Give a Slice

Here's a swell idea. Open a pizza shop. Sell slices for a dollar. Let customers pay for more than one slice (or however many they actually eat), then give those slices to homeless people for free. Sweet idea, yeah? 

That's what Mason Wartman did. The 27-year-old Philadelphian left his job on Wall Street to open Rosa's Fresh Pizza

The model is pretty simple. Pay for your slice and however many you want to donate. For each donated slice, a Post-It is stuck on a wall. A homeless person comes in, takes a Post-It, trades it for a slice of pizza. 

Here's Mason appearing on Ellen:

Obviously the feeding the hungry factor is a great one here, but as Mason points out, this model also treats the homeless customers with the same respect as any other customer. They aren't being handed leftovers waiting at the door, they aren't being shooed out, they're sitting and eating their pizza. 

It's not a solution, sure, but it's a good step in the right direction. 

Reese's words of wisdom from Mom

Reese Witherspoon's mom wants her to do good! The actress took to Instagram Monday to share a series of texts sent from her mother, Betty. Among the missives: "Always remember to help others." 

Source: E! Online

Source: E! Online

Great advice, Mrs. Witherspoon! 

(Now, excuse us while we run to the cinema to see "Wild"!) 

Pets are good for you!

Having a pet has plenty of benefits for both animal and human. Here are nine health benefits you and your family might gain from bringing a pet into your home:

1.     Children exposed to animals tend to develop stronger immune systems. The presence of a pet in the home might actually reduce a child’s chances of developing allergies. (Dr. James E. Gern, University of Wisconsin at Madison, via Animal Planet)

2.     Animals can be icebreakers. Didn’t you see “Must Love Dogs”? A pet is a perfect excuse to approach that cute stranger at the park. Just make sure Fido doesn’t start getting fresh with your new friend. That’s no kind of story to tell the grandkids.

3.     Pets are good for your heart. They can help decrease blood pressure, triglyceride levels and cholesterol (Centers for Disease Control)

4.     Dog owners who regularly walk their dogs are less likely to be obese. (National Institutes of Health)

5.     Pets can help relieve stress and boost self-esteem. Pets are being used to help service men and women overcome Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. (CNN).

6.     Amusing pet tricks can make you smile, which raises serotonin levels. (Huffington Post)

7.     Taking care of a pet can help a child with ADHD (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder) learn focus through responsibility.

8.     Children with autism can gain increased social skills through living in a home with a pet. (Medical News Today)

Source: Medical News Today

Source: Medical News Today

9.     Pets provide companionship. If you have a pet, someone is always around to listen to you. (Prevention.com)

Actress Amanda Seyfried with rescue dog Finn. Source: onegreenplanet.org

Actress Amanda Seyfried with rescue dog Finn. Source: onegreenplanet.org

Tempted? Contact Animal Welfare League of Arlington to learn more about how to adopt your newest family member.  

No, my cat is not a porn star!

The cat formerly known as Salem. 

The cat formerly known as Salem. 

I actually adopted the best cat of my life from the Animal Welfare League of Arlington in 2006.

I went online and made a list of cats I was interested in and then did an in-person visit. Salem climbed right up onto my chest and rubbed his cheek against mine and purred, and I knew he was the one (why can't that happen when it comes to finding the romantic one?!).

I didn't like the name Salem but wasn't sure what else to call him. A friend of mine has a cat named Marcus. I always thought that sounded cute, so I copied it but put a "Mr." on the front to make it slightly different.

Face/paw

Face/paw

I didn't think much of it since I know lots of cats with a Mr. or a Ms. in front of their names (Mr. Whiskers/Ms. Kitty). I had a roommate at the time who was pretty straight laced.... church on Sunday, Bible study on Wednesday, and she was waiting on God to bring her her man.

I told her I had picked a name for the cat -- Mr. Marcus -- and she looked at me like I was crazy and said, "you know Mr. Marcus is a porn star, right?"

Um, no...how would I know that?

Mr. Marcus (not the porn star, who will not be pictured here), with Daily Do Good founder Saranah Holmes

Mr. Marcus (not the porn star, who will not be pictured here), with Daily Do Good founder Saranah Holmes

And she said, "EVERYONE knows Mr. Marcus; he's, like, super famous." So then just about every single time I told people what my cat's name was they would say, "Oh like the porn star?"

