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We're excited to welcome Diana Adams and Brett Chamberlin back to the show to discuss advocacy, relationship rights, and more. Diana Adams (they/them) is an international legal leader in advocacy for queer family forms beyond the romantic dyad. Diana is the Executive Director of Chosen Family Law Center, a nonprofit advocating for diverse family structures, & runs a boutique law firm providing mediation services nationwide for those hoping to negotiate intentional or polyamorous families. Diana's TED talk ‘Why US Laws Must Expand Beyond the Nuclear Family' explains their expansive vision of family. Find them on all socials @DianaAdamsEsq. Brett Chamberlin (he/him) is a social impact organizer with over a decade of leadership experience building a more just and joyous future. He is the founder and Executive Director of OPEN, the Organization for Polyamory and Ethical Non-monogamy. Prior to launching OPEN, Brett worked in the environmental movement as the Director of Community Engagement at The Story of Stuff Project and the co-founder of the Post Landfill Action Network. Check out the legislative toolkit from OPEN for ways to help further local legislation in your area: harvard.turtl.co/story/polyamory-legislative-toolkit. Download the 5 calls app to contact your representatives and hold them accountable: https://5calls.org/. Join our amazing community of listeners at multiamory.supercast.com. We offer sliding scale subscriptions so everyone can also get access to ad-free episodes, group video discussions, and our amazing Discord community. Multiamory was created by Dedeker Winston, Jase Lindgren, and Emily Matlack. Our theme music is Forms I Know I Did by Josh and Anand. Follow us on Instagram @Multiamory_Podcast and visit our website Multiamory.com. We are a proud member of the Pleasure Podcasts network. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
John interviews the founding director of Paid Leave for All, Dawn Huckelbridge on paid family leave and what it means to America and the world. Then he interviews Sam Pearse from The Story of Stuff on corporate America's single use plastic addiction. Prior to joining the Story of Stuff Project, Sam spent a decade campaigning on nuclear disarmament, climate change and human rights issues in a range of international contexts. Sam is passionate about the intersection of digital strategy and people-power to a secure a more equitable and sustainable future. Sam can be reached at sam [at] storyofstuff [dot] org.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Today we're excited to be joined by Brett Chamberlin from OPEN! Brett (he/him) is a social impact organizer with over a decade of leadership experience building a more just and joyous future. He is the founder and Executive Director of OPEN, the Organization for Polyamory and Ethical Non-monogamy. Prior to launching OPEN, Brett worked in the environmental movement as the Director of Community Engagement at The Story of Stuff Project and the co-founder of the Post Landfill Action Network. He lives in the California Bay Area.We'll be chatting with Brett about progress for non-monogamous folks over the past few years, from securing rights to overall awareness of non-monogamy as a relationship style. If this show is helpful to you, consider joining our amazing community of like-minded listeners at patreon.com/Multiamory. You can also get access to ad-free episodes, group video discussions, bonus episodes, and more! This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp. Give online therapy a try at betterhelp.com/multi and get 10% off your first month.Midwest Love Fest is a brand new all day conference about relationships, identity, community, and non-monogamy coming August 17th to Indianapolis, Indiana.Get 10% off tickets with promo code MULTIAMORY at swlovefest.com/midwestGet access to “What's Your Jealousy Trying To Tell You?” a workshop by the author of Polysecure, Jessica Fern. Head to heyplura.com/multiamory and enter the invite code “Multiamory” during onboarding Multiamory was created by Dedeker Winston, Jase Lindgren, and Emily Matlack.Our theme music is Forms I Know I Did by Josh and Anand.Follow us on Instagram @Multiamory_Podcast and visit our website Multiamory.com. We are a proud member of the Pleasure Podcasts network. