Little Ruckus: Rule Breakers + Tastemakers

Adrienne Han, Big Dopamine PR
Little Ruckus: Rule Breakers + Tastemakers Podcast

Being ahead of the curve isn't for the faint of heart. Little Ruckus is your peek into the next consumer obsession. With each emerging trend we explore, we sit down with 3 individuals who’ve been propelling it. Join us for tales in persistence, pivots, and pop culture in the making. This is the little ruckus before the big racket.

  1. 29/04/2021

    Building a Boba Empire, Confident Vulnerability, & Punching Up feat. Boba Guys CEO & Co-Founder, Andrew Chau

    We're chatting with Andrew Chau, the co-founder and CEO of Boba Guys, a national boba brand that’s bridging cultures through deliciously disarming beverages. If you live in the Bay Area, LA, or NYC, you’ve probably passed by -- or through -- a Boba Guys store. Today, Boba Guys has 18 immaculately designed retail locations, but as with most start-up stories, it has humble beginnings. Co-founder and CEO Andrew Chau grew up in ‘80s New Jersey, in a working-class neighborhood that was home to primarily Jewish and Italian families, where his parents ran a Chinese restaurant. Outside of food, the only Asian representation he saw were in Bruce Lee action films, courtesy of VHS tapes he'd rent from a video shop in a neighboring town. This changed when he moved to California, attended UC Berkeley, and got his start in marketing at retail and CPG companies, spanning Target, Walmart, Timbuk2, and Clorox. While running a boba brand had never been a part of the 5 year plan, when Andrew met his future co-founder Bin at Timbuk2, the two got to brainstorming what they could create together while sipping boba drinks, and soon, the boba concept became inescapable. Andrew kept his corporate job for the first 3 years of Boba Guys, before cutting the cord and going all in on growing the company. That said, if you ask Andrew what business he's in, it doesn't stop at boba. Boba Guys is ultimately about bridging cultures. Even with their national retail footprint, tens of thousands of Yelp reviews, and millions of loyal customers, Andrew has stayed true to the mission. Boba Guys doesn't franchise, nor have they taken outside money. Co-founders Andrew and Bin are in it for the long haul. We’ll talk with Andrew about his experience growing up Asian American in the ‘80s, the always worthwhile but often painful lessons he’s learned while making Boba Guys a household name, and unconventional ways for driving change in ways that feel authentic to who we are -- whether that be brazenly outspoken, stoically committed, or something in between. Stay tuned for an unfiltered conversation with one of the most forthcoming CEOs whom we’ve had the pleasure of chatting with, Andrew Chau. More Andrew: Instagram @chaumeleon @bobaguys Twitter @chaumeleon More Hot & Sour Soup for the Soul: ✋Not Your Auntie's Jade Jewelry ✋ 👅 Multisensory Monthly Newsletter 👅 👀 IG 👀

    45 min
  2. 03/03/2021

    When "Me" Meets "We", Magic Ensues

    Which do you think more often about: “Me” or “We”? Historically, whether we belonged to the school of individualism or the school of collectivism had to do with the cultural context we were brought up around, whether we grew up with more Western or Eastern influence. Today however, between a global pandemic, planetary climate change, and national civic movements that are resurfacing racial disparities which many had previously thought had already been squashed, the “We” -- collective effort and collective gain -- appears to be something we’ll all need to get comfortable with. Out with the notion that individualism and collectivism are mutually exclusive. In with the power of paradox, of holding the tension between “Me” and “We” within ourselves.  In this episode, we get into harnessing the power of not “Me” vs. “We”, but “Me” & “We”. First, we get interactive, with a few real-time tests to gauge where we currently are on that scale spanning from individualist to collectivist. Then, we talk actionable steps to building our ability to flex between the two. This is a space where the multifacetedness of & > the restriction of Or. Let’s get to tapping into the power of paradox. Studies mentioned: UC Berkeley's Bus, Train, and Track Triad Study UMichigan Focal Point Study UChicago Sense of Self Study More The Babe Brigade: ✋Wear: Not Your Auntie's Jade Jewelry ✋ 👅 Read: Multisensory Monthly Newsletter 👅 👂Listen: Episode Archive👂 👀 Watch: Instagram 👀

    27 min
  3. 12/02/2021

    Tiger Moms, Growing Up Hapa, & Equity in AI feat. Stanford PhD Candidate, Allison Koenecke

    MIT undergrad. FAANG internships. Antitrust economic consulting. Stanford PhD candidacy. No question Allison Koenecke is an academic force. Beyond impressive institutional associations -- which she seldom spotlights -- what has made her a true force of nature (or shall we say, software?) is the research she's leading to address equitability in mainstream technologies. Specifically, Allison's bringing visibility to the blind spots tech companies have been operating with while training their machine learning models. For instance, did you know voice assistants (i.e. Siri, Alexa) register twice as many errors when processing African American colloquial English? Allison is a researcher who's working towards a tech future that is built on the foundation of a more diverse set of colors, creeds, and communities. Beyond chatting about her journey to and within her PhD candidacy at Stanford's Institute for Computational & Mathematical Engineering, we talk about parental expectations, leading teams, and quick tips to getting more done during the day. More Allison: Twitter @allisonkoe Allison's research on racial disparities in automated speech recognition software PhD Profile Level up your math & science skills @ brilliant.org (as mentioned in the episode!) More Hot & Sour Soup for the Soul: ✋Not Your Auntie's Jade Jewelry ✋ 👅 Multisensory Monthly Newsletter 👅 👀 IG 👀

    34 min
  4. 07/10/2020

    Harvard, Green Tech, & Chasing Purpose feat. Heidi Lim, Chief of Staff at Opus 12

    What do you do when you start feeling like you’re just going through the motions? How do you optimize around your strengths to make the biggest impact? Who are you without your day job? Heidi Lim has been there, and in this episode, she’s sharing with us what she’s learned. Heidi is a queer Chinese American who grew up in Las Vegas (yes, that Vegas), and was a first gen college student at Harvard, where she studied environmental engineering and policy. It was there that she decided she wanted to pursue work at the nexus of sustainability and business. However, realizing that dream took a whole lot of intentionality. Between Harvard and her career today as a full time environmental technologist, Heidi worked in enterprise software as a product manager. In 2018, she left this cozy job to dedicate time to building the bridge towards working on what she sees as the world's most pressing issue, climate change. After 10 months of self-discovery, which included time living alongside monks in Thailand, she made it happen and became Chief of Staff at Opus 12, a California start-up that has developed a technology to recycle CO2 into valuable chemicals, materials, and fuels. There, she is focused on commercializing the technology, working with companies across many sectors to defossilize their supply chains and spark the move from a fossil-based economy to a CO2-based circular one. In this episode, we get real about what people don’t tell you about the emotional journey to finding purpose in your work, how to make an outsized impact in your community, and what farming can teach us about playing the career long-game. More Heidi: Chasing a Job with Purpose Article Carbon Removal 101 Article Twitter  Instagram  More Hot & Sour Soup for the Soul: ✋Ring Collection ✋ 👀 Instagram 👀

    33 min

About

Being ahead of the curve isn't for the faint of heart. Little Ruckus is your peek into the next consumer obsession. With each emerging trend we explore, we sit down with 3 individuals who’ve been propelling it. Join us for tales in persistence, pivots, and pop culture in the making. This is the little ruckus before the big racket.

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