The moment the internet went silent, the studio did too. The new height was still warm from the filming lights, the chairs still angled exactly the way producers had placed them. A few half empty coffee cups sat abandoned on the table. A tiny reminder of the 2-hour podcast that had just broken every record they’d ever dreamed of.
Millions of people had watched Taylor laugh, tease, open up, and charm her way through what fans instantly called the interview of the year. But none of them, not even the diehard Swifties who scour every frame, no one happened 30 seconds after the camera shut off. Because the minute that red recording light blinked out, Taylor changed. Her shoulders dropped.
The smile faded just enough to show the strain, and she let out a breath she’d been holding for hours. Travis noticed it instantly. He always noticed. And here’s the part no one saw. As the last producer stepped out, and the studio door quietly thutdded closed behind him, Taylor whispered something so soft, Travis almost missed it.

A single line, barely a breath, but enough to freeze him in place. I didn’t tell them everything. It wasn’t dramatic. It wasn’t staged. It wasn’t meant for anyone. Not fans, not cameras, not the internet. It was meant for him. And he realized in that instant that the real story of their relationship wasn’t the one the world had just watched.
It was the one she was about to tell him in the dark because Taylor Swift, the woman who can command a stadium of 80,000 people without blinking, suddenly looked like she was standing on the edge of something terrifying. And Travis couldn’t shake one question. What truth was she finally ready to say out loud? And why did she wait until nobody else could hear it? And before we dive into the part of their story that no podcast, no Tik Tok clip, and no fan theory ever uncovered, make sure you’re subscribed.
We dig into the moments that happen after the spotlight fades. The moments that tell the real story. You don’t want to miss what comes next. Because whatever she was holding on to, it wasn’t small. And it was about to rewrite everything we thought we knew about how their love story truly began. Before that whisper, before the breath she let out, the room hadn’t just been buzzing. It had been electric.
August 13th, 2025, Kansas City. The New Heights podcast studio had never looked like this before. Producers pacing, assistants hovering, phones blowing up before the episode was even finished recording. Because this wasn’t just another guest. This was Taylor Swift in her first ever podcast appearance.
two hours of stories, laughter, inside jokes, and the kind of chemistry that had fans replaying clips frame by frame. But while the world saw excitement, something else was simmering underneath. Taylor had walked into the studio that day in full public mode. The polished answers, the bright eyes, the practiced warmth of someone who survived years of being asked the same things in a hundred different ways.
And for most of the episode, that version of her stayed perfectly intact. She teased Travis. She joked with Jason. She announced a brand new album and even shared sweet little details about their first date that sent social media into a meltdown. But the people in the room felt something shifting quietly, slowly as the interview went on. Every once in a while, she glance at Travis a little longer than the moment required.
Her fingers would tap anxiously against her coffee cup. Her answers would wobble just for a second, like she was preparing herself for something. And Travis saw it, not as a football player, not as a public figure, but as the person who’d spent 2 years learning the micro expressions she tried so hard to hide.
So when the interview wrapped, when the applause faded, when Jason began packing up his cards and cracking one last joke, Taylor did something none of them expected. She went quiet. Not nervous quiet, not overwhelmed quiet, but the kind of quiet people slip into when a truth is pressing on their chest, begging to be released. A truth she wasn’t ready to say on camera. A truth she needed to say to him. And as Jason slung his backpack over his shoulder, he caught it instantly.
The shift, the tension, the unspoken words. He paused at the doorway, looked back at the two of them, and grinned. I’ll give you to a minute. The door clicked shut. Two worlds remained in the room. The public story they had just shared with millions and the private one Taylor had been carrying for years.

And the moment she turned towards Travis, he knew which world they were about to step into. Because she didn’t look like the woman who just charmed an entire audience. She looked like someone standing in front of a truth she could no longer avoid. And what she said next would pull Travis into the most vulnerable part of her past. A part she’d never let anyone see.
The studio felt different the second Jason left. Not colder, not emptier, just realer. The kind of stillness you only get when the last witness steps out of the room. Taylor didn’t move at first. She stayed by the edge of the table, fingers curled around the rim, eyes locked on the floor like the grain in the wood was suddenly fascinating.
Her breathing was slow, controlled, too controlled. And Travis knew exactly what that meant. He’d seen it before, not often, but enough to recognize the signs. The tiny tremor in her left hand. The way her shoulders rose a little too high with each breath. the quiet battle between public composure and private truth.
