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*Kung Fu Panda* she had read and deeply admired its thematic pacing. *Ready Player One* had terrified her and made her think about the future of digital dia. But the *Marvin 1* EP had utterly destroyed her. It had done exactly what it did to everyone, and she had spent several weeks afterward lying on her bedroom floor, desperately trying to understand the chanical chanism of it from a professional perspective.
'What specific, engineered vocal decisions had produced what specific, devastating emotional effects?' She had ultimately arrived at the conclusion that so of what the dark music did was entirely beyond the scope of what professional, technical analysis could ever rationally account for.
This conclusion was endlessly interesting to a young actress. She filed it away in her mind under things that required significantly more empirical data.
When the live performance began on the telecast, Keira slid off the sofa and sat cross-legged directly on the living room rug, leaning forward. She listened with the focused attention of soone who was simultaneously emotionally experiencing the art, and coldly studying the artist.
The magic reached her, exactly as it reached everyone else, directly through the front door of his genuine musical craft, and simultaneously through the backdoor of sothing entirely else—sothing dark. Both arrived at the exact sa ti, in a way that her teenage brain simply could not fully separate into logical component parts.
She obsessively watched him play the grand piano with the hawkish attention she always paid to live performance. She studied the elegant quality of his hands striking the ivory keys. She analyzed the breathing relationship between the physical playing and the vocal singing. And she studied the terrifying composure of an entity who was completely, fully *inside* the emotional mont, and not cheaply *performing* being inside it for the caras.
When the massive standing ovation began in Los Angeles, Keira was already physically on her feet in her living room, her hands clamped over her mouth, tears shining in her dark eyes.
Her mother, Sharman, sitting on the sofa beside her, looked up in surprise. "You actually stood up, Keira."
"So did six thousand hardened Hollywood executives, Mum," Keira shot back, her voice thick with emotion, not looking away from the screen.
"Yes, but they were actually there in the room with him," her mother pointed out logically.
"I completely felt like I was exactly there in the room with him," Keira whispered, a single tear escaping down her cheek. Which was, she realized, the most honest description she possessed of what the television broadcast had just delivered to her living room in Teddington.
---
Park Avenue, New York City.
Seventeen-year-old Paris Hilton was watching the Academy Awards from the sprawling, cavernous family penthouse.
She was watching it on a massive, state-of-the-art flat-screen television that was considerably larger and significantly more expensive than the televisions 99% of the global population were currently using. She was lounging on a velvet sectional, draped in expensive silk, existing in the curated, effortless configuration of a wealthy socialite.
She inherently understood that the Oscars were a cultural event worth watching, at least for the sake of the vicious, high-society gossip it would fuel within her friend group tomorrow.
But beneath the silk and the flawless blonde pink aesthetic, the reality of Paris's psychology was vastly darker, infinitely more complex, and l guarded.
Paris had an insulated, deep relationship with LA celebrities that was entirely distinct from all the other teenage girls watching the telecast tonight. She was not an observer looking in from the outside. She was born inside the blinding, suffocating center of the fishbowl. Her family's staggering hotel wealth and their iron-clad social connections placed her firmly in an elite, untouchable landscape.
Since she was fifteen, she had been sneaking into the VIP rooms of the most exclusive clubs in New York and Los Angeles, surrounded by A-list actors, predatory executives, and desperately famous adults.
Because of this, she already knew exactly how fake the world was. She knew the smiles were transactional. She knew the glamour was a thin veneer over profound, terrifying exploitation.
And more intimately, she knew the agonizing cost of a billion-dollar last na. Behind the closed doors of the penthouse, she was trapped in a cold war with her strict, image-obsessed parents. They demanded absolute compliance to the Hilton brand, and her desperate, teenage rebellion was currently being t with terrifying threats of being kidnapped in the middle of the night and shipped off to abusive "troubled teen" behavioral modification facilities.
