21 episodes

Hosted by Vish, this show features conversations with graduating students, alumni, professors and coaches at McMaster University. We talk about all things life - from the toughest obstacles we had to overcome to our most happiest moments ever.

The Last Word with Vish Vish

    • Education

Hosted by Vish, this show features conversations with graduating students, alumni, professors and coaches at McMaster University. We talk about all things life - from the toughest obstacles we had to overcome to our most happiest moments ever.

    Lindsay Hamilton: Send 5 emails to 5 different people you really admire

    Lindsay Hamilton: Send 5 emails to 5 different people you really admire

    Lindsay Hamilton joined TSN in September 2016 and is an anchor for SportsCentre. Hamilton started working in broadcasting at a young age, becoming the first host of the Family Channel in 2008. For more than five years she interviewed entertainment icons, athletes, and musicians across North America, including Justin Bieber, Selena Gomez, and One Direction. While pursuing a double major in communications and film at McMaster University, she created, produced, and hosted various MacTV segments – a digital television outlet covering both sports and local entertainment. During her time at McMaster, Hamilton also created, produced, and hosted a sports radio program at CFMU. In 2012, Hamilton hosted events during the 100th Grey Cup Anniversary Week, and by 2014 she joined Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment as a host for Toronto Marlies, IIHF World Juniors, and Toronto Maple Leafs games and team events. The year following, Hamilton hosted the 2015 Pan Am Games torch relay across Ontario and the artistic gymnastics during the Games in Toronto. Hamilton joined CBC Radio as a sports reporter in March of 2016. During the Rio 2016 Olympics she was part of the CBC News Network team delivering national sports updates each morning of the Games. You can follow Lindsay on Twitter @Linz_Hamilton, and on Instagram @hamiltonlindsay.

    • 33 min
    Dr. Juliet Daniel: These 4 years are going to be the best years of your life

    Dr. Juliet Daniel: These 4 years are going to be the best years of your life

    Dr. Juliet M Daniel is a Canadian biology professor at McMaster University, where her research focuses on cancer biology. In 1987, Dr. Daniel completed a Bachelor's degree in life sciences at Queen's University, and then a PhD in microbiology at the University of British Columbia in 1993. Daniel completed post-doctoral research fellowships for three years at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, and then followed her supervisor's move to Vanderbilt University, in Memphis, Tennessee, where she stayed for another three years. Following her post-doctoral fellowship, she joined McMaster University's Department of Biology in November 1999, where she is now a full professor. Dr. Daniel's lab studies triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), specifically to identify genetic risk factors that may explain the prevalence and high mortality associated with TNBC in women of African ancestry. In 2017, her lab demonstrated that Kaiso plays a role in the proliferation and survival of TNBC cells. Daniel mentors students through the African Caribbean Association at McMaster University, as well as youth belonging to the African Caribbean community of Hamilton. She co-founded the Canadian Multicultural LEAD Organization for Mentoring & Training. In recognition of her research, Daniel has received several awards including the Ontario Premier’s Research Excellence Award, the John C. Holland Professional Achievement Award, the African Canadian Achievement Award of Excellence in Science, the Barbados National Honor Gold Crown of Merit and a Hamilton YWCA Women of Distinction Award. She has also been featured in “Millennium Minds: 100 Black Canadians”. You can follow Dr. Juliet Daniel on Twitter @bajanjules27

    • 40 min
    Dr. Dawn Bodish: Life is too short to be doing work you don't want to do

    Dr. Dawn Bodish: Life is too short to be doing work you don't want to do

    Dr. Dawn M. E. Bowdish is a Canadian immunologist and currently a professor in the Department of Pathology and Molecular Medicine at McMaster University in Ontario, Canada. She is a Tier 2 Canada Research Chair in Aging & Immunity. She is known for several discoveries including the immunomodulatory properties of the antimicrobial peptide LL-37, how MARCO signaling complex recognizes Mycobacterium tuberculosis, age-associated inflammation and its effects on clearing pneumococcal pneumonia and how the aging gut microbiome drives age-associated inflammation. Dr. Bowdish was born and raised in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada in 1976. In 1999, she graduated from the University of Guelph with an Honours Bachelor of Science in microbiology. Bowdish was a graduate student and obtained her PhD from the University of British Columbia between 2000 – 2005. There, under the supervision of Robert E. W. Hancock, she discovered the immunomodulatory role of the host defense peptide LL-37. As a Canadian Institute of Health Research Post-Doctoral Fellow, Bowdish worked at the University of Oxford from 2005-2008 under the supervision of Siamon Gordon in the Department of Pathology. Dr. Dawn Bowdish’s lab is focusing on why the elderly are particularly susceptible to pneumonia and striving to extend lives by developing new therapies that bolster the body’s own natural defense mechanisms. You can follow Dr. Bowdish on Twitter @MsMacrophage

