PLAY PODCASTS
The Craft with May Globus

The Craft with May Globus

107 episodes — Page 2 of 3

Ep 57episode 058: Mark George

Mark George possesses an original perspective, someone with the ability to look at the world and spaces in it with a nonconformist eye. The longtime designer & furniture maker recently founded August Studios, an East Vancouver building for artists, designers, and makers to work, learn, and collaborate.Born in Miami, his family moved to Seattle when he was 10-years-old. His bank consultant father was battling leukemia, and the city had a cancer research hospital with the necessary treatment. His father’s search for new bone marrow became a national story on Oprah, Geraldo, and Sixty Minutes—at the time only blood relative bone marrow transplants were allowed, and he had been adopted. With the help of a voice analyst consultant for the FBI, an extended search and a subsequent lost court case, eventually a donor from Sweden was found a decade later. For cancer recovery, the family relocated to Vermont, where they lived a simple and idyllic life in the middle of the woods. Mark went to school in New York for fine arts, sculpting, and painting. He then spent some time in Philadelphia, before winding up in Vancouver for his Masters in Architecture at UBC. During his career, he has focused on modern, architectural design and worked on projects with a number of architects, artists, and institutions: Mcleod Bovell Modern Houses, the Patkaus, Scott & Scott, Tony Robbins, Ken Lum, Elspeth Pratt, Vito Acconci, Rebecca Bayer, Vancouver Art Gallery, and Burnaby Art Gallery.In this conversation, we examine being a witness to his father’s cancer journey growing up and recently learning about his father’s autism; how he learned to deconstruct systems and how it’s influenced his work; how he constantly see shapes in everything and relates them to places on his body; his experience-based approach to designing spaces and objects; winning first-place in association with Haeccity Studio Architecture for Urbanarium’s 2018 ‘The Missing Middle’ competition; his woodworking classes based on the late Enzo Mari’s open furniture design concept; what fascinates him about how his daughter operates in the world; and much more.

May 25, 202244 min

Ep 55episode 055: Amanda Lee Smith

Amanda Lee Smith is a true visionary. An early start in journalism as a teen led her into a career in communications at various places, before landing a plum brand content role at Kit and Ace. She then took a chance on herself, launching Coterie Co., which eventually became Monday Creative, a branding & content marketing agency that counts lululemon, Arc'teryx, HerschelSupply, Smash & Tess, EA Sports, and more as clients. She grew up with two sisters (one her twin) in the suburbs, in a supportive home that regularly practiced Evangelical Christianity, with loving parents who have been married for 52 years. Ambitious and unafraid from a young age, she was into everything under the sun: school, books, writing, sports, student council, punk rock. After her marriage ended, Amanda went through a reckoning with her faith, a process that shifted her identity and broke her open to all kinds of nuances & groups that exist in life and in the world. Since then, Amanda has continued to forge her path ahead, evolving Monday Creative into its new strategic partnership with RANGE, teaching digital storytelling at UBC and, more recently, entering the world of angel investing with Futuretense Capital. In this conversation, we explore how her religion & faith shaped her identity and how it has evolved over the years; the book trilogy she wrote in the first grade and a teen punk rock phase; where her love for storytelling came from; working at Kit and Ace & the talented team from that chapter; how Monday’s strategic partnership with RANGE serendipitously came to be; her passion for apparel circularity & emerging fabric technology; getting into angel investing and the Futuretense values; her relationship with the concept of grace in daily life; and much more.

May 11, 202258 min

Ep 54episode 054: CJ Swanton

CJ Swanton is in a league of his own, a man of impeccable taste. A longtime communications professional, he launched his career in Vancouver as part of the Obakki team before moving to New York for many years. There, he worked with labels such as Proenza Schouler, Jason Wu, Isaac Mizrahi, G-Star, Gola and Lars Andersson through MAO PR and, eventually, his own agency Omen PR, doing press for emerging brands and producing shows for New York Fashion Week. Now back in Vancouver, CJ returned to his roots at Obakki as their director of communications.Though born in Edmonton, Alberta, he was raised in Victoria, moving between the homes of his parents, who had divorced when he was young. His upbringing was complicated at times, as he navigated family dynamics and being in the closet. It was when he found the local punk rock scene that he began to come into his own. Eventually, CJ left Victoria for the mainland, beginning life chapters in Vancouver to New York and back again.In this conversation, we explore his relationship with his parents and siblings & the things he’s reflected upon as adult; how the punk rock scene supported him at a pivotal time in his teenage years; his journey to living in New York for nearly a decade and starting his own fashion PR agency; the creative thought process behind producing a New York Fashion Week show; a major burnout that led him to change his entire life; what he loves most about his husband Joey; and much more.

May 4, 20221h 31m

Ep 53episode 053: Zoë Pawlak

Artist Zoë Pawlak is an incredible beam of human light. She has a way of connecting with others upon first meeting them—nothing is trite or superficial when in conversation with her. To be in her presence is to go deep into life’s mysteries, and deeply laugh while at it. She is a beloved painter and product designer who has built a successful, sustainable business and meaningful body of work over the last 16 years. Born and raised in Vancouver, she was an intense child who spent her time playing basketball, singing, and drawing. She grew up attending a liberal left-wing leaning church and learned to be of service and a steward of love. This idea of service is something intimately woven into her approach as an artist, in her work, and in life. In this conversation, we explore her personality as a child and the types of questions she asked when she was young; her path to art and what she feels is her job as an artist; the way her mind starts to fire creatively once receiving a commission work or project; the challenge & beauty of creating an art exhibition in another language while she was living in Mexico; how sobriety has affected her life and work; her longtime spiritual nature and relationship with the divine; the essentialness of honest vulnerability in creating and perceiving art; and much more.

Apr 27, 202257 min

Ep 52episode 052: Cemre Demiralp

Cemre Demiralp is an incredible force of nature, not one to live her life without bringing meaningful change to the world. She has spent much of her art career thus far working at various museums and institutions, mainly with established blue chip artists and creatives: Kerry James Marshall, Robert Buck, Lara Favaretto, Ian Wallace, Simon Starling, Oliver Stone, Yoko Ono, and Solange Knowles. Currently, she operates the Shumka Centre for Creative Entrepreneurship at Emily Carr University, helping to create programs, mentorship, and resources for supporting emerging artists and creative practitioners in sustainable, real world ways. Cemre is also heading up and organizing Emily Carr’s grad art show, which opens this May.She was born in Istanbul, Turkey, the only daughter of a spiritual mother and atheist father. Curious and independent, and usually surrounded by elders & adults, Cemre was encouraged by her parents to have opinions—and to express them. At 17, she moved to France for schooling and at 19, she left her home country for Canada, where she double majored in Art History and Political Science at the University of British Columbia. Cemre’s career in art kick-started during university, as she reached out to galleries and centres to offer her help. In this conversation, we talk about her childhood in Istanbul; her journey into the art world and the existing systems within it that she hopes to improve; the importance of respecting another’s journey in life; how feeling like a migrant is an untangling for her; how she brings what she learned working with blue chip artists to her current role at Emily Carr with emerging artists; interfacing creativity with running a viable business; the way she would approach curating an art show; what she wants others to know about the people & culture of Turkey; and more.