To survive the crushing weight of her family's expectations and the predatory gaze of the dia, Paris was actively constructing a mask. She was learning to play the vapid, careless dumb blonde—a brilliant, bulletproof armor designed to make people underestimate her. If they thought she was empty, they couldn't hurt the intelligent, terrified girl hiding underneath.
Her relationship to the phenonon of Marvin yers was, therefore, unusual to say the least.
She had initially encountered his art through the exclusive networks of elite social information that dictated her privileged life. A wealthy friend had played the vinyl *Marvin 1* EP at a massive, gated Hamptons party back in September. Paris had stopped talking, stopped drinking her smuggled champagne, and listened with the full, undivided attention she only ever gave to things she intended to take seriously.
She inherently understood, within the first thirty seconds of the track, that the music was doing sothing to her nervous system. It cut cleanly through her dissociation, through the carefully curated armor, and reached the terrified girl underneath. It grounded her in a way the cheap, disposable pop music she usually heard absolutely did not.
She had imdiately demanded the DJ hand over the physical EP. She had listened to it alone in her bedroom countless tis, feeling a strange warmth in her chest, a profound sense of safety in a house where she currently felt none.
She had also forced herself to read *Ready Player One*, primarily because it was being loudly discussed at every single elite dinner party she attended, and Paris possessed opinions about things that were being discussed everywhere.
She thought the novel was extraordinary. It gave her the distinct, chilling sense of a massive, brilliant mind operating years ahead of the curve, positioned sowhere deep in the digital future, simply describing it back to the ignorant present. It proved that Marvin wasn't just an artist; he was an apex predator in the business world.
She also thought Marvin yers was extrely, almost uncomfortably, paralyzingly attractive.
She was seventeen. She had already developed a highly sophisticated, cynical understanding of human attraction and its various, transactional forms. She intimately knew the difference between a genuine attraction to a physical person, and a cheap attraction to the wealthy *idea* of a person. She also knew exactly what the predatory gaze of older n in VIP rooms felt like.
But what she felt watching Marvin was completely different. It was not "attraction" in the conventional, teenage sense. It was sothing vastly more primal. It was gravity.
The terrifying recognition of an untouchable force operating in her imdiate proximity.
He was twelve. She was seventeen. These biological facts peacefully coexisted with the intense gravity she felt, completely without resolving it. In her world, strange power dynamics, it's not really new around here, there was nothing new under the sun.
Now, she watched the live Oscar performance with the focused, unblinking attention that genuine gravity commanded. She felt the heavy, Celtic song arrive in her chest. The overwhelming combination of the music, the impossibly handso face on the glowing screen, and the staggering knowledge of everything the boy had done produced a massive, physiological response.
But what truly captivated Paris's bruised psychology wasn't just his talent. It was his *autonomy*.
Marvin didn't answer his parents. His parents seem to have answered to him. He was completely, unapologetically in control of his own world, his own image, and his own life. He had the one thing her billion-dollar last na could not buy her: absolute, unassailable freedom. He was the only person in the world more powerful than the institutions and the family threatening to lock her away.
She sat frozen, her manicured hand pressed over her mouth for the entire, deafening duration of the standing ovation. And then, when the jarring comrcial break finally ca, she processed the overwhelming emotional information in the ruthless Paris Hilton way.
Which was to say: She took the emotional data. She filed it in the relevant, highly classified ntal category. And she coldly, calculatingly decided exactly what his existence ant for her going forward in this world.
What it ant was simple. She was going to rember this specific evening for a very, very long ti. And she was absolutely going to find a way to et him, to step into the protective radius of his gravity, and align herself with the gravity to see how it feels like to be around him.
---
In a quiet, snow-dusted suburb of Burlington, Ontario, Canada, nineteen-year-old Rachel McAdams was watching the Oscars from her living room sofa.
She had just stumbled through the front door, exhausted from a local community theater rehearsal, approximately forty minutes before the telecast officially started. She was still wearing her baggy rehearsal clothes—grey sweatpants and an oversized university hoodie—and had initially sat down in front of the glowing television with the casual, innocent intention of simply unwinding and watching the red carpet arrivals for an hour.
