think | earth - Alternative Power Productions
Transcription
think | earth - Alternative Power Productions
THINK | EARTH VOL I CONTENTS 4 CONTRIBUTORS 6 INTRODUCTION 8 LUKAS HAAS Lifelong Environmentalist Adds A Little Rock to his Star 10 ELIZABETH MITCHELL Lost and Found in Bainbridge 12 LOSING LOUISIANA: How Restoring Gulf Marshes Can Bring New Orleans Back By Aaron Viles of the Gulf Restoration Network 15 AKASHA: Baking Eco-Cusine Into The Mainstream By Fred Ascher 16 SHANE WEST The Good Kind of Germ 18 NIGEL BARKER America’s Next Top Role Model 2 21 FROM GREED TO GREEN: The 12-Step Program By Sarah Backhouse 22 JOSH KELLEY And The Tour Bus Recycling Challenge 24 IDEALBITE.COM: A Sassier Shade of Green Interview with Heather Stephenson & Jen Boulden 27 GREG ALTERMAN Means Business 28 JASON KENNEDY Bringing Generosity: Water into the Spotlight 30 ADRIAN GRENIER Promoting Sustainability Onscreen and Off 32 LIFE. LOVE. TRUTH. GREEN? By Michelle Lombardo 34 REID SCOTT My Boy Rocks (And Renews) Our World 36 ECOSPIRE: Looking For Guidance on Going Green? By Davida Heller of Ecospire 37 ECONATION: The Business of Going Green By Ben Bloch 38 ALI HILLIS Rescue Me! 40 AMY SMART Loud and Clear for Heal The Bay 41 NEW MOON SKIN CARE: Nourishment for Body and Earth Interview with Amy Leavell Bransford 42 RIGHT WHALE, RIGHT NOW: Saving Right Whales From Extinction By Anthony Ramos of the Wildlife Trust 44 MALIN AKERMAN Back to Basics: Dreams of a Simpler Life 46 SHE’S A NATURAL Ingrid Seaburn’s Guide to Fresh, Radiant Skin 47 THE MAN ON TAP By Bryan Devendorf of The National SPEAK OUT! Featuring Scarlett Johansson, Donald Faison, and David Arquette 48 SUSTAINABLE WAVES: Parties Powered By The Sun Interview with Mark McLarry & Neal Turley 51 ADAPTATION: An Inspired Floral Experience Interview with Mike LaSage & Liz Gudmundsson 52 BRIAN WILLS Making Waves with String Theory and Oceana 54 FEATURED CHARITIES SPECIAL THANKS STAFF CONTACT 50 DOODY FREE: The Ethics of Environmentalism and Dog Poop By Chris Connolly www.alternativeapparel.com 3 CONTRIBUTORS Benjamin Kutsko Benjamin Kutsko makes films, art and magic in and about the world that his brain finds itself. He is currently finishing up the short film "Petecia and the Quest for the Golden Owl" and beginning work on a new music video. www.benjaminkutsko.com Michelle Lombardo Originally from Glastonbury, Connecticut, Michelle came onto the scene by winning the inaugural Sports Illustrated Fresh Face Contest in 2004 and was a swimsuit model for Sports Illustrated's calendars and magazines. She soon realized her passion for acting and has been seen on HBO’s Entourage, Quarterlife, and is currently recurring on Showtime's Californication. She is also a host on the cable network Current TV and resides in Los Angeles. The National Brooklyn-based indie band The National was formed in 1999 by five friends from Cincinnati, Ohio. Singer Matt Berninger’s distinctive baritone carries their lyrics, while two pairs of brothers – Aaron & Bryce Dessner and Scott & Bryan Devendorf – comprise the rest of the band. Together they tour the world, most recently to promote their universally acclaimed album, Boxer. www.americanmary.com Davida Heller Davida Heller’s career as a Sustainable Lifestyle Consultant started while working in the entertainment industry as Vice President of Production at a film production company in Los Angeles. Realizing that helping people incorporate sustainability into their lives was her true passion, Davida founded Ecospire, a consulting company committed to helping people and the environment. Originally from New York, Davida has been living in Los Angeles for ten years. www.ecospire.com Sarah Backhouse TV Host, global citizen and free thinker, Sarah Backhouse professes a love of irony, secularism and cricket which has ensured a seamless transition to life in Los Angeles. With her roots firmly at The G Living Network, Sarah looks forward to branching out deeper and darker into this brave new world of green. From fashion to cars, food to architecture, celebrity piffle to pressing world affairs, she’s honored to be able share her passion for this emerging green lifestyle. www.sarahbackhouse.com www.gliving.tv Ben Bloch Ben Bloch is co-founder of Econation Chauffeured Transportation and one of the principals of investment firm Madison Capital Ventures, LLC. Based in Los Angeles, CA, Ben is also a freelance columnist for several domestic publications, including Los Angeles Confidential, Angeleno and The Hollywood Reporter. www.econation.com www.alternativeapparel.com Rosemary Elperin Ingrid Seaburn Ingrid Seaburn is a Los Angeles-based skincare therapist who focuses on natural treatments using products that are non-chemically based. Her in-home treatments incorporate parabenfree and fragrance-free skin care and skin nutrition brands that contain no artificial colors and promote radiant skin. ingrid.seaburn@yahoo.com Anthony Ramos As Director of Marketing & Communications at Wildlife Trust, Anthony Ramos continues to work hard to generate awareness of conservation issues and bring attention to the negative effects of damaged ecosystems. Human-induced change to the environment has contributed to a significant rise in infectious diseases called zoonoses - diseases that make the leap from wildlife to humans. www.wildlifetrust.org Chris Connolly When not traveling the world on behalf the New York Times, Men's Health and the Travel Channel, Chris Connolly lives and rages against the machine in Madison, Wisconsin, with his two sons and his wife. www.chrisconnollyonline.com 4 Fred Ascher Fred grew up in East Tennessee and graduated from the University of Tennessee in 1986. He came to L.A. in a Toyota Tercel on a wing and a prayer, and lives the Hollywood dream as a writer and publicist. Aaron Viles Aaron Viles is the campaign director of the Gulf Restoration Network, a non-profit network of environmental groups dedicated to protecting and restoring the natural resources of the Gulf of Mexico. Based in New Orleans, GRN is working to ensure that New Orleans and other coastal areas in the central Gulf come back sustainably from the devastating hurricanes of 2005. Aaron focuses on media, government and community relations for GRN. www.healthygulf.org 5 THINK EARTH When we take a moment to look around, it’s hard not to notice the many issues that deserve far more attention than they get – schools without enough books for their students, entire populations who miraculously survive each day without food and water, an Earth that will die if we don’t clean it. But as clearly dire as these problems may be, more often than not, we see them, feel a pang of sadness, and quickly shift our thoughts to something – anything – less devastating. But it doesn’t have to be like that. What if, instead of automatically ignoring these situations, we actually continued to think about them until we conjured a solution? Then what if we followed through with that idea to create a positive change? We at Alternative can’t help but wonder what the world would be like if we did. Finding out is what inspired us to collaborate with businesses, nonprofits, and fierce individuals who are dead-set on changing the world for the better. As we deliberated on how to get started, we couldn’t conceive of a more pressing and pertinent issue than the environment. The finished product: Alternative’s Think 6 www.alternativeapparel.com Earth, a celebration of individuals who are not only aware of their impact on our planet, but take action every day to reduce it. Each person in Think Earth represents an idea or perspective on the state of our planet and expresses it by supporting a charity, starting a business, or simply choosing a Prius over a tricked-out Hummer. However they do it, their individual actions contribute to a movement that will hopefully change the world. We know we can’t singlehandedly tackle every issue, but we want to try, one at a time, to think about them – and to get you to think about them, too! Because in the end, solutions all start with a thought, one little seed that holds the potential to grow into an idea and metamorphose into positive action. It is our hope to inspire you with the pages that follow – not only to think, but in your own way, to do. Movements change the world, and they all start with the actions of a single person. How are you making waves? Tell us at www.alternativeapparel.com. 7 So Lukas, how did you get inspired to be a part of our project? I thought it was a really cool concept. I’ve been active in cleaning the environment since I was a kid. When I was about 6 or 7, I was anti underground nuclear weapons testing because it was ruining the environment. I have a lot of mutual friends who are very active in the green cause, so it’s just part of my life. Is there anyone in particular you admire for their environmental efforts? Leo [DiCaprio] does so many things for the environment, and he’s taught me a lot. I was pretty impressed by his documentary, The 11th Hour. But Al Gore is probably the guy I’m most inspired by because he’s been able to make such an impact. It was really after his documentary people started to finally take a serious look and realize what’s happening. Now it seems to be a bit of a fad to be green. But I don’t think it is, because it’s not like it’s going to go away and all of a sudden we won’t have to be green anymore… Very true. On a lighter note, you recently put out a self-titled EP. Has it been a challenge to get started in music after your long career as an actor? I’ve been writing music all my life, actually. I’ve always wanted to get my music out there, and recording an album has been a lifelong dream. And it happened naturally – I had recorded some songs, a producer heard them, he asked to produce them with me, and we basically recorded the album over the first half of last year. I’ve got some really good people doing it with me, like Ben Harper and Chris Cester from Jet. Actually Chris just called me to play keyboards on Jet’s new record, and I just got back from playing live with them in Austin. It sounds like you’re living the dream! What else do you have going on right now? I just did a couple episodes on Entourage, and I’ve got a few things coming up movie-wise. I’ve been touring, just played in New York, I played some shows here [in LA], and then there’s the Jet album. I might even go on tour with them! Just doing that kind of stuff. Pretty awesome. So, you don’t think this movement is just a trend? I don’t think it can be. It feels like a trend right now, but we’ve got a big problem. Hopefully the movement gains momentum and we are able to make real fundamental changes, not only in what people do at home, but also in the government. There are a lot of things that the government could do to change the direction we’re heading. For instance, alternative fuels could reinvigorate the American economy and become a whole new source of income. Even if doesn’t seem feasible right now, as time goes on it’s going to become clearer that those things have to happen. LUKAS HAAS LIFELONG ACTOR AND ENVIRONMENTALIST ADDS A LITTLE ROCK TO HIS STAR Lukas Haas has been a part of Hollywood since kindergarten, but did you know he’s been an environmentalist for just as long? Here were learn a little about his roots in protesting underground nuclear weapons testing, his admiration for activists Leonardo Dicaprio and Al Gore, and how his dream of becoming a musician has finally come true. 8 www.alternativeapparel.com www.alternativeapparel.com 9 ELIZABETH MITCHELL LOST AND FOUND IN BAINBRIDGE As at home as Elizabeth Mitchell seems running through the jungle on the hit series Lost, she’s even more at home with her husband and son in the sustainable community of Bainbridge. Speaking with us from her Washington home, Elizabeth discusses her life as an actress and “greenie” from the start. Let’s talk a little bit about the Earth: what’s your outlook on the state of the planet? I think we’re at a crisis point, and anyone who says that we’re not, well, I don’t think they’re paying attention. I go to all these science exhibits with my son because he’s so fascinated by it, and you see the chain of pollution and what we’re doing with our landfills. I worked for New York Public Interest Research Group for awhile, and I’ve pretty much been a greenie since then. So I’m just excited that it’s fashionable – I don’t really care who started it or when they did it or how they did it, I’m just glad that people are doing it. What are some of the things you do to ease your impact? Here on Bainbridge we only have one car, and we take public transportation quite often. We filter our water, we compost, and we try to do everything we can to reuse. We’re not big purchasers, but we put money into the economy buying organic food and those sorts of things. What I’m enjoying lately is that the grocery stores here are going to start charging 3 cents for a plastic bag. I just carry around a big purse that I can stuff groceries in. You love the environment, but what about rolling around in the mud in the woods on Lost? Do you ever get sick of that? To be honest with you, I don’t. But then you have to think I’m keeping great company, like Evangeline [Lilly] – being in the mud with her is pretty fun. I knew it was going to be physical, and the heat is something, but one of the reasons the show works is that we are out there running, out there fighting. We’re not sipping piña coladas, and as a result the reality of the work shows on our faces. I think it makes the show better. What it is about acting that compels you? Well, I was a dorky kid, and all I would do was read and imagine. My mother is an artist and my great-grandfather was an artist and everyone around me had these outlets. I’m a terrible artist, but I have a huge appreciation for it. Anyway, the outlet was very important to me. If I wasn’t an actress, I don’t know what I would have been. Probably a librarian, but not a very good one. If you had to