Open Door Neighborhood

Open Doors, Right Friends, and Eyes Wide Shut

Hey everybody, itโ€™s Brian Flanagan hereโ€”flair bartender extraordinaire, former Jamaica bartender, and the guy who once thought he could conquer Manhattan with nothing but a shaker and a dream.

Back in the โ€™80s, life was different. We had open door neighborhoods. You know the kind Iโ€™m talking about. Neighbors actually trusted neighbors. You could leave your front door unlocked, let the kids run wild until the streetlights came on, and nobody batted an eye. If you needed sugar, you walked next door. If you needed a hand, someone was already there with a cold beer and a story. That was the world I grew up in. That was the world that made me.

I learned early that having the right friends in the right places wasnโ€™t about fancy titles or corner offices. It was about loyalty. It was about showing up. It was about the guy next door who had your back when the city tried to chew you up and spit you out. Joe had that. Joe always had all the right friends in all the right places. Not because he chased power, but because people trusted him the same way we trusted our neighbors back then. Solid. No games. No masks.

Fast forward a few years and the world got a lot more complicated. Doors started closing. Secrets got heavier. I made a movie in โ€™99 called Eyes Wide Shut that peeled back some of those layersโ€”showed what happens when the open trust of the โ€™80s gets replaced by private rooms, hidden rituals, and people wearing literal masks to hide who they really are. Stanley Kubrick didnโ€™t make movies by accident. That film was a warning wrapped in velvet and Christmas lights. A lot of people still havenโ€™t decoded the page. But some of us did.

And now?

Now I hear a song on the Top Gun: Maverick soundtrackโ€”OneRepublic dropping โ€œI Ainโ€™t Worriedโ€ with that line about โ€œ1999 heroes.โ€

Man, that hit me right in the chest.

Because 1999 wasnโ€™t just the year Eyes Wide Shut dropped. It was the year the old world and the new world collided. The year the open door started swinging shut for good. But hereโ€™s the beautiful part: some heroes from that era never really left. Theyโ€™re still out thereโ€”keeping dreams alive, still earning trust the old-fashioned way.

This oneโ€™s for my old neighbor Joe.

You had all the right friends in all the right places, brother. Not because you played the game better than everyone else, but because you never forgot what real trust felt like. The kind we had back when neighborhoods kept their doors open and their eyes wide shut to the nonsense.

We need more Joes in this world.

People who remember what it felt like when a handshake meant something. When your neighbor wasnโ€™t a stranger behind a locked door, but the guy who knew your name and had your six before it was cool to say it.

So hereโ€™s to the open door โ€™80s. Hereโ€™s to the decoded pages. Hereโ€™s to the 1999 heroes who never stopped believing.

And most of allโ€ฆ hereโ€™s to Joe.

Now if youโ€™ll excuse me, Iโ€™ve got a bar to tend and some drinks to shake. But remember this, folks:

The best connections arenโ€™t made in boardrooms. Theyโ€™re made over backyard fences and late-night conversations with people who still know how to leave the door open.

Stay thirsty, my friends.

โ€” Brian Flanagan (aka the guy who still believes in the old neighborhood)

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Nelly’s Neighborhood

Christus Rex walks slowly through Clark Park, where the grass still remembers bare feet and cheap guitars. The city has changed, but the trees havenโ€™t forgotten.

Tom Cruise sits on a bench, coffee in hand, watching an electric tram glide past where traffic once snarled.

Tom Cruise:
I used to live right here. Clark Park.
Back when rent was possible and hope didnโ€™t feel like a luxury item.
You could hear kids, not engines. You could smell rain, not exhaust.
People think the โ€œgood old daysโ€ are a mythโ€”but theyโ€™re not.
Theyโ€™re just badly archived.

Christus Rex:
Memory is a form of prophecy.
You remember because itโ€™s still possible.

Tom Cruise (half-smiling):
We didnโ€™t call it sustainability back then.
We just called itโ€ฆ living.
Walking everywhere. Talking to strangers.
Letting neighborhoods raise you when families were stretched thin.

An electric avenue hums softly nearby. No cars coughing smoke. Just motion without violence.

Tom Cruise:
If weโ€™d had this tech thenโ€”clean transit, quiet streetsโ€”
half the illnesses people carry today wouldnโ€™t exist.
You donโ€™t realize how much damage noise and fumes do
until you finally hear silence again.

Nelly Furtado (passing through the park, nodding in recognition):
East Van taught us how to belong without pretending to be rich.
Thatโ€™s rare now.

Christus Rex:
Thatโ€™s why this place matters.
East Vancouverโ€”the worldโ€™s greenestโ€”not as a slogan,
but as a last act of wisdom.
Electric avenues so the sick can breathe.
Parks instead of parking.
Homes instead of investments.

Tom Cruise:
The future keeps trying to sell itself as faster, louder, bigger.
But the best years of my life?
They were slower.
You could sit on a bench and feel like you were part of something.

Christus Rex:
The kingdom does not arrive with spectacle.
It arrives when a neighborhood decides
that breathing clean air is not a privilege.

A child rides past on a bike. The tram bell rings gently, almost politely.

Tom Cruise (quietly):
If this is our last chanceโ€ฆ
then it should look like Clark Park on a good day.
Not perfect. Just human.

Christus Rex:
Then remember it clearly.
And help build it again.

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