She had not moved a single inch since.
Rachel was passionately training as an actress. She was currently at the sponge-like stage of artistic developnt where watching an extraordinary, magnetic performance was both deeply inspirational and instructive.
It was the crucial stage where you could rationally identify specific, invisible things that were genuinely worth stealing from what you observed, and successfully incorporate them into the artistic foundation you were trying to build for yourself.
But the live performance she was watching now on the Shrine stage was giving her sothing she was not entirely sure how to incorporate. Primarily because so of what the performance was *doing* was operating at a terrifying frequency that she simply didn't possess a technical, theatrical frawork for yet.
The boy's voice was doing things with the song that the heavily produced, studio recording version absolutely did not do.
Not "better" or "worse" things, but fundantally *different* things. Things that were highly specific to a live, bleeding performance in a resonant physical space, ard only with a real grand piano and a real, breathing audience. Things that a plastic recording could simply never contain, because a recording was rely a dead docunt of the past, and what she was currently watching was a living thing happening in real-ti.
When the standing ovation began in Los Angeles, she watched the screen with the hungry quality of an artist who is watching sothing she fully intends to steal and use.
Not to cheaply replicate it—she rationally understood that what she was currently watching was physically un-replicable by any earthly ans available to her—but to deeply *understand* it.
She wanted to understand what genuine, absolute commitnt to a terrifying performance could actually, physically produce in a room. She wanted to know what it authentically looked like from the outside when a human being was completely *inside* a mont.
When the broadcast jarringly cut to a fast-food comrcial, Rachel sat frozen on the couch for a long, silent mont.
Then, she slowly stood up, walked over to her CD tower, found her worn-out copy of the *Titanic* soundtrack, put it into the stereo, and pressed play.
She listened.
The studio recording was undeniably beautiful.
It was a masterpiece of 90s love pop production.
But the live performance she had just witnessed had been sothing else entirely.
The live performance had been a twelve-year-old boy sitting utterly alone on the massive Oscar stage with a grand piano, ard with whatever magic it was that he possessed entirely beyond the craft of music.
And the result had been the most affecting thing she had ever seen perford since she had first begun paying close attention to human performance.
Rachel grabbed a pen from the coffee table and wrote a quick, ssy note on the back of her theater script. She would absolutely not forget this or the boy on the screen.
---
Roehampton, London.
Fifteen-year-old Emily Blunt was watching the Academy Awards from the cozy, sprawling Blunt family ho in Roehampton.
She was watching the exact sa slightly delayed BBC Two broadcast as the rest of the country, but Emily was securely sequestered away in the dark, uninterrupted sanctuary of her own bedroom.
She had desperately wanted the quiet isolation for this anticipated evening, completely separate from her loud, boisterously affectionate family downstairs.
Emily was observant and intensely private, but her quietness was not simply a personality trait—it was a survival chanism born of a very specific, suffocating trauma. For the majority of her childhood, she had been a hostage inside her own body, held captive by a severe, paralyzing stutter.
She possessed a massive intelligent interior landscape, bursting with sharp observations and profound empathy. But attempting to translate that internal world into spoken words had always been a humiliating minefield. A blocked throat, tripping consonants, and the burning anxiety of watching people patiently wait for her to finish a single sentence. For years, she had felt completely, helplessly trapped inside herself, a vibrant soul locked behind a broken drawbridge.
Because speaking was a battleground, she had beco a ravenous reader. Books were a safe haven. Marvin's literature had reached her through those quiet channels. She had read *Kung Fu Panda* initially at her younger siblings' begging request, only to discover a profound resonance with its thes of inner peace and overcoming perceived physical limitations.
*Ready Player One* had arrived more recently, and she consud it with the absorption of a teenager finding a digital world where the limitations of the physical body—and the voice—were entirely irrelevant.
*****
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