Apr 20, 20221h 13m

Ep 51episode 051: Richard Smart

There’s a wonderful gentleness to Richard Smart, the owner of EC Rarebooks, a subterranean shop in Gastown full of first edition books and titles. A third-generation book restorer, he—and his late grandfather and late father—are well-known and trusted in the large international antiquarian book world as the best at their craft. He grew up in London, England, the grandson of Charles Smart, who became a book binder in the 1930s, mostly out of necessity. His father John joined the family business as a young man, taking it over after Charles became ill. Richard, who loved motorcycles and building things with his hands growing up, also eventually learned the art of restoring books, coming into the company and relocating with it from the city to a smaller, more affordable town outside of London. With a desire to carve his own path, Richard attempted to move his family to Melbourne, Australia, but when that fell through, he found himself in Canada instead.In this conversation, we discuss how joining the family business wasn’t his initial dream and what he had really wanted to do; how he came to enjoy his craft in more recent years, now that he added a bookshop to the restoration studio; the things he must consider from a material and chemical standpoint when restoring a book; the joy it brings him when the younger generation wander into his shop and marvel at what’s in there; the life lessons he learned from his late father; what he wants for his daughter, a talented ballerina currently dancing abroad; and much more.

Apr 13, 202242 min

Ep 50episode 050: Shannon Heth

When Shannon Heth walks into a room, it’s hard not to be drawn in by her presence. Once you’re in conversation, it’s hard not to be captivated by her intelligence. After a stint in film & wardrobe after university, Shannon found her stride as a publicist, working at agencies and with clients in both Vancouver and New York before founding her own agency, Milk Communications. She grew up in Edmonton, Alberta, the only child of academic parents—her mother was a gallery curator at the University of Alberta and her father was a psychology professor. The family traveled extensively during her childhood, allowing Shannon to experience global culture & expand her perspective at a young age. She was also an equestrian—horses were a passion for her then, and still are today. In her 10-plus years in publicity and living between Vancouver and New York, she’s found her PR niche in the art, restaurant, and fashion & lifestyle worlds. More recently, Shannon co-wrote and launched her first book with celebrity makeup artist Beau Nelson, a longtime friend of hers.In this conversation, we go deep into how travel was an essential part of her upbringing and what she learned about the world, religion & spirituality at a young age; the natural unfolding of her journey into PR; why she’s been drawn to horses since childhood; the healing journey she’s been on with plant medicine and psychedelics for the last few years; the things she has learned about her ego, love & happiness since doing the world’s most powerful psychedelic 5-MeO-DMT; what she misses about New York and why it calls to her; the process of writing her first book and how it went co-authoring with a close friend; the one thing she wants her sons to know most about who she is; and more.

Apr 6, 20221h 14m

Ep 49episode 049: Dickson Li

To know Dickson Li is to love him. A sales veteran in the skate & snowboard industries, he’s represented a variety of major brands for over a decade: OBEY Clothing, Taikan, Dragon, thirtytwo, and more. He’s also co-founder of popular dumpling brand Dicky’s Dumps, something he launched a few years ago with his life partner Pearl Lam.He grew up on the Kowloon side of Hong Kong, until he was eight. His parents did well for themselves—his dad was higher up in the insurance division of HSBC, his mom worked at a shipping company. In 1990, they decided to move to Canada in order to give their sons the best education, and Dickson spent the first two years here in ESL school. As he assimilated into North American life and culture, he discovered roller hockey and then skateboarding, after a group of older boys noticed him with a board one day and offered to teach him to skate.When he found snowboarding, his career took off. A work placement as a tech at Sportchek and volunteering for events on the local mountains allowed him to meet and make friends in the industry, landing himself jobs small and big at The Boardroom, Endeavour, and finally at NLA, where he’s been for the past 12 years. In this conversation, we go into his life as a kid in Hong Kong; what it was like adjusting to a foreign culture in the 90s; his engaging story of how he became part of the skate & snow worlds; seeing people of colour in the industry and what meant it to him; his passions for cooking and continually sharing & supporting Chinese culture; a dive into our shared love for space, aliens, astral projection & other unexplainable phenomena; what he’d say to his friends & homies that gave him a chance along the way; and more.

Mar 30, 202258 min

Ep 48episode 048: Sean Blishen

Sean Blishen is a bright soul, her personality and smile light up any room. After working in fashion retail and then healthcare, she turned a candle-making hobby into a full-fledged business, launching Kilig Candle Co. Her Filipino mother immigrated to Canada from Singapore in her early 30s, after working there as a nanny. She applied to move to Vancouver and Los Angeles—the approval from Vancouver came first, giving her a new life in a new country. She met Sean’s father at a dance and, nine months later, they were married with Sean coming later, an only child. She grew up in Surrey, where her friend group was mostly Caucasian and Indian. She had a massive shift in cultural pride during a Vegas trip, while joining her mom to watch the Miss Universe contest that year, where one of the finalists was Filipino. After stints working retail at Aritzia and in luxury retail in the UK, she came back to Vancouver and found herself in healthcare at St. Paul’s Hospital and residential homes. A major car accident forced her physically to slow down, and she began making candles in the kitchen to stay busy—and soy and vegan-based Kilig Candle Co. came to be. In this conversation, we discuss her mother, grandmother and uncle’s immigrant story and her deep connection with each of them; the unconditional support her father gave her during the start of Kilig Candle Co., making deliveries together every Saturday; what the word ‘kilig’ means in Tagalog; what she loved about working in healthcare and the consistent life lesson she learned when connecting with the elderly; her relationship with her body and mental health after the car accident; the process of candle-making and why people choose a certain brand in a saturated market; how sense of smell evolves throughout life; founding the Girl Gang pop-up & exciting horizons for Kilig; and much more.

Mar 23, 202247 min

Ep 47episode 047: Steve Rio

To boil down the beautiful essence and spirit of Steve Rio down to a few adjectives is next to impossible. The musician, investor, former founder & CEO of social impact agency Briteweb and current co-founder of Enfold Institute & Nature of Work has a calm, centered inner compass that feels rare in our frenzied world.He was made in Hong Kong, born and raised in Vancouver. His entrepreneurial parents gave him space to do the things he wanted to do—this made him resourceful and independent, but that parental support was not always emotional in nature. A longtime musician, he spent many years in a band before moving fully into the digital, branding & communications agency space, splitting his time between Vancouver and New York. After a transformative experience with 5-MeO-DMT (often called the world’s strongest psychedelic or the ‘god molecule’), he began the next chapter of his life’s work in the psychedelic space. In this vast conversation, we explore his dynamic with his parents; how music saved him; the major chapter of his life in a band and his current reflections on that time; starting Briteweb and what it taught him about himself; how to create spaciousness for yourself and for others; the adolescent hunt for spiritual transcendence and how psychedelics opened him up to that early in life; the natural path that led him and his wife Austin to co-founding Enfold Institute and facilitating 5-MeO medicine ceremonies; my recent and deeply profound ceremony experience with them and some personal insights since then; their continued involvement in psychedelics and what’s coming next within the year; his mini love letter to Austin; and much more.

