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Bill Strickland makes change with a slide show


Poziom:

Temat: Media

It's a great honor to be here with you.
The good news is
I'm very aware of my responsibilities to get you out of here
because I'm the only thing standing between you and the bar.
(Laughter)
And the good news is I don't have a prepared speech,
but I have a box of slides.
I have some pictures that represent my life and what I do for a living.
I've learned through experience
that people remember pictures long after they've forgotten words.
And so I hope you'll remember some of the pictures
I'm going to share with you for just a few minutes.
The whole story really starts
with me as a high school kid in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
in a tough neighborhood that everybody gave up on for dead.
And on a Wednesday afternoon
I was walking down the corridor of my high school,
kind of minding my own business, and there was this artist teaching,
who made a great big old ceramic vessel.
And I happened to be looking in the door of the art room.
And if you've ever seen clay done, it's magic,
and I'd never seen anything like that before in my life.
So I walked in the art room and I said, "What is that?"
And he said, "Ceramics -- and who are you?"
And I said, "I'm Bill Strickland. I want you to teach me that."
And he said, "Well, get your homeroom teacher to sign a piece of paper
that says you can come here, and I'll teach it to you."
And so for the remaining two years of my high school,
I cut all my classes.
(Laughter)
But I had the presence of mind
to give the teachers' classes that I cut the pottery that I made --
(Laughter)
and they gave me passing grades.
And that's how I got out of high school.
And Mr. Ross said,
"You're too smart to die, and I don't want it on my conscience,
so I'm leaving this school and I'm taking you with me."
And he drove me out to the University of Pittsburgh
where I filled out a college application and got in on probation.
Well, I'm now a Trustee of the University
and at my installation ceremony I said,
"I'm the guy who came from the neighborhood
who got into the place on probation.
Don't give up on the poor kids because you never know
what's going to happen to those children in life."
What I'm going to show you for a couple of minutes
is a facility that I built in the toughest neighborhood in Pittsburgh
with the highest crime rate.
One is called Bidwell Training center, it is a vocational school
for ex-steel workers and single parents and welfare mothers.
You remember we used to make steel in Pittsburgh?
Well, we don't make any steel anymore
and the people who used to make the steel
are having a very tough time of it.
And I rebuild them and give them new life.
And Manchester Craftsmen's Guild is named after my neighborhood.
And I was adopted
by the Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese during the riots.
And he donated a row house, and in that row house
I started Manchester Craftsmen's Guild,
and I learned very quickly that wherever there are Episcopalians,
there's money in very close proximity.
(Laughter)
And the Bishop adopted me as his kid.
And last year I spoke at his memorial service
and wished him well in this life.
I went out and hired a student of Frank Lloyd Wright, the architect,
and I asked him to build me a world class center
in the worst neighborhood in Pittsburgh.
And my building was a scale model for the Pittsburgh airport.
And when you come to Pittsburgh -- and you're all invited --
you'll be flying into the blown-up version of my building.
That's the building.
Built in a tough neighborhood where people have been given up for dead.
And my view is that if you want to involve yourself
in the life of people who have been given up on,
you have to look like the solution and not the problem.
As you can see, it has a fountain in the courtyard
and the reason it has a fountain in the courtyard is I wanted one.
And I had the checkbook so I bought one and put it there.
(Laughter)
And now that I'm giving speeches at conferences like TED,
I got put on the board of the Carnegie Museum
and at a reception in their courtyard, I noticed that they had a fountain
because they think that the people who go to the museum deserve a fountain.
Well, I think that welfare mothers and at-risk kids
and ex-steel workers deserve a fountain in their life.
And so the first thing that you see in my center in the springtime
is water that greets you -- water is life and water of human possibility.
And it sets an attitude and expectation
about how you feel about people, before you ever give them a speech.
So from that fountain I built this building.
As you can see, it has world class art and it's all my taste
because I raised all the money.
(Laughter)
I said to my boy, "When you raise the money
we'll put your taste on the wall."
But we have quilts and clay and calligraphy
and everywhere your eye turns,
there's something beautiful looking back at you.
