Media

  • Today's the Day -Great Music for A Great Cause Now Available Here and on the Web

    The Aid Still Required CD shines the spotlight on Tsunami Recovery and issues that have fallen out of the headlines.

    The Deluxe  Super Green CD (veggie dye n everything!) is available on The ASR website and is now downloadable from your favorite digital online retailer!

  • Father's Day Pledge

    At Aid Still Required, part of our mission is that fathers everywhere have the resources to provide for their families.

    Would you help?

    Honor your dad and

    1) Be an Angel - pledge $10 monthly minimum - and receive our All-Star CD as a gift.

    2) Purchase the Deluxe Eco--Edition CD for $15 plus tax and shipping.

    3) Download the CD June 22nd from iTunes/Amazon and other digital retailers.

  • The CD is On Its Way!!!!

     

    ASR.Tsunami.CD.Cover.ArtWe are in the throes of preparing for our CD launch June 22nd.  It is such an exciting moment, the opportunity to bring Aid Still Required onto the national/international scene so that we may have the privilege of truly fulfilling upon our mission...making a real difference for those no longer the latest media headline....and in particular with this CD, lending a hand to the tsunami survivors of SouthEast Asia.
    For those of you are new to us......this project is five and a half years in the making - from a thought which bubbled up from hearts opened by tremendous tragedy and ignited by examples of heroism .....thousands of miles traveled, hundreds of volunteer hours and  the goodwill of dozens of people who have contributed, lots of trials and errors..........but never to be deterred :  - ) .......an organization manifested.... relationships and bonds forged for life  ...a commitment honored....and our goal... transforming lives of people we may never meet but who are our global family.
    Proceeds go to....widows overcoming their grief to provide for their kids, orphans needing an education so they can build a future, dads trying to eke out a living so their daughters don't need to go to cities and risk human trafficking,  trees ( the earth's lungs) and reefs  to conserve to protect one of the two greatest areas of biodiversity on the planet.......read more on our Tsunami Projects page..
    Next blog:  ways you can assist us in making the CD launch successful!  See ya next week!

     

  • Save an Angel - ASR Teams with Hans Zimmer for Mother's Day!

    Composer and philanthropist Hans Zimmer's Remote Control Foundation has selected Aid Still Required as one of seven beneficiary  organizations to participate in the Save An Angel Mother's Day fundraising campaign.

    Save An Angel was composed by rising songstress, humanitarian- and Los Angeles -area high-school student!- Rachel Eskanazi-Gold to bring awareness  to  the suffering of women and children around the globe. ASR's proceeds from the campaign will go towards funding our projects in Southeast Asia in honor of the women and children who were either victims or survivors of the 2004 tsunami which devastated the region.

    Hans Zimmer is the award winning composer of over 100 films; among them are Disney's The Lion King, Gladiator, Pirates of the Caribbean, Driving Miss Daisy,  both of Christopher Nolan's Batman films - Batman Begins and The Dark Knight, Thelma and Louise, The Da Vinci Code and many, many others.  He is an composer  and person of extraordinary depth and breadth, pioneering the use of integrating electronic music with traditional orchestral arrangements as well as providing mentorship to young composers and seeking opportunities to make a difference.

    Thank you , Rachel and  thank you to Hans Zimmer and Remote Control Productions and Foundation

    In honor of Mothers Day this coming Sunday, May 9th please download a copy of Save an Angel here. and do your part to save and honor mothers everywhere.  To make it even more meaningful - why not donate it in your mother's name!

    Happy Mother's Day to all our supporters 

  • ASR Interview in the Los Angeles Business Journal!

  • Los Angeles Business Journal Hall of Fame Awards Ceremony

    ASR Femmes

    Lindsay Huff, ASR Special Projects, ASR Founder Andrea Herz Payne, and Elizabeth Markovitch, new ASR Director of Development

    On March 9, 2010, the women of ASR attended the Los Angeles Business Journal's annual awards luncheon.