“Hey,” he said softly, stepping closer, not touching her yet, just entering her space the way he always did when he sensed that invisible wall starting to crack. She didn’t smile, didn’t joke, didn’t give him the usual playful eye roll she used whenever he hyped her up. Instead, she lifted her head and in that split second, he saw a version of her most people never even imagine.
Not the global icon, not the unstoppable performer, but the girl with a thousand unfinished songs about wanting to be understood. Her voice came out barely above a whisper. Trav, can we talk? Just us. four words, but they hit him harder than any cheer, any camera flash, any viral headline. He nodded. Of course, always.
Taylor took a breath, then ran both hands through her hair, a motion she only did when she was trying to brace herself. Then she said the sentence that turned the room into a pressure chamber. I didn’t tell the whole truth on the show. Not accusatory, not dramatic, just honest. Painfully honest. Travis didn’t interrupt. He just waited, steady, grounded, giving her all the space she needed.
But inside, something in him tightened because the way she said it, the way her voice cracked on the word truth, this wasn’t a fun story she forgot to mention. This wasn’t a detail she wanted to clarify for fans. This was deeper, heavier, something she’d been carrying long before today. She swallowed hard, her eyes lifted to meet his. And he could feel it.
The shift, the weight, the truth she was finally ready to let free. Whatever she was about to reveal, it wasn’t small. It wasn’t harmless. It wasn’t the kind of thing you drop into a podcast for a quick laugh. It was the kind of truth that rewrites the beginning of a love story. and she was finally ready to let him hear it.
Taylor didn’t speak right away. She stared at the floor like the words were hiding there, buried somewhere between the scuff marks from Travis’s cleats and the shadows from the soft studio lamps. Finally, she exhaled, a long, shaky breath that trembled all the way down. When she looked up, her eyes weren’t guarded anymore. They weren’t performing.
They weren’t choosing the right expression for the cameras. They were just hers. That story I told, she began slowly about our first date, about how nervous I was. Travis nodded. She shook her head gently, not disagreeing with him, but disagreeing with the version of the story she just shared with the world. I wasn’t nervous because you were famous.
or because people would see us or because of the attention. She paused. Her voice dropped to a place so honest, so unprotected. It made the whole room feel smaller. I was terrified because for the first time, I wanted to tell someone everything. Travis’s stomach tightened. Not from fear, from recognition.
because he’d felt something that night, too. A weight he couldn’t explain. A pull he didn’t know how to name. Now he understood why. Taylor stepped away from the table and moved toward him. Slow, cautious. Like every step required trust. I’d spent years, she said, writing songs about wanting someone to actually choose me. Her voice cracked. Not dramatically, just enough to reveal the truth behind the lyrics she’d always coded in metaphor.
Not Taylor Swift, not the idea of me, not the version of me people think I know. She pressed her hands together trying to study them. Me, the real me. The line hit like an echo in the empty studio. And then she said the part that made Travis’s heart drop. But no one ever chose that girl. Silence. Not cold silence. Not awkward silence.
Just the kind that happens when someone finally stops running from their own truth. Taylor took another breath. This one sharper. That’s why I asked you that question on the show. the one about seeing Jason across the field at the Super Bowl. Travis frowned slightly, confused. Why bring that up now? She stepped closer, eyes flickering with something raw. I wasn’t asking about football.
And suddenly, he understood. She wasn’t talking about touchdowns. She wasn’t talking about strategy. She wasn’t even talking about Jason. She was asking what it felt like to stand in a stadium full of people cheering for you and still feel alone. She was asking if he understood the loneliness hidden inside admiration.
She was asking if he could see her, the person, not the persona. And beneath all of it, she was asking if he was safe. Travis didn’t speak. He didn’t need to. Because in that moment, he wasn’t the NFL star with millions of eyes on him. He wasn’t the guy from the viral podcast. He was just the person she hoped would choose her.
Not for the story, not for the spotlight, but for the girl standing in front of him, admitting she was scared. And this was only the first layer of the truth she’d been holding back. Travis had replayed that Super Bowl question in his head a dozen times. It was cute. It was funny. It was classic Taylor. Thoughtful, curious, a little mischievous. At least that’s what he thought.
