Tell a Friend

Do1Thing Blog

Have you guys been watching those awesome videos on the do1thing multimedia page?

Well, here’s the man who literally spent hundreds of hours editing video interviews and helping other photographers put their videos together. He edited images, produced videos, troubleshooted technical issues and was an all around great guy always willing to help anyone.

If you ever wondered if there’s still an old fashioned good guy out there? Well, we found one. THANK YOU Curt, Penn State and all the interns across the country.
Curt Chandler editing Pennsylvania shoot for Do1Thing

  • Share/Bookmark

0

  • Share/Bookmark

0

rockymountainnews_logo

When you’ve spent your life inside of a kaleidoscope – twisted and churned until it felt like the air was being squeezed out of you – what do you do when you’re finally free to breathe?

When you’ve been abused or abandoned by the very people who gave you life, how do you find a way to open your heart and learn how to hope?

When you’ve been careening in and out of the lives of adults who never keep you around long enough to remain anything but strangers or enemies, what happens when you’re finally flung out for good, homeless, and you discover that concrete isn’t the hardest thing about the streets?screen-capture-4

screen-capture-5

Read the entire story here: ROCKY MOUNTAIN NEWS

  • Share/Bookmark

0

screen-capture-1

 

The addict extended her hand. There were two $1 bills, enough for bus fare to a shelter for homeless teens.

“Call me when you get there,” she said.

That runaway, Angela, will be just one of dozens of young runaways and throwaways welcoming generous visitors to Covenant House Texas Saturday. With luck, hundreds of Houstonians will drop by the campus at 1111 Lovett bearing clothing, toiletries, bus cards, gift cards or baby items as a part of a national daylong event called “Do 1 Thing.”

Words help to explain the plight of the homeless teens, but Najlah Feanny Hicks, one of the masterminds of the project, believes photographs are more powerful still.

That’s why she’s enlisted the help of award-winning photojournalists to show the faces of teens at sites all over the country. Houston photographers include Smiley N. Pool of the Houston Chronicle and Dave Einsel, Robert Seale and Todd Spoth.

All day Saturday, their photos will be streaming online at www.do1thing.org.

Angela, now 20, her friend Corderro and other young people from Houston should be easy to find on the Web site.

Aspirations

Corderro, 19, wants to be an actor, a pastry chef and a restaurateur. For the moment, though, he’s busing tables and making plans to enroll at Houston Community College.

If he seems an unlikely resident of Covenant House, he is not. “I used to run away when things didn’t go right,” Corderro said.

Hicks, a New York-based photographer who has donated hundreds of hours of her own time to the project, said that today, Valentine’s Day, 1.3 million young people are living on the streets or in shelters.

“We’re going to spend billions of dollars telling each other how much we care,” Hicks said. “Why not do one thing for someone, a young person, less fortunate than ourselves?”

Do 1 Thing is Hicks’ third campaign to help disadvantaged children through photography.

In 2005, she and a colleague enlisted the help of photographers to showcase several hundred foster children in New Jersey. Over time, 160 of those kids were adopted.

In 2007, Hicks organized a photography exhibit featuring 100 older children who faced the prospect of living in foster homes, group homes or shelters until they reached the age of maturity.

Every year, Hicks says, that happens to 25,000 young adults nationwide, and thousands of them wind up on the streets.

Do 1 Thing, she hopes, will get the public involved with young people like Angela and Corderro.

Inspirations

In his small dorm room at Covenant House, Corderro keeps pictures of his siblings, books by Donald Trump and President Barack Obama, and a pencil sketch of the president.

Corderro looks like a smaller, younger Obama, and Corderro, like Obama, was raised by his mom.

“I wish I could talk to him,” Corderro said wistfully. “I’d ask him for advice.”

In Angela’s dorm room are scrapbooks, photos of her little sister, and life-size plastic heads with lots of hair.

Future plans

In just a few weeks, Angela is going to start working on her beautician’s license, and one day she hopes to own her own beauty shop.

Her short life has been tough so far. But when she walks out of Covenant House, Angela sees downtown, skyscrapers and opportunities.

What’s important, she says, is not where you’ve been, but where you’re going.

claudia.feldman@chron.com

To view the chron.com photo gallery click here

  • Share/Bookmark

0

screen-captureWhile some of you will be out scrambling for flowers, cards or some other stand-in for your affection on Saturday, a new national non-profit group with ties to Maine is asking you to take a minute for them.

On Valentine’s Day Do 1 Thing is asking people around the country to break off from their regularly scheduled programming and think about helping the nation’s homeless teenage population.

So, yeah, drop the whole chocolates and naughty underwear bit for a minute.

Do 1 Thing is the brainchild of photographers and other journalists from around the country, trying to bring attention to a problem that sometimes gets little or no recognition. On Feb. 14, the project is kicking off as photographers around the country spread out to document the young people living just outside the margins, sometimes right in broad daylight. As the people behind Do 1 Thing point out, homelessness for young people can take many forms; it doesn’t just mean living on the streets, but sometimes couch-surfing from one friend’s place to another.

