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A Walk of Fame ceremony for two in-laws at their peak: The story of Emily Blunt and Stanley Tucci

30 April 2026 at 11:48

If thereโ€™s one place in the world used to hosting special moments, itโ€™s the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Premieres, parties, and celebrations have taken place for decades on its gray terrazzo tiles. But this Thursday, at 11:30 a.m. (Los Angeles time), a truly unique moment will occur: two actors will receive a star on the Walk at the same time. And they are not only colleagues, but also family โ€” a rare combination. Londoner Emily Blunt and New Yorker Stanley Tucci will receive their honors at 6930 Hollywood Boulevard, in front of the iconic Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. They will likely celebrate among colleagues, but also with family: they have been in-laws for more than a decade.

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ยฉ TheStewartofNY (Getty Images for 20th Century St)

From left to right, Stanley Tucci, Felicity Blunt, Emily Blunt and John Krasinski, at the premiere of 'The Devil Wears Prada 2' in New York, on April 20, 2026.
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  • Sustainability In Your Ear: Zena Harris Brings a Green Spark to Hollywood Mitch Ratcliffe
    An average big-budget movie creates about 3,370 metric tons of COโ‚‚, according to the Sustainable Production Allianceโ€™s 2021 report. Thatโ€™s like driving over 700 gas-powered cars for a year, or about 33 metric tons of COโ‚‚ for each day of filming. A single TV season can have the same impact as 108 cars. With thousands of productions happening every year in North America, Hollywoodโ€™s environmental impact is hard to overlook. Zena Harris, founder and president of Green Spark Group, has spent more t
     

Sustainability In Your Ear: Zena Harris Brings a Green Spark to Hollywood

27 April 2026 at 11:00

An average big-budget movie creates about 3,370 metric tons of COโ‚‚, according to the Sustainable Production Allianceโ€™s 2021 report. Thatโ€™s like driving over 700 gas-powered cars for a year, or about 33 metric tons of COโ‚‚ for each day of filming. A single TV season can have the same impact as 108 cars. With thousands of productions happening every year in North America, Hollywoodโ€™s environmental impact is hard to overlook. Zena Harris, founder and president of Green Spark Group, has spent more than ten years helping the industry turn sustainability goals into practical steps that productions can track. On this episode of Sustainability In Your Ear, she shares how to build sustainable practices into film and TV projects from the very start, instead of adding them at the end when most waste has already been created. Zena started Green Spark Group in 2014 after earning a masterโ€™s in sustainability and environmental management at Harvard. She pitched Vancouverโ€™s major studios on a simple idea: sustainability can save money. Her first big project, the X-Files reboot, managed to divert 81% of its waste across 40 filming locations. Since then, her certified B Corp consultancy has worked with Disney, NBCUniversal, Amazon, and other major studios, and she founded the Sustainable Production Forum, which is now in its tenth year.

Zena Harris, founder and president of Green Spark Group, is our guest on Sustainability In Your Ear.

This conversation comes at an important time. Soon, Californiaโ€™s climate disclosure laws will require studios to report emissions from every vendor in their production supply chain, both before and after filming. Zena points out that while studios are getting ready, most of their suppliersโ€”like small companies that rent generators, handle waste, or provide lumber on tight schedulesโ€”are not prepared. The Sustainable Entertainment Alliance has released Scope 3 guidance for productions, and updated Scope 1 and 2 guidance came out in August 2025, but there is still no single tool that everyone uses. The real challenge over the next two years will be closing the gap between what studios must report and what their suppliers can provide. Zena also makes a bigger point about culture. After 12 years in the industry, she sees sustainability experts facing the same obstacles again and again because the way content is made hasnโ€™t changed. The day-to-day work is important, but the bigger opportunity is in climate storytelling. Only about 13% of recent top-rated films mention climate change at all. Tracking the carbon footprint of a TV season is important, but what really matters is how a billion viewers see whatโ€™s normal on screen. Thatโ€™s the influence Hollywood hasnโ€™t fully used yet.

To follow Zenaโ€™s work, visit greensparkgroup.com. You can also learn more about the conference she started at sustainableproductionforum.com, or listen to her podcast, The Tie-In, which she co-hosts with Mark Rabin.

Interview Transcript

Mitch Ratcliffeย  0:00

Hello, good morning, good afternoon, or good evening, wherever you are on this beautiful planet of ours. Welcome to Sustainability In Your Ear. This is the podcast conversation about accelerating the transition to a sustainable, carbon-neutral society, and Iโ€™m your host, Mitch Ratcliffe. Thanks for joining the conversation today.

Weโ€™re going to talk about film and television, because every film and TV production starts the same way: with a creative vision, a budget, a shooting schedule, and a huge amount of stuff. Generators burn diesel all day and night at shooting locations. Trucks idle as they wait to move between locations. Sets are built from raw materials only to end up in the landfill when filming ends. Craft services rely on single-use items for literally everything thatโ€™s placed on the table for the production team.

Now multiply that by the thousands of productions happening in North America each year, and the scale of the problem becomes clear. The average feature film emits 3,370 metric tons of carbon dioxide, which is like driving more than 700 gas-powered cars for a full year. And a single season of a TV show can match the emissions of 108 cars โ€” and thatโ€™s not even counting the supply chain, everything that comes onto a set and everything that leaves. Hollywood has promised to be more sustainable many times, and our guest today has spent the last 10 years figuring out what it really takes to make these promises come to life in practice.