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this episode, Emma and Mary sit down to talk to Smruti Aravind, who oversees fundraising, donor communications, and grants at the Story of Stuff Project. Smruti brings over a decade of experience in the nonprofit sector, with an emphasis on digital storytelling and network-building to drive systemic change. Prior to joining the Story of Stuff, she led communications at Faith in Action East Bay, a federation of the largest faith-based organizing network in the U.S. Smruti shares about her work and her perspective on creating meaningful social impact, as well as the campaign work that Story of Stuff is doing in order to create policy change. She introduces the Bottle Bill project as well as the Reuse Revolution, and why burning plastic is not the solution that you may believe it to be. Smruti also touches on what other countries are doing to deal with their waste, the impact on The Global South, and how we can all flex our citizen muscles and advocate for plastic reduction laws to be codified. Topics Discussed Smruti's Work in the Nonprofit Sector How the Story of Stuff Came to Be Using the Power of Media to Influence Policy Change Content Creation & Advocacy The Story of Microbeads & The Story of Plastic Founder Annie Leonard's Inspiration for the Documentary Increasing BIPOC Voices in the Search of a Solution Systems Thinking for the General Public The Break Free From Plastic Movement Treaty How Millennials and Gender Z Approach Environmental Activism Shifting From Individual Responsibility to Systemic Change Real Solutions vs. False Solutions The Great Pacific Plastic Patch Why Burning Plastic & Buying Plastic Clothes Doesn't Work Stopping the Tap with Campaign Work: The Bottle Bill & The Reuse Revolution What Other Countries Are Doing The Impact of Waste on the Global South Flexing Our Citizen Muscles What Corporations are Able to Change Moving to Florida & the Way that Different States Handle Plastic Waste Cloth Diapers Slow Living in a Big City The Impact of the Individual Episode Resources: Watch The Story of Stuff Documentary The California Plastic Incinerator Connect with Smruti Aravind: Website: https://www.storyofstuff.org/blog/people/smruti-aravind/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/storyofstuffproject Instagram: @storyofstuff https://instagram.com/storyofstuff/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/storyofstuff Links: https://linktr.ee/storyofstuff ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
In this episode, Emma and Mary sit down to talk to Smruti Aravind, who oversees fundraising, donor communications, and grants at the Story of Stuff Project. Smruti brings over a decade of experience in the nonprofit sector, with an emphasis on digital storytelling and network-building to drive systemic change. Prior to joining the Story of Stuff, she led communications at Faith in Action East Bay, a federation of the largest faith-based organizing network in the U.S. Smruti shares about her work and her perspective on creating meaningful social impact, as well as the campaign work that Story of Stuff is doing in order to create policy change. She introduces the Bottle Bill project as well as the Reuse Revolution, and why burning plastic is not the solution that you may believe it to be. Smruti also touches on what other countries are doing to deal with their waste, the impact on The Global South, and how we can all flex our citizen muscles and advocate for plastic reduction laws to be codified. Topics Discussed •Smruti's Work in the Nonprofit Sector •How the Story of Stuff Came to Be •Using the Power of Media to Influence Policy Change •Content Creation & Advocacy •The Story of Microbeads & The Story of Plastic •Founder Annie Leonard's Inspiration for the Documentary •Increasing BIPOC Voices in the Search of a Solution •Systems Thinking for the General Public •The Break Free From Plastic Movement Treaty •How Millennials and Gender Z Approach Environmental Activism •Shifting From Individual Responsibility to Systemic Change •Real Solutions vs. False Solutions •The Great Pacific Plastic Patch •Why Burning Plastic & Buying Plastic Clothes Doesn't Work •Stopping the Tap with Campaign Work: The Bottle Bill & The Reuse Revolution •What Other Countries Are Doing •The Impact of Waste on the Global South •Flexing Our Citizen Muscles •What Corporations are Able to Change •Moving to Florida & the Way that Different States Handle Plastic Waste •Cloth Diapers •Slow Living in a Big City •The Impact of the Individual Episode Resources: •Watch The Story of Stuff Documentary •The California Plastic Incinerator Connect with Smruti Aravind: •Website: https://www.storyofstuff.org/blog/people/smruti-aravind/ •YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/storyofstuffproject •Instagram: @storyofstuff https://instagram.com/storyofstuff/ •Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/storyofstuff •Links: https://linktr.ee/storyofstuff ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
In questo episodio di Educare con Calma parliamo di un argomento che mi sta molto a cuore: la sostenibilità. E questa volta ci concentriamo soprattutto sulla moda sostenibile con l'aiuto della mia ospite Camilla Mendini, conosciuta anche come Carotilla. Ho adorato chiacchierare con lei e spero che l'episodio piaccia anche a voi.