The reality was he didn't resemble a porn star at all....more like a British gentleman :)  

- Saranah Holmes

Adopt a Pet!

Looking for a feline friend or a canine companion? How about an avian ally or a leporine... there's really no good word that means "friend" and starts with "L" so let's go with bunny buddy for the sake of alliteration. But at least now you know the word "leporine" means with rabbit-like qualities. 

Even more adorable than vocabulary lessons (for you animal lovers at least!): Meet some of AWLA's animal residents who are looking for a loving home. 

Jasper is a border collie mix. He's an energetic fella, but he's not so good with the sharing. 

Jasper is a border collie mix. He's an energetic fella, but he's not so good with the sharing. 

Cassie is a snuggly Spaniel looking for love

Cassie is a snuggly Spaniel looking for love

Tucker 's a coonhound, an outdoor country boy in need of love and special attention (but he likes his privacy during mealtimes).

Tucker 's a coonhound, an outdoor country boy in need of love and special attention (but he likes his privacy during mealtimes).

Sebastian is a shorthair cat whose playful personality makes him almost dog-like.

Sebastian is a shorthair cat whose playful personality makes him almost dog-like.

Tee enjoys both attention and independence. A playful and easygoing gal.

Tee enjoys both attention and independence. A playful and easygoing gal.

Meet Jack Storm. He has FIV (feline immunodeficiency virus), so he needs some extra TLC.

Meet Jack Storm. He has FIV (feline immunodeficiency virus), so he needs some extra TLC.

This lovestruck Romeo (and Juliette) are a bonded pair of purebred finches.

This lovestruck Romeo (and Juliette) are a bonded pair of purebred finches.

Meet Gigi. Loves humans, does not play well with other bunnies. 

Meet Gigi. Loves humans, does not play well with other bunnies. 

All photos from Petango, via Animal Welfare League of Arlington. For more dogs, cats or small companion animals available for adoption, contact AWLA.

DDG Wants You!

The Daily Do Good is looking for dedicated volunteers who want to help spread a little sunshine in the world. If you are a believer in the power of doing good and giving back, we might love you.

Do you enjoy talking to people? Know your affects from your effects? Are you a digital diva or graphics guru? Can you talk people into giving us their money? Can you write? No seriously, are you any good? We might really love you.

Here’s who we need:

Content Crafters
Writers, bloggers, photographers, videographers… come forth! We are looking for people who know how to tell a story, be it in words or pictures. The work includes interviewing folks, so a journalism background is helpful, but not necessary. Grammar nerds, raise your hands. Contact Holly Leber, Editorial Director, at staff@dailydogood.co.

Marketing Mavens
Love makes the world go ‘round, but we can’t run this business on love alone. So, frankly put: We need money. And in order to get money, we need as many people as possible to know about us and love us. We’re seeking marketing assistants with strong research abilities. Experience in crowdfunding is a huge plus. Show us your sales savvy – sell us on YOU! Contact Saranah Holmes, President, at s.holmes@dailydogood.co

Social Media Specialists
Are you all a-Twitter? Did you teach your Gram to Instagram? Do you have more Facebook friends than people you’ve actually met in your lifetime? Give us some #LOVE. Attend fundraisers, post pics and comments (how fun is that?!), and just generally tweet your face off about @TheDailyDoGood. Contact Crystal Davis, Social Media Manager at crystalndavis@gmail.com

 Requirements

  •       Self-starters – must be able to problem-solve and manage time well
  •       Good communicators – respond efficiently and keep us in the loop
  •       Be able to work remotely without immediate supervision
  •       Approximately 10 hours a week (15 for crowdfunding)
  •       Weekly e-mail check-in
  •       Monthly meeting  

Tell us why you want to work with The Daily Do Good. Include a resume and a few pertinent work samples. We’re looking forward to hearing from you!

 Do Good, Feel Good!

 

Seven Ways to Give Without Spending a Dime

It's easy to think of the word "charity" and imagine writing large checks, but monetary donations are only one way to give. And though there are many, many organizations doing wonderful work to help the less fortunate, doing good and giving does not have to be applied to only to the non-profit world. Here are (lucky) seven everyday ways to do good.

1) Use outdoor space to plant food to donate. Even those with very little room can create gardens with a little ingenuity. 

Photo from Sunset.com

Photo from Sunset.com

2) Set up a table at your local library (ask first!) and offer to help job-seekers with their resumes.

