
Joe Jukic and Nelly Furtado are sitting at a tiny café table, Paris in the background on someone’s phone screen, espresso cooling between them.
Joe Jukic:
“You know what people don’t get about Paris Hilton going into politics?”
(smiles)
“It doesn’t start with speeches. It starts with SimCity.”
Nelly Furtado:
(laughs)
“Totally. That game is low-key political training. Taxes too high? Citizens riot. Ignore infrastructure? Power grid collapses. That’s basically a senate hearing in pixel form.”
Joe:
“Exactly. You don’t wake up one day and run a country. You first learn why zoning matters. Why you can’t just build luxury condos and forget sewage.”
Nelly:
“And Paris is actually perfect for that. She understands branding, nightlife economies, tourism, reputation management. In SimCity terms, she’s already maxed out culture and commerce.”
Joe:
“The phone version is the gateway drug. Five minutes here, ten minutes there. Next thing you know, she’s on a laptop at 3 a.m. trying to balance public transport with environmental happiness.”
Nelly:
“That’s when it clicks:
‘Oh… people aren’t accessories. They’re systems.’”
Joe:
“And systems punish you if you fake it. You can’t just say ‘That’s hot’ to a collapsing hospital network.”
Nelly:
(smiling, thoughtful)
“If she sticks with it, politics becomes less about celebrity and more about stewardship. Keeping the city alive. Making it livable.”
Joe:
“So yeah. First step into politics?”
Raises his cup.
“Play SimCity. Lose a few cities. Learn why.”
Nelly:
“And only then do you try the real world.”
