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Hi, my name is Tea Uglow. I have been a creative since I was little and was Creative Director at Google's Creative Lab from 2007 until 2023. Now I run a creative advisory and freelance as a creative coach for agencies or studios.
Tea Uglow gave herself a unique and imaginative title to match the unique and imaginative work she does at Google Creative Lab Sydney. As “Experimental Person-in-Charge”, she has worked with artists, writers, and performers on seven books, 17 websites, six apps, a feature film, three plays, two concerts, four museum exhibits, and a teddy bear that talks. In this talk, Uglow explains why her success as a leader is rooted not in what she knows, but in what she doesn't know: --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/getu-chandler/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/getu-chandler/support
Tea Uglow is an influential voice in the tech world. A pioneering force behind Google's Creative Lab where she led experimental tech projects for 17 years, Tea Uglow's brilliance extends beyond technology. Join Yumi Stynes as the pair walk through Tea's personal journey, and how her experience as a trans autistic woman has become a powerful lens through which she reshapes the tech landscape.
This series of The Sacred Elizabeth spoke with nine fascinating individuals about their core values, and how the messages, philosophies and experiences from their childhood shaped them into the people they are today. She spoke with Cole Arthur Riley, Thordis Elva, James Marriott, Tomiwa Owolade, Anne McElvoy, Tea Uglow, Iain McGilchrist and John Vervaeke. In this reflection episode, Elizabeth takes a look back at all these conversations and dwells on a couple key threads that were prominent throughout. ***** The Sacred is a podcast produced by the think tank Theos. Be sure to connect with us below to stay up-to-date with all our content, research and events. CONNECT WITH THE SACRED Twitter: https://twitter.com/sacred_podcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sacred_podcast/ CONNECT WITH ELIZABETH OLDFIELD Twitter: https://twitter.com/ESOldfield Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/elizabethsaraholdfield/ CONNECT WITH THEOS Theos monthly newsletter: https://confirmsubscription.com/h/d/E9E17CAB71AC7464 Twitter: https://twitter.com/Theosthinktank Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/theosthinktank LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/theos---the-think-tank/ Website: https://www.theosthinktank.co.uk/ CHECK OUT OUR PODCASTS The Sacred: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/the-sacred/id1326888108 Reading Our Times: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/reading-our-times/id1530952185
Tea Uglow is the former Creative Director for Google's Creative Labs in Sydney and one of Deloitte's #OUT50 LGBTI+ Leaders for 2018. They are also the author of the books 'A Curiosity of Doubts' and 'Loud and Proud: LGBTQ+ Speeches that Empower and Inspire'. Tea spoke about their childhood, prior to transitioning, and the difficulties of growing up during Margaret Thatcher's Section 28 legislation in the UK. They also spoke about the influence of technology in our lives, the power it has to shape our society and where we might have missed the boat on legislating Artificial Intelligence. ***** The Sacred is a podcast produced by the think tank Theos. Be sure to connect with us below to stay up-to-date with all our content, research and events. CONNECT WITH THE SACRED Twitter: https://twitter.com/sacred_podcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sacred_podcast/ CONNECT WITH ELIZABETH OLDFIELD Twitter: https://twitter.com/ESOldfield Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/elizabethsaraholdfield/ Substack: https://morefullyalive.substack.com/ CONNECT WITH THEOS Theos monthly newsletter: https://confirmsubscription.com/h/d/E9E17CAB71AC7464 Twitter: https://twitter.com/Theosthinktank Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/theosthinktank LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/theos---the-think-tank/ Website: https://www.theosthinktank.co.uk/ CHECK OUT OUR PODCASTS The Sacred: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/the-sacred/id1326888108 Reading Our Times: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/reading-our-times/id1530952185
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It's been a long journey with hundreds of guests but in this episode Being LGBTQ reaches the 200 milestone and it's time to reminisce and have a look back at an incredible 35 months of podcasts. With highlights from our most poignant episodes and thoughts from Being LGBTQ creator Sam Wise remember the past and set the stage for the future. Featuring Rosie O'Donnell, Stephanie Davies, Brandon Wolf, Skylar Cote, Andy Brennan, Fred Rosser, Jen Winston, Hazell Dean, Tommy Atkins, Ryan Cassata, Precious Brady-Davis, Jeffrey Bowyer-Chapman, Lucy Clark, Tea Uglow, CB Lee, Dan Glass, and many, many more!
