Magnetic Ideals are a small community organisation working on projects that bring about positive social change. We have a dedicated research team that can help you gather useful data and transform it into insightful reports. As a not-for-profit group, we understand the challenges and budget constraints faced in this sector. We can work with you to find cost-effective ways to help you achieve your goals. For example, we can support you with funding bids for research projects or finding partners with shared research goals to ensure cost-saving.
Our services encompass a wide range of research methodologies, including but not limited to:
Interviews: We can conduct in-depth interviews with stakeholders, beneficiaries, and community members to gather first-hand insights.
Focus Groups: Our experienced facilitators can organise and moderate focus group sessions, ensuring rich qualitative data.
Surveys: We design and administer questionnaires, helping you collect quantitative data and opinions from your target audience.
Action Research: We can work closely with your team to plan, implement, and evaluate action research projects to drive positive change while doing workshops or activities that move you forward.
Case Studies: We excel in creating compelling case studies that showcase your organization’s impact and success stories.
Desk-Based Research: Our researchers can conduct thorough desk-based research, compiling relevant data and literature to support your projects.
Writing up and analysis of existing data: We can work with your existing data sets to find trends, help you highlight achievements or understand your service-user needs.
Away Day Research: Run fun and creative away days that help you gather information, understand your organisational needs, while promoting staff communication and cohesion.
Researcher Training: Upskill your staff so that you can build the research capacity of your organisation internally.
Working with Magnetic Ideals you can expect the following benefits:
Affordability: We understand the budget constraints of small organisations, and our pricing is designed to be reasonable and transparent.
Customized Solutions: We tailor our approach to meet your specific research objectives and organisational goals.
Professional Expertise: Our team comprises experienced researchers and writers who are dedicated to delivering high-quality reports.
Timely Delivery: We are committed to meeting deadlines and ensuring you have the information you need when you need it.
Actionable Insights: Our reports provide you with actionable insights to make informed decisions and demonstrate your impact to donors and stakeholders.
Previous research projects include working with EASA, mapping resistance to precarious work practices (interviews, case studies, desk-based research), supporting student-led research into housing for Sussex Students’ Union (training, report-writing), away day facilitation and write-up for Advance HE and service-user surveys for Menopause and Mind.
If you’re interested in working with us, we’d be happy to hear about your project however big or small! Please reply to this email or get in touch with info@magneticideals.org to schedule a free consultation, include if you can a rough outline of the project you are planning and any budget constraints and funding ambitions. We’re a friendly group and are keen to work with you, not just for you.
The launch of the Creative Climate Café Programme brought together artists, musicians, environmentalists, and community activists to celebrate funding for a new kind of climate café. This new programme, funded by the Rampion Community Benefit Fund, brings creative art practices into the traditional creative climate café format. This programme of ten cafes covers issues from the energy crisis, marine life and wetlands preservation.
A partnership project between Magnetic Ideals, Arts for Life and Ecotopia Now!, the Creative Climate Cafe initiative will help address eco-anxiety, and fuel conservation for vulnerable groups by running ten intergenerational, family-friendly Creative Climate Cafes that also address the cost-of-living crisis. These workshops will be hosted by experienced facilitators and community leaders with backgrounds in sustainability, mental health, eco-anxiety and community empowerment. Arts activities range from painting with natural dyes, to marbling and working with charcoals, the full programme of events is available on Eventbrite.
Kirsty Lumm from Arts for Life discussed how creative climate cafes, people will engage in healing artistic pursuits, and build community while learning to save money sustainably in the cost-of-living crisis. Each cafe addresses a different cost of living issue, from home fuel use, water use, food, social life and connections, sustainable purchasing, and empowering people to ask for change. Heather McKnight from Magnetic Ideas explained how at these builds on the Climate Psychology Association model of Climate Cafes as open, inclusive spaces for discussing climate change. Cafes allow a forum that can encourage action and educate in cost saving. Research indicates that these collective experiences can lead to better mental health outcomes and be better for the planet, as people move from anxiety to action. Booking for the creative climate cafes is available here.
Xenia Christopoulou from Ecotopia Now! gave an empowering talk about how small actions can make a big difference, and about how interconnected we are with the world around us. Katie Scanlan, the Rampion Stakeholder and Visitor Centre Manager, also gave at talk highlighting the way in which the Rampion Windfarm have been engaging with community both through the visitor centre, and through the Rampion Community Benefit Fund.
The launch event featured a soundscape by local musician Jim Purbrick under the guise of Remember Glaciers. The project Snæfellsjökull 2011 recalls memories of a road trip to an electronic music festival near the Snæfellsjökull glacier in Iceland. The story is told in fragments of dialogue from a more care free time when our only concerns were “Where’s the raves at in Iceland?”, how to make Salmiakki and whether the car would be able to get us there and back again.” You can hear edits of this stream from this live project on his YouTube.
A highlight of the night was a performance of protest song Under the Pee by Lorelei Mathias and Phil Johnstone comedically highlighting pollution in the sea. Lorelei is a comedian, author, mermaid… and founder of cause-powered comedy collective, www.Meloncomedy.com. Lorelei Mathias believes comedy has a unique power to create change, and has made work for South Coast Sirens (which she co-founded), and performed at Surfers Against Sewage /SOS Whitstable’s ‘Cut the Crap’ marches, as well as comedy shows from London to Melbourne. Phil Johnstone is a songwriter and musician in the Bedford Celts, The Qwarks and other projects and also works at the University of Sussex researching and teaching on sustainability transitions. He co-wrote Under the Pee with Lorelei.
