 Cultural actors are scouts for society. The evolutionary purpose of that is to make sure that whatever you discover gets back to the mainstream. We're in a stage where technology has been turned against the people. The only icons we have on our phone are either thumbs up, thumbs down, and a heart. There is no umbrella for understanding, and most of the comments are hatred. We have to find a way through culture, through leaders, to make a connection for people that felt left by a system. Artists' interpretation of political reality are extremely important, and what they have to say will be vastly different. It's a pure form of reflection. To find the right balance between the demand for justice and the demand for freedom. If you connect with someone, they're likely to have a human reaction, and empathy is one of the core things on which humanity is built. You tell the things that somebody else may not be able to say, telling the truth the way it is. As we lose trust in politics and politicians and justice, telling stories of the truth is very powerful. Even if somebody disagrees with the performance of mind, like if you're talking women, you're talking education, you're talking family welfare, you're talking health, you're talking the environment, you're talking water resources, this intersectionality is so huge that you take one and in fact you're touching a lot of the others. When you hear a musician from a different part of the world, you're not necessarily thinking about us versus them, then the divisions melt away because you're caught in the moment. The great song, great piece of music, doesn't matter what language it's in, you can feel it even more than they hear it. We need to have other ways that lead us to create a common narrative. People just want to come together. They don't want to be told to come together. They want to engage in conversations they don't want to be preached to. It opens a dialogue and that conversation could be so influential.