Attacking them might not be the best way to get them to change, and you can’t just wrestle their cows off them. Crops, cows, sheep, pigs, chickens, alpacas, goats – just as we have the freedom to pick our careers, they choose the sector that’s the best fit for them and their land. It belongs to them and, ultimately, they can farm what they want. And this simplistic narrative of vilification is undermining the serious environmental debate.Īs an aside, it’s worth pointing out that many farmers own their land. McGrady, audibly confused, replied with: “To be clear, if a farmer wants to continue farming in whatever way – because we don’t control how our farmers decide to farm – they can continue to do that.”įarming livestock is not a crime (I can’t believe I’m actually writing this). Husain might as well have asked: “What if they’re dealing drugs from the farm?” Yeah – chuck them off! Plant trees instead! As McGrady explained they will only convert land if the tenant does not want to continue farming it, and no farmer will be forced out, Husain butted in with: “But if they’re using the land for pasture, if they have cattle, that land needs to be used for tree planting?” Mishal Husain was interviewing Hilary McGrady, Director-General of the National Trust, about planting 20 million trees on their land over the next decade and putting 10% of current farmland into woodland. I almost choked on my muesli listening to Today on Friday morning. We’re getting to the point where some journalists are losing the plot. We seriously need a reality check people. Guaranteed to piss off the NFU (his favourite sport) and get some media coverage to boot. How about…The End of the Agricultural Age? Yes, yes! Farming will be dead in 30 years! And not just livestock farming… George had to serve up something truly outrageous. No, to cut through and get some headlines, Apocalypse Cow had to push the boundaries even further. Even Birds Eye had beaten her to the plant-based burger. Liz Bonnin was late to the party when she triumphantly announced on BBC One’s Meat: A Threat to Our Planet that she had turned her back on beef. “Stop eating red meat” has been done to death. A week after broadcast, I finally got around to watching Apocalypse Cow. Meat the Family and How to Steal Pigs and Influence People are on my All4 list. I took great care to approach it like a watercolor painting, building depth with layers of transparent inks, while also paying attention to the textures, airbrushed glows, and subtle linework that Bob often employed, making this one of the most iconic movie posters of all time.Is anyone else struggling to keep up with Channel 4’s wall-to-wall meat coverage? Shrewdly scheduled to coincide with Veganuary, it’s going at it with both barrels.īut like many viewers these days I consume most TV on catch-up. "My goal when helping separate this poster for screenprinting was to retain as much of the original artist's hand and richness of colors from the original piece as possible. Talking about the delicate recreation process, Jameson says: Matthew Peak supervised the process to make sure the new poster is a faithful copy of his late father’s work. With the files in hand, artists Jason Edmiston and Jon Smith handled the color separation needed for creating a new printable version, while Shane Mahn reproduced the billing block. To make the recreation as good as the original poster, Mondo got high-resolution files directly from Coppola’s American Zoetrope. The iconic Apocalypse Now poster is getting an exclusive recreation at Mondo. A limited-edition version of the poster originally created by Bob Peak for Francis Ford Coppola's war masterpiece will be available at the Mondo store.
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