When things get darkest, we must be our brightest, we must love our hardest. This is BETTER. I’m your host, Mark Brand—a social-impact entrepreneur, chef, and systems designer committed to ending hunger. I believe we can end it. I also believe, with all of my being, that there's a calling within you. We just have to find it and give you the tools to activate it. That's what BETTER is about. It stems from the deep knowing that everyone has the power to change their life and the lives of those around them for the BETTER. In my decades of front line work I have seen it happen, against all odds, in the toughest corners of the world. Every week, my incredible guests and I share stories of resilience and hope with the explicit intention of empowering you to be your biggest, brightest, most powerful self, to help US all build a BETTER world, together.
Andrew Knapp is today's guest; a dog-lover, photographer, illustrator, and a New York Times best-selling author! His dog Momo created an internet sensation by playing hide-and-seek all over the world. Andrew's books about Momo include Let's Find Momo!, Let's Find Momo Outdoors! and more. His latest release was published just last week titled Let's Find Yaya and Boo at Home!: A Hide-and-Seek Adventure. Find out more about Andrew Knapp, sign up for his newsletter & learn about his new book Find Momo Everywhere (which is viewable here and out in February) on his website: https://andrewknapp.com/ Follow along with Andrew and his furballs on Instagram.
This week, Mark's guest is Heather Plett, an international speaker, facilitator, writer, and life-long learner. She's the author of the book The Art of Holding Space: A Practice of Love, Liberation, and Leadership and the soon-to-be-released book, Where Tenderness Lives: On Healing, Liberation, and Holding Space for Oneself. She is also the co-founder of the Centre for Holding Space. Mark and Heather talk about their respective journeys through grief and the tools that we can all use to hold space for ourselves and those around us. Before launching her work in holding space, Heather worked in leadership and communications in government and non-profit. Having spent most of her adult life in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, where she raised her three daughters, Heather has recently become nomadic while she decides where to settle next. (Read more about her here.) Find her program here: afullbodiedlife.com Order her book here: https://a.co/d/0n0lDbJ
This week's guest is award-winning broadcaster Ziya Tong. She is best known as the anchor of Daily Planet, Discovery Channel's flagship science program. Her book The Reality Bubble won the Lane Anderson Prize for best science writing in Canada and was shortlisted for the RBC Taylor Prize. The book has been translated into multiple languages, and has earned praise from luminaries including Naomi Klein and David Suzuki who calls Tong's book, “required reading for all who care about what we are doing to the planet.” Tong also hosted the CBC's Emmy-nominated series ZeD, PBS's national prime-time series, Wired Science, and worked as a correspondent for NOVA scienceNOW alongside Neil deGrasse Tyson on PBS. Ziya served as the Vice Chair of the World Wildlife Fund Canada and is now on the board of directors of WWF International. She is currently working on a new documentary called Plastic People, looking at the frightening impact of microplastics on human health. Twitter: @ziyatongBlue Sky: @ziyatong.bsky.socialMastodon: @ziya@journa.host http://ziyatong.com/
This week's guest is a legend, especially in the projects on the south side of Chicago, where every unhoused human he looks in the face feels acceptance, love and dignity. He is the CEO and Founder of Taste For Thee Homeless. In this episode, you'll hear him talk about discovering his purpose, making people of influence like Chance the Rapper support his cause, and what he's planning next. Follow along with Mike on his Instagram for more @TasteForTheHomeless.
Host Mark Brand has a conversation with entrepreneur, social innovator, and activist, James Anderson. *DISCLAIMER* This episode will touch on suicide; please find some resources below if you are struggling. After overcoming a childhood riddled with great challenges, James' story is one filled with hope and redemption. James graduated from UCLA with double honors while simultaneously helping to create one of the world's leading criminal justice reform organizations—The Anti-Recidivism Coalition. In this episode, he will also talk about his work with Next Chapter. Previously at Guayakí Yerba Mate, James spent his time on their senior leadership team focused on the development and execution of the corporation's social impact commitment to hire system-affected individuals, creating a world-class company culture, and ultimately using business as a force for good. His knowledge, achievements, and innovative solutions to contemporary issues has led to invitations to meet with high ranking political officials including President Barack Obama. One of his key messages is that we all carry an innate ability to create unparalleled change in the lives of others. Recommended Suicide Resources:In Canada: https://talksuicide.ca/In the United States: https://988lifeline.org/
Anthony Demby has worn many entertainment-industry hats for more than two decades. From managing the careers of artists such as Childish Gambino and John Legend to advising global brands, his journey has been diverse and expansive. In 2010, Demby combined his recording label, artist management knowledge, and cultural curiosity to found Humbleriot, a New York-based intentional idea shop that utilizes music, culture, and social impact to create dynamic experiences and tell compelling stories. Additionally, he leads a mentorship program for international artists, musicians, and creators. His roster has included clients such as Google, Sonos, Oatly, HBO Max, The Red Hot Organization, For Freedoms, and many others. Follow Anthony Demby on socials: @dembycratic and @humbleriot. Artists Ant told us he loves right now in this episode: Yaya Bey, Yussef Dayes, and NeOne the Wonderer.
“Hawaii” Mike is a branding maestro and founder of Chef for HigherTM, a pioneering culinary and culture brand leading the exciting new era of Cannabis legalization. Chef for HigherTM specializes in creating exemplary Cannabis-infused sweet & savory foods and hosting popular tastemaker dining events, and check out the New York line which just launched HERE. For over 25 years, Hawaii's been on the frontlines of music, media, and lifestyle, using Hip-Hop and Cannabis as conduits for pursuing his passions and refining his alchemy. Hawaii has worked with legendary Hip-Hop groups like Mobb Deep and consulted for global brands including Nike, Reebok, Estee Lauder, and Mountain Dew. As a talent manager, he guided the careers of influential personalities Nigel Sylvester, DJ Clark Kent, and Jonathan Mannion. He founded LTD magazine, served as a lifestyle editor for The Source magazine, and was co-founder & editor-in-chief of tattoo publication INKED. He has been featured in The Wall Street Journal, Sports Illustrated, VH1, BET, and Forbes. He currently lives in Brooklyn, NY, and is available for Private HigherTM catering events, Cannabis-related thought panels, and speaking engagements. Follow Hawaii on Instagram @HWMK.
Host Mark Brand welcomes Harold O'Neal to Better for a conversation about embracing conflict and creative storytelling through impact by turning inside. Don't miss a little performance on his keyboard at the end of the episode! Harold O'Neal is a musician and social entrepreneur, known for his work as a producer, pianist, composer, public speaker, and storyteller. He is widely recognized for his association with the legacy of jazz pianists and has also worked with a diverse range of artists across various musical genres, including U2, Lupe Fiasco, Bob Geldof, Jay Z, and Damien Rice. O'Neal has also been granted fellowship to the prestigious Royal Society of the Arts, with Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II as patron. Recently, Harold O'Neal brought his storytelling expertise to Pixar's Academy Award-winning film, Soul, serving as a creative expert behind the scenes with his stories providing valuable resources to the filmmaking process. O'Neal is currently working on a range of exciting projects, including his next cinematic jazz album set for release in 2023. He's also producing and scoring a feature-length film with an Academy Award-winning director, scheduled for release in 2024. Additionally, he's collaborating with NASA's Chief Story Architect, Paul Propster, to co-found the Admira Summit, a social enterprise focused on youth outreach, technology, and storytelling. Find out more about Harold O'Neal: https://www.pianocinema.com/https://www.admirasummit.org/homehttps://www.instagram.com/haroldonealofficial
Holley M. Kholi-Murchison is an artist and cultural geographer exploring work as a portal to self and communal actualization. They study the human condition, desire, and potential within and outside of evolving definitions of work and workplace. From their research, they tell love stories, make artifacts and resources, and design and program spaces that open pathways for creators to nurture their gifts, talents, and growing edges for their life's work and personal fulfillment. Currently, Holley is Managing Partner and Director of Studio and Media Lab at Oratory Glory, and a co-steward at Celie & Squeak. Find out more about Holley (including the Tell Me About Yourself or TMAY book referenced in this episode) HERE.
BETTER is back for season two with Mark Brand. Today, he welcomes friend and fellow DJ Kirk St. Cyr, better known by his stage name as 4 Korners. He's the official DJ for the Toronto Raptors and an international musician – he's played the top nightclubs in more than 20 countries across the world while collecting awards and accolades, AND an NBA championship ring! Find out more about 4Korners and listen to his debut album 4Korners of the World HERE.