Mar 16, 20221h 23m

Ep 46episode 046: Vince Garcia

Vince Garcia emanates warmth and welcoming energy—he’s someone who feels immediately like an old friend upon first meeting. One of the four cofounders of award-winning Kasama Chocolate, he has spent the last six years building the bean-to-bar artisanal chocolate brand from the ground up (and with no formal chocolate-making experience) with his business partners.He grew up on the north shore, the son of Filipino parents who immigrated to Canada in the 1970s. Roller hockey, soccer, and basketball were a big part of his childhood—it was in roller hockey where he met his long-time friends Stefan, Oliver, and Dom, who eventually became his future business partners, too. Working at a creative agency like DDB or Rethink had been Vince’s ultimate career goal as a young adult, until life presented another option after he inherited a family property in the Philippines that grew cacao beans. In this conversation, we discuss how cultural identity and being a bit of an outsider shaped his view of himself and the world; the genesis story of Kasama and its growth since launching in 2016; what the word ‘kasama’ means in Tagalog and the political charge it represents back in the Philippines; working with cacao bean farmers and the importance of building trust with them; the creative process for coming up with a new bar flavour; the difference between a chocolatier and a chocolate maker; why he and his business partners have been called ‘chocolate punks’; emerging trends in the industry; what he appreciates about his three business partners and his friendship with each of them; and more.

Mar 9, 202243 min

Ep 45episode 045: Tiffany Soper

On a long list of women to admire, the classy, ambitious, and courageous Tiffany Soper is near the top of it. The well-respected veteran publicist began her career working for other PR professionals before landing at Hawksworth Communications, then becoming a partner at Avenue PR. She now has her own agency Nine Point Agency, with a client roster focused on lifestyle, cannabis, and wellbeing. She was born and raised on the north shore, the second eldest daughter of four children whose parents had been world-class competitive ice dance figure skaters. Her home environment growing up was very loving but unpredictable at times, as one of her parents battled alcoholism. Tiffany left home at 18-years-old to expand her worldview and spent time in Australia and Japan, before coming back to go to @capilanou and then @royalroadsu in Victoria. She eventually found herself in PR after observing the publicist at a restaurant she worked at, and began steadily building a career and name for herself. More recently, she became a mother to a beautiful daughter, deciding a few years ago to have a baby on her own.In this conversation, we dive deep into her parent’s love story and the ups and downs of her childhood; her chapter in abroad after high school and what she learned most about herself in that time; the qualities she and her team look for when vetting potential PR clients; her profound healing journey with the help of ayahuasca and spirituality over the last few years; the decision to become a single mother by choice and what it’s brought to her life; what she wants her daughter to know most; and more.

Mar 2, 202249 min

Ep 44episode 044: Danielle Barich

There is a natural elegance and sparkle to Paris-based Danielle Barich. The former event planner and now sensory strategist has worked with the likes of Nike, Monique Lhuillier, Bioderma, Nespresso and Veuve Clicquot to help them deliver brand & consumer experiences around the five senses: taste, touch, smell, hearing, sight.Born in Toronto, Danielle comes from a close-knit hockey family and has a mother & father with strong independent streaks and passions. An artistic child and teen, she was also deeply involved in sports, playing hockey and competitive sprint canoe. After high school, she went down the path of fashion and event planning, eventually working to create experiences in the luxury wedding industry. A major life change a few years ago brought her a new chapter in Paris, a place she had always felt drawn to. In this conversation, we examine her tight relationship with her parents and what she’s learned from both of them; balancing art and sports growing up; the long journey to her dream life in Paris; what a sensory strategist does and how she works with brands; the art & science of smell; how people can enhance their five senses; the ways our senses can play into future technology and the metaverse; and more.

Feb 23, 202252 min

Ep 43episode 043: Brit Gill

Britney Gill is someone who lives each day and moment in her truth. The longtime photographer has traveled the world shooting lifestyle, fashion, and consumer brands with the eye of an artist. She was born and raised in suburbia, the daughter of an Indian father who moved to Canada at 18-years-old from Punjab and a Caucasian mother. Her introduction to photography & cameras came from her father, who took photos as a hobby and for memory collection. Brit loved science & the body and went to school to become a dietician, eventually shifting to a different program and moving into global nutrition. She spent a life-changing seven months in Africa under international directed studies, and her vibrant career in photography followed after she began posting images from her trip on Facebook.In this conversation, we explore the story of how her parents met and her father’s love for western culture; how she found her way to photography; her journey into global nutrition and food policy, security & distribution; her observations of the entrepreneurial and community spirit of the African people; what ethical capitalism and the free market mean to her; things she’s learned about herself and the world in the last two years; how she finds beauty; her new workspace Studio Kou and a new creative project Nowhere; and more.

Feb 16, 202259 min

Ep 42episode 042: Matt Corker & Chad Clark

Matt Corker and Chad Clark have a strength of bond that is undeniable—their love feels deep and true. Matt spent years in people & leadership development at lululemon and The Corker Collective, and is now the COO of global fashion & lifestyle brand Smash + Tess. Chad spent decades in retail and hospitality, getting his retail start at Banana Republic & Holt Renfrew before transitioning into restaurants as a maitre’d and, eventually, director of operations at The Hawksworth Restaurant Group. He’s now a director at L’Abattoir. Chad was born in Michigan and raised in Montreal—his mother is Filipino and his father is Caucasian, and both were educators. He was a resilient teen who taught himself to deal with difficult situations at a young age, and that ability to handle hard situations with grace is a talent he brought to his career. Matt grew up on the east coast in Aurora, Ontario. His parents divorced when he was 10 and, around the same time, he was deep into musical theatre as a child, indulging in his love for singing and performing. He also got involved in leadership development at 13, a passion that transformed into what became his work down the line. In this conversation, we explore their different upbringings and stories of coming out to family and friends; the way their respective careers unfolded; what made Chad successful at running a restaurant floor; the future of the restaurant industry; Matt’s experience in people development and what it taught him about humans & company culture; what it means to be courageously creative; how they became fathers to their son and the surrogacy journey; and more.

Feb 9, 20221h 44m

Ep 41episode 041: Bridget Reichert

The ever-effervescent Bridget Reichert is a ball of walking human light. The long-time sales & marketing rep and exec for Vans is many things: an athlete, yoga teacher, breathwork practitioner, co-founder of women’s retreat The Drawout, and co-owner of the quaint and cozy Shoreline Tofino.She grew up in Saskatoon, despite her very natural west coast leanings. A water baby, she swam competitively for many years before discovering snowboarding, which quickly became her primary sports love. Bridget went into kinesiology after high school before shifting into finance, then finally marketing. A dream job at Burton Snowboards got her slowly moving west, first to Calgary, then to Vancouver—it was after a year of being in the city that she joined Vans and has been there ever since. In this conversation, we explore growing up as a competitive swimmer; her long-time career in action sports and her tight-knit community within the industry; how she found her way to yoga & breathwork and how they’ve essential to her being; the way The Shoreline Tofino came to be for her and her business partners; what embodiment and self-honouring mean to her personal journey; and much more.