    We had the privilege of meeting personally 2010 Business Person of the Year and LABJ Hall of Fame inductee Patrick Soon-Shiong. Surgeon, researcher, inventor, entrepreneur, and philanthropist, he is a remarkable, humble man with an equally remarkable story.

    Born and raised in South Africa at a time when apartheid was still epidemic, Soon-Shiong began his medical career at a very young age in South Africa.  Receiving half the pay of his caucasian counterparts, he shone in his endeavors, overcame the oppressions of apartheid, emigrated to Canada and then The United States where he has become one of the most innovative scientists of our time, changing the face of medicine.

    In the  1980's, Soon Shiong performed  the first cell transplants to produce insulin in a diabetic.  He subsequently invented Abraxane, the first breast cancer drug based on nanparticle technology.  His new-found material wealth not only catapulted him into the ranks of America's wealthiest individuals, it has inspired extraordinary philanthropy.  Soon-Shiong and his wife Michele Chan started their own foundation which has donated hundreds of millions of dollars to local hospitals, and is assisting in the planned reopening of South LA's MLK Jr. Hospital and in the improvement of Skid Row Medical Care  In his seemingly extemporaneous  acceptance speech we heard wonderful and humorous examples of his innovation and insight into the healthcare industry through technological improvements.

    We got reacquainted with social media  and internet marketing guru Torsten Kunert who has joined the ranks of those contributing their significant knowledge and expertise to the ASR team. Tunert  was in attendance with business partners Robert Star and Irvine Zysensky; they have an important iPhone application in the works - we'll update you in the future.

    We also had the privilege of speaking with LABJ publisher Matt Toledo and Editor Charles Crumpley.  As new subscribers, ASR appreciated the opportunity to thank them for the extensive, informative, and interesting coverage of our community.  The day was a unique, fascinating experience for us, gaining the perspective of local entrepreneurs and interacting with members of the wide-ranging Los Angeles business world.

    Update: LABJ will be publishing an article about ASR in their March 22, 2010, issue! We will be posting it here as soon as it is released! Stay tuned.....

  • United Nations Global Creative Forum

    We were so pleased and excited to be able to attend and contribute to the United Nations 2010 Global Creative Forum in Los Angeles.  Held March 1, 2010, at The  Armand Hammer Museum in Westwood, The Forum was chaired by Chicken Soup for the Soul CEO Bill Rouhana, and was created to bring together Hollywood, The United Nations, and a variety of world organizations.

    The morning began with an intimate, thought-provoking conversation between United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and actor Michael Douglas, who also serves as a United Nations Messenger of Peace.  The UN Secretary -General  made a special request of  the entertainment community to create positive story lines focusing on the activities of The United Nations and the important issues it addresses.

    In the ensuing panel discussion, The United Nations and Hollywood, moderator Robert Orr, Assistant Secretary General,  and UN Creative Community Outreach Officer Eric Falt asked the creative community to partner with them to achieve the Millennium Development Goals.
    Panelist Neal Baer, executive producer of Law and Order: SVU, is currently working on an episode which will highlight the rape epidemic in the Congo set to air sometime in March. Other panelists included Hotel Rwanda director Terry George, actress/activist Gloria Reuben who mentioned some of her environmental activism, and actress/activist Mira Sorvino, currently working with The United Nations in their Human Trafficking division.

    The Empowering Women Worldwide Panel, held in the afternoon, focused on how the empowerment of women creates global prosperity and peace.  Helene Gayle, founder and president of CARE moderated.  We heard from actress Julia Ormond, founder of ASSET (Alliance to End Slavery and Stop Trafficking)  and social entrepreneur Blake Mycoskie, founder of TOMS Shoes, as well as Margaret Chan of The World Health Organization and UN Legal Counsel Patricia O'Brien.

