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The Story Collider

Knowledge: Stories from our workshops

The Story Collider

Story Collider, Inc.

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

4.4824 Ratings

🗓️ 19 September 2025

⏱️ 28 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this week’s episode, we’re featuring two powerful stories born from our education program.

Part 1: As an undergraduate with no “real” science experience, Molly Magid is thrilled to join a research project studying how bats fly—until she discovers the bats refuse to cooperate.

Part 2: As a child, Léa Souccar and her father explore the wreckage in the aftermath of a devastating bombing.

Molly Magid is a science communicator and podcast producer. She has been telling stories about science since the first grade, when she wrote a biologically accurate story about ladybugs. Originally from Denver, Colorado, Molly now lives in Christchurch, New Zealand. She enjoys sharing her passion for science anywhere from podcasts to social media to declaring her love of longfin eels on the street.

Léa Souccar was born in Lebanon, three years into the war. By the time the fighting stopped, she was twelve. In between, the voice of her storytelling grandmother carried her above the chaos—like a flying carpet—and helped shape who she became. During her first year studying Performing Arts, Beirut hosted its first Storytelling and Monodrama Festival. She skipped classes that week to attend every lecture by day and every performance by night. Something long asleep inside her woke up. From that moment on, she trained relentlessly, learning from renowned storytellers from around the world. After earning a Master’s in Theater Education for Special Needs, she began working as a storyteller and puppeteer, sharing stories in schools, hospitals, refugee camps, and prisons. In 2010, she became a primary school teacher in France. She found her place in a preschool classroom, where she began exploring all the ways oral storytelling can support and inspire learning. Today, she leads workshops where she shares her two greatest passions: storytelling and education—and the sparks that fly when the two meet.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Your first great love story is free when you sign up for a free 30-day trial at audible.com.

0:05.5

U.K. slash Wondery. That's audible.com.

0:13.0

A science story, huh?

0:16.2

Is NYU scientist the...

0:18.0

I felt...

0:19.0

And I just thought, well, it was that golden moment.

0:23.6

Because science was on my side.

0:30.6

Hey everyone, welcome to the story clutter, where true personal stories about science help us explore just how weird and wonderful it is to exist in this world and be a human.

0:44.2

I'm your host, Mishayevsky, and today's episode features two stories that were born from one of our workshops.

0:49.8

In case you didn't know, the Story Clatter has an education program where we teach people how to tell

0:54.5

their own science stories. We pull back the curtain on our story development process and share

0:59.2

tools for bringing powerful science stories to life. We work with everyone, from STEM professionals

1:04.8

to passionate science enthusiasts and offer custom workshop packages you can learn more about

1:08.9

at storyclutter.org slash education.

1:11.6

And if you're looking for a great place to start, our next intro to storytelling class is coming up

1:16.1

on October 27th. It's taught by LA Senior Producer and Moss Grand Slam winner Brian Kett, along with

1:22.4

environmental scientists and New York producer Neity Jen. And there are still a few spots left.

1:28.1

Head to our website for all the details.

1:30.4

Okay, now on to those incredible stories from our workshops.

1:33.7

Our first story today comes from science communicator and podcast producer Molly Majid.

1:38.0

The story is recorded in her home in Christchurch, New Zealand, and was performed online

1:42.0

at last month's workshop showcase show.

...

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