But the way she was looking at him now, eyes glossy, shoulders drawn in, lips trembling between honesty and fear, told him he’d been wrong. Very wrong. She took one small step closer enough that he could feel the warmth of her breath, the tension in her voice. Trav, I asked you that question because I needed to know something. He swallowed, waiting.
I needed to know what it felt like, she said. To want someone and not be able to reach them. The room fell still. Not even the hum of the studio lights seemed to exist anymore. Taylor looked past him for a moment, her eyes unfocusing the way they do when someone slips into a memory they wish they could rewrite.
She whispered, “Everyone thinks I don’t understand football.” But that question wasn’t about football at all. She blinked hard, fighting the sting in her eyes. I asked you because I wanted to know if you understood me. And now it made sense. The way her voice had wavered during the podcast, the way she’d watched him so carefully while waiting for his answer. She wasn’t listening for a sports explanation.
She was listening for compassion, for patience, for proof. Taylor wrapped one arm around herself as if steadying her own heart. She softly said, “I’ve performed for stadiums of people who adore me, but I’ve still felt completely alone in the middle of it.” Her voice shook and I needed to know if you had ever felt that, too.
Travis took a slow breath because he had. The cameras had never captured it. The commentators never mentioned it, but there were moments, big moments, when he felt exactly what she was describing. Moments when noise didn’t equal connection. Moments when applause didn’t equal being understood. He stepped closer and gently touched her hand, grounding her.
Taylor’s eyes flicked up to his, searching not for validation, not for comfort, for recognition. “So when you explained the game to me,” she said, “and you didn’t laugh and you didn’t make me feel stupid.” Her voice broke, sliding into a whisper. “That’s when I knew.” Travis’s brow softened. “Knew what?” he asked quietly. She held his gaze completely unarmored now.
“You weren’t trying to win,” Taylor Swift. “You were trying to know me.” The words hung in the air, fragile and honest. And suddenly, the Super Bowl question, a moment fans turned into memes, highlight clips, and reaction videos, became something entirely different. It wasn’t flirtation. It wasn’t teasing. It wasn’t a cute onair moment.
It was a test of her deepest fear. Would he choose the real her or just the version the world was obsessed with? in the way he answered slowly, patiently, with genuine interest, told her everything she needed to know. But what she shared next, that was the part that changed him. For a moment, Travis didn’t know what to say.
Not because he didn’t feel anything, but because he felt too much all at once. This whole time he had thought he was the one chasing her, the one taking the risk, the one stepping into her world of cameras and headlines and a thousand opinions. He never imagined she had been afraid too.
He lifted her chin gently, just enough for her eyes to make his. And what he saw there made his chest tighten, not with fear, but with realization. She wasn’t telling a story. She was telling a truth she had carried for years. and he needed to meet it with one of his own. So he sat down in one of the empty studio chairs, the same one he’d been laughing in an hour earlier, and motioned for her to sit with him.
Not across from him, not beside him, with him. She hesitated, then sank into the seat, knees touching his, fingers barely resting on her lap. He took a deep breath. “Taylor,” he said quietly, “Can I tell you something, too?” Her eyes widened, not with fear, but with that alert stillness that happens when someone senses a shift in the air.
He rubbed the back of his neck, looking suddenly younger, almost boyish, the same expression she’d once seen in an old photograph of him from high school. That first night after our episode aired, after I basically told the world I wanted to date you, she nodded.
She remembered he’d told her that part, but then he shook his head. No, what I didn’t tell you, he continued, was that I called my mom again at 3:00 a.m. Taylor blinked, startled, he laughed softly. The kind of laugh people use when they’re embarrassed by their own honesty. I was panicking, he admitted. I kept thinking, “What if I made the biggest mistake of my life?” Her breath caught.
Trav, why? He leaned back in the chair, staring at the ceiling like the right words might be written up there. Because you’re you. You’re this force of nature. You walk onto a stage and entire stadiums feel you. And I kept thinking, why would someone like that ever look twice at someone like me? Taylor’s hand flew to her mouth, not in shock, but in heartbreak.
Because for years, she believed she was the one who wasn’t enough. And here he was thinking the exact opposite. He continued softly. My mom listened to me fall apart for 20 minutes. And then she told me something I’ll never forget. She looked straight into Taylor’s eyes.