That's deliberate.
That's intentional.
In my view, it is this kind of world
that can redeem the soul of poor people.
We also created a boardroom.
And I hired a Japanese cabinetmaker from Kyoto, Japan,
and commissioned him to do 60 pieces of furniture for our building.
We have since spun him off into his own business.
He's making a ton of money doing custom furniture for rich people.
And I got 60 pieces out of it for my school
because I felt that welfare moms and ex-steel workers
and single parents deserved to come to a school
where there was handcrafted furniture that greeted them every day
because it sets a tone and an attitude about how you feel about people
long before you give them the speech.
We even have flowers in the hallway and they're not plastic --
those are real and they're in my building every day.
And now that I've given lots of speeches,
we had a bunch of high school principals come and see me
and they said, "Mr. Strickland,
what an extraordinary story and what a great school.
And we were particularly touched by the flowers
and we were curious as to how the flowers got there."
I said, "Well, I got in my car and I went out to the greenhouse
and I bought them and I brought them back and I put them there."
You don't need a task force or a study group to buy flowers for your kids.
What you need to know is that the children
and the adults deserve flowers in their life.
The cost is incidental but the gesture is huge.
And so in my building, which is full of sunlight and full of flowers,
we believe in hope and human possibilities.
That happens to be at Christmas time.
And so the next thing you'll see is a a million dollar kitchen
that was built by the Heinz company -- you've heard of them?
They did all right in the ketchup business.
And I happen to know that company pretty well
because John Heinz, who was our U.S. senator --
who was tragically killed in a plane accident --
he'd heard about my desire to build a new building
because I had a cardboard box and I put it in a garbage bag
and I walking all over Pittsburgh, trying to raise money for this site.
And he called me into his office --
which is the equivalent of going to see the Wizard of Oz --
(Laughter)
and John Heinz had 600 million dollars, and at the time I had about 60 cents.
And he said, "But we've heard about you.
We've heard about your work with the kids and the ex steel workers,
and we're inclined to want to support your desire to build a new building.
And you could do us a great service
if you would add a culinary program to your program" --
because back then we were building a trades program.
He said, "That way we could fulfilll our affirmative action goals
for the Heinz company."
I said, "Senator, I'm reluctant to go into a field
that I don't know much about, but I promise you
that if you'll support my school, I'll get it built
and in a couple of years I'll come back
and weigh out that program that you desire."
And Senator Heinz sat very quietly and he said,
"Well, what would your reaction be
if I said I'd give you a million dollars?"
I said, "Senator, it appears that we're going into the food training business."
(Laughter)
And John Heinz did give me a million bucks.
And most importantly,
he loaned me the head of research for the Heinz company.
And we kind of borrowed the curriculum from the Culinary Institute of America
which in their mind is kind of the Harvard of cooking schools.
And we created a gourmet cooks' program for welfare mothers
in this million dollar kitchen in the middle of the inner city.
And we've never looked back.
I would like to show you now some of the food
that these welfare mothers do in this million dollar kitchen.
That happens to be our cafeteria line.
That's puff pastry day. Why?
Because the students made puff pastry
and that's what the school ate every day.
But the concept was that I wanted to take the stigma out of food.
That good food's not for rich people --
good food's for everybody on the planet
and there's no excuse why we can't all be eating it.
So at my school, we subsidize a gourmet lunch program
for welfare mothers in the middle of the inner city
because we've discovered that it's good for their stomachs,
but it's better for their heads.
Because I wanted to let them know every day of their life
that they have value at this place I call my center.
We have students who sit together, black kids and white kids,
and what we've discovered is you can solve the race problem
by creating a world class environment
because people will have a tendency to show you world class behavior
if you treat them in that way.
This is examples of the food that welfare mothers are doing
after six months in the training program.
No sophistication, no class, no dignity, no history.
What we've discovered is the only thing wrong with poor people
is they don't have any money, which happens to be a curable condition.
It's all in the way that you think about people
that often determines their behavior.
