TED Talks Daily - The delicious potential of rescuing wasted food | Jasmine Crowe-Houston
Episode Date: May 14, 2025What if solving hunger isn't about growing more food but wasting less of it? Social entrepreneur Jasmine Crowe-Houston has made that idea her mission with Goodr, a platform that reroutes surplus food ...to people in need. In conversation with journalist and "TED Radio Hour" host Manoush Zomorodi, she shares how a viral moment led to a nationwide effort to fix the food waste problem.Want to help shape TED’s shows going forward? Fill out our survey! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Here's a wild stat.
30 to 40 percent of food that is produced in the U.S. ends up in the landfills.
It's especially upsetting that this much food is tossed,
knowing how many people are experiencing hunger
and food insecurity.
In a 2024 conversation, social entrepreneur,
Jasmine Crow Houston,
shares why hunger actually isn't an issue of scarcity,
but rather an issue of logistics.
She speaks with journalist and TED Radio Hour host
Manoush Zomorodi about helping people get access to food
in a way that's a major step in the fight against
both hunger and climate change.
Enjoy.
Okay, so I have been following Jasmine's career.
She gave a TED Talk at TED Women five years ago in December.
Which is crazy.
And I interviewed you three years ago, and now here you are, and so much has happened.
You are more of a behind the scenes person.
Yeah.
For people who don't know Gooder, explain your story, how you came to be so aware of
food waste and what you are doing with it.
I started Gooder here in Atlanta.
I had created, for people experiencing homelessness, a pop-up restaurant.
And the concept really came to me after feeding and working with a volunteer group and making
all these peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, going out to the streets and handing them
out and a man telling me,
oh, I'm allergic to nuts.
And I thought, we just made a thousand peanut butter
and jelly sandwiches and nuts are one
of the number one allergies.
And it made me think that dignity was lost
in how we are serving our own house
and how we're serving people in need.
And that too often we think, well, they're homeless
or they're hungry, take this and be happy
for getting the fact that they can have religious convictions,
dietary restrictions, or they could plain out be allergic.
And so I created this pop-up restaurant
where I would rent tables and chairs and linens
and print out menus and let people feel like
they were dining at a restaurant and a video went viral.
And it was a 15 second clip, I'll never forget it,
because it was before Instagram allowed
you to have minute videos, longer videos.
So I woke up one morning really afraid because I had never, I mean, obviously gone viral
and I was like, what's going on on Facebook?
I need to get off this app.
It was like one of those things.
And so I'm reading through millions of views and comments and what people kept asking me
was who donated the food?
And the truth was nobody.
I was couponing, price matching.
I would start cooking on Friday, Saturday,
go out and feed about three to 500 people every Sunday.
And so I was like, I need to get this food donated.
I went to Google fully expecting to get a list
of all the businesses that are gonna donate food to me
to help me keep feeding people
and I would live happily ever after.
And instead I found about food waste.
And I read an 86-page report by the Harvard Food Law Policy Group.
And as I'm reading through this at this point now into the wee hours of the morning,
I'm getting upset because I'm thinking about the people that are lined up at 9 a.m.
for my 3 p.m. feeding every Sunday,
because they know that there's not a lot of people
that come out to feed during the week.
They were living at the former Metro Atlanta
Peach Tree Homeless Task Force.
It was the only shelter in the city
that would allow families to come,
and that's so important.
A lot of you all don't know,
but if you are a homeless mother,
you have a 15-year-old son,
you guys gotta go to two different shelters.
And so I was feeding all these people.
I learned about food waste and I became upset.
And I was like, I'm going to solve this.
I'm going to do something to your point better and gooder.
And that's what got me started.
So explain what gooder does now because from going to peanut butter sandwiches, it's impressive.
So now we have a two-sided business model
as it relates to food waste.
We can help a business keep all of their food out of landfill.
If it's edible, we're getting it to people in need
that are people like me feeding people, shelters,
safe houses, domestic violence centers, churches.
One of our largest partners is communities and schools.
We feed thousands of kids every week.
So we keep edible food from going to a landfill and we are delivering it directly to people in need while giving all of
our clients back a lot of data. How many pounds they're keeping out of the landfill.
What does this mean for their CO2 emissions and their carbon footprint?
And then we have a hunger side of our business which was birthed during the pandemic that really focuses on creating sustainable
solutions to solve hunger. We build free grocery stores inside of schools.
