Concrete Roses – East Van Struggle

[Scene: East Vancouver, back alley lit by neon. King Loo leans on a graffitied wall, Yugo Joe sparks a smoke. Sirens echo faintly in the distance.]

King Loo:
Every corner out here’s a trap, bro. Kids chasing that glass dragon, don’t even know it’s hollow. Synthetic poison, cut with death. They selling dreams but handing out coffins.

Yugo Joe:
Facts. And the cops? They don’t clean it up—they eat off it. Dirty badges, taking their cut while mothers cry. They raid one trap house, then protect the next. Whole system’s rigged, like East Van’s just their chessboard.

King Loo:
Yeah… every day another one bites the dust. I see brothers vanish—OD on the block, chalk outlines like bad graffiti. City talks about “safe supply,” but the streets never safe, not when death’s the dealer.

Yugo Joe:
We grew up thinking hustle meant survival. But survival’s a lottery ticket out here. One wrong pill, one hot shot, and you don’t wake up. That ain’t hustling—that’s genocide slow-cooked.

King Loo:
Still, we speak it. If we don’t spit the truth, they bury it. East Van’s scars tell stories the politicians don’t want to hear.

Yugo Joe:
Then let’s keep talking, Loo. Voice for the fallen, fire for the living. Maybe one day, dust turns to gold. But tonight? We watch our backs, and we keep our people awake.

Son of God

Title: “Christ Consciousness” – A Conversation About Diogo Morgado

Scene: Joe Jukic and Luis Morgado sit in a dimly lit living room, the credits of Son of God rolling on the TV screen. They’re silent for a moment, absorbing what they’ve just watched. Then, Joe turns to Luis, thoughtful.


JOE (leaning forward)
You feel it too, don’t you?

LUIS (nodding slowly)
Yeah. It’s not just the acting. There’s something else.

JOE
Exactly. He’s not just playing Jesus. It’s like… he knows Him.

LUIS (smirking slightly)
Or is Him, in some way.

JOE (pointing at him)
That’s what I’m saying! Diogo’s got that thing—what did Oprah call it?

LUIS
“Christ Consciousness.”

JOE (snapping his fingers)
Yes! That’s it. It’s not just a performance. It’s an energy.

LUIS (leaning back, arms crossed)
You think he’s aware of it? That he’s carrying that?

JOE
I don’t know. Maybe not in an egotistical way. But when you see him in this role—the way he speaks, the way he looks at people—it’s not just acting. It’s like he’s tapped into something real.

LUIS (thoughtful)
Oprah talks about it like it’s a universal love, a higher awareness. And Diogo… he doesn’t just portray it. He radiates it.

JOE (grinning)
So what you’re telling me is… Diogo Morgado might actually be an ascended master?

LUIS (laughing)
Hey, I’m just saying—if there’s anyone out there who could convince me Christ Consciousness is real, it’s him.

JOE (raising an imaginary glass)
Then here’s to Diogo—the man who made us believe, even just for two hours.

LUIS (raising his own imaginary glass, smiling)
Amen.

(They both laugh as the screen fades to black.)


Closing Note: A lighthearted but deep conversation about presence, spirituality, and the power of performance—with just the right touch of reverence and humor.

Astor Spell Caster

In the icy depths
she lost her way
A dream of grandeur turned to dismay
In the echoes of hearts that once sailed high
The world broke apart with a whispered sigh
The fed rose strong
in a time of plight
Yet shadows fell hard
masking the light
Through the trenches
the tears did fall
In the wake of war
we remember it all