Zena Harris is the founder and president of Green Spark Group, a certified B Corp sustainability consultancy that she launched in 2014 with a mission to change the environmental impact of entertainment. She holds a masterโ€™s degree from Harvard in sustainability and environmental management, and she came to this work not as an environmentalist, but as a systems thinker โ€” someone who spent her early career in engineering and HR identifying where organizations were leaking efficiency and money. But when she moved to Vancouver and discovered that nobody was focused on sustainability in what had become one of North Americaโ€™s largest film production hubs, she saw a gap and filled it.

For more than a decade, sheโ€™s worked with major studios โ€” including Disney, NBCUniversal, and Amazon โ€” helping them embed sustainable practices in video production projects, and sheโ€™s developed measurable goals and built cross-industry collaborations that make lasting change possible.

She also founded the Sustainable Production Forum, which is now in its 10th year and has become the industryโ€™s premier gathering place for turning sustainability talk into coordinated action.

Weโ€™ll talk with Zena about what it looks like when a production plans for sustainability from the very beginning, instead of adding it on at the end of the process like we usually do with all of our waste. And sheโ€™ll explain her idea of radical collaboration and why making real progress in Hollywood requires everyone โ€” that includes unions, guilds, city governments, power companies, and those top-talent stars โ€” to work together. Weโ€™ll also discuss how she uses the circular economy on set, the accountability gap that remains even as Californiaโ€™s new climate disclosure laws start to roll out, and whether the same systems-thinking approach can help business outside the film world.

To find out more about Zenaโ€™s work and Green Spark Group, visit greensparkgroup.com โ€” thatโ€™s all one word, no space, no dash. Hollywood has the power to change how people think about sustainability, but can it also change how it works behind the scenes? Zena Harris is tackling both challenges at the same time. Letโ€™s see what sheโ€™s discovered, right after this brief commercial break.

Mitch Ratcliffeย  3:49

Welcome to the show, Zena. How you doing today?

Zena Harrisย  3:50

Hi. Thanks for having me. Iโ€™m doing great. The sun is shining in Tacoma, Washington, and Iโ€™m happy to be talking with you.

Mitch Ratcliffeย  3:59

Well, Iโ€™m so happy to hear that you live in Tacoma. I lived there for almost 50 years. Itโ€™s a beautiful place, and Iโ€™m glad youโ€™ve inherited it. I really like it. But you started your sustainability career in Vancouver, and you had no entertainment experience, and your first project was helping The X-Files reboot series divert material at 40 shooting locations โ€” and you reduced their waste by 81%. What gave you the confidence to, you know, just call and say, โ€˜Hey, can I make you more sustainable?โ€™

Zena Harrisย  4:31

It was a little more than that. You know, there was a lead-up to it. I had studied the film and TV industry in graduate school โ€” I did my masterโ€™s thesis on it โ€” so I had a little bit of a background. And the reason I studied it in grad school: I was in a sustainability masterโ€™s program, and I wanted to figure out how to shift culture. The first thing I thought of was, okay, people watch TV, we all love movies โ€” thatโ€™s where I should start digging in to see what theyโ€™re doing. And they werenโ€™t doing a ton. They were doing a little bit, but not too much.

So I talked to all the studio reps and found out what was going on and created a whole framework, like you do in graduate school, and wrote it all up. And then I pitched it to every studio. I sent out a white paper, essentially, to all the studios, and I was like, โ€˜Hey, letโ€™s talk about this.โ€™ Flew to LA, met with people in person. And Iโ€™m like, โ€˜Iโ€™m in Vancouver. I know itโ€™s a major film hub. Put me to work.โ€™ And one person did. She said, โ€˜Hey, you know, The X-Files is coming. Itโ€™s a big show. We have room in the budget to make this great. Letโ€™s see what we can do.โ€™ And thatโ€™s what really got me going.

One of the first people I met in the industry was Kelsey Evans. She is the owner of Keep It Green Recycling, which is a local vendor in Vancouver. Now, I had studied the film and TV industry, I know management practices and sustainability and the science, and she knew โ€” like, really knew โ€” the industry. So we worked together on that production, and we still work together today. Sheโ€™s a friend of mine. Sheโ€™s fantastic.

We got a lot of stuff done on that show, and that was my introduction into the film industry in practical terms. Vancouver, because itโ€™s a major film hub, has โ€” letโ€™s just say โ€” 20 shows filming at any given time. Sometimes itโ€™s a lot more. But I knew that the work I was doing on that one show could scale. We needed to do it on all the shows. We needed to engage the industry. We needed to train people. So I started Green Spark Group as a vehicle to do this in the industry more broadly.

I think my past experience โ€” prior to even going to grad school โ€” in HR for a multinational company, and I was also an executive director at an international nonprofit where we had working groups and people from all over the world coming together to solve problems and create programs, all that gave me confidence to step into the film industry, look around, learn from others, apply my skills, and build this momentum locally. The company, locally, ended up โ€” now we work across North America and even in other countries. So itโ€™s been a journey.

Mitch Ratcliffeย  7:52

Well, you point out that they said, โ€˜Weโ€™ve got room in the budget to make this great,โ€™ but that isnโ€™t always the case. So whatโ€™s the pitch to a new client?

Zena Harrisย  8:00

Yeah, yeah. Well, those are the magic words: โ€˜We can save you money.โ€™ That is it. Thatโ€™s it. I mean, look, this has been a movement over the last, letโ€™s say, 12 years โ€” thatโ€™s how long Iโ€™ve been working in this space. And itโ€™s rare for folks to say, โ€˜Yeah, we can figure this out in the budget.โ€™ Sometimes it happens, but most people want to know how they can save money. So if you can show them very clearly that they can save money, that pushes the door open. And then you can talk about lots of other things too.

Mitch Ratcliffeย  8:43

So tell us about The Amazing Spider-Man 2. You saved them a lot of money. Howโ€™d you do it, and how much did you save them?