Tara McGuire is a mother, a steep advocate for change in the fight against overdoses, a former broadcaster, and a powerfully potent writer. Her book “Holden After and Before," gives us an honest insight into her grief, carried from the loss of her son, Holden to the opioid crisis, which Tara points out is better viewed as what it truly is: an overdose crisis. "He died because he made a mistake that day,” she says with heavy compassion for her own loss, and her son's loss, too, "He wasn't trying to die." Holden's overdose at 21 is not an isolated event. Over 35,000 families know their version of her pain from the last five years alone. That's 21 deaths a day. And while the "cause of death," might be marked on paper with the same words, the Cause of Life and the person behind it only exists once. We're all one of one. That's the love part of the loss. That's the crisis of One in many. Tara has turned that love for her son into proactive activism. She is now invited to speak to judges with power to change the course of treatment made available to people struggling. In this episode, we talk about the solutions—the life-saving solutions our youth deserve. And Tara drops bars in one of the most special elements of this episode. Through her prose and poetics Tara's gives voice to hope. At the top of Segment 2, we hear her read an excerpt and go into her world as she breathes in the life of her son . All of this takes us to the key emotion driving impactful change: compassion. "We need to find out why people are numbing themselves with these substances at all. Who we're losing through this overdoes crisis are our most sensitive people." Tara says, "We need to be in the prevention business... we need to provide care instead of punishment." That part. WORKS:- Author of "Holden After and Before: Love Letter for a Son Lost to Overdose"- Notably recognized essay: “I Can Feel Him Breathing”- Tara's poems and essays have been recognized by Room Magazine, the Writer's Union of Canada, the TNQ Edna Staebler personal essay contest, as well as broadcast on The Sunday Edition and The Vinyl Cafe on CBC Radio TOOLS:- Wisdom that guides us to our calling- How to speak to your children about drug use with compassion - Language to help us demystify the stigma of substance abuse- Permission to take your time with grief and guidance for how to express grief - How to transfer energy when someone we love dies - Reminders that bad advice exists everywhere and to feel your feelings- The importance of ritual - Pharmaceutical information that helps us question why our doctors are prescribing these highly addictive meds to begin with when there are alternatives MEMORIAL FUNDAfter his passing, the Holden Courage Memorial Fund for Artists was created to support street artists. Link to donate here Addictions Treatment Helplines in Canada Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (U.S.) LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT: BETTER is recorded on the unceded and ancestral territory of the hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ and Sḵwx̱wú7mesh speaking peoples, the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations, and has been stewarded by them since time immemorial. BETTER with Mark Brand is produced by Pamela Rothenberg of I HEAR YOU STUDIOS and Adam Karch with Orbyt Media
Rick Doblin is a a psychedelic-assisted psychotherapist and the visionary behind MAPS—the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies), a non-profit dedicated to “delivering global healing through psychedelic research.” His research proves how psychedelics heal trauma. Rick started studying the power of psychedelics as medicine just one year before the US government scheduled an emergency ban on psychedelics—and he has continued to work on the frontlines of advocacy for the return of this medicine ever since. In this episode, you'll hear us talk about the need for deep healing in a society that's running on fumes. His words on PTSD and what's possible for even the most complicated of cases brings a depth of hope that anyone with trauma (big t or little) can drop shoulders after listening. The long term effects measured by his clinical trials are there. The safety is there. The need is there. The only thing missing is the regulatory approval and the adaptation for certain psychedelics to move from Schedule I (the highest of offense) to Schedule II, which allows medical use. We also cover the extremes, like balancing a sober life with the use of this medicine— because that's all it is, medicine—and combining it with therapy. And we catch beautiful quotes like this one: “A lot of the people who are involved in substance abuse problems feel isolated and alone. Part of the antidote to that is to feel that you are connected to this magnificent adventure of billions of years that's produced life on earth, and to feel that there's this web of love that's underneath everything.” TRIGGER WARNING: This episode discusses suicide and suicidal ideation, and some people might find it disturbing. If you or someone you know is struggling with suicidal thoughts, please, contact your physician, go to your local ER, or call the suicide prevention hotline in your country. For the United States, the numbers are as follows:Call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800-273-TALK (8255), or message the Crisis Text Line at 741741. Both programs provide free, confidential support 24/7.For Cananda, the numbers are as follows:Call the Canada Suicie Prevention Service 1.833.456.4566, available 24/7/365 or Text the Crisis Text Line at 45645, available 4pm - midnight WORKS: - founder and executive director of MAPs—the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies, which has “dedicated the last 36 years to changing the way people think of, talk about, and consume psychedelics through research, education, and advocacy.” - TED: The Future of Psychedelic-Assisted Research TOOLS: - Research that sheds light on the true safety psychedelics can provide in healing trauma - Profound insights and data that open us up to what's happening when our minds are on psychedelics - Reminders of the power therapy has and why I always always recommend it - Insight into the studies MAPS is conducting to better understand the profound effects this medicine creates - Discussions around the equity and accessibility of these tools and what changes have to happen LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT: BETTER is recorded on the unceded and ancestral territory of the hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ and Sḵwx̱wú7mesh speaking peoples, the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations, and has been stewarded by them since time immemorial. BETTER with Mark Brand is produced by Pamela Rothenberg of I HEAR YOU STUDIOS and Adam Karch with Orbyt Media
Rachel Sumekh was in college when she noticed the problem: her peers are hungry. Then she spotted the solution and moved instantly into action. No flinching here. (You can see why we're friends.) It didn't take long for the administration to see her impact before they tried to shut it down. While they moved to block progress, the Obama White House named her organization a “Champion for Change.” What one authority called rebellion, another named Revolution. Same coin, different sides. One truth. In this conversation, Rachel speaks openly about the influence her Iranian-Jewish background has on her experience as a human in service to other humans. You'll hear us talk about our duty, as people, to help end each other's suffering. Let's let that one hang. That's OUR duty: end each other's suffering. We also explore the chapter-close of her decade-long role as the Founder of Swipe Out Hunger—a national nonprofit committed to ending college student hunger, which is something that went largely overlooked before her eyes and heart took notice—proving once again that it just takes One of us (to start). To date, the team at Swipe Out has proudly served over 4.8 million nourishing meals across more than 450 campuses. “This is a baton pass,” Rachel says mid-interview about leaving Swipe Out in the hands of new leadership. “These problems are so big. I'd need to be the whitest of white men to believe that I need to stay there and solve this problem.” And with THAT truth, the episode is yours. Let's go. WORKS:- Founder of Swipe Out Hunger—a national nonprofit committed to ending college student hunger. From its beginnings as a grassroots movement at UCLA in 2010, Swipe Out Hunger has since served 4.8 million nourishing meals across more than 450 campuses in all 50 states and Canada.- Board member for her LA based Jewish community, IKAR- Owner, TypicalPersianGirl.com RESOURCES:If you or someone you know is experiencing hunger on a college campus, visit swipehunger.org to learn about resources TOOLS:- How to align your skill set with an issue you care about- Tools to recover from lone-wolf syndrome- Reminders that help us conceptualize away time from working- Incredible awarenesses around the true path to creating change- How to face the challenges of being idealistic as an adult- Reminders to find safe people who you can open up to- Stories that remind us HOW normal and common food insecurity really is LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT: BETTER is recorded on the unceded and ancestral territory of the hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ and Sḵwx̱wú7mesh speaking peoples, the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations, and has been stewarded by them since time immemorial. BETTER with Mark Brand is produced by Pamela Rothenberg of I HEAR YOU STUDIOS and Adam Karch with Orbyt Media
Eamonn Store is IN boardrooms changing the hearts, minds, and actions of some of the world's biggest companies. He's the former CEO of The Guardian and current Founder & CEO of FairShare—an impact consultancy driven by the belief that “making a contribution to the World is no longer just a 'nice to have.'” I call him a board whisper because he has the critical ability to get people in powerful seats to see past greed's inherent blindness and come to truth. We talk about capitalism's many side effects—one being what Eamonn calls “addiction to winning,” and then move into how our current climate crisis, among other crises, can all see themselves in the face of this phenomenon. Thankfully, it's hard-TRUTH-facing conversations like this, with people like Eammon who put action behind their beliefs, that brings us to see what's most important and most possible: we have to show up for each other. We have to. We have no other choice. Trust, when I say, this conversation brings layers of wisdom about the machine, about community, about change, and our ability to make it—with a lens on what it looks like to live life with a compass of contribution at North. WORKS:- Former CEO of The Guardian, North America- Founder & CEO of FairShare, an Impact Consultancy that helps companies advance a Purpose beyond their product's benefit and practices Conscious Commercialism, which “leverages the soul of your brand to the benefit of all while creating more long-lasting business value." TOOLS:- Tools to help us give ourselves permission not to push for perfection when the world just needs us to show up- Reflections that help us see our addiction to winning- The importance of developing a worldview - Reminders to give yourself permission to reflect on the last 5 years of your life with a compassion-centered lens - Reminders to value stakeholders in business, rather than centering shareholders alone- Questions to help you identify your true purpose - Reflections that validate the difficulty of disappointment that comes with hoping corporates aligns with true purpose and impact RESOURCE:- You'll hear us also talk about YOUTH v GOV, a must-watch documentary LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT: BETTER is recorded on the unceded and ancestral territory of the hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ and Sḵwx̱wú7mesh speaking peoples, the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations, and has been stewarded by them since time immemorial. BETTER with Mark Brand is produced by Pamela Rothenberg of I HEAR YOU STUDIOS and Adam Karch with Orbyt Media with special support and assistance for today's episode from Sarah Burke.