We have 28 right now around the country.
We have grocery and meal delivery during the height of the pandemic.
Gooder delivered all the meals to Atlanta public school students that got free breakfast
and lunch, but were learning virtually, so we made sure that they got food at home.
So we really are solving hunger and food waste. So can you
just explain, can we give her... yeah.
The part of me is like 40% that's such a crazy statistic. It's a crazy number.
Like why? When you talk to the company's nonprofits like what is happening that Why?
Nearly 2% of all US GDP we spend on food that, you know, we never even eat. And I think what it is is that the old guard is we've always done it this way.
We've always thrown it away.
And this is how we do it.
And of course, when I was first starting, people were like, oh, well, if someone gets sick,
and we'll get sued.
And so Gooder said, hey, we'll take on all of that onus.
We provide the packaging materials.
We provide the labels.
When nonprofits receive the food, it comes from gooder.
They sign hold harmless agreements.
I have a multimillion dollar liability insurance
because the airport was my first customer
and we were driving on tarmacs
and I ended up having to get insurance
that I wasn't quite ready for.
But it definitely helped the business.
And even with all of that, people will still say,
well, we're just afraid.
Or our lawyers just can't
wrap their heads around it, or, you know, we're just, we're going to compost everything
even if it's edible, which I'm still happier that it's not going into landfill if it gets
composted.
You know, of course, gooder, we deliver to hog farms, we turn, we have anaerobic digesters
will take food too, so we want to keep it out of landfill.
But feeding hungry people is not a priority
for too many people in this country, and that's a problem.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Tomorrow, I am coming to see one of your facilities.
I'm so excited about that.
You're going to love it.
From what I understand, it's bread day.
So bread is going to be coming in from all different places and
then you are going to be sorting it. Some of it goes, as you said, to compost if
it's not for human consumption. Or to a hog farm. Or to a hog farm, which is
amazing. Or a cattle farm. I think we have cattle farms now. And cattle farms, yes you do.
I've seen that. And then some will go, of course, to people, to schools, to
hospitals, or wherever else. But talk to me more from the corporate side.
How did you get people to come on board with this?
Did something have to change when it comes to laws and forcing companies to do this?
Is it because they want to be able to say to their customers, like, we are a sustainable
company?
So what I used to do is I would go to the websites of the big hotel groups, the big food groups, and I would look at their sustainability reports. or a sustainable company?
So you guys wasted 25 million meals. Now I have no idea if that was true,
but I looked at their sustainability report.
I used the EPA's calculation that food was the number one
thing in landfill, and I was able to go back
to the Atlanta airport and say, listen,
you guys are sitting in College Park.
The children in this city are living in poverty,
and all this food is going to waste.
And this doesn't make any sense.
And so the airport became one of our first
large scale customers, and you think of all of the grab and go food items
that goes to waste every single night,
if it's not for gooder.
And now that's why I need to be in more airports.
But getting that before it goes to waste
and getting it to gateway center,
before Georgia workforce,
their third shift is coming out
and building half of this city.
A lot of men that are trying to transition
out of homelessness, them getting that meal.
Putting this food in our grocery stores and families taking it home for free. This is
what it does. So I think so much, it was really about making people keep their promises. You
know, like, hey, I won't say the hotel group, but they had on their website, and this is
someone I'm trying to pitch now. And I was like, hey, you guys said you're going to cut
food waste in half by 2025.
This is in two months.
Like, why have you guys not started?
Like, what's the process?
So a lot of times it's trying to hold their foot to the fire.
Can we clone Jasmine?
I want her holding all these companies accountable.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's about keeping the, I mean, people need to keep,
I think we live for the announcement.
Yeah.
And we as people don't follow up on the delivery, right?
Because for someone to invest millions,
I mean, I don't even know how much
a Super Bowl commercial costs,
but I've heard it's like a million dollars per 30 seconds.
I could be wrong.
But to invest two to three million dollars
and not follow up on your promise.
That's called greenwashing.
Yes, and that's a lot of that.
So you're not just in Atlanta though now,
you've grown a lot.
Yes, so we are in 15 states, 26 markets.
So this is where we have food moving and being donated.
And then we have grocery stores in about five states,
maybe six or seven now.
But we are doing our food waste business,
obviously in more locations.
