News
Why Colombian Latinas Want To Kill Lonely Americans For Profit

A 28-year-old software developer from Atlanta named Marcus woke up alone in a trashed hotel room nearly 2,000 miles from home with no memory of the previous night. His wallet, expensive watch, and personal belongings were gone, and the hotel safe’s door was left wide open and empty. A metallic taste in his mouth, severe headache, and stomach cramps signaled something far worse than a typical hangover. Faint memories surfaced—a woman named Camila, clicking high heels, rapid Spanish—and the terrifying reality began to emerge.

Marcus’s story is not just a tale of personal misfortune but a wake-up call about a growing global danger intertwined with loneliness, digital influence, and romance tourism. After repeated rejection and a sense of social isolation at home, Marcus was lured abroad by glossy influencer videos showcasing young Western men finding easy romance in exotic locations like Medellín, Colombia. These videos, alongside addictive online communities such as the “Passport Bros,” paint an alluring but dangerously misleading picture of finding love and validation overseas.
In reality, an exploitative industry is thriving on this vulnerability. Women like Camila present themselves as romantic guides but are often part of networks using a potent and secretive drug called scopolamine, known locally as “devil’s breath.” This tasteless, odorless substance can be blown into a victim’s face or slipped into drinks, causing zombie-like compliance by blocking neurotransmitters responsible for memory formation. Victims lose their ability to form new memories, comply with thieves without resistance, and wake hours or days later with no recollection of events, often robbed of everything valuable.
The US State Department estimates around 50,000 scopolamine cases yearly in Colombia alone, with local police reporting attacks every 10 hours in cities like Bogotá. Small gangs and micro cartels operate extensively, turning male loneliness into a profitable and dangerous criminal economy. Tragic cases include tourists disappearing or dying after falling victim to similar schemes.

The broader context reveals a crisis of connection in the West—social isolation, repeated rejection, and loneliness drive men like Marcus to seek love in places where dating feels more accessible or traditional. Influencers fuel this by promoting idealized and often false narratives, masking the risks behind enticing facades. The rising phenomenon of romance tourism, seen not just in Colombia but also in cities worldwide, exploits this void, leading to devastating consequences.
Beyond the personal stories, scopolamine itself is a powerful muscarinic receptor antagonist that impairs various memory types, attention, and cognition. Its pharmacological effects include severe amnesia and slowed reaction times, which criminals exploit to incapacitate and rob victims. Awareness of these effects is vital for travelers and those navigating the complex, often dark world where desire for connection meets predation.
Marcus’s ordeal, and those like him, reveal how today’s male loneliness and the modern dating crisis have spawned an entire ecosystem—from digital influencers to local crime networks—that turns hopeful romantics into prey. This reality demands urgent reflection on the emotional and social fractures in Western societies and highlights the dire consequences of seeking human connection through deceptive, dangerous means.
Ultimately, the hardest lesson Marcus—and all of us—must learn is this: sometimes, when you think you are the customer, you are actually the product being sold. This alarming truth urges us to wake up to the realities behind the glossy images, to address the root causes of loneliness at home, and to approach the search for love with eyes wide open to both opportunity and peril.
News
From Seen to Secured: How Filmmakers Are Owning Their Value

At Love My Productions, seen and secured are more than buzzwords — they are a creative and financial standard for how filmmakers deserve to move through the industry. Being seen speaks to visibility, voice, and representation on screen; being secured speaks to sustainability, strategy, and the ability to build a career that can weather industry shifts.
Together, they form the heartbeat of a mission led by Emmy-winning filmmaker and CEO Asha Chai-Chang, whose work centers filmmakers who have historically been underestimated or overlooked.
Love My Productions was born from Asha’s commitment to create the content and the conditions she didn’t see enough of: stories with strong, multidimensional characters and sets that are accessible, affirming, and inclusive by design.
As a first-generation Afro-Latina and Caribbean-Asian creative with disabilities and a background in finance, she bridges worlds that rarely meet — the emotional power of storytelling and the practical rigor of financial strategy.
That unique blend shapes everything the company does, from producing award-winning films to mentoring filmmakers on how to build their own “creative economies” instead of waiting for permission.
Being seen at Love My Productions means more than getting a film into a festival; it means stories that reflect the fullness of communities — across disability, culture, language, and identity — and casting and crews that mirror that depth. Asha’s projects, like Cruise Control, Spoiler Alert, A.V.G, and Marque Dos, have reached Oscar-qualifying and NAACP-recognized platforms, but their impact is measured as much by who they center as by where they screen.
Each project quietly reinforces a core belief: when filmmakers see their own value, they are more likely to claim space, negotiate fairly, and create work that doesn’t shrink to fit outdated expectations.

Being secured means that same filmmaker has the tools, language, and strategy to sustain that vision over time. Drawing on years as a finance professional and risk manager, Asha helps creatives understand that funding, partnerships, and deal structures are not separate from their artistry — they are extensions of it. Through education, intensives, and one-on-one guidance, Love My Productions supports filmmakers in learning how to talk to investors, design realistic budgets, and build long-term plans that align with both their values and their audiences.

