Monday, 25 October 2010

Thank You

The Tiny Box Company would like to thank everyone who watched our wee slot on Dragon's Den last night and to all who have put kind messages on our Facebook and Twitter. If you missed us, undoubtedly you can catch up on BBC iPlayer.

We do appreciate the support.

New Member of Staff (suffering with a terrible dose of the cold).

Saturday, 23 October 2010

Easy Being Ethical?


Scenes like this are happening all over the UK. Young hoodies. Out on the streets. Nicking stuff.

But this time it’s not Playstations, your widescreen TV with 3d glasses, your Wii Fit, your Guitar Hero or your Kona Cindercone mountain bike. No, the Tiny Box Company’s Environmental Policy states that where we can recycle, we will. And where we can use recycled goods we will.

Which means we nick the boxes that people throw out on the street, take them back to the Tiny Box Warehouse in the dead of night and then use them to ship out our goods. So if you see dodgy looking characters hanging around your place at night casing the cardboard, don’t be alarmed.

And if you order 500 kraft natural 100% recycled gift boxes but the packaging says “cod fillets”, it’s probably not actually cod fillets but 500 kraft natural 100% recycled gift boxes. If it’s actually cod fillets, it’s not from us.

DON’T FORGET: DRAGONS DEN. 24TH OCTOBER 9PM BBC 2.

New Member of Staff.

Tuesday, 14 September 2010

Ethical Company??? Tiny Box Exposed.




See below email.
Disgruntled New Member of Staff.


From: rachel watkyn [mailto:supreme_overlord@tinyboxcompany.com]
Sent: 14 September 2010 11:24
To: 'New Member of Staff'
Subject: RE: Annual Leave
Dear Minion,
Absoluely NOT! What do you think this place is??? It is a slave camp where no one is entitled to holiday – EVER! And its no good muttering about human rights and the law, blah blah blah – heard it all before. HOLIDAY IS BANNED FROM TINY BOX !!
Rachel Watkyn
Tiny Box Company

From: New Member of Staff [mailto:minion@tinyboxcompany.com]
Sent: 14 September 2010 11:18
To: 'rachel watkyn'
Subject: Annual Leave
Dear Boss,
Request for one day’s holiday on 8th October 2010.
I will fill in the relevant forms if required.
Yours sincerely,
Minion
Tiny Box Company

Monday, 13 September 2010

Meet Theo the Dragon


Hello - our tiny hit counter tells us that we have had visitors, so thank you for following. I apologise for not having updated for a wee while but I'm glad to report that we've been very busy. I'm working on one of those long articles that I do, which are full of facts and probably really boring but I haven't had time to finish.

In the meantime... meet Theo!

Last Friday, Rachel - our Supreme Overlord, along with Sharon - Accounts Lady and Organiser Extraordinaire, went to a local school to give the wee children a presentation on the importance of recycling. Afterwards, Rachel, Sharon and the children made a dragon out of rubbish to demonstrate the idea of making something out of waste. Theo was created out of loo rolls, milk bottles, wooden spoons and a lavatory cystern and the children had great fun.

Don't tell anyone but the BBC was also there, filming the shenanigans and they have also been in the office, skulking around the warehouse, filming here and there and asking us to "act natural".

Unfortunately we can't say much more... Ssshhhh.

New Member of Staff

Tuesday, 24 August 2010

Capt. Charles Moore on the seas of plastic | Video on TED.com

Capt. Charles Moore on the seas of plastic | Video on TED.com

This is an excellent talk about the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, a Pacific island twice the size of Texas, which is made entirely of plastic that has drifted the oceans to rest here in a gigantic swilring mass. If you are curious, take a look on Youtube, which has footage of the Patch. It's unbelievable.

New Member of Staff.

Thursday, 19 August 2010

Thursday at Tiny Box House

Not wishing for our blog to be too serious, I thought I'd drop a quick nearly-the-end-of-the-week hello.

It has been extremely busy at TBH this week - more happy customers we hope. One of our happy customers brought in some lovely chocolates which, unfortunately, due to their richness and exoticness, made a couple of members of staff feel a little unwell. So,I valiantly ate the remainder to save my colleagues from any further sickness.

As always, feel free to say hi, leave comments and suggestions, or join us on Facebook or Twitter.

Nearly the weekend!