Brother Ernie Paniccioli is a legendary hip hop & culture historian, humanitarian, and self-taught photographer who has been ‘documenting the culture since the start.' My first meeting with Brother Ernie was in Vancouver where he said the feeling of being seen—truly seen and known—was more alive because Indigenous people are "everywhere." Unlike in Brooklyn where he grew up eight blocks away from Biggie Smalls. In this conversation, we track the history of hip hop as a global voice—a global power—and how it can teach us to inhabit a consciousness that promotes our collective wellbeing over a collective violence that he says, knowingly, only leads to the perpetuation of more violence. Here's a quote to kick us off, "If you're gonna love Tupac, if you're gonna love Biggie, then you have to look at it through a different lens—and that lens is how do we not hurt each other? How do we not expand on that violence? How do we not relive it? They say, History's best qualified to teach you, whether it's Germany and the Holocaust or the American Native situation. Unless you know your history, you're condemned to repeat it. So, my thing is very simple: let Tupac and Biggie rest in peace, but more importantly, learn from that and learn that violence creates more violence. What you eat, what you see, and what you absorb is what you become," he says before leading us into a list of recommendations to enlighten the mind and lighten the heart. Also, special side note, if you're catching this at the time of air, Brother Ernie's work is currently being displayed at the GRAMMY Museum Experience, at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey. The feature exhibit is called, “A Hip-Hop Life: Five Decades of Hip-Hop Music, Art and Culture" and displays early & exclusive, behind-the-scenes photos of Hip-Hop legends: Tupac, Biggie Smalls, Naughty By Nature, Lauryn Hill, the Fugees, Ice T, Chuck D, Queen Latifah, and many many more. WORKS:- Dig into the history (see Ernie's prints for sale here)- Hip Hop Hall of Fame in 2014 - Served as the chief photographer for the hip hop magazine, “Word Up!” for over 20 years- Spokesman at The United Nations for The Temple of Hip Hop during the Hip Hop Peace Conference- Published several books, including “Who Shot Ya”- Featured as the subject of the award-winning documentary, “The Other Side of Hip-Hop" TOOLS:- Stories that help guide us into a deeper knowing of ourselves- Wisdom that appeals to the importance of history, knowing it, and using it to shape the future- Spiritual truths that guide us out of violence and into regular, good fun- Legendary tales that remind us to celebrate the ones who gave us what we have today LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT: BETTER is recorded on the unceded and ancestral territory of the hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ and Sḵwx̱wú7mesh speaking peoples, the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations, and has been stewarded by them since time immemorial. BETTER with Mark Brand is produced by Pamela Rothenberg of I HEAR YOU STUDIOS and Adam Karch with Orbyt Media
Zach Sciacca, aka DJ Z-Trip is a conduit for the power of music AND the love of music. He has a history of working alongside the world's greatest artists including Chuck D & Public Enemy, LL Cool J, Busta Rhymes, Biz Markie and the list of legends goes on (check the list of WORKS below*) His work showcases the connectivity that music brings us across lifetimes, friendships, memories… Music is one of—if not THE most—transformational tool we have. But when a song gets mashed with another, it transcends everything and becomes something entirely new. THAT power is something Z-Trip has mastered and even pioneered, in the truest sense of the word. Without Z-Trip, the modern-day mash-up doesn't exist in music. His genius shows up in his ability to simultaneously create containers of celebration & containers of healing—both needed. It IS evolutions in music like this that have helped make me who I am today. What DJ Z-Trip DOES (for a living and for life) honors the past, present, and future all at once. Time is transcended. Feelings are processed. Memories are made and people are remembered. I bring him on today as my dear friend and someone I've been a fan of since before our friendship (shoutout Ant Demby for bringing us together at the Playlist retreat)—and let this stand as a reminder that bigging up your friends is always, always the move. WORKS: - Listen to DJ Z-Trip and support his crazy talent on Twitch, Bandcamp, Spotify, YouTube- 2009 recipient of the "America's Best DJ Award" (he remains on the top 10 lists year after year)- Respectively, Z Trip is the “Godfather of the mashup movement” - Topped the charts for “Best Album of Year” lists including Rolling Stone Magazine, Spin, the Los Angeles Times, The New York Times, among many others with his 2001 album, "Uneasy Listening, Vol. 1" - He has a history of working alongside the world's greatest artists including Chuck D & Public Enemy, LL Cool J, Busta Rhymes, Biz Markie and the list of legends goes on- Opened for The Rolling Stones- Headlined at major shows like Coachella and Rock The Bells- Produced music for EA Games and Tony Hawk- First and only DJ to have a remix approved by Nirvana and Kurt Cobain's estate TOOLS:- What it means to be an entertainer, to transcend space and create containers of healing- Reminders to let you know the importance of slowing down and reflecting on the impact of your work and life- The value of having perspective of where you've been to see where you're going- The beauty of people whose life purpose is to give people a break from the hard stuff- Reminders of how music gets us through the day and through life- Advice that guides craters to be conduits who connect creation to audience not audience to your ego- Metaphors that reflect the balance we need for trust & safety AND playfulness & challenge- The importance of reconnecting with the core of your being- Stories that give the gift of gratitude for the music collectors in your life- Reminders to be a fan of your friends and how they show up in life- Truths that show us that time and time again, only you can do things your way- Permission to adapt daily for the sake of creativity - Inspiration to be your own student- Resonance that reflect the truth of how powerful music is as a healer - Wisdom that reflects the importance of respecting the culture and the history of your craft- Inspiration to take what you've learned in life and open someone else's world with it LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT: BETTER is recorded on the unceded and ancestral territory of the hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ and Sḵwx̱wú7mesh speaking peoples, the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations, and has been stewarded by them since time immemorial. BETTER with Mark Brand is produced by Pamela Rothenberg of I HEAR YOU STUDIOS and Adam Karch with Orbyt Media
Jennifer Crawford is a gender creative queer who I could happily gush about for the entirety of this episode. We first met cooking for an organization called Sistering in Toronto, which does critical work with women and trans people who are predominantly street entrenched and fleeing violence. You'll hear that story upfront. (I promise, it's a warm one.) Jennifer is also the first queer winner of MasterChef Canada, and—wait for it—a professional wrestler who goes under the moniker of Moon Miss. BOTH of which make it super easy for us to talk about the inherent multi-dimensionality that comes with being a person (period), and that leads us right into talking about the trauma that first causes any of us to mask, and the secondary trauma that comes from the pain of masking. It's a lot of uncovering. "There's a lot of peace in learning how your mind works and giving yourself that permission slip to treat the stakes as high as they are. When I think about authenticity, it's not something I think about a lot in terms of like, ‘Oh, am I being authentic?' I think about the stakes being so high—and they are for so many. It's not just a thing we do for clout online. It is a thing we do to survive, and connect with other people, so that we can thrive together.” - Jennifer Crawford Take that in. And get ready to feel a whole lot of permission. (*Check the list of tools below for the full scope.) WORKS- Winner of MasterChef Canada (Check their recipes at jenniferecrawford.com)- Professional wrestler, under the name Moon Miss- Columnist and author of the platform, “My Queer Kitchen" on Daily Xtra- Columnist for SaltWire Tools You'll Get from This Episode:- Reminders that free you from having to mask who you are- Truths that come from permission-granting lived-experience stories - How sobriety can help us discover more nuance about ourselves- Insight into the beauty and gift that comes with noticing yourself - Reflections that help us depart from codependent patterns- Lived lessons on finding the balance between humility and self-abandonment- Truths that show you're always worthy of nurturing- Wisdom that creates doorways into small degrees of change (rather than the pressure to 180)- Connection and truths revealed about lone-wolfing life and how to break away from the damage of this trauma response- Ideas that free you from the trappings of niching down your life LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT: BETTER is recorded on the unceded and ancestral territory of the hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ and Sḵwx̱wú7mesh speaking peoples, the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations, and has been stewarded by them since time immemorial. BETTER with Mark Brand is produced by Pamela Rothenberg of I HEAR YOU STUDIOS and Adam Karch with Orbyt Media
