Colgate Magazine — Summer 2019

Page 53

Today, crime is down more than 70 percent and incomes for families receiving the public housing subsidy are four times higher. “But it’s around education that we’re most excited,” Naughton says. Children attending the neighborhood charter school, which was once the lowest performing school in Atlanta, are competing at the highest levels in the state. In 2001, Naughton became head of the East Lake Foundation, overseeing the various pieces of the plan. As the group’s data kept improving, they started garnering the attention of people around the country, including New Orleanians trying to recuperate from Hurricane Katrina. “That was our ah-ha moment,” she says. “We could create a consultancy group that could work with local leaders, because the work is complicated and it takes a long time, so having an expert consultant to work with is terrific.” Thus, Purpose Built Communities was born. They’re now working with more than 20 neighborhoods across the country, from Syracuse to Tulsa, and in discussions with approximately 40 more. The neighborhood-focused approach is consistent across the country, but it is customized for each community. “In every place we’re invited, there are many strengths,” Naughton says. “So part of the early work is identifying the strengths and the community leaders who have been doing great stuff for a long time because we want to build on what’s working.” Naughton’s role is leading the consulting teams and working with civic and business leaders. In her TEDx talk, Naughton remembered reading To Kill a Mockingbird at the age of 10. “I found the book on my kitchen table, sat down, and read it five times straight through,” she recalled. “I wanted to be like Atticus Finch. I wanted to be part of the team of people who were dealing with the hardest problems we had, part of the team that could be counted on to work through the things that were getting in the way of creating the kind of society where we all wanted to live.” Naughton has dedicated her career to doing just that. “This work speaks to my soul,” she says. “I have an extraordinary belief in people, people who want to do better collectively to create opportunities for all of us. We can continue to do better. And, frankly, I think we must do better.” ● — Aleta Mayne A political science major, Carol Redmond Naughton ’82 recalls the Washington, D.C., Study Group: “It helped me understand what levers you can pull and what levers you can’t pull in order to drive change.”

Podcast

Saving Humanity One Episode at a Time Important: curing cancer. Not important: Battlestar Galactica?

rom a tiny Studio City, Calif., office in which they’re surrounded by Indiana Jones and Star Wars memorabilia, Quinn Emmett ’05 and his co-host discuss the two seemingly disparate topics (among others) on their podcast, Important, Not Important. Recently nominated for a 2019 Webby Award, the podcast started as a newsletter covering groundbreaking discoveries in science, technology, and medicine. Although it began as just a side project, the newsletterturned-podcast has received significant acclaim. It was nominated for best podcast host, competing against shows like Pod Save the People and Serial. It also earned an honorable mention in the science and education category. “[In each episode], we try to judge every potential conversation through the prism of: ‘Will this either kill us all or improve the majority of the species?’” Emmett says. “We try to entertain and make it fun, and then point you toward action steps.” Emmett and his co-host, Brian Colbert Kennedy, created Important, Not Important, in part, because they noticed the polarizing

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effect social media has on people today. Because we — and the media outlets themselves — curate our feeds, we typically only see a smattering of news that’s aligned with our political views. Or, on the flipside, we use social media as an escape from the speedy news cycle, preferring to keep up with cute animals or celebrities. The duo aims to provide a more well-rounded view of news they feel is integral to the “survival of the species” by including guests representing an array of political backgrounds, careers, races, and genders. Since the podcast first aired a year ago, Emmett and Kennedy have interviewed more than 60 scientists, doctors, and activists for episodes such as “What Happens When the Atlantic Ocean Invades the Arctic Ocean?” Most topics on the show center on climate change, the other reason they started the podcast. “[I felt] a sense of scarcity and a sense of urgency,” Emmett says. Constantly hearing about Earth’s imminent doom can feel discouraging, so, sporting his quintessential Goonies T-shirt, Emmett often uses humor to cast a positive light on show topics. “Even if [the world] does look really different [in the future], and Indonesia, New York, and Miami are half underwater, there are still going to be incredible scientific advances that benefit humanity,” he says. At the beginning of every episode, Emmett asks his guests one resounding question: “Why are you vital to the survival of the species?” His guests often say it’s because they ask important questions, or disseminate information to the public. For his part, Emmett is leaving the log of conversations he’s made with Important, Not Important. Those conversations, he hopes, will be available in the future, when mankind has made significant advances and wants to look back on history. His three children are part of that future. “However they choose to spend their lives and spend their focus and curiosity, I want them to have an impact on the world. I feel like with modeling this for them, [with the podcast], I’m leaving a very public record of conversations and asking people, ‘What do we need to do?’ Hopefully that inspires them.” A sampling of “conversations most vital to our survival as a species” →→ Episode #63: How Do We Build a New Pipeline of Sustainable Farmers? →→ Episode #48: Why Does Childhood Cancer Exist and What Can We Do to Make It Go Away Forever? →→ Episode #31: Can Texas Go (Clean Energy) Independent?

— Rebecca Docter Summer 2019  Colgate Magazine  51


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