Dec 15, 202157 min

Ep 40episode 040: Jude Wang

Cultivate Tea co-founder Jude Wang is a man who is not only interesting, but interested. Sitting at his tea bar and diving into a bottomless conversation will lead to some profound thoughts, ideas and philosophies of living.He was born in Northern China and spent all his childhood there, before moving to Canada at the age of 12. His initial school years here at Queen Alexandra School were surprisingly supportive and open as a newcomer immigrant kid, with the student body being diverse and multicultural. After high school, Jude went to the University of British Columbia for biology and finance, before moving to Beijing for four years, answering an inner call to experience a bigger city and work at a local Chinese company. It was here that he discovered tea—specifically pu’erh tea— at a small, nondescript shop with no signage. And it was here, his journey to founding Cultivate Tea really began.In this conversation, we examine his childhood in both China and Vancouver; his mischievous personality as a kid; his experience as an immigrant; the pull back to Beijing and the reason he felt the need to live there for a time in his life; how working in China differs from working in other places in the world and the subtleties built into it; the fateful way he discovered tea while living there; building deep & trusting relationships with small-scale tea farmers in Yunnan Province; the process of building his original shop on Main Street and then his current one; the ceremony of tea and why the same tea leaves will taste different, depending on who is pouring it for you; and much more.

Dec 8, 202151 min

Ep 39episode 039: Kate Horsman

Holistic integrative practitioner Kate Horsman has an aura of warmth and inner beauty that orbits around her. The former professional ballet dancer works with a wide variety of private and corporate clients, supporting them on their healing journeys.She was born and raised in Vancouver, and started dancing at the age of three. Both naturally gifted coupled with a deep passion for ballet, she quickly excelled—by nine years old, she was already at the Canada's National Ballet School. Kate then moved to New York, after being accepted into the School of American Ballet, but her hard took a devastating turn. Kate eventually left ballet as a result, realizing dance was no longer her happy place. This started a journey of coming back home to herself, and shifting into a deep calling to support others in their lives.In this conversation, we explore growing up in a household with two chronically ill parents; her experience in ballet and how it taught her about embodiment; the difficult shift in identity when she left that world; taking her counselling degree and finding herself pulled toward nutrition and merging that with other energy modalities in her work; her chapter as a stylist and what that showed her; the concepts of achievement and perfection; what she’d tell people suffering from eating disorders quietly; learning to trust oneself and body; and much more.

Dec 1, 202152 min

Ep 38episode 038: Bob Rennie

Most people who know his name, know Bob Rennie as a real estate success story—and, perhaps, they know he’s a prolific and well-respected art collector, too. Those that know him more deeply also know how charismatic, smart, quick-witted, supportive, and generous he truly is. He grew up in East Vancouver, the son of lower middle class parents. His homemaker mother spent many years raising him and his sister - at the age of 40, she entered the workforce as a waitress. A truck driver for Carling Brewery, his father also ran the press box for the Vancouver Canucks and BC Lions. At 19-years-old, Bob picked his own path and started his long storied career in real estate, first as a realtor, and began steadily building the backbone of his business empire from the simple values imparted on him by his father. His biggest passion, however, is collecting art, something that sparked on a trip to San Francisco in 1974 when he was 18-years-old. During a gallery visit, he saw a Norman Rockwell limited edition print, On Top of the World (1934). He bought it for $375, and marked the start of the extensive and renowned Rennie Collection, one the largest contemporary private art collections in North America. Works in the collection are regularly shown at rennie museum in the historic Wing Sang Building in Vancouver’s Chinatown and are also loaned to museums across the world. Bob is also currently president of the Tate Americas Foundation and on the board of trustees for the Art Institute of Chicago. In this conversation, we discuss what he learned from his parents growing up; the importance of creating trustworthy relationships in work, art & life; why he collects art in the threads of diversity, inclusion & social injustice and the role of a collector to elevate an artist; the story of how he acquired Kerry James Marshall’s Garden Party (2003-2014) over the course of nine years and his long-standing friendship with the artist; how the art world has evolved from when he began collecting to now; advice he’d give to those wanting to build their own collections; what he learned about himself over the last two years during the pandemic; why it’s essential to show people your vulnerability; what he would tell his three children right now; and much more.

Nov 24, 202151 min

Ep 37episode 037: Craig Pearce

There is a deep kindness that emanates from Craig Pearce that you feel the moment you meet him. The founder of beloved custom furniture company Union Wood Co. also recently launched a new product brand Goodland, which are objects for a slow, considered life. His family moved from Toronto to Vancouver when he was five-years-old - his father was in banking and was relocated. As a kid, Craig grew up in West Vancouver skateboarding and snowboarding - and he was creative even back then, a trait he inherited from his mom. Craig began his road to becoming a firefighter after a pivotal moment on a trip to New Zealand in his early 20s - something he still does full-time. Founding Union Wood Co. in 2009 came by organically, after a stint living in Big White, Kelowna, as a volunteer firefighter, while doing carpentry on the side. In this conversation, we discuss how he expressed his creativity through drawing as a kid; his journey to becoming a firefighter for the past 16-plus years and his love for his second family at the firehall; why he loves building things with his hands and how he’s entirely self-taught; the ins and outs of scaling his businesses; the immersive design & production process of his team at Union Wood Co.; how the slow down of the pandemic sparked the idea for Goodland and the product launching soon (a wood fired hot tub); what he loves about his wife Kendra; why moving half as fast means you notice twice as much; and more.

Nov 17, 20211h 10m

Ep 36episode 036: Tony Ferguson

Tony Ferguson is one of the greats of skateboarding. Discovered by legend Tommy Guerrero at 16-years-old, this defining moment led him to becoming a pro skateboarder at 18, riding for Plan B, Real Skateboards & Girl Skateboards, moving to California to continue pursuing this path, and travelling the globe for years doing it.He was born in Edmonton, but grew up in both Ottawa and eventually Vancouver. As a kid, he was full of energy and always moving, playing soccer & basketball among other sports. In 1986, Tony picked up his first skateboard after watching Back to the Future, mastered his craft through repetition & progression, found his place in the sport, and the rest is history. In this conversation, we explore the origins of his skateboarding career; the freedom and creativity of the sport; his retirement and eventual shift into learning building and maintaining a business as a partner at Alife; launching his own footwear brand RONE in 2015 and the craftsmanship that goes into it; a recent slides collaboration with Ace Hotel; the importance of leaving the genetic codes for the next generation of emerging skateboarders; a dive into a recent podcast episode with The Nine Club and Dr. Andrew Huberman on brain science & skateboarding; what the sport has taught him about people and the world; what he wants his two sons to remember about him; and much more.

Nov 10, 202154 min

Ep 35episode 035: Behmann Gustavsp

Behmann Gustasvp (pronounced “Goos-tas) is a beam of light, energy, and wit in the world. The head of community and partnerships at Vessi Shoes began his career in journalism, before pivoting into retail and brands at L’Oreal, lululemon, and Native Shoes.Born in Pakistan, Behmann grew up there until he was 10, one of three siblings in a happy, spiritual home environment. His father was a civil engineer in their mother country but moved his family to Canada for a better life with only $10,000. He went to BCIT for journalism, moving into radio working on the street team for The Beat. Eventually, he found himself working in retail at lululemon, sparking his career journey into working at global brands crafting community and experience. In this conversation, we explore growing up in Pakistan as a competitive, athletic youngster and how sports was also a mask for him; his experience coming out to his family; why creating communities and experiences with the brands his works with feeds his soul; the importance of being the first to say hello; what working at global companies has taught him the most in his career; what he misses most about Pakistan; and more.

