Category Archives: World

I don’t care what you think about climate change


For the past few months, I have spent the majority of my waking hours on Chasing Ice, an award-winning documentary about photographer James Balog’s quest to capture visual evidence of glaciers before they disappear. I got involved in the project after my friend Drew Levin told me I had to meet his friend Danny Goldhaber, who was in town for the week to shoot a short film. We got breakfast together, which turned into a brainstorming session, led me to meet Chasing Ice director Jeff Orlowski, and ultimately, has had a profound impact on my life. (I should note that Drew and I met sitting outside of Nacho’s office my freshman year. A big thanks to him for this one.)

I’ve always been interested in the way that society’s progress has influenced the planet we live on, and I am well-versed in the discussions that surround climate change. But I did not get involved with Chasing Ice because I want to talk to people about the way we are changing nature. I got involved because I fundamentally believe that many people, especially Americans, live in a perpetual state of reckless overconsumption, unaware of what they are doing to themselves and their environment. In short, I want to help people live better, and to do that, I need to start by helping them understand how they are living right now.

For those of you that know me, you’re familiar with my belief that people should live more intentionally and mindfully, and that the biggest thing schools fail to teach people is how to reflect. Schools teach us to become passive consumers of information and society teaches us to show off our wealth through things. But it doesn’t have to be that way, and in fact, if it continues that way, we won’t be here much longer.

It has been a privilege and a blessing to be a part of the Chasing Ice team, because the people that I work with daily – Jeff Orlowski, James Balog, Paula DuPre Pesmen, Lindsay Friedman, Larissa Rhodes, Ali Fujino, Jerry Aronson (and many others) – are people who I truly believe are putting in energy to help shape the course of society by educating others on what it is we are doing to the planet and how we can see it in the ice. Many people have tried to reduce this film to pseudo science or claim that we are fear-mongering, but that’s not true. What Chasing Ice does is present irrefutable visual evidence of these changes as they are happening all around us. It is a wake up call for society to realize that “we cannot live the way we have lived and we cannot consume the way we have consumed,” as Lewis Pugh says.

At the end of the movie, Balog mentions that in twenty years from now, when his daughters ask him what he was doing to stop these changes, he wants to be able to say that he was doing all he could with the skills that he had. I hope that I can be so lucky.

Although it was not intentional, I believe that the release of Chasing Ice in the weeks before Thanksgiving is worth reflecting on, as Thanksgiving is often seen as a holiday of consumption. I hope that as we sit down with our families and friends in the coming days, we reflect on what we have, what we have given each other, and what we have given to the world. Every one of us has different talents, and it is up to us to use those talents to build a better future – a more sustainable future – for us, our children, and our children’s children.

You can learn more about Chasing Ice and find a showing near you at chasingice.com

*Note: The opinions expressed above solely reflect the views of the author and are not written on behalf of Chasing Ice or any other members of the team. 

Always Have the Bottle Ready: My Reflections on Yesterday’s Kony 2012 Panel

Foreword: This is not an analysis of the Kony 2012 campaign. These are merely some thoughts about a discussion that took place yesterday. For a richer discussion, turn to some of the people I’ve mentioned below, whom are smarter and better informed than I am on the issue and surrounding context.

Last night I was a member of a panel put on by a number of students at the University of Washington surrounding the “Kony 2012″ video put out by advocacy organization. The panelists included Assistant Professors Joseph Babigumira and Amy Hagopian from the School of Public Health, Fredrick Lorenz from the Jackson School of International Studies, Kristy Bolsinger from Ant’s Eye Media and myself.

Professor Babigumira presented a great overview of Uganda and the historical nature of the conflict, discussing the tribes in Africa and how power has shifted in the region in the past century. Lorenz followed with a discussion of the ICC and what an American “intervention” in the Kony conflict could look like. Professor Hagopian discussed her work in Uganda and what other interventions, ranging from medical training to government power, look like. To conlcude, Bolsinger and I talked about the nature of the video (her) and how the message was spread throughout the country on social media (me).

I pulled heavily from the coverage that SocialFlow and Ethan Zuckerman gave to the issue, discussing how social media can help engage audiences, help empower the audiences to engage with each other, and how ultimately the video did not go “viral” but instead moved through a semi pre-constructed network, as many have pointed out.

What I wished I had said to the group at large, but was ultimately said to a few individuals after the panel in response to their question, was when we consider social media’s role in conveying complex messages, things like tweets are analogous to tastes of wine at a restaurant. If someone offers you a taste of wine and then doesn’t have the bottle to provide you with, they are doing a disservice to their customer. Similarly, social media is an incredible tool to share snippets of ideas and messages with links, but if those links don’t ultimately connect us with the larger story, the organization spreading the message is doing a disservice to their audience.

It’s clear from Zuckerman’s writing as well as others that we need to not avoid complex issues, but that we do experience obstacles in trying to share them in bite-size bits. So please do encourage people to taste the wine, but make sure you have the bottle ready.

A big thanks to Mihae Jung, Kevin Solarte, Kaeley Pruitt-Hamm and the rest of the group that organized this event. It was well-attended and quite a pleasure to be at.

As a final note, I do not mean to use the wine metaphor as a way to say you should encourage your audience to get drunk with your message, but it happened to be one of the most appropriate metaphors that I had used in the conversation.

S*bl*ngs in Paris, Part 1

As some of you know, shortly after my 22nd birthday, I hopped on a plane to Paris, France to help get my sister settled in for her French immersion/study abroad experience. While I’ve been to a number of diverse cities in the world, the convergence of old and new, especially in terms of art and culture, had me very excited to visit Paris. Perhaps the best part of this trip, not to psyche myself out, is that even if Paris is miserable, I’ll be spending 8 days in Vienna visiting family, which is easily one of my favorite cities, and what often feels like a second home. That being said, here’s what Paris has been like so far:

Plane

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Boycott A Meeting Day

As a follow up to my last post, “Why Work Doesn’t Happen at Work”, I wanted to bring attention to Jason Fried (and perhaps the 37signals crew) actually doing something about his disdain for meetings: Boycott A Meeting Day

When you visit the website, you see the follow pledge bar (taken at 2pm):

Boycott A Meeting Day

While I can definitely agree that meetings can be a waste of time, I want to spend a moment acknowledging the value they have, which is primarily at the start and end of tasks, in my experience.

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Who are you sleeping with?

In the most recent Communication Arts Photo Annual, there were a number of excellence works that caught my eye, yet nothing resonated with me like Alain Desjean‘s work on the “Get Tested” campaign for One Life.

The work speaks for itself, clearly and pointedly stating that “when you sleep with someone, you also sleep with his/her past.” This is something I wish more people would consider when they decide to engage in intimacy with others. You have only one life to live.

Check out the work in the full post. Continue reading