Zena Harrisย  8:48

I did not work on that. A colleague of mine, Emellie Oโ€™Brien, worked on that. That was actually one of the first productions publicized for saving a lot of money. I think they saved something like โ€” well, I have the number here โ€” $400,000. The cool thing about what happened with that, and also what happened with The X-Files and some others shortly thereafter, is that the studio recorded behind the scenes. They interviewed crew members to talk about what they had done. Then they published some of the stats in a case study and a video.

People in our industry love watching videos, right? So we did a behind-the-scenes for The X-Files, which caught lightning in a bottle โ€” really created a whole movement in Vancouver. We showed that little five-minute behind-the-scenes video to everyone, and they saw their peers in that video because they were crew members speaking about what they had done. Things like that really sparked action in people and this excitement that, โ€˜Wow, things I have seen and kind of felt uncomfortable with โ€” like waste, nobody likes seeing waste โ€” people saw solutions in those videos. People saw themselves, saw their peers, and that inspired action, awareness, intrigue โ€” like all the stuff you would want to create a movement. I canโ€™t say enough about those early videos. They really helped kind of put us on a trajectory for more awareness and more action.

Mitch Ratcliffeย  10:42

A set is kind of like a microcosm of a city. A lot of stuff comes together and then disperses again. We actually did some consulting a few years ago with Hollywood about recycling the material on site โ€” they use the PCs for the first time and then send them to recycling. Itโ€™s amazing how wasteful it could be. Tell us about what happens on a set. Whatโ€™s the input, and whatโ€™s the output?

Zena Harrisย  11:10

Yeah, you are right. It is definitely akin to a city. I mean, if you think about it, for a large film or TV series, there can be 20 different departments working together to make that project happen. Each of those departments brings in some kind of material, some kind of input. The production office will have lots of office supplies, equipment, office equipment, furniture for the office โ€” that kind of thing. Those things are coming in, and then you use them, and then they go out.

Then you can think of production design and construction. These two departments work really closely together, and theyโ€™re the ones creating and then building the sets in the sound stage. You can think about all the materials that might be associated with that. Construction is a big input department, where weโ€™re bringing in lots of wood โ€” and other types of material. Itโ€™s not just wood, but essentially weโ€™re building a village inside a sound stage to shoot. And itโ€™s all the wood and any other material that goes into that: wallpaper, paint, all sorts of props, set dressing that will go into that space.

So all thatโ€™s coming in, and then we use it for a short period of time, and then we have to do something with it. A lot of times, set walls are kind of standard โ€” they can be reused. These are things that, if we recognize the patterns here, weโ€™re using these things all the time. Weโ€™re breaking them down, and then we do something with them. A lot of times the breakdown is fast. You donโ€™t have a ton of opportunity to really think. But if we know that thereโ€™s a pattern associated โ€” prep, production, and wrap every single show โ€” we know that we can disrupt that pattern. We can plan for it.

This is where thinking ahead and planning like, โ€˜Hey, we can reuse these walls. Got a lot of doors here โ€” weโ€™re going to reuse these doors. Weโ€™re going to send them to a place that will hold them temporarily, like a reuse center, and then those can be redistributed back into the industry.โ€™ Some productions will store this stuff on their own if they have reshoots they think they might have, or another series they might come along. So all of these are options.

The default historically has been โ€” because this is a dynamic industry, because timelines are short, people need to get out of their stage space โ€” to use it, break it down, put it in the dumpster, get that thing out of here, and move on. So weโ€™re saying thereโ€™s another way to do it, and just that alone saves the production a lot of money, because those big dumpsters at the end of it all are expensive to haul away. If we can reduce even a few of those, that is a cost savings, and then that material can be diverted and reused. So everything coming in โ€” food, big material like construction material that people think a lot about, anything coming in โ€” has an opportunity to be diverted, redistributed on the back end. And then that action saves money.

Mitch Ratcliffeย  14:59

Well, you describe whatโ€™s needed as radical collaboration. Iโ€™m wondering if you can explain what that means, because Hollywoodโ€™s going through a lot of changes right now, and it sounds like sustainability may be the keystone of some new talent or new careers during the production process. So what are the hardest stakeholders in that radical collaboration to get to move from where they are today?

Zena Harrisย  15:22

Yeah. I think, like I said, Iโ€™ve been doing this for a really long time, and one of the things that Iโ€™ve picked up over the years is that people in the industry have been conditioned to point fingers. There are different stakeholders in the industry. Crew will point to the union or the studio, for example, and say, โ€˜You know, those folks need to do something so that I can integrate sustainable practices.โ€™ The unions will point to crew or studios. The studios will point to production or unions. And so at the end of the day, that doesnโ€™t get us anywhere. Weโ€™re kind of swirling in this finger-pointing. And nobody really knows what to do. Theyโ€™re waiting for something. So progress is slow when you do that.

In order to move the needle, I think one of the things we need to do is actually work together in ways that might seem unconventional or radical. I keep reminding myself of the saying, โ€˜What got us here wonโ€™t take us forward.โ€™ So we have to get over ourselves and do something differently. We know that thereโ€™s no single organization thatโ€™s going to solve all the problems or change the existing system. We need a different approach, a different narrative around all of this โ€” not just kind of deferring to another stakeholder.

This is what I call radical collaboration, because itโ€™s different. Collaboration between crew and unions and studios and creatives and suppliers and industry organizations โ€” in ways that have been different than weโ€™ve tried before, that really havenโ€™t worked so well, or not to the degree we wanted them to work. So instead of reinventing the wheel on that, we need a whole different tack. I think that in order to see success, we need positive reinforcement for people. We need to actually say, โ€˜Yes, this worked,โ€™ and in increments too โ€” not just the big things. When people see that positive reinforcement, they actually lean in. They actually have more confidence in what theyโ€™re doing. And then this increases momentum. Thatโ€™s kind of my view of radical collaboration and what I think is needed to keep the ball rolling.

