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When AI Grow UpAuthor: Peter Ostick
When AI Grow Up What kind of future are we raising our kids into? I'm Peter Ostick entrepreneur, investor, and father to three kids (13, 4, and 1). In When AI Grow Up, I'm interviewing founders, educators, futurists, and technologists to explore how artificial intelligence is reshaping not just our work but the world our children will inherit. We dig into the big questions: How will AI change education? What jobs will still exist (and what new ones will be born)? What kind of society are we building? This isn't about hype or fear. It's about understanding so we can better prepare ourselves, and the next generation, for the world that's coming fast. New episodes weekly. Language: en-au Genres: Business, Technology Contact email: Get it Feed URL: Get it iTunes ID: Get it |
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A Love Letter to Good Men: Rethinking Masculinity with Dr Mei-Ling Doery
Episode 2
Monday, 22 December, 2025
This episode was recorded on Tuesday 9 December. In it, Dr Mei-Ling Doery refers to "the Bondi massacre," meaning the Bondi Junction attack of April 2024. At the time, we could not have known that another massacre would occur at Bondi Beach that following Sunday. Bondi is a place I once called home, and the closeness of these events is deeply felt. After careful reflection, we have chosen to release the episode as it was recorded. It was important then — and feels even more important now. Episode Overview Over the past few months, I've been exploring a question that has become increasingly urgent: Are we in a masculinity crisis — and what lies beneath it? To explore this, I sat down with Dr Mei-Ling Doery, whose experience spans emergency medicine, public health, elite sport, military health, and strategic advisory. She has treated the consequences of male violence firsthand and understands the cultural and psychological forces shaping this moment. We discuss: The roots of male violence Trauma, attachment, and emotional development How culture shapes masculinity The gap between "good intentions" and "good behaviour" What it truly means to be a "good man" This is a challenging conversation — and a necessary one.











