EPISODES

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Food & Beverage, Animal Welfare Paul Shapiro Food & Beverage, Animal Welfare Paul Shapiro

Ep. 32 - From ConAgra to Culturing Fish Cells

You’ve likely heard the Biblical story in which a small amount of fish were multiplied to feed thousands. Well, in 2020, Lou Cooperhouse is literally multiplying the fish—or at least their cells—in the hopes of again feeding the masses, and saving our planet at the same time. Lou’s company, BlueNalu, has raised millions of dollars to culture fish cells into real fish meat that looks and performs just like conventional fish, but without the mercury, microplastics, nor oceanic exploitation.

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Food & Beverage, Animal Welfare Paul Shapiro Food & Beverage, Animal Welfare Paul Shapiro

Ep. 31 - Can Beer Brewery Waste Help Solve Plastic Pollution?

Plastic is amazing at doing so many things—except going away. As the planet increasingly swims in humanity’s plastic garbage (nearly none of which gets recycled and virtually all of which will last for centuries), Lori Goff is betting that biotech will be part of the solution to creating functional plastic alternatives that are so biodegradable you can eat them.

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Food & Beverage Paul Shapiro Food & Beverage Paul Shapiro

Ep. 30 - Bean-Free Brew: A Perfect Cup of Coffee down to the Last Molecule

What if you could make coffee out of agricultural byproducts, like watermelon seeds and sunflower seed husks? Think it wouldn’t taste as good? Well, according to a Seattle-based startup called Atomo, they’ve not only recreated the exact taste of coffee, but they go on to claim that in blind taste tests of their brew vs. Starbucks, 7 out of 10 people preferred the taste of their so-called molecular coffee.

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Sustainability, Environmental Protection Paul Shapiro Sustainability, Environmental Protection Paul Shapiro

Ep. 27 - Your Trash Is Tom Szaky's Treasure

You know the story: there’s a bright college student who drops out of an Ivy League school to embark upon an entrepreneurial journey, founding his own company and building it into a major success along the way. No, we’re not talking about Mark Zuckerberg or Bill Gates here. Instead, we’re talking about Tom Szaky, an immigrant whose family fled Hungary after the Chernobyl disaster, eventually sending him to Princeton, where he dropped out to launch his startup called TerraCycle. Their goal, as the company touts, is to make “recycling the unrecyclable not only feasible but desirable and profitable!”

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Food & Beverage Paul Shapiro Food & Beverage Paul Shapiro

Ep. 26 - The Meat-Scientist-Turned-Plant-Based-Entrepreneur

The man who brought you Oscar Mayer’s Lunchables and other notable products such as Slim Jim is now hoping you’ll buy his soy-based meats. After spending 30 years in the meat industry, Rody co-founded and is the CEO of Improved Nature. You might not have heard as much about Rody’s food tech start-up as some of the more well-publicized names in the field, but he’s already raised millions of dollars and is selling in the US and abroad.

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Food & Beverage, Sustainability Paul Shapiro Food & Beverage, Sustainability Paul Shapiro

Ep. 25 - Can Helping the Homeless with Surplus Food be Profitable? Jasmine Crowe is Betting on It.

For a lot of people, when they walk by someone who’s homeless, their inclination may be to look the other way. One day for Jasmine Crowe, however, she not only didn’t look the other way; she saw a profitable business opportunity in helping connect the hungry with perfectly good food the rest of us are throwing away.

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Food & Beverage Paul Shapiro Food & Beverage Paul Shapiro

Ep. 23 - Josh Tetrick on Resilience in the Face of Both Adversity and Success

In this interview, Josh talks about how he tries to remain calm and resilient in the face of both success and adversity. He talks about why he doesn’t believe the headlines about his own company, both when they’re good and when they’re bad, since neither may be right. And he talks about what types of companies he wants new food entrepreneurs to start.

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Ep. 22 - Turning Down the Global Thermostat

There are few people who know more about climate change than Columbia University’s Graciela Chichilnisky. Not only did she propose and design the carbon credits trading system under the Kyoto Protocol, she also was a lead author of the 2007 report from the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change that won the Nobel Prize. Not too shabby.

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Food & Beverage, Animal Welfare Paul Shapiro Food & Beverage, Animal Welfare Paul Shapiro

Ep. 21 - Sampling a Historic Pint of Ice Cream with Perfect Day

Ryan Pandya and Perumal Gandhi were both in their early 20s when they were e-introduced to each other by another person they’d never meet in person either, Isha Datar. A series of online chats led to the idea of jointly creating a company that would put cows out to pasture by making real dairy proteins without the involvement of a single cow.

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Ep. 19 - Giving Farmers a Fairer Shake

Paul Rice has devoted his life to trying to give the farmers who grow our food a fairer shake. That crusade has taken him from the coffee farms of Nicaragua to founding his own certification program for fair trade that now certifies a wide variety of products you probably buy all the time, from coffee and tea to sugar and even clothing.

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Ep. 17 - Cleaning for Good with Biokleen

Today, Biokleen is nationally distributed and is one of the biggest names in natural cleaning products. The company’s Clean for Good program not only commits to environmentally-preferable ingredients, packaging, and energy, it also ensures that purchases of its products go to reforestation and other restoration programs. In other words, Biokleen is a textbook case of conscious capitalism, and we’ve got their managing director, Barry Firth, on the show with us this episode!

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Ep. 16 - Will Mycelium Materials Save the World?

You may know that mushrooms are fungi or that some medicines, like penicillin, are created from fungi. But just as plants are extremely diverse, fungi are even more so. Companies like Ecovative are just starting to peer into what we can do with fungi to help right some of the environmental wrongs humanity’s been committing.

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Food & Beverage, Sustainability Paul Shapiro Food & Beverage, Sustainability Paul Shapiro

Ep. 15 - Making McProgress for Good

When you think about picking a career that’ll help make the world a better place, do you think of working at the largest fast food company in the world? You may not, but that’s indeed what Bob Langert spent his career doing. The former McDonald’s executive was at the forefront of many of the decisions the restaurant behemoth made relating to social responsibility, from retiring styrofoam containers to paying tomato pickers more to improving farm animal welfare.

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