trade in acting, is that what you’d want to do instead? Oh, that’s hard, because I’ve spent my whole life in acting. I don’t know, I sang a lot as a kid and as a young woman for musicals and that sort of thing, so I also really love that. It’s hard to imagine doing anything outside of the arts; I can’t really imagine being someone who isn’t allowed to express herself. How does this concept of “the outlet” and your need for selfexpression play into your acting? I’m one of those odd chameleon people. I try to work without ego and I really, really listen. I definitely love when someone has a big personality and they bring it in, but that’s not me. I love to lose myself in the role. I can just get right in there, and only someone with a love for it can do that. 10 www.alternativeapparel.com PHOTOS BY MICHAEL O’NEIL www.alternativeapparel.com 11 LOSING LOUISIANA HOW RESTORING GULF MARSHES CAN BRING NEW ORLEANS BACK By Aaron Viles of the Gulf Restoration Network In the wake of the devastating hurricane season of 2005, when the world watched in horror as Katrina, then Rita, wiped Gulf Coast communities off the map and delivered New Orleans a near knockout punch, many woke up to the importance of these coastal wetlands. Scientists have agreed that had New Orleans been surrounded by the buffer of marsh that existed 50 years ago, Katrina would not have threatened the city. Due to a national need for dependable shipping lanes on the Mississippi River and oil production from coastal areas, mankind has impacted the marsh and sped up natural processes so that Louisiana has been losing coastal wetlands at a staggering rate. Over 900,000 acres of marsh have turned to open water since 1930, an area about the size of Delaware. Every year, Louisiana loses an additional 25 square miles of coast. This is not a hopeless tale. Though climate change makes the coastal crisis even more critical, no coastal area has a tool in their front yard like the Mississippi River. Just as the river built the land New Orleans sits upon, when managed differently, the river can rebuild it. About 15 miles southeast of New Orleans, past the still-hammered community of Chalmette, sits the Caernarvon freshwater diversion. Completed in 1991, the diversion was designed to put fresh water into 12 www.alternativeapparel.com marshes south of New Orleans, which had grown too salty due to the intrusion of Gulf water, facilitated by oil and navigation canals. There are some 10,000 miles of canals throughout Louisiana’s coastal zone, most dredged by the oil industry, some by the Corps of Engineers for navigation purposes. These canals are coast killers, disrupting the hydrology of the wetlands, and allowing saltwater to travel up the canals with the tide or with storms, killing the fresh or brackish water plants, and unraveling the land. Caernarvon was meant to ‘freshen’ the marsh, not actually rebuild land. To save New Orleans though, we need to build more, bigger, river reintroduction projects to put sediment from the river into the marsh, not just fresh water. We also need to pipe sediment from the ongoing dredging operations, which suck up muck from the bottom of shipping channels to ensure the waterways are deep enough for the ships. Traditionally, this dirt has been dumped into the Gulf of Mexico and wasted. (continued ) www.alternativeapparel.com 13 Photo by Alen Lin! AKASHA (continued from p.13)! The plans have been developed to rebuild the coast and defend New Orleans, but they still haven’t been authorized or funded by Congress. Steps have been taken, though. Due to the work of GRN and other community and environmental groups, Congress has voted to shut down a massive navigation canal, the Mississippi River – Gulf outlet (MRGO – called Mister Go by locals) which has destroyed over 28,000 acres of wetlands. Unfortunately, the Corps of Engineers have failed to begin the necessary wetlands restoration to mitigate MRGO’s impacts. Stanton Moore, the drummer for New Orleans’ Galactic sums it up this way, "New Orleans is the birthplace of jazz, and has influenced about every American style of music that followed, from rock to hip hop. The next President will need to prioritize restoring our coast to continue the recovery process. The culture of our whole country depends on it." Louisiana’s Governor recently announced one billion dollars worth of coastal restoration projects, the single largest commitment so far to the coast. The state is expecting federal resources for the effort due to a new law which gives the state 37% of all revenues generated from off-shore drilling in the waters off Louisiana’s coast. Unfortunately, it’s a drop in the bucket. Current estimates range from $30 to $50 billion dollars to rebuild the coast and protect our communities. About the Gulf Restoration Network To save the coast we need to convince the nation that Louisiana’s coast is special and worth saving. It has been done before, for the Everglades and for the Chesapeake (admittedly with mixed results). GRN has been working to elevate the issue, organizing house parties across the country on the past two Katrina anniversaries, and recently signing on the high profile support of musicians REM, Pearl Jam, My Morning Jacket, Ok Go, Trent Reznor and some 90 others. 14 www.alternativeapparel.com The Gulf Restoration Network (GRN), one of Alternative’s charity partners, is a network of environmental, social justice, and citizens' groups and individuals committed to restoring the Gulf of Mexico to an ecologically and biologically sustainable condition. The GRN was formed in 1994 to raise awareness of environmental issues in Gulf States and to increase communication and coordination of member activities across the region. They are playing a pivotal role in providing their members and partners with the technical information, Gulf-wide networking opportunities, and communication that empowers local communiti es to successfully address the environmental threats that they face. To learn more, visit www.healthygulf.org. Baking Eco-Cuisine into the Mainstream Renowned chef and author Akasha Richmond made headlines in February, 2008, when she opened her Culver City restaurant AKASHA with a commitment to be 100% Green. “I’m not just talking about putting a sign on the wall and separating the recyclables in the trash,” Akasha says, “but really making sure that, in every way possible, my restaurant sets a high standard for what it means to be Green.” Akasha’s reputation as a leader in the Green movement is hardearned, and she takes that trust very seriously. “Our kitchen sources from farms, ranches and fisheries that are guided by the principals of sustainability.” She brings produce in from local purveyors who purchase from a number of local family farms that serve Southern California, and her seafood comes from Clean Fish and other Marine Stewardship Council-certified fisheries. AKASHA’s chicken comes from Petaluma Poultry, a pioneer and leader in the organic foods industry, dedicated to farming practices that renew natural and human resources. She credits the rich flavor of her cuisine to carefully selected artisan sea salt, estate-grown olive oils, non-irradiated spices and other natural and organic ingredients. Beyond meats and vegetables, AKASHA’s bakery features artisan desserts and pastries made with organic flours, sweeteners and healthy but delicious ingredients like spelt, goji berries and acai. “We purchase from Wholesome Sweeteners and Dagoba Chocolate, who source from sustainable plantations around the world,” promises Akasha. “Stonyfield Yogurt, Silk Soymilk, Organic Valley and Horizon Organic are used in our ice creams and baked goods as well as our espresso drinks.” By Fred Ascher As Akasha prepares to celebrate the restaurant’s one-year anniversary, she takes great pride in knowing she has broken into the mainstream. “Some thought my focus on green, sustainable, organic sources would brand me as a fringe concept, too narrow to compete effectively with the other top restaurants opening in Culver City,” she says. “I’m proud to say that we’ve proved the naysayers wrong. AKASHA proves a restaurant can be run successfully without compromising on quality or our principles to protect our fragile planet.” BIELER’S BROTH | My favorite soup for feeling healthy 1 1/2 quarts vegetable stock 3/4 pound thin green beans, washed, stemmed, cut into 2inch pieces 5 zucchini, stem ends removed, sliced into 1inch pieces 1 leek, white part only, cleaned and chopped 2 inner ribs celery, coarsely chopped !"#$%&'$()*+,-).$')/0,-1$0'/230 1 tablespoon white miso 1 tablespoon unsalted butter or extravirgin olive oil In a heavy stockpot, combine the stock, green beans, zucchini, leeks, and celery. Bring to a boil over mediumhigh heat. Reduce *4$)$0255-/6$%47-/6$)89$%44:$&8*2,$*;-$7-3-*)<,-0$)/-$04.*6$)<4&*$ =>$528&*-0?$@8$)$<,-89-/$4/$.449$'/4%-004/$'&/--$*;-$04&'$A2*;$ miso and butter in two batches until smooth and creamy. Makes 2 quarts. Being Green doesn’t stop with the food. The wine list has been crafted exclusively by Tom Simson and Shane Gelinas of Millennium Wine Consulting, and it is hand-tailored to complement AKASHA’s unique cuisine and sense of style. Her bar also features top shelf brands and an exclusive selection of organic spirits, such as Juniper Organic Gin, TRU Organic Vodka, 4 Copas Organic Tequila and VeeV, the world’s first antioxidant spirit. www.alternativeapparel.com 15 When did you first get involved working with charities? My mom got me into that at an early age. Up until now, I have mainly been involved with charities for battered and abused families, disabled veterans, and urban communities. This is new for me in the environmental charity world. Getting green is something I am really getting into. Have you discovered an environmental organization that you like a lot? I think the Environmental Media Association (EMA) is great, in that we in the entertainment industry must get environmental issues out to the public. SHANE WEST THE GOOD KIND OF GERM Between starring in The Germs flick What We Do is Secret and fronting the band in real life, actor/musician Shane West is super crazy busy. He nevertheless found some time chat with us about his hobbies, the EMA, and what he’s doing to help the environment. 16 www.alternativeapparel.com How else do you contribute to eco-friendly living? I have been an avid recycler for many years, and I even used to have my own compost heap in my back yard. I also use the same recyclable bag for when I grocery shop. However, I need to get better and smarter with a lot of things, and I’m working on that now. When you’re not working, what do you like to do? I don’t have much spare time with acting and music being a major part of my life. But I like to read, collect old records, work out (a major hobby since I turned 30), and spend time with my friends and lady. I also have a horrible spending habit at Amoeba records – I’m a big movie watcher and lover of music. It’s no surprise, then, that you’re an actor and musician. If you weren’t, what could you see yourself doing? Psychology. It’s the only "normal" job I was interested in when I was growing up. That and oceanography. One of Alternative’s favorite words is “inspiration” – what is something that continually inspires you? How about a phrase? "I shall grow old, but never lose life's zest, because the road's last turn will be the best," Henry van Dyke. That and, "The world cares very little about what a man or woman knows; it is what the man or woman is able to do that counts," Booker T. Washington. 17 NIGEL BARKER AMERICA’S NEXT TOP ROLE MODEL If any individual stands out as someone dedicated to making a difference, it’s photographer and America’s Next Top Model judge Nigel Barker. Whether he’s manning a booth for The Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation, photographing seals and sharks for The Humane Society, documenting riots in Haiti for Edeyo, or supporting charities Do Something and the Make-A-Wish Foundation, he never lacks the energy to help a person or animal in need. In your own words, tell us a little about The Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation (EGPAF). The EGPAF organizes fantastic fundraisers in both NYC and LA called "Kids For Kids" and "A Time For Heroes," respectively. Essentially these events are designed to be like amazing block parties with all sorts of booths, stores, and fun activities for children to get involved with. What inspired you to get involved with the foundation? I believe all children deserve a chance in life, and growing up with a life-threatening illness like AIDS is crippling for the child and devastating for the family. As a father I would hope, should the unthinkable happen, organizations like EGPAF would be there offering support and advice through such hard times. In what ways have you participated at their signature events, “Kids For Kids” and “A Time For Heroes?” I have volunteered in booths decorating t-shirts, playing fancy dressup, and doing photography. I also have taken photos using a giant Polaroid camera. A year ago I took photos of about 10 different children at the "Kids For Kids" event in NYC and found out weeks later that one of the children died the following day. I received a letter from the family saying how thankful they were that the last day their child had was one filled with laughter and smiles and that they had a photo of their child to remember that day forever. You work with a number of charities in addition to EGPAF – what kinds of projects are you working on these days? I went with The Humane Society to shoot the Protect Sharks Campaign in Martha’s Vineyard, and I’m going to Iceland this summer to photograph and film whales. Also, I went to Haiti in the beginning of May to do a photo documentary with Edeyo, a Haitian charity. Edeyo, which means, “help them,” funds and educates about 90 children. It also feeds them every day – most people don’t actually have that, some go for days without eating. Then I’m