Incoming calls are greeted by a Rick-style AI voice, generated in real time. The system can answer questions, send a follow-up email, record voicemail with transcription, and forward specific callers directly to my phone based on whitelist rules.
Featured YouTube & Short-Form Videos
Alongside Twilio and AI voice projects, I create short-form videos designed to grab attention fast. These examples show my style: quick hooks, bold visuals, and concepts that feel fun to watch.
Viral Short #1
Fast, punchy visuals built to hook the viewer in the first second.
Viral Short #2
High-energy pacing and a tight concept built for YouTube Shorts.
Planet of the Bums
Character-driven, slightly absurd sci-fi style short with humour.
Channel 6 News (1984)
Retro news-style segment with a nostalgic, VHS-era feel.
I can create similar content for brands, events, or characters — from concept to final export, optimised for Shorts, Reels, TikTok, or full YouTube.
Interactive voice and SMS systems I have already built.
Below are examples of real Twilio projects I have run on my own infrastructure, combining phone, SMS, AI, and email for practical use in business and entertainment.
Built a system for a legal services company where staff can send and receive SMS with clients, generate professional email responses from client notes, and keep all communication tied to case status in one place.
A Twilio-powered text adventure where players text a number and move through a branching story. The game uses GPT to generate responses, remembers previous choices, and can unlock hidden paths or rewards based on player behaviour.
Implemented an IVR that checks an external whitelist file and treats calls differently: some callers hear a full AI greeting, some go straight to forwarding, and unknown numbers are directed to a simple voicemail with no extra interaction.
From phone call or text to AI-driven response.
Everything runs on a combination of Twilio, Node.js, and AI services that I control on my own server. That means I can customise the behaviour for each number or campaign, instead of being locked into a fixed SaaS product.
- 1. Twilio receives the call or SMS.
Twilio hits my secure webhook URL for that phone number. - 2. My Node.js app decides what to do.
It checks whitelists, caller history, campaign settings, or notes stored for that client. - 3. AI generates the right message.
Using OpenAI, I create either a spoken reply (for calls) or a written reply (for SMS or email). - 4. Voice is generated and played back.
For calls, I use text-to-speech voices (including character voices) to keep the experience natural. - 5. Extra actions happen in the background.
The system can log the conversation, send emails, notify staff, or update a client’s status.
- Twilio Voice & SMS – phone numbers, calls, and messages.
- Node.js + Express – application logic, IVR flows, routing.
- OpenAI – conversational logic, text content, smart replies.
- ElevenLabs & other TTS – character voices and natural speech.
- Custom JSON / Google Sheets / simple databases – configuration and history.
- Custom behaviour per number (or per client).
- Extendable flows instead of one-off scripts.
- Ability to plug into email, web forms, or internal tools later.
Who I am and how I work.
My name is Jesse Breslin. I run my own servers and build practical systems that connect phone calls, SMS, AI, and now video. I have worked on entertainment projects (character-based IVRs and SMS games) and serious business use-cases (legal services communication, client updates, and internal tools).
I prefer straightforward, dependable setups: code that can be deployed on a normal server, with simple files and clear logic. The goal is not to create something flashy for one week, but something that can quietly run in the background and support real work.
Like what you see? Let us talk about your number or project.
Start with a simple message describing what you want the phone or content to do.
For example: “I want callers to hear a friendly assistant, collect basic information, and then either send me an email or forward to my mobile.” Or: “I want a short video that feels like a viral clip for my brand.”