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szdaily -> Yes Teens! -> 
Young Canadian inventor on her experiences as a creator
    2021-06-30  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

Inventor, environmental activist, TEDx speaker, and more, Canadian Ann Makosinski has packed a pretty impressive resume during her lifetime — and she’s only 22.

Her rise in the media

The Hollow Flashlight was the catalyst that garnered massive waves in the media. In 2013, Makosinski won a Google Science Fair award, competing with other students in the 15-16 age bracket. Her winning design was a flashlight powered using heat from the human hand. Following her win, Makosinski gained media attention and found herself being featured on Forbes’ 30 Under 30, presenting TEDx Talks, and even showing off a new creation on “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.”

“[Winning the Google Science Fair] made me believe that anything was possible if I put my mind to it,” Makosinski said in an interview. “It opened up many opportunities and paths that I had only dreamed of, and it made me realize that it was just as — if not more — important to pursue interests and passions outside of school as it was to do my school homework.”

Makosinski’s natural curiosity, combined with her ambition and smarts, has granted her new opportunities that allowed her to be a part of new and exciting adventures.

“Going to the Arctic for two weeks on an icebreaker ship — that trip changed my perspective on life,” she says. “I am over the moon to have been invited to join another expedition next year and adventure to the Antarctic!”

Creative aspirations

Although the world sees her as a STEM professional, Makosinski says she wants to pursue other ventures in creative media. In addition to her current work, she plans to take on more projects involving film, acting, directing, and more.

Her YouTube channel allows her to combine her interests while allowing viewers to get more insight in her life.

“I would like to work in film in the future, for sure,” she adds. “I’ve been learning so much about it since day one.” Makosinski even throws in becoming an “old cat historian” or “the wrinkled hag who lives next door” as potential paths.

Current projects

Although she is open to other opportunities, there is one project that has been taking up her attention and time. Makosinski has been working on a line of children’s toys relating to electronics and green energy.

Reported by CNN, the toys make react when they are wound up, placed in the sun, or run underwater. These toys are meant to demonstrate different ways of generating power.

As for her future, what exactly is Makosinski’s end goal? “At the end of the day, I just want to create, tell stories, and make products that others can both be entertained and educated by.

(SD-Agencies)

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