Open Letter to John Travolta (and those who can afford it)
Dear John Travolta,
I'm on a flight from Melbourne to Sydney and have just watched a doco about you. Well I thought it was going to be about you and your home but it was mainly about you and Qantas and the big new Airbus. You are their ambassador after all.
I'm an actor and I have admired your work for many years. I thank you for the great pleasure you have given me. But I have to say I was really quite shocked by the program. Perhaps you made it before Global Warming came into your field of vision. Perhaps it just doesn't figure. You may not be aware that flying is becoming a dilemma because of the conflict between it's importance in the world economy and the fact that it is a huge contributor of Greenhouse gas emissions.
The documentary showed you with your air planes ( parked outside your house which has a runway big enough for a 747 jumbo!) and you spoke of the joy and thrill of your childhood in a world that was boundless in it's possibilities and the time when you fell in love with flight. We watched you flying yourself, wife and daughter, and your sister, I believe, with a crew of five on a 'world tour'. Ten of you flying in a 707 (?) As I watched your daughter I couldn't help but think how different is the world for her - although of course the world you are giving her is the one of limitless possibilities while the reality is that those limits have been reached.
It creates a very confusing and confronting state of being when people like yourself, whom we admire and look up to and take as examples of what to aspire to, do things that surely are no longer ethical. There must be (if one insists on being in the public gaze) a more responsible approach to the things one does. It is time now for people like yourself: intelligent, warm, generous of spirit and compassionate to help guide us away from the consumerist greed that has taken our planet to the edge.
I write this with no feeling of disrespect or any desire to insult and offend. Rather it is with respect and a desire to urge people like yourself to help bring about the changes that will pull us from the edge.
William Zappa
Link
Posted by william zappa at 1:33 PM 0 comments Links to this post
Saturday, December 16, 2006
Global Warming: A Challenge for Performers
On Nov. 4th an estimated 100,000 Australians took to the streets as part of the International Day of Action on Climate Change "Walk Against Warming". To coincide with that day, I instigated a letter writing campaign resulting in at least 250 actors/performers, agents, techies, and others in the entertainment industry posting letters to the government and opposition, expressing their concern about Global Warming and calling for serious action to tackle what is undoubtedly the most urgent problem facing the planet.
The support from the entertainment community for this letter campaign was fantastic. Many people expressed their thanks for my setting it all up and "making it easy to actually do something"! It's nice to know too, that others, not in our industry, changed the original, to reflect their work, because they had been sent them by friends and wanted to add their voices. As far as I know the letters are still circulating.
Several months ago I asked, via the MEAA email if any actors/performers were interested in setting up a discussion group to look at what we as people in the entertainment industry, could do about global warming, . I'm sorry to say the response was pretty dismal. However, the response to the letter campaign has assured me that their are many of us who care about the subject and who want to do something about it.
One of the first things we need to do is to talk about it as an industry. In order to facilitate this I have set up a blog spot (never thought I'd do that) and invite you all to contribute and let others know of it's existence. http://actingfortheplanet.blogspot.com/ (copy into your browser) But before then.......................
I'm going to start a discussion here and now by suggesting that one of the major things we have to do is look at our indirect but specific contribution to Global Warming, through the work we do in advertising, be it 100%ers or voice-overs.
This is a very difficult subject because many of us earn, if not a huge living from commercials (although some do), then at least a contribution to the household budget. Often, the only financial contribution we make. The 'big ad' can be a life saver, sort of, and the steady stream of regular voice-over work or T.V. commercials can be the only 'performing' one might get to do for quite some time. As we know the industry is in pretty dire straights across the board when it comes to the amount of work that is available and calling your self an actor - or singer or dancer- when you haven't been in a show for a couple of years or on TV seems a little heartbreaking. So to challenge this area of work is quite a big issue but, I feel one that must be looked at, because our faces, voices and personalities are at the forefront of consumerism and as such we help sell many of the products which either through the process of their production or in themselves are contributing to Global Warming.
The problem we face with ads is either general or specific.