Nov 3, 202157 min

Ep 34episode 034: eric veloso

Co-founder of Street Dreams Magazine, Eric Veloso always had the hustle (and photographer’s eye) in him. From learning how to frame shots while working in film to learning the ropes of distribution at Aritzia, Eric followed his natural instincts, growing Street Dreams with his business partners from a print publication to also a creative studio.Born in Calgary and raised in Vancouver, he was taught the virtue of hard work by watching his single mother go from a hotel maid to director of entertainment services. His passion for photography came in his teens, after a skateboard injury sidelined him. To pass time at the skatepark while recovering, he picked up a camera, shooting everything urban. While in New York in 2014, a fated run-in with a photographer that he followed on Instagram named Steve Irby led him, Steve and Mike Cobarubbia to found Street Dreams Magazine, which grew quickly in the following years to include a creative studio, a clothing line available in Tokyo, and a loyal global community. In this conversation, we dive deep into the origins of his hustle and growing up in a Latino household; the combination of hard work and right timing when it came to the birth of Street Dreams; the magazine’s guest-edited issue with Jeff Staple and the issue launch party that shut down a New York city block; what it’s been like creating campaigns & activations for the likes of Nike, New Balance, Tribeca Film Festival, Coach, HBO & more; a hilarious interaction with comedian George Lopez and actor Don Cheadle at a panel talk in Soho’s Apple Store; how a 2015 New York Times article catapulted the Street Dreams brand; what’s next on the horizon, and much more.

Oct 27, 20211h 36m

Ep 33episode 033: Adele Tetangco

Adele Tetangco dances to the beat of her own drum - always has, always will. She’s been in the fashion industry for years, from writing and sales & marketing at clothing brand Dace to co-founder & VP of Merchandising at retail start up Garmentory. Now, Adele is the co-creator at contemporary womenswear label Et Tigre, co-founder of BIPOC market In Todo, and founder of Snack Size, a creative collective. She grew up in Coquitlam and has lived there for most of her life. The youngest of three daughters, her childhood was spent in Filipino neighbhourhoods that threw block parties and her family took regular trips to the Philippines. Her love for fashion came from her father, who worked in fashion at Fields—part of Hudson’s Bay at the time—starting in the warehouse, then working his way up to being a buyer. At 19, she had her first child, a daughter. In this conversation, we explore how she never felt the need to conform to cultures other than her own; being a young mother and often mistaken for her daughter’s nanny in the early days; what the next gen is wearing right now; the way she forged & pivoted her career by following her instinct without question; her psychic abilities & listening to your body; major lessons she learned as a co-founder of a venture-backed company; her late mentor & powerhouse fashion exec Ginny Hershey-Lambert and the impact she left on Adele; why its essential to allow space for creativity & therefore business success; and much more.

Oct 20, 202159 min

Ep 32episode 032: Saschie & Roman Magbanua

Formation Studio co-founders Roman Magbanua and Saschie Maclean-Magbanua are a couple completely in-synch with one another, in work and in life. Before opening their dance & movement space, Roman spent years in visual design for film, television, and videos, while Saschie paved her PR career path at Tourism Vancouver and agencies Yulu and Popcorn.Roman was born in Winnipeg and raised in Vancouver, growing up in an intense home environment. His tough & independent yet observant spirit led him to follow his creative pursuits in visual arts & motion graphics, working for companies such as Microsoft, Black Rhino Creative, and Loud Crow Interactive. Saschie grew up in Cloverdale, a competitive cheerleader through her high school years. A serious injury sidelined her, causing her to rethink her identity beyond the sport she was dedicated to for so long. Eleven years ago, it was a mutual love for dance that brought them together at a class and, after a short stint as just friends at first, they became partners in life and, eventually, business. In this conversation, we explore the delicate balance of Roman’s childhood growing up with an addict father; how they do MDMA together once a year as a home date night in order to reconnect with one other; the loss of Saschie’s younger sister in a car accident in 2014, the grief that came with it & healing through dance; Formation Studio’s thoughtful approach to dance & movement as both a therapeutic activity and philosophy; what it means as a couple to put each other first, while taking care of oneself at the same time; and much more.

Oct 13, 20211h 4m

Ep 32episode 031: Ashley Freeborn

Entrepreneur Ashley Freeborn is magnetic in every sense of the word. The Los Angeles-based founder and CEO of popular fashion brand Smash + Tess has a powerful, energizing presence you feel as soon as you’re in her orbit.She grew up in Tsawwassen, the daughter of hardworking, type A parents. Her stylish, pioneering mother is the CEO and president of a financial institution, and her father was the fire chief of Delta. Goal-setting was ingrained in her at a young age, and Ashley set about to become an educator, receiving her Masters in Education before moving into corporate training and culture for a number of years. In 2014, she did the summer program at Conde Nast in London and, from there, Smash + Tess came to be.In this conversation, we explore growing up with a mother that truly loved what she did and continually works to advance opportunities for women, what it was like launching a brand with both her best friend and mother, where the name Smash + Tess comes from and its recent collaboration with Hilary Duff, her journey with Crohn’s Disease and the importance of self-advocacy & asking questions when it comes to your health, her lens on raising two inquisitive daughters in this world, and more.

Oct 6, 202155 min

Ep 31A heartfelt thank you for season one

[A NOTE FROM MAY GLOBUS] I wanted to give a heartfelt thank you to all of you, many of whom have turned into regular listeners over the last six months since I launched The Craft. I’ve been touched and overwhelmed with the messages I consistently receive from guests, friends, and strangers about the show and how they’re enjoying these deep intimate conversations and explorations of life and humanity. The Craft wouldn’t be what it is without Luis and Sarah Valdizon of When They Find Us, who co-create the show’s visuals with me - it’s been important for me since day one that the photography you see of my guests, the little intentional details of their worlds, also tells the story of how they curate their lives and who they are as humans. Thank you, Luis and Sarah. You’re as much the heart and soul of this podcast alongside me, and I love you both dearly.Another massive thank you to my incredible sound editing team Jay and Andro Bagasbas. They make me sound good with their technical magic and talents every episode. Love you guys, too.And finally, thank you to my first set of guests, many of whom are dear friends, who didn’t hesitate to say yes and sit down with me to tell their beautiful life stories: Garret Louie, Nate Sabine, Christina Culver, Tyler Quarles, Ben Smith, Courtney Chew, Paul Grunberg, Emily Leung, Scott Sueme, DJ Big Jacks (Jay Isaac), Gelareh Darabi, Steve Thorp, Kenny MacIntyre, Maurice Li, Michael Leckie, Beth Richards, Mark Brand, Juno Kim, Malania Dela Cruz, Karin Bohn, Jamie Collins, Jackie Kai Ellis and Joe Chan, Apolla Echino, Caroline Boquist, Zach Berman and Ryan Slater, Mauvey, Darya Kosilova, Pearl Lam, Mikey Scott, and Ashleigh Kim. We’ll be going on a short hiatus to prepare The Craft’s next collection of conversations and will return on air again sometime this September. Until then, please enjoy the 30 existing conversations with some amazing, truly good humans who are creating beautiful things out there, who are always uncovering more about themselves and doing better, and are generous enough to share their stories and wisdom with others. The world needs to know and listen to more wonderful people like them because many, many more of them do exist out there, in every corner of this home we call earth.See you sometime this September and as always, thank you for being here, and for listening.