Mitch Ratcliffeย  18:07

Well, youโ€™re making a really interesting point, which is that people donโ€™t dislike change. They may be a little afraid of it, but they want to see that the extra effort involved in making the change actually is paying off. As the orchestrator of the sustainability activities on set, how do you communicate that to them so that the Teamsters and the members of the Screen Actors Guild all say, โ€˜Oh, Iโ€™m inโ€™?

Zena Harrisย  18:37

Yeah, yeah. Well, you know, itโ€™s interesting. You mentioned a couple of different positions there โ€” Teamsters and actors and these sorts of things. Everybody is coming to the production with a different perspective, a different viewpoint, kind of a different mandate within their department. Like, their job is to do this. So everybody sees sustainability in a slightly different way.

One of the things we really strive to do โ€” and I would say this is kind of a standard practice, but what weโ€™re trying to do as a team at Green Spark Group โ€” is go beyond surface-level conversations. Not just say, โ€˜Here are a few things you could do,โ€™ but really try to have a deeper conversation with people in each of these departments and ask them what they see, what they need to be successful in doing any one of the things that they might want to do differently, and really help them get there. If theyโ€™re afraid to talk to someone, well, weโ€™ll help them do that. We will have their back. We will go with them and be a backstop for anything they may not know or feel confident talking about. If it is finding a vendor and they donโ€™t have time to look around, weโ€™ll help them do that.

You know, people say, โ€˜Meet you where you are.โ€™ But itโ€™s really going beyond surface-level conversations. Itโ€™s really tapping into peopleโ€™s wants, needs, level of confidence, and helping them grow that and helping them shine in their role โ€” whatever it is. I think that sort of human-centric approach is really helpful, and what really moves the needle, or actually builds trust. Because at the end of the day, we can go in there and talk about all sorts of gear. Thereโ€™s a lot of gear out there. Thereโ€™s a lot of batteries out there that are going to save emissions. But I have seen multiple times where batteries have been rented, they sit in the gear truck, and people are afraid to use them. Why is that? Letโ€™s talk about that. Letโ€™s really unpack it, and letโ€™s find a safe space to do it. Maybe itโ€™s that lightweight one over there, and we want to just test it out. Totally cool. Letโ€™s make that happen. Whatโ€™s it going to take to get there?

Mitch Ratcliffeย  21:24

This very meta moment โ€” talking about telling stories to storytellers to get them to change their behavior โ€” is a great place to take a quick commercial break. Folks, weโ€™re going to be right back to continue this really interesting conversation.

Welcome back to Sustainability In Your Ear. Letโ€™s get back to my conversation with Zena Harris, founder and president of the Hollywood sustainability consultancy โ€” although Vancouver, too โ€” Green Spark Group. Zena, your mission is to change the climate of entertainment, and that has a double meaning that clearly was deliberate. But Iโ€™m wondering, in the current environment and thinking about the stories we tell about why we do things, with all the whiplashing political winds of the last couple of years, how has that changed your message and your perception of what Hollywoodโ€™s trying to accomplish?

Zena Harrisย  22:16

Yeah, I mean, Iโ€™ve said this a few times. We have a lot of momentum. Right now, in 2026, there are more organizations, there are more people thinking about sustainability, there are more tools out there for people to use. Thereโ€™s a lot of momentum in the industry. So for us at Green Spark Group, we are on a mission to change the climate of entertainment, and itโ€™s incremental, year over year, year over year โ€” and so weโ€™re still working on it. Itโ€™s very relevant for us today.

We have had a hand in changing a lot in the entertainment industry over the last 12 years. We started programs, weโ€™ve created strategic plans for industry organizations and training in the C-suite, and started the industryโ€™s first conference. Weโ€™re uplifting people and trying to give a platform to people to collaborate and share their ideas. But thereโ€™s a lot of opportunity out there. There are still a lot of people who are new to sustainability, and they need someone to help them make sense of it all. Itโ€™s taking all this wonderful information thatโ€™s been created by various organizations โ€” and weโ€™ve contributed as well โ€” and distilling it and helping them make sense of it all, make decisions that are in line with their values, and implement the things that they want to implement. Save the money that they can save, that they know they can, when they start doing the math.

Mitch Ratcliffeย  24:11

Is the money the key thing right now? Is it the sustainable savings, or is it still a commitment to the climate, in the context of, again, all the backlash against the idea of environmentalism?

Zena Harrisย  24:24

Yeah, I mean, the idea of environmentalism, I think, is kind of in the broader ethos. I think when you get down to talking to people one on one, they want solutions to things โ€” waste theyโ€™ve seen, or emissions theyโ€™ve encountered on production, or food waste, or whatever it is. Whether they call themselves an environmentalist or they just are a caring and concerned person, everybody wants a positive working experience. And they donโ€™t want that tension internally between, โ€˜Iโ€™m doing this great, creative, wonderful thing in my job, and then I look over here and some negative thing is happening environmentally or whatever.โ€™ People want a holistic, positive work experience. So I think thatโ€™s core at the end of the day โ€” to tap into that, and, like I said, just go beyond surface-level conversations and really help people figure that out.

Mitch Ratcliffeย  25:35

Let me ask about the other side of that equation, about changing the climate of entertainment. Hollywood has enormous cultural reach, but we did a little research and found that only about 10%, 13% was the number we came up with, of recent top-rated films even acknowledge the idea of climate change on screen. Do you hear creatives on the content side talking about climate? Do they ask you? Do they say, โ€˜You know, this is interesting, Iโ€™d like to learn more, and I might tell a story about it somedayโ€™?

