Archive for April, 2009
The Bay vs. The Bag
Tuesday, April 14, 2009May 1st is Decorative Dumpster Day
Monday, April 13, 2009Ruby Re-Usable, Little Shiva and I are having an online party on May 1st to be hosted by our blogs Olympia Dumpster Divers, The Visible Trash Society and Everydaytrash.com as well as other neat locales in the garblogosphere. Stay tuned for a fuller list of participants. And in the meantime, if you’ve been decorating your dumpster/other trash-holding container or seen a neat one in the NYC area that deserves a day in the spotlight, let me know.
Pick Up the Trash Day is here!
Saturday, April 11, 2009Remember how I wrote in February about the annual Pick Up the Trash Day? Well, now it’s April and kiddos all over Sweden are gearing up to run around and clean up their communities. So far over 145 000 young ones are signed up for this year.
New for 2009 is that all participating schools, municipalities etc. can post on a collective blog, so that we all can check in on what’s up. And get more pix like this one here:

Trash kids from Byrsjö School
Eco-capitalism
Saturday, April 11, 2009“We take waste, we add design and produce mass merchandise,”says TerraCycle founder and CEO Tom Szaky in the opening of his new show, Garbage Moguls. “I don’t see garbage, I see cash.”
He’s a soundbitey guy, that Szaky, which is probably an element of TerraCycle’s success. The man knows how to bottle charm.
After watching a sneak peak of the first episode—airs at 9pm ET/PT on Wednesday, April 22 a.k.a. Earth Day—I can honestly say it’s a show I would watch [If I got the National Geographic Channel. Which I did, until this week when my sister and I decided we couldn’t afford cable anymore]. It’s like Ace of Cakes, if you’ve ever seen that gem about a punk rock baker running a fancy cakemaking service with his friends. Only better, because this reality show is about a guy and his employees making neat stuff out of garbage and selling it to huge companies like Wal-Mart and OfficeMax.
Garbage Moguls is a flattering look at the TerraCycle crew. Szaky is the executive producer and in the show boldly refers to his company as an eco-revolution. But oddly enough, despite my own bias against anything profit-driven, the project doesn’t come off as entirely self-serving. They’re a cute bunch and all clearly dedicated to the TerraCycle cause—eco-capitalsim, which is just what it sounds like, in equal parts.
Episode one includes a brianstorming session about plastic cookie wrappers. First, they discuss the strengths of the material: very strong, waterproof. Then they toss out ideas for what could be made out of this product and sold commerically: poncho, hot air ballon and place mat are among the ideas rejected in favor of a flying kite.
“There isn’t’ any kind of waste that can’t be reinvented,” declares Szaky.
Which, when you think about it, is a rad concept to have aired on television, even if it’s being said in the context of personal profit. Still radder is the fact that TerraCycle collects the cookie wrappers from schools accross the country. Students and teachers gather up the trash from their institutions and mail them in to the company. In return, TerraCycle donates two cents per wrapper to the school it came from. My favorite scene is one of a couple staff members opening boxes of used Oreo wrappers and reading out the different states from which they came. It’s an all-American upcycling venture and a beautiful business model.
Anyway, enough of the spoilers. Watch for yourself and report back. I will say the most surprising bits are scenes of Szaky on the phone with buyers from large companies straight up lying that he has prototypes ready or is sure he can meet an order on time when he doesn’t and isn’t. The sense of do or die urgency lends the show some adreneleine, but isn’t the best ad for best business practices. I guess dramatic tension, good design and the fact that the company always delivers in the end overshadows this little detail.
At any rate, it’s the most entertaining Earth Day event I’ve ever come accross and sure to become one of my favotite shows. Trash! On TV! Perhaps we trashies can find a bar that gets the National Geographic Channel and organize weekly viewing get-togethers the way sports fans do for football and lesbians do for The L Word.
Update: Sorry, having issues with embedding video lately. Teasers for Garbage Moguls can be viewed here, here, here and here.