Yarrow Kraner is the founder of HATCH—a global network of innovators and co-conspirators actively doing the work to create a more beautiful, sustainable, and just world (people who Yarrow refers to as “real-life superheroes”). HATCH'S mission is to accelerate solutions to global challenges. The how: by fueling extraordinary humans. The why: to HATCH a better world. Yarrow is a creative alchemist whose heart has the distinct ability to draw people out of a state of self-uncertainy and into a state of self-empowerment—one that has the literal power to change the world. I say that with no fluff. He is, with all sincerity a creative alchemist, builder of community, facilitator of hope, and someone who shows me the truest side of friendship. We have traveled the world together, backpacks on tight, creating safe spaces for people (like you, yes You) to see and discover their ability to make REAL change in this world. Today, you'll hear him wax poetic like, “There's a race between consciousness and catastrophe.” And speak truth that brings you deeper into the hope we need. This one IS that: “You are either tapped into what you're meant to do in the world, or you have the potential to.” This one goes out to all of us. WORKS:- Founder of HATCH—a global network of innovators who are actively pursuing a more beautiful, sustainable, and just world.- Founder of H360, a machine learning platform that brings silos of organizations together to activate collaborations and create a "Network of Networks" for collaborations with the power to improve the world. - Tate and Olivia's stepdad- Named 2015 top 100 creatives in the U.S. by Origin- Founder, Superdudes—the original online community (pre-MySpace) connecting and empowering real life superheroes while gamifing community volunteerism- Director, Virgin Produced, which is the entertainment arm of Richard Branson's Virgin group- Filmmaker, photographer, and director, leading projects with Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, Richard Branson, Sean Combs (aka P. Diddy), as well as, international brands- Aspen Institute Fellow Tools You'll Get From this Episode :Reflections that help us remember the endless value of true friendshipInsights to guide you towards your own backyard and the changes in your handsHope—THAT'S the toolTruths that help us restore balance in ourselves and inner-knowing LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT: BETTER is recorded on the unceded and ancestral territory of the hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ and Sḵwx̱wú7mesh speaking peoples, the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations, and has been stewarded by them since time immemorial. BETTER with Mark Brand is produced by Pamela Rothenberg of I HEAR YOU STUDIOS and Adam Karch with Orbyt Media
Loren Cardeli is a food sovereignty activist confronting the unjust power in our global food systems—systems that are crippling the well-being of people who grow our food. He asks us to look at the frameworks of our minds and says "To learn, we must unlearn." He is the Founder and President of A Growing Culture—an activist collective and nonprofit you must catch on IG (Run. Don't walk) I'll wait… @agrowingculture's posts center farmer justice. The humanity of this issue is important for too many reasons, but one stat makes it really easy to get: “Right now, we have a food system [where] 1.2 billion people go to bed hungry,” Loren says. “70% of them are farmers. 70% of the hungry are the ones growing our food.” Drink that in. These hard truths have the power to wake us up and garner global solidarity for folks who need support. “We have no solution,” Loren says, “but I can point to 10,000 people that do, and none of them look like me. We champion those folks.” Then he says, “There are no voiceless people. People say [to me], ‘Oh, you give voice to the voiceless.' No. There's no voiceless. There's only silenced.” This episode is in honor of the silenced and dedicated to the actions we are capable of together. WORKS:- Founder and President of A Growing Culture—an activist collective and 501c(3) nonprofit working towards a future of food sovereignty- Keynote speaker, addressing agricultural issues through the lens of economics, political science, and life sciences while promoting farmer-led research and innovation for the purpose of helping farmers throughout the world create sustainable, self-driving futures.- AGC PROJECT: “SEED IS POWER” - Seed is Power is a fund to ensure that seeds stay in the hands of the people. These funds support seed savers on their own terms. It's designed to disrupt the status quo of philanthropy that often inadvertently harms communities. Instead, it creates a reciprocal system that redistributes power, building equity and community among seed savers.- AGC PROJECT: “HUNGER FOR JUSTICE” - Hunger for Justice is a storytelling series designed to center justice in food system dialogues. The series is an opportunity to shift our focus away from symptoms, like hunger, and towards the injustices at the root of our failing food system. AGC provides an emergent and interactive global platform for movements on the frontlines of the struggle for food sovereignty to connect with broader audiences and with each other. Until every last million of us hungers no more, we must hunger for justice.- AGC PROJECT: PEASANT AND INDIGENOUS PRESS - a bi-monthly forum, media workshops, a monthly dispatch, and a journalist fellowship program, Peasant and Indigenous Press centers and connects Indigenous and peasant communities with media and cultivates a more holistic and nuanced storytelling ecosystem.- AGC PROJECT: BIPOC FARMER LEGAL FUND - The BIPOC Farmer Legal Fund provides pro-bono legal services to majority BIPOC-owned agricultural entities to create pathways for agricultural futures. Tools You'll Get From This Episode:- Access to the most empowering definition of activism you've ever heard- Reframes for how to lift up voices that aren't yours- Reminders of our true humanity and connectivity - Stories that emphazie why we say “If the community is unwell, we're all unwell.”- Root definitions of words that will teach you how language distorts reality - Questions to ask yourself about belief versus fact and what narratives are running the behind the scenes of your daily life- Reframes for how to think about power and where it belongs LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT: BETTER is recorded on the unceded and ancestral territory of the hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ and Sḵwx̱wú7mesh speaking peoples, the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations, and has been stewarded by them since time immemorial. BETTER with Mark Brand is produced by Pamela Rothenberg of I HEAR YOU STUDIOS and Adam Karch with Orbyt Media
Samantha Ramirez-Herrera is a radical creator and a trailblazer in every sense of the word. Born in Mexico with a legacy lived, made, and growing in the US, she has become “her ancestor's wildest dreams”—something I heard her describe from stage in the mountains of Montana. Sam is who I go to—as my North Star—to track the narratives being created in media that support the movements that support the people. Her work is provocative in that it represents resistance and progress all in the same sweep. Her mantra is “F-ck fear.” And, to top it all off (not even kinda), Sam is an Emmy Award-Winning filmmaker, a self-made entrepreneur, and the founder & CEO of OffThaRecord—a creative studio with the mantra, “We are creatives who give a damn.” She is a DREAMer who grew up in the United States undocumented, but what we learn without hesitation from her is that there is not a single DREAMER who's out here wasting their opportunity. She says, “I am labeled as a DREAMer, but I am way more than that. I am a DOer. And I am a chain breaker for my family.” I'll take a DEEP breath to that one. It's that quote, and all the stories she's lived to date, that brought us the name for this episode: “BEYOND DREAMER.” This conversation is a repeat listen for those moments when we need to remember that we can make new rules for ourselves, our communities, our society, our future. It's not possible to leave this listen without a hunger for equity, a determination to “fuck fear,” (visualize those words in Old English, please) and a drive to love yourself radically. Get pen and paper. Your hands are about to be busy grabbing lines like this: “Being an immigrant in this country is difficult. Because every day you're attacked with words… and if you don't love yourself radically, if you don't love yourself in a revolutionary way, they can break you. But I choose to be unbreakable. And I choose to love myself.” - Samantha Ramirez-Herrera WORKS:- CEO & Founder, OffThaRecord—a creative studio with the mantra “We are creatives who give a damn.”- CIVICS FOR THE CULTURE—a campaign launched by Fair Fight Action (founded in 2018 by Stacey Abrams) to mobilize young people of color 18-35 to vote and be civically engaged.- SEEDS OF RESILIENCE—Sam and her team at Off Tha Record worked with Food Well Alliance to uplift the stories of Black growers around Atlanta through a 4 part series titled “Seed of Resilience”. They discussed land access, growing food in the city, and the significance of supporting Black-led agriculture -- particularly in the South. - WE ARE HOME—a multi-racial, multi-ethnic, multi-generational coalition calling on the Biden administration and Congress to take immediate action to protect millions of immigrants who call this country home and end the cruelty of our interior detention and deportation system.- UNDERDOG DREAMS—OffThaRecord executed storytelling and video productions for Underdog Dreams, a non-profit organization working on revolutionizing the flawed child welfare system.- Keynote Speaker, where she describes herself as "just a Brown immigrant pursuing all of my wildest dreams and hoping to inspire others to do the same." Tools You'll Get From this Episode:- How to transcend the lies of stigma- How to make new rules for yourself- What it really looks like to create the path to equity- Tools to redefine yourself in alignment with your true identity and ACTIONS- Contemplations to witness and honor the hardships and privilege people individually carry and inspiration to help guide you to work through yours- Stories that motivate you to embrace your actual potential - Permission to love yourself radically- Reminders that strengthen courage in the face of fear- Everyday practices we can do knowing traumatic events are happening DAILY without time to process- Reminders to see the way social media manipulates the mind. Sam talks about “appreciating the moments between the posts.”- Reminders to protect our mental space and our energy- Compassion around how addictive social media is- We hear revealing stories that remind us to protect our mental health - Strong awarenesses around what happens when we normalize trauma rather than carrying for our mental health proactively - Absolute unending permission to curse. Sam and I joke about how we have to keep it quiet the first four segments because it's made for radio LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT: BETTER is recorded on the unceded and ancestral territory of the hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ and Sḵwx̱wú7mesh speaking peoples, the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations, and has been stewarded by them since time immemorial. BETTER with Mark Brand is produced by Pamela Rothenberg of I HEAR YOU STUDIOS and Adam Karch with Orbyt Media
