Pride Festival Video Outreach

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Date/Time
Saturday, July 17, 2021 - Sunday, July 18, 2021
9:00am - 6:00pm

Location
Loring Park

Video outreach is extremely effective--and this is our biggest event of the year!

We’ll share our booth # here once known.

Join us for video outreach at the Twin Cities Pride Festival and make a difference for animals!

We’ll be paying people one dollar to watch a five-minute video about factory farming on a tablet or using virtual reality equipment. Sign up now!

In addition to the many outreach volunteers that we’ll need Saturday and Sunday, we also need a photographer and folks to haul supplies. View all of the positions on the sign-up form.

We look forward to having you join us for one of our most powerful events of the year.

Invite friends to join you on the Facebook event page!

Pay-per-view and virtual reality are effective ways that we advocate for animals and educate the public. Come out and help the animals by introducing people to the compassionate choices they can make.

Virtual reality outreach gives people the chance to experience life on a factory farm from a pig’s point of view. Wearing the special virtual reality equipment, participants step into a 360-degree view of a farm, seeing and hearing what a pig might experience.

Pay-per-view outreach gives viewers the chance to see undercover footage of life for cows, pigs, chickens, and fish as they are raised commercially.

As a volunteer, you’ll either invite people to try one of these experiences or help set them up with the equipment and then have a supportive conversation with them afterward. The vast majority of participants express gratitude and the desire to help make a difference in farmed animals’ lives. You’ll get to help them to do that by inviting them to eat animal-free diets.

Here are some of the things that you can expect to hear from participants, along with some of the best ways you can respond.

  • I don’t think I can give up eating meat.
    • Any step you can take makes a difference. It can be a gradual process. You could start off with a Meatless Monday and just incorporate a plant-based meal into your diet once a week.
  • Why do they have to do it like that!? It doesn’t have to be done like that! (in response )
    • Due to consumer demand for inexpensive meat, eggs, and dairy, suppliers are in constant competition to market their products at the lowest price, regardless of how the animals are treated. Whenever we choose not to buy animal products, we help shift demand away from factory farms and toward vegetarian foods.
  • But I buy my meat from free-range farms.
    • Any choice that you can make to reduce animal suffering is great. However, be aware that labels such as “free range” may still involve cruelty. For example, the male chicks who are not valued by the egg industry are killed at birth through a grinder or suffocation, and the female chicks are debeaked.
  • I lived on a farm, and they never did that.
    • Unfortunately, the practices depicted in these videos are standard practices on factory farms. The vast majority of animals in our food system experience this treatment.
  • Where will I get my protein?
    • It’s easy to get enough protein on a plant-based diet. Beans, peas, lentils, nuts, seeds, and whole grains are all high in protein.
  • I’m never going to eat meat again!
    • Thanks for feeling so passionate about it. Please take a look at some of the tips for plant-based eating in this pamphlet.

See our Advocacy Etiquette and Frequently Asked Questions for more extensive answers to these questions, along with other tips.

 

 

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