Walking on plastic
Saturday, April 11, 2009I’ve seen fused plastic dresses, messenger bags, tote bags, kites and belts, but I’ve never seen shitty old plastic bags transformed into something as practical as Cobble Stones. That’s exactly what they’re doing in Mopti, Mali as France 24 reports in this clip. Yay Africa.
Stewardship
Friday, April 10, 2009My friend Julie is a radio producer who covers religion. She recently sent me this article from Advocate.com about the next generation of evangelical Christians and how they’d rather fight for environmental protection than rail against gay marriage. It’s a fascinating juxtaposition of issues and I encourage you to read the whole thing.Thanks, Julie.
The Cardburg500
Friday, April 10, 2009Check out this inspired event, an exhilarating way to reuse old cardboard boxes and fashion them into something AWESOME like a windblower-powered vehicle. Rules and regs below. As they say “imagination and embellishment required”.
SanFran trashies, please attend and report back. These shenanigans are to be hosted by the Cardboard Institute of Technology, creators of such whimsical projects as Death Cry of Recyclor and Welcome to Cardburg.
Still in transit…
Thursday, April 9, 2009Been quiet as I’m still kind of in transit from Stockholm to Brooklyn, but my broadband should come around soon. At the moment though I have an urgent need to tell you that the password for the free wifi where I now enjoy a cup of coffee is “pleaserecycle”. Love.
Better buy a shredder
Thursday, April 9, 2009Canadian police don’t need a warrent to investigate your trash, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled today.
Thoughts on this privacy issue? On the one hand, I don’t like laws that inhibit rooting through garbage for the purpose of salvaging and reusing what might not be waste in the first place. On the other hand, being held accountable for one’s trash after it’s left out on the curb seems extreme.
Calling all trashies to weigh in.
Trashku contest
Thursday, April 9, 2009Obtainium
Thursday, April 9, 2009Today’s secret word is obtainium. Scream when you hear it.
I read about obtanium—a poetic term for salvaged objects—in this ambling New York Times profile of artist and architect Randy Polumbo. The piece covers building houses in the desert out of shipping containers and empty tequila bottles and making sculpture out of dildos. Also, it’s about libertarians.
There’s some good stuff in there about the silly terms people use to fancy up good old fashioned recycling, dumpster diving and conserving. Like “green architecture”. To be honest, though, I found the article itself hard to get into, it’s a little all over the place. Or I am. It’s been a long week and the Internet is destroying my attention span.
Luckily, if you’re scattered like me, there’s an audio slide show. And for the truly word averse, Polumbo’s Web site has several video clips showing his home and art.
Vodpod videos no longer available.Lotsa options for leftover Matzah
Wednesday, April 8, 2009via Treehugger
My favorite idea is guitar pick. Also, I want that girl’s shirt. Think it comes in “halal”?
Back like Jesus
Tuesday, April 7, 2009What better metaphor for recycling than the celebration of rebirth? For your consideration: a roundup of recycled Spring holiday ideas so cute you don’t even have to be Christian to appreciate them.
First up, from Ruby Re-usable, get a load of this wonder bunny. This is my second favorite use of Wonderbread bags, just after Ruby’s amazing Wonder bra.
Next up, this soda pop magnet from the Etsy Trashion Team. The trashion team has a roundup of their own. This gem came via FunkyRecycling.
Finally, check out this CBS segment on going green for Easter AND these tips from an “Eco Rabbi” on Passover cleaning as a chance to reduce, reuse and recycle.
Happy Easter, happy Pesach, happy Noruz…
Trash-o-saurus update
Sunday, April 5, 2009In December we let you know that the financial crisis might kill the Garbage Museum in Connecticut. Those as charmed by the giant dinasaur trash sculpture as I might be interested in this story from the AP full of Trash-o-saurus fun facts and also the encouraging news that the museum has redoubled fundraising efforts. Stay up to date via the Save the Garbage Museum blog.
Upcycle upcountry
Sunday, April 5, 2009Attention Twin Cities peeps, Twin Cities Green is hosting its annual upcycing contest. Or at least, twincities.com seems to think so. I couldn’t find details on the Web site.






