Welcome,
 eco-minded viewers, 
to this week’s edition of 
Good People, Good Works, 
featuring the Sustainable 
Living Roadshow, 
a non-profit group 
made up of eco-advocates 
and entertainers 
that help communities 
learn strategies 
for sustainable living. 
Step right up 
and play our games. 
A sustainable planet, we 
can proclaim, a carnival, 
much more conscious 
than before. 
Have great fun 
and learn some more 
about what you can do 
to help the Earth. 
Take the steps towards 
a healthy re-birth! 
My name is Zach Carson; 
I'm the director 
of an organization called, 
“The Sustainable Living 
Roadshow.” 
We're a group that travels 
across the country setting up 
off-the-grid eco-festivals. 
So we believe that learning 
about sustainability 
should be something 
to be celebrated, 
to be enjoyed, a change 
that we need to embrace. 
So we try to use fun, 
the concepts 
of the old-time circus, 
to really spread messages, 
tools and information 
to local communities 
on ways that they can 
empower themselves to 
really shift their behaviors 
and their lifestyles to one 
of more sustainable ways.
Mr. Carson holds a 
bachelor of science degree 
in ecological design, 
sustainable development 
and environmental education
from the University 
of Vermont, USA. 
He is a dedicated individual 
who is deeply committed 
to constructively 
changing our world.
We’ve been on the road 
since about 2006, 
all over the US, 
throughout West Africa. 
We’ve toured 
over 200,000 miles now. 
We use all bio-diesel. 
We try to tour zero waste; 
all of our events 
are off –the-grid 
so they’re all run on solar 
or bio-fuel generators. 
And this last tour 
has been about 
three-and-a-half months, 
setting up a festival 
every weekend 
across the country. 
Here we go, heading 
towards the Sustainable 
Living Roadshow zone. 
Check it out. 
This is where the activism, 
non-profits, our friends, 
our people (are)… 
What are the Roadshow’s 
primary productions 
and attractions?
Every weekend 
it’s different. 
We go to existing festivals 
and set up eco- villages, 
we use music festivals a lot, 
because they seem 
to have become 
one of the center points 
of American culture, 
especially among the youth. 
Trends seem to go 
from there; music seems to 
go from there, and those 
have always been tools 
for creating change. 
So we bring in 
solar-powered stages, 
and offer full days of 
workshops, everything from 
an overview of bio-diesel, 
how to start 
a community garden, 
organizing 
on your college campus, 
to overview of GMOs 
(genetically modified 
organisms). 
We have carnival games 
that have eco-themes, like 
“Toss out fossil fuels” 
where you throw 
bean bags at oil derricks, 
coal factories and 
gas pumps and out pops 
solar panels, windmills, 
and barrels of bio-fuel. 
We bring out 
massage therapists, 
acupuncturists, and
nutritional consultants. 
We have markets for 
conscious corporations 
and we represent, sample 
and sell their goods. 
So it's quite a big set up, 
it can be 
up to 30,000 square feet. 
And when 
we go to colleges, we 
set up those same things. 
But everywhere we go, 
we try to create a platform 
for the local community 
to showcase 
what resources they have. 
So, six months out we'll 
do research and we'll find 
all the green businesses, 
the non-profits, 
the healing artists, 
the food cooperatives, 
the activists, 
and we'll invite them 
into the platform. 
So they can come together, 
and it can be a platform 
of community teaching 
community, rather than 
us coming and saying, 
"We are here to save you.” 
It’s like actually 
all those resources that 
we are presenting are 
in your community, and 
you have them available. 
It’s not really a lack 
of resources, of tools, 
to change the world. 
It's just a matter 
of people willing to 
embrace those resources.
How did this champion 
of sustainable lifestyles 
decide to start 
a traveling show 
to inform people about 
greener ways to live?
I happened to 
go to Costa Rica, where 
I met a crew of people 
who had just driven 
from California down to 
Costa Rica on two buses 
that ran on vegetable oil. 
And they were 
teaching farmers 
all along the way about 
the dangers of pesticides 
and the benefits 
of organic (foods). 
And they were like 
beautiful people, 
they were friends, 
they were travelers 
from all over the world. 
And at the time 
I'd just received all of this 
research and information 
on fossil fuels. 
And I came home 
and I was like, 
what an incredible way 
to live your life, 
traveling with friends. 
And not just being 
a tourist, but being 
an active participant 
in the community process 
and spreading knowledge. 
And so I changed 
my thesis from that 
of studying fossil fuels to, 
“Using cross country 
bio-fuel bus tours as 
a means of changing the 
collective consciousness 
of the country 
on sustainability issues.” 
So is that how you came up 
with the unique idea 
of a road show, 
by seeing that example?
That was how 
I came up with it, and 
then I spent 25,000 miles 
driving across the country 
doing interviews 
and going to festivals .
And four months later 
my bus broke down 
in Northern California, 
and that same weekend 
Julia Butterfly Hill, who 
sat in the Redwood tree 
for over two years, 
she was launching a tour 
in a vegetable-oil-
powered bus 
across the country. 