going to Africa with EGPAF to do another documentary either in Tanzania or Zimbabwe, so we’ll have another exhibition when we return to bring more awareness about children with AIDS. You are someone who is everywhere, using your talents every day to benefit the lives of people who need help. What advice do you have for individuals who want to use their skills to make a difference? Anyone can be a hero – just get out there and do something! There’s actually a charity called Do Something where children go out into the community and gain an idea of what they want to do to help – from bringing food to a homeless shelter, to helping write letters fighting for amnesty. Also, the Make-A-Wish Foundation is great. Most of the kids in the program don’t have very big wishes: maybe they want a playground in their back yard, or a jungle gym or a sandbox – get some wood, fill it with sand, and there you have it. Really anyone can get out there and set an example and help their fellow man. (continued ) 18 www.alternativeapparel.com www.alternativeapparel.com 19 From Greed to Green: The 12-Step Program By Sarah Backhouse Greed is a disease. It’s a powerful and destructive addiction that spectacularly brought down the system of democratic capitalism as we know it. Just like other addictions, greed lures you in before spitting you out. The same greed that created the economic climate which resulted in the top 1% owning 40% of the wealth, ultimately led to their downfall. Just ask poster child Bernie Madoff. But let’s be optimistic. Every financial crisis has a silver lining. We can be thankful that Gordon Gecko’s mantra of “Greed is Good” has finally gone the way of hair crimpers. And waiting in the wings is the enormous potential of a restorative, sustainable economy which upholds the values of natural capitalism. It’s time to embrace it: the survival of the human race and our planet depends on it. But what about the greed addicts? Those riddled with unbridled selfinterest and avarice? What should be done with them? Sure, their utter disdain for the fundamental tenets of business blew through our entire life savings and investments. And yeah, their irresponsibly cost us our homes and health insurance. Big deal. In these challenging times let’s pride ourselves in our capacity for compassion. Let’s seek to help those afflicted by the disease of greed by encouraging them to seek treatment. (continued from p.19)! About Do Something About The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) Do Something believes you have the power to make a difference. They aim to inspire, support and celebrate a generation of doers: people who see the need to do something, believe in their ability to get it done, and then take action. DoSomething.org provides the tools and resources for you to convert your ideas and energy into positive action. Be part of a generation of doers. The Humane Society of the United States is the nation's largest and most effective animal protection organization—backed by 10 million Americans, or one in every 30. Established in 1954, The HSUS seeks a humane and sustainable world for all animals—a world that will also benefit people. They are America's mainstream force against cruelty, exploitation and neglect, as well as the most trusted voice extolling the human-animal bond. To learn more, visit www.dosomething.org. To learn more, visit www.hsus.org. About Edeyo About the Make-A-Wish Foundation Edeyo is an independent not-for-profit organization dedicated to improving the future of children in Haiti by rebuilding dilapidated schools, supplying students with learning materials, and providing them with nutritional support. The Edeyo Team is a group of dedicated professionals from various backgrounds who all share the same passion to empower Haitian youth. Since 1980, the Make-A-Wish Foundation® has enriched the lives of children with life-threatening medical conditions through its wishgranting work. The Foundation's mission reflects the life-changing impact that a Make-A-Wish® experience has on children, families, referral sources, donors, sponsors, and entire communities. To learn more, visit www.edeyo.org. To learn more, visit www.wish.org. About The Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation (EGPAF) The Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation, one of Alternative’s charity partners, seeks to prevent pediatric HIV infection and to eradicate pediatric AIDS through research, advocacy, and prevention and treatment programs. So greedsters, consider this a public intervention. Stop lamenting the demise of Wall Street and the loss of your Lamborghini. Follow the classic 12-Step Program, tweaked specifically for the needs of G.A. (Greedster’s Anonymous), and reflect on them as you bicycle to your new job at Pinkberry. Step 1 - We admitted we were powerless over our addiction - that our lives had become unmanageable. Seven figure bonuses, homes in the Hamptons, vacays in St. Bart’s and Aspen, zebras at children’s birthday parties, the Robb Report, mercury poisoning by sushi. Admit it. It was all a little excessive. Especially when you could watch what was happening in Darfur and New Orleans every night on your 100” flat screen television. Step 2 – Came to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us to sanity. That “Power” lies in new economic system befitting of the ecological age. A recent report by the United Nations Environment Programme entitled “Green Jobs: Towards Decent work in a Sustainable, Low-Carbon World” explains how tens of millions of new green jobs can be created as we tackle climate change. Ask for it at the prison library. Step 3 – Made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of our Higher Power as we understood it. Replace Gordon Gecko and Mammon with Paul Hawken and Buddha. Step 4 – Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves. Yeah, your morals. You sold them a long time ago. Buy them back. Oh, crap. You’ve got no money. Not even any of OUR money. Well, EARN them back then. Use your tips at Pinkberry to plant trees. Step 5 - Admitted to those who matter to us and to other human beings the exact nature of our wrongs. Repeat after me. “I must not short sell. I must not short sell. I must not short sell.” Step 6 - Were entirely ready to remove all these defects of character. Not all of your defects. You can stay impoverished and vilified. We’ll leave you with those. It’s the least we can do after you raped our kids’ college funds. Step 7 - Humbly asked to remove our shortcomings. Time to ditch your insatiable appetite for mega-yachts, private jets and multi-million dollar homes, which are always, inexplicably, in appalling taste. Step 8 - Made a list of all persons we had harmed, and became willing to make amends to them all. Let’s see, two million homes foreclosed in 2008 and counting, thousands of small businesses shut down…just get the phonebook and begin at the A’s. Step 9 - Made direct amends to such people wherever possible, except when to do so would injure them or others. How about golden parachutes for the homeless? Step 10 - Continued to take personal inventory, and when we were wrong promptly admitted it. “Clean” coal, naturally (conventional) cotton, and “safe” offshore drilling? There are no such things, and you know it. Step 11 - Sought to improve our conscious contact with our Higher Powers, asking only for knowledge of their will for us and the power to carry that out. Remember Job? He could be you. Step 12 - Having had a spiritual awakening as the result of these steps, we tried to carry this message to other addicts, and to practice these principles in all our affairs. Warn Gordon Gecko wannabes about the dangers of “Greed is Good” and inform them instead that “Green is Good.” To learn more, visit www.pedaids.org. 20 www.alternativeapparel.com www.alternativeapparel.com 21 What inspired you to get started in music? I’ve always been involved with music in one way or another. My mom is a drummer, and she bought me a drum set with a guitar and a cheap little amp when I was a kid. I learned how to play drums, piano, and guitar at the same time, and it really made it easier to learn everything else. The language of music started making sense early on. JOSH KELLEY AND THE TOUR BUS RECYCLING CHALLENGE Josh Kelley lives and breathes music, and when he’s not recording hit albums like Backwoods, he’s touring the country and playing before audiences of thousands. Here Josh dishes on his amazing life as a musician and how he minimizes his global footprint everywhere he can, both on the road and off. Were there any musicians who influenced you growing up? It depended on whose car I was in, you know? If I was in my brother’s car, it was Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, Black Sabbath, Jethro Tull, Supertramp. If I was with my mom, it was Stevie Wonder, Donny Hathaway, Van Morrison. And with my sister, it was Madonna. You can actually hear a number of those influences in Backwoods… You know the whole reason Backwoods came out was for the fans. I also wanted to also showcase some new songs in acoustic; some of those songs that are on the Backwoods are going to be in the next studio album. When did you first start becoming more aware of your environmental impact? Probably 4 years ago, I think I actually came in a little late. What really did it was moving to a big city. I started thinking about the packaging we get with our foods, and the clothes we wear, the things we buy. Lately we’ve started going with companies that are green, like Alternative. How about your daily routines, how have you changed those? We definitely recycle. To tell you the truth, recycling on a bus is interesting, because we go through so many bottles of water, which we’re not buying – they’re ready and waiting when we get here. We also have these things called capacitors for our electricity – they work like batteries and get charged up so our equipment is not tugging on the line of electricity. And we draw all the shades on the bus and hook it up to shore power, so we’re not actually running on the diesel engine. [Back at home] we started to do things with a lot of solar power, and now we actually sell power back to the state. That’s very inspiring! Is there any one thing that continually inspires you? Sitting down in front of a piano, no matter what the situation, is the most inspiring thing for me, both musically and professionally. Being able to hug my lady is also very inspiring. 22 www.alternativeapparel.com www.alternativeapparel.com 23 IDEALBITE.COM A SASSIER SHADE OF GREEN Heather Stephenson & Jen Boulden Wondering how small changes can make a massive difference? For the answer, check IdealBite.com, a smart source for incorporating eco-friendliness into even the most luxurious lifestyle, one little “Bite” at a time. Here we sit down with Heather Stephenson and Jen Boulden, the two brilliant minds behind the site, to learn how they got inspired to promote environmentalism and where they’d like to see our current movement in the not-so-distant future. How were you first inspired to commit to environmentalism professionally? JEN: The turning point was in 2001. I was appalled to learn that my building’s recycling was being thrown into the trash. I started taking all our paper home because I had great recycling where I lived in the Village. One Friday I had these two duffel bags full of paper, and I was walking down the subway stairs when my high heel caught the edge of a cement step, and I just went plummeting down. I was laid up for about two months and got to thinking, “I don’t think I’m really making a dent by doing this.” HEATHER: [Around that time], I had started to look into how I could take the skills I already had and apply them in different ways. How it manifested was I started a landscape design company in New York City building rooftop gardens. That led to an entire obsession with sustainability, or the concept that you can live a beautiful lifestyle while not impacting the earth negatively. How did the two of you meet and decide to work together on IdealBite.com? HEATHER: We actually met drunk at a bar in New York. JEN: It was a little bit like, hmm, well, I haven’t met my true love at a bar, but maybe a business partner is possible. We had so many things in common and couldn’t believe that we hadn’t met prior: we had both done the dot-com startup thing, both from families that had been environmentally conscious, both looking at how we could redirect our professional energies towards helping the environment. We love the name you chose! How did you come up with it? JEN: At this point neither one of us remembers how the name came to pass, except that it was probably some typical night, drinking wine and IM-ing and laughing, probably still in our pajamas because we hadn’t taken the time to get dressed that day. We didn’t want “green” in the name, because we knew “green” would come to stand for so many things. We just wanted it to be fun and sassy. JEN: Our philosophy is, we’re not perfect, no one is, no company is. We just have to reward the good things and really hope that this carrot approach works better than the stick approach that was used for the 80’s and the 90’s. Speaking of the 80’s and 90’s, how do you think this movement is different from that one? Are we recycling an idea that’s bound to get tossed, or do you think this one will result in some actual changes? JEN: It’s trendy, but on a macro level it’s really being baked into our fundamental everything, our society, our economy. The reason why is out of necessity. This is a pivotal time in our history. I hope in 5 years that “green” is going to be a part of everything. HEATHER: I liken this movement more to people adopting the internet. What’s beautiful is that we now have all the tools at our disposal to live the lifestyle we want to live. NO ONE should have to give up their car! We have all that technology available to us right now; we just need to implement it. At the end of the day, what one thing continually inspires you? HEATHER: My 2-year-old nephew Quinn inspires me hugely, because he’s just this perfect little creature. He goes to kid’s yoga, and he calls me and he goes, “Nama” instead of Namaste. You just look at him and he’s so sponge-like and you think about all the complete, amazing untapped potential. It’s explosive. I feel like there’s an obligation to make the world fantastic for him, and to leave it beautiful for him, and then to instill in him the things that are going to give him vast potential so one day he may use it in the service of something fantastic. JEN: Outside my barn, there’s this picture-perfect view of the Spanish Peaks behind all this farmland and a big, windy creek. I guess, as cliché as this sounds, I’m always inspired by how beautiful nature is and how well it works together. Our ecosystem is so perfectly designed. I mean, you don’t see a landfill because nature had to grow a field of flowers. It’s such a gift and we shouldn’t disrespect it anymore. How is IdealBite.com different from other eco-friendly websites? HEATHER: At the beginning of 2005, when we started the company, we came out with a mantra that we would never be preachy. We have a litmus test that every piece of editorial must go through, which is, does it keep it real? Are we being authentic? 