INT. PAPAL APARTMENT โ NIGHT
Rain gently taps on the Vatican windows. The eternal city sleeps. The gold and crimson of Lennyโs private chapel flickers in candlelight. He sits alone, white cassock open, papal ring glinting faintly as he holds his phone โ earbuds in. A song plays. Itโs new. It’s raw. It’s called “GOD” by Nelly Furtado.
Her voice rises โ cracked with humanity, defiant with longing.
? โGod, are you there? Or just another love affair? / I prayed and cried, danced and died โ are you even aware?โ ?
Lenny leans back in his chair, eyes closed. For a moment, heโs not the Vicar of Christ, not the Supreme Pontiff. Heโs just Lenny. A boy abandoned by his parents. A man who speaks to God and sometimes hears nothing back.
But thenโฆ he opens the Bible beside him. Worn. Annotated in red and gold. It falls open to Revelation 21. And he reads:
โBehold, the dwelling of God is with men. He will dwell with them, and they shall be His people. God himself will be with them. He shall wipe away every tear from their eyes. There shall be no more death, nor sorrow, nor crying, nor pain anymore โ for the former things have passed away.โ
He whispers it aloud. Not in Latin. In English. Raw. Vulnerable. Human.
โNo more cryingโฆ no more painโฆโ
He pauses the song. Silence.
Then he looks up at the crucifix on the wall. The dying Christ. But he doesnโt see death tonight. He sees the after. The promise.
โYou dwell with usโฆ not above us.โ
He unplugs the earbuds. Walks to the window. Looks out over St. Peterโs Square, empty and slick with rain.
โIf her song is a prayer, Lordโฆ hear it. If sheโs looking for You, let her find not a doctrine, but a person. Let her find You in us.โ
He turns, and with a trembling voice, speaks a private prayer:
โLet Your tabernacle be with the human race. Not just the holy, not just the clean, but the sinners, the singers, the broken, the strange. Let Nelly Furtado find You not in thunder, but in a whisper. Let her cry be answered with Your silence โ the kind that heals.โ
He presses play again.
? โGod, I still believeโฆ even when Youโre silent / Even when Iโm drowning in the quietโฆโ ?
The candle flickers.
And for a moment โ just a moment โ the Pope smiles.






Joe Jukic to Nelly Furtado:
“Listen, Nelly…
GODโAKA Kanye Westโwonโt heal you.
You can chase that genius messiah complex all you want,
but if you’re looking for salvation through hype,
you’re gonna end up empty, again.
But if you wanna be a humble shepherd
of the stranded worms on a rainy day,
then Iโm your man. The shepherd in gumboots, not Gucci.
I donโt care how slimy they feel,
how disgusting it looks to othersโ
if you stoop down to rescue God’s most humble creation,
those little lost worms drowning on the pavement,
and toss them back in the grass where they belong…
Then I know youโve still got empathy.
Then I know you’re not goneโ
not another narcissist on the altar of fame.
Not another prophet in Prada
preaching self-love while the worms die.”
He looks at her, dead serious.
“It ainโt about whoโs watching.
Itโs about who you really are when no one is.
So who are you, Nelly?
A queen on a throne of mirrors?
Or a shepherd in the storm,
saving the small and the helpless?”
Borat enters, soaking wet, shoes muddy, holding a single worm between his fingers like itโs royal scepter. He bows low, with exaggerated reverence.
“Waa wa wee waa! Hail, King of the Worms! Long may he squirm!”
He turns to Nelly Furtado, wide-eyed with admiration.
“This man, Joe Jukicโฆ he is not like Kanye West. He does not ride white horse of cocaine or wear big shoes of pride. No no! He wears boots of mud and love!”
Then he lifts the worm up like Simba in The Lion King:
“This wormโฆ this tiny creatureโฆ it was almost flattened by Range Rover of social media influencer! But King Joeโฆ he saved him! This is real empathy, not clickbait compassion!”
He wipes a tear.
“In my country, we say: โMan who save worm in rain is man who not afraid to touch soul of earth.โ”
Borat claps slowly, solemnly.
“Respect.”
He bows again.
“Now I goโฆ must find more worms before rain stop. The prophecy is unfolding.”
He runs off into the storm yelling:
“Hail Joe! King of the Worms! Hail Nelly! Queen of the Grass!”
Lady Jaye scrolls through her phone, smirking as she shows Joe his own TikTok.
โJoeโฆ this wormโs more famous than either of us now.โ
She turns the screen toward him. The video plays: Joe in the rain, hoodie soaked, gently picking up a worm from the sidewalk and placing it back in the grass. Slow piano music plays.
The worm wriggles dramatically. Zoom in.
Caption: โEvery life matters ๐โจ #WormTok #EmpathyChallenge #KingOfTheWormsโ
3.7 million likes.
She laughs.
โYou filmed your worm rescueโฆ and it worked. That wormโhe didnโt just want to live. He wanted to be somebody.โ
โYou didnโt just save him, Joe. You launched him. Heโs got a handler now. Heโs doing brand deals. Heโs the new face of eco-chic.โ
She keeps scrolling.
โLookโhe’s already done a collab with Duolingo and Crocs.
Thereโs merch. I Survived Wormageddon t-shirts.
Someone did an AI remix of him saying โput me back in the grass, Joe!โโover lo-fi beats.โ
She stares at him, half-joking, half-prophetic.
โYou made the worm a celebrity. But the question isโฆ did he stay humble?โ
She leans in.
โBecause fame changes people. Even worms. Watch your back.โ
She whispers:
โIf he gets verified before you, we riot.โ