KC-based Make48 team films Season 3 at Baltimore makerspace

August 28, 2018  |  Nick Ward-Bopp

Make48

Editor’s note: Nick Ward-Bopp is a volunteer tool tech for Make48, and co-runs the MakerSpace at the Johnson County Library, helping the community use tools for digital fabrication like 3D printers and laser cutters. He spends his nights and weekends co-running Maker Village, a small wood and metal shop in Midtown Kansas City that builds community through workshops with neighbors, nonprofits and artists. The opinions expressed in the commentary are the author’s alone.

On a Sunday earlier this month, I was standing next to Rich Brull, head of the tool techs and co-creator of Make48, and we were both taking in the flurry of activity around us, when I told him, “You guys have really come a long way.”

Nick Ward-Bopp, Maker Village KC

Nick Ward-Bopp, Maker Village KC

Rich looked at me, hair disheveled, with a bit of a bewildered look through his thick prescription safety glasses, and responded simply, “Yeah. Yeah, I guess we have,” while shaking his head in weary agreement.

Rich, along with the rest of the tool techs (myself included) had slept about five hours total in the previous 48-hour period.

As we stood there, a giant telescopic camera crane seamlessly panned above the audience as people began to take their seats to see who won the 48-hour invention competition, called Make48 — an event where teams of all ages, genders, backgrounds, and places develop a brand new idea for a product in a specific category given at the beginning of the competition.

The venue for the evening was the Museum of Industry overlooking the historic Inner Arbor of Baltimore. The lights were bright, and dressed up executives were milling about from Stanley Black & Decker, Dewalt, QVC and other companies. I even spotted the famed maker Jimmy Diresta (I worked up the courage to say hello).

Members of the film crew, Outpost Worldwide, were busy making sure they were ready to capture these critical moments for Season 3 of Make48, a nationally syndicated docu-series on PBS, now airing on Amazon Prime. Meanwhile, the 12 college teams that travelled from across the country to compete were preparing their final presentations to showcase their inventions with equal parts excitement, nervousness, and exhaustion.

You could see Bob Coulston, the biggest co-creator (both in size and personality), from across the room sitting at a table near the back. He was unusually quiet, but with a big smile on his face and remnants of saw dust on his head and sprinkled on his black shirt.

During the previous 48 hours, Bob pinged around the woodshop non-stop, helping teams sand, route, saw, and build their inventions, while calling out dimensions to tool techs like he was on a jobsite.

Tom Gray, CEO and co-creator of Make48, made his way up to the judges table where he sat down for what seemed like the first time in a week. Tom is a big reason the sponsors showed up (along with the trailer full of tools and 3D printers). He even took the VIP attendees to The Foundery, a massive Baltimore Makerspace, where they learned how to blacksmith.

Courtney Benish, Amy Gray and the rest of the team darted around like they were preparing for surgery to make sure everyone was where they are supposed to be, timers were queued, judges scorecards were set, backdrops set up, catering was in place, sponsors were taken care of, and all the other important details were addressed.

The crowd finally settled in, lights hit the stage and Curt McMillan, co-creator of Make48 and host of the show, walked onto stage pumping his fists to galvanize the crowd (like he had all weekend long).

It worked. The audience roared to life.

The teams for this year’s competition in Baltimore had the entire Stanley Black & Decker prototyping facility at their fingertips — full of CNC routers, mills, lathes, bandsaw, table saw, plasma cutters, laser cutters, 3D printers, and almost every tool you could imagine needing to build a prototype.

They had patent attorneys, industrial designers, engineers, marketers, experts in manufacturing, inventors and a experienced team of tool techs to help make their product a reality. Comparing a production of this magnitude to the early days of Make48 — using a tool metaphor — is like comparing a utility knife to a laser cutter.

During the first Make48 competition at Union Station in Kansas City, the co-creators, tool techs, and even some competitors brought their own tools from their home garage. Gone are the old days of a cobbled together parking lot fabrication area littered with sleeping bags, extension cords, and maybe a bottle of whiskey or two.

Season 3 of Make48 is scheduled to air in 2019, but Season 2 is just around the corner — set for fall 2018.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2018 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Wendy Doyle, United WE

        United WE powers forward with initiative to appoint women into government positions

        By Tommy Felts | September 30, 2021

        Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly saluted United WE Wednesday as the women-focused nonprofit celebrated 30 years of change-making across the two-state region — from strengthening workplace benefits to empowering more women into civic leadership. “United WE is making a huge difference. Just this year, United WE partnered with my office to significantly expand parental leave benefits…

        KC company packages guilt-free plastic alternative with new fashion line by Grammy-winning Ciara

        By Tommy Felts | September 30, 2021

        A Kansas City company’s groundbreaking biodegradable packaging will help send shipping waste from a fashion icon’s new clothing line back to the earth, officials from Biolo announced Thursday. LITA by Ciara — The House of LR&C’s new consciously created, ready to wear collection, inspired by Grammy award-winning singer Ciara — will include sustainable packaging for…

        Ruben Alonso, president, AltCap; Kelvin Perry, president, Black Chamber of Commerce of Greater Kansas City; Karis Harrington, chief of business development, G.I.F.T.; Brandon Calloway, CEO and co-founder, G.I.F.T.; Emily Lecuyer, managing director, equity2 (not pictured, Josh Rowland, CEO and vice chairman, Lead Bank)

        AltCap, GIFT, small business allies partner to expand opportunities for Black-owned ventures

        By Tommy Felts | September 30, 2021

        A coalition of Kansas City organizations have joined forces to launch a new partnership that will invest in the region’s Black-owned small businesses through flexible debt and equity financing, grant funding and business advisory services, the group announced Thursday. “Unfortunately, many Black entrepreneurs are left out of the financial mainstream when it comes to business…

        Nayelly Serrano-Dantzler, Erika Reza, Silvia Marin, and Veronica Alvidrez, paraMi

        No soy tu chacha: How four Latinx moms (and 600+ of their closest friends) are cleaning up gender roles

        By Tommy Felts | September 30, 2021

        Editor’s note: Veronica Alvidrez is a member of the education team at Startland, the parent organization of Startland News. This story, detailing Alvidrez’s business, paraMi, was produced independently by Startland News’ independent nonprofit newsroom. One year ago in the thick of the pandemic, Veronica Alvidrez felt like she was losing her voice. Not the literal one —…