Plastic Plague Series: PART 7 (of 7) THE FUTURE: how Solutions, Policy, & Resistance around plastic can elevate, inspire, and drive change at a systems-level approach. Our guests, Matt Prindiville of Upstream Solutions, Sam Pearse of Story of Stuff, and Emily Parker of Heal the Bay, speak with our host, Jessica Aldridge of Adventures in Waste. There is no one silver-bullet solution or intervention point. The story of plastic we knew from the 1970s and 80s is a different story than what we know today. The finger of responsibility no longer points only at the consumer, but we all have the opportunity to play our role when it comes to creating and demanding the future we want to see. We are up against a take and make economy [that not only ends up disposing of packaging, but also energy, water, resources, and PEOPLE!] where packaging is not the only disposable, but so is energy, water, resources, and PEOPLE! How do we create the change and connect the dots for everyone who uses, disposes of, or is in some way effected by plastic. Matt Prindiville, Imagineer & CEO of Upstream [https://www.upstreamsolutions.org/], is a recognized thought leader within the plastic pollution community and advises the United Nations Environment Program on their plastic pollution strategies. He is one of the founders of the global Break Free from Plastic Movement and the founder of the Cradle2 Coalition and Take It Make It Campaign. Sam Pearse, Lead Campaigner of The Story of Stuff Project [https://www.storyofplastic.org/], is working at the intersection of storytelling, plastics policy, and corporate campaigning. He comes from a background of campaigning on environmental, human rights, and security issues. Emily Parker, Coastal and Marine Scientist for Heal the Bay [https://healthebay.org/], works to protect our coastal and marine resources. Her work focuses on plastic pollution, marine protected areas, sustainable fisheries management, and climate change. Hosted by Jessica Aldridge from SoCal 350 and Adventures in Waste [adventuresinwaste.com/] Engineer: Blake Lampkin Executive Producer: Jack Eidt Producer: Georgia Tunioli Show Created by Mark and JP Morris Music: Javier Kadry Episode 66 Photo Credit:
Paralleling the steps to start a fire as outlined in the book 'Stuff Guys Need to Know' by Author John Hunt. Of course it has my spin to 'Stuff Project Managers Need to Know'.
Paralleling the steps to start a fire as outlined in the book 'Stuff Guys Need to Know' by Author John Hunt. Of course it has my spin to 'Stuff Project Managers Need to Know'.
Paralleling the steps to start a fire as outlined in the book 'Stuff Guys Need to Know', with a spin to 'Stuff Project Managers Need to Know'.
Following the 8 steps used to build a fire from John F. Hunt's book "Stuff Guys Need to Know: How to Do Just About Everything" as parallels to stuff Project Managers need to know throughout the project's lifecycle. *Book available on Amazon*
Following the 8 steps used to build a fire from John F. Hunt's book "Stuff Guys Need to Know: How to Do Just About Everything" as parallels to stuff Project Managers need to know throughout the project's lifecycle. *Book available on Amazon*
Following the 8 steps used to build a fire from John F. Hunt's book "Stuff Guys Need to Know: How to Do Just About Everything" as parallels to stuff Project Managers need to know throughout the project's lifecycle. *Book available on Amazon*
Following the 8 steps used to build a fire from John F. Hunt's book "Stuff Guys Need to Know: How to Do Just About Everything" as parallels to stuff Project Managers need to know throughout the project's lifecycle. *Book available on Amazon*
Let's talk Stuff! We have so much of it, and we're taught that we need so much more... The girls discuss The Story of Stuff Project as well as their own experiences with the growing Stuff issue. Check them out on Instagram @basicallybeingbetter and Twitter @beingbetterpod .
In this episode, we get real with Stiv Wilson, an unparalleled advocate currently serving as Campaigns Director for the Story of Stuff Project, director of The Story of Plastic, and as a founding member of the Break Free From Plastic global steering committee. Stiv shares about unique vantage point on the evolution of plastic movement strategy - from some big early wins like banning microbeads in the US to the recent Global Brand Audit campaign, plus from a focus on ocean impacts to a global strategy that tackles the issue from a human rights perspective across the entire supply chain. We also get a sneak peek into the making and key messages of the Story of Plastic, a visually powerful documentary coming out this fall that tells the story of the true scope and scale of the plastic pollution problem, as well as some emerging solutions across the globe. Listen now for a rich and geeky discussion about movement strategy and the incredible global effort happening through #breakfreefromplastic, the movement helping make throw-away so yesterday.
