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The Story Collider

Home: Stories about science and community

The Story Collider

Story Collider, Inc.

Arts, Science, Society & Culture, Personal Journals, Performing Arts

4.4824 Ratings

🗓️ 8 December 2017

⏱️ 33 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This week, we present two stories about finding community with science.

Part 1: Keoni Mahelona leaves his home in Hawaii in pursuit of science.

Part 2: After growing up wealthy, Chuck Collins' thinking is transformed by his work with mobile home park tenants.

Aloha. O Keoni koʻu inoa. No Hawaiʻi au. I tēnei wā, noho au i Taipā. Keoni Mahelona is a melting pot of diversity in so many ways -- ethnicity, education, hobbies, sexuality, and possibly personality hahahahaha. He's had a seemingly random journey through engineering, business, and science that's somehow thrown him into media. Today he works at a Māori social enterprise whose mission is to promote and preserve te reo Māori o Muriwhenua, and they use science and innovation to create the tools they need to achieve their mission. He hopes his story will encourage other Māori and Pacific Islanders to pursue a future in STEM.  

Chuck Collins is an organizer, agitator, researcher and storyteller based at the Institute for Policy Studies where he co-edits Inequality.org, a global web site focused on the income and wealth divide. He is author of Born on Third Base: A One Percenter Makes the Case for Tackling Inequality, Bringing Wealth Home, and Committing to the Common Good. In his late twenties he worked with residents of mobile home parks around New England to buy their parks as cooperatives. 

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

If you like the stories you hear on the Story Collider, we think you'll like the Sierra Club's new storytelling podcast, The Land I Trust.

0:07.6

It's a first-person audio series that features people telling stories about climate change and how the shift from fossil fuels to clean energy is affecting real people.

0:17.2

You can find it online at beyondcold.org slash stories or wherever you download podcasts.

0:24.8

A science story, huh?

0:27.9

Is NYU scientist the...

0:29.7

I felt...

0:30.5

I felt...

0:30.6

I was so...

0:31.6

And I just thought, well...

0:32.6

I figured it out.

0:33.4

It was that golden moment.

0:35.9

Because science was on my side.

0:43.8

Hi, everybody.

0:45.3

Welcome to the Story Collider, where we bring you true personal stories about science.

0:49.9

I'm your host, Aaron Barmer.

0:51.8

This week, we're presenting two stories about home and community.

0:55.7

Our first story is from Keone Mahalona.

0:58.6

It was recorded in September 2017 at Meow in Wellington, New Zealand.

1:03.6

And our show produced in partnership with scans, the Science Communication Association of New Zealand.

1:11.6

As a child, I was always afraid of sharks in the ocean, and any little sign that was there, that could perhaps be a shark, would really give me a fright.

1:21.6

So if there was a black spot on the bottom of the ocean floor, I'd get a fright. If there was this cusp of a wave that

1:27.8

could be a shark's fin, I'd get a fright. Even what I didn't see sort of gave me the thought

...

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