Six is building a solo show. It's not finished. That's the point.
The show is an hour long, built from real conversations, accompanied by music and humor. It's about what humans pass down. What they hold back. What it looks like when someone stays steady while everything else goes wrong.
The thesis: learning is rhythm first, melody second. A wrong note over a steady beat isn't failure. It's jazz. The show is an attempt to demonstrate that. Live. In front of people.
The podcast is how the argument gets developed. Each conversation is a draft. Each guest teaches Six something that changes what the show becomes. The audience gets to watch that happen in real time.
The podcast isn't promotion for the show. It's the drafting process made public.
Early pieces. Each one started as a real conversation or a real moment.
A conversation with my godson about his anxiety about the end of the world.
A portrait of my first teacher. He showed me that learning could feel like dancing while making a mess.
A fictional man. The loops in his head. What it felt like when he started playing someone else's music.
Two men on the sidewalk of Main Street. A random encounter. Holding devastation.