Friday of the Network 23 sports division has shown the sport to Ped Xing, the head of the network's biggest advertiser, the Zik-Zak Corporation. If Zik-Zak is interested enough, they'll build a chain of stadiums for raking teams... and give Network 23 exclusive worldwide coverage, with corporate advertising, to replace the declining "Missile Mike" and other violent shows. And legislator Simon Peller is being convinced to help legalize the sport.

Theora goes back to her console as Carter heads into the wastelands to find Shawn. At the Ouzo Bar, he hooks up with a tough street rickshaw driver, Rik, whom he apparently knows from prior adventures in the streets, and together they set off to find one of the clandestine raking matches.

Rik advises Carter that Shawn is in big trouble if he's connected with raking. They set out to find another raker to tell them where the current matches are being held. They find one, and get into a match, only to find that the injured Shawn is losing a brutal match. The promoters have been paid by Zik-Zak and are slipping away, leaving the problem in Network 23's lap.

Carter jumps in with his camera but is knocked down and the camera damaged. Rik finds a television with Max on it, and via the two-way link (authorized by a watching Cheviot), Max takes the ugly story live, ending raking as a promoted sport and as a Network 23 program.

Theora evidently mends fences with her brother and both she and Carter are made uncomfortable by Winnie's suggestion that they start a family, too.

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* BitingTheHandHumor: Max has a lot of this regarding Missile Mike, the ultra-violent children's program his network is running. Eventually, it becomes GoneHorriblyRight and the network plans to replace it with rakking. In short, they're going to replace a bunch of 'fictional' violence beloved by kids with 'actual violence' done by kids. Max is suitably chastened.
* {{Bloodsport}}: Raking started as basically motorized skateboarding but some petty mobsters turned into a gladiator competition where people can get killed.
* CannotTellFictionFromReality: The characters assume Max is acting this way given his hatred for Missile Mike. They're wrong, he just really loathes the program.
* {{Expy}}: Missile Mike is one for Franchise/{{Rambo}}.
* GeorgeJetsonJobSecurity: Theora is fired for running off during a story only for Carter to basically override his boss. It helps it leads to a big story.
* HonorBeforeReason: Shawn has cut his sister out of his life and taken up a dangerous bloodsport to make money for his wife and baby daughter. The thing is, Theora is a well off television station employee who is happy to help pay their bills.
* LongLostRelative: Theora's brother was never lost but he didn't communicate with her after she was adopted and he wasn't.
* ThinkOfTheChildren: A rare time a hero shows this attitude as Max is repulsed by Missile Mike and worries about its effect on the public.

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