Musings from Jeb Berrier, on the Southern Circuit Tour

Bag It narrator Jeb Berrier is touring 23 locations in Southern states over 11 days on the Southern Circuit Tour.  Here are some of his notes from the road:

Next stop on the Southern Circuit: Manteo, NC, home of the famous Lost Colony of 1583. I say famous, but I had never heard the story, shame on me because it’s a good one, and something we all should know.

Manteo was a Croatan Indian chief that befriended the English explorers who landed at Roanoke Island in 1584. This pre-dates Jamestown by more than 20 years. Manteo traveled to England several times where he learned the language, was appointed Lord of Roanoke, and returned in 1590 with the English to find the entire colony gone, without an explanation. The mystery has never been solved. I can’t believe this was the first time I’d heard this story, or maybe I had and like so many things learned in school, it had faded into my 40 something brain.

The other bit of history right across the water from Manteo is Kitty Hawk, site of the Wright Brothers’ fist flight. I actually stayed right on the beach in the Orville and Wilbur Wright Days Inn. Pretty awesome, and pretty windy, which is part of the reason they picked it for their flight.

I was picked up and brought to the screening by my host, Chris Sawin, who works for the Dare County Arts Council in Manteo. We went to their “brand new building” (actually their brand new building is about 100 years old). It’s the old courthouse that they have taken over and have turned into an arts center. Art galleries on the whole first floor, featuring painting, photography, sculpture, and my favorite, an old cigarette machine which has been retro fitted to dispense art. For real, it’s full of cigarette sized art pieces that you can buy for $5. A good use of a beautiful old machine, and how fitting for North Carolina. The upstairs was the old courtroom, which is being turned into a live performance venue. The courtroom was also the setting for an episode of Matlock, which many of the town’s people were in.

After the tour we headed over to the theater and screened Bag It to a small but enthusiastic crowd. Just so you know, this was Election Night, and there was a big storm happening, so we were grateful for any crowd at all. I was told that some of the towns on the Outer Banks have actually ‘Bagged It’ already and instituted a plastic bag ban in the large supermarkets.

Next day was a biggie with three high school classes and a lunch.  We started with Miss Shimi’s class who had been asked to name things they use every day that are made of plastic. Thank goodness for Shimi! She’s a great teacher who really asked these kids to think and participate, which they did.

It’s always fun to see kids think about a life without single-use disposable plastics. They have never known anything different, but at the same time they are often quicker than adults to see the problems with some of our more wasteful and destructive ways, and to be open minded about ways to help make things better.

Next, after a meeting with some of the environmental club we headed over to First in Flight High School for Katie Neller’s advanced science class. These were kids who had done a variety of AP environmental science, chemistry, and physics classes. After discussing the issue of bottled water (one poor girl had brought a water to class and took some playful ribbing from the other kids), we came up with a possible exercise of carrying their water around school for one day in something other than plastic. Mason jars, spaghetti sauce jars, or anything that was not single use plastic. At first they shuddered at the thought of the un-coolness factor, a legit fear for any high school student, but after being offered extra credit by the teacher, they all seemed to get excited about it. What better way to open a dialogue about why we don’t need to be drinking tap water shipped from Fiji in a throw away bottle, than to wear a mason jar around school on your belt. Might even become a fad.  Ms. Neller also wants to get the kids out in the field doing research on plastic to plankton ratios in their ocean water.

Lunch was at a delicious fish place called Tortuga’s Lie, with some members of the Arts Council and two local filmmakers. Almost everyone at lunch was a member of Surfrider, a nationwide group devoted to protecting the oceans and beaches. One upcoming film is about the stranding of sea animals on beaches. They don’t know why marine strandings happen when they do, but in many cases the animal has ingested, guess what………….wait for it……….,you got it,  plastic, and it goes on shore to die. These stories are all connected and make me glad to know that there are people all over the world who care and who are working to make a difference.

Farewell Manteo, next stop Miramar, FL.

About bagitmovie

Bag It is a documentary film following the world wide use of plastic bags, plastic's impact on the environment and human health.
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3 Responses to Musings from Jeb Berrier, on the Southern Circuit Tour

  1. Karen Benhar says:

    Hi,
    Just recently viewed your movie and thought it was fantastic, I wanted to pass it on to my friends but either have to purchase the DVD or go to a community viewing which costs $150 to host. Have you thought of using kickstarter.com for funding to be able to offer the movie for free? That is really the only way it will go viral and it has the potential to do so. Karen.

    • bagitmovie says:

      Hi Karen,
      Bag It is available on itunes and Netflix. It also plays regularly on local public access stations. Please let us know if you have trouble accessing it via any of these methods!
      Thanks for your interest in the film!
      Rebecca

  2. Tom says:

    This comment is for Jeb and I’m infuriated about the coast guard cleaning the oceans filled will plastic bags…….why?…… because i was in the U.S. Navy and the BIGGEST POLLUTERS of the seas is the NAVY. I personally was told to dump all garbage we produced on the ship over board. LET ME REPEAT THIS….WE DUMPED EVERY SINGLE PIECE OF GARBAGE WE PRODUCED OVER BOARD. Then to see the coast guard which is a division of the Navy (except they stay behind and defend the U.S.coastal waters) cleaning up basically their own pollution pisses me off.I’m not naive and think that the navy is the only polluter out there but they are a huge part of it.

    I was stationed in Yokuska, Japan from April 1988-1989 Dec. on DDG-21 USS Cochrane. A good political cartoon would be a guy wearing a U.S. Government shirt dumping garbage overboard while saying we’re going to push for better and tougher regulations on polluters. WHAT A JOKE!!!!!

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