Sep 1, 20213 min

Ep 30episode 030: Ashleigh Kim

SSENSE art director and former Hypebeast editor Ashleigh Kim has a brilliant spirit and inherent instinct for what looks good and is emerging in culture, fashion, and beyond.Her deeply layered family history is rooted in her grandparents’ incredible Korean immigrant story to Canada, one built upon love, sacrifice, tenacity, and the grit to build a good life and business empire from nothing but sheer hard work. That drive to follow one’s own path lives in Ashleigh, too, from her days as an editor at Hypebeast in Hong Kong, vessel operator at NYK’s European headquarters in London to art director at SSENSE in Montreal (now a $5 billion dollar company after recently receiving an investment from Sequoia Capital with plans to expand into Asia).In this open and honest conversation, we dive into her family’s story and the Korean values instilled in her from a young age, her introverted childhood, the ins and outs of being an art director, what it means when someone takes a chance on your talents, having patience with and compassion for oneself & others right now, and much more.

Aug 25, 202158 min

Ep 29episode 029: Mikey Scott

There isn’t anything Mikey Scott can’t do. The marketing and branding powerhouse has had a successful career in action sports and fashion & lifestyle brands, from being a professional snowboarder to running the global marketing at Herschel Supply for over six years. He grew up in Markham, Ontario, with a love for skateboarding, soccer and his close-knit family. Eventually, he discovered snowboarding and ended up travelling the world as a pro boarder at sixteen with sponsorship from Ride, Oakley, Globe and Endeavour. After action sports, Mikey pivoted quickly into marketing, working his way up to global marketing director at Herschel Supply, VP of Global Marketing for an iconic VF Corporation brand in Antwerp (VF also has Supreme, The North Face, Vans & more). Now, he’s innovating in a different industry from his usual repertoire as the VP of Digital Marketing at @freshtrackscanada, a travel company that’s been around for more than two decades. Always thinking ahead, he also more recently launched the well-crafted accessories brand, he also launched accessories brand Issues Objects with his wife Shawna Olsten and several creative partners.In this raw and real conversation, we explore what it was like making a discovery about his father when he was nine, not letting trauma define you, the importance of quality vs. quantity in life, the five pillars he always operates from, his journey in the marketing world and getting after it, what fatherhood means to him, and much more.

Aug 11, 20211h 21m

Ep 28episode 028: Pearl Lam

Pearl Lam has an enviable depth of smarts about the world around her. The entrepreneur & creative is co-founder of a number of businesses and projects, from popular food brand Dicky’s Dumps to Vancouver guide District Local to community event series Sanbo Worldwide. She was born in Hong Kong, the youngest of two daughters. Her family immigrated to Canada when she was three and was encouraged by her parents to quickly assimilate into North American culture. A shy child, she spent much of her time alone and creating, whether it was drawing, making art, or spending hours at the library reading solo. Despite her natural introvertedness, her love of writing, production, curiosity, and having fun eventually overrode this, and Pearl found herself working as a publicist, marketer in various industries, and also living in New York for a time.In this conversation, we examine her childhood and the push & pull of straddling two cultures, her desire to reconnect with her roots in her adult years, what her chapter in New York brought to her life, the genesis story of Dicky’s Dumps and what it’s like working with your life partner, a traumatic accident that changed her world, and more.

Aug 4, 202153 min

Ep 27episode 027: Darya Kosilova

Darya Kosilova has an allure about her that you can’t quite put your finger on, but it makes you want to hear more of what she has to say. The model (for Aritzia, Reigning Champ, Kit and Ace, Mavi), artist, creative director & founder of rapidly-growing ecomm vintage retailer Cherish has lived many, many lives in her life. Born in eastern Russia, her family left the country at a dark time when she was just five years old, immigrating to Seattle and starting their life in North America. During high school, she was the brainiac goth, spending a lot of her time in the art room, playing the guitar, and modelling. After high school, an offer came to model in Milan for fashion week. From there, the journey of her life began to really unfold in organic, unexpected ways.In this conversation, we talk about her early years growing up in a small studio with her family in Russia, her sweet connection with her resourceful grandmother Valentina, how modelling allowed her to live in various cities around the world for six years and how it taught her how to quickly adapt, what it was like running cult print magazine The Lab, her thoughts on being an artist, what she’s learned about herself now that she’s an entrepreneur, and much more.

Jul 28, 202155 min

Ep 26episode 026: Mauvey (Ransford Laryea)

Mauvey is someone whose spirit just cannot be denied. The musician, songwriter, artist and creator - who recently signed a major deal with 604 Records - is on the precipice of the world getting to know and hear his music.He was born in Ghana as Ransford Laryea (pronounced “Lah-ee”) and raised in South Hampton in the UK, the son of a pastor and hardworking mother. His parents had two or three jobs to give their children the best lives possible, and he and sisters grew up in a household that still upheld the Ghanian (gah-nay-ehn) culture. As a teenager, adversity turned on Mauvey’s resilience to full blast: working hard, he became a star basketball player, leading to him playing in Europe professionally for a number of years, including in Denmark and for England’s national team.A tragedy struck during his time in Europe, causing him to hang up his basketball shoes. As solace, he turned to his longtime love for creative writing, churning out poems, essays, novels, and songs. Eventually, Mauvey started going to open mics and then, with no experience, organized himself a world tour and played a slew of shows and festivals, gaining the attention of stations like BBC Radio One. In this conversation, we go deep into his childhood, how the bullying he experienced growing up pushed him to pick up new skills, why coachability is an important trait to have, his journey to becoming a pro basketball player, signing his major deal with 604 Records, new music coming out, why spreading love is essential to him, and much more.

Jul 21, 20211h 17m

Ep 25episode 025: Zach Berman & Ryan Slater

Childhood friends & co-founders of The Juice Truck, Ryan Slater and Zach Berman have been in each other's lives since they were eleven. Their friendship has taken them from school days and high school days to a year-long trip around the world, before starting their successful Juice Truck brand together.Both Zach and Ryan grew up in Steveston - their meet cute was on a soccer field, and their bond was instantaneous. Hustlers at a young age, they got their first taste of entrepreneurship selling skateboard stickers to their classmates. After university, they worked and saved money for a year-long trip around the world, starting their journey in Kathmandu. It was in Nepal where they discovered seabuckthorn and the genesis of the Juice Truck came to be. In this conversation, we explore their growing up and what they were like as kids and teens, the shenanigans they got up to together, their soul-changing adventures and experiences in Nepal, India & Sri Lanka, what they appreciate the most about each other, new things to expect from the Juice Truck, and much more.

