September 10, 2021 saw the tenth anniversary of the release of the documentary film Vegucated offering an occasion to talk to its creator Marisa Miller Wolfson.
September 10, 2021 saw the tenth anniversary of the release of the
documentary film Vegucated—offering an occasion to talk to
its creator Marisa Miller Wolfson, a two-time grantee (2009, 2011),
on what she’s been up to since. Columbia University Navab Fellow and
CAF intern Makenna Cherry reports. [Watch
Vegucated on YouTube HERE.]
I started off by asking Marisa very broadly about what had happened
to her since the film’s release. She had to think about this, but
began with, “The big difference is I’ve been being a mom.”
Vegucated came out on DVD in January 2012, her son was born in
October of that year and her daughter in 2015. Marisa also wrote The
Vegucated Family Table (2020), a cookbook that includes
tips on feeding vegan children.
And that’s not all. In the works is Laura Joyce Finds Her Voice, a
picture book focusing on a shy vegan kindergartner in a non-vegan
classroom who connects with the class goldfish and as a result
becomes confident enough to speak out on veganism to her classmates.
Plant-Powered Kid is another picture book in development that Marisa
describes as a “surreptitious, ‘Why vegan?’ book” that’s also
written for children.
When I asked Marisa about her shift in focus from adult vegans to
children, Marisa acknowledged that “the cultures of parenting and
veganism don’t often mix,” which can make a vegan parenting space
hard to find. Further, she explained, there aren’t a lot of vegan
books for children that aren’t “Why vegan?” and that the community
needs more books about children navigating veganism. In addition,
she observed, the books that are “Why vegan?” can be graphic and
tough for parents and educators. Marisa hopes to fill two voids in
the vegan space: a documentary for parents and or healthcare
providers about the benefits of veganism for children, and
appropriate media for kids around the “Why?” of being vegan. Her
biggest challenge now, she admits, is figuring out whether to aim
her projects at parents or children: “Veganism will never be
mainstream unless people feel like it’s safe psychologically and
physiologically for children.”
I asked Marisa whether she kept in touch with Ellen, Brian, or
Tesla, the characters in Vegucated who go on a vegan diet
for six weeks. Marisa revealed that she’s mostly kept in touch with
Brian and Tesla and less so with Ellen. Brian is married to a vegan
animal rights advocate and lives with his wife and two children in
California. Tesla is currently a realtor in Long Island and is
married with a daughter also named Tesla. Ellen is a playwright
whose plays have featured in a few festivals. Marisa reported that
all three had been vegan or vegetarian on and off since
Vegucated’s release.
When I asked Marisa if she’d have changed anything about the film,
she told me that her biggest regret was not raising money ahead of
making the film so she could afford the equipment and crew to
produce a documentary in higher definition and get help with
distribution. She told me she wished she’d taken a film class and
hired an entertainment lawyer who knew more about the process and
specifics of creating a documentary. She reflected: “There’s a rule
in filmmaking that you can get two out of three things. You can’t
make a film that’s really good, and fast, and cheap. You get two out
of the three, but you can’t get all three, and I went for cheap and
good.”
I wondered whether Marisa felt that the issues highlighted in
Vegucated had changed or not. We agreed that the realities of
factory farming hadn’t shifted much in the past decade, but Marisa
thought people knew more about veganism in 2021 than in 2005 when
she filmed Vegucated. She also observed that she herself
had evolved beyond what she called “white veganism” and regretted
the film hadn’t covered more of the economic challenges, food
policy, and politics (such as food deserts) that made it hard for
people to vegan. We also talked about her favorite vegan youth
activists: 12-year-old vegan chef Omari McQueen and 14-year-old
climate activist Genesis Butler.
Finally, I asked Marisa about what had been positive and what had
been challenging about vegan parenthood. She replied that it had
been very rewarding to know she was enabling her children to
contribute positively to the climate crisis and connect with animals
in a way that non-vegan kids might not be able to. She confessed
that navigating food with her children could be difficult because
they are picky eaters. “Before you’re a parent you have all kinds of
opinions about how you’re going to parent,” she said. “I was, like,
‘Oh, whatever I do, I’m not going to have a bully and I’m not going
to have a picky eater.’ Well, I don’t have a bully, but I certainly
have a picky eater.”
Marisa emphasized that connecting her children to a vegan community
was vital, so they’d know they weren’t alone. I asked if she had any
advice for would-be parents about raising a vegan child: “Read
Nourish by Brenda Davis and Reshma Shah and The Plant-Based Baby and
Toddler by Whitney English and Alexandra Caspero,” she said. “Expect
to be challenged, even by doctors. There are stories in the media of
vegan children who aren’t thriving, but it’s not about veganism,
it’s about neglectful, negligent, and uninformed parents. The more
informed you are, the more confident you will be in making a choice
for yourself.” She added: “Feel proud knowing that you’re setting
your child up for healthy habits and in knowing they’ve helped
create the kind of planet that they want to live on. Kids want to
feel like superheroes; they want to feel like they’re protecting the
planet; they want to feel healthy and strong. Being a vegan kid
makes them feel a little bit like a superhero. That’s what I’m going
to write about in my book, Plant-Powered Kid.”