3) Clear your closets each quarter, and give clothes directly to a homeless person. 

Photo from drkarenjacobson.com

Photo from drkarenjacobson.com

4) Back to the library -- use your computer abilities to help teach low-income neighbors looking to increase their job skill set. 

5) Writers and editors can volunteer their time with publications like Street Sense.

6) If you have a car, offer to run errands or give rides to your senior neighbors.

Photo from aarp.com

Photo from aarp.com

7) Visit a local shelter to offer homework help or do a story circle for children. 


Haircuts for the Homeless

Mark Bustos wants you to #BeAwesomeToSomebody. Mark is a stylist at an elite salon in New York City. Celebrity clients pay more than $100 to let him tame their tresses. But every Sunday, Mark hits the streets, giving haircuts to the homeless men and women he meets. This Dec. 10 article in The New York Times tells the story of how Mark uses his talent for hairstyling to bring a little light to the lives of those who are facing a lot of darkness. 

Read more

Giving for the Social Media Generation

This article was written for the Miami Herald by Daily Do Good writer Marcella McCarthy. It is reproduced here exactly as printed on the Herald's website. 

The cultural change toward frugality that took place among millennials during the recession has affected the way they give back to society.

It’s no longer “hip” to pay $500 for a gala ticket. As such, organizations have had to reinvent their strategies to attract young donors.

The Miami Foundation, an organization that connects philanthropy with community needs, has capitalized on technology and social media. Through its Give Miami Day initiative, a 24-hour online campaign complete with a Twitter party, the foundation solicits donations from around the world for Miami-based charities.

“Part of our way of engaging millennials is to meet them where they are, which is online,” said Javier Alberto Soto, president and CEO of the Miami Foundation.

In 2013, Give Miami Day raised $3.2 million in 24 hours. With minimum donations set at just $25, the campaign is more accessible for young people. This year, Give Miami Day 2014 will take place Nov. 20. As of last week, 173 Miami-based nonprofits had registered to participate. People can click on the charity they want to give to.

“Give Miami Day is a website, and it’s totally mobile so you can access it on your tablet or phone,” said Soto.

Give Miami Day isn’t just about raising money for today’s problems; it’s about developing a habit of giving back in young people.

“Today’s $25 Give Miami Day donor is tomorrow’s endowment builder,” Soto said.

Other groups are following the Miami Foundation’s example in wooing young people.

Marly Quinoces has created the PARK Project, which stands for ‘‘performing acts of random kindness.”

When Quinoces, 31, was growing up in Miami, she thought she had to be older to be a philanthropist, but she said that when she learned the broader meaning of philanthropy, she realized that giving of her time and skills was also just as important.

PARK Project is a nonprofit that earned third place in 2013 in the Miami Herald Business Plan Challenge. One of its events, the 5K PARK Fest encourages runners, walkers and cheerers to sign up for $40, half of which will go to a charity of their choice.

The project has benefits for both the nonprofit beneficiaries, which can register for free, and the runners and walkers, who start building a team of like-minded people with whom they can work out and socialize.

To help get the word out, PARK Project supplies the charities with communication materials, from pre-written emails to Twitter posts. The only thing the organizations have to do is reach out to their networks.

“You’re giving them everything they need to be successful,” she said.

The idea of doing the heavy lifting for charities that have suffered from the financial downturn is the concept behind Philanthrofest.

Philanthrofest, begun by Miami native Estrella Sibilia, 35, puts together what Sibilia describes as a “job fair within a carnival.” Charities come together to create an event where the public can not only sign up to help, but can learn about the services that are available to them within the community.

Prior to founding Philanthrofest, Sibilia worked in real estate development in Miami.

“I’ve spent years building the skyline, so now I’m building the community around the skyline,” she said.

Philanthrofest 2015 will be held in Miami’s new Museum Park on April 11.

Sibilia also helps organizations with their communication efforts, giving them the tools to build their own marketing campaigns.

“We host digital engagement institutes to teach nonprofits how to engage with social media so they can amplify and build their audience,” she said.

At last year’s Philanthrofest, about 100 organizations participated, Sibilia said. Throughout the year, she has heard stories of how the organizations have helped change people’s lives.

Meanwhile, other organizations are asking young donors to give their talents and skills to a cause.