Ultimately, From Seen to Secured is the story of what happens when filmmakers stop treating their worth as negotiable and start treating their careers as ecosystems they can thoughtfully design. Love My Productions exists as both proof and pathway: proof that a disabled, Afro-Latina, Caribbean-Asian filmmaker can lead an Emmy-winning, Netflix-supported career on her own terms, and a pathway for others to do the same.
Under Asha Chai-Chang’s leadership, the company invites filmmakers not just to be visible in the frame, but to be structurally supported behind it — owning their value, their voice, and their future.
News
March 1 in NYC: Love Notes From Harlem at Don’t Tell Mama

Harlem doesn’t always announce its biggest nights in advance—but when it does, you can feel it in the air. Love Notes From Harlem: Styles of Billie Fitzgerald was born in Harlem, tested by a snowstorm, and now arrives for one special night at legendary cabaret club Don’t Tell Mama in Hell’s Kitchen on March 1, 2026. After weather forced the original Room 623 dates to be postponed, LaDawn Mechelle Taylor refused to treat it as a setback. She calls the storm a plot twist—one that shut the show down in Harlem and pushed her to bring the project back stronger, on a new stage, with the same heartbeat: a love letter from Harlem to the world.
Event details: March 1, 2026 – Don’t Tell Mama NYC
– Show: LaDawn Mechelle – Love Notes From Harlem (Styles of Billie Fitzgerald)
– Date: Sunday, March 1, 2026
– Venue: Don’t Tell Mama NYC, 343 W 46th St, New York, NY 10036
– Seating from: 7:15 p.m.
– Showtime: 8:00 p.m. – approximately 9:30 p.m.
– Cover charge: 24.00 USD
– Minimum: 20 USD per person (must include 2 drinks)
– Payment: Cash only
– Food menu available during the show
This is a classic New York cabaret night: intimate tables, full bar, and a powerhouse vocalist close enough for you to feel every note.
A love note that keeps moving
LaDawn has earned the nickname “Queen of Switch Up” from people who know her best. When snow hit and the original Harlem dates had to be cancelled, she did not fold. She pivoted. What began at Room 623—created for and inspired by Harlem—is now stepping into a Midtown room without losing its roots.

Love Notes From Harlem is built as a storytelling concert: LaDawn, backed by live musicians, honoring Ella Fitzgerald, Ertha Kit, Bessie Smith, Ma Rainey, Nat King Cole and others while weaving her own journey through songs and stories. It is Harlem’s soul transported to Restaurant Row for one night only.
What people close to LaDawn are saying..
From her mother, Rosalind Turner:
“My diva daughter LaDawn has totally lived her unforgettable dreams and she will never stop what she believes in. I am one great big fan of hers. She is the one who will ride through any rain, sleet, or snowstorm. I am a witness, and I know she has weathered a big storm by not giving up. She was forced to cancel a recent show and picked right back up the very next one. The girl is a realist.”
From Angela Strauman, NYC‑based actor and award‑winning writer in theater, television, and film, who joins the show:
Angela Strauman is “so grateful to be part of such a talented crew led by the marvelous LaDawn Mechelle.”
When LaDawn asked her to join the show to help represent the relationship between Marilyn Monroe and Ella Fitzgerald, she was beyond excited. She notes that multi‑racial friendships are rarely represented or portrayed in media, and that showing such a positive, supportive relationship between two friends…
…“in a time when there was such a divide, not unlike today, is such a great reminder that love and support will always win.”
These perspectives make it clear: this is not just another gig. It is community, legacy, and risk‑taking onstage.

From Disney princess to Harlem storyteller…
LaDawn’s path to this moment covers a lot of ground. She has immersed herself in performance at every level—from playing Disney’s first Black American princess, Tiana, to leading Whitney Houston tribute shows and singing from the heart at New York venues. She has proven she can carry iconic material and still sound unmistakably like herself.
In Love Notes From Harlem, she turns that experience inward: honoring the artists who shaped her, lifting up Harlem’s sound, and telling the story of a Black woman who refuses to stop moving forward, no matter the weather.
Why you should be in the room
If you love Harlem’s musical history, Black women headlining their own stories, intimate New York rooms where the singers really sing, and shows that feel like you are being transported to another era, then March 1 at Don’t Tell Mama is not the night to skip.
Love Notes From Harlem: Styles of Billie Fitzgerald is the kind of show friends talk about long after the last note—and the kind of performance you will be glad you caught before it moves on to even bigger rooms.
Learn more about Ladawn by watching her interview below:
News
Idris Elba’s Multimillion-Dollar Film Studio Is Coming to Ghana

British actor and producer Idris Elba is moving ahead with plans to establish a state-of-the-art film studio and creative hub in Accra, Ghana, in a move industry observers say could significantly boost the country’s screen sector and the wider African film ecosystem.
The multimillion-dollar complex is planned for a 22-acre site near Osu Castle in Accra and is expected to combine full production facilities with a strong talent development component.
The project has been described as both a studio and a training ground, aimed at equipping Ghanaian and African creatives with world-class skills across directing, production, cinematography, post-production, and related disciplines.
Elba, whose work spans blockbuster franchises and prestige television, has been vocal about his commitment to building sustainable film infrastructure on the continent rather than limiting engagement to short-term shoots. The Ghana studio forms part of a broader vision to position Africa as a competitive production destination, with facilities capable of servicing both local storytellers and international productions.
Industry analysts note that many African filmmakers continue to face structural challenges, including limited access to purpose-built sound stages, modern post-production services, and consistent training pathways. By situating a major creative hub in Accra, the initiative is expected to address some of these gaps, create employment opportunities, and attract higher-budget projects to Ghana.
The planned studio is also being framed as a catalyst for economic growth, with potential knock-on benefits for tourism, hospitality, and ancillary services that support film and television production. Local stakeholders have welcomed the development as a sign of growing confidence in Ghana’s creative economy and its ability to compete on a global stage.
Early reaction across social and traditional media has highlighted enthusiasm among filmmakers, actors, and young creatives who see the project as a landmark investment in African talent. As plans progress, further details on the construction timeline, partners, and specific training programs are expected to be announced.
There are videos circulating online showing Idris Elba discussing and outlining his vision for the Ghana studio project, including interview segments and news features that provide additional context and visual coverage of the announcement.
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