Under the Pee Performance
Overall, the night was a wonderful opportunity to bring together people who were activists, artists, community and political leaders, as well as climate café participants from the original pilot scheme. While the climate crisis is very much upon us it is inspirational so see so many people taking part in projects big and small to inspire change, create change and bring the community together around one of the greatest challenges humanity has ever faced.
Utopia Falls (Feb 2020) is a ground-breaking and vastly under-discussed Canadian sci-fi TV show about Afrofuturism, youth activism, and eco-awareness.[1] Created by R.T Thorne, it is the first sci-fi hip hop cross-over, and challenges the white-heteronormative-masculine norms of the sci-fi genre, offering a cast that features mostly BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, people of colour) actors. The show represents diverse sexualities and kinships, placing women in authority.
Utopia Falls is set hundreds of years in the future where during surface wars the great flash sent everything dark, poisoning the world. The remaining survivors were forced underground until what emerged was New Babyl, a seemingly utopian society with a dystopian undertone. We see clear links with our ongoing real-life apocalyptic fears around climate crisis and nuclear extinction.
Things digress from the expected sci-fi narrative when we hear that “the youth of New Babyl have the most important duty of all”. This involves honouring their predecessors through training to compete in “The Examplar”, a music and dance competition that unites, entertains and inspires the people of New Babyl. The engagement of the young participants transforms, however, when they make a discovery about the past that will change their perspective and have far-reaching consequences for the people of new Babyl…
In our far-from-equilibrium times with pandemics, climate crisis, ongoing wars and genocides on one side, and high-profile activist movements of Black Lives Matter, and youth climate strikes on the other we should have expected such a TV show which is “about the erasure of history and Black culture in the future”[2] to be centred and discussed widely in the press?
Daniella Broadway, from Black Girl Nerds notes it “gives us what we’ve been waiting far too long for — representation for people of color in [TV] sci-fi.”[3] The writer, R.T. Thorne, is also a significant figure as chair of the BIPOC committee of the Directors Guild of Canada, hoping to “fight systemic racism and help create much-needed change in our industry.”[4]
However, while it came out in February 2020 it has received little interest despite its cultural relevance for the time we are in. I have not-yet been able to find any academic articles that reference it and have been shocked by the tirade of dismissive reviews and low ratings on sites such as Rotten Tomatoes and IMDB. Disgustingly, this is part of the broader racist and discriminatory structures of the TV industry and society at large. The combination of sci-fi, dance and music on tv is undoubtedly a new one. We can speculate that the traditional world of TV reviewers have found this unsettling and failed to see its significance.
As the creator, R.T. Thorne himself notes, “[p]eople definitely looked at me weird when I first threw it out there a few years ago, just this idea of science fiction and hip hop.”[5] However, on further inspection, what is more surprising is that this hasn’t happened sooner. Science fiction has long been a space for stories of imaginaries of a better world, battles for equality, and critical interventions in the now by positioning dystopian futures.[6] Thorne had noticed that despite these narratives, these future scapes tended to be dominated by electronica and not the kind of music that would galvanise and politicise.
He saw a place for hip hop in how we imagine and critique our own futures in science fiction, as a music of protest as well as popularity. Hip hop forms a signifier in the show for both the erasure and reclamation of black histories. The show goes on to valorise the potentiality of non-violent protest, while also exploring physical and structural violence, tackling police brutality, the injustice of incarceration, privilege, nepotism, infertility, ableism, and precarious bodies in activism. [7]
While not necessarily gaining recognition on mainstream platforms, the show has garnered critical acclaim in the industry and a strong youth following. It has had nominations for the Canadian Screen Awards for best YA programme and direction, for the Canadian Society of Cinematographers Awards, and won the Tweens and Teens Award and Outstanding Achievement in Production Design at the Directors Guild of Canada.[8] It has also been a hit with young BIPOC and LGBT+ fans noting, “[f]or the first time there is a connection between art and what my life is actually like” and others stating that has been unique in the genre of TV sci-fi not only in its representation but also its stories which are set against a backdrop of people of colour trying to uncover stolen aspects of their cultural history.
Utopia Falls represents youth subcultures on television in a way that fundamentally values BIPOC, and LGBT+ lives, and aims to inspire knowledge informed activism and values the revolutionary potential of the arts.[9] Despite its relevance to teen engagement with Black Lives Matter protests, and School Strikes, season two has not-yet been announced. However, there is a clear call for its reinstatement in online petitions and teen-activist blogs that indicate we should not be ignoring the relevance of Utopia Falls, or its ability to inspire future sci-fi shows, as well as its viewers. [10]
As R.T. Thorne notes, the show is about a cultural revolution and not just a political one.[11] He states: “At the end of the day, [‘Utopia Falls’] might not be for everybody, I get that. It’s all good. I’m happy that we’re the first science-fiction hip hop [show and] bring hip hop into the future… There are black nerds out there that love whatever they love. I hope that it just inspires them now to be able to see that culture matters in a future scape.”[12]
Utopia Falls is a highly ambitious and influential show, and I will be writing more about it in due course. In the future, you’ll look back and be glad you watched this show, it’s a sea change, part of a transformational landscape of TV that educates, informs and inspires as it entertains.
[1] ‘Utopia Falls — CBC Media Centre’, accessed 28 June 2021, https://gem.cbc.ca/, //www.cbc.ca/mediacentre/program/utopia-falls. Note this has failed to be include in the recent Routledge guide to Teen TV, despite coming out after numerous other TV shows featured with less radical messaging.