That was done by a student after seven months in the program,
done by a very brilliant young woman
who was taught by our pastry chef.
I've actually eaten seven of those baskets and they're very good.
(Laughter)
They have no calories.
That's our dining room.
It looks like your average high school cafeteria
in your average town in America.
But this is my view of how students ought to be treated,
particularly once they have been pushed aside.
We train pharmaceutical technicians for the pharmacy industry.
We train medical technicians for the medical industry.
And we train chemical technicians for companies
like Bayer and Calgon Carbon and Fisher Scientific and Exxon.
And I will guarantee you that if you come to my center in Pittsburgh --
and you're all invited --
you'll see welfare mothers doing analytical chemistry
with logarithmic calculators,
10 months from enrolling in the program.
There is absolutely no reason why poor people
can't learn world class technology.
What we've discovered is you have to give them flowers
and sunlight and food and expectations and Herbie's music
and you can cure a spiritual cancer every time.
We train corporate travel agents for the travel industry.
We even teach people how to read.
The kid with the red stripe was in the program two years ago --
he's now an instructor.
And I have children with high school diplomas that they can't read.
And so you must ask yourself the question --
how's it possible in the 21st century
that we graduate children from schools
who can't read the diplomas that they have in their hands.
The reason is that the system gets reimbursed
for the kids they spit out at the other end, not the children who read.
I can take these children and in 20 weeks,
demonstrated aptitude, I can get them high school equivalent.
No big deal.
That's our library with more handcrafted furniture.
And this is the arts program I started in 1968.
Remember I'm the black kid from the '60s who got his life saved with ceramics.
Well, when I decided to reproduce my experience
with other kids in the neighborhood,
the theory being if you get kids flowers and you give them food
and you give them sunshine and enthusiasm,
you can bring them right back to life.
I have 400 kids from the Pittsburgh public school system
that come to me every day of the week for arts education.
And these are children who are flunking out of public school.
And last year I put 88 percent of those kids in college
and I've averaged over 80 percent for 15 years.
We've made a fascinating discovery --
there's nothing wrong with the kids
that affection and sunshine and food and enthusiasm
and Herbie's music can't cure.
For that I won a big old plaque -- Man of the Year in Education.
I beat out all the Ph.D.s
because I figured that if you treat children like human beings,
it increases the likelihood they're going to behave that way.
And why we can't institute that policy
in every school and in every city and every town
remains a mystery to me.
Let me show you what these people do.
We have ceramics and photography and computer imaging
and these are all kids with no artistic ability, no talent,
no imagination, and we bring in the world's greatest artists --
Gordon Parks has been there, Chester Higgins has been there --
and what we've learned
is that the children will become like the people who teach them.
In fact, I brought in a mosaic artist from the Vatican,
an African-American woman
who had studied the old Vatican mosaic techniques,
and let me show you what they did with the work.
These were children who the whole world had given up on,
who were flunking out of public school,
and that's what they're capable of doing
with affection and sunlight and food and good music and confidence.
We teach photography.
And this is examples of some of the kids' work.
That boy won a four-year scholarship
on the strength of that photograph.
This is our gallery.
We have a world class gallery
because we believe that poor kids need a world class gallery.
So I designed this thing.
We have smoked salmon at the art openings.
We have a formal printed invitation.
And I even have figured out a way to get their parents to come.
I couldn't buy a parent 15 years ago.
So I hired a guy who got off on the Jesus big time.
He was dragging guys out of bars
and saving those lives for the Lord.
And I said, "Bill, I want to hire you, man.
You have to tone down the Jesus stuff a little bit,
but keep the enthusiasm.
(Laughter)
I can't get these parents to come to the school."
He said, "I'll get them to come to the school."
So he jumped in the van, he went to Miss Jones' house and said,
"Miss Jones, I knew you wanted to come to your kid's art opening,
but you probably didn't have a ride.
So I came to give you a ride."
And he got 10 parents and then 20 parents.
At the last show that we did, 200 parents showed up
and we didn't pick up one parent.
Because now it's become socially not acceptable not to show up
to support your children at the Manchester Craftsmen's Guild
because people think you're bad parents.
