Community Podcast Initiative Panel Discussion

Opportunities for authentic storytelling in audio

The Community Podcast Initiative (CPI) presents a panel discussion on emerging career paths in digital audio. Our three panelists will share their experiences in different forms of audio production, how it makes space for under-represented voices and how their work today might not have been the career path they imagined when they first registered in MRU’s journalism and digital media studies program. 

The panel will be moderated by the CPI’s Brad Clark, Associate professor in the journalism and digital media and broadcast media studies programs at MRU. A 20-minute audience Q&A will be included at the end of the panel discussion.

Register to attend this great discussion and panel, which has been powered by Shaw! Once registration is complete, you will receive an email invitation to the Google Meet event.

 

Event date: Nov. 22, 2021

Event time: noon to 1 p.m.

Event format: Google Meet

 

Meet our panelists

Kyle Napier

Kyle Napier

Kyle Napier (Northwest Territory Métis Nation) is Dene/nêhiyaw Métis, with Gaelic and French connections. Kyle is a sessional instructor with the University of Victoria’s Certificate in Indigenous Language Revitalization program. He’s involved in graduate research at the University of Alberta, where he earned an MA in Communication and Technology, and supports education across Nunavut in a variety of IT roles. Kyle is a co-consultant with Tatâga, and is the Communication Manager and an audiovisual technician with Calgary Show Services. Kyle oversees the release of multiple podcasts and podcast cohorts with partnering universities. He is also co-chair with Native Land Digital maps, as well as a video game designer creating Indigenous language resources for the South Slave Divisional Education Council.

 

Grace Heavy Runner

Grace Heavy Runner

Poksikainiaki Grace Heavy Runner is from the Kainai Nation in Treaty Seven Territory. For the last several years she has worked at CJSW as a producer and podcaster hosting Indigenization Across the Nation, and Treaty Nation Music. More recently she was the host and narrator for Survivors, a series on residential schools. Grace is also a fourth-year student in MRU’s Journalism and Digital Media program. 
Hadeel Abdel-Nabi

Hadeel Abdel-Nabi

Hadeel Abdel-Nabi is an assistant producer with CBC Podcasts in Toronto. A Calgary-born journalist and poet, and a graduate of MRU’s journalism program, she has bylines in HuffPost, VICE, Avenue Magazine, The Sprawl, Muslim Girl and more. She also launched, hosted and produced Muslim Girl's podcast, which she premiered live at SXSW in Austin, TX, with an interview from congresswoman Rashida Tlaib. Hadeel's passion has always been to bring underrepresented voices to the forefront of the conversation. She is most interested in stories about social inequity, the first-generation Canadian experience and politics.

 

Meet our moderator

Brad Clark

Brad Clark

Dr. Brad Clark worked as a journalist for 20 years in both print and broadcasting before coming to MRU. At the CBC in the 1990s he was a reporter on an award-winning investigative unit for CBC Radio in Edmonton, and became a national reporter based in Calgary in 2000. In 2006, Brad left the CBC to teach in the broadcast diploma program. His doctoral dissertation examined network television news representations of Indigenous peoples and racialized groups in Canada. His subsequent research has focused on inclusion in news, social media, and eSports, and podcasting as an emerging and inclusive digital medium.

 

About the CPI

The CPI is an initiative in the School of Communication Studies at MRU that uses podcasting as a medium to connect communities that are underserved by the current media landscape and explore new, more inclusive ways of communicating through the spoken word. Our goal is to develop, produce and promote podcasting by fostering innovative audio storytelling as a way to amplify underrepresented voices, including Indigenous community members, racialized Canadians, rural residents and multicultural and multi-ethnic groups in urban centres. We aim to collaborate with and provide space for community groups to share their stories as we explore new and more inclusive ways to tell audio stories. The CPI is powered by Shaw.

Shaw Communications logo       Community Podcast Initiative logo