Billie Eilish is perhaps the most talented artist of our generation…and I don’t throw that around lightly. At only 13, Eilish wrote “Ocean Eyes” alongside her brother Finneas and launched her prolific career. And at the fair age of 22, Eilish has 24 GRAMMY Award nominations and nine wins, two Oscars, two Golden Globes, and countless other accolades.
Beyond that, she recently announced her third album, HIT ME HARD AND SOFT, to be released May 17, 2024. She spent the days leading up to the announcement building excitement by adding all of her Instagram followers to her “Close Friends” list. Eilish had the most Instagram followers in 48 hours…with her count increasing by 7 million followers total.
While her debut album, when we all fall asleep…where do we go?, was a chart-topper in its own right, it landed Billie every GRAMMY it was nominated for at the ripe age of 18…Eilish has solidified herself as one of the most revered and sought-after popstars in the world.
Eilish recently caught media attention for quietly revealing her sexuality. In an interview with Variety, she states that she’s always liked girls…and assumed people always knew that. In a viral snippet from her new song, LUNCH, she details a love affair with a girl.
But people don’t only adore Billie for her catchy tracks that consistently top the charts. It’s not just her songwriting ability and unique vocals that keep us hooked. People love her because she’s unafraid to speak her mind.
Whether it be complaining about too many influencers being at an awards show, or calling out other artists for using unsustainable practices…Billie does not hold back.
Billie Eilish On Sustainability
Eilish home
rethinkingthefuture.com
The Eilish home is iconic for many reasons: it’s where Billie and Finneas recorded her debut album, countless other songs, and EPs, in an effort to conserve water there’s no grass, and the roof is covered in solar panels. And being environmentally conscious extends beyond the four walls of their home.
When the hottest young talent is discovered at such an early age like Eilish, record labels are chomping at the bit to sign them. It’s like when a D1 athlete is ready to commit to college…you have your pick.
But what Eilish and her mom, Maggie Baird, were looking for wasn’t about money or label-perks…they were seeking a solid sustainability program. And while that may seem like standard practice, most labels didn’t bring up environmental policies during these meetings at all.
After signing to The Darkroom via Interscope Records, the struggle didn’t stop there. Billie Eilish and her family have been consistent contributors to the fight against climate change.
Maggie Baird has since started Support + Feed, which focuses on the climate crisis and food insecurity. Support + Feed helped Eilish’s 2022 Happier Than Ever tour save 8.8 million gallons of water through plant-based meal service for the artist and crew members.
During Billie’s 2023 Lollapalooza performance, she aided the launch and funding of REVERB’s Music Decarbonization Project – which guaranteed all battery systems used during her set were solar powered. The MCD’s overall mission is to lower – and eventually eliminate –the music industry’s carbon emissions.
But more recently, Billie Eilish called out other artists for releasing multiple versions of vinyls in order to boost vinyl sales. In an interview with Billboard, she says,
“We live in this day and age where, for some reason, it’s very important to some artists to make all sorts of different vinyl and packaging … which ups the sales and ups the numbers and gets them more money and gets them more…”
Artists convince fans to buy different versions of their albums by offering exclusive features on each vinyl. Take Taylor Swift, for example, who released five separate vinyl versions of Midnights, each with a different deluxe “Vault” track.
While Billie may not have been trying to shade one artist in particular, the point is that she’s fed up. After being the rare artist in the industry who go out of their way to remain environmentally conscious, Eilish sets the bar high.
How Eilish’s New Album Is Sustainable
Billie for "Hit Me Hard and Soft"
William Drumm
Social media users were quick to claim Eilish was hypocritical by announcing that HIT ME HARD AND SOFT will have eight vinyl variations. However, each vinyl is made from recycled materials – either 100% recycled black vinyl or BioVinyl, which replaces petroleum used during manufacturing with recycled cooking oil.
This just illustrates that Eilish wasn’t directing criticism towards other artists for using vinyl variants to gain album sales…but she does think there are better ways to do it that benefit the environment without hurting their sales.