Rhett Butler is an award-winning journalist whose reporting is actively saving rainforests. I met him at a climate conference in Sun Valley, Idaho, and immediately felt pulled to the sense of hope and action that exists in his work as the founder and CEO of Mongabay—a non-profit Conservation & Environmental Science news platform that has been raising human awareness of both wild lands and wildlife for 20+ years. “I didn't have a big vision,” he said. “I just achieved little things along the way. Then you wake up 20 years later and…” I jumped in to finish his sentence because Rhett is humble, but his work is not. The power of the information he's gathered has impacted the livelihood of our planet in profound ways. His platform, Mongabay, is special for so many reasons, but one, in particular, is that it allows other outlets to use its information, its storytelling, research, data, science, all for free—and, in that act, Mongabay has successfully aided in the preservation of precious ecosystems and changed the very fate of our planet more than once. This episode is a double-triple listen in that it gives us tangible mental health tools that can actively turn our climate despair into the hope we need to create planet-saving action. It's also a visual listen. We get to see inside the very real threat environmental defenders, like Rhett and his team, experience globally. You'll hear stories that will make the hair on your forearms spiderweb all the way up, with visuals that take you into the environments he protects and then back with information to armor you for the fight of preserving our existence here on Earth. We get real on the issues and talk misinformation (the WHY and the WHO) and then dig into what each of us can do to level up our information intake in a way that protects us all from mistruths. We get all of this alongside the very real hope that rises up when we dedicate ourselves to local acts of change. And if you know me, if you know this show, you know one thing: solutions are my love language. Let's go. WORKS:- founder and CEO of Mongabay—a non-profit Conservation & Environmental Science news platform… with over 20 years dedicated to raising awareness and appreciation for wild lands and wildlife- Editor-in-chief and CEO of Mongabay- founder, WildMadagascar.org, a site that highlights the spectacular cultural and biological richness of Madagascar and reports on environmental news for the Indian Ocean island nation- co-founder of Tropical Conservation Science (acquired by SAGE Publications in August 2016), an open-access academic journal that aims to provide opportunities for scientists in developing countries to publish their research- co-founder, Tropical Forest Network, a social network in the San Francisco Bay Area broadly interested in tropical forest conservation and ecology- information source for The Economist, BBC, CNN, CBS, NBC, Fox News, National Geographic, the Wall Street Journal, Fortune Magazine, Business Week, Bloomberg, the Discovery Channel, Animal Planet, Reuters, Voice of America, the Associated Press, the San Francisco Chronicle, the L.A. Times, the New York Times, the Washington Post, and Forbes, among many other media outlets Tools You'll Get from This Episode:- Tips to support your mental health in the face of climate despair - Critical thinking tools that help us understand how we've been misinformed and why- Insight into how corporations purposefully intend to mislead us for their capital gain- Awareness of the very real threats that journalists and advocates defending nature experience- Insights into what drives global change (and what local action to take)- Stories to inspire sustained action LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT: BETTER is recorded on the unceded and ancestral territory of the hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ and Sḵwx̱wú7mesh speaking peoples, the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations, and has been stewarded by them since time immemorial. BETTER with Mark Brand is produced by Pamela Rothenberg of I HEAR YOU STUDIOS and Adam Karch with Orbyt Media
Chef Joshna Maharaj is a chef and activist using social gastronomy to rebuild our food system. She fights for our right to healthy, scratch-made, delicious food anywhere institutional food is provided. This includes community food centers, hospitals, schools, prisons, etc. Her work has proven what's possible when we commit to revolutionizing our institutionalized food systems. In this conversation, you hear us belly laugh all the way through about the gross corruption she used to see and has helped influence to change, but we also get very serious in discussing the long road of change ahead. The energy switches to praise when we talk Earth and connectivity. Joshna says, "Resisting a true connection with good food is similar to resisting a true connection with your own humanity." Facts. We also dig into her first experience learning to cook in an ashram in India and how this showed her the ultimate truth: we eat the energy of the food, we consume the energy of the folks who made the food, grew the food, and served the food… and all of us are connected. Her book, “Take Back the Tray: Revolutionizing Food in Hospitals, Schools, and Other Institutions,” walks us through the revolutionary changes we need in our broken, institutionalized food systems so that we can begin to heal in holistic, well-rounded, people-first ways. WORKS:- Author, “Take Back the Tray: Revolutionizing Food in Hospitals, Schools, and Other Institutions”- Finalist, Basque Culinary World Prize, which highlights “chefs who show how gastronomy can be a motor for change”- Former Chef at The Stop Community Food Centre in Toronto. About The Stop: “For over 35 years, we've connected low-income Torontonians experiencing poverty to good food in spaces that are warm, dignified, and respectful.” Tools You'll Get from This Episode:- Reminders of where energy comes from and reminders of how to cultivate energy in a way that supports your being and the well-being of those around you- Massive encouragement to go off the “regular path” in life - Insights that will elevate your understanding of basic human rights and the food system- How waste is directly related to disrespect - Reminds of what IS and ISN'T food to support your connection to food as our essential lifeforce LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT: BETTER is recorded on the unceded and ancestral territory of the hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ and Sḵwx̱wú7mesh speaking peoples, the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations, and has been stewarded by them since time immemorial. BETTER with Mark Brand is produced by Pamela Rothenberg of I HEAR YOU STUDIOS and Adam Karch with Orbyt Media
Nirvan Mullick is a filmmaker, storyteller, and the big-hearted founder of Imagination Foundation, a nonprofit born out of the success of one of Nirvan's viral films, “Caine's Arcade.” (If you haven't seen it, it's the first link in the bio.) He also founded Interconnected—an LA-based creative agency that tells stories for impact. The Venn diagram for his trajectory in life is “I see you. I want you to see you. I want everybody to see you.” That part is simple. That part is soul. The hard part—the part that makes someone transcend creativity and embrace ACTION is the next part: execution. In this episode, he walks us through his personal philosophy for how to see ideas come to life, how to see them nurtured, and how to see them embraced. What makes this POV special is that it isn't a business trick. This isn't the entrepreneur's guide to wealth. This is CREATION and success uniting in its own way. Nirvan takes us way past any “how to,” that stalks us from the click-bait corners of the internet. This isn't that. This is anything but. This is the science of nurturing your ideas, carefully, considerately, honestly. And coming to a creative conclusion that births something beyond your imagination. Now, you might be asking, “How is that possible?” because we've been taught to think ideas are only as good as the person thinking them, but that's not the case. An idea is as good as your ability to let go. Nirvan says, “Ideas envision their own existence. Ideas have this inherent idea of what they want to become, and if you can tune in to them, they will tell you how to do [the idea].” Think about that. IDEAS have IDEAS about their own existence. That's the secret. (Not anymore, if you already pressed play, which you definitely should.) After the film made an impact, Nirvan doubled down. He built a movement (#CardboardChallenge), which then led to the nonprofit. That's how we got Imagitionation.org, which merged with TwoBitCircus.org and supports over 180 Chapters in 30 countries. The organization has received support and recognition from Lego, Ashoka, VANS (to name a few) for its work fostering the creative expression of kids worldwide. But, you know what's funny? When I ask Nirvan how he introduces himself, he says, “I am just a *guy trying to make things I care about for people I care about. And I care about everybody.” And if you're here, if you're listening to this show, isn't that you, too? *gender not restricted—you know. It's US. WORKS:- Creator, filmmaker, director of Caine's Arcade, a short film that became a viral phenomenon in 2012, receiving millions of views and changing the life of a creative 9-year-old kid- Founder, Interconnected—an LA based creative agency that helps tell stories for impact- Founder, Imagination.org- Filmmaker with works screened in festivals worldwide, from Cannes to Annecy- Director of the viral #EarthToParis climate campaign for the UN Foundation and GOOD, generating over 1.4 billion impressions leading up to the historic Paris Climate Agreement - Board Member of TwoBitCircus.org, which Imagination.org merged with in 2018- Recipient of the Dan Eldon Award for Creative Activism and the Big Ideas in Action award Tools You'll Get from This Episode:- Inspiration on where to find ideas and how to treat them- Tips to inspire your curiosity- Reminders of how impactful and necessary play is- Stories that awaken your imagination- Tools to seek out opportunities that support other people's dreams - Mental health support for the very common and very real social anxiety that plagues so many of us (myself included)- Confirmation that you're special, unique, and that there really is only one You, and there's a power to that LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT: BETTER is recorded on the unceded and ancestral territory of the hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ and Sḵwx̱wú7mesh speaking peoples, the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations, and has been stewarded by them since time immemorial. BETTER with Mark Brand is produced by Pamela Rothenberg of I HEAR YOU STUDIOS and Adam Karch with Orbyt Media