So someone was asking me, they're like, but how does how do these companies keep track because it must be so random
What they can get rid of yeah, and I said well actually there's an app for that
Which at first when I first heard about your apples like that seems weird
But actually it is really the linchpin and making this
Right, right. That's really what I saw. So when, and shout out to Jackie Chu,
she runs Ted Atlanta, Tedx Atlanta.
And she convinced me to do my first Tedx talk.
And when I was talking to her about it,
she was like, oh, I get it.
It's a logistics problem.
I was like, you get it.
And that's really what it is.
Hunger is not an issue of scarcity.
And we hear about that right there.
We need to produce more food.
We need to grow more food. We are wasting 40% of it. It's really about logistics. How do we connect
this excess food with the millions of people that need it? Seniors, their income doesn't
change. You know, we're going to be seniors, all of us. Some of us probably already are,
but all of us, God willing. And once you get to that point, it doesn't matter then if toilet
paper goes up, if bread is more expensive, eggs are more expensive, this is all you have to work with. So it's
really about how quickly can we match it so we inventory everything it is that
they sell, we create a very easy user experience where they click on the items,
tell us how many, request a pickup, we leverage the shared economy that's
already out there, meaning and that's how we've been able to grow to a lot of
different locations, we don't have to hire our own drivers, we don't have to purchase trucks and vehicles.
Now we do have a couple, but what we leverage is a driver that's already out there and drivers
love it.
They're like, oh my God, I'm feeding people, I'm getting paid to do it, and they make it
happen.
So wait, so literally, the person, let's say I'm working at a big company and I work in
the cafeteria area,
I take out my phone and what do I do?
Or it could go on your point of sale system and you click on the Gooder app, your menu
is already there and you're just clicking on the items that you have saying, I've got
10 chicken breasts, I've got this.
Our platform is calculating the approximate weight of those items.
So we pull a lot of that data from US Foods, Cisco, whoever they're ordering their food from.
And then it's calculating the tax value of those items
at the time of donation,
which is a critical offering to our clients.
And once that food gets picked up, a nonprofit receives it.
They sign for it like they would a UPS package
and a donation letter with a picture of that donation
from that nonprofit automatically goes
to our client's portal.
So now they see everything that they've donated,
the nonprofit it went to,
and a tax deduction receipt for what they donated.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And the carbon that they've saved,
and yeah, we have a corporate social responsibility
impact report as well as a sustainability.
And it's actually, I remember one of my angel investors,
she sits on the board of IHG, who's one of Gooder's
customers, and she messaged me last year
at their board meeting in London.
And she was like, Gooder is on the board report.
Like they're literally talking about how we're cutting
food waste with this company.
So they're starting to show off by using you.
They're starting to show.
I mean, as they should.
It feels strange.
It's like such a good thing.
Yeah.
Growth.
What's, I mean, we should be clear.
You're not a nonprofit.
I'm not.
You are a B Corp.
Why is that important to you?
Why did you decide to go for a for-profit company?
Is it because that is something that you hope to scale?
Where are the pros and cons with that?
There was a couple things.
One, I think the nonprofit was going to be a much harder old guard to get past because that you hope to scale?
in the nonprofit space. The biggest piece that I saw though,
was that businesses were already paying
to throw this food away.
So this was not new found spend.
They're already paying waste management,
Republic services, whoever their waste company is.
Mind you, the waste industry is a trillion dollar industry.
None of us ever say, let's just keep our trash.
Right?
Like we were like, it's trash day missing.
Oh my God, it's a hurricane.
They didn't run today.
Like what's happening?
Like we are paying for this on a daily basis.
So when I realized that, I realized that this was not
gonna be new found spin for these businesses.
It was gonna be a better spin.
So dollar for dollar, we're a little bit more expensive,
but the outcome, the return on the investment
for our clients is far much greater than they would ever get
from a traditional waste company.
And so I do look at us as a triple bottom line.
We're for people, we're for planet,
and we are for profit.
Woo!
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And that's it for today's show.
Ted Talks Daily is part of the TED Audio Collective.
This episode was produced and edited by our team, Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman, Brian
Green, Lucy Little, Alejandra Salazar, and Tansika Sarmarnivon.
It was mixed by Christopher Faisy-Bogan.
Additional support from Emma Taubner Daniella Ballarezzo.
I'm Elise Huw.
I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feed.
Thanks for listening.
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