Unlike the adult homeless population, teens can have a different set of needs, including expanded medical and education services.

Around Maine, photographers, including students from The Salt Institute for Documentary Studies will be taking photos of homeless youth and giving the “A Day in the Life” treatment to people who are sometimes referred to as “falling in between the cracks.”

Alexandra Daley-Clark, director of photographer relations (or photographer wrangler as she says), says the idea was for people to use whatever resources and skills they have, writing, shooting photography or video, to draw people’s attention to the issue of teen homelessness.

Daley-Clark is a photographer with years of experience working for different publications, including Newsweek. She now lives in Saco and has her own studio, working on commercial photography as well as weddings and other events.

The Valentine’s Day push serves two purposes, documenting the issue of poverty and homelessness and using the results of that to get people motivated to act, she said. So even if you’re not a Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer, you can find a way to Do 1 Thing in your area, which can be something as easy as donating slightly used clothes, toiletries or non-perishable food to shelters and other aid groups.

Daley-Clark says it is just the beginning, as the Do 1 Thing project will continue to try and give a voice and face to the young homeless. While it may not seem like a lot, it can start to add up if enough people get involved.

Looking for ways to help, you can contact some of these agencies around Maine or find a shelter near you.

Portland: The Preble Street Resource Center

York County: Caring Unlimited

Franklin, Oxford and Androscoggin counties: Community Concepts

  • Share/Bookmark

0

Kathleen O’Donnell-Pickert, 17,  is all blonde ambition – - to help homeless teens in Newark by giving them their prom night, a night that most of these kids never dreamed of having. Kathleen found out about Do 1 Thing because her parents donate to Covenant House and she knows Janette Scrozzo, the Outreach/Volunteer manager at CH. The more Kathleen learned about Covenant House, the more she wanted to help out. Luckily, she could also get her gold star scout award with Covenant House.

girlscout whose having prom party at covantant  house in newarkSo Kathleen put up flyers at her school, Westfield High School in Westfield, NJ and at her church. She got 20 volunteers to help her put together the Covenant House Prom for 75 – 80 young people. She’s been overwhelmed with donations of gowns, tuxes, make up, nail polish, everything your average teen wants to look his or her best on prom night. There will be a dj, a buffet dinner and goodie bags for everyone. Kathleen’s dad will photograph everyone and each prom-goer will get his or her photo in a frame decorated with Valentine hearts.

What the attendees don’t know yet is that the New Jersey Nets have donated 4 tickets to a Nets game to each of the teens. Now that’s sweet!

  • Share/Bookmark

1

This Valentine’s Day people across the nation will be teaming up to help homeless kids with the Do 1 Thing campaign, and some of the nation’s best photographers and journalists will be documenting it. The project is designed to raise awareness about the estimated 1.3 million young people who live on the streets or in shelters.

screen-capture-8Here in Houston you can participate by bringing donations of toiletry items, bus cards, clothing or diapers to the Covenant House Texas at 1111 Lovett Blvd.
(Cash donations will also be accepted, which makes the activity less free, but not less gratifying.)

After you make your donation you can check out the coverage at do1thing.org. (Checking out the coverage is guaranteed 100 percent free. Unless of course you then feel motivated to donate even more money.)