Jul 14, 20211h 7m

Ep 24episode 024: Caroline Boquist

Walrus co-founder Caroline Boquist has a warm, intuitive way of connecting with everyone she meets. Her entrepreneurial journey to opening the beloved retail shop in 2009 with business partner Daniel Kozlowski is an unconventional, tenacious one. Caroline grew up in Vancouver, one of four daughters of a Filipino mother and a South Asian father, who was born in Goa and raised in Hong Kong. Her family, to this day, is a close-knit one. She became a young mother herself at the age of 22, at the crux of much transition and devastating heartbreak in her life. In this conversation, we uncover Caroline’s childhood story, losing her father when she was pregnant with her son Noah, the chronicle of how Walrus came to be and where the name comes from, what she’s discovered about herself over the last 15 months, and more.

Jul 7, 202159 min

Ep 23episode 023: Apolla Echino

New York-based Apolla Echino is a natural storyteller. It’s hard not to be enthralled, listening to this filmmaker speak and watching her videos for clients like lululemon, CIBC, Samsung, 23andme, and The Indigenous Tourism Association of Canada.She grew up in Alberta, Canada, and spent much of her childhood moving around with her young mother. An avid surfer, sports & activity have always been in her blood, from competitive gymnastics to professional dancing. Apolla eventually settled in New York in 2007 to pursue her dancing career, before finding herself a filmmaker instead. In this episode, we discuss her childhood and parents at length, the reality of being an independent filmmaker, her solo female documentary travel series ‘A Woman’s Guide to the World’ where she sailed to Antarctica in a 100-year-old sail boat & winter surfed in New Zealand, a new film project centred on a transgender woman working in the Alberta oil fields, and more.

Jun 30, 20211h 7m

Ep 22episode 022: Jackie Kai Ellis & Joe Chan

Jackie Kai Ellis and Joe Chan have a gentle, beautiful cadence together as a couple. An author, entrepreneur, advice columnist & creator, Jackie founded the much-loved Beaucoup Bakery, The Paris Tours, APT La Fayette and penned a national best-selling memoir. A partner at Vancouver’s oldest law firm, Joe co-founded the late food blog Vancouver Slop and serves on the board of directors for the Dr Sun Yat Sen Classical Chinese Garden.Joe and Jackie both grew up in close-knit families, where Chinese culture, food, and creativity were essential in their childhoods and into their teens. Jackie found a way to pursue her love for art after university, and Joe spent 13 years working at a radio station in Calgary, while writing about music and culture.In this conversation, we do deep exploring their respective childhoods, Jackie’s reflections on her Beaucoup Bakery and Paris life chapter, Joe’s passionate activism for Hong Kong, how they first met, how they found each other again after a five-year separation and what they learned about themselves and each other during that time, what they want to leave behind in the world together, and much more.

Jun 23, 20211h 20m

Ep 21episode 021: Jamie Collins

Designer Jamie Collins is an old soul, through and through. Co-founder of Analog Design and co-founder & Chief Marketing Officer of self-care brand Before, he’s been creating beautiful visual languages for more than two decades and looks at the world with a reflectiveness that’s rare these days.Jamie grew up in the tiny town of Labrador City in Newfoundland, spending his childhood contemplating nature when he wasn’t skating, snowboarding, or drawing cartoons. His chapter on the west coast started with landing his dream job, designing for Option Snowboards, and continued to unfold from there, from joining creative agencies to eventually starting his own. In this conversation, we explore diversity in design and the creatives inspiring him lately, what he’s reflected upon about himself this last year, his take on what spirituality looks like for him, the creative process his agency team goes through, what it means to live a good life, and much more.

Jun 16, 20211h 6m

Ep 20episode 020: Karin Bohn

Interior designer and co-host of Netflix show Restaurants on the Edge, Karin Bohn is one of those people you can’t take your eyes off, her presence and energy is that magnetic. Her design studio House of Bohn has won numerous awards since opening in 2009, with her team working on residential and commercial projects across North America. She’s also built a legion of global followers who view her Youtube and Instagram content on entrepreneurship, travel, and design. She also happens to be one of the most intentional and reflective humans you’ll come across. In this conversation, we explore her idyllic childhood in Dawson Creek, the greatest lesson her late father passed onto her and the strength of her mother, the long tenacious path to landing her Netflix show, what it takes to be an entrepreneur, the arrival fallacy, and more.

Jun 9, 20211h 6m

Ep 19episode 019: Malania Dela Cruz

Malania Dela Cruz is the kind of human everyone hopes to have in their life. The long-time publicist began her career in television production before transitioning into the PR world, running her agency Dela Cruz PR for a decade, before going in-house as west coast director for Toronto-based Faulhaber Communications and, now, as VP for Nine Point Agency.A lover of singing and dancing from a young age, she spent her childhood in Edmonton and St. Albert, the daughter of a Filipino father and caucasian mother. At 17-years-old, Malania left small community life for the big city, working jobs in nightlife and hospitality in Vancouver before following her soul to Australia, finally ending up back in the Pacific Northwest.In this close conversation, we discuss her layered relationship with her biological father, her healing journey from personal trauma, how essential inclusion & diversity is in organizations and how leaders can do the work, education about the cannabis industry, and much more.

Jun 2, 20211h 7m

Ep 18episode 018: Juno Kim

Juno Kim is a man with a deep, deep soul. He became a household name among the food and creative worlds after launching Juno Kim Catering, marking his successful run in the culinary space, despite any formal training.The son of immigrants from South Korea, he spent much of his childhood moving from city to city, school to school. After graduating from university, he found himself becoming a chef, reimagining people’s sensory experiences with food with his intricate seasonal dishes to great acclaim, before a major burn out in 2017 led to a period of self-exploration.In this layered conversation, we dive into his childhood, his reintroduction to meditation, a passion for matcha and the ceremony of tea, what it means to thrive in the world, and more.

May 26, 20211h 4m

Ep 17episode 017: Mark Brand

Mark Brand is a human always in service to others. The restauranteur has been behind Boneta, Sea Monstr Sushi, The Diamond, Persephone Brewing, and iconic downtown eastside diner Save on Meats but is well-known for his global work as a social entrepreneur. Born in Scotland, his childhood was an intensely nomadic one, moving from country to country. At 14-years-old, he got his first job making pizza and never looked back, moving to Australia with his dad when he was 19. There, Mark found happiness in the restaurant industry and as a hiphop, rap, and funk DJ - and it was also where he was diagnosed with polycystic kidney disease. He then moved to Vancouver on a feeling and, for the last 15 years, rebuilt his life around restaurants and worldwide social impact: establishing A Better Life Foundation, cooking at the Vatican as executive chef for Pope Francis’ Laudato Si’ Challenge, teaching innovation at USC, and working with on the United Nations Catalyst Team focusing on food waste, poverty, and the impacts of current systemic structures on the most marginalized. Resilience is a recurring theme in Mark’s life, and his story is a reflection of that. In this conversation, we dig deep into the idea of creating safety and boundaries in a chaotic environment, why his parents are his heroes, sobriety and the dark days he’s had to go through, why we shouldn’t look away from discomfort, projects he’s currently working on around the world, and more.