24 www.alternativeapparel.com www.alternativeapparel.com 25 IDEALBITE.COM TOP 10 26 1. Switch your credit cards to e-statements. If 10,000 Biters go electronic with just one of their accounts, over a lifetime we'll save 3,481 trees. 2. Thaw your food in the fridge. If 10,000 Biters quit using running water to thaw food, in a year we'll save enough fresh water to fill 1,664,000 bathtubs. 3. Is your shampoo making you fat? Parabens are chemicals found in many personal care products that have a structure similar to estrogen and thus interfere with the body’s natural hormones – potentially leading to weight gain or, more importantly, certain cancers. So check your labels & protect yourself (& the environment – these get flushed into our waterways, too) by using parabenfree products. 4. Turn off your dishwasher’s drying cycle. Save 15-50% of energy used by your dishwasher. If 10,000 Biters don't use their dishwasher's drying cycle, in a year, the CO2 averted will have the effect of planting 3,343 trees. 5. Go organic—inside AND out! If 10,000 Biters make their next jeans purchase organic, we'll keep the weight of 8 male walruses in pesticide-treated cotton out of production. If 10,000 Biters make their next undie purchase an organic one, we'll eliminate the use of 1,250 lbs of synthetic chems. 6. Download Your Music. Buying music online is cheaper and avoids the waste caused by the production, packaging, and distribution of CDs. If you absolutely have to have the CD booklet or limited edition disc, try to buy it used. 7. Kick the Bottled Water Habit. Americans use 4 million plastic bottles every hour - but only 1 in 4 is recycled. Use home water filters instead, because believe it or not, bottled water isn’t always cleaner, and the production, shipment, and disposal of plastic water bottles are taking an enormous toll on the environment. The Bite's team members use non-leaching, lined aluminum SIGG bottles. 8. Tackle your chores with reusable cloths and natural cleaners. Save cash and lower your ecoimpact by ditching the one-wipe habit. Every year, Americans use enough disposable wipes to fill 9,000 18-wheelers to capacity. 9. Avoid “phantom load.” That’s the energy your appliances use when they are plugged in but not turned on – up to 40% of your energy bill. If 10,000 Biters plug our cable boxes into powerstrips that we turn off when not watching TV, we'll save about $300,000 per year. 10. Set the Lint Bunnies Free. Cleaning out your dryer's lint screen after each load is an easy way to save energy and reduce fire hazard. Believe it or not, a dirty lint filter can cause your dryer to use as much as 30% more energy. www.alternativeapparel.com GREG ALTERMAN Means Business Alternative Founder and Creative Director Greg Alterman is known for his lighthearted attitude, but when it comes the effects of pollutants on human health, we get a glimpse of his serious side. Speaking frankly about his stance on environmentalism, Greg discusses how businesses and the government must take this movement by the horns if we are ever to achieve sustainability on a global scale. What are your thoughts on this environmental movement we’re experiencing? I think what’s happening, unfortunately, is that certain large corporations are attaching themselves to the movement without really meaning it. Take certain oil companies, for example: they’re producing the worst thing for the environment, and all of a sudden they’re green companies? It’s a manipulation of marketing to fool consumers. I have the most respect for companies that make sustainability a part of everything they do, and even we’re not there yet. I hope to say at some point we can be, and I think we’re moving in that direction. How else is Alternative different from some of the companies you’re talking about? A year-and-a-half ago we didn’t have one “green” item in our line. Now 24% of our line is organic or eco-friendly. That’s huge. We’ve been greening a lot of our business practices as well – we print our Magalogs on FSC-certified paper, we make sure our boxes and packaging are recyclable, and at the office we have recycling and make sure to use recycled paper products. Personally speaking, what would your ideal green world be like? I would just love to walk outside in the morning and be able to breathe air that I knew was clean and to drink water that I knew was clean. To eat fruits, vegetables, beef, and not have to worry that any of it could cause cancer, that it could only contribute to good health. We’re evolving like any other species, but I don’t know how the human body is going to handle it. Even now diabetes is up. Cancer is up. 8-yearold girls have their periods. That never used to be the case, so why is that happening? We’re injecting hormones in our beef, our fruits and vegetables are covered in pesticides, and we’re drinking water that’s contaminated. All these things are leading to a less healthy world. Fast-forward 1,000 years, and we are not a healthy species. How could we get closer to a healthier, more sustainable world? I’d love to make it law that a certain percentage of a corporation’s business must be sustainable, maybe 10% to start. Overall, that would be so much more than what we’re doing now. There’s a lot we can do as individuals, but I think it takes non-corrupt government regulation to really make it happen. www.alternativeapparel.com 27 E! News anchor Jason Kennedy spends his days interviewing celebrities. But in his off hours, he’s active with Generosity: Water, an organization that partners with charity: water to bring wells to villages in Africa. These wells provide ample supplies of clean drinking water to hundreds of people at a time, helping to promote health and prosperity throughout the regions they support. You’ve interviewed some truly amazing people in your career. Is there anyone who sticks out for having taught you something about the environment that you didn’t necessarily know? I saw The 11th Hour with Leonardo DiCaprio. I interviewed him about what’s going on with global warming and energy conservation, and I realized that everybody can help. People feel like they need to make drastic changes, but really it starts off with small things, small measures that would make big differences if everyone started doing them. So, after talking to him, seeing the film, I realized I can make a difference and do something about it. JASON KENNEDY BRINGING GENEROSITY: WATER INTO THE SPOTLIGHT PHOTOS BY JORDAN WAGNER So that was a turning point for you to get involved with environmentalism? Exactly. Also, through my church we do something called Generosity: Water, which builds wells in Africa for people who don’t have access to clean drinking water. I never realized it was such a big issue, but over a billion people are affected by it. It causes diseases and death; every 15 seconds someone dies because of this. Basically $4,000 builds one well, providing years’ worth of water for something like 400 people. They’re also training people in these specific areas to build their own wells. I saw some footage of the project in action and it really gave me some perspective on my life and how blessed I am, so I wanted to do something to help. I think it’s the least I can do. Everybody should get involved in an organization that’s close to their heart that’ll help someone else out. With everyone jumping on the green bandwagon, what advice do you have now that you’ve gotten involved in Generosity? I know it sounds kind of cliché, but turn your lights down, turn them off when you’re not at home, or collect water when you’re showering, or just talk to people who are involved in the cause. And especially with the way gas prices are now, try to drive an earth-friendly vehicle. Not only does it help with your budget but it’s better for the environment. You win all the way around. is the best job in the world; it’s what I came here [to Los Angeles] to do. I just wrapped up a show on ABC called Dance Machine. We had a great season with some extraordinary people dancing. Did you learn some new moves? I tried, but it turns out I’m not much of a dancer. Now we’re done with that show and onto the next project. E! as we speak is keeping me really busy. About Generosity: Water Have you been able to make the trip to Africa to see the impact you’re making? I have not, but that’s definitely something I want to do. Our board members have gone over there and shot some video. When I saw the footage they brought back, it definitely touched me. I want to go over there – my schedule’s a little bit crazy right now, but that’s something I’d love to do someday. In addition to Leonardo DiCaprio, is there anyone who’s really inspired you in their environmental efforts? Some of my friends – they’re not necessarily celebrities, but they changed their lifestyle. When you have close friends and you see the changes they’ve made, it helps you to follow their lead and make your own path. Generosity Water is a Los Angeles based nonprofit organization committed to addressing issues surrounding the global water crisis. Its founder, Philip Wagner, was made aware of the water crisis in Africa and was moved to make a difference. From Philip’s passion sprung Generosity: Water, a practical response to the clean water crisis and HIV/AIDS epidemic. 100% of the profits go to organizations bringing solutions to the clean water crisis, such as charity: water and World Vision. To learn more, visit http://generositywater.com. What else are you working on right now? Still at E! News, been there for 3 years hosting and corresponding. Every day we’re covering premieres, junkets, interviewing celebrities. It www.alternativeapparel.com 29 What are your thoughts on green living? We need to return to a moral and ethical lifestyle where we extend the same respect that we share with our friends and family to the people across the street, to other cities in this country, to other countries, and, ultimately, to the earth that sustains all of us. What do you think people can do to integrate these practices into their lifestyle? At this point, it is just not ethical to continue indulgent practices. We need to make serious shifts in our habits and find new and exciting ways to enjoy the life we are preserving. What organizations are most alligned with creating the global community you envision? The charities that I work closely with are charity: water and Heifer International. Both organizations are dedicated to helping our global neighbors. About charity: water charity: water is a non-profit organization bringing clean, safe drinking water to people in developing nations. They give 100% of the money raised to direct project costs, funding sustainable clean water solutions in areas of greatest need. They also work to raise awareness of the water crisis through events, fundraising exhibitions and other public awareness campaigns. To learn more, visit www.charitywater.org. About Heifer International ADRIAN GRENIER PROMOTING SUSTAINABILITY ONSCREEN AND OFF For years we’ve seen Entourage star Adrian Grenier everywhere from Charity: Ball to the Be Eco Chic fashion show. These days he’s also working on a series of his own, Alter Eco, as well as supporting Hiefer International and charity: water, two organizations working to provide a sustainable supply of food and water to people who really need it. With that kind of dedication to charity and environmentalism, we’re convinced Adrian’s heart is even bigger than his fan base – and rightly so. 30 www.alternativeapparel.com Heifer’s mission is to end hunger and poverty while caring for the earth. For more than 60 years, Heifer International has provided livestock and environmentally sound agricultural training to improve the lives of those who struggle daily for reliable sources of food and income. Every gift of an animal provides direct benefits such as milk, eggs, wool, fertilizer, as well as indirect benefits that increase family incomes for better housing, nutrition, health care and school fees for children. Recipients “pass on the gift” of offspring of their cows, goats and other livestock to others in an ever-widening circle of hope. To learn more, visit www.heifer.org. About Alter Eco Alter Eco is an eco lifestyle and makeover series on Planet Green presented by Adrian Grenier and his team of green activists, experts, and friends. To learn more, visit http://planetgreen.discovery.com/tv/alter-eco www.alternativeapparel.com 31 Green has become a very popular term as of late – but what exactly does it mean? For me, it is to be aware of yourself, mindful of how you live on this earth, conscious of how your actions, thoughts, and beliefs affect the world and her