Chef Charles Michel is a gastronomer, profound educator, and innovator whose work has the power to change our understanding of food systems—globally and at home. His activism offers us the opportunity to create a very powerful, and very needed, revolution spanning food education, community activism, connection to planet, and much much more. He says, "Food is nature. Food is us. Food is the future." He also says, “What we eat is the most intimate connection we establish with Earth and the people around us.” Charles is a dear friend, for so many reasons, but the one I'll pin at the top is this: he knows how to bring me into my heart center on two issues I get extremely passionate about: activism for our stomachs and activism for our planet. In this conversation, you'll hear Charles share history that enlightens us on why our food customs come with a fork and knife, how the monarchy still influences cultures today, what we can do to reclaim our relationship and experience to food, and that's just the start. You'll also hear powerful stories from Charles' personal experiences ceremoniously sacrificing live rooster once yearly, and how this action connects your nervous system to our greater system, naturally. Trust, that part of the conversation pulls you in and takes you away from the present moment (in the best way). And then we go deeper into activism with what can we DO to address global food systems and waste food. This conversation will, undoubtedly, make your life BETTER by bringing you even closer to the one subject we can all agree we love to embrace: food. Dig in. No knives. Hands only (or, in this case, ears). Let's go. WORKS: - Classically trained Chef in Michelin-star restaurants - Chef-in-residence at the Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford - Community Builder and Educator of his digital classroom, which you can find on Patreon - In-person educator of masterclasses like “A Course in Regenerative Living,” which you will find on his website charlesxmichel.com - Competitor on The Final Table (Netflix) with the intention of activating on behalf of BETTER global food systems - TED speaker, "Delicious Evolution - Food and Human Civilization" - Former Consultant for the World Food Programme in Colombia Tools You'll Get From This Episode: - Wisdom that will empower you to envision new food paradigms in your own home and beyond - Historic knowledge and philosophy to make your relationship with food new again - Tools that encourage us to think critically about the cost of our current habits - Inspiration to reignite curiosity in ingredients - Insight to empower you to be a catalyst for inner, social, and environmental change - Reminders for supporting your own emotional regulation through food - Guidance for cultivating awareness of which foods make you feel your best - Resources to find community in this food revolution LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT: BETTER is recorded on the unceded and ancestral territory of the hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ and Sḵwx̱wú7mesh speaking peoples, the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations, and has been stewarded by them since time immemorial. BETTER with Mark Brand is produced by Pamela Rothenberg of I HEAR YOU STUDIOS and Adam Karch with Orbyt Media
Sarah Eagle Heart is an Emmy-Award Winning Social Justice Storyteller and—in all seriousness—a true Social Justice Warrior. She's the co-CEO of Return to the Heart Foundation, which, if we pause right there to experience the name alone, we feel the power, the empowerment, the justice, the heart, the truth.As the co-CEO of Return to the Heart Foundation, Sarah works tirelessly to enable and empower the very necessary visibility of Indigenous womxn. I've looked up to Sarah Eagle Heart and her work for many years now, making it a deep honor to have her here with us today.In our conversation, you'll hear her begin with a greeting that reverberates past your ears, beyond your mind, and into your body's knowing of where we come from as people—historically, ancestrally, culturally, environmentally, spiritually. Sarah's traditions carry a reverence for truth that, when heard with the ear of your nervous system, injects itself into the very bones of our being— easily and quickly. Making it so much more simple for us to disperse truth from lie—be it lies of capitalism, lies of racism, lies of a lack, and the list goes on as long as the trail of tears. Longer, even. Returning to truth is sacred work. Amplifying that truth, those stories, those peoples, so that we can return to a real care for our planet, our community, ourselves….. THAT is the sacred work we'll hear about today from Sarah Eagle Heart. This is a very special episode. And it's an honor to have you listening with us today. WORKS: - Emmy-Award Winning producer of Crow: the Legend, inspired by the Native American legend - co-CEO of Return to the Heart Foundation - Co-author of “Warrior Princesses Strike Back: How Lakota Twins Fight Oppression and Heal through Connectedness,” written with her identical twin sister and psychotherapist, Emma Eagle Heart–White - Co-producer, “Lakota Nation vs. the United States,” a feature-length documentary chronicling the Lakota People's present-day quest to reclaim the sacred land called Black Hills - former, CEO of Native Americans in Philanthropy, a national nonprofit that focuses on investment in Native American communities - Board Member, Women's March - Board Member, National Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition - Board Member, We Stand United Tools You'll Get from This Episode: - Tools to address the root causes of racism - The importance of acknowledging Indigenous history and how honoring this history leads to the changes we need - Wisdom behind the importance of acknowledging the land you live on - How to transfer TALK into ACTION - Steps to decolonize your life and decolonize your work - Understandings that enable us to lean into conflicting history, become comfortable sitting in discomfort, fear, and truth to enable safety for people who have had to live without safety for centuries LAND ACKNOWLEDGMENT: BETTER is recorded on the unceded and ancestral territory of the hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ and Sḵwx̱wú7mesh speaking peoples, the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations, and has been stewarded by them since time immemorial. BETTER with Mark Brand is produced by Pamela Rothenberg of I HEAR YOU STUDIOS and Adam Karch with Orbyt Media
“To navigate complexity, you need people who not only believe in the same change you do, but bring experience so deep and unique, it fast forwards your ability to see clearly,” I wrote this note about my brother, Little Shawn, after finding an intrinsic connection within myself that equally matches who he walks with inside himself. That deeper relationship we carry within our being creates room for our witnessing and connection with those who see (and KNOW) what we're really about. Seeing yourself is that unique gift from the universe saying, “You're right where you need to be. Don't move. But make MOVES.” That's what Shawn Pen, aka BEHIND THE SMOKE, is doing right now. He's already written the documentary of his life, the book, the words. Now he's moving it to screen (documentary, that is) for us to see what's really “behind the smoke.” If you know, you know. If you don't, this episode will open windows into the rap scene in a way you'd only dream possible. Remember: hip hop and rap is the spine of culture. It's the body. It's the blood, And it influences everything around us. It influences everything I care about and everyone I care about. Peep the list (below) of Shawn's WORKS, history, and the tools you'll get from listening to this one-of-a-kind episode from a one-of-a-kind person. WORKS: I could list it. But it's better I don't. Let's start here: On Wikipedia, it says “Tyrone Shawn Wilkins, (born December 21, 1969) better known as Little Shawn and Shawn Pen, is an American hip hop artist, rapper, songwriter and producer from East Flatbush, Brooklyn." Then it says, "Little Shawn released the single "Dom Perignon" (Uptown Records) featuring fellow Brooklyn rapper The Notorious B.I.G. on 20 July 1995. The music video also featured Busta Rhymes, another rapper from Brooklyn. It peaked at #5 on the Bubbling Under Hot 100 as well as #87 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles and #23 on the Hot Rap Tracks charts. The song was featured on the soundtrack to the Fox TV crime drama New York Undercover." It's rumored that Tupac Shakur was on his way to record a verse for Shawn when he was robbed and shot 5 times in 1994. We get into this. And much more. (See the list of TOOLS below) And make sure to follow @behindthesmoke to stay plugged into WHERE HE'S GOING. Not just where he's been. Tools You'll Get from This Episode: - Tools to stay clear-headed when the world wants you foggy - Unmatched tips for how to stay truly dedicated to your truth and knowing of self - Tips that remind you how to present yourself in a way that honors your integrity - Reminders that empower you to ensure your influence isn't overtaken by outside influences - Helpful guidance to uplift your image when others see you in a way that differs from your own knowing of who you are - Inspiration for cultivating your clarity and sticking to it
Dr. Sylvia Earle is a world-renowned oceanographer, marine biologist, and National Geographic Explorer in Residence affectionately known by her fellow scientists, and peers alike, as “Her Deepness.” She has logged more than 7,000 hours underwater. What struck me most when I first met Sylvia was her ability to deeply touch my spirit when we talked about the oceans. In this episode, you'll hear us talk about “our power to change the nature of nature,” as Sylvia says, “through our options.” We talk about the pace at which the planet is warming, our impact on the oceans, and how we can govern ourselves better to ensure they (and we) have more longevity to make our survival and prosperity possible. WORKS - founder, Mission Blue, an organization dedicated to protecting the ocean from threats such as climate change, pollution, habitat destruction, invasive species, and the dramatic decrease in ocean fish stocks - founder, Sylvia Earle Alliance -author, National Geographic Ocean: A Global Odyssey - author, The World is Blue - author, Sea Change - author, Blue Hope: Exploring and Caring for Earth's Magnificent Ocean TOOLS - Knowledge that equips us to understand how we affect the ocean and how the ocean affects us - Historic and scientific evidence of our planet's network of life—information that can empower us to look at Earth as a system and see what needs protecting and how - Appreciation for the planet to inspire sustainable change - How to apply for a Hope Spot and where - What we can do in our local communities to restore health to the oceans
