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Will The Next 'MacGyver' Be An Indian Woman?

Richard Dean Anderson portrayed MacGyver with the perfect combination of cool and nerdy.
The Kobal Collection
Richard Dean Anderson portrayed MacGyver with the perfect combination of cool and nerdy.

When it comes to being a cool engineer, Padmasree Warrior, an executive at Cisco Systems, gives Richard Dean Anderson's fictional MacGyver a run for his money.
Miguel Villagran/Getty Images/The Kobal Collection
When it comes to being a cool engineer, Padmasree Warrior, an executive at Cisco Systems, gives Richard Dean Anderson's fictional MacGyver a run for his money.

With all his homemade gadgets and cool scientific tricks, MacGyver is an engineering superhero.

Seriously. Who else could make heart defibrillator out of candlesticks? Or blow up a jeep with mirrors and the sun?

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Well, MacGyver fans, sharpen your Swiss Army knives and grab an extra roll of duct tape because Mac may be back on TV. And the creators of the 1980s series are looking to the fans to design the new show and write the pilot script.

There's just one requirement: The new MacGyver has to be a woman. Yup, that's right. The 21st century Mac is female.

The creator of the original MacGyver, Lee Zlotoff, has teamed up with the National Academy of Engineering and top Hollywood TV producers to launch a crowdsourcing competition. Anyone around the world can submit ideas for the fictional character. Five winners will get the chance to work with a Hollywood producer to develop the character and write a pilot script.

So at this point, you might be wondering why is this story on Goats and Soda. What does this have to do with the developing world?

Quite a lot, says Zlotoff. "As popular as MacGyver is in North America, it's even more popular around the world. MacGyver is huge in Brazil, huge in South America."

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In particular, MacGyver's resourcefulness appeals to kids who grow up with little, Zlotoff says. "MacGyver doesn't use a lot of fancy technology to defeat the bad guy. He uses whatever is at hand. I think people found that very relatable."

MacGyver's ingenuity and problem-solving skills have inspired kids all over the world to go into engineering, Zlotoff says. He hopes these global Mac lovers will participate in the competition.

"I think the exciting thing for us is that ideas and stories can come from all over the planet," says producer Lori McCreary of Revelations Entertainment.

McCreary produces the show Madame Secretary. She's also a computer scientist. She hopes the new series will be a chance to portray women engineers more realistically on TV.

"We put some many images [of women] out on TV and cable, and it's really up to us to start portraying people the way they are, not that old-fashioned idea of what we think they must be," McCreary says.

For instance, when you look at where in the world most of the new women engineers are, it's not the U.S. — but Asia.

In China, about 40 percent of engineers are women, compared to less than 20 percent in the U.S. And in India, the number of women in the engineering industry has been rising so fast that the head count has surpassed the U.S.

So could the new Mac be from Asia?

"I think the character could be from anywhere," McCreary says. "I love the idea of anyone, of any race, coming in and showing us what's possible."

So look out world, the 21st century MacGyver is on the horizon, and she's going to unstoppable. As long as she has her duct tape.

The Next MacGyver competition starts Thursday and ends April 17.

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.