inhabitants, and then, with this knowledge and respect, to move into a state of creating positive action. Life. Love. Truth. Green? BY MICHELLE LOMBARDO 32 PHOTOS BY ELISABETH CAREN www.alternativeapparel.com When you live with something for so long you tend to take it for granted. Let us remind each other that we are fortunate to live in a place filled with natural art, inspiration and immense beauty. This wondrous place is our mother, our planet Earth. I know we all feel lost, alone and confused at moments, and during this time especially, remember you are never alone – you have the Earth. Allow yourself to be blown away by your home – go outside and just be one with your surroundings. Breathe, listen, watch, and feel everything happening around you and inside of you. Be within the silence of your soul, allow your thoughts to be taken away by the wind and let the earth ground your essence. Become amazed at the world in which we live and share that energy with each other. As I write, I am in the state where I was born, Connecticut. I find myself sleeping in my bedroom at my parents’ house, the one I have had since I was 2 years old. Even though I do not live here anymore, it seems not much has changed since I was a child, but very much has. I guess that is how life naturally is – you resemble who you once were, yet you have grown to become someone different. To describe my setting at the moment, my bed faces the window, which overlooks our backyard. I sit looking out at the trees that I climbed daily during the years here when nothing else mattered to me as much as having fun, playing outside in the woods, and stepping into a world that existed within my imagination. Huge green peaceful trees line the streets. Their leaves are starting to change color now, and the palette of New England is fast becoming an array of orange, yellow, green, brown, and red. This time of year the air is fresh, crisp, and clear. I close my eyes, breathe in, and allow the wind to hit my face. Still it gives me a chill and the feeling of being totally alive! The animals are popping out to say hello and as I view them, I realize that I cannot stay away from this place, it is part of me, no matter what I carve out my path to be and what happens during my life; this magical serene plot of earth has been witness to my growth since I first entered this world. She knows me; she is there for me; listening, watching, and comforting me. She has seen my tears, my pain, my happiness, my confusion, my excitement, my peace, and my love. She has accepted all of me. I cannot hide and I do not want to. I rip down the walls that hold me back, that keep me in fear and trust to open my heart with truth and passion in hopes that one day I can always be this way. This and much more is what our Earth does for us. She takes our emotional, physical, and spiritual waste and fills our hearts with everything we see. We are all one. We can do this, we can change the world! You just have to believe, and it starts with you, with me, today, right now. Find your truth. The truth will make you free. Let us lead not with fear, let us see our fears, conquer them and move into a state of leading with love. www.alternativeapparel.com 33 REID SCOTT MY BOY ROCKS (AND RENEWS) OUR WORLD Reid Scott, star of the hit TBS series My Boys, has many loves – acting, guitar, and Egon Schiele, to name a few. When it comes to saving the planet, he hearts his eco-friendly hybrid and supports Rock ‘n Renew, a non-profit that organizes shows, lectures, and other events that spread the word about sustainability. So Reid, what are you up to these days? We recently wrapped our latest season of My Boys and now I’m moving on to a web series called The Prick, which I’m writing/directing/ producing. No, it’s not autobiographical. What would you be doing if you weren’t an actor? Rock star astronaut. Definitely. When you’re home on Earth, do you practice eco-conscious living? I like to think of myself as very earth-conscious. I mean no one is perfect, so it’s all about doing what you can with what you’ve got. Like what? For my part I drive a hybrid, I recycle like crazy (everything down to envelopes and paper towels), and I only use energy-efficient appliances, light bulbs, and power strips. I also use non-toxic cleaning products and as little water as possible. You’d be surprised how easy that all is once you decide to make a true eco-friendly lifestyle change. It’s fun too. Is there anyone you admire for their environmental efforts? My good friend Jonny Dubowski heads up an organization called Rock ‘n Renew. They’ve received tons of support from amazing musicians and artists like Debbie Harry, Art Alexakis, Jody Porter, Jesse Malin, Morningwood, and The Kaiser Chiefs (just for starters) to help educate students and communities on environmental issues and how to live and act in sustainable/eco-friendly ways – something that’s now more important than ever. What about you, are you involved with music as well? Growing up I was always fascinated by music. I never learned to play an instrument and always felt like “Well, I guess that’s just something I’ll never do. That’s for other people that have that gift.” Then about 8 years ago a buddy of mine who was staying with me in my loft in Brooklyn, spent most of his days noodling around on his guitar while I was trying to write. So I said, “Alright man, if you’re going to play that damn thing all day at least teach me how so I can play along.” That’s all it took. I’ve been addicted ever since. In addition to music, is there anything that continually inspires you? I draw my inspiration from so many places. As an artist, Egon Schiele’s paintings simply amaze me. Also the George Harrison song “All Things Must Pass” – it can break your heart and make you smile every time. About Rock ‘n Renew Rock ’n Renew is a non-profit organization that helps musicians, students, and their communities live and act in sustainable ways. Recognizing the connection between the health of culture and the health of the planet, they use art and music to generate excitement about green solutions as they custom-design eco-blueprints for concert tours, schools, businesses, and events. Since its inception in 2006, Rock ’n Renew has brought the message of sustainability to thousands of people through rock shows, festivals, lectures, and installations. To learn more, visit http://rocknrenew.com/BLOG/wordpress. www.alternativeapparel.com 35 ECOSPIRE LOOKING FOR GUIDANCE ON GOING GREEN? By Davida Heller ECONATION The Business of Going Green By Ben Bloch The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) defines sustainability as “meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.” It sounds great in theory, but if we’re constantly inundated with new eco-friendly advice, products and services, how do we know where to start? Enter the Sustainable Lifestyle Consultant to provide guidance and expertise. As a Sustainable Lifestyle Consultant, I’m trained in green building practices. I focus on four environmental aspects: Energy Efficiency, Resource Conservation, Water Efficiency, and Indoor Air Quality. Taking action in these areas promotes sustainability, creates a healthier living environment, and saves money. Here are some simple steps you can take to get started: Save Energy The key to energy efficiency is decreasing energy usage while maintaining comfort. One inexpensive way to accomplish this is to insulate your gas or electric water heater, which is continually heating water to be available for use. This constant loss of heat can be reduced up to 45% by insulating your heater with an insulation jacket. Also, try reducing its temperature a few degrees and remember to turn it all the way down when you go on vacation. 36 www.alternativeapparel.com Conserve Resources Get creative with the products you use to see what you can recycle and how you can reduce waste: Ijgc\aVhh_Vgh^cideZg[ZXian"h^oZYkVhZh[dg^cY^k^YjVa ÅdlZghdgi^cnWdjfjZih 7g^c\ndjgdlci]ZgbdhidVXd[[ZZh]deid\ZiV Y^hXdjciVcYVkd^YlVhiZ JhZlVh]VWaZgV\hidXaZVcndjg]dbZ^chiZVYd[ eVeZgidlZah IgncZlheVeZgidXaZVcndjgl^cYdlhhigZV`"[gZZ JhZXadi]cVe`^chVibZVai^bZh^chiZVYd[ eVeZgcVe`^ch >chiZVYd[ejgX]Vh^c\^iZbhbVYZd[lddY!Wjni]^c\h bVYZ[gdbWVbWdd!VhjhiV^cVWaZgZhdjgXZ#>[ndjYd WjnlddYegdYjXih!add`[dg^iZbhi]ViVgZ;H8"XZgi^ÄZY# Use Water Wisely By purchasing energy-efficient appliances like an Energy Star dishwasher, you can save up to 1,000 gallons of water each year. Faucet aerators and low-flow showerheads allow more air into the water flow, utilizing less water for the same pressure. Install kitchen and bathroom faucet aerators and low-flow showerheads with water flows between .5 and 1.5 gallons-per-minute (GPM) for great water and energy savings. Be sure to look for the EPA WaterSense label. Breathe Better Indoors According to the EPA, we spend 90% of our time indoors, and indoor air pollution is 2-5 times worse than it is outside. One way to improve indoor air quality is to set up a “mud area” at the main entrances to your home, where you and guests can easily remove shoes that have been worn outdoors. Creating this area greatly improves indoor air quality by reducing outdoor pollutants, allergens and toxins being tracked into your home. There are many ways to integrate sustainability into everyday life. Some are simple and inexpensive like the tips mentioned here, and others are larger investments like solar panels or low-flow landscape irrigation systems. A Sustainable Lifestyle Consultant can help you make educated and powerful choices to adopt the best options for you. No matter what you take on, every action that promotes sustainability produces a positive impact on the planet. For more information, please visit www.ecospire.com. Some people think that the environmental movement today is just a trend that will eventually go out of style a la parachute pants and Members Only jackets. Though both will probably come back as hip new recycled clothing brands sometime soon, it’s important to recognize that “being green” is not just a short term cause for trend seekers, hippies and liberal politicos. Sure, there will be some who say they want to go green and have no idea what it means, but nonetheless, it’s pretty impressive that the often consumption-happy U.S. is finally getting on the bandwagon and focusing on something that’s good for the world – and not just ourselves. No matter your perspective, it’s hard to deny that a world focused on becoming more sustainable is a good thing. In fact, I think that we stand to have a much better world in the long run as a result of this green revolution, no matter how much crap we have to dig through to find the true resolution to our problems. And we may have to dig through a lot if it’s true that the “bodily functions” of livestock cause as much as 18% of the harmful emissions that everyone keeps talking about. Regardless, as a result of the toil of millions trying to find the answer, we are coming up with a great deal of options from infinitely available algae-based biodiesel to hydrogen, solar, wind or geothermal power. Along with a million other products and solutions, there are many that will eventually make our world a better and more efficient place to live. What truly still moves the U.S. is capitalism, but what feels better when you get up in the morning than supporting your lifestyle by doing something positive and (hopefully) that you believe in? Look at Richard Branson as an example: he put up a large prize for anyone who can help “solve” the energy crisis, and he’s investing in space travel and living. He’s trying to help fix the problem at hand, but hey, if it doesn’t save the world, at least he’s still hedging his bets. Will your “great idea” to sell recycled cotton swabs save the world? Maybe not, but in the end it all helps so, if you believe in what you’re doing, then do your research and get a move on. Yes, I’m in the green business world as well. Along with a couple of associates, I was in the real estate field like many others and at one point helped a green building company to raise money so that they could expand their business. While speaking with some friends in real estate development and others in the local government, we realized that the new buildings going up around Los Angeles and the country in general was only going to make parking and transportation worse… and in Los Angeles, that’s hard to do. So we did a lot of research and realized that like the airlines, ground transportation was outdated and due for an overhaul. We started EcoNation (www.econation.com), a transportation service that is initially offering hybrid and alternative fuel based “green” limousines, taxis and buses all over the country. To make things a bit more fun, each ride comes with healthy snacks and the ability to order cars with high speed wireless internet and touch-screen digital entertainment. The next hurdle includes offering an alternative to public transportation in LA, which is under development as we speak (and is much needed if I do say so myself). We’re also helping other transportation companies to convert vehicles to fuels like compressed natural gas to “green” their fleet and make a bigger overall impact from a national standpoint. OK, so we may not be able to stop the icebergs from melting alone, but it all adds up, and if we can make transportation in LA suck even a little bit less along the way, than we’ve got something to be proud of. So my advice is this: if you’re contemplating a green business, do your research, make sure that it will really offer a benefit both environmentally and to the consumers that are supposed to buy it, and feel good that you’re waking up doing something positive. Hey, at least if this doesn’t all work, rest well knowing that you can always stock up on Tang, buy a Virgin Space Condo on the moon from Sir Branson and still live happily ever after. www.alternativeapparel.com 37 ALI HILLIS RESCUE ME! It’s clear Beverly Hills Chihuahua voice talent Ali Hillis