Filmmaker Gretta Wing Miller, who made the short film about the flooding that WI organic farmers experienced, writes to say:
We really appreciate that you have a link to our video on your blog, but do you think you could change the URL to our website rather than to GoogleVideo? You can imagine why: we took out all the references to WF ... We hoped we could help out in some way, and we have beyond our wildest imagining!
We really appreciate that you have a link to our video on your blog, but do you think you could change the URL to our website rather than to GoogleVideo? You can imagine why: we took out all the references to WF ... We hoped we could help out in some way, and we have beyond our wildest imagining!
It's OK if you make any snide remarks about it!
Hey, no one likes taking swings at ye olde "Super Natural" Whole Foods more than I do, but the Company did the right thing, so no snide remarks from me, Gretta. Granted it took the carrot of being involved with Sow the Seeds and, one assumes, the whip of Gretta's movie zipping through the Internets (and the impending publication of Sam Fromartz's article) to bring them around. But, by contrast, Wal-Mart left many organic farmers holding the bag when their upscale greenwashing campaign flopped - and they didn't even need the cover of a flood to do it (I never heard a word about Wal-Mart veeps trucking out to visit the farms they stiffed).
So Whole Foods totally deserves credit for trying to make things right with their farmers and Gretta's right to release an updated version of the movie that doesn't hold WF's feet to the fire.
Hey, no one likes taking swings at ye olde "Super Natural" Whole Foods more than I do, but the Company did the right thing, so no snide remarks from me, Gretta. Granted it took the carrot of being involved with Sow the Seeds and, one assumes, the whip of Gretta's movie zipping through the Internets (and the impending publication of Sam Fromartz's article) to bring them around. But, by contrast, Wal-Mart left many organic farmers holding the bag when their upscale greenwashing campaign flopped - and they didn't even need the cover of a flood to do it (I never heard a word about Wal-Mart veeps trucking out to visit the farms they stiffed).
So Whole Foods totally deserves credit for trying to make things right with their farmers and Gretta's right to release an updated version of the movie that doesn't hold WF's feet to the fire.
2 comments | Leave a comment