And there is no statistical difference
between the white parents and the black parents.
Mothers will go where their children are being celebrated,
every time, every town, every city.
I wanted you to see this gallery because it's as good as it gets.
And by the time I cut these kids loose from high school,
they've got four shows on their resume
before they apply to college because it's all up here.
You have to change the way that people see themselves
before you can change their behavior.
And it's worked out pretty good up to this day.
I even stuck another room on the building, which I'd like to show you.
This is brand new.
We just got this slide done in time for the TED Conference.
I gave this little slide show at a place called the Silicon Valley
and I did all right.
And the woman came out of the audience,
she said, "That was a great story
and I was very impressed with your presentation.
My only criticism is your computers are getting a little bit old."
And I said, "Well, what do you do for a living?"
She said, "Well, I work for a company called Hewlett Packard."
And I said, "You're in the computer business, is that right?"
She said, "Yes, sir."
And I said, "Well, there's an easy solution to that problem."
Well, I'm very pleased to announce to you that HP
and a furniture company called Steelcase
have adopted us as a demonstration model for all of their technology
and all their furniture for the United States of America.
And that's the room.
That's initiating the relationship.
We got it just done in time to show you.
So it's kind of the world debut of our digital imaging center.
(Applause)
(Music)
I only have a couple more slides,
and this is where the story gets kind of interesting.
So I just want you to listen up for a couple more minutes
and you'll understand why he's there and I'm here.
In 1986 I had the presence of mind to stick a music hall
on the north end of the building while I was building it.
And a guy named Dizzy Gillespie showed up to play there
because he knew this man over here, Marty Ashby.
And I stood on that stage with Dizzy Gillespie on sound check
on a Wednesday afternoon, and I said,
"Dizzy, why would you come to a black-run center
in the middle of an industrial park with a high crime rate
that doesn't even have a reputation in music?"
He said, "Because I heard you built the center
and I didn't believe that you did it, and I wanted to see for myself.
And now that I have, I want to give you a gift."
I said, "You're the gift."
He said, "No, sir. You're the gift.
and I'm going to allow you to record the concert,
and I'm going to give you the music.
And if you ever chose to sell it, you must sign an agreement
that says the money will come back and support the school."
And I recorded Dizzy, and he died a year later,
but not before telling a fellow named McCoy Tyner what we were doing
And he showed up and said,
"Dizzy talking about you all over the country, man,
and I want to help you."
And then a guy named Wynton Marsalis showed up.
Then a bass player named Ray Brown,
and a fellow named Stanley Turrentine,
and a piano player name Herbie Hancock,
and a band called the Count Basie Orchestra,
and a fellow named Tito Puente,
and guy named Gary Burton, and Shirley Horn, and Betty Carter,
and Dakota Staton and Nancy Wilson
all have come to this center in the middle of an industrial park,
to sold out audiences, in the middle of the inner city.
And I'm very pleased to tell you that, with their permission,
I have now accumulated 600 recordings
of the greatest artists in the world,
including Joe Williams, who died,
but not before his last recording was done at my school.
And Joe Williams came up to me and he put his hand on my shoulder
and he said, "God's picked you, man, to do this work
and I want my music to be with you."
And that worked out all right.
When the Basie band came, the band got so excited about the school
they voted to give me the rights to the music.
And I recorded it and we won something called a Grammy.
And like a fool, I didn't go to the ceremony
because I didn't think we were going to win.
Well, we did win.
And our name was literally in lights over Madison Square Garden.
Then the U.N. Jazz Orchestra dropped by and we recorded them
and got nominated for a second Grammy back to back.
So we've become one of the hot, young jazz recording studios
in the United States of America --
(Laughter)
in the middle of the inner city with a high crime rate.
That's the place all filled up with Republicans.
(Laughter)
(Applause)
If you'd have dropped a bomb on that room,
you'd have wiped out all the money in Pennsylvania
because it was all sitting there;
including my mother and father, who lived long enough
to see their kid build that building.
