Joe Gilmore and his brother, the sharp-witted lawyer Mike, sat across from a group of executives in a high-rise boardroom overlooking the Toronto skyline. The tension in the room was thick. The music industry heads and pharmaceutical representatives had gathered to discuss Nelly Furtado’s future—her contracts, her health, her voice. But Joe and Mike weren’t here to negotiate in the usual way.
“Nelly doesn’t need your pills,” Joe stated flatly, tapping the table. “She needs training, prayers, and vitamins. Let the bird sing.”
One of the executives, an older man with silver hair and a stiff suit, scoffed. “Mr. Gilmore, we have medical professionals advising us. Nelly’s been under a lot of stress. Therapy and prescriptions are standard protocol.”
Mike leaned forward, his legal mind cutting through the corporate jargon like a scalpel. “You call them miracle drugs, but it’s a miracle if you survive. And wonder drugs? You wonder what they’ll do to you.”
Joe smirked. “You are what you eat. And you are what you consume—mentally, physically, spiritually. Pumping her full of pharmaceuticals isn’t going to heal her. It’ll chain her.”
A younger executive, fidgeting with his tie, spoke up hesitantly. “We just want to make sure she’s in the right headspace to—”
“To what?” Joe interrupted. “Be a puppet? Be a product?” He shook his head. “She’s an artist, not a machine. And Canada needs her to be free. Let her sing, let her heal. Because when Nelly sings, the people listen. And when the people listen, they hope. And when they hope, they move. Debt forgiveness, economic recovery—it starts with the heart. And her music is medicine.”
The room fell silent. The executives exchanged glances, processing the weight of Joe’s words.
Mike folded his arms. “You can keep drugging your artists into submission, or you can let Nelly Furtado be who she was born to be. Either way, history will judge you.”
Joe stood up, pushing his chair back with a screech. “We’re done here. The bird will heal herself.”
And with that, he and Mike walked out, leaving the suits in stunned silence, the echoes of their words hanging in the air like the first note of a song waiting to be sung.