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Turning powerful stats into art

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    My work is about the behaviors that we all engage in unconsciously,
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    on a collective level.
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    And what I mean by that, it's the behaviors
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    that we're in denial about,
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    and the ones that operate below the surface of our daily awareness.
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    And as individuals, we all do these things, all the time, everyday.
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    It's like when you're mean to your wife
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    because you're mad at somebody else.
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    Or when you drink a little too much at a party, just out of anxiety.
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    Or when you overeat because your feelings are hurt, or whatever.
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    And when we do these kind of things,
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    when 300 million people do unconscious behaviors,
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    then it can add up to a catastrophic consequence
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    that nobody wants, and no one intended.
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    And that's what I look at with my photographic work.
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    This is an image I just recently completed, that is --
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    when you stand back at a distance,
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    it looks like some kind of neo-Gothic, cartoon image
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    of a factory spewing out pollution.
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    And as you get a little bit closer,
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    it starts looking like lots of pipes, like maybe a chemical plant,
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    or a refinery, or maybe a hellish freeway interchange.
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    And as you get all the way up close,
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    you realize that it's actually made of lots and lots of plastic cups.
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    And in fact, this is one million plastic cups,
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    which is the number of plastic cups that are used on airline flights
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    in the United States every six hours.
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    We use four million cups a day on airline flights,
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    and virtually none of them are reused or recycled.
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    They just don't do that in that industry.
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    Now, that number is dwarfed
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    by the number of paper cups we use every day,
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    and that is 40 million cups a day for hot beverages,
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    most of which is coffee.
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    I couldn't fit 40 million cups on a canvas,
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    but I was able to put 410,000. That's what 410,000 cups looks like.
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    That's 15 minutes of our cup consumption.
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    And if you could actually stack up that many cups in real life,
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    that's the size it would be.
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    And there's an hour's worth of our cups.
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    And there's a day's worth of our cups.
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    You can still see the little people way down there.
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    That's as high as a 42-story building,
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    and I put the Statue of Liberty in there as a scale reference.
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    Speaking of justice, there's another phenomenon going on in our culture
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    that I find deeply troubling, and that is that America, right now,
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    has the largest percentage of its population in prison
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    of any country on Earth.
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    One out of four people, one out of four humans in prison
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    are Americans, imprisoned in our country.
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    And I wanted to show the number.
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    The number is 2.3 million Americans were incarcerated in 2005.
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    And that's gone up since then, but we don't have the numbers yet.
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    So, I wanted to show 2.3 million prison uniforms,
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    and in the actual print of this piece,
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    each uniform is the size of a nickel on its edge.
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    They're tiny. They're barely visible as a piece of material,
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    and to show 2.3 million of them required a canvas
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    that was larger than any printer in the world would print.
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    And so I had to divide it up into multiple panels
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    that are 10 feet tall by 25 feet wide.
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    This is that piece installed in a gallery in New York --
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    those are my parents looking at the piece.
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    (Laughter)
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    Every time I look at this piece,
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    I always wonder if my mom's whispering to my dad,
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    "He finally folded his laundry."
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    (Laughter)
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    I want to show you some pieces now that are about addiction.
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    And this particular one is about cigarette addiction.
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    I wanted to make a piece that shows the actual number of Americans
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    who die from cigarette smoking.
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    More than 400,000 people die in the United States every year
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    from smoking cigarettes.
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    And so, this piece is made up of lots and lots of boxes of cigarettes.
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    And, as you slowly step back,
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    you see that it's a painting by Van Gogh, called "Skull with Cigarette."
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    It's a strange thing to think about, that on 9/11,
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    when that tragedy happened, 3,000 Americans died.
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    And do you remember the response?
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    It reverberated around the world,
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    and will continue to reverberate through time.
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    It will be something that we talk about in 100 years.
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    And yet on that same day, 1,100 Americans died from smoking.
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    And the day after that, another 1,100 Americans died from smoking.
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    And every single day since then, 1,100 Americans have died.
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    And today, 1,100 Americans are dying from cigarette smoking.
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    And we aren't talking about it -- we dismiss it.
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    The tobacco lobby, it's too strong.
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    We just dismiss it out of our consciousness.
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    And knowing what we know about the destructive power of cigarettes,
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    we continue to allow our children, our sons and daughters,
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    to be in the presence of the influences that start them smoking.
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    And this is what the next piece is about.
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    This is just lots and lots of cigarettes: 65,000 cigarettes,
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    which is equal to the number of teenagers
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    who will start smoking this month, and every month in the U.S.
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    More than 700,000 children in the United States aged 18 and under
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    begin smoking every year.
