At first glance, Oh Yes I Can functions as a "what’s on" guide. It lists upcoming gigs, album releases, and workshops. However, to categorize it merely as a listings magazine is to overlook its editorial depth.
One reader, a 58-year-old warehouse supervisor named Marcus, wrote: "I used the magazine’s script to ask for a promotion I’d been too scared to mention for seven years. I got the job. The script was three sentences long. I can’t believe it worked."
In an era dominated by doom-scrolling, cynical hot takes, and the constant pressure of social media highlight reels, finding authentic, useful inspiration feels like searching for a needle in a digital haystack. We are inundated with content telling us to "think positive," yet we rarely receive a manual on how to translate that positivity into tangible results.