Zena Harrisย  26:05

Yeah. I mean, this idea that the industry reach is certainly enormous โ€” the cultural influence of the industry, wherever youโ€™re interacting with it, whether you love a character on screen, whether you follow an actor in real life and kind of just like what they do, whether you follow โ€” like, Iโ€™m an operations kind of person, I like looking at how things work and trying to improve that. But this idea of climate storytelling, a lot of people are thinking about it right now. Itโ€™s a huge lever. You will hear that batted around a lot. A lot of industry organizations are doing research on it and trying to get into writersโ€™ rooms and in film schools.

Thereโ€™s a lot of momentum in that space. We have been engaged a few times in that effort, and itโ€™s proven beneficial. So I would say that 13% โ€” thereโ€™s a lot of momentum around this subject, and I can see that number increasing over time. People want stories that reflect the current reality theyโ€™re feeling in real life. There are a lot of people working in environmental jobs, or in some shape or form, and I think those kinds of professions will be reflected on screen a lot more in the future. So, yeah, I think thereโ€™s a lot of momentum in that space.

Mitch Ratcliffeย  27:52

I can see a film about a ranger saving a family from a fire.

Zena Harrisย  27:57

You can think it, they can do it.

Mitch Ratcliffeย  28:00

Letโ€™s turn back to the operational question, as you pointed out you focus on that. One of the common problems that production has, along with every other business, is trying to fully measure whatโ€™s going on. Like we were talking about, this set is this midpoint in a very complex supply chain where stuff has flowed in, now it needs to go somewhere in order to either be reused or appropriately recycled, but we canโ€™t fully measure all that. Whatโ€™s still in the invisible category of information? In the same sense that Scope 3 emissions are hard for a typical corporation to measure, is there a comparable issue with production sustainability?

Zena Harrisย  28:36

Oh yeah, 100%. Look, there are always more things to measure. As an industry, we have focused a lot on carbon emissions from things like utilities, fuel, air travel, and accommodations. We have a really good handle on that. But those are, like, four categories, right? And, as you said earlier, materials are coming onto production โ€” food, wood, office supplies, you name it, it comes onto production. So those are the things we donโ€™t have a solid handle on. Thereโ€™s embedded carbon and all that stuff.

There are also lots of industry tools, industry carbon calculators out there โ€” some measure more than others.

Mitch Ratcliffeย  (interjects)

Are any of them any good?

Zena Harrisย  (continues)

Yeah, yeah, theyโ€™re good. But some have more inputs than others. Some will only measure those four categories that I mentioned. For years, for example, everybody in the industry wants to know the waste diversion rate, right? But nobody focuses on the carbon emissions associated with that material. We just get a diversion rate, and we call it good. So you have to choose: if you want to know all of that, you have to choose a tool that will allow you to input more of that information. And we donโ€™t have a standard tool yet in the industry that everybody uses, so we can compare apples to apples.

We have guidance in the industry, and thatโ€™s really helpful. The Sustainable Entertainment Alliance, which is an industry consortium, has put out guidance on Scope 1, Scope 2, and Scope 3. Their Scope 3 guidance is the most recent, and with new information, new methodology, a lot of people donโ€™t really know what to do with that, and maybe arenโ€™t sure which tool to use to capture some of that stuff. So thereโ€™s a lot of uncertainty even around the guidance thatโ€™s out there. Thatโ€™s where you can seek out professionals to help you understand all that stuff.

Mitch Ratcliffeย  31:11

One of the characteristics of the change weโ€™re undergoing right now is the recognition of externalities. And in Hollywood production generally โ€” I have some friends who are in the industry โ€” it seems to me that they focused almost entirely on who was in front of the camera and who was behind the camera, and only now are starting to recognize that theyโ€™re part of this deeper supply chain. And now Californiaโ€™s new climate disclosure laws are going to require studios to report indirect, upstream and downstream emissions from every vendor by this year. Howโ€™s that going to change? And is the industry actually getting the traction on trying to respond to that requirement?

Zena Harrisย  31:47

The studios are very aware of this. Theyโ€™ve been preparing for this. The suppliers upstream, downstream are not as [prepared].

Mitch Ratcliffeย  31:58

So how are they not prepared? What do we need to do?

Zena Harrisย  32:00

Well, they havenโ€™t been tracking.

Mitch Ratcliffeย  32:10

So theyโ€™re the typical company.

Zena Harrisย  32:13

They are a typical company. These are small companies servicing these projects, these productions. And weโ€™ve been so focused in the industry on pre-production and production โ€” that piece of the content creation process. So if you think of a book that has 10 chapters, weโ€™ve been essentially focusing on one chapter. So youโ€™ve got all of the other ones, and all of the service companies and suppliers and all of that that still incorporates the book, and all of those are contributing in some way.

Now weโ€™ve been collecting data from waste haulers. Weโ€™ve been collecting data from people who supply equipment, and even those folks are still trying to get organized with their data. So you can imagine, like every other company, they all have their own operations. So thatโ€™s one thing. You can incorporate sustainability into your own company operations, and then you can provide data associated with the product or service that you are providing. And thatโ€™s going to matter. Those things roll up into this production reporting, and that production reporting rolls up into the larger studio, whoโ€™s going to have to incorporate that into their corporate reporting.

Mitch Ratcliffeย  33:54

So do you see this regulation as catalyzing the potential for sustainability at scale in entertainment production?