    • 24 min
    Hartley Jafine: Say the word 'Yes' more

    Hartley Jafine: Say the word 'Yes' more

    Hartley holds a BA in Theatre Studies from Acadia University and an MA in Applied Drama from Goldsmiths, University of London (UK). He has facilitated theatre workshops and productions both nationally and internationally - Ontario, Nova Scotia, the United States, England, Bulgaria, and Kosovo.  He joined the Arts & Science Program in 2012-13, teaches ARTSSCI 3CL3 / Theatre, Self, and Social Development and co-teaches (with Dr. J. Wilson) ARTSSCI 4MN2 / Movement and Integration. Hartley also teaches in the Bachelor of Health Sciences (Honours) Program, where he facilitates theatre and arts-based courses. Currently working on his PhD, he focuses his teaching and research on Applied Drama, research-based theatre, and the use of drama in professional health science education. When not on the McMaster campus, Hartley works as a freelance applied drama practitioner, a communication coach at the University of Toronto’s postgraduate Medical Education program, and an arts educator at Baycrest Health Sciences. For over a decade, he has been integrating drama, improv, and play specifically within health professions education. One of his projects is a pilot of a medical improv curriculum with residents in the Department of Family and Community Medicine in Toronto as a vehicle for curriculum delivery of the CanMEDs-FM framework. He has been honored to receive four McMaster Students Union Teaching Awards for his work in the Faculty of Health Sciences (2012, 2015, 2018) and the Arts & Science Program (2017). He is also a clown nose enthusiast. You can follow Hartley on Twitter @hartleyjafine

    • 58 min
    Dr. Elizabeth Hassan: Figure out a way to be useful

    Dr. Elizabeth Hassan: Figure out a way to be useful

    Dr. Elizabeth joined McMaster following a Post-Doctoral Fellowship in Neuroscience at the Sachs Lab at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute. She started her career at Queen’s University with a degree in Mechanical Engineering and after a Master of Engineering Science in Mechanical Engineering from Western University, she joined MEA Forensic Engineers and Scientists. She then went on to earn a Master of Design in Strategic Foresight and Innovation at OCADU and a Ph.D in Mechanical Engineering from Queen’s University. She's currently an assistant professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at McMaster University. You can follow her on twitter @Liz_Hassan

    • 23 min
    Dr. Allison Sekuler: University is the perfect time to explore

    Dr. Allison Sekuler: University is the perfect time to explore

    Dr. Allison Sekuler joined the faculty of the Department of Psychology at the University of Toronto in 1990. In 2001, Professor Sekuler moved to McMaster as Professor and Canada Research Chair in Cognitive Neuroscience. She currently serves as Associate Vice-President (Research) for McMaster University, and she is an adjunct member of York University’s Centre for Vision Research.

    Professor Sekuler has been recognized as an Alexander von Humboldt research fellow, and as an Ontario Distinguished Researcher. In 2004, Professor Sekuler’s research garnered her the distinction of a "Leader of Tomorrow", by the Partnership Group for Science and Engineering (PAGSE), recognizing her advances in research showing how the human brain processes visual information and how that processing changes as a function of aging. And in 2005, she received the Hamilton Spectator Publisher's Award for Educators, in appreciation of her devotion and efforts toward increasing public science outreach. She recently received a Women's Executive Network 2019 Canada's Most Powerful Women: Top 100 Award in the Manulife Science and Technology category.

    Currently, she's a Senior Scientist and Managing Director at the Rotman Research Institute at Baycrest Health Sciences. You can follow Dr. Sekuler on Twitter @asek47

    • 24 min

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