Season 1 in progress / Episode 3 recording this week / Day 28

Each guest picks
the next. The last
one is Kevin
Bacon.

Six conversations between a stranger and the actor at the center of the universe. We’re testing whether pleasant persistence works — in real time, on the record.

2 / 6Episodes out
4Hand-offs left
87Cold emails sent
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Season 1 / The hand-off Open the live chain →
The premise

Six interviews. Each guest recommends the next. We end with Kevin Bacon — or we don’t.

The math says any two people on Earth are connected by an average of about six relationships. The folklore version, attached to Kevin Bacon since a 1994 college dorm conversation, says it specifically about him. He liked the idea enough to spin it into SixDegrees.org.

We’re running it as an experiment. I’m starting from zero — no agent, no shared zip code, no warm intro. Each episode I sit down with whoever the last guest recommended. They tell me about their work. Then they help me get to whoever’s next.

If pleasant persistence is a real strategy and not just a thing I tell myself at parties, the sixth conversation is with Kevin Bacon. If it isn’t, the show is a record of how it failed and where.

“The whole show works only if every guest is interesting on their own — before the hand-off matters.” — Six to Bacon, the rule
The format

A six-step controlled experiment in being a stranger.

Step 01 · Interview

Sit down with whoever the last guest sent.

A real interview, not a hand-off transaction. We talk about their actual work — the show only earns its ending if every middle is worth listening to.

Step 02 · The ask

Ask for the next door.

Toward the end, on tape: who do you know that gets us closer? They pick. They make the introduction. The cold email becomes a warm one.

Step 03 · Repeat × 6

End with Kevin, or with the truth.

Hybrid release: we record, edit, and ship while the next booking is still in motion. The audience finds out at the same speed I do.

What people are saying

Early listeners, on the record.

“The kind of podcast that justifies its own gimmick by episode two — because the gimmick was never the point.”
— Renée O., Brooklyn
“You think it’s a chase show. It’s actually about how strangers extend each other small kindnesses for no reason at all.”
— Newsletter subscriber, week 3
“I keep telling people about it the way you tell people about a long con you’re rooting for.”
— Listener email, after Ep. 02
The dispatch

A short letter between episodes.

Where the booking went sideways. Who said no. The voice memo that became next week’s opening line. One email per published episode. No spam, ever.

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