Anna Gerber is an award-winning Creative Director, working with storytelling, design and technology. For over 20 years, she's worked with global teams and companies like Google, Penguin, Mercedes and WeTransfer. Anna co-founded Visual Editions, a publishing house with refreshingly innovative book design and ideas. It won many awards and each book they made joined the permanent collection at The Art Institute of Chicago. Anna also dreamed up Editions at Play with Britt Iversen and Tea Uglow from Google Creative Lab, to tell experimental stories for the mobile phone. They made the first ever blockchain book, and published a ghost story that knows where the user is, and a book using Google Street View to travel the world. They received a Peabody Futures Award, and each Editions At Play story is part of the permanent collection at The British Library. In the pandemic Anna worked on Stories of Splendid Isolationwith voice activated stories for the home, and Anna is currently working with The Institute for Art and Olfaction in Los Angeles on making the first ever open access digital scent archive. In all of her work, Anna brings stories into the world in surprising ways, and helps make our digital experiences more thrilling and human. www.annagerber.com
Tea Uglow has built her career exploring the space between technology and art, looking for unexpected ways they can interact. She has written about doubt, and about being transgender and her book 'Loud and Proud' is a collection of the most influential and inspiring LGBTQI speeches of all time. Listen to Tea's 2020 All About Women discussion with Maddison Counaughton on Spotify or Apple Podcasts - The new streaming service from the Sydney Opera House has arrived. At home or on the go, take a front row seat whenever you want. Register for free now and start watching on Stream. Follow the Sydney Opera House on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook
Content warning for discussions of transphobia, homophobia, eating disorders & violence. Welcome back to Talking Queer, Talking Words’ summer special, here today with not one, but two incredible queer multi-hyphenates: Fiona Wright and Tea Uglow. Hailing from Sydney’s southwest, Fiona is a writer, editor, critic and tutor of creative writing and creative non-fiction. She hosts Six Degrees from the City, a podcast about writers and Western Sydney, holds a PhD in Literature and Creative Writing from Western Sydney University, and has authored four award-winning books – two collections of poetry, and two essay collections; all remarkable, challenging, and beautifully intimate.Tea is the Creative Director for Google’s Creative Lab in Sydney. Interested in the generative potential of intersections between technology and the arts, this self-described ‘atypical creative’ and fan of physics, reality, and doubt, has contributed world-altering talks to TED, the Sydney Writer’s festival, and the AIGA annual conference in Minneapolis. Most recently, Tea authored the beautiful book Loud and Proud, an anthology of speeches from the LGBTQIA+ community and our allies. Fortunately, Fiona and Tea are both currently based in Sydney, so we were able to meet in person to discuss creativity, vulnerability, and queer history.Settle in for the long haul – this one’s a journey worth taking.[One final note - since this episode was recorded, Leona's preference of pronoun leans more towards 'they' than 'she' - but they won't be offended if you occasionally forget!]
An everyday story about the perils of dating while trans while face-blind with Dissociative Identity Disorder. Tea Uglow is a founder member of Google’s Creative Lab where she works on a range of projects with cultural organisations and practitioners using digital tools to amplify or augment their artistic practice. She has published 4 books including the recent Loud and Proud anthology of LGBTQ+ speeches, and was awarded a Peabody for digital storytelling in 2018. Tea likes pop-physics, behavioural psychology, and shopping. Queerstories is an LGBTQI+ storytelling night programmed by Maeve Marsden, with regular events around Australia. For Queerstories event dates, visit www.maevemarsden.com, and follow Queerstories on Facebook. The Queerstories book is published by Hachette Australia, and can be purchased from your favourite independent bookseller or on Booktopia. To support Queerstories, become a patron at www.patreon.com/ladysingsitbetter And for gay stuff and insomnia rants follow me - Maeve Marsden - on Twitter and Instagram. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tea Uglow is the Creative Director of Google Creative Lab. Her work focuses on pushing boundaries in global tech and creative industries. She is also a trans woman. So what does it mean to fight for representation in an industry dominated by white men? What are the false binaries we assume about the skills of men and women? And how can we transcend tokenism in the search for a truly diverse workplace? Don't miss this brilliant event on true intersectionality in the tech world. Hosted by Maddison Counaughton.
Debbie talks with Tea Uglow about experimental digital projects that are pushing the boundaries of tech and art.
Featuring.. Tea Uglow - Author of the new book 'Loud and Proud' which is out on May 5th 2020 and contains 'LGBTQ+ Speeches that Empower and Inspire' with a foreword by veteran human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell. Leader of Google's Creative Lab in Sydney, Australia since 2012 Tea has worked at the organisations since 2012. Tea came out as transgender in 2015 and helmed a campaign to get a transgender flag emoji added to all platforms. Also - Sam reviews the new Ryan Murphy Netflix series 'Hollywood'.