Blair Butterfield, 33, originally from North Florida, is the founder of Colony1, which she bills as Miami’s “first sustainability center.”

With a net-zero water and energy building in the design phases, Colony1 will be located at 550 NW 52nd St. on a 14,000-square-foot plot of land donated by Miami-Dade County. They began work on the site in June.

Butterfield, director of the Art of Cultural Evolution, a nonprofit, said the site will host a “teaching and learning garden.”

“Instead of paying to harvest your own vegetables, you’ll be growing your own food and taking it home. We’re going to have a local food kitchen that is going to offer one organic meal a day. People who eat that food will be learning to cook that food, too,” she said.

But for those who just want to drop by and pick up some fresh organic food for their household, they can bring their own containers and shop at the zero packaging store. Goods at the store will be grown at Colony1’s 2.5-acre plot of land in Homestead.

All the work for Colony1, from the design to the engineering, has been done by volunteers, who are predominantly millennials.

“There are so many young people [here] who have so many great talents — and so all these people have come together and offered their skills,” she said.

RESOURCES

Colony1: www.artofculturalevolution.org

Park Project: www.parkproject.org

Philanthrofest: www.philanthrofest.com

Miami Foundation: www.miamifoundation.org


Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/living/helping-others/article3606576.html#storylink=cpy

 

Outtakes with Carla Hall

She's a chef, TV host, cookbook author and soon-to-be restaurant owner. Carla Hall took time out of her busy schedule to talk to us about one of her favorite organizations, DC Central Kitchen, and to answer some fun questions just for you! 

shelling_peas_028.jpg

Is it scientifically possible to eat just one your Petite Cookies?
“No! You don’t have to choose just one. There’s a smorgasboard.”

What is your favorite cooking smell?
“That’s hard! Would it be a cake in the oven, or my grandmother’s cornbread… let’s say bread baking. I have this fascination with bread baking…”

What is your least favorite cooking smell?
"Being from the South, it would have to be something like pig’s feet, that smells really funky, or chitlins…. When you’re like “what the hell?”

With all due respect to your husband, do you have any celebrity crushes?
“My husband knows I have a crush on Jamie Oliver. I told Jamie “it’s okay, my husband knows that I love you, too.”

What is, no holds barred, no political correctness, no apologies, the best kind of pie to have at Thanksgiving?
“I honestly would like peach cobbler. I honestly know peaches aren’t in season, but if I had some canned, I would do a peach cobbler. Or cherry. Sour cherry cobbler.”

Play a round of ‘Bang, Marry, Kill’ with your gentlemen co-stars (Clinton Kelly, Michael Symon, Mario Batali)
Aw, dang, this is going to be so hard… Marry Clinton.. oh wow… this is like asking, which of your brothers would you bang or kill? I’ll kill both of them! I’m more grossed out by the bang part than I am by the kill part. I wouldn’t want to bang either of them… you’re giving me the willies! Okay, bang Michael, kill Mario… Gross!

Why is The Daily Do Good truly awesome?
The Daily Do Good is awesome because 1) it reminds you to do good, 2) they do with a smile and laughter, and 3) they ask you tough questions that you all want to hear. 

Friday Funny -- Good fortune

This is a story that was told to Saranah Holmes:

A teacher took her class on a field trip to a fortune cookie factory as part of a lesson about Chinese-American culture. All of the students received cookies, but... when they opened them up, the fortunes inside were X-rated! There were a lot of angry calls from parents that day. 

Have a funny or embarrassing story about something that happened when you were doing good? Email it to us at staff@dailydogood.com with the subject "Friday Funny." 

Doing good on screen

We asked our friends and Twitter followers to help us think of movies about people who are doing good, giving back, and doing the right thing. Here are ten of the results we came up with. Please note, this is in no way a comprehensive list, so please share your favorite "do good, feel good" movies with us!

Read more

A Note from the Editorial Director

Each week, the DDG blog will feature posts written by people who are giving back to the community, as well as people who have been helped by some of the wonderful organizations that we'll be featuring on this site. Some folks might write about the growth of one project on a regular basis. Others might contribute only once or twice to reflect upon a special event. It's really up to you. If you volunteer with an organization, or are planning to participate in an event (such as a neighborhood clean up), and you'd like to write about your experiences for the DDG blog, email staff@dailydogood.co. 

Looking forward to hearing from you!

Do Good, Feel Good,

Holly