loves working with animals, but behind-the-scenes she’s even more passionate about rescuing those four-legged friends in need of a good home. Over the past few years, there has been a lot of emphasis on cleaning our environment. What are some things you do to do your part? I am a big believer in “doing your best” in all you do. I think that if we can all do our very best to change our everyday usage, our consumption, and our waste habits, every single person – even kids – can make a difference. Every little bottle cap, extra minute in the shower, extra mile on the road counts! I have SO been known to dumpster dive for a plastic bottle cap: it’s just so easy to recycle! How did you first find out about animal rescue? Is there a special pet your life as a result? Animal rescue found me! I seem to be a magnet for lost doggies. I fix them up, train them a bit, and find them a loving new home. I recently rescued my second boxer from Boxer Orange County Rescue. Rescues are a wonderful pet source since they can tell you so much about your new pet before you bring them home. My rescue boxer "Cooper" is everything they told me he would be and more! In addition to your eco-efforts, you’ve become known for your work in animal rescue. What is it about rescue that you love the most? It makes the earth a happier place to live in general! I feel that rescuing animals helps to put puppy mills out of business, and I can only imagine the waste that has been created in that environment. The people who run them seem less concerned with healthy living and more concerned about making a buck. Is there a person or organization you admire for their commitment to this cause? Brenda K. and all of the volunteers at Boxer Orange County Rescue. Animal rescue is a full time job, and the volunteers are tireless. They are amazingly driven to help the helpless. Tell us a little about what you’re working on right now – any more animal movies in the works? With the amazing success of Beverly Hills Chihuahua, whose story line so encourages pet rescue, I look forward to doing more films that promote the responsible and compassionate idea of adopting a pet who needs a new home, instead of a pet who has been bred. There are so many wonderfully playful and loving pets already out there who just want to love and be loved, and I just LOVE working with them! They have a way of making every environment, even an intense and busied movie set, just plain more fun. Lastly, what one thing – like a painting, word, or phrase – inspires you to do what you do? “Do one thing every day that scares you.” Eleanor Roosevelt said a lot of cool things. About Boxer Orange County Animal Rescue, Inc. Boxer Orange County Animal Rescue, Inc., is a 501 (c) (3) not for profit rescue. Their focus is rescuing Boxers and Boxer mixes, finding loving homes for their loving animals, and making a difference in the lives of dogs who are in need. To learn more, visit www.boxerocrescue.org. www.alternativeapparel.com 39 AMY SMART NEW MOON SKIN CARE: LOUD AND CLEAR FOR HEAL THE BAY NOURISHMENT FOR BODY AND EARTH AMY LEAVELL BRANSFORD Not only has Amy Smart been honored by the HollywoodLos Angeles Beautification team for her work promoting green living, she’s also on the board for Santa Monicabased Heal the Bay. Heal the Bay started in 1985 in response to learning that the City of Los Angeles was dumping raw sewage directly into the ocean. Thanks to their efforts, children and fish can now swim together safely throughout the Santa Monica Bay and the waters beyond. Late nights at smoky bars clouding your skin’s youthful glow? Then talk to eco-esthetician Amy Leavell Bransford. After spending her early career days as a music promoter, Amy turned to organic skin care to cure the epidermic woes that inevitably accompany a rock n’ roll lifestyle. What she discovered opened her mind to the expansive world of organic esthetics and inspired her to start her very own blossoming business, New Moon Skin Care. What first inspired you to become active in the environmental movement? I grew up on a farm outside of Macon, GA. My parents are tree farmers down there. They’ve won numerous awards throughout their lives for their environmentalism and being good stewards of the land. I learned from their example and wanted to pass that on to my own generation in my own way. What inspired you to get involved with a charity? I wanted to volunteer for an environmental organization, and so I called the local nonprofit, Heal the Bay. I decided to take their speakers bureau training and then go out a few times a month to talk with school kids about cleaning up the ocean. I figured the environment affected everyone, and I wanted to do something where I was hands-on. I did that right out of high school for about 6 years. How has Heal the Bay evolved since you’ve been on board? Heal the Bay has grown tremendously since I joined, and they fight harder than anyone I know at the state level to keep the ocean clean and bring environmental education as a mandatory curriculum into the school systems. Mark Gold, leader of Heal the Bay, is an amazing scientist and stands up to extremely tough issues. The time for making a positive impact through legislation is now, it couldn't be more crucial. Has your position changed through your involvement? I was asked to be on the board of directors, so I've been on that for about 7 years. My environmental lifestyle really started kicking in 40 www.alternativeapparel.com when I was teaching kids to buy eco-friendly cleaning products (mainly to tell their parents) because everything that goes down the drain goes straight to the sewage treatment plant, and all the harsh chemicals are not able to be treated so they end up in the ocean. I then started buying eco-friendly cleaning products. I was inspired to walk my talk. With everyone jumping on the green bandwagon, what has made the most sense to you in regard to how you live? Have you changed your lifestyle to be more eco-conscious? I truly believe in living eco-consciously as a daily lifestyle. I think change starts with inspiration, and it’s a domino effect. You make a small change and then you keep finding new ways of being more eco-friendly. I first started with eco-friendly cleaning products, and then recycled paper products, like toilet paper, fax paper, napkins, and paper towels. Then I began using canvas bags at the market and started buying organic at all times. Buying organic is slightly more expensive, but it’s far more nutritional and healthier for the planet because it doesn't pollute the water and air with chemicals and pesticides. Then I leased a hybrid and put a water filter on my house to cut way down on using plastic bottles. I now buy more organic cotton clothing, and I enjoy every step. It feels right, and I get so much satisfaction when family and friends start adopting a more eco-friendly lifestyle. We all have to be examples for each other. I have many friends who are teaching me all the time. You’re commitment to cleaning the Santa Monica Bay is rather inspiring. Is there something that motivates and inspires you to dedicate your time and energy towards this cause? Gandhi's quote, “You must be the change you wish to see in the world,” are words to live by. About Heal the Bay Heal the Bay is a nonprofit environmental organization dedicated to making Southern California coastal waters and watersheds, including Santa Monica Bay, safe, healthy and clean. They use research, education, community action and advocacy to pursue their mission. To learn more, visit www.healthebay.org. That pursuit eventually led to you starting your own company, New Moon Skin Care. What is it about organic skincare that’s so important to you? Part of it is that it’s organic, but it’s what’s not in the bottle that’s important: the absence of chemical preservative systems that can be toxic for humans and for the environment. It also means minimal packaging, as used by the lines I represent. For me, it’s about finding companies whose ethos are the same as or similar to mine. For those of us who don’t know much about skincare products in general, what are some of the bad things you might find in the non-organic variety? Since the 1920’s, paraben has been probably the most common chemical preservative used in skincare and cosmetics. They’ve actually found parabens in breast tumors, and the reason is because they can actually mimic estrogen in the body. That’s a big thing I’ve tried to educate my clients about: when you turn your bottle of product around and you see some of the ingredients have more letters than the alphabet, you should question that, you should wonder what those things are. Do you feel or see a difference when you use organic skincare products? A lot of times organic skincare products are less irritating and less drying. My clients are always amazed when they switch and their skin detoxes from the drug store brand they’ve been using. What I hear most often from people who thought their skin was very sensitive, is they’re just amazed to learn their skin isn’t actually sensitive at all – it’s just the products they’ve been using. To touch a little more on starting New Moon, how did you come up with the name? I love the new moon symbol, the symbol of new beginnings – that’s what I set out to do, to go on my own and start my own business. Also, a really important part of the New Moon routine is helping the dead skin cells slough off, so your organic products can actually get into the skin. That exfoliation should happen about every 28 days, the same as the moon cycle. It gives a gentle reminder to my clients to how often they should come and see me. In addition to more organic products, what sort of positive changes would you like to see in the spa and skincare industry? There’s a big focus on indulgence in the industry. That’s something I got away from when I went out of my own. It is so much less about people going to sleep on my table than it is about educating them and really learning why you’re having a treatment done, whether it’s a facial or a massage. That’s something I’d like to see more of in the industry. How about your ideal green world – what would that be like? My ideal “green” world would not have the word “green” in quotation marks. It would just be a way you live, so you’re conscious and have gratitude, you don’t buy things you don’t need, and live as minimally and safely with the environment as possible. I’m still trying to incorporate a lot of that into my own life. I think we all have a lot of work to do, but it can be done. Nothing gets done without a little inspiration! So for our last question, what one thing continually inspires you? I’d have to say my 2 ½ year-old. He has the best perspective on life. The other day he was pointing to a picture of the statue of liberty and he says, “What’s that?” and I say “That’s Lady Liberty.” And he says, “Oh. She’s got ice cream?” I just thought, you know what, yes, if that’s your idea of freedom, I’ll go with it – as long as it’s made with organic milk. To learn more, visit www.newmoonskincare.com www.alternativeapparel.com 41 RIGHT WHALE RIGHT NOW SAVING RIGHT WHALES FROM EXTINCTION BY ANTHONY RAMOS OF THE WILDLIFE TRUST Right whales are a unique breed of whale, mostly because of their thick layer of blubber. This fatty layer, which may comprise as much as 45% of their 60-ton body weight (closer to 25% in other whales), serves many purposes - it prevents heat loss in the colder ocean water, it is a food reservoir that sustains them during winter months when they are engaged in birthing and mating rather than feeding, and it is structurally important in that it forms a smooth surface that reduces drag when they swim. Right whales get their name from being the “right” whale for hunters of years past, as their blubber makes them relatively slow swimmers, causes them to float when they are dead (for easy tying to a whaling ship), and produces huge amounts of oil. Unfortunately, such appeal has caused their population to dwindle, and now the right whale is on the brink of extinction. The Wildlife Trust conservation scientists, however, are working hard to save these amazing mammals. The first step in any strategy to save an endangered species is to find out how many individuals are left, where they are, and what behaviors are putting them at risk. This is difficult information to gather when it comes to whales. Even though adult right whales can measure over 50 feet in length, they are hard to find in the vastness of the North Atlantic Ocean because they number so few. When northern right whales (Eubalaena glacialis) aggregate during the summer months to filter feed in plankton-rich waters off the east coast of Canada and New England, we know where they are, and thus have an idea of their total population size. When winter approaches, about half of the population heads to calving and mating areas off the southeastern U.S. coast. The other half? We don’t know - they may head east. Occasionally individual whales are sighted off the coast of Europe. Wildlife Trust teams are based in Charleston, SC, and St. Simons Island, GA, where they spend each year documenting migrating North Atlantic right whales. The North Atlantic right whale is estimated to have only 350 - 400 individuals left in the population, as they were heavily hunted until they gained international protection in 1935. Unfortunately, the rate of recovery of the species has been very slow following hundreds 42 www.alternativeapparel.com of years of intensive whaling. The population size is believed to have only marginally increased since the 1930’s. Some of the major factors affecting their ability to increase in numbers have been mortality caused by ship strikes and entanglements in fishing gear. Marine Biologist Cynthia Taylor of the Wildlife Trust has tracked whales for over a decade and is responsible for monitoring right whales off the waters of South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida each winter. Every