Zena Harrisย  34:05

Yeah. I mean, I think it provides people a solid talking point to go up and shake the tree a little bit and say, โ€˜Hey, weโ€™re going to have to be doing this.โ€™ Look, theyโ€™re not going to have all the information they need, probably, in year one. So theyโ€™re going to take what they do have, and theyโ€™re going to estimate probably across their slate. And then theyโ€™re going to work really hard to make that better, more accurate in the coming years. So if youโ€™re not asked in year one as a supplier for certain information, you might be in year two and three. It would be wise, I think, to kind of get your house in order and be able to start reporting on these things, even if youโ€™re never asked. Itโ€™s good for you as a company, because you start to understand where your waste is, where your emissions lie, and then you can start making changes accordingly. And yes, that stuff saves money. So itโ€™s good for everyone to be thinking about this, whether youโ€™re asked by a studio or not.

Mitch Ratcliffeย  35:16

Well, thatโ€™s really the key โ€” that itโ€™s also rewarding to make that kind of additional positive impact, as well as save some money and make more profit in the long run. I mean, thatโ€™s whatโ€™s rewarding about progress in general.

Zena Harrisย  35:30

Totally, totally. Itโ€™s a ripple effect, right? And then we just get better as an industry, and then an industry that contributes to broader society.

Mitch Ratcliffeย  35:40

So after 10 years, how far has the industry come toward the vision that you had when you started Green Spark Group?

Zena Harrisย  35:50

Oh, gosh. Well, thereโ€™s a lot that has happened over these years. Like I said, more people are aware, more people are engaged. But I think that we are swirling within the existing system. Sustainability practitioners that started working on production like I did years ago โ€” we just entered this existing content creation system. And what Iโ€™m noticing now is that weโ€™re swirling within the same system. Weโ€™re all running up against similar challenges around the world with regard to implementing sustainable practices. So weโ€™re coming up against consistent hurdles, barriers within this system.

For me, thatโ€™s an opportunity to look a little bit bigger and say, โ€˜Okay, well, if we keep running into the same barriers, what if the system shifted? What if the entire system shifted? What are the incentives involved in the system to keep it the way it is?โ€™ And thereโ€™s a lot โ€” thatโ€™s a whole separate podcast โ€” but all to say, this is where we need to be thinking: how we shift the system, how we have that radical collaboration, how we shift the needle on what suppliers are doing and reporting, and these sorts of things. And thatโ€™s whatโ€™s going to take us to the next level. Weโ€™re going to get over the hump.

Mitch Ratcliffeย  37:34

So, given that, imagine that you are Zena, goddess of sustainability, and can put your finger on one thing and change it. What would it be, in order to drive much more rapid transition to a more sustainable production environment?

Zena Harrisย  37:51

I mean, I think it all comes down to the people โ€” the people in the system that are either allowing or not allowing, either making excuses or open to possibility. It all comes down to that. There are some core elements associated with people, behavior change, these sorts of things. I think mindset is core, absolutely core. I think courage โ€” even to talk about this stuff within your small team or your department, or even in a larger conversation โ€” is pretty critical, to voice some things youโ€™re noticing, or what ideas you have for doing things differently. I think that collective confidence โ€” once you do that, people get on board. They come together. Confidence is critical as well. If you donโ€™t have it, youโ€™re not going to take the next step, right? So there are fundamental human elements that need to be developed, to be encouraged, to be demonstrated. And I think that is going to shift the needle.

Mitch Ratcliffeย  39:08

Itโ€™s a storytelling challenge in a lot of ways. Thereโ€™s some carrot, thereโ€™s some stick, thereโ€™s a lot of nuance to that tale that we need to really make embedded into everybodyโ€™s approach to thinking about the work. Zena, thanks so much for your time today. How can folks follow both Green Spark Group and the work youโ€™ve done with the Sustainable Production Forum?

Zena Harrisย  39:28

Sure. Youโ€™re always welcome to check out our website, greensparkgroup.com. We post insights there monthly and have a lot of great information for folks. Also on social media at @greensparkgroup โ€” pick a platform, weโ€™re probably on it. And then the Sustainable Production Forum is online as well, sustainableproductionforum.com, and from there you can get to all of their content, videos, anything you want to know is there too.

And Iโ€™ll also just give a quick plug for my podcast that I co-host with my longtime friend Mark Rabin. Itโ€™s called The Tie-In, and so folks can also check out stories from crew members, from people doing amazing work behind the scenes. We talk to them all there.

Mitch Ratcliffeย  40:21

Zena, thanks so much. Itโ€™s been a fascinating conversation. Really enjoyed it.

Zena Harrisย 

Thank you.

Mitch Ratcliffeย  40:31

Welcome back to Sustainability In Your Ear. Youโ€™ve been listening to my conversation with Zena Harris, founder and president of Green Spark Group, the certified B Corp sustainability consultancy she launched in 2014 to change the climate of entertainment. You can find Zena and her teamโ€™s work at greensparkgroup.com โ€” thatโ€™s all one word, no space, no dash. And check out their conference, the Sustainable Production Forum, now in its 10th year, at sustainableproductionforum.com, also all one word, no space, no dash.

I think the headline from Zenaโ€™s work is a pitch, not a principle: โ€˜We can save you money.โ€™ Thatโ€™s how she opens a conversation with a studio, and itโ€™s why The Amazing Spider-Man 2 became an early case study, based on the work of a colleague of hers at Green Spark who helped that production save roughly $400,000 through sustainable practices. The implications of these savings are clear when you stand next to the dumpster at the end of a chute and watch a villageโ€™s worth of lumber, furniture, wallpaper, and props get hauled away to a landfill because the stage needs to be empty by Monday.

The sustainability opportunity in film and TV isnโ€™t a values problem โ€” the industryโ€™s values are already stated on the record. Itโ€™s an operational capacity problem, and Zenaโ€™s work is translating aspiration into line items a production accountant can track. And thatโ€™s to the benefit of the environment, even if itโ€™s not visible on the bottom line.