And it was the weekend 
I got there, 
and I went to the event 
and that weekend 
I met the two people who 
are my business partners 
today, who had started 
the concepts 
of the Sustainable Living 
Roadshow.
Thus far, the Roadshow 
has participated in 
over 200 events and tours 
around the world, 
including the Spring 2011 
Right2Know Tour. 
One thing we just did 
is the Right2Know March. 
I was on the steering 
committee for the March 
and we did 320 miles 
from New York 
to Washington, DC. 
And it's opened my eyes 
to a lot of issues that are 
going on in this country 
that relate to GMOs, 
(genetically modified 
organisms) but 
systemically relate 
to the bigger picture 
of the uprisings that 
we see globally going on 
of corporate entities 
taking advantage 
of Earth's resources 
for their own good. 
So I think one of the things 
that we can all do is start 
to vote with our dollar. 
A growing body of 
evidence points to 
disastrous health outcomes 
from genetically 
modified organisms 
(GMOs), such as 
premature aging, immune 
dysfunction, cancer, 
multiple organ damage 
and reproductive disorders.
Examples of crops that 
have been genetically 
modified include 
soy, corn, and papayas.
With the GMO issue, 
we found through 
a lot of studies that 
eight out of 10 people 
will choose the non-GMO 
(food) if it's labeled, 
over the GMO (food). 
If we’re successful 
in passing mandatory 
(GMO) labeling 
in California, we will 
give consumers a voice. 
And one 
of the strongest things 
we can do as people is 
use that voice and choose 
not to spend that money, 
because when we stop 
spending that money, 
those companies 
go out of business. 
And that’s one way 
we can create change, is 
find out what companies 
are really doing well, 
what companies 
are giving back, 
what companies 
are not animal testing, 
what companies 
are not using GMOs, 
what companies 
have corporate social 
responsibility initiatives 
that give back. 
While on the road, 
how many people make up 
the Sustainable Living 
Roadshow team?
This tour right now, 
we have 
25 people on the road for 
three-and-a-half months, 
living together. 
We did another tour in 
the spring in California 
where we had 14 people. 
I'd say we’ve worked 
with thousands of people. 
We have college students 
that intern with us 
throughout the year. 
We have advisors; it's been 
a 100% volunteer effort. 
So, the people that work 
with us are passionate 
about the concept 
of creating change 
on national levels 
and local levels. 
So it's not just 
the kind of 9-to-5 people 
that we get working with us, 
it's the people 
who feel a calling 
to have their voice heard. 
What kind of diet 
do you think is the most 
sustainable and why?
So eating locally 
and vegetarianism is 
reducing our impact. 
And (eating) vegetarian 
is probably one of 
the best things we can do 
for the planet 
and our communities. 
(And vegan even better)
And vegan even better. 
Do you incorporate that 
in your road show? 
Promoting the vegan 
or a vegetarian diet? 
Yes, we hand out 
information from PETA. 
We only eat vegetarian 
on the road. 
We cook and source from 
local farmers as we go, 
so we feed our crew with 
all local and organic food. 
And we find food vendors 
from the local communities 
when we have events 
that subscribe to 
those same philosophies.
Before 
the Sustainable Living 
Roadshow moves on 
to its next destination, 
Zach Carson has a message 
for our viewers in the US, 
particularly California, 
where during the 
November 2012 elections, 
voters in the state will 
decide on a ballot initiative, 
or proposed law, 
that will require 
all food manufacturers 
to clearly label 
products containing 
GMO ingredients.
(There is) a petition that 
goes to the FDA (Food 
and Drug Administration) 
and the website is 
JustLabelIt.org. 
It’s really important that 
everyone goes out there 
and signs this petition, 
as well as in California, 
that people support 
this ballot initiative. 
I think that’s going to be 
a really big step. 
If we get in California, 
California being one of 
the largest economies and 
the largest food producers 
in the country, 
companies won’t have 
the ability to label food 
just in California. 
So, it’s going 
to really shift behavior 
on a national scale. 
And right now, 
with the whole 
occupation movement, 
I just encourage people to 
go out and have a voice. 
Express yourself 
in peaceful, beautiful 
and artistic ways. 
Be one to 
represent the change. 
Just embody it
and try your hardest 
to live the way you want
to see the world.
Zach Carson, 
our accolades to you, and 
the Sustainable Living 
Roadshow staff members 
and volunteers 
for your steadfast, 
praiseworthy work. 
May the Roadshow 
continue to travel 
far and wide, using 
informative games and 
performances as well as 
fun and laughter to 
promote sustainable living 
in communities 
around the world.
For more information
on the Sustainable Living
Roadshow,
please visit 
www.SustainableLivingRoadshow.org
Gentle viewers, 
we’ve enjoyed 
your company today on 
Good People, Good Works. 
May we soon see 
true peace on Earth 
as our hearts so desire.