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Creative Media Practice Research Insights

Podcast de Dr Roy Hanney

inglés

Technology & science

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Welcome to Creative Media Practice Research Insights, a podcast exploring the intersections where art, research, and media-making meet. Drawing inspiration from seminar-based conversations, each episode delves into themes central to practice-led research in creative media, investigating what it means to make, reflect, and theorise in the contemporary media arts landscape. We’ll be exploring topics such as: How early‑career researchers articulate their creative practice as part of academic work (process, reflection, theorisation) Relationships between practical media work (audio, video, installation, performance) and critical theory Innovation in media techniques, technologies, and modes of production The social, cultural and ethical dimensions of creative media (inclusion, equity, environment, community) Interdisciplinary and experimental approaches: crossing boundaries, embracing uncertainty, embodiment, collaborative methods Each episode aims to offer insight both for those already embedded in creative media practice research, and for practitioners curious about how theory and practice can inform one another.

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10 episodios

episode Dr Scott McLaughlin on Making Research Explicit: Articulation, Exposition and Creative Practice Research artwork

Dr Scott McLaughlin on Making Research Explicit: Articulation, Exposition and Creative Practice Research

In this episode of Creative Practice Research Insights, Roy Hanney speaks with Dr Scott McLaughlin, Associate Professor in Composition and Music Technology at the University of Leeds. Scott is a composer and practice researcher whose work explores materiality, agency, indeterminacy and emergent musical structures. He is also closely involved in the development of practice research infrastructure through SPARKLE and the AHRC-funded ENACT Practice Research Data Service. The conversation focuses on a central challenge for creative practice researchers: how research generated through practice can be communicated without reducing or flattening the practice itself. Roy and Scott explore the distinction between research articulation and research exposition, methods for doing research and methods for sharing it, and the role of structured reflection in making creative research legible and reviewable. They also consider whether articulation might function as an intermediate stage between practice and exposition, helping researchers clarify their insights before returning them to more material, experiential or practice-specific forms. At the centre of the discussion is a deceptively simple question: should practice research primarily make its knowledge explicit, or should it create the conditions through which that knowledge can be encountered?

15 de jun de 2026 - 41 min
episode Prof. Craig Batty on Building a Creative Practice Research Culture artwork

Prof. Craig Batty on Building a Creative Practice Research Culture

In this episode of the Creative Practice Research Insights Podcast, Roy Hanney speaks with Professor Craig Batty about how universities can develop a sustainable culture of creative practice research. Moving beyond individual projects, the conversation explores the institutional conditions needed to support creative practice research at scale. Topics include leadership, infrastructure, shared language, doctoral supervision, peer review, and the challenges universities face when recognising creative work as research. Craig reflects on the evolution of creative practice research over the past two decades and argues that creative practitioner-researchers play a crucial role within contemporary universities—bringing new methodologies, ways of thinking, and opportunities for collaboration across disciplines. Prof. Bio: Professor Craig Batty is Pro Vice-Chancellor for the College of Creative Arts, Design and Humanities at Adelaide University. His research focuses on creative practice research, screenwriting, creative writing, and doctoral education in the creative arts. Over the past fifteen years he has contributed significantly to the development of creative practice research as a recognised field within universities, publishing widely on creative research methodologies, creative PhDs, and supervision in the creative arts. His recent work examines the broader infrastructure, policy, and institutional systems that support creative research cultures. Craig has supervised and examined numerous creative practice doctorates and has been closely involved in international conversations about how universities can better support practice-based research and creative scholarship.

13 de mar de 2026 - 36 min
episode The Development Room: How Ideas Evolve, Survive and Sometimes Get Made (with Emma Millions & Paul Jackson) artwork

The Development Room: How Ideas Evolve, Survive and Sometimes Get Made (with Emma Millions & Paul Jackson)

Creative Media Practice Research Insights – Podcast Episode 8 What really happens to creative ideas once they leave the spark stage? How do they change, strengthen, stall, or — occasionally — make it onto a screen? In this episode, we enter the development room with two guests whose careers span the full lifecycle of ideas in the screen industries: Emma Millions is a development producer, screenwriter and tutor whose portfolio career includes shaping hundreds of pitch decks and developing projects across scripted and unscripted television. She has worked with a wide range of formats, coached emerging writers, and specialises in identifying potential in early-stage ideas. Paul Jackson is one of the UK’s most influential television producers and executives. His career includes major BBC and ITV leadership roles, producing iconic comedy and entertainment series such as The Young Ones, Red Dwarf, The Two Ronnies, and later commissioning large-scale entertainment formats including Britain’s Got Talent. His experience spans the UK, USA and Australia, giving him a unique global view of how ideas survive industry systems. Together, Emma and Paul offer a rare, candid conversation about how ideas actually move through development: how practitioners pitch and refine them, how producers assess their potential, and why decision-making processes so often feel opaque. We explore “development hell,” creative resilience, collaboration, and the structural conditions that influence whether an idea thrives. For researchers, practitioners and anyone interested in the hidden labour of idea development, this episode sheds light on a crucial but often under-discussed dimension of creative media practice. If you’re exploring creativity, pitching, production development, or the dynamics of the screen industries, this conversation will be especially valuable.

2 de dic de 2025 - 46 min
episode Finding the Spark (with Alison Norrington) artwork

Finding the Spark (with Alison Norrington)

Creative Media Practice Research Insights — Episode 7 Where do creative ideas actually come from? How do practitioners notice them, feed them, and decide which ones are worth pursuing? In this episode, I’m joined by writer, producer and storyworld designer Alison Norrington, founder of StoryCentral. Rather than talking about platforms or production pipelines, we explore the earliest and often least visible stage of creative practice: the spark. Alison reflects on how ideas first make themselves known, the habits and environments that keep her creativity alive, and the ways she recognises when an idea has real potential. We also talk about intuition, curiosity, creative drift, what blocks the spark, and the small rituals that help ideas grow. This conversation opens up the generative side of creative media practice research, offering an intimate look at how creativity begins and how practitioners can sustain a life that welcomes ideas in. If you’re a creative practitioner, researcher, or anyone who’s ever wondered how to feed your imagination, this episode is for you.

20 de nov de 2025 - 38 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
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