Californiaโ€™s new climate disclosure laws are about to change the equation, too. Beginning this year, studios will have to report upstream and downstream emissions from every vendor in their production supply chain. Thatโ€™s the chapter of the book, as Zena put it, that the industry has never actually opened. The studios knew that this is coming, and theyโ€™ve been preparing for it. Their suppliers โ€” the small companies servicing productions on short timelines โ€” mostly havenโ€™t. That gap is the real story over the next 24 months in the entertainment sustainability business.

Zenaโ€™s advice to suppliers is the same advice my recent guest Steve Wilhite, who leads Schneider Electricโ€™s power management division, offered corporate energy buyers just a few weeks ago: get your house in order now, because even if youโ€™re not asked for data today, you will be in two or three years. The companies that can report cleanly will win work, while those that canโ€™t will become a balance sheet burden to the studios.

A digital nervous system is arriving now in Hollywood, and every waste hauler, every generator rental company, every lumber supplier is becoming a data-producing node in a network that didnโ€™t exist just one or two production cycles ago. Californiaโ€™s environmental policy is forcing that network into being, and once it exists, it will not unbuild itself, because people are going to see the benefits. Theyโ€™re going to see the savings that weโ€™ve been talking about throughout this conversation.

And after 12 years in the business, I think Zenaโ€™s comment near the end of our conversation โ€” that sustainability practitioners in entertainment are โ€˜swirling within the existing systemโ€™ โ€” is important to note. The hurdles they hit on one production look identical to the hurdles they hit on the next, because the content creation system itself hasnโ€™t changed. Thatโ€™s the green living myth problem I discussed recently with author Michael Maniates, but with a Hollywood accent: individual actors are doing the right thing inside a structure that continues to produce the same outputs by default. And that can easily become disenchanting. On-set greening is necessary and itโ€™s real, but the industryโ€™s deepest cultural lever is the one that we discussed in passing.

Only about 13% of recent top-rated films even acknowledge climate change on screen. The carbon accounting for a single TV season matters, but the cultural accounting โ€” for what a billion viewers see, what they feel is normal, and what film and television characters drive and eat and care about โ€” thatโ€™s the lever that this industry hasnโ€™t yet pulled. Production sustainability builds the operational muscle and the credibility, but climate storytelling is where that credibility will be built at scale, because it will spread these ideas, changing not only Hollywoodโ€™s practices, but the practices of an entire world. One without the other leaves the most influential narrative engine on the planet running on the old script, and itโ€™s time for a change.

So stay tuned. Weโ€™re going to keep talking with people rewriting whatโ€™s possible on set and on screen. And could you take a moment to help spread the word about the sustainable future we can build together? You are the amplifier that can spread more ideas to create less waste. So please take a look at any of the more than 550 episodes of Sustainability In Your Ear in our archives. Writing a review on your favorite podcast platform will help your neighbors find us. So please tell your friends, family, and co-workers they can find Sustainability In Your Ear on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, iHeartRadio, Audible, or whatever purveyor of podcast goodness they prefer.

Thank you, folks, for your support. Iโ€™m Mitch Ratcliffe. This is Sustainability In Your Ear, and we will be back with another innovator interview soon. In the meantime, take care of yourself, take care of one another, and letโ€™s all take care of this beautiful planet of ours. Have a green day.

The post Sustainability In Your Ear: Zena Harris Brings a Green Spark to Hollywood appeared first on Earth911.

Lisa Kudrow: โ€˜OK, so Iโ€™ve gotten older โ€” excuse me for not dyingโ€™

26 April 2026 at 04:00

Lisa Kudrow, 62, will always be Phoebe, but now, for many, sheโ€™s also Valerie Cherish, the main character on The Comeback (HBO Max), a series created by and starring herself that brings to life a mature actress attempting a return to the entertainment industry by putting on a brave face despite all kinds of humiliation. Its first season in 2005 was not a huge hit, but its slightly-pathetic-yet-endearing has-been female lead, who attempts to resuscitate her career with a reality show, won over discerning tastes.

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ยฉ AMY HARRITY/The New York Times/Europa Press (EL PAรS)

Actress Lisa Kudrow.

When Jacob Elordi replaced Andrew Garfield: Hollywoodโ€™s most memorable lastโ€‘minute casting shakeโ€‘ups

26 April 2026 at 04:00

Some TV seasons are spaced so far apart that, between the end of one and the start of the next, actors who were virtually unknown can become fullโ€‘fledged stars. Thatโ€™s what has happened with Euphoria, whose third season has just arrived on HBO. Neither Sydney Sweeney nor Jacob Elordi resemble the performers who said goodbye to their characters in 2022.

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ยฉ Getty Images / Blanca Lรณpez (Collage) (EL PAรS)

Andrew Garfield and Jacob Elordi.
  • โœ‡Antiques and Vintage - flickr
  • Alice White Truus, Bob & Jan too!
    Truus, Bob & Jan too! posted a photo: British postcard in the Film Weekly Series, London. In the late 1920s, sexy and bubbly Alice White (1904-1983) was one of Hollywood's most popular stars who received more than 30,000 fan letters a month. She was Warner Bros' blonde answer to Clara Bow, and among her film hits were Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1928) and Show Girl (1928). Tabloid reports about a violent love triangle seriously damaged her reputation and her career. Alice White was born
     

Alice White

25 April 2026 at 12:14

Truus, Bob & Jan too! posted a photo:

Alice White

British postcard in the Film Weekly Series, London.

