Taylor Swift famously wrote the lyrics, “Can I ask you a question?” While seemingly a simple query, it plays to the idea that we all have questions some we never pose and some we agonize over never being answered. Pop culture is overrun with gossip columnists, blind items and paparazzi photos in this predatory society we live in. But what if you actually got to sit down with your favorite artist, or athlete? What if you got to ask them all the questions you’ve always pondered? But here’s the catch, you can’t ask them questions that you’ve seen speculated on in social media. Instead, you get to ask them why. Why did they write that song? Why did they choose that part to audition for? Why did they sign with that team? Why did they write that book? Back in the day, Myspace was known as quote “a place for friends.” The Whyspace show is place where we get to really know each other. Knowing why someone does something can literally change the trajectory of history.
That being said, “Can I ask you a question?”
All content for Whyspace is the property of mandyasberry and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Taylor Swift famously wrote the lyrics, “Can I ask you a question?” While seemingly a simple query, it plays to the idea that we all have questions some we never pose and some we agonize over never being answered. Pop culture is overrun with gossip columnists, blind items and paparazzi photos in this predatory society we live in. But what if you actually got to sit down with your favorite artist, or athlete? What if you got to ask them all the questions you’ve always pondered? But here’s the catch, you can’t ask them questions that you’ve seen speculated on in social media. Instead, you get to ask them why. Why did they write that song? Why did they choose that part to audition for? Why did they sign with that team? Why did they write that book? Back in the day, Myspace was known as quote “a place for friends.” The Whyspace show is place where we get to really know each other. Knowing why someone does something can literally change the trajectory of history.
That being said, “Can I ask you a question?”
Episode 85: Why America needs Taylor and Travis now more than ever (part 1)
Whyspace
27 minutes
1 month ago
Episode 85: Why America needs Taylor and Travis now more than ever (part 1)
This past week was heavy in America and we in no way take that lightly. However, this isn't a political podcast, nor a news app, and we cover pop culture and sports. So that's what we did in episode 85. Hollywood was full of breakups over the weekend and our favorite pop princess did not make a visible appearance at the Kansas City Chiefs game. But, we did still recap several college football matchups and NFL games. We also made our predictions, which have been less than stellar so far this season. But hey, there's always next week. We answered your questions and we also shared some things we are loving and hating right now. This is a two-part episode b/c as you know, technology is not our friend.
Whyspace
Taylor Swift famously wrote the lyrics, “Can I ask you a question?” While seemingly a simple query, it plays to the idea that we all have questions some we never pose and some we agonize over never being answered. Pop culture is overrun with gossip columnists, blind items and paparazzi photos in this predatory society we live in. But what if you actually got to sit down with your favorite artist, or athlete? What if you got to ask them all the questions you’ve always pondered? But here’s the catch, you can’t ask them questions that you’ve seen speculated on in social media. Instead, you get to ask them why. Why did they write that song? Why did they choose that part to audition for? Why did they sign with that team? Why did they write that book? Back in the day, Myspace was known as quote “a place for friends.” The Whyspace show is place where we get to really know each other. Knowing why someone does something can literally change the trajectory of history.
That being said, “Can I ask you a question?”