What I mean is that ads in 'general' are about increasing consumption ( or at least tempting us to buy), which has inherent problems for the planet with things like power and energy and waste. By ads in a 'specific' sense, I mean that they may be for large gas guzzling cars or inefficient appliances, say. (One could throw into the mix the whole notion of ethics on other levels as well, but they are inherent in what I am arguing here anyway.)
The problem is that we very seldom get to question what the ad is actually 'doing'. What are the words and images saying? And even if one has a level of concern about the content, the script itself might not be available until after turning up for the job. Even then, the finished product may be quite different from what one imagined. We have no input into what is said or shown. We might get asked to do things that we don't feel particularly good about, but, "what the hell, I'm here now I might as well do it and ..... think of the money!"
We have been in a situation for many years where there was no need to question much of what ads do, -although many women for example, have been conscious of the way they may be portrayed or used and have refused to do ads because of their concern about such images. As a general rule however, the concern over ads has come, not from within our industry but from the public or 'interest' groups. Ours is usually a shared acknowledgement that ads are often a pain to do, sometimes a little embarrassing, occasionally good fun and .......well, "think of the money" But we don't really question them, the content, the product. The only thing for certain is that they don't pay like they used to. Of course, not all ads are bad as far as the environment goes, but perhaps now is the time we have to seriously start questioning what it is we are advertising. What is the effect of the product we are trying to sell when it comes to the environment and Climate Change? Or, well let's take it into ethics, how does the extolling and constant urging to buy, effect poorer people in society, or the life chickens have to suffer to supply the fast food industry which uses actors to sell their products? You see, I think there was a time when there was no need to question, there was so much to go around and it seemed that we all could have pretty much everything, (and of course poor people were looked after and chickens were for the most part free range and 'a treat'.) And even though I'm sure the government and business leaders would like us to keep thinking that way - for the sake of the growth of the economy - we have to acknowledge it is no longer the same world. It never really was that world anyway. Nothing in the universe grows and grows forever. To a human lifetime many things may seem to go on and on, but that is more the fault of our perceptions and perhaps our egos. The simple fact is there are limits to growth and in the opinion of many, those limits has been reached. We are now all responsible for what happens to the world we live in.
As if we don't have enough to cope with!
It is a very difficult thing I'm suggesting here, but I think we have to seriously start questioning what it is we are being asked to do with every ad or voice-over, because everything we do in life has some sort of environmental impact. It may be miniscule, it may be large. And yet, how can we be expected to know what the environmental impact of a product is? What it's contribution to global warming may be? Should performers be given a disclosure of the 'embedded carbon' within every item, service or object they are being hired to sell which would allow then to make an informed decision on whether to take the job? Or how does one make a decision about advertising a product which was invented for 'professional' use (like a 'vacuum sealer' for food, say), which is unnecessary in the home but that is where the product advertising is being aimed?
Should we in fact be involved in a dialogue with advertisers to try and come up with a standard to work towards, a standard that puts the environment before 'sexiness' for instance?
The issues brought up by Global Warming, when looked at in fine detail, reveal many layers. These layers reflect much of our society, everything from wasteful consumption to unethical treatment of animals, from blatant disregard for anyone but oneself to the gap between the haves and the haves-not. I admit to being on the pessimistic side on this subject. Having been involved with environmental issues since the 1970's I have heard how long the warnings have been going on and observed how little has been done. I admit there is a certain comfort in seeing the rapid shift in direction our government has made on the subject in just the last few weeks, a 180 degree turn, in fact. And even though the steps they are taking fall short of the mark, the publicity and focus on the subject will hopefully mean many more individuals will be spurred into making changes to reduce their personal impact on the planet. But the power of the individual to effect change is enhanced when the individual is part of a group - that's what unions are about of course - and when that group is able to effect change within it's sphere of influence the repercussions can be quite dramatic. When you consider that the area in which we are involved - media and entertainment - has such a close contact with people (we are in their living rooms) and has an almost ever present opportunity through our voices and images and actions to influence people's choices, then perhaps now is the time we should start to seriously question the whole area of advertising and our role in promoting a carbon hungry world.