"We only have one home to live in: our body," says today's guest, Jovanka Ciares who carries over a decade of personal wisdom as an integrative herbalist and nutrition expert with the life mission of "helping people reclaim natural states of wellness through practices of our lineage, our ancestry, and our birthright." I instantly graviated to her work because it highlights how we can take our power back and heal ourselves. She writes about this in her book, "Reclaiming Wellness: Ancient Wisdom for Your Healthy, Happy, and Beautiful Life." And has so much wisdom to offer us today as the founder of Solana Wellness and creator of the #ReclaimingWellness, which carries the initiative of educating BIPOC communities about the power of herbal medicine and plant-based living. In this conversation, we go DEEP and get to hear her share powerful practices to build new habits, change our taste buds, and experience a new conversation between our mind and body. We explore how her upbringing in Puerto Rico and connection to African philosophies brought her to discover a level of true wellness & connectivity we all deeply crave and deserve access to. WORKS - author, Reclaiming Wellness: Ancient Wisdom for Your Healthy, Happy, and Beautiful Life - founder, Solana Wellness TOOLS - Thought processes to support systems change in privileged spaces - Practices to decolonize your mind - African philosophies for reconciliation & healing - How music serves as a gift and doorway into healing - Advice for those moments when you feel the call to do more and give back - Wisdom for honoring the only home we have to live in: our body - "Lazy-proof" self-love, self-care practices to create nutritional routines that give you joy and uplift your lifestyle - Why we're depleted, and tools to reclaim time and space - Practices that help us replenish our needs rather than self-abandon - Permission to honor your emotions and cry - Powerful practices to build new habits, change your taste buds, and experience a new conversation between your mind and body - Tips to turn your desire to see the world be a BETTER place into ACTION
Today, I have the distinct pleasure and honor of hosting GRAMMY award-winning artist, Julian Alexander whose work has been a cornerstone of hip hop and rap for three decades. He's the creator behind iconic logos & album artwork that you undoubtedly recognize (artists including Jennifer Lopez, 50 Cent, Eminem, Destiny's Child, the iconic Mile Davis, and more). He's the founder of Slang Inc., a Brooklyn-based studio whose clients include the world's top agencies & brands. And also serves on the board of my charity, A Better Life Foundation. We go way beyond resumé in this conversation and dig deep into the intricately thoughtful layers of his art. I ask him about the work he creates to survive—not for money, for meaning. You'll hear him share about the Supremacy Project, a profound art instillation brought to life during 2020's historical Black Lives Matter protests. Julian collaborated with our friend Steven Irby (aka Steve Sweatpants) and the powerful Khadijat Oseni. “I had so much to say and so few options,” he says when speaking to the anger of the moment. “I had to do this for my sanity and survival.” Join us as we talk about art as a force for political change, dialogue, and expression on all sides. And how expression yields empowerment, especially in critical times, like the ones we're in today. WORKS: - Supremacy Project, description: “Addressing the systematic oppression and violence our communities are fighting to end through art. #whoprotectsmefromyou” - Fit The Description—”a series of conversations between Black male officers and civillians.” - founder, Slang Inc. - GRAMMY® Award for The Complete Jack Johnson Sessions by Miles Davis for Best Boxed or Special Edition Package - previously, Design Director for Sony Music - previously, Executive Creative Director of Guild, where Julian led creative teams on experiential projects for Nike, Target, and Stella Artois - TEDx Talk “Good Design Makes People Feel Heard, a Part of Something” Tools You'll Get from this Episode: - Inspiration to expose injustice through art - A thoughtful viewpoint on what art's purpose is in the world - Permission to practice creative expression as activism - Confirmation & affirmation when it comes to allowing yourself to transmute anger into art - Wisdom and advice on how to keep some of life private - Reflections on the difference between solitude & loneliness - Tools to witness your own good fortune - Stories that showcase how to create work that matters to a mission - A sense of humility with a dose of permission to allow your art to be its own entity in the world - Insight into how to enable meaningful dialogue through your creations BETTER with Mark Brand is produced by Pamela Rothenberg of I HEAR YOU STUDIOS and Adam Karch with Orbyt Media
Chef Suzanne Barr is a social justice advocate & food advocate who walks the talk in equitable pay, food security, social justice for People of Color and the LGBTQIA+ community. She is a one of North America's most respected chefs, a dear friend of mine, the author of My Ackee Tree: A Chef's Memoir of Finding Home in the Kitchen, and she previously owned of the popular restaurant Saturday Dinette, Head Chef/Owner at True True Diner, and was the inaugural chef-in-residence at the Gladstone Hotel. Today, you'll hear powerful stories about setting intention, knowing your path, letting go to let more in, and much much more. WORKS: - Author of, “My Ackee Tree: A Chef's Memoir of Finding Home in the Kitchen” - Head Chef/Owner at True True Diner - Owner, Saturday Dinette - Former inaugural chef-in-residence at the Gladstone Hotel - Contributor, Suzanne contributed her jerk chicken ramen recipe to “Black Food”—a collection of stories, art and recipes across the African Diaspora - suzannebarrfood.com Tools You'll Get from this Episode: - Awarenesses that remind us how powerful love is and how to put it in practice to heal and support the needs of communities - How to find flow state in something you care for personally & professionally - Tools to enhance your love for and connection to food - Inspiration on how to change the hierarchy is a workplace - Stories that remind us of the importance of rest - Inspiration to create food and recipes as resistance
Almost every man I know has benefited from a woman's right to choose. And in this time, we need them to be louder than ever. Control is not an option. Which is why I'm bringing Kathryn “Kitty” Kolbert on to talk about the data, action and tools that we need to equip ourselves with to support women's reproductive rights. What makes Kathryn's voice so powerful is manyfold, but one in particular is her legacy as the attorney who co-founded the Center for Reproductive Rights and argued Planned Parenthood v. Casey, the historic 1992 Supreme Court case that saved Roe v. Wade. She's also the co-author of “Controlling Women: What We Must Do Now to Save Reproductive Freedom,” which I binged the day before our interview and is mandatory regardless of your pronouns. In this episode, you'll gain access to critical information on Roe v. Wade, abortion rights, what we can do collectively, and what's next, from the wisdom of someone who has literally been at the tip of the spear for 30 years and is recognized as one of the "100 Most Influential Lawyers in America” WORKS: - Co-founder of the Center for Reproductive Rights - Co-author of “Controlling Women: What We Must Do Now to Save Reproductive Freedom” - Founder of the Athena Center for Leadership at Barnard College, which is dedicated to the advancement of women's leadership - Co-Founder of The Athena Film Festival, which celebrates extraordinary films from across the globe that tell the stories of fierce and fearless women leaders. - Creator and executive producer of NPR's “Justice Talking,” an award-winning radio program Tools You'll Get from This Episode: - Directions on how to properly support women's rights with action - Data that helps us better understand why the system is the way it is and who's most harmed along the way - Historic accounts that help equip you with the education necessary to create progress - Big questions to ask loved ones and strangers alike in exploring your individual role in empowering leaders who support human rights BETTER with Mark Brand is produced by Pamela Rothenberg of I HEAR YOU STUDIOS and Adam Karch with Orbyt Media
Tim Daly is an award-winning actor best known for his roles in MADAM SECRETARY, WINGS, PRIVATE PRACTICE, and THE SOPRANOS. He's also the voice of Superman for the animated series. But, beyond a 40-year acting career, Tim is a dear friend and advocate in some of the most critical spaces. He's president of The Creative Coalition, a nonprofit advocacy group that focuses on funding for the arts and shaping policy in a way that supports our creativity as humans. He's also on the board of Inside Out Writers, a non-profit organization dedicated to reducing juvenile recidivism. In this important conversation about art and politics, he shares with us how creativity can be used as a catalyst for personal transformation, so much so, that it actually saves people from re-entering the prison system by finding their own voice, power, and inner-artist. We also talk about unlocking memories that leads to creating more space for presence and learning how to properly honor the part of you that is creative. One of the many great lessons here is that even if you think you're not, you are. We are. And your individual creativity can unlock opportunities for a BETTER world. WORKS: - Madam Secretary - Wings - Private Practice - The Sopranos - Superman, The Animated Series - The Creative Coalition, (President) - Inside Out Writers, (Board Member) - Recipient of Theater World, Golden Satellite, GLAAD, Gracie, and Peabody Awards, and also has been nominated for Emmy and SAG awards Tools You'll Get from This Episode: - Insightful reflections on discovering your inner artist - Guidance on how to take the first step toward a cause you care about - Advice and wisdom on sobriety - Uplifting messages of the heart to inspire your greatest abilities in life BETTER with Mark Brand is produced by Pamela Rothenberg of I HEAR YOU STUDIOS and Adam Karch with Orbyt Media
