“He’s a big deal and a really nice guy, too,” Figi said. “We stalked him for a while and watched Youtube videos of him to see what kind of a guy he was like because as much as we want to sell it, we want him to find the right home for it. There’s really nothing like this on TV.”

The show, which Figi, Kottler and Covington have planned out for seven seasons with 10 episodes each, will be pitched to networks in early 2019 after the Sundance Film Festival and, if all things fall into place, filming could begin in late 2019 or in 2020.

Considered a family drama, the show is about orphaned teenage twins, Ellie and Sam, who are sent to live at the estate of their eccentric aunt, Dr. Katherine Evermor. That’s where the twins discover the Forevertron that allows them to journey through the multiverse where “they find danger, love, family and a limitless potential for human adventure,” according to a description of the show.

The Forevertron is one of the main focuses of the show but other sculptures in the park — like a bus-sized bug with eyes made from dozens of round survey markers, a 17-foot tall and 23-foot long spider named Arachna Artie and creatures that resemble pets, spaceships and a flock of dozens of 10- to 12-foot-high birds holding musical instruments — would also be incorporated into the show.