UXAUS2019 Day 2 How Experience Design [xD] is the new everything. Tea Uglow spent 15 years designing experiments for digital experiences in 'real' reality at Google's Creative Lab - often with cultural orgs like the Royal Ballet, PunchDrunk, NASA, SBS, Penguin, and British Museum. Tea explains how our own cognition of reality is becoming more important as we move past the era of mobile UX and into a world where our interaction with information starts as we walk through the door. the human brain is the cleverest machine we have understanding sensory patterns and cognitive filters how ML erases the weird and the wonderful how to work with culture as a sandbox. “UX spent 30 years designing X as a function limited by form. Now, form is ‘reality', we get to redefine the whole relationship. Ideally, human-first.” Breaks down as using computers to enhance not replace our abilities: orientation in space (the importance of ears) xD & aperture effects (why dramaturgy matters) confronting AI bias at a Design level (data blindspots) lateral creativity (out of the left field) repurposing as scale (stealing ideas)
Welcome back to Up With The Lark The Podcast! In my experience, those enterprises which set sincere and coherent brand values, and express them honesty and with innovation, thrive. I initially started by interviewing Sophie, founder of Sleepy Doe. I then quickly realised that, like the British weather and tins of Quality Street, the joy was in the variety. So I approached some other brands and projects and asked them to share their business values. Over the next week, we will be hearing from different founders and leaders on why they feel that values are important, how they chose them, the benefits of having them, how they stick with them and where to start if you haven’t yet had chance to think about this in any great detail. For our second instalment, we have Alli Beddoes Artistic Director and CEO of Lighthouse Brighton. Lighthouse is an arts charity specialising in connecting new developments in art, technology, science and society. It runs an extensive programme of talks, training, exhibitions, commissions and educational initiatives. They also run Guiding Lights which is the UK's premiere film mentoring programme matching emerging film makers with top industry professionals such as Barbara Broccoli, Danny Boyle, Abi Morgan, Sam Mendes and Kenneth Branagh. Alli herself shares her own fascinating professional journey as well as articulating Lighthouse's values clearly and with breadth and depth of thought. It's such a great reminder that having a set of values matters whether you are in business, big or small, in the charitable sector or as a creative in your own right. Every encounter with Alli gets me thinking and this episode does too. I hope you find yourself pondering it too!It would be wonderful if you were able to rate, review and share. It helps other creatives to find us! Lighthouse Brighton: http://www.lighthouse.org.ukThe Toyota Five Whys: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_whysHow To Work Better (Peter Fischli and David Weiss):https://www.tate.org.uk/tate-etc/issue-8-autumn-2006/working-it-outSteph Douglas - Don't By Her Flowers: https://www.dontbuyherflowers.com/sisterhoodandallthat/Anna Whitehouse: https://www.instagram.com/mother_pukka/Tea Uglow, Google Creative Labs: https://teau.me Lizzo: https://www.instagram.com/lizzobeeating/Kemi Telford: https://www.instagram.com/kemitelford/
Ist ein Buch ohne gedruckte Seiten und Bindung überhaupt ein Buch? Wie sehen Bücher in Zukunft aus? Lohnt es sich, das Medium Buch zu erhalten? Und wenn ja, warum? Ein Gespräch über die Zukunft eines Mediums mit Tea Uglow vom Google Creative Lab Sidney. Der Artikel zum Nachlesen: https://detektor.fm/politik/n99-tea-uglow-ueber-die-zukunft-des-buches
Is doubt holding you back – or can it drive you forward? Tea Uglow doesn’t always know who she is. And she’s okay with that. In this episode, Rachel and Tea catch up about the expectations we all feel around our identities and, crucially, why doubt and uncertainty give us the freedom to learn, to grow, to change – and to trust.
Ist ein Buch ohne gedruckte Seiten und Bindung überhaupt ein Buch? Wie sehen Bücher in Zukunft aus? Lohnt es sich, das Medium Buch zu erhalten? Und wenn ja, warum? Ein Gespräch über die Zukunft eines Mediums mit Tea Uglow vom Google Creative Lab Sidney. Der Artikel zum Nachlesen: https://detektor.fm/politik/n99-tea-uglow-ueber-die-zukunft-des-buches
In Episode 2, our Programme Intern Elia Habib talks to Tea Uglow, co-creator of My Mother’s Kitchen, an audio interactive documentary. Which shares in the stories of eight LGBTQI+ individuals as they relay intimate memories of their mother’s kitchens. Filled with joy and comfort mixed with inequality and hardship. You can experience this heartfelt audio documentary on any tablet or mobile device by searching www.mymotherskitchen.com.au In October 2019, for the Brighton Digital Festival, Lighthouse presents selected works from the Sheffield Doc/Fest's Alternate Realities. The exhibition at Lighthouse focusses on immersive and interactive technologies which enable us to interpret and engage with socio-political infrastructures, storytelling and the interface of physical and digital worlds. Each of the selected works reveal themes of empathy and intimate encounters with people and places. In this Light + podcast series, we talk to the creators to find out more. This series has been edited by Connor Clark
In this episode, we spoke with Tea Uglow, experimental person in charge at google's creative lab, Sydney. Tea Uglow is one of those very few people who genuinely make you rethink everything you thought you knew. This episode is full of interesting insights into how we can think about technology, inclusiveness, design, and accommodation. We talk very briefly about her early days at Google in 2006 and how she didn’t particularly see herself working there for long, fast forwarding to today where she works in the idea of information, space and how digital works with humans, technology and culture. We covered how experimentation can be part success and part disaster, our relationship with truth in communication, ethics, inclusiveness and framing problems. Big thank you to special guest host Prue Jones, our friends at Streamtime and The Design Conference Brisbane. Check out streamtime.net to keep on top your projects. Admin without feeling like admin. Links http://teau.me https://research.ambientlit.com JFK Unsilenced campaign: https://www.thedrum.com/news/2018/06/22/cannes-lions-the-day-jfk-unsilenced-wins-creative-data-grand-prix-cannes
Debbie talks with Tea Uglow about experimental digital projects that are pushing the boundaries of tech and art.
