Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Carissa and Homeless Youth Awareness Month

I just got the following note from the marketing department at Virgin Mobile regarding Carissa - see earlier blog posts. The note is from VM's Stacy Schwartz, who is herself a valued member of The Cyrano Project's Advisory Council.

"I wanted to touch base to let you know what a great move it was introducing my organization to the Carissa project. Not sure whether you heard that Virgin Mobile sponsored legislation that just passed, which designates November as Homeless Youth Awareness Month. We are a planning a bunch of awareness-raising events and programs for November, that we hope Carissa (and the formerly homeless singer, Jewel) will be part of."

Here is Carissa's account of her day in DC. http://www.carissaproject.com/blog/archives/24

The Cyrano Project is very proud to have been instrumental in making this possible.

Thursday, July 19, 2007

Carissa Project and Virgin Mobile

Excellent news from The Carissa Project. If you missed the story - click here.

Carissa tells me:

"Thanks so much for making the introduction to Virgin! We're both very happy with the relationship. Actually Ariel the director of the ReGeneration campaign was just in LA today and looked at some of the footage with David.

Thanks again for the connection...it was perfect!"

Click here to learn about Virgin Mobile's Re*Generation Project

Monday, July 9, 2007

But is Cyrano sexy?

I was reading the wonderful Vanity Fair Special African edition (July 07). Guest editor Bono. I thought I would just skim it quickly – but I got sucked right in. The stories are honest and really well told – not in the least woo-woo – they’re surprising and irreverent (the Chris Rock satire was harsh, brilliant and insightful). They’re about actual people doing what they can to get along. The stories give me a whole new way of looking at Africa, they make me want to do something to help – drill a well for clean water, carry Jeff Sachs’ bags.

Cyrano too is working to get understanding and help. But is Cyrano’s a sexy story? We are not getting the help directly to those Africans with big smiles and flies on their faces, or drawing drinking water from stinking cesspools - we aim to help those who do help them.

Where are our cover stories of the under-resourced volunteers, the inspired but penniless choreographers, the over-worked and under-paid executive directors and the hair-tearing development directors? If we had those pictures would they move anyone? But they all need the help to get their good work done. And we can help them tell their stories effectively so that they can get more resources and do more and do it better.

A dollar spent on Cyrano will be multiplied geometrically when we can provide all of them with the tools to get more of what they need to do more of their good work. That dollar won’t just go to one organization – it will go to 1.5 million. That’s how many nonprofits there are in the US. They will all get to use it. How’s that for leveraging!

There are over 25,000 nonprofits in New York City, 750 in my zip code alone. You have heard of Amnesty International, The New York City Ballet and The American Red Cross. But there are hundreds of thousands – yes hundreds of thousands you haven’t heard of. Good people doing good work. Look them up on Guidestar.org – they are all there.

Most of them are doing humanitarian work feeding the hungry, fixing education, curing disease; they are working to lift people out of poverty, many of them are working to save our natural environment – a humanitarian effort surely – and many are working to expand our minds and our understanding of ourselves and our world through music, dance, theater – perhaps the most humanitarian of all.

So what is Cyrano doing? We are here to give them the tools to tell their stories more effectively – so they can strengthen the impact of their work. We are here to give them the leverage to take their passion and have it make more of a difference, by getting more of the stories of all these good works told so that they will move people – just as this Vanity Fair moved me. They can’t all be cover stories – but they don’t all have to be. Sometimes the right story just needs to be told to the right one or two people to make the difference.