She said, “Baby, if that girl is half as smart as she seems, she’s not looking for someone to worship her. She’s looking for someone brave enough to see her as human.” Taylor’s breath shuddered because that that right there was the thing she’d been afraid to say out loud. She wasn’t looking for a fairy tale or a fan or a polished love story the world could clap for.
She was looking for someone who could look past the spotlight and see the person standing behind it. The girl with messy hair. The girl who panics at 2 a.m. The girl who names her sourdough starter like it’s a pet. the girl who still hopes quietly, desperately to be chosen without conditions. And Travis reached out, taking both of her hands in his. He said softly, “I’ve been choosing you.
Not the superstar, not the headlines, you.” A tear slid down her cheek. Not dramatic, not staged, just honest. And for the first time in years, she didn’t hide it because this this was the moment she realized he wasn’t just steady, he was safe. But neither of them knew the conversation was about to get even deeper and even more vulnerable because Travis had one more truth to reveal.
One he’d been holding back for longer than she realized. For a long moment, neither of them spoke. The studio, once loud, bright, buzzing, felt like it had folded in on itself, shrinking down to the circle of space between their hands. Taylor’s breathing slowed. Travis’s thumb brushed over her knuckles.
And the world outside that room simply didn’t exist. She let out a breath she’d been holding for years, not days, not months, years. Trev. Her voice cracked on his name the way a voice does when someone is trying to hold everything together and finally realizes they don’t have to. He squeezed her hands gently, grounding her without a word.
She swallowed hard, gathering her courage, then blinked up at him with eyes that were no longer glossy from tears, but from relief. Relief that she didn’t have to pretend anymore. relief that the story she told the world wasn’t the one she had to tell him. I’ve never said this out loud,” she whispered. “But I needed to know you wouldn’t leave when things got real.
” He tilted his head, softening. “Taylor, I’ve seen you real.” She shook her head. “Not that kind of real. I mean the messy kind. The controlling, overworked, exhausted, everything’s falling apart and I’m trying to hold it together with a hair tie and caffeine kind. A tiny laugh escaped her, shaky, but real.
The girl who spirals over lyrics, who names her planner, who cried because she thought she killed her sourdough starter. Travis snorted. “Susanna,” he said, dead pan. She covered her face with one hand, mortified. “Yes, Susanna. rest in peace. He gently pulled her hand away. She lived, he reminded her. I talked you through a 45minute feeding schedule. That made her laugh harder.
The kind of laugh that comes right after crying, soft and cathartic. Then her expression shifted. The laughter faded. Her breathing stilled. And she said it. The line that rewired the entire moment in one heartbeat. You stayed even when I was a disaster. He leaned forward, forehead almost touching hers. You weren’t a disaster.
You were human. And that was it. That was the line. The line that unlocked the truth she’d been holding like a fragile secret inside her rib cage. Taylor’s voice broke completely. No cameras, no audience, no carefully constructed image to protect. Just her. I love you, she said.
Not the careful way I’ve loved before. Not the scared way. Not the way where I hide parts of myself so no one gets hurt. A tear slid down her cheek, but she didn’t look away. I love you like I write. All in, messy, honest, everything I have. Travis inhaled sharply as if the words knocked the breath out of him.
And then he laughed, not because it was funny, but because he couldn’t contain the rush of warmth in his chest. He touched her cheek, thumb brushed the tear away with the gentleness of someone who knew exactly how big this moment was. They leaned into each other, not kissing, not clinging, just holding, quiet, still, completely seen. Around them, the studio sat silent.
The same room that had just captured the polished, produced version of their relationship. But this, this was the unedited version. The one no microphone caught. The one no audience witnessed. The one that wasn’t for the world, just for them. And if that moment were the end of the story, it would already be perfect.
But as they left the studio, hands intertwined, hearts steadier than they’d been in years, Travis paused. There was one more truth. One he had been holding since the very beginning. One he had never told her. One that would shift everything she thought she understood about the night he first saw her on stage. He exhaled. Taylor, there’s something I need to tell you, too. The hallway outside the studio was dim.
Quiet in the way places feel after everyone’s gone home. Their footsteps echoed softly, fingers intertwined. Both of them still warm from everything they just said. Taylor reached for the door, but Travis didn’t move. His hand tightened around hers gently, but enough to stop her. She turned back, brows lifting in confusion. Trav. He looked nervous.