I'm talking here about ads because of their influence on consumerism. Of course as I have said, many ads are quite innocuous, but there are an equal number, if not more, that, when looked at through the lens of global warming and climate change, become far from innocuous. We need to look at Climate Change therefore, not only in our private life but our working life too. I believe that as an industry we need to seriously consider the impact we have. It is no longer a simple case of making money without care for what that means. As individuals we need to be informed to enable ourselves to be discerning about what work we accept by considering it in the light of climate change, not just in the light of 'how much money am I getting?'
I hope these few words on this important subject can start a dialogue between ourselves. Can help us as an industry, contribute in a very positive way to finding solutions to this very big issue.
This is a starting point for dialogue.
William
Posted by william zappa at 9:07 PM 6 comments Links to this post
Subscribe to: Posts (Atom)
On Nov. 4th an estimated 100,000 Australians took to the streets as part of the International Day of Action on Climate Change "Walk Against Warming". To coincide with that day, I instigated a letter writing campaign resulting in at least 250 actors/performers, agents, techies, and others in the entertainment industry posting letters to the government and opposition, expressing their concern about Global Warming and calling for serious action to tackle what is undoubtedly the most urgent problem facing the planet.
The support from the entertainment community for this letter campaign was fantastic. Many people expressed their thanks for my setting it all up and "making it easy to actually do something"! It's nice to know too, that others, not in our industry, changed the original, to reflect their work, because they had been sent them by friends and wanted to add their voices. As far as I know the letters are still circulating.
Several months ago I asked, via the MEAA email if any actors/performers were interested in setting up a discussion group to look at what we as people in the entertainment industry, could do about global warming, . I'm sorry to say the response was pretty dismal. However, the response to the letter campaign has assured me that their are many of us who care about the subject and who want to do something about it.
One of the first things we need to do is to talk about it as an industry. In order to facilitate this I have set up a blog spot (never thought I'd do that) and invite you all to contribute and let others know of it's existence. http://actingfortheplanet.blogspot.com/ (copy into your browser) But before then.......................
I'm going to start a discussion here and now by suggesting that one of the major things we have to do is look at our indirect but specific contribution to Global Warming, through the work we do in advertising, be it 100%ers or voice-overs.
This is a very difficult subject because many of us earn, if not a huge living from commercials (although some do), then at least a contribution to the household budget. Often, the only financial contribution we make. The 'big ad' can be a life saver, sort of, and the steady stream of regular voice-over work or T.V. commercials can be the only 'performing' one might get to do for quite some time. As we know the industry is in pretty dire straights across the board when it comes to the amount of work that is available and calling your self an actor - or singer or dancer- when you haven't been in a show for a couple of years or on TV seems a little heartbreaking. So to challenge this area of work is quite a big issue but, I feel one that must be looked at, because our faces, voices and personalities are at the forefront of consumerism and as such we help sell many of the products which either through the process of their production or in themselves are contributing to Global Warming.
The problem we face with ads is either general or specific.
What I mean is that ads in 'general' are about increasing consumption ( or at least tempting us to buy), which has inherent problems for the planet with things like power and energy and waste. By ads in a 'specific' sense, I mean that they may be for large gas guzzling cars or inefficient appliances, say. (One could throw into the mix the whole notion of ethics on other levels as well, but they are inherent in what I am arguing here anyway.)
The problem is that we very seldom get to question what the ad is actually 'doing'. What are the words and images saying? And even if one has a level of concern about the content, the script itself might not be available until after turning up for the job. Even then, the finished product may be quite different from what one imagined. We have no input into what is said or shown. We might get asked to do things that we don't feel particularly good about, but, "what the hell, I'm here now I might as well do it and ..... think of the money!"
