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- <text id=89TT1509>
- <title>
- June 12, 1989: The Greening Of Hollywood
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Endangered Earth Updates
- June 12, 1989 Massacre In Beijing
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SHOW BUSINESS, Page 76
- The Greening of Hollywood
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Tinseltown has a boffo new cause: saving the planet
- </p>
- <p>By Jeanne McDowell
- </p>
- <p> It is the capital of conspicuous consumption, the land of
- Lamborghinis, the home of the heated swimming pool. And now,
- ironically, Hollywood is the chic base for a crusade to help
- save Planet Earth. From efforts to insert environmental themes
- into movies and TV to the formation of action groups by the rich
- and famous, the entertainment industry is mobilizing to help
- solve the environmental crisis. "We have all realized we're on
- the front lines," says British rock star Sting, who is
- campaigning worldwide to save the Brazilian rain forest. "We
- have access to information and can transmit it through the
- media."
- </p>
- <p> Hollywood's zeal mirrors an explosion in environmental
- activism throughout the world. Stories about the burning rain
- forest, global warming and the Exxon Valdez spill have left
- people feeling a loss of ecological innocence. "It's an issue
- you can't escape--even if you live in Beverly Hills," says
- Josh Baran, a Los Angeles public relations consultant.
- </p>
- <p> The town's involvement transcends checkbook activism.
- Media-shy Meryl Streep performs as spokeswoman for Mothers and
- Others for Pesticide Limits. The names of celebs who huddled
- around a garbage-filled storm drain at a rally for Heal the Bay,
- a Santa Monica, Calif., group, read like a short list for the
- 25 most intriguing people: thirtysomething people (Ken Olin,
- Patricia Wettig), sitcom people (Justine Bateman, John Ritter),
- people named Moon and Dweezil Zappa. A sludge protest drew
- Dynasty's Linda Evans to Olympic, Wash. More recently, Dennis
- Weaver, Michael Landon and Robert Downey Jr. voiced their
- protest against offshore oil drilling at a rally in downtown
- L.A. And last weekend a gross of glitterati--Diana Ross, Elton
- John, Sigourney Weaver--joined world leaders in Our Common
- Future, a five-hour global telecast.
- </p>
- <p> The good work goes on for veteran good-earthers. Cheers'
- Ted Danson, president of the American Oceans Campaign, lobbies
- Congress to help save the oceans. Barbra Streisand offers a
- $250,000 donation to the Environmental Defense Fund. Robert
- Redford, who is planning a film with Steven Spielberg about the
- damaging of a rain forest, speaks on global warming at a Senate
- hearing. "It's important to raise the environment to the same
- level as national security," Redford says. "If we poison our
- planet, what is there left to defend?"
- </p>
- <p> A primary goal of Hollywood activists is to raise
- consciousness through TV shows, movies and music about dangers
- to the environment. In TV spots that will air later this month,
- NBC's ALF will warn earthlings about the environment in a
- 60-second spot: "Public lands aren't like pizzas. You can't call
- up and order more." Tips about recycling, ozone depletion and
- aerosol sprays will be inserted in next season's shows. "If
- characters on shows are making these changes, they will impact
- the home," says producer Norman Lear.
- </p>
- <p> Movies and TV movies will also stoke awareness. The Keep,
- a TV movie about global warming set 50 to 75 years in the
- future, may air later this year; TNT will broadcast Incident at
- Dark River, about a father who learns that toxic dumping has
- killed his child. When writer-director David Zucker (Airplane!)
- visited a solar-power plant in the Mojave Desert, he was
- inspired to drop a message into his script for The Naked Gun II.
- "A love affair is like the ozone layer," says Lieut. Frank
- Drebin. "You only miss it when it's gone."
- </p>
- <p> Hollywood's challenge is to entertain as it informs. This
- fall TBS will introduce children to the cartoon villain Dr.
- Carbon on Captain Planet. Producer Paul Witt (Golden Girls) is
- developing a three-hour all-star "practical guide to saving the
- planet"; Witt hopes all three networks will air it
- simultaneously. In September a medley of pop stars will shoot
- Yakety Yak, a music video about recycling. Its refrain: "Yakety
- yak, take it back."
- </p>
- <p> Two new groups will prod show people toward making
- environmental awareness as crucial a part of their scripts and
- songs as boy meets girl. The Environmental Media Association,
- a clearinghouse for save-the-earth societies, is fronted by
- such heavyweights as Disney Chairman Michael Eisner, Creative
- Artists Agency President Michael Ovitz, MCA President Sid
- Sheinberg, and Lear, who with his wife Lyn was a group founder.
- At the letter-stuffing level, the Earth Communications Office
- is targeting the few thousand actors, writers, producers and
- directors whose work reaches billions of people. In seminars and
- trips, ECO will educate creative folk on earth-shaking issues.
- </p>
- <p> Skeptics note that, unlike campaigning for abortion rights
- or fringe political causes, environmental activism offers no
- career risk. "It's a nonpartisan issue," says Heal the Bay
- co-chair Ellen Gilbert. "What's the other side--a dirty
- ocean?" Others suspect that the glamour do-gooders will lose
- interest or be unable to give up gas-guzzling cars and private
- planes. Bonnie Reiss, executive director of ECO, disagrees:
- "This is a people's movement, and we're beginning with the
- wealthy and privileged people of Hollywood."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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