Do 1 Thing
Covenant House Texas
1111 Lovett Blvd
Saturday, Feb. 14
10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

~~~~~~~~~~~

It’s Black History Month, and there are lots of fun things for kids to do. This Saturday the Houston Public Library will be celebrating the Women of the Blues as part of their African American Traditions in Music presentation.

The Web site says the concert is geared for adults, but MomHouston believes appreciation for legendary singers such as Bessie Smith, Billie Holiday and Nina Simone can occur at any age.

Houston-native Tweed Smith, the woman singer in the band WAR, will be presenting.

Other library branches will be holding similar presentations with the music of African-American legends such as Ella Fitzgerald and Sam Cooke. Check the Web site for details and locations.

  • Share/Bookmark

0

dn-masthead-logoCandace and Solo stood outside the state’s only teen homeless shelter the other day huddled in the hope of better days to come and cold only in their resolve not to let circumstances get them down.

Down and out is a state of mind, not a condition of life, Candace keeps gently pointing out. “It’s not the thing, it’s how you look at the thing,” she says.

“This is the situation I’m in, but this situation is not me.”

screen-capture-101

Her dream, though admittedly still a few turns of better luck away, is being owner of a nice little restaurant. “Not that I’m a great cook, I’m not. I just want to own a nice place where people can come and eat and read poetry and leave full. And, oh, it would be in a much warmer state.”

Solo agrees, but he’s not talking about the weather, even thought being from Florida you’d think being 70 degrees below his normal outside operating temperature and 180 degrees off the course he had in mind is a factor.

“Life just throws you a curve sometimes,” he says with the sureness of someone who’s seen his share of beanballs. “And you just got to do what you have to do, so I’ve just stepped aside for a minute. But like David’s lost sheep, I’ll be back.”

screen-capture-11

The Old Testament reference is intentional and understood by Candace, his newest friend and the only person he trusts at the moment. Each recognized a genuine fellow traveler for more spirit and deeper meaning in life.

The chances of that are rarer than finding a sack full of money — and a lot more valuable in the long run.

“The fact of the matter is, no matter how tough things look,” Candace says, “if you’ve got someone to love you, who could ask for more. I don’t miss home, but I miss love, and I’m just glad that even if this is never a path I ever thought I would be on, I’m glad it crossed his.”

Despite the impending celebration of romantic love, the two are talking about something different. Something that Solo sums up as “that love that’s better, that comes from knowing someone has got your back.”

And minding your back and front and all sides is pretty much a full-time job, says Zach Bale, a Volunteers of America Utah staff member who looks after the shelter, 655 S. State, and its circulating occupants “who are all different, who are each more resilient than a dozen of us put together and who really just need to feel, maybe just for a few minutes every day or so, that they’re OK.”

To that end, photo journalists news and media outlets are setting Saturday aside as a Do1Thing campaign for arguably the most neglected homeless Americans — youth who have run away or been driven off and too often feel rejected by a system that seems to hurt as much as help.

“A lot of these kids have never had the security of being a kid being taken care of by parents,” Bale said. “So many don’t know how to take care of themselves. How can you if you’ve been abused by the people who are supposed to be your protectors?”

“Need is up 150 percent,” Bale said, noting that there are many “1 Things” people can do, chief among them is to visit the shelter on Saturday afternoon “and just find out what we’re doing and who we are.

“And, if you can’t think of a thing, we’ll happily provide you a copy of our wish list.”

  • Share/Bookmark

0

Miss Exclusive 2008 poses outside Covenant House in Newark.  The Charmin in the window was donated.

Miss Exclusive 2008 poses outside Covenant House in Newark. The Charmin in the window was donated.

A load of pink bags, escorted by two pretty girls from Seton Hall, one of them wearing a banner — Miss Exclusive, 2008 and a silver tiara, of course, are here to check out the community outreach opportunities at Covenant House in Newark, N.J. The Miss Exclusive Pageant holds a beauty pageant event each year. But don’t just think they are all beauties and no brains, says Miyokee, who was crowned at the current Miss Exclusive.

The organization, besides finding the next Miss Exclusive, prides itself on building the self esteem of young girls, says Cathy, a tall, pretty young woman, sporting oversized pink glasses. “We invite high school girls to participate, encouraging them to meet other young girls who are doing something positive with their lives,” says Cathy.

Miyokee, who was rather shy at first, chimes in. “It’s about empowering young girls, helping them believe that there is nothing they can’t do.”

And that includes taking away the crown  from Miyokee.

  • Share/Bookmark

0

Pasquale Chieffalo, a graduate student at Parsons, The New School for Design produces short animated promo for the Do1Thing project. Chieffalo animated the short as well as composed original music for the project. Using Aftereffects software to convey a simple but clear message, Do1Thing to help homeless youth.
A NATIONWIDE CALL TO ACTION www.do1thing.org There are more homeless people today than at any previous time in U.S. history. Right now, more than 1.3 million of them are children. Do1Thing is our call to action to make a difference. We believe that by focusing our efforts on highlighting 1 Cause while asking people to do 1 Thing for that cause, great change will come. More than 30 Pulitzer-prize winning photographers and some of the most recognized names in photography have come together to put a face on teenage homelessness while asking you to put a face on activism and do 1 thing to help. Why focus on teenage homelessness? Three out of every 10 homeless adults admit to a history in foster and with 25,000+ children aging out of the foster care system each year, many will end up experiencing homelessness. The issues surrounding homelessness are gigantic. The solutions offered are endless. But what if everyone did 1 thing on 1 day to help this 1 cause?
PROJECT PARTNERS It is the goal of Do1Thing to not only raise awareness for teenage homelessness, but also to promote and support the work of those non profits who have a long history of providing education, health care, job training and temporary housing to them. Through sustainable projects they are moving children from a life on the streets to permanent housing and a future. We are proud to partner with the following organizations. Covenant House International www.covenanthouse.org The largest privately funded agency in the Americas providing shelter and other services to homeless, runaway and throwaway youth. Stand Up For Kids www.standupforkids.org Their mission is to help homeless and street kids. They do this, every day, in cities across America through volunteers who go to the streets in order to find, stabilize and otherwise help homeless and street kids improve their lives. All facets of their mission are guided by the mandate that their volunteers tell kids they care about them and then, at every point, prove it. Do1Thing is a project of The Heart Gallery of New Jersey, a unique not-for-profit dedicated to raising awareness about foster children available for adoption. Through the volunteer efforts of some of the country’s most prestigious photographers, portraits are taken that help capture the individuality and spirit of each foster child who is eligible to be adopted. www.heartgallerynj.org To view more of Pasquale Chieffalo’s work, visit his website: http://www.pasqualechieffalo.com/
  • Share/Bookmark

0

« Previous Entries