In this episode, I talk to Tea Uglow. Tea is the Creative Director of Google Creative Lab, Asia Pacific. She is also known as ‘Experimental person in charge’, which perfectly describes her personality and the way she thinks. During our conversation, we discuss the importance of exploring ideas through culture rather than through profit, how to create safe spaces for creatives to flourish and the best way to problem-solve.You can find more information about Tea on her website: http://teau.me/
Since the first time someone told a story around a campfire a lot has changed about how we tell stories to one another. In this first episode of Lumina, Fenella Kernebone talks to two creatives rethinking the way we tell stories; Tea Uglow, Creative director at Google’s Creative Lab in Sydney and Mikaela Jade, CEO and founder of augmented reality company InDigital. Both think screens are just a stepping stone on the way to a world full of interactive stories we can barely conceive of yet. Lumina is a podcast about how tech innovations challenge and shape the way we share stories, produced for the Australian Film Television and Radio School (AFTRS) by Audiocraft. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Is the Solar System better understood than Gender? Creative Director of Google's Creative Lab wrote a blog about gender that ended up spreading worldwide. Tea Uglow joins Badass Womens Hour to discuss how the topic is not as black and white as we think. See her TED talk here.Is the way you think about money affecting your career and life choices? Money Empowerment Educator Michelle Gyimah is here to help you sort your money out!For information on all your hosts you can click on their names:Harriet MinterNatalie CampbellEmma SextonIf you want to get in touch you can find us on all the socials under this name: @badasswomenshrAnd for more about the podcast head here: https://www.badasswomenshour.com See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Tea Uglow is Creative Director at Google's Creative Labs and works in Sydney. Google Translate once translated her role as ‘experimental person in charge at Google' where she runs a small team at the intersection of digital technology, arts and culture working on innovative, global, creative and collaborative projects. In this episode of #PitchPodcast Pitch guest editor and cofounder of Utopia Nadya Powell interviews Tea. They talk about Tea's childhood obsession with drawing and how interactivity formed a key part of her art as a student at Oxford's Ruskin School. Tea discusses the importance of moving from being settled to being unsettled throughout your life and career; recounting a multifaceted career which includes her working in a bar, doing book art degree, learning how to code and freelancing at Google for a year and a half. We learn that following a wiggly path is sometimes the best thing to do, as when you do finally end up where you're supposed to be you're ready for it. Tea is a trans woman and talks about the project of inclusion and diversity, challenging cultures and the importance of allowing people to bring a perspective that is not in the room into the room. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this episode we were joined by Creative Director of Google Creative Lab, Tea Uglow. We chatted with local art legend, Justene Williams about her practice and her participation in the exhibition Under The Sun for Art Month Sydney. We discussed Cementa with Co-Director Alex Wisser, and exhibiting artists John A Douglas and Teena McCarthy. With tracks by Matthew Hopkins.
Tea Uglow, Creative Director Google Creative Lab Nils Pokel, Digital Experience Manager Auckland War Memorial Museum Sarah Tutton, Senior Curator ACMI VR has been going through yet another cyclical revival driven largely by improvements in hardware resulting in a new surge of public interest. With content relatively scarce, there has been a huge investment from many different sectors in content creation. Several museums have jumped on the bandwagon with VR exhibits, 360 degree video presentations, and even rumors of loaning Hololens to visitors much as they have done historically with audio guides. How is this moment different from the 1990s and 2000s? Where are the truly exciting opportunities for museums? And how do we get beyond just having to manage visitor expectations and the resultant problems with ‘more tech’?