You are what you see
My inspiration for the podcast started in my fourth year of university when I was mentoring Māori engineering students. I learnt that there were less and less Māori within the engineering cohort as the years of university went on. I was also on my own journey of what it meant to be a Māori engineer.
With this mindset, I researched Māori in engineering but couldn’t find much. I discovered a webinar, called ‘Māori in Construction’ which was a panel discussion and I loved it because it was such an open, honest kōrero from changemakers in the industry: Troy Brockbank, Lincoln Tomoteo, Chantelle Bailey, and Warner Cowin. It was awesome to listen to their life stories, what they had achieved and what the industry needs to do better – it was a whakaaro that sparked lots of inspiration for me.
I wanted to do something similar- an accessible space where Māori and non-Māori could connect. The people I initially talked to were up in Tāmaki Makaurau and every call was such organic kōrero, that I wished I’d recorded it. A mate said to me “You listen to podcasts all the time, why don't you just interview them on a podcast?” It all fell into place after that.
The whakaaro of “You are what you see.” For the people I was mentoring in first year engineering, there weren’t many inspiring stories in plain sight and there wasn’t a space for sharing them. It feels like I’ve found the space.