Sara Roversi is transforming the future of food and doing it in the most powerful spaces on the planet. She is my dear friend and a powerhouse accomplice in developing global food systems. Her focus directly addresses climate change, planetary health, and global poverty, but amongst the heaviness, she brings so much light, wisdom and joy. Among her many influential roles, she is the founder and President of the Future Food Institute, an organization dedicated to facing the urgent challenge of protecting our planet while feeding humans in a way that is sustainable, equitable, and nourishing. In this episode, she brings her love of Earth, people and food to brighten our vision of what's truly possible for our planet's health and shows us how certain mindset changes can empower Us to create a sustainable world together. The beauty of this episode is indescribable, but I'll give you one off the top: you'll see and FEEL that you're never “just one person,” you are much more than that—connected, capable and creative. And together, we can do big things. WORKS: - Future Food Institute, Founder & President - Singularity University, Faculty Member - B20, Member of the Action Council - Food for Climate League, Partner & Board Member - You Can Group, Founder - Food Innovation Program, Executive Director - CAAB - The Agri Food Center of Bologna, Board Member - Bibimbap, Co-Founder - Well Done Burger, Co-Founder Tools You'll Get from This Episode - Powerful mindset changes that will help you be a BETTER ally for the planet - Empowering ideas to help inspire actionable change within your local community - Information about our planet that will help us unify in saving her BETTER with Mark Brand is produced by Pamela Rothenberg of I HEAR YOU STUDIOS and Adam Karch with Orbyt Media
Having interviewed every music legend known from Prince to Public Enemy, George Stroumboulopoulos is one of the most trusted and respected journalists—period. He has over three decades of music knowledge and an ability to help us see the revolutionary healing power of music. He's won awards for Best Talk Series, Best Show Host, Best Screen Award, and more, and uses his platform to create change and stand up for people and causes that deeply matter, including hunger, mental health, decriminalizing drugs and keeping people safe alongsideThe United Nations World Food Program, Canadian Drug Policy Coalition, Canadian Music Therapy Fund, and Artists for Peace and Justice. George and I go deep on music and explore how healing and unifying it can be when the world or life can feel so lonely, hope is found in the lyrics of your favorite song. Works: - STROMBO on Apple Music Hits Tools: - How to find your community through music - Reframes for seeing society in a light that opens you up to advocacy - Advice for how to redirect your energy away from energies that harm and toward energies that serve - Questions that lead to new channels of open-mindedness
Mark Groves is a massively insightful human dedicated to helping us understand human connection. He shows up in the world as a teacher and translator of some of our most challenging and beautiful experiences in life so we can better understand the pathways to true love within ourselves and within relationship. In this conversation, we talk about discovering and creating liberating love, and also offer some powerfully conscious tools to help you create the love you wish to experience most deeply in life. WORKS: - Mark Groves Podcast - @createthelove on Instagram - Create The Love Cards Tools You'll Get From This Episode: - Frameworks and questions to ask yourself when considering how to consciously be in love and truth - Permission to explore your relationships, what they need, and what you need with absolute honesty & integrity - Insight on how to hold joy and grief at the same time alongside tools to honor “the beauty of the departure” - Liberating ways to let divorce be a sign of self-love - Reminders of your humanness and how worthy of love you naturally are BETTER with Mark Brand is produced by Pamela Rothenberg of I HEAR YOU STUDIOS and Adam Karch with Orbyt Media
Rha Goddess is an Entrepreneurial Soul Coach, the Founder & CEO of Move The Crowd, a Hip-hop artist, known for coining the term “floetry,” and the author of The Calling. In her TED talk, she says, “This is a story of a young girl's journey to rock the mic, save the hood, and heal the planet. This is my journey from starving artist to sustainable revolution. This is the story of how I healed my relationship with capitalism, and empowered a new generation of entrepreneurs.” In this conversation, we hear Rha's raw wisdom highlighting the beauty of what we can be if we invest in hope. We hear about “the medicine of slowing down and finding your people.” And we dig into the current systems of power and what meaningful change looks like, and how you can find your way into creating it with us. TRIGGER WARNING: This episode discusses suicide and suicidal ideation, and some people might find it disturbing. If you or someone you know is struggling with suicidal thoughts, please, contact your physician, go to your local ER, or call the suicide prevention hotline in your country. For the United States, the numbers are as follows: Call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800-273-TALK (8255), or message the Crisis Text Line at 741741. Both programs provide free, confidential support 24/7. For Canada, the numbers are as follows: Call the Canada Suicie Prevention Service 1.833.456.4566, available 24/7/365 or Text the Crisis Text Line at 45645, available 4pm - midnight WORKS: - Coaching & Soul Work: www.movethecrowd.me - Book: “The Calling: 3 Fundamental Shifts to Stay True, Get Paid, and Do Good” - TED talk “Born To Move THe Crowd” - TED talk “ 4 Ways to Redefine Power at Work to Include Women of Color” Tools You'll Get From this Episode: - Guidance to discover your true calling - A sense of affirmation that can guide you into your intuition - Wisdom that can guide you through the emotional ebbs and flows of being in movements - Reminders to rest and find your people
Jodi-Ann Burey works at the intersections of race, culture, and health equity. She co-authored Harvard Business review's top 100 most-read articles in history: “Stop Telling Women They Have Imposter Syndrome,” and her TED talk, “The Myth of Bringing Your Full Authentic Self to Work” embodies her disruption of traditional narratives about racism at work. Jodi-Ann holds a Masters in Public Health from the University of Michigan. She prides herself on being a cool auntie, a twist-out queen, health advocate, adventurer and reluctant dog owner. In this conversation, you'll gain tools to lessen imposter syndrome, sympathize with your own mental health, as well as gain toos to increase workforce accountability, while also laughing with us along theway. TRIGGER WARNING: This episode discusses discusses suicide and suicidal ideation, and some people might find it disturbing. If you or someone you know is struggling with suicidal thoughts, please, contact your physician, go to your local ER, or call the suicide prevention hotline in your country. For the United States, the numbers are as follows: Call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800-273-TALK (8255), or message the Crisis Text Line at 741741. Both programs provide free, confidential support 24/7. For Cananda, the numbers are as follows: Call the Canada Suicie Prevention Service 1.833.456.4566, available 24/7/365 or Text the Crisis Text Line at 45645, available 4pm - midnight WORKS: - Stop Telling Women They Have Imposter Syndrome - TED talk “The Myth of Bringing Your Full Authentic Self to Work” - Black Cancer Tools You'll Get From this Episode: - Inspiration from the beloved Bell Hooks (Rest in Power) - Insights that will open you up to the biases existing throughout our work-lives and practical tools to help you shift the burden off folks in need of rest and ON to powers upholding injustices - Reminders of how to integrate play into your life for a fuller expression of your truth - Helpful tips that can relieve the guilt that often comes with depression BETTER with Mark Brand is produced by Pamela Rothenberg of I HEAR YOU STUDIOS and Adam Karch with Orbyt Media
The world knows today's guest from smash songs like “I Would Die For You” and “Insensitive.” She's a multi-platinum, award-winning singer-songwriter, an actor starring in CTV'S hit show, “JANN,” an author, dedicated animal rights activist, and beloved soul of Canada. Beyond growing up with her music, I also know today's guest from her sincere support of my work with A Better Life Foundation, where we feed over 1,200 people a day in need of nutrition and the simple love and care that comes from a scratch-made meal. Today, Jann Arden helps us see how she built a BETTER life for herself and so many others. We get to go into her safe space, a place she created growing up in a chaotic childhood home with alcoholism, and a desire to heal through music. You'll also hear stories about coping with the loss of our pets, learning to ask for help when we need it, and so much more. WORKS: - Time for Mercy (1993) - Living Under June (1994) - Happy? (1997) - Blood Red Cherry (2000) - Love Is the Only Soldier (2003) - Jann Arden (2005) - Uncover Me (2007) - Free (2009) - Uncover Me 2 (2011) - Everything Almost (2014) - A Jann Arden Christmas (2015) - These Are the Days (2018) - Descendant (2022) Tools You'll Get from This Episode - Learning to ask for help - Accepting your true feelings, and honoring them as they are uniquely yours - Tools for dealing with loneliness - Insight on the gift of getting older Resources: https://www.jannarden.com/ https://www.instagram.com/jannarden/ https://twitter.com/jannarden BETTER with Mark Brand is produced by Pamela Rothenberg of I HEAR YOU STUDIOS and Adam Karch with Orbyt Media
Dr. Gabor Maté is an internationally renowned speaker known for his expertise on addiction, trauma, and the connection between mind and body. His wisdom comes from decades of lived experience working with homeless patients struggling with drug addiction and severe mental health. With bestsellers like “In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts” and “When The Body Says No: Understanding the Stress-Disease Connection," his work is revolutionizing our understanding of self, healing, and, simultaneously, transforming Our human capacity for compassion. WORKS: - "In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts: Close Encounters with Addiction” - “When The Body Says No: Understanding the Stress-Disease Connection" - "The Wisdom of Trauma" Tools You'll Get from This Episode: - Compassion inquiry - Empathy & understandings for deeper human connection - Indigenous wisdom from the Lakota people to help you honour your pain & and each other's pain - Insight into how to turn your passion into support for a cause you care about Resources: https://drgabormate.com/ https://compassionateinquiry.com/ Dr. Gabor Maté TED talk https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=66cYcSak6nE BETTER with Mark Brand is produced by Pamela Rothenberg of I HEAR YOU STUDIOS and Adam Karch with Orbyt Media
Subscribe now! Available on March 13th 2022. Follow Mark Brand on Instagram: @mark.brand