We have been in a situation for many years where there was no need to question much of what ads do, -although many women for example, have been conscious of the way they may be portrayed or used and have refused to do ads because of their concern about such images. As a general rule however, the concern over ads has come, not from within our industry but from the public or 'interest' groups. Ours is usually a shared acknowledgement that ads are often a pain to do, sometimes a little embarrassing, occasionally good fun and .......well, "think of the money" But we don't really question them, the content, the product. The only thing for certain is that they don't pay like they used to. Of course, not all ads are bad as far as the environment goes, but perhaps now is the time we have to seriously start questioning what it is we are advertising. What is the effect of the product we are trying to sell when it comes to the environment and Climate Change? Or, well let's take it into ethics, how does the extolling and constant urging to buy, effect poorer people in society, or the life chickens have to suffer to supply the fast food industry which uses actors to sell their products? You see, I think there was a time when there was no need to question, there was so much to go around and it seemed that we all could have pretty much everything, (and of course poor people were looked after and chickens were for the most part free range and 'a treat'.) And even though I'm sure the government and business leaders would like us to keep thinking that way - for the sake of the growth of the economy - we have to acknowledge it is no longer the same world. It never really was that world anyway. Nothing in the universe grows and grows forever. To a human lifetime many things may seem to go on and on, but that is more the fault of our perceptions and perhaps our egos. The simple fact is there are limits to growth and in the opinion of many, those limits has been reached. We are now all responsible for what happens to the world we live in.
As if we don't have enough to cope with!
It is a very difficult thing I'm suggesting here, but I think we have to seriously start questioning what it is we are being asked to do with every ad or voice-over, because everything we do in life has some sort of environmental impact. It may be miniscule, it may be large. And yet, how can we be expected to know what the environmental impact of a product is? What it's contribution to global warming may be? Should performers be given a disclosure of the 'embedded carbon' within every item, service or object they are being hired to sell which would allow then to make an informed decision on whether to take the job? Or how does one make a decision about advertising a product which was invented for 'professional' use (like a 'vacuum sealer' for food, say), which is unnecessary in the home but that is where the product advertising is being aimed?
Should we in fact be involved in a dialogue with advertisers to try and come up with a standard to work towards, a standard that puts the environment before 'sexiness' for instance?
The issues brought up by Global Warming, when looked at in fine detail, reveal many layers. These layers reflect much of our society, everything from wasteful consumption to unethical treatment of animals, from blatant disregard for anyone but oneself to the gap between the haves and the haves-not. I admit to being on the pessimistic side on this subject. Having been involved with environmental issues since the 1970's I have heard how long the warnings have been going on and observed how little has been done. I admit there is a certain comfort in seeing the rapid shift in direction our government has made on the subject in just the last few weeks, a 180 degree turn, in fact. And even though the steps they are taking fall short of the mark, the publicity and focus on the subject will hopefully mean many more individuals will be spurred into making changes to reduce their personal impact on the planet. But the power of the individual to effect change is enhanced when the individual is part of a group - that's what unions are about of course - and when that group is able to effect change within it's sphere of influence the repercussions can be quite dramatic. When you consider that the area in which we are involved - media and entertainment - has such a close contact with people (we are in their living rooms) and has an almost ever present opportunity through our voices and images and actions to influence people's choices, then perhaps now is the time we should start to seriously question the whole area of advertising and our role in promoting a carbon hungry world.
I'm talking here about ads because of their influence on consumerism. Of course as I have said, many ads are quite innocuous, but there are an equal number, if not more, that, when looked at through the lens of global warming and climate change, become far from innocuous. We need to look at Climate Change therefore, not only in our private life but our working life too. I believe that as an industry we need to seriously consider the impact we have. It is no longer a simple case of making money without care for what that means. As individuals we need to be informed to enable ourselves to be discerning about what work we accept by considering it in the light of climate change, not just in the light of 'how much money am I getting?'
I hope these few words on this important subject can start a dialogue between ourselves. Can help us as an industry, contribute in a very positive way to finding solutions to this very big issue.
This is a starting point for dialogue.
William
Posted by william zappa at 9:07 PM 6 comments Links to this post
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Carbon Trading for Films/TV?
Hollywood carbon trading is happening. Could this be a business deal for out of work actors. I'll be in it if anyone want's to give it a go!
www.smh.com.au/news/environment/ researchers-reveal-tinseltowns-grubbiest-secret/2006/11/15/1163266637825.html
Posted by william zappa at 11:06 PM 0 comments Links to this post
Hollywood carbon trading is happening. Could this be a business deal for out of work actors. I'll be in it if anyone want's to give it a go!
www.smh.com.au/news/environment/ researchers-reveal-tinseltowns-grubbiest-secret/2006/11/15/1163266637825.html
Posted by william zappa at 11:06 PM 0 comments Links to this post
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