individual whale is a precious investment in the survival of the species, and she oversees teams of observers who monitor their whereabouts, behavior, and reproduction between November and April of each year. This work is accomplished by surveillance from small aircraft. Cynthia and her team carefully monitor the northern right whales while they are bearing their 15-foot calves. She reports the location of the animals to the Navy when they venture into shipping lanes, so they in turn can notify commercial mariners to shift position to avoid striking the understandably distracted and vulnerable animals. During these aerial surveys, right whales are photographed for identification purposes and are documented yearafter-year to monitor their progress. We hope the 2008-2009 right whale aerial survey season brings us no casualties and more calves. If you would like to learn more and show your support please go to www.wildlifetrust.org and help us save these beautiful creatures. About the Wildlife Trust Wildlife Trust, one of Alternative’s charity partners, is an international organization of scientists dedicated to the conservation of biodiversity. For more than 35 years, Wildlife Trust has focused its efforts on conservation. Today, they are known for their innovative research on the intricate relationships between wildlife, ecosystems and human health. To learn more, visit www.wildlifetrust.org. www.alternativeapparel.com 43 How did you get inspired to visit us at Alternative today? I’ve just been introduced to Alternative; it’s a new company for me. I’m always open and excited about discovering eco-friendly clothes, furniture, anything. I did a couple episodes on Adrian Grenier’s show Alter Eco and got to learn there are actually eco-friendly versions of everything. Those were our episodes, eco-friendly shopping, ecofriendly spas, eco-friendly nail salons, all that fun stuff. So it’s safe to say you’re a fan of our current environmental movement? I love it, it’s just sad that we didn’t start so much earlier, especially when I hear about how long certain people have been involved. For instance, Al Gore has been involved for 19 years, and it’s only recently we’re starting to hear about it. I want to have kids, and I want them to grow up in a world that’s environmentally friendly. What are you doing so future generations actually have shot at inheriting an eco-friendly world? I just recently got involved with NRDC, the Natural Resources Defense Council. I’m just familiarizing myself with what can be done. Obviously at home there are little things you can do: we changed our light bulbs, we have a hybrid, we recycle, we walk when we can, and we do a lot of second-hand shopping so we don’t always buy new stuff. Since you’ve become involved with the NRDC, how has your perspective changed? What do you think has been your biggest learning? The thing I love about NRDC is they’re actual lawyers who are defending our environment. And they have a lot of power. It’s not just raising money to bring awareness, but they take action and bring people to court, which I think is just the coolest thing ever. Again, I’m just learning about it, but it’s really cool, really inspiring and exciting. MALIN AKERMAN BACK TO BASICS: DREAMS OF A SIMPLER LIFE Malin Akerman, supermodel and star of Watchmen (and The Proposal and Couples Retreat), couldn’t be more passionate the about saving the environment. Here she shares with us her love of eco-friendly nail salons, Al Gore, the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), and her dream of one day returning to a simpler, cleaner way of life. 44 www.alternativeapparel.com What’s been your favorite part about embracing environmentalism? It’s just one of those things where you feel good, you’re doing the right thing, you’re spreading a good word, and leading by example is the best way to do it. If you had the chance to create your own ideal eco-friendly world, what would it be like? I would love to go back in time to when it was horses and buggies. I think a lot is lost in this modern world where everything is so fastpaced. In my utopian world, it would be back to nature, back to basics, where people are connecting. We don’t need to rush around and stress, but we’re taking care of ourselves and taking care of the earth and enjoying what we have, growing everything organically and taking time to raise our kids. So more back to the basics, I think, would be my utopia. About NRDC NRDC is the nation's most effective environmental action group, combining the grassroots power of 1.2 million members and online activists with the courtroom clout and expertise of more than 350 lawyers, scientists and other professionals. To learn more, visit www.nrdc.org. www.alternativeapparel.com 45 SHE’S A NATURAL THE MAN ON TAP By Bryan Devendorf of The National INGRID SEABURN’S GUIDE TO FRESH, RADIANT SKIN Traveling musicians of the past didn’t have bottled water. This is something I have observed from glimpses of bands backstage in concert videos, like Led Zeppelin in The Song Remains the Same or New Order looking awesomely dour (and waterless!) before an ‘85 Tokyo show in Pumped Full of Drugs. Man, you’ll say, has had bottled water since the Middle Ages. But this is on a totally different scale of consumption. Experts in the field of skincare now agree that inflammation is what causes skin to age prematurely. When skin becomes irritated by the chemicals and parabens found in most over-the-counter products, inflammation can result, causing the active ingredient to become less effective. By using products that are natural and organic, the skin benefits greatly by having nutrients delivered with a minimized likelihood of any inflammation occurring. The end result is more beautiful, natural, and radiant skin – created with less harmful effects on the environment. Nowadays an average touring musician is confronted with a dilemma: he knows drinking bottled water is not good for the earth, but that drinking bottled water is as habitual to the culture of bus and venue as smoking and tattoos AND that while at home he might try to drink solely tap water, he’ll still backslide when he sees a six-pack of Jana with its cute blue handle and its come hither Croatian-pastoral imagery….or he’ll indulge, after a short run, in a tall sweating bottle of Fiji from some faraway island in the South Pacific. I use a variety of products by Cosmedix, a chirally correct (100% natural) and chemical-free line. Below are some of my favorite natural products and ingrediants available today. 2. CALENDULA – An anti-inflammatory, antiseptic, antioxidant ingredient that comes from marigold flowers. Wonderful for calming and moisturizing the skin. 3. BROMELAIN – A natural enzyme derived from pineapple that works as a great natural exfoliant for sloughing off dead skin. 5. SALYCYLIC ACID – Found naturally in wintergreen leaves, licorice, and other plants, salicylic acid helps to control oily skin and breakouts through its antiseptic agents. He struggles every day with his bottled water habit and tries to be a better man. A man who drinks from the tap. SPEAK OUT 1. GREEN TEA – A highly effective antioxidant that can help the body fight UV-based aging by helping to repair cell damage. 4. SOY ISOFLAVONES – Soy-based ingredients have antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties that also enhance hyaluronic acid production to keep the skin hydrated and healthy. To drink it is to be transported. . . Maybe this isn’t a dilemma after all, but an addiction. What can he do? Organic Garden of 100% natural skincare products SCARLETT JOHANSSON "My family is always looking for ways to make our lives greener, whether it's using biodegradable dish soap or swapping paper towels for cloth rags. This year, we've completed the solar roofing on our home. Watching our meter spin backwards is an added bonus! It is very exciting to watch more and more homes in the neighborhood install solar panels. I've participated in the Solar Neighbors program, which was conceived by Ed Norton. Each time a celebrity or public figure buys a home solar system, BP Solar provides solar technology to a low-income family. I am looking forward to the fulfillment of President-elect Obama's commitment to making alternative energy available and affordable for everyone. Participating in this project is just one of the ways that I've been able to be proactive in the green movement.” 1. Eminence: Eight Greens Phyto Mask – This Hungarian organic product is great for hormonal breakouts and balancing the skin. 2. Jurlique: Calendula Lavender Hydrating Serum – A well-known Australian organic product, great for calming sensitive skin and delivering hydration using Calendula, Lavender, and Chamomile. DONALD FAISON “For me, to be green is to be aware that the planet that we live on is alive. Just as you respect any other life on the planet – be it a human, plant, or animal – you need to respect the earth in the same way. People need to be aware that this planet can die and that we may be the ones who kill it. Spread the word!” 3. Dr. Haushka: Rose Day Cream Light – A beautiful organic cream for light moisturizing of dehydrated and/or sensitive skin. 4. Pangea Organics: Acai and Goji Berry Mask – Full of green tea, Acai and Goji berries, this mask is very high in antioxidants and leaves the skin glowing. 46 DAVID ARQUETTE "In this challenging time, it's up to all of us to do our part to help. The environment, people suffering, and the world at large need us to come together. Alternative is doing their part by supporting some amazing charities, one of which I am also a part -- The Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation. I have also started working with Feeding America, the nation's largest food distribution organization for hungry Americans. Find a cause that speaks to you and do your part. It's up to all of us to make this world a better place for future generations." 5. Natural Difference: Pumpkin Enzyme Exfoliant – A wonderful natural exfoliant using pumpkin enzymes to slough off dead skin cells. www.alternativeapparel.com www.alternativeapparel.com 47 SUSTAINABLE WAVES: PARTIES POWERED BY THE SUN Mark McLarry & Neal Turley Nothing tops a music festival, right? That’s what we thought until we sat down with Mark McLarry and Neal Turley, partners behind solar-powered production company Sustainable Waves. The festivals they help to produce (think eco-fest Outside Lands and floating carnival Xingolati) are more like interactive cross-genre music and performance art collaborations than your run-of-the-mill rock show. So it may be true that nothing beats a music festival, but that’s if and only if it’s produced by Sustainable Waves. What are your thoughts on the current environmental movement? MARK: I think it’s great there finally is movement. When Neal and I first started putting events together, we were building carbon neutrality into everything. That was in 2001, before words like “carbon neutrality” were even in anyone’s head. So to see that green is part of the mainstream and to see some real change, it’s incredible. NEAL: It’s very exciting to see the momentum created around it, but I think it’s a little bit frightening as well, like when I get calls from ad agencies in New York that are pretty ignorant to the entire market – it’s something they’re trying to sell as opposed to something they really believe. The worst thing that could happen is that it blows up into a fad and then goes out of style before change is actually made. We need to evolve from this place of education to a place of designing and manufacturing change. Right now you almost need a filter for what is “green.” One of your selling points is that you offer 100% pollution-free concerts. How do you make that happen? NEAL: Our stages are designed to run the entire concert on solar. You have solar energy collected from solar panels which are then stored in batteries. In the event we’ve got wind or weather issues, we’ve got enough power to do a show for 9 hours. So we have a base of solar power which we’ve accented with wind power and also algae sequestration technology, where we use algae to clean emissions from biodiesel engines [which we use to generate some additional power, if necessary]. Do you think it’s possible to power everything on solar? NEAL: It’s not that we use a certain kind of energy, but that we design for efficiency. Our first sound system was completely custom built. Every component we chose for efficiency. At the same time, you’re not giving up any level of quality. That’s where it really begins: making solar possible by designing for efficiency. That’s where the world needs to go before you answer that question. The second step is educating people and getting them beyond awareness of the environmental impact of energy and its cost. Sometimes I think the only reason anyone turns off their lights is because it costs them money at the end of the month. Whether we like it or not, though, money does make the world go ‘round. As entrepreneurs in this field, what’s your take on the influence of alternative energy and green economics on our current economy? NEAL: What is the difference between green economics and economics? There is no difference. There are new green businesses and investments in green space, but the reality is we have no valuation system for any of our natural resources. It’s like what we’re starting to see now with carbon trading, it’s an attempt to place value on air quality. It’s exciting to see all this totally evolve into a global economy where every country in the world is responsible for the emissions they have, the garbage they put in the earth, and what’s in the water as it flows downstream. It’s not until you start losing all the resources in the world that these things actually become valuable. You take a look at the global system and really redefine what economics is all about. That’s what sustainability is. It’s not just economics, but how we can sustainably