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    One more strange epidemic in the United States
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    that I want to acquaint you with
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    is this phenomenon of abuse and misuse of prescription drugs.
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    This is an image I've made out of lots and lots of Vicodin.
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    Well, actually, I only had one Vicodin
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    that I scanned lots and lots of times.
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    (Laughter)
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    And so, as you stand back, you see 213,000 Vicodin pills,
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    which is the number of hospital emergency room visits
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    yearly in the United States,
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    attributable to abuse and misuse of prescription painkillers
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    and anti-anxiety medications.
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    One-third of all drug overdoses in the U.S. --
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    and that includes cocaine, heroin, alcohol, everything --
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    one-third of drug overdoses are prescription medications.
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    A strange phenomenon.
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    This is a piece that I just recently completed
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    about another tragic phenomenon. And that is the phenomenon,
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    this growing obsession we have with breast augmentation surgery.
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    384,000 women, American women, last year
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    went in for elective breast augmentation surgery.
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    It's rapidly becoming the most popular high school graduation gift,
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    given to young girls who are about to go off to college.
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    So, I made this image out of Barbie dolls,
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    and so, as you stand back you see this kind of floral pattern,
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    and as you get all the way back, you see 32,000 Barbie dolls,
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    which represents the number of breast augmentation surgeries
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    that are performed in the U.S. each month.
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    The vast majority of those are on women under the age of 21.
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    And strangely enough, the only plastic surgery
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    that is more popular than breast augmentation is liposuction,
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    and most of that is being done by men.
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    Now, I want to emphasize that these are just examples.
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    I'm not holding these out as being the biggest issues.
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    They're just examples.
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    And the reason that I do this, it's because I have this fear
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    that we aren't feeling enough as a culture right now.
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    There's this kind of anesthesia in America at the moment.
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    We've lost our sense of outrage, our anger and our grief
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    about what's going on in our culture right now,
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    what's going on in our country,
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    the atrocities that are being committed in our names around the world.
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    They've gone missing; these feelings have gone missing.
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    Our cultural joy, our national joy is nowhere to be seen.
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    And one of the causes of this, I think,
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    is that as each of us attempts to build this new kind of worldview,
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    this holoptical worldview, this holographic image
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    that we're all trying to create in our mind
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    of the interconnection of things: the environmental footprints
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    1,000 miles away of the things that we buy;
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    the social consequences 10,000 miles away
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    of the daily decisions that we make as consumers.
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    As we try to build this view,
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    and try to educate ourselves about the enormity of our culture,
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    the information that we have to work with is these gigantic numbers:
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    numbers in the millions, in the hundreds of millions,
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    in the billions and now in the trillions.
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    Bush's new budget is in the trillions, and these are numbers
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    that our brain just doesn't have the ability to comprehend.
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    We can't make meaning out of these enormous statistics.
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    And so that's what I'm trying to do with my work,
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    is to take these numbers, these statistics
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    from the raw language of data, and to translate them
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    into a more universal visual language, that can be felt.
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    Because my belief is, if we can feel these issues,
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    if we can feel these things more deeply,
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    then they'll matter to us more than they do now.
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    And if we can find that,
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    then we'll be able to find, within each one of us,
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    what it is that we need to find to face the big question,
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    which is: how do we change?
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    That, to me, is the big question that we face as a people right now:
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    how do we change? How do we change as a culture,
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    and how do we each individually take responsibility
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    for the one piece of the solution that we are in charge of,
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    and that is our own behavior?
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    My belief is that you don't have to make yourself bad
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    to look at these issues.
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    I'm not pointing the finger at America in a blaming way.
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    I'm simply saying, this is who we are right now.
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    And if there are things that we see
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    that we don't like about our culture,
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    then we have a choice.
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    The degree of integrity that each of us can bring to the surface,
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    to bring to this question, the depth of character that we can summon,
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    as we show up for the question of how do we change --
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    it's already defining us as individuals and as a nation,
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    and it will continue to do that, on into the future.
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    And it will profoundly affect the well-being, the quality of life
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    of the billions of people
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    who are going to inherit the results of our decisions.
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    I'm not speaking abstractly about this,
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    I'm speaking -- this is who we are in this room,
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    right now, in this moment.
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    Thank you and good afternoon.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Turning powerful stats into art
Speaker:
Chris Jordan
Description:

Artist Chris Jordan shows us an arresting view of what Western culture looks like. His supersized images picture some almost unimaginable statistics -- like the astonishing number of paper cups we use every single day.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
10:57
TED edited English subtitles for Turning powerful stats into art
TED added a translation

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