Join your podhostess and peer support human, Kathy Surline as we tackle some tough stuff this round. This episode is an honest discussion about the prevalence of suicide among young people, and their generational shift in the willingness to seek help. if you are in danger or in need of support, please reach out to seek the help you need. Then, have patience with yourself and with those who can help you move forward. All good things, fellow humans. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/WisdomWithin/support
Description: Happy Earth Day, 2018! For this special episode, Danny is joined by his brilliant wife, Kim Anderson for a conversation with Brett Chamberlin from the Story of Stuff Project. Founded in 2007 with Annie Leonard's film of the same title, which has received more than 50 million views, the Story of Stuff Project seeks to provide educational and organizational resources for combating the damaging effects that consumerism has caused the planet and the economy. Included in the discussion: the deep problems our consumerist mode of capitalism causes to our planet; how Nestle is able to put untold millions of gallons of water into its plastic bottles; what citizens can do to break these destructive cycles; and what role Christians and other people of faith can play in providing better stewardship of the planet. Links: Story of Stuff Project website Story of Stuff Video Videos about the Nestle water extraction Faith-based Program for Christian Teens
www.LetsTalkAboutTheWeather.org Mario Escobar is the Digital Media Producer for the Story of Stuff Project, a non-profit which utilizes the power of animated video and picture to raise awareness of the impact our take-make-waste economy has on the environment. As he manages the creation of short, educational videos - his position entails him to identify, create and share impactful stories that highlight problems and solutions relating to various environmental issues. Mario has spent more than 15 years producing, editing and directing projects in the field of social justice. Links and Mentions The Story of Stuff The Free Range Studio Privatized Water Awareness We Tap The Story of Stuff: Tell Nestle to Unbottle California! Episode 16: Kirsi Jansa: Pioneering Sustainability with Documentary Film The Story of Stuff Microban Monica Rosquillas on Instagram: Girl For A Clean World SumOfUs palm oil commercial SanDiego350 The Story of Stuff: The Growing Solutions Campaign Eco Artists Tips Guest Contact information Mario EscobarThe Story of StuffMario on FacebookThe Story of Stuff on TwitterThe Story of Stuff on FacebookThe Story of Stuff on InstagramThe Story of Stuff on YouTube Purchase the podcast’s namesake Eco Music album "Let’s Talk About The Weather" on iTunes or Bandcamp.
We have a problem with stuff. Brett Chamberlin from The Story of Stuff Project explains how we have developed a culture of over-consumption and how that culture is hurting our environment, the people working somewhere along the production line and our own well-being. Luckily, the Story of Stuff Project has plenty of good solutions to quitting the take-make-waste culture.
This podcast, recorded in January of 2013, turns the tables – or rather the microphone – on Annie as she's interviewed by Jearlyn Steele of WCCO-AM in Minneapolis. Given the recent shift in public discourse, Annie and Jearlyn talk about what must be done to combat climate change. Annie also reflects on the first five years of The Story of Stuff Project.
Guests Annie Leonard, Co-Director of the Story of Stuff Project, and Erik Assadourian, Senior Fellow at Worldwatch Institute and Co-Director of Worldwatch Institute's "State of the World 2013: Is Sustainability Still Possible?", speak with Diane Horn about what is needed to move from a consumer society to a more sustainable future.
We invite you to listen in on a conversation about how the art of animation and the power of story are helping grow the environmental movement by winning hearts and minds. Some activists are finding that cartooning and storytelling provide a particularly persuasive combo of entertainment and education to help popularize their messages. Discussing how they use media to captivate and motivate new audiences are the producer of Pacha's Pajamas, Aaron Ableman of Balance Edutainment, and Christina Samala, Director of Online Strategy & Media for The Story of Stuff Project. The post Terra Verde – September 16, 2011 appeared first on KPFA.
- This evening, we'll be looking into Tesla Technologies including primarily 'Project BlueBeam' and indeed if it is fact or fiction. Should be an interesting episode, please join us.