live on this planet. MARK: If you take the example of a festival or event, it seems they quarantine one area to the “green” section, and I think we need to move away from that and to integrate it into every part of the event. That idea applies to businesses in general. I think triple bottom line is a great example of how businesses now can gauge their success, not only on the financial bottom line but also what they’re doing for society or for bettering the environment. For one final question, what’s your biggest inspiration in life? MARK: My 2-year-old son, he’s my biggest inspiration. It’s so refreshing to wake up to someone who’s always smiling. Also, Neal and I are in a fortunate place – I get up, I go to work, and I don’t even know if I can call it work. I just love what I’m doing, and hey, it’s something good for the planet. It’s a win-win all the way around. NEAL: For me, it’s cool to watch our little company grow - we have 15 employees now. It’s also amazing to have something that Mark and I started together and, now, to see how passionate our guys have become about doing what they’re doing. And then there are people who see our work and think it’s really cool. It’s so nice to work on something that people appreciate. To learn more, visit www.sustainablewaves.com. www.alternativeapparel.com 49 ADAPTATION: DOODY FREE THE ETHICS OF ENVIRONMENTALISM AND DOG POOP AN INSPIRED FLORAL EXPERIENCE Mike LaSage & Liz Gudmundsson BY CHRIS CONNOLLY Being an environmentalist—or just socially responsible—takes work, thought and, not infrequently, money. And while everyone (almost) publicly acknowledges the need to undertake the extra effort, when I walk my dog every day (almost) I have to wonder how much of this acknowledgement is just lip service. In my opinion—one formed on countless treks around the same 10 or 15 blocks—nowhere in society is the type of unmonitored, self-motivated commitment required for environmental responsibility so closely mirrored as in the way people collect and dispose of their dogs’ poop. Being confronted with a stinky, occasionally amorphous, hunk or pool of steaming dog poop in the late evening is one of the prickliest ethical questions a sizeable percentage of Americans wrestle with every day. If you live in a quiet area, or when you’re taking a late walk, there’s virtually no oversight. The only thing compelling you to clean up that repellent mess is your commitment to civic responsibility and your belief that when we all Do The Right Thing society functions better. Because, frankly, dog walking is a bit of a boring chore, I have done a good deal of quality cogitating on my responsibility towards the irresponsibility of people who have preceded me at popular pooping spots. For a long time, my policy, upon encountering an uncollected poop close to a poop under my jurisdiction, was to pick up both poops. Unfortunately, it is not always easy to collect two poops in a lone bag, and the Orphaned Poop Collection Project occasionally had, shall we say, disastrous results. For a while, I abandoned the OPCP entirely, but recently I had an experience that caused me to reevaluate my philosophies on the matter. I was, as you’ve probably guessed, walking my dog. And he, as you’ve probably guessed, pooped. What was interesting about this particular poop was that it landed right on top of an orphaned poop! No part of my dog’s poop extended beyond the edges of the pre-existing poop, and none of it was in contact with the ground. It’s said that flowers, like snowflakes, are each entirely unique; paradoxically, most floral bouquets come off as anything but. Such was the inspiration behind Adaptation, an Atlanta-based floral boutique recognized for creating one-of-a-kind arrangements for weddings, birthdays, fiestas, and everything in between. Here owners Mike LaSage and Liz Gudmundsson talk about Adaptation and the (d)evolution of “green” as we know it. I circled the poop several times to discern whether my portion of poop presented any danger to foot traffic in excess of that poised by the original deposit. In the end, I decided if someone, say, a jogger, was running swiftly by, it might be possible that the “second floor” my dog had contributed would increase the odds of a “top graze,” however, shoe contamination by orphaned dog poop mostly occurs via a downward placement of the foot and as the top poop did not increase the circumference of the danger zone, I concluded I had zero liability in this capacity. So, a very slight increase in danger to joggers, versus the fact that I’d picked up a couple hundred hunks of poop on behalf of my neighbors in the past… My dad’s a jogger. I picked them both up. But honestly, barring that kind personal connection, I’m not sure I would have. And looking at the lawns in my neighborhood, and the state of the world, I increasingly get the haunting sense that a lot of people don’t even think twice about leaving their fellow man to clean up their dog poop—or their industrial waste, or their financial garbage. Environmentalism and social responsibility are Choose Your Own Adventure books we read on a daily basis. I always considered the So, standing there in the flickering of the streetlights, here was the question I had to answer: Was I obligated to pick up this nonterrestrial poop? Or, as it basically occupied ungoverned, borderless territory, like the tax free zones at airports, had I, via my long karmic association with the OPCP, finally earned a “Doody Free?” 50 www.alternativeapparel.com goal of those books to keep reading and trying new choices until I’d weeded out all the mundane endings and death traps and found that one Ultimate Storyline that led to glory. But honestly, looking at all the sh*t lying around, I feel like a lot of people are content to succumb to the rattlesnake bite on page 43. Tell us a little about Adaptation – how did you get started? LIZ: I have been in the floral business since I graduated from college (with a Communications degree, not exactly necessary in floral design). I sort of fell into it: I had the opportunity to work for some really great people and ended up gaining an infinite amount of experience in all facets of the business. When I moved to Atlanta, I felt that I had found a place I wanted to make my home, where I could open up the flower shop of my dreams – one where carnations and baby's breath don't exist. I wanted Adaptation to be a reflection of Mike and myself and for every design that leaves the store to be unique and make people feel like they got something they wouldn't see anywhere else. How did you come up with the name? MIKE: Adaptation is the concept behind the whole evolutionary process as well as our flower arrangements: Liz has a very unique style and she’s always trying new things. The idea of evolution and nature went hand in hand with what we were doing. In addition to Liz’s unique style, how else is Adaptation different from other florists? LIZ: I like to cut random plants from our garden and buy things people don’t normally see – like persimmons on a stem or eggplants – just to incorporate something different into our arrangements. MIKE: I think our outlook on business as a whole, which isn’t always the most profitable thing, also sets us apart – we’re just two friends who just like having fun. That’s what Adaptation is all about. It started off with flowers, and then we got into some retail and dealing local art. We pretty much dumped everything we had into creating an environment we like hanging out in, one that’s very homelike. Now half of Inman Park uses the couch upstairs for nap breaks. It’s just a blast. Aside from being a home to countless plants, how is Adaptation “green?” MIKE: You know, I get tired of the word “green” being thrown around. I feel it’s used very carelessly, as more of a marketing term than about people being environmentally conscious. We don’t do it because it’s trendy, and we don’t market ourselves that way. I think it’s better to just do the best you can. LIZ: For example, we think it’s great to reuse. With our weddings, we rent all the vases, and when it’s over we take all the flowers to the senior center up the street. We also recycle as much of our water as we can and use it to water the plants. We don't offer our customers bags unless they request it. I try to order flowers from only a few wholesalers, which cuts down on shipping and box waste. We just try to do little things and they all help – there’s so much waste in the floral industry. What do you think can be done to minimize that waste? LIZ: A big part of why it happens is because of over-importing. So much is bought from South America, Holland, and California, where almost all cut flowers come from. But there are so many climates where a lot of it can be grown. We buy from a couple in South Carolina who decided they wanted to have a flower farm and just did it. I wish I could get everything I needed from people like that and buy it on a smaller scale. So much can be grown here – seasonally, but it can be done. To learn more, visit www.adaptationfloraldesign.com www.alternativeapparel.com 51 BRIAN WILLS MAKING WAVES WITH STRING THEORY AND OCEANA Stepping back to take in pieces from Brian Will’s String Theory series, one can almost see the ripples and reflections of the ocean in his panels upon panels of meticulously layered string. It’s not surprising, then, that the artist advocates non-profit Oceana, an organization working to clean our oceans and preserve the many diverse ecosystems they contain. Your String Theory series has received critical acclaim across the country and beyond. What is your inspiration behind this incredible body of works? String Theory came from my interest of how science informs art and thus the way we perceive. Specifically, a basis of string theory is the "floating strings" that comprise everything – they are ever-changing and comprehensive. This interests me when thinking about the surface of a painting or sculpture. Many of these surfaces operate on an unconscious visual level – I have constructed some things in a way that dictates the way your visual cortex makes you see. What's your position on the issue at stake? The issues at stake are pretty important. Climate change, eliminating dirty fishing and seafood contamination, saving sea turtles, and stopping destructive trawling are all at the forefront of the organization’s mission. These are all issues that affect our lives as well as the future of our planet. We think your work is absolutely inspiring, but tell us: what inspires you? Bruegel's peasant paintings are pretty great. James Turrell, Robert Irwin, Judd, and definitely my wife. About Oceana Oceana seeks to make our oceans as rich, healthy and abundant as they were in our grandparents’ youth. They look to a future in which dolphin sightings are common along any temperate coast; in which the mighty swordfish, marlin and tuna are abundant once again; in which whales and sea turtles thrive, cod are plentiful on both sides of the Atlantic, local fishing cultures evolve rather then decline and in which fish are a safe, growing and plentiful source of food around the world. To learn more, visit www.oceana.org. Many of your pieces also include unconventional materials like dental floss, vinyl tape, varnish, and basswood. How do you choose your materials? Most of the materials I choose have a functional purpose. The dental floss is used to create grooves on the surface. The tape is used to create lines. I chose rayon thread because of its reflective quality. Is there any one you enjoy working with more than any other? I don't necessarily like using one material over another, although I am really interested in trying to use wire to create surfaces. How are your views on the environment reflected in your art? The most apparent reflection of the environment and/or its preservation is the concept of recycling that I use. I save every bit of detritus. Somehow, I try to bring it back to life in other works. You’re also active in an environmental charity. What inspired you to get involved? I became interested in The American Oceans Campaign (now a part of Oceana) because of their attention to the preservation of our oceans and its wildlife. It seemed like a grand project, something that needed all the help it could get. 52 www.alternativeapparel.com www.alternativeapparel.com 53 THINK | EARTH FEATURED CHARITIES Boxer Rescue Orange County www.boxerocrescue.org charity: water www.charitywater.org Do Something www.dosomething.org Edeyo www.edeyo.org Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation www.pedaids.org Generosity: Water www.generositywater.com Gulf Restoration Network www.healthygulf.org Heal the Bay www.healthebay.org Heifer International www.heifer.org Humane Society of the United States www.hsus.org Natural Resources Defense Council www.nrdc.org Oceana www.oceana.org Rock ‘n Renew rocknrenew.com/BLOG/wordpress The Make-A-Wish Foundation www.wish.org Wildlife Trust www.wildlifetrust.org SPECIAL THANKS TO Adaptation Akasha Amy Smart Brian Wills David Arquette Econation Elizabeth Mitchell Gulf Restoration Network Ingrid Seaburn Josh Kelley Lukas Haas Michelle Lombardo New Moon Skin Care Reid Scott Sarah Backhouse Shane West The National Erin Skipley Jarod Jones Adrian Grenier Ali Hillis Benjamin Kutso Chris Connolly Donald Faison Ecospire Fred Ascher Idealbite.com Jason Kennedy KurenT http://kurentinc.com Malin Akerman Michele Monaco Pinnacle PR Ryan Rickett Scarlett Johanson Sustainable Waves Wildlife Trust Mickael O’Neill Robin Garvick STAFF Editor-in-Chief Molly Raney Interviews and Copyediting Beth Schechter Photography Ashley Haber Graphic Design Lee Tesche Ian Darken Production Coordinator Meagan Judkins MEDIA CONTACT For questions and inquiries please contact: Molly Raney PR, Media + Events 678.924.5207 molly@alternativeapparel.com ÝÝÝ Most talent featured wearing Alternative Earth. To learn more about these styles, visit: www.alternativeapparel.com 54 www.alternativeapparel.com