In the late 1920s, sexy and bubbly Alice White (1904-1983) was one of Hollywood's most popular stars who received more than 30,000 fan letters a month. She was Warner Bros' blonde answer to Clara Bow, and among her film hits were Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1928) and Show Girl (1928). Tabloid reports about a violent love triangle seriously damaged her reputation and her career.

Alice White was born Alva Violet White in 1904 in Paterson, New Jersey, to French and Italian parents. Her mother was Catherine 'Kate' Alexander, a chorus girl, and her father was Audley White, a paper salesman. Audley abandoned the family when she was a baby, and Catherine died in 1915. Alice was raised by her Italian grandparents in New Haven, Connecticut. Her grandfather owned a fruit business. When Alice was a teenager, they moved to California, where she attended Hollywood High School. After leaving school, White started to work as a secretary, but lost several jobs for being too "sexy". She also worked as a switchboard operator at the Hollywood Writers' Club and as a script girl for director Josef von Sternberg. After clashing with von Sternberg, White left to work for Charlie Chaplin, who decided before long to place her in front of the camera. Elizabeth Ann at IMDb: "Her short blonde hair and big lips would become her trademark. Audiences fell in love with Alice, but critics were rarely impressed with her acting. It was also rumoured that her singing voice was being dubbed." Her bubbly and vivacious persona led to comparisons with Clara Bow, and she dyed her hair blonde to stop these comparisons. In his book 'Silent Films, 1877-1996: A Critical Guide to 646 Movies', Robert K. Klepper wrote: "Some critics have said that Ms. White was a second-string Clara Bow. In actuality, Ms. White had her own type of charm and was a delightful actress in her own, unique way. Whereas Clara Bow played the quintessential, flaming redheaded flapper, Alice White was more of a bubbly, vivacious blonde." After playing a succession of flappers and gold diggers, she attracted the attention of director and producer Mervyn LeRoy, who saw potential in her. Her screen debut was in The Sea Tiger (John Francis Dillon, 1927) with Milton Sills. She appeared as brunette Dorothy Shaw opposite Ruth Taylor's Lorelei Lee in the silent comedy Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (Mal St. Clair, 1928), co-written by Anita Loos based on her novel. Her other early films included Show Girl (Alfred Santell, 1928), which had Vitaphone musical accompaniment but no dialogue, and its musical sequel Show Girl in Hollywood (Mervyn LeRoy, 1930), both released by Warner Brothers and both based on novels by J.P. McEvoy. In these two films, White appeared as Dixie Dugan. In October 1929, McEvoy started the comic strip Dixie Dugan with the character Dixie having a 'helmet' hairstyle and appearance similar to actress Louise Brooks. White was featured in The Girl from Woolworth's (William Beaudine, 1929), having the role of a singing clerk in the music department of a Woolworth's store. Karen Plunkett-Powell wrote in her book 'Remembering Woolworth's: A Nostalgic History of the World's Most Famous Five-and-Dime': "First National Pictures produced this 60-minute musical as a showcase for up-and-coming actress Alice White." White was one of Hollywood's most popular actresses, and according to IMDb, received more than 30,000 fan letters a month.

Alice White left films in 1931 to improve her acting abilities. The studio claimed that she was unhappy with her salary and had become difficult to work with. White toured the vaudeville circuit. In 1933, she returned on screen in Employees' Entrance (Roy Del Ruth, 1933) with Warren William and Loretta Young. White's supporting role garnered good reviews and sent her on the comeback trail, but her career was hurt by a scandal. In 1933, Alice and her fiancรฉ, American screenwriter Sidney 'Sy' Bartlett, were accused of arranging the beating of British actor John Warburton. Alice and Warburton had a love affair that ended when he beat her so badly she required cosmetic surgery. Warburton told the press that Alice and Sy hired thugs to disfigure him. A grand jury in Los Angeles decided not to charge Bartlett or White; however, the bad publicity hurt Alice's career. Although White married Sidney Bartlett in 1933, her reputation was tarnished, and she appeared only in supporting roles after this. She appeared the next year in the comedy-crime film Jimmy the Gent (Michael Curtiz, 1934), starring James Cagney and Bette Davis. In one scene, White was famously slapped by Cagney. Jimmy the Gent did well at the box office, and the critical response was positive as well. In 1936, she suffered a nervous breakdown and was hospitalised for two months. In 1937, she filed for divorce from Bartlett, claiming he "stayed away from home" and was awarded $65 per week in alimony. By 1938, her name was at the bottom of the cast lists. White married film writer John Roberts in 1940. They divorced in 1949 in Los Angeles. In court, she said he "threw things and wasn't very nice". The following year, she sued him over unpaid alimony. White made her final film appearance in the Film Noir Flamingo Road (Michael Curtiz, 1949), starring Joan Crawford and Zachary Scott. Eventually, White resumed working as a secretary. For many years, she lived with musician William Hinshaw. She never had any children. In 1957, she fell off a ladder and landed on a pair of scissors. This freak accident left her blinded for several months. When she recovered, she was offered a small role on The Ann Sothern Show. From then on, White stayed out of the spotlight, but she continued to answer the fan mail she received. In 1983, Alice White died of complications from a stroke in Los Angeles at age 78. She was buried at Valhalla Memorial Park in North Hollywood. White has a star at 1511 Vine Street in the Motion Pictures section of the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Sources: Elizabeth Ann (IMDb), Wikipedia and IMDb.

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

This is How IMAX Projects its Gigantic 70mm Film

23 April 2026 at 12:03

A man with glasses and a gray beard inspects a large, tilted IMAX projector in a dark room, smiling and pointing at the machine.

IMAX film screenings are special experiences. Not many theaters play the actual IMAX celluloid, and that is in large part because of the insane logistics involved with projecting the film.

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