blognoble

The Green Movement Is Branching Out

Green_echo_5Ever since Adam and Eve got kicked out of the garden for misbehaving, or so the story goes, humans have been scratching out their existence at the expense of the earth. Exploitation didn’t take its toll until recently. If you ran out of something, you either moved on or paid someone to bring you more. Whoever thought there would ever be a shortage of timber? The rain forest was considered no different than the forest that covered what’s now known as New York City. Cut it down, bring in the cement trucks, progress will solve everything. And it still might. Or it might not.


The question of whether progress could or can solve our environmental problems became a giant concern when acid rain, the hole in the ozone, and global warming started to gain traction. The green movement started to move. It picked up momentum with Earth Day, angry protests, The Green Party, Ralph Nader, and now almost every Hollywood star and news outlet rushing to center stage to elbow their way into the green spotlight. 


In 2004 we saw a shift in how products were being sold and proposed a concept we called “GREEN HOT”: The Return to Nature by Force.


We saw tangible evidence that products would soon have to be positioned as being better for the planet, or at least capable of making a significantly smaller impact on the grid. We saw early evidence that the masses were starting to give a damn. And what we know is that when the masses start caring, they start voting for or against a product with their dollars. And at that point, companies take notice and either change or die.


We called it GREEN HOT while it was still only warm, but now everybody knows it’s about as hot as you can get. Just a few years ago, Al Gore or no Al Gore, a documentary on global warming would have struggled to draw even a small crowd; this year it got an academy award. 


There’s no real controversy about whether green is hot; the real question here is why—and what will the next evolution be?

Continue reading "The Green Movement Is Branching Out" »

Posted by Bob Noble | Permalink

“Super Downsize Me”—McDieters Fight Back

2_image_2It had to happen:  a consumer backlash to the message that overweight people are just hapless victims of big, bad McDonald’s. It just isn’t so says one courageous McDonald’s customer who refused to believe it.

In his popular documentary, Morgan Spurlock ate nothing but meals from McDonald’s and gained over 30 pounds and a ton of fame by bashing the world’s largest restaurant franchise.

In her defiant protest and personal experiment, Merab Morgan from Henderson, N.C., has lost over 35 pounds on a McDonald’s-only diet and is giving credit to McDonald’s for helping her make the right nutritional choices as she takes control of her weight.

Continue reading " “Super Downsize Me”—McDieters Fight Back" »

Posted by Bob Noble | Permalink | Comments (1)

Will the New Food Pyramid Break Old Habits?

New_pyramidIn a free society, everyone should have the right to be wrong.  Right?  Think what you like, worship how you want (or not), drink (responsibly), smoke (in designated areas), or eat ’til your pants explode—it’s your right.  But who do you turn to if your choices turn into bad habits?  As far as eating habits go, the USDA has been trying to help for quite awhile with arguably little success.  We had The Four Food Groups in the ’50s, the Food Pyramid introduced in 1992, and now MyPyramid, the latest attempt, is to be launched in American classrooms this fall.

I personally have trouble seeing it as any kind of nutritional answer for unhealthy eating or fighting obesity. 

It turns out that the “New and Improved” Food Guide Pyramid, which was intended to be the latest Idiot’s Guide to Eating, isn’t really “new” or “improved” much—and certainly not easy to put to use.

Continue reading "Will the New Food Pyramid Break Old Habits? " »

Posted by Bob Noble | Permalink | Comments (2)

My Photo

Important Info and Links

  • About Bob
  • NOBLE

Recent Posts

  • Careering
  • The Rise of the Human
  • Are You Willing to Explore Life and Exploit What You Find?
  • Ten Million Town Criers
  • Voice Search—The New Oral You
  • Make your next thought better than your last.
  • SOS For SEOs
  • Welcome to "Tiser" Mania
  • Is That a Behavioral Target on Your Back?
  • From Walkman to Infoman

Categories

  • Creativity
  • CultureWaves
  • Current Affairs
  • Design
  • Insights
  • Leadership
  • Marketing
  • neemee
  • Technology
  • The Food Channel
  • Web/Tech
  • Weblogs
  • Well-being

Archives

  • February 2010
  • November 2009
  • September 2009
  • December 2008
  • July 2008
  • March 2008
  • December 2007
  • October 2007
  • June 2007
  • May 2007
Add me to your TypePad People list
Subscribe to this blog's feed