Not cute nervous, not flustered nervous. Real nervous. The kind that made him run a hand through his hair. the same little tells she’d watched a thousand times during big games and high pressure moments. “There’s something I haven’t told you,” he said quietly. Taylor blinked. She thought they’d aired everything.
Fears, insecurities, hidden truths. But this this was something else. He took a breath, deep, steady, determined. “It’s about the night I went to your Aerys tour show.” Her heart jumped. They’d talked about that night endlessly. The bracelet, the attention, the headlines, the jokes, the memes.
It had become part of their public lore, their origin story, the one fans recited like scripture. But the look in his eyes told her this wasn’t the version the world knew. She tilted her head. What about it? Travis hesitated just long enough to make her breath hitch. Then I didn’t go just to see you perform. Her lips parted slightly.
He continued, words slipping out like confessions escaping on their own. My mom made me go. She laughed, not mocking, but startled. Donna sent you to my concert. He shook his head a little embarrassed. Not exactly. It started 3 weeks earlier. Taylor watched him closely, her mind racing through every possibility, every little detail she might have missed. He ran his thumb across her knuckles, a nervous habit, then finally said it.
I told my parents I couldn’t stop listening to one of your songs. Her eyes softened. Which one? He looked down, then up. Anti-hero. The air shifted. Not because it was a hit, not because it was popular, but because she knew exactly what that song meant, where it came from, what it cost her to write it. His voice lowered.
The part about staring at the sun, but never in the mirror. Taylor’s breath caught. That was one of the most personal lines she’d ever written. A quiet confession disguised as a lyric. Travis continued. I told my mom I didn’t know why it hit me so hard. I just I felt something. He paused, letting the memory settle. And she looked at me and said, “Baby, if something moves you like that, don’t ignore it. Put yourself in its path.
” Taylor’s eyes glistened. She could practically see Donna saying it. Warm, steady, unshakable. “So, you went to the show?” Taylor whispered. Travis nodded. She told me I owed it to myself to hear it live. Then a shy, almost guilty smile, and yeah, I brought the friendship bracelet. It said thank you on one side, my number on the other. She shook her head slowly, stunned.
This entire time, she thought he’d gone because he was shooting his shot, because it was funny, because it made a good story. But he had gone for an entirely different reason. Her art had reached him long before she did. And suddenly their beginning, the bracelets, the jokes, the viral clips snapped into a new shape.
Not a bold pickup attempt, not a headline moment, a gratitude moment, a connection moment, a human moment. Taylor stepped closer, eyes softening as her voice dropped to a whisper. Why didn’t you tell me that? He shrugged helplessly. Because I didn’t want you to think I loved you. because I loved your music. I wanted you to know I love your music because I love you.
Her heart clenched because that was the difference, the real difference. He didn’t fall for the spotlight. He didn’t fall for the legend. He fell for the person the spotlight kept trying to bury. And now she could finally see it. He had been choosing her before she ever knew his name. But there was still one more layer to unfold.
What that truth meant for the future. and what stayed hidden from the world long after this night. The elevator door slid open at the end of the hallway, but neither of them stepped inside. Taylor stood there, fingers woven through Travis’s, her mind replaying the entire night like a film reel she wasn’t prepared to watch.
Not the podcast, not the jokes, not the polished stories she’d told the world, but this. The quiet truths, the shaky breaths, the confessions they hadn’t rehearsed, the real beginning, the one no one knew existed. She leaned her shoulder against his, letting her head rest there. Something she rarely allowed herself to do in public.
But here, with no eyes on them, she didn’t have to be careful. “It’s strange,” she whispered. Travis looked down. What is? She exhaled slowly like she was letting the weight slide off her spine. I spent 2 hours in that studio telling the world our story. But the real story didn’t start until the cameras turned off.
His thumb brushed the back of her hand. Most real things do, he murmured. No lights, no producers, no audience, just two people standing in a hallway that suddenly felt like the only place in the world where the truth could breathe. And for the first time in her life, Taylor realized something she’d written about in a hundred metaphors, but never fully understood until now.
Being seen and being admired are not the same thing. People admired her, millions of them, every day. But very few ever saw her. And somehow this man had seen her before they ever spoke. She lifted her eyes to him, studying the details. The softened jawline, the tired warmth, the steadiness she’d felt even before she understood why.