And there's Dizzy, just like I told you, he was there.
And he was there, Tito Puente,
and Pat Metheny and Jim Hall were there
and they recorded with us.
And that was our first recording studio, which was the broom closet.
And we put the mops in the hallway and re-engineered the thing
and that's where we recorded the first Grammy.
And this is our new facility, which is all video technology.
And that is a room that was built for a woman named Nancy Wilson,
who recorded that album at our school last Christmas.
And any of you who happened to have been watching Oprah Winfrey
on Christmas Day, he was there and Nancy was there,
singing excerpts from this album,
the rights to which she donated to our school.
And I can now tell you with absolute certainty,
that an appearance on Oprah Winfrey will sell 10,000 CDs.
(Laughter)
We are currently number four on the Billboard Charts,
right behind Tony Bennett.
And I think we're going to be fine.
This was burned out during the riots -- this is next to my building.
And so I had another cardboard box built,
and I walked back out on the streets again.
And that's the building, and that's the model,
and on the right's the high-tech greenhouse
and in the middle's the medical technology building.
And I'm very pleased to tell you that the building's done.
It's also full of anchor tenants at 20 dollars a foot --
triple that in the middle of the inner city.
And there's the fountain.
(Laughter)
Every building has a fountain.
And the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center are anchor tenants
and they took half the building.
And we now train medical technicians through all their system.
And Mellon Bank's a tenant.
And I love them because they pay the rent on time.
(Laughter)
And as the result of the association,
I'm now a director of the Mellon Financial Corporation
that bought Dreyfus.
And this is in the process of being built as we speak.
Multiply that picture times four and you will see the greenhouse
that's going to open in October this year
because we're going to grow those flowers
in the middle of the inner city.
And we're going to have high school kids
growing phalaenopsis orchids in the middle of the inner city.
And we have a handshake with one of the large retail grocers
to sell our orchids in all 240 stores in six states.
And our partners are Zuma Canyon Orchids of Malibu, California,
who are Hispanic.
So the Hispanics and the black folks have formed a partnership
to grow high technology orchids in the middle of the inner city.
And I told my United States senator
that there was a very high probability
that if he could find some funding for this,
we would become a left-hand column in the Wall Street Journal.
To which he readily agreed.
And we got the funding and we open in the fall.
And you ought to come and see it -- it's going to be a hell of a story.
And this is what I want to do when I grow up.
(Laughter)
The brown building is the one you guys have been looking at
and I'll tell you where I made my big mistake.
I had a chance to buy this whole industrial park --
which is less than 1,000 feet from the riverfront --
for four million dollars and I didn't do it.
And I built the first building, and guess what happened?
I appreciated the real estate values beyond everybody's expectations
and the owners of the park turned me down for eight million dollars last year.
And said, "Mr. Strickland,
you ought to get the Civic Leader of the Year Award
because you've appreciated our property values
beyond our wildest expectations.
Thank you very much for that."
The moral of the story is you must be prepared to act on your dreams,
just in case they do come true.
And finally, there's this picture.
This is in a place called San Francisco.
And the reason this picture's in here is
I did this slide show a couple years ago at a big economics summit
and there was a fellow in the audience who came up to me.
He said, "Man, that's a great story.
I want one of those."
I said, "Well, I'm very flattered. What do you do for a living?"
He says, "I run the city of San Francisco.
My name's Willie Brown."
And so I kind of accepted the flattery and the praise
and put it out of my mind.
And that weekend, I was going back home
and Herbie Hancock was playing at our center that night --
the first time I'd met him.
But he walked in and he says, "What is this?"
And I said, "Herbie, this is my concept of a training center
for poor people."
And he said, "As God is my witness,
I've had a center like this in my mind for 25 years and you've built it.
And now I really want to build one."
I said, "Well, where would you build this thing?"
He said, "San Francisco."
I said, "Any chance you know Willie Brown?"
(Laughter)
As a matter of fact he did know Willie Brown,
and Willie Brown and Herbie and I had dinner four years ago,
and we started drawing out that center on the tablecloth.