Fannie Lou Hamer And Kamala Harris
Kamala Harris Breaks Barriers as 2024 Nominee
The 2024 National Democratic Convention will soon witness Kamala Harris become, in the words of the Associated Press, “the first Black woman and first person of South Asian descent to be the presidential nominee of a major party.”
This is a marvelous change in the scheme of things; it’s also long overdue. Remarkable as she is, Harris is part of a continuum of political, social, and cultural engagement. Women – and especially women of color – are finally receiving some of the attention, acclaim, and respect that white patriarchal history has so long denied them.
Civil Rights Activist Fannie Lou Townsend Hamer is a case in point.
- YouTubewww.youtube.com
Hamer’s been mentioned several times over the course of the NDC. If you haven’t heard of her until now, you’re not alone. Once you have, you won’t soon forget her. Hamer’s story is a stunning example of one woman’s perseverance in the face of intense and often violent racism, as well as a testament to the desire for equality and justice that motivated so many in the tempestuous 1960s...and continues to inspire millions to this day.
Born in 1917, Hamer grew up in Mississippi and, like her parents and 19 older siblings, worked as a sharecropper picking cotton, scratching out the meagerest sort of existence. By l961 she was married to Perry Hamer and together they worked on a plantation owned by a white man named W. D. Marlow.
Two events that year set Hamer on her way to an honored place as a freedom fighter. As the Tobacco Farm Life Museum website tells us:
Hamer’s civil rights activism began after she fell victim to a
“Mississippi appendectomy,” a practice of forced sterilization
that was commonly done to black women in Mississippi at
the time, when a doctor conducted a hysterectomy without a
woman’s permission or knowledge while performing surgery
for other reasons.
The second event took place that summer, according to the National Women’s History Museum’s website:
Hamer attended a meeting led by civil rights activists James
Forman of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee
(SNCC) and James Bevel of the Southern Christian Leadership
Conference (SCLC). Hamer was incensed by efforts to deny
Blacks the right to vote. She became a SNCC organizer and
on August 31, 1962, led 17 volunteers to register to vote at
the Indianola, Mississippi Courthouse. Denied the right to vote
due to an unfair literacy test, the group was harassed on their
way home, when police stopped their bus and fined them $100
for the trumped-up charge that the bus was too yellow. That
night, Marlow fired Hamer for her attempt to vote; her husband
was required to stay until the harvest.
Harassment and financial loss, disgusting as they are, were only two of the ways in which Hamer was treated in the wake of her civil rights work. Physical violence was also used. Coming back from a citizenship training program in the summer of 1963, Hamer and colleagues were thrown into jail for a sit-in protest at a bus station’s “whites only” café. Hamer and others were severely beaten in jail and, PBS’ American Experience informs us, “the damage done to Hamer’s eyes, legs, and kidneys would affect her for the rest of her life.”
Biography.com says that in 1964:
Hamer helped found the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party
(MFDP), established in opposition to her state's all-white
delegation to that year's Democratic Convention and announced
her bid for Congress. Although she lost the Democratic primary,
she brought the civil rights struggle in Mississippi to the
attention of the entire nation during a televised session at the
convention.
Hamer’s statement included a vivid account of the many forms of persecution she and other Black Americans suffered simply for trying to register to vote and concluded:
All of this is on account we want to register, to become first-class
citizens, and if the Freedom Democratic Party is not seated now,
I question America, is this America, the land of the free and the
home of the brave where we have to sleep with our telephones
off of the hooks because our lives be threatened daily
because we want to live as decent human beings, in America?
This brings us back to the present moment and – 60 years later – another National Democratic Convention. Representative Maxine Waters spoke of Hamer’s appearance in’64:
Echoing Hamer, Waters asked: “Is this America?”
The answer is yes. The fight for all of America’s citizens to count is still underway. The bigoted and hateful are still doing their damnedest to disenfranchise people of color, the poor, and women. That’s one of the reasons Fannie Lou Hamer has once again become a part of the nation’s consciousness.
And why Kamala Harris and a vast multitude of Americans draw inspiration and strength from this exceptional woman.