I think I wrote entire albums trying to explain what I just said tonight, she admitted. Travis chuckled gently. And I think I spent years waiting for someone to ask me the right question. She nudged him lightly with her shoulder. You mean the Super Bowl question? His smile turned tender.
Yeah, because you weren’t asking about football. Her breath hitched. He got it. He really truly got it. And suddenly she saw the future. Not the glamorous one, not the public one, but the small ordinary one. her and sweats, him in a hoodie, bread dough on her hands, football diagrams scribbled on a napkin, the tiny quiet life behind the noise, the life she’d stopped believing she could have.
And this moment, this hallway, this stillness, this honesty would become the first invisible lyric of an album the world would one day obsess over without realizing where it was born. Because 6 months from now, when The Life of a Showgirl hit global charts, fans would dissect every verse, hunting for clues. They’d find metaphors about trust, lines about choosing someone daily, bridges about being seen without being performed.
But they’d never know about this hallway, this night, this breathless, fragile, human moment. A moment meant only for them. Taylor squeezed his hand. Thank you, she whispered. He frowned slightly. For what? She looked up, eyes soft and shimmering. For seeing me before everyone else did. Travis pulled her into his chest. Not a dramatic embrace, just a gentle grounding one, as if he understood she needed to be held, not shown off.
And for a few heartbeats, nothing existed except the sound of their breathing. Quiet, steady, real. Outside those walls, the podcast episode was already exploding across the internet. Clips were being posted. Fan edits were being made. Comment sections were going feral. But in here, just two people holding the part of their story that wasn’t meant for the world.
And yet, there was one last secret the world would never hear. One final truth Travis had been keeping for a very long time. And the meaning of that truth would change the way she looked at him forever. The elevator hummed quietly behind them, its doors still open, waiting, patient, unaware that the moment unfolding in front of it mattered more than anything on the other side.
Travis took a slow breath. Taylor felt it. The shift in his posture. The way he straightened slightly. The way his fingers tightened around hers like he was gathering the last piece of courage he’d kept tucked away. There’s one more thing I need to tell you, he said softly. Taylor turned fully toward him now, searching his expression.
She’d heard fear in his voice before. nerves, excitement, but this was different. This was the kind of quiet honesty someone shares only once and only with the person they trust most.” He rubbed the back of his neck, eyes dropping for a moment before meeting hers again. “When I saw you on that stage, I didn’t fall for the show.
” Taylor blinked, his voice lowered. I fell for the way you look when you’re not performing. She inhaled sharply. He continued, each word slower, more deliberate. I saw you turn away between songs. I saw the way you steadied your breathing.
I saw how you tucked your hair behind your ear like you were reminding yourself to stay present. Her lips parted, stunned. No one ever noticed those things. Not the fans, not the cameras, not the people who swore they knew her best. But he had. He’d noticed the moments between the moments, the human ones, the invisible ones, the ones that weren’t meant for anyone, but somehow reached him anyway.
He That’s when I knew I didn’t want the version of you the world gets. I wanted the version only you know. Taylor felt her throat tighten, not with fear this time, but with an overwhelming wave of recognition. Because that was it, the missing piece. The thing she’d been trying to explain in metaphors and melodies for years. To be loved for the spaces between the spotlight.
To be seen without being performed. to be chosen. Quietly, she stepped forward and placed her forehead against his. A gesture so small, so simple, yet deeper than any public display of affection she could ever give. Then that’s the part of me you’ll get, she whispered. It wasn’t dramatic, wasn’t cinematic, wasn’t meant for an audience. It was a promise, soft, steady, and entirely real.
He wrapped his arms around her. She melted into him. And for a while, neither of them said anything. Not because there was nothing left to say, but because they finally didn’t need words to fill the quiet. When they finally stepped into the elevator, the doors closing gently behind them, it felt like the end of one story and the beginning of another.
The public would see the polished version, the interviews, the appearances, the smiles captured in split-second photos. But the real love story that lived in the moments no one else saw. The confessions whispered after midnight. The truths shared in dim hallways. The promises made when cameras were nowhere to be found. Some stories are written for the world.
But the best ones, the ones that change people, are written for just two. And if you’re the kind of person who wants to hear those stories, the ones behind the headlines, behind the stages, behind the curated posts, then make sure you’re subscribed because the real magic, the real secrets, they happen when nobody’s watching. And we’re just getting started.