I was an audio producer with the Guardian’s Who screwed millennials team from November 2023 to March 2024.
About the show:
Australian millennials are the first generation to be worse off than their parents, and things are only heading in the same direction for gen Z. In this deeply researched yet tongue-in-cheek five-part podcast series, Full Story co-host Jane Lee and social media reporter Matilda Boseley investigate the mystery of who screwed young Australians out of affordable housing, education and secure work, and why inequality is rising in Australia.
These episodes were made in collaboration with the Who screwd millennials team: Gabrielle Jackson, Miles Martignoni, Miles Herbert, Jane Lee and Matilda Boseley.
7amis one of Australia’s top daily podcasts. I was an audio producer with 7am from May 2019 to Sept 2021.
About the show:
7am is a daily news podcast from the publisher of The Monthly and The Saturday Paper. It tells the news through in-depth interviews and sharp analysis.
Hosted by award-winning investigative journalist and documentary host Ruby Jones, 7am is a smart, strong, character-driven account of the big story of the day: the background, who’s involved, and why it matters. This is news with narrative, every weekday.
These episodes were made in collaboration with the 7am team: Osman Faruqi, Ruby Jones, Ruby Schwartz, Elle Marsh, Atticus Bastow, Anu Hasbold and Beth Atkinson-Quinton.
Host and producer: Jess Ho Executive producer: Michelle Macklem Series producer: Bethany Atkinson-Quinton Producer: Beź Zewdie Sound designer: Nicole Pingon Editor: Zoe Tennant Theme music: Rainbow Chan Art: Joanna Hu 2022
Who gets to decide what good and bad food is? Join food writer Jess Ho as they investigate foods like spam, native grains and bánh mì in this SBS podcast.
Have you ever had someone yuck your yum? Have you read outstanding reviews for a hot, new restaurant and found the food disappointing?
Hosted by food writer Jess Ho, Bad Taste is a six-part podcast series that will make you reconsider the perception of good taste.
Each episode analyses a food, traces back its history, and looks at its relevance today through the eyes of guests Nathan Lyons, Rosheen Kaul, Bruce Pascoe, Jacob Birch, Alum Choi, Miin Chan, Beź Zewdie, Ruth Gebreyesus, Thi Le and Vien Tran.
I co-created the series with Jess Ho and was the executive producer.
Listen to all 6 epsodes where you get your podcasts, we recommend starting with episode 1
Sleepover is a critically acclaimed podcast from CBC that follows an unusual social encounter. Three complete strangers meet for 24 hours to work through each other's challenges. It’s hosted by Sook-Yin Lee and the supervising producer is Veronica Simmonds.
I was an associate producer for season 2 in 2017, and a producer for season 3 in 2018.
About the show:
Sleepover takes us inside an unusual social encounter, where three complete strangers agree to meet in different places—from a highrise condo to an island yurt—for an evening, night, and morning together.
In each episode, with Sook-Yin's guidance, one stranger takes the spotlight and presents a problem from their life. The other two offer advice and bring up related experiences from their own unique perspectives.
The Fridge Light is a Webby award-winning podcast from CBC about the foods we eat. I was the supervising producer for season 1 in 2017 before moving to Australia in 2018.
About the show:
Join top food writer Chris Nuttall-Smith for an obsessive, fascinating journey through the hidden stories of the things we eat. Each episode chows down on one food phenomenon, revealing the unexpected cultural ingredients.
Part science, part business, part psychology — always fresh and delicious.
These episodes were produced in collaboration with our team: Chris Nuttall-Smith, Zoe Tennant, Lisa Godfrey, Veronica Simmonds, Alison Broverman and Paolo Pietropaolo.
a podcast about the interaction between human ability & technology
Adaptive is a 4-part podcast series about the interaction between human ability and technology. It was created as a part of Michelle Macklem’s graduate research project in Media Studies at Concordia University. The podcast features researchers, designers and users of technologies that are often associated with disability, to investigate how our perceptions of disability are often shaped by the technologies people use.
Segments from Adaptive were featured on CBC’s Spark:
This episode investigates how we define ability and disability, often based on the technologies we use - like glasses, canes or walkers.
This episode includes: Graham Pullin, a designer and researcher who wrote the design manifesto Design Meets Disability
Sara Hendren speaking about her work at Olin College in Boston where she teaches a course for engineers on designing for disability and diverse abilities
Aimee Louw - a radio producer, writer and accessibility advocate - speaks about her own experiences of disability and how that identity is really constructed and placed on her by other people
Episode 2: What is technology?
What is technology delves into the things we consider to be technology - and the things we don't. Owen Chapman, a Professor in Communications at Concordia University discusses how he understands technology, from simple objects to a chair or cardboard, and how this relates to his recent research on disability and mobility studies.
Also in this episode, we visit the Adaptive Design Association in New York that specializes in making custom cardboard adaptations for disabled children.
Episode 3: Reading by Ear
Can reading only be done by people who can see? This episode explores how reading by ear through Talking Books (for the Blind) can challenge the conventional conceptions of reading.
We speak with Mara Mills, a professor and researcher at NYU, about her research on the history of Talking Books, different from what we think of as commercial audio books. Mara talks about how the history of Talking Books has been largely ignored, even though they revolutionized reading at a very early moment in sound recording history. We also speak with Shafeka Hashash who grew up using Talking Books and recalls her relationship with the medium.
Episode 4: Bodies as Tool
In this episode, we explore the blurry lines between ability, bodies and technology as told by two people. Danielle Peers and Lindsay Eales are artists, scholars and partners in Montreal who study disability through their own embodied experiences.
Danielle is a former wheelchair basketball Paralympian and now researches disability sport and social justice movements in Canada. She uses her wheelchair as a tool to navigate the world, while her partner Lindsay uses her own tools – like psych meds and make-up – to help her deal with mental illness.
Note: The podcast is no longer available on podcast players but you can email me using my contact form if you’d like mp3s or transcripts of the episodes.