And Willie Brown said, "As sure as I'm the mayor of San Francisco,
I'm going to build this thing
as a legacy to the poor people of this city."
And he got me five acres of land on San Francisco Bay
and we got an architect and we got a general contractor
and we got Herbie on the board,
and our friends from HP, and our friends from Steelcase,
and our friends from Cisco, and our friends from Wells Fargo
and Genentech.
And along the way I met this real short guy
at a slide show in the Silicon Valley.
He came up to me afterwards.
He said, "Man, that's a fabulous story.
I want to help you."
And I said, "Well, thank you very much for that.
What do you do for a living?"
He said, "Well, I built a company called eBay."
I said, "Well, that's very nice.
Thanks very much, and give me your card and sometime we'll talk."
I didn't know eBay from that jar of water sitting on that piano.
But I had the presence of mind to go back
and talk to one of the techie kids at my center.
I said, "Hey man, what is eBay?"
He said, "Well, that's the electronic commerce network."
I said, "Well, I met the guy who built the thing
and he left me his card."
So I called him up on the phone and I said, "Mr. Skoll,
I've come to have a much deeper appreciation of who you are
(Laughter)
and I'd like to become your friend."
(Laughter)
And Jeff and I did become friends,
and he's organized a team of people
and we're going to build this center.
And I went down into the neighborhood, called Bayview-Hunters Point
and I said, "The mayor sent me down to work with you
and I want to build a center with you,
but I'm not going to build you anything if you don't want it.
And all I've got is a box of slides."
And so I stood up in front of 200 very angry, very disappointed people
on a summer night and the air conditioner had broken
and it was 100 degrees outside,
and I started showing these pictures.
And after about 10 pictures they all settled down,
and I ran the story and I said, "What do you think?"
And in the back of the room, a woman stood up and she said,
"In 35 years of living in this God forsaken place,
you're the only person that's come down here and treated us with dignity.
I'm going with you, man."
And she turned that audience around on a pin.
And I promised these people that I was going to build this thing,
and we're going to build it all right.
And I think we can get in the ground this year,
as the first replication of the center in Pittsburgh.
But I met a guy by the name of Quincy Jones along the way
and I showed him the box of slides.
And Quincy said, "I want to help you, man.
Let's do one in L.A."
And so he's assembled a group of people.
And I've fallen in love with him,
as I have with Herbie and with his music.
And Quincy said, "Where did the idea for centers like this come from?"
And I said, "It came from your music, man
because Mr. Ross used to bring in your albums,
when I was 16 years old in the pottery class,
when the world was all dark,
and your music got me to the sunlight."
And I said, "If I can follow that music,
I'll get out into the sunlight and I'll be OK.
And if that's not true, how did I get here?"
I want you all to know
that I think the world is a place that's worth living.
I believe in you.
I believe in your hopes and your dreams.
I believe in your intelligence.
And I believe in your enthusiasm.
And I'm tired of living like this,
going into town after town with people standing around on corners
with holes where eyes used to be, their spirits damaged.
We won't make it as a country unless we can turn this thing around.
And Pennsylvania, it costs 60,000 dollars to keep people in jail,
most of whom look like me.
It's 40,000 dollars to build the University of Pittsburgh Medical School.
It's 20,000 dollars cheaper to build a medical school than to keep people in jail.
Do the math, it will never work.
I am banking on you
and I'm banking on guys like Herbie and Quincy and Hackett and Richard
and very decent people who still believe in something.
And I want to do this in my lifetime, in every city and in every town.
And I don't think I'm crazy.
I think we can get home on this thing
and I think we can build these all over the country
for less money than we're spending on prisons.
And I believe we can turn this whole story around
to one of celebration and one of hope.
In my business it's very difficult work --
you're always fighting upstream like a salmon,
never enough money, too much need.
And so there is a tendency
to have an occupational depression that accompanies my work.
And so I've figured out, over time, the solution to the depression --
you make a friend in every town and you'll never be lonely.
And my hope is that I've made a few here tonight.
And thanks for listening to what I had to say.
(Applause)
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