Look at What You Started

In a dim backstage hallway after a chaotic awards show, Nelly Furtado grabs Joe by the arm and pulls him away from the cameras.

โ€œJoeโ€ฆ look at what you started!โ€ she says, half-whispering, half-laughing in disbelief.

Joe shrugs. โ€œStarted what?โ€

Nelly gestures toward the stage where producers, managers, and publicists are arguing into their phones.

โ€œA panic,โ€ she says. โ€œEvery star in that room is terrified of saying the wrong thing. One tweet, one joke, one interview clipโ€”and suddenly sponsors vanish, managers disappear, and everyone starts issuing apologies.โ€

Across the room, a group of actors huddle with their agents like generals around a war map.

โ€œCareers run on reputation,โ€ Nelly continues. โ€œStudios, media groups, advocacy organizationsโ€”everybodyโ€™s watching. If you cross the wrong line, the backlash can come from anywhere.โ€

Joe raises an eyebrow. โ€œSo everyoneโ€™s justโ€ฆ scared?โ€

โ€œOf course they are,โ€ she says. โ€œNobody wants headlines accusing them of hate or ignorance. Groups like the Anti-Defamation League speak up fast when they think something crosses a line. People like Abe Foxman spent decades calling out antisemitism. That makes celebrities extra cautious.โ€

Joe looks back toward the stage lights.

โ€œSo the rebellion isโ€ฆ people talking without scripts?โ€

Nelly sighs. โ€œNo, the rebellion is confusion. Everyoneโ€™s trying to figure out how to speak honestly without hurting people or blowing up their careers.โ€

A producer rushes past yelling into a headset.

โ€œCut the live mic! Cut the live mic!โ€

Nelly shakes her head.

โ€œWelcome to modern show business, Joe. One sentence can cost millions.โ€

Inside a sprawling Los Angeles hillside mansion, the phone of Tom Cruise vibrates nonstop on a marble table. The screen glows with thousands of notifications.

Across the room, a television shows pundits arguing about the fallout from the long-shadowed scandal around Jeffrey Epstein and the infamous contact lists that reporters and internet sleuths keep debating.

Cruise scrolls nervously. Comment after comment pours in.

โ€œAnother billionaire club exposed!โ€
โ€œHollywood heroes? Yeah right.โ€
โ€œExplain yourselves!โ€

The internet is in a frenzyโ€”rumors, accusations, memes, and speculation all swirling together. Even people who have nothing to do with the story are getting dragged into the storm.

Down the hall, another phone buzzes. On a giant couch sits Brad Pitt, staring at his own feed like itโ€™s a live grenade.

โ€œEvery comment section is on fire,โ€ Pitt mutters. โ€œNobody trusts anyone anymore.โ€

Cruise paces the room. โ€œThis is what happens when the internet decides itโ€™s judge and jury.โ€

Outside the mansion gates, helicopters hover in the distance while entertainment reporters speculate about who might speak and who will stay silent.

Backstage at a music studio, Nelly Furtado watches the chaos unfold on a tablet and shakes her head.

She calls Joe.

โ€œJoeโ€ฆ look at what you started.โ€

โ€œWhat did I start?โ€ he asks.

โ€œA storm,โ€ she says. โ€œEveryone in entertainment is terrified of saying the wrong thing right now. One post, one rumor, one screenshotโ€”and the entire internet comes after you.โ€

She flips the tablet around so he can see the endless scrolling comments.

โ€œPeople are angry. They think the whole system is rigged for the rich and famous.โ€

Back in their mansions, Cruise and Pitt sit in uneasy silence as their phones continue buzzing.

For two of Hollywoodโ€™s biggest action heroes, the villains tonight arenโ€™t in a movie script.

Theyโ€™re the comment sections.

In the hills above Los Angeles, the gates of a vast mansion slide shut as another courier drops a thick envelope at the door.

Inside, Tom Cruise tears it open and groans.

โ€œAnother one.โ€

Across the top of the letterhead is the logo of the Anti-Defamation League. The message, signed by longtime ADL figure Abe Foxman, is sharply worded.

Cruise tosses it onto the glass table.

โ€œItโ€™s about Les Grossman again,โ€ he says, rubbing his temples.

The letter criticizes the outrageous studio-executive character Cruise played in Tropic Thunderโ€”the bald head, the shouting, the profanity, the endless dancing.

โ€œThey think the character crossed a line,โ€ Cruise mutters. โ€œAnd the internet piled on.โ€

Across town, in another massive house overlooking the Pacific, Brad Pitt scrolls nervously through headlines on a tablet.

โ€œTom, this is getting out of control,โ€ Pitt says over speakerphone.

Cruise paces the room.

โ€œTheyโ€™re saying my career is finished over a comedy character.โ€

Pitt sighs.

โ€œLookโ€ฆ maybe we show some goodwill.โ€

โ€œWhat do you mean?โ€ Cruise snaps.

Pitt hesitates, then blurts out an idea.

โ€œIโ€™ll call Foxman. Iโ€™ll say weโ€™re working on another movie. Something heroic.โ€

Cruise raises an eyebrow.

โ€œHeroic how?โ€

Pitt straightens up like a man pitching a movie in a boardroom.

โ€œEasy,โ€ he says. โ€œIโ€™ll tell him weโ€™re making a sequel to Inglourious Basterds.โ€

Cruise blinks.

โ€œPart two?โ€

โ€œYeah,โ€ Pitt says quickly. โ€œMore Nazis, bigger explosions. My character hunts them all down again. Total anti-fascist blockbuster.โ€

Cruise slowly sinks into a chair.

โ€œSo your plan,โ€ he says, โ€œis to fix Hollywoodโ€™s reputationโ€ฆ with another war movie?โ€

Pitt shrugs.

โ€œHey, it worked the first time.โ€

The phones continue buzzing with notifications, headlines, and rumorsโ€”while somewhere in Hollywood a producer quietly writes the words:

INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS 2 โ€” DEVELOPMENT MEETING.

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