DiscoverSTEAM PoweredNarrative for social change and science communication, and AI in the creative process with Joanna Beveridge
Narrative for social change and science communication, and AI in the creative process with Joanna Beveridge

Narrative for social change and science communication, and AI in the creative process with Joanna Beveridge

Update: 2024-05-20
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Description

Humans are fascinating. We have this incredible capacity for creativity, resilience, and invention, and have been keen to dabble in technologies that improve our lives since we first started using tools. So, where is technology going to lead us in terms of what makes us human?

Joanna Beveridge is a producer, writer, and director with a background in nuclear medicine. Join us as we speak about attitudes towards trust and failure between STEMM and the creative industries, representation and stealth politics in film and television, and finding a balance with AI tools and the creative process.

About Joanna Beveridge 

Joanna Beveridge is a producer, writer, and director based in Western Sydney. She has a double degree in Nuclear Medicine and Digital Media, and has worked as a Creative Producer/Editor for companies such as Network Ten, NBCUniversal, Warner Bros. and ITV Studios.

In 2020, Jo was selected for Screen NSW’s Emerging Producer Placement and Screen Producers Australia ‘Ones to Watch’. She’s produced two Screen Australia funded romcom digital series -- NO ORDINARY LOVE and SHIPPERS. She created the award-winning web series SYDNEY SLEUTHERS. She produced the Screen NSW Screenability funded short film MAGNETIC, which premiered at Sydney Film Festival. And Jo wrote and directed the award-winning short film THE TAKEDOWN OF MELANIE SPROTTLE.

Show Notes (link)

[00:01:24 ] Joanna's path to nuclear medicine coming from a STEMM family

[00:02:52 ] The almost movie-plot level reason for pivoting (despite actually being good at nuclear medicine)

[00:05:15 ] Finding her space and learning by doing

[00:09:03 ] Trust in STEM vs the creative industries

[00:11:21 ] The incongruity of entry-level positions that require experience with few opportunities for training

[00:12:59 ] The career pipeline problem

[00:15:11 ] The importance of and barriers to networking

[00:16:48 ] The value of proofs of concept - someone has to be first

[00:17:26 ] Bringing back the eight-hour day in the film industry

[00:19:34 ] 'AI in the TV and movie creation value chain'

[00:20:29 ] Segue: What is art? Why is art?

[00:24:08 ] The history and popularity of Schitt's Creek

[00:24:54 ] Stealth politics and audience psychology

[00:27:57 ] The PR of science and STEM in the media

[00:30:17 ] We love tropes (also, I said CSI when I meant NCIS)

[00:31:52 ] The Scully Effect and how the media shows us that we have the capacity for change

[00:34:56 ] What is the nature of the work we are asking AI to replace?

[00:38:54 ] What is scut work and what contributes to making you better at your craft?

[00:44:54 ] Moving the needle for representation and the power of narrative

[00:48:55 ] Our favourite sci-fis

[00:53:05 ] What advice would you give someone who'd like to do what you do, and what advice should they ignore?

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Hosted and produced by Michele Ong.

Music is "Gypsy Jazz in Paris 1935" by Brett Van Donsel.



This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis:

Podscribe - https://podscribe.com/privacy
OP3 - https://op3.dev/privacy
Spotify Ad Analytics - https://www.spotify.com/us/legal/ad-analytics-privacy-policy/
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Narrative for social change and science communication, and AI in the creative process with Joanna Beveridge

Narrative for social change and science communication, and AI in the creative process with Joanna Beveridge

Michele Ong