The fight was brutal but swift, the BAPP trio’s skills honed, their dogs a whirlwind of fur and fury. Ricardo tackled the stocky dealer, his fists flying with a personal vendetta, each punch landing with a dull thud, the man’s grunts sharp in the air. Omar and Hassan moved like a tag team, switching seamlessly, their kicks and grapples fluid, the knife clattering to the pavement with a metallic ring. The dealers crumpled, disarmed, and begging, their pleas drowned by the dogs’ triumphant barks, the air heavy with the coppery scent of blood. Ricardo, Omar, and Hassan stood tall, their faces streaked with sweat and blood, fist-bumping with a quiet pride, the streetlight’s glow casting their silhouettes long and defiant. They owned this moment, respect swelling, the night’s cool air brushing in their faces as they walked off, leaving the dealers humiliated in the dust.
After 32 years in Education followed by 24 years as a successful CEO in the corporate world and seeing his efforts were not making much improvement in solving the world’s problems, Barry decided to bring his human services background with his financial expertise along with the 70’s optimism to the film industry hoping a new approach to film will change the world. Starting with his memoirs Maestro Please soon to be put onto the screen, Barry has become one of the newest prolific writers for social changeView all by Barry Meinster