New Member of Staff

Monday, 16 August 2010

From Swampy to Sienna – The Changing Face of the Environmentalist.


Remember Swampy? Swampy Hooper first appeared in 1996 as an environmental protester, barricading the machinery sent in to dig out a bypass through the woodlands outside Newbury. The standoff between protester and machine lasted for weeks, with people taking root (no pun intended) in the trees and Swampy digging an underground tunnel, where he stayed throughout the protest. Dreadlocked and donning the big sweaters that were fashionable amongst certain groups in the 1990s, Swampy became the image of environmentalism at that time. As result of his appearance, he and his cohorts were dismissed by many as “crusties” and potheads and the press made much of his middle class upbringing, as if it somehow diminished his authenticity. However, despite the negative reaction by many, Swampy became a celebrity. More than ten years later, not only is Swampy still protesting, albeit more quietly (more recently he appeared at the demonstrations against the third runway at Heathrow), but Swampy still practices what he preaches. According to the Independent, Swampy lives a self-sufficient life in Wales, in a community where there is no electricity or running water. The family, consisting of him, his partner and three children, grow most of their own food, wash in a nearby stream and use an eco-loo.

In my last article, Recycling in the Recession, I addressed the way in which matters concerning the environment are still perceived by many as “middle class” issues. So it is interesting that actually coming forward and challenging the system of power that threatens the environment, or indeed involvement in any kind of demonstration, has long been associated with the working class. Those presenting anything less than “salt of the earth” credentials, as in the case of Swampy, are rejected as fakes. This presents a weird paradox, since on the one hand, a working class background has been essential for the authenticity of the protester but on the other hand, his or her voice has been ignored because of exactly that. Despite their significant role in bringing the growing devastation of the British countryside to the attention of the public, the physical appearance of Swampy and the gang almost certainly weakened their progress in terms of getting their message heard by suit-wearing officials and politicians.

Fast forward a few years. By the mid-noughties the planet’s corner was being fought by a host of celebrities, including Coldplay’s Chris Martin, his wife Gwyneth Paltrow and actress Sienna Miller. Exalting the virtues of composting, recycling and hybrid cars, the endeavour of these celebrities was ostensibly to lead by example. Regularly featured in Coldplay’s music videos was Martin waving his hands, adorned with messages in the form of coloured tape and scribbled symbols, as signs of his commitment to Fair Trade. However, widespread reports of hypocrisy that detailed ecologically unsound activities such as regular long haul flights in private jets, seriously damaged the credibility of both the message and the messenger. Not to mention that Coldplay, in a few short years, went from being the coolest kids on the block to something no self respecting music lover would admit to having on their i-Pod. It could be argued that Martin’s increasing propensity to use his music as a platform for political activism took him down the same route as Bono et al, on a one way trip to uncool.

So in 2010, what are we left with? Horribly contrived photographs of politicians, such as David Cameron, riding bicycles through London, tailed by a legion of support cars? Al Gore? Gore’s authority was seriously degraded some time after the release of his initially well-received film An Inconvenient Truth as a result of leaked emails and sexual allegations, meaning the public once again turned away in disbelief. Or perhaps we place our faith in Lewis Pugh, “The Human Polar Bear”, a Devonshire environmental lawyer who swam 1km (0.62 miles) across 2°C Pumori Lake under the summit of Everest to draw attention to the rapidly melting glaciers. Pugh, who has previously swum in Antarctica and across the North Pole , is something of a hero in both sporting and environmental terms and has so far been praised by the media for his efforts to raise awareness of increasingly visible environmental problems. But perhaps Pugh will only hang onto his integrity until the press can dig some dirt on him. It seems that since way before Swampy’s time, anyone with a message relating to the way we live and the things that we need to change has been condemned by certain segments of the media and had their sincerity challenged. In reality, they have probably made quite a difference in the thinking of the public but at the cost of their own reputation.


Perhaps, though, there is hope in the possibility that environmentalism has, at last, started to bridge the class divide. A heartening article in the Daily Telegraph notes how the battle against Heathrow’s third runway brought together a host of demonstrators, including middle class, aristocracy, politicians and the tweedy upper-middle class. This shows that the face of environmentalism is changing to one that encompasses us all and has the potential to make a difference from terraces and mansions, and living rooms and drawing rooms all over the country. From Swampy to Sienna – we need them all – but most of all, we need all of the people in between.