Joe - Ghetto Child -
The smirk vanished. Malik looked at the court, then back at the page. "You see all that in a hoop game, kid?" "I see everything," Joe said quietly.
"You scribblin' again, Joey?" Nana Rose would ask, her voice like sandpaper on velvet. "Just keepin' track, Nana," he’d say. Joe - Ghetto Child
Years later, when Joe stood on a stage in a suit that cost more than his old apartment, he didn’t talk about the glitz. He opened a tattered spiral notebook and told the world about a boy on a fire escape who learned that if you look hard enough, even the hardest streets can be a masterpiece. The smirk vanished
That night, Joe didn’t write about the sirens. He wrote about the "Halo." He realized that being a "ghetto child" wasn't just about what they didn't have; it was about the intensity of what they did have—the loyalty, the survival, and the neon-lit beauty hidden in the grit. "You scribblin' again, Joey
Malik handed the book back, his expression unreadable. "Don't stop seein' it. People like us... we get forgotten if nobody writes it down."