What if you asked everyone you knew the same seven questions? How do you think the answers would change between people of different backgrounds, professions, even stages of life? Do some questions send us all down completely different roads? Are there's some answers that ring true for all of us? I'm mini driver and this was the idea I set how to explore in the first season of my podcast Many Questions.
In season one, I asked every guest the same set of seven questions, questions about the inflection points in their life, what they're curious about, the qualities they like least about themselves, and what relationships have defined love for them. From music legend Dave Girl, the first time I saw a band play on the stage, I was in this dark barred it smelled like bleach and beer, and they started playing and life my chest was against the stage, and so I was like, this is what I'm doing for the
rest of my life. To television host d a Copy, you know you always want an addit gir off from your dad, but instead when you don't have that, You're like, I guess there's more in this mountain to climb. If I hadn't gotten sick, I wouldn't have the guts, like I wouldn't have the courage. I would have never asked, that would have waited like I usually do when it's dead. It was urgent to Amazonian, tree Frog enthusiast and celebrated actor, comedian and writer Stephen fry Well. I think first love
is fix love to some extent. It's so overwhelming, its expectations are so high. It's a vertical moment of happiness, one little drop of bliss. And now I'm excited to announce the second season of Many Questions. This year we bring a whole new group of guests to answer the same seven questions, including vocalist and founding member of the rock band Blundie Debbie Harry. Can you tell me about something that has grown out of a personal disaster. I think one day I did have a revelation. It was
as CBGBs. As a matter of fact, I went on stage, I walked out and I realized I was waiting for the audience to, you know, give it, to me, give it. And I realized that I had to make them, I had to command them, And that was a real revelation. Comedian and writer of the HBO show starstruck Rose Matt Affair, what would be your last meal? Thank you so much
for asking if Keaven existed. And when you die and you look back on the you know, sort of highlights really your last day and you see that you have like a pritt sandwich or something, You're like, no, why they that I hadn't stand up too years ago? Being on a plane and really specifically deciding what film that you're watching because somebody's scared of flying. I don't want that plane to go down and I die and my mom's like, what was the last thing she was watching?
And it would just be like Despicable Me too. It's like, you don't want to you don't want that that to be the final one. Pioneer of drum and based artist and creative juggernaut Goldie, if you can tell me where
and when were you happiest? And I walk up to the mountain, our high coup and this is like a ten kid going up and down, But just being in that environment and seeing life and death in front of you, right in front of you, is a really beautiful reminder of how how insignificant we are and how you know, how being at the happiest moments there and I got there and scream and crying and laugh and and I
find that being the happiest and many more. Each episode is a new entry in the archive, a new opportunity to examine how as people were both similar and individual. Join me as we continue this exploration on Season two of Many Questions, premiering January twelve on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your favorite podcasts. Seven questions in Limitless Answers,