May 19, 20211h 2m

Ep 16episode 016: Beth Richards

Beth Richards is one powerful female force. The designer has a long list of accomplishments, cutting her fashion teeth at brands like Roots, Aritzia, John Fluevog, Sugoi, and Kit and Ace before launching her namesake swimwear label in 2011.She grew up just outside of Toronto, inspired heavily by skate, street, music, and rave culture throughout her rebel teenage years. Chloe Sevigny, Sofia Coppola, Kim Gordon, and the Riot Grrrl feminist punk movement influenced the person she was becoming - honest and always unapologetically herself, Beth took a page from these independent, fierce women and carved a path all her own.In this conversation, we explore what it’s like to be a female voice in a very male world, her ethical, sustainable & fair wage approach to design, a bright new swimwear collaboration with Indian designer Roopa Pemmaraju, what she’d tell teenage Beth that was bullied, and more.

May 12, 202143 min

Ep 15episode 015: Michael Leckie

Michael Leckie is a renaissance man - this thoughtful architect has a vast range of talents and passions. Everything that he does is intentional, with great care for detail and with his curious nature. The principal of award-winning Leckie Studio, he’s also the co-founder of The Backcountry Hut Company, which designs stunning minimalist prefab cabins. Michael also spent years playing semi-pro squash and once spent five months surfing the Baja, living on a beach in a van. He’s also a partner in an innovative new project (and movement) called arcana, where one can book a stay in reflective polished stainless steel, design-forward architectural cabins in the wild. Bridging wellbeing and nature through design, experience & self-directed / science-based wellness rituals, arcana is launching first in Ontario, while preparing to launch a number of sites across the US and Canada. Its founding team includes Tokyo Smoke’s Alan Gertner and Felicia Snyder, and Michael’s Leckie Studio collaborates with New York-based Aruliden on the design.In this conversation, we explore his life-long love of nature and creating with his hands, the values of his architecture practice and his approach to design, what about his daughter that he’s most proud of, and more.

May 5, 20211h 1m

Ep 14episode 014: Maurice Li

Maurice Li is one of the most widely respected content creators out there, with a soul and eye unlike any other. He’s also co-founder and creative services director for Stay & Wander, a powerhouse content studio and creator network. He grew up in a home with parents who encouraged him to follow his own path, one that found him in venture capitalism with photography as a side hobby. Maurice left the VC world to pursue his passion full time, before starting Stay & Wander with co-founder Alex Strohl. The studio has worked across automotive, travel, food & beverage, and gear and technology, with clients such as Lexus, Marriott International, Nespresso, Google, and The North Face.In this layered discussion, we explore where he got his passion for photography, his beautiful relationship with his parents, his insights on the landscape of content creation and platforms moving forward, and more.

Apr 28, 20211h 13m

Ep 13episode 013: Kenny MacIntyre

There is no one quite like Kenny MacIntyre. The former national culture manager for Red Bull Canada and founder of Red Bull Thre3Style, the world’s largest DJ competition, he is a mine of creative ideas, and always in perpetual motion.Kenny grew up out east in Sudbury, Ontario, with his mom, dad, and brother. His love for music and sound came at a young age, listening to records with his dad and discovering new music during his teenage years - something he continues to do now. Having watched his father battle mental illness, he’s as compassionate and empathetic as he is brilliant.In this conversation, we deep dive into music that influenced him, how Red Bull Thre3Style was an experiment that turned into something much bigger, his pivot toward more self-care and alternative healing this past year, a coming-soon project called Play the 19th, and much more.

Apr 21, 202159 min

Ep 12episode 012: Steve Thorp

Steve Thorp has an energy about him that lifts everyone up. The serial entrepreneur has accomplished much in his young life, from a long career in action sports to a rewarding chapter in the hospitality industry.He grew up in Alberta, a lover of the great outdoors since a young child. Annual fishing trips with his dad to BC eventually led to his move to Vancouver at 18-years-old, where his entrepreneurial path truly began. Over the years, he’s launched FreshTAP, Vancouver Urban Winery, and Postmark Brewing to great success.In this episode, we deep dive into what he learned from his parents, his deeply personal learnings over the past year, a new wellness brand Before that he’s launching later in 2021, and more.

Apr 14, 202146 min

Ep 11episode 011: Gelareh Darabi

Gelareh Darabi is a fascinating human and storyteller. This eloquent multi-platform journalist, documentary filmmaker, and international correspondent has worked with National Geographic’s Explorer series, Al Jazeera English, and other media outlets, focusing on science and the environment.She grew up a lover of nature, thanks to frequent outdoor walks with her family when she was a child. Her natural curiosity and love for oration led her into investigative journalism, taking her to six continents and over 20 countries. She’s covered the Iran water crisis, the Australian bushfires, indigenous resistance in the Amazon, and more. In this conversation, we explore her familial dynamics, her deep interest in the mystical and spiritual (a compass that's guided her in life), what makes a good journalist, one universal truth she's learned about people from different cultures, and more.

Apr 9, 202146 min

Ep 10episode 010: DJ Big Jacks (Jay Isaac)

DJ Big Jacks is not only one of most talented musicians and DJs in Canada, he’s also one of the most humble, kind humans you’ll ever meet.He discovered his love for music at a young age, going to record stores with his father, and quickly carved himself a career in Toronto’s music scene before expanding his reach from coast to coast. Jay is the official DJ for Aritzia and co-founder of GGBR Records with music producer Bozack Morris. In this conversation, we talk about his perspective around the Black Lives Matter movement over this last year, creativity and connection, the origins of his nickname Yung Snack Lord, and more.

Mar 31, 202156 min

Ep 9episode 009: Scott Sueme

Scott Sueme has a quiet energy and demeanour about him, something calming you can feel right from the moment you meet the artist. The start of his artist journey came from a deep interest in skateboard and graffiti art culture, which eventually led him to Emily Carr University, where he studied fine arts before taking off to travel for inspiration outside of what he knew. Today, he’s done commissioned work for The City of Vancouver, a project with the NBA, Nike, lululemon, and more.In this conversation, we explore his creative process, how he’s built community among other artists, what he learned most about himself during this last year, what he would tell his younger self, and more.

Mar 25, 202146 min

Ep 8episode 008: Emily Leung

Emily Leung is the founder of cannabis lifestyle brand Ohai, a collection of cannabis goods that are curated with the same beautiful, careful intention that as you observe her operate from. To say she’s smart is an understatement. Emily is a brilliant marketing mind in every sense of the word, having cut her teeth at brands like Vega and the Vancouver Canucks - all while teaching digital marketing at Brainstation (she still does). Building the Ohai brand was to answer her own desire for well-designed tools to administer the benefits of cannabis, for her own self-care. In this conversation, we explore Emily’s experience with being a female entrepreneur, living with anxiety, growing up in an immigrant family, and tending one’s own figurative garden. Emily is a powerhouse with a whole lot of soul - and she champions a future that is female.

Mar 17, 202152 min