    The closing discussion, Cutting Edge Solutions, was chaired by Bill Rouhana and featured actress/activist Maria Bello, who gave everyone an update on the situation in Haiti, Ray Chambers, UN Special Envoy on Malaria, tech genius James Colemenares of The Qindred Foundation, and UN Messenger of Peace, the ever-vibrant Stevie Wonder rounded out the panel.

  • Ben Skinner at Youth for Human Rights International Event

    On February 28, 2010, ASR attended an event for Youth for Human Rights International where we were honored to meet Ben Skinner, author of A Crime so Monstrous: Face-to-Face with Modern Day Slavery.   A Carr Center for Human Rights Policy fellow at Harvard's Kennedy School and winner of the 2009 Dayton Literary Peace Prize. Skinner is both academic and activist.

     

    Skinner's own first-hand experience with slavery began in 2003 while in Sudan on an assignment for Newsweek.  He met a young man, Muong Nyong, a former slave who was Skinner's own age but who had spent half his life in bondage.  Nyong inspired Skinner to seek out more people like him. Thus began the journey  that has made Skinner the first person in history  to have observed the sale of human beings on four continents.

     

    Scholars estimate the total number of modern-day slaves is greater than at any point in history - Skinner places it at potentially twenty-seven million human beings.  But as Skinner points out,  that number means little, unless we clarify the meaning of slavery. He formulated a specific definition: slaves are forced to work, under threat of violence, for no pay beyond subsistence.

     

    Though the number of slaves defies comprehension and is growing, finding them is challenging and at times  dangerous. Often going undercover, Skinner  has infiltrated trafficking networks, slave quarries, urban child markets and illegal brothels. These experiences and insights are chronicled in A Crime So Monstrous.

     

    After the presentation, ASR also met with Skinner's guest, fellow Angeleno Maria Suarez of CAST-LA (Coalition of Abolition of Slavery and Trafficking- Los Angeles).  Maria moved the audience to tears with her story of being trafficked at age 15- in Los Angeles.  Lured by the promise of a job, Maria was imprisoned into domestic servitude and abuse for 5 1/ 2 years - in Los Angeles, then wrongfully imprisoned for 22 1/2 years for the murder of her enslaver.  Upon her release, she was threatened with deportation.  Maria's name was cleared, a green card granted, and with a radiant smile and spirit, she is dedicating her life to educating families, and especially young women, both here and in small villages abroad, of the dangers of human trafficking.

     

    It was a thought-provoking morning and ASR felt privileged to bear witness to some of the tragedies of human trafficking.

     

  • Loyola Marymount presents Greg Mortensen

    Last night, ASR Special Projects Manager Lindsay Huff took ASR Founders Hunter and Andrea and ASR Friend Laurie Benenson to her alma mater Loyola Marymount to hear author and humanitarian Greg Mortensen speak about his latest book "Stones Into Schools.".

     

    Mortenson, author of  the bestseller "Three Cups of Tea", has been working in Pakistan and Afghanistan since 1993 after recovering from a hike up K2 - the world's second highest mountain.  In the weeks he spent recovering in the far reaches of a Himalayan village, Mortenson noted that the village children had no school and had to study on exposed rocks in the cold.  As an expression of his gratitude,  Mortenson promised the villagers that he would build them a school.

     

    Out of what may have been a delirious, rash promise,  Mortensen founded the Central Asia Institute and Pennies for Peace. To date, he has built 131 schools that provide educational opportunities to children in some of the most politically volitile regions of the "war on terror." Of these children the vast majority (48,000 of the 58,000) are girls who often have even less access to education because of their gender.

     

    We were so inspired by Greg.  His first school took three years to build, 500 letters to receive his first check, and now he is making a difference in lives throughout Afghanistan and Pakistan, creating a positive lasting influence in the region.

     

     

  • Invictus Screening Honoring the Work of NGO's - 12/9/09

    As a part of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights Campaign, Clint Eastwood graciously donated his new film, Invictus, for an advance screening at the Pacific Design Center in West Hollywood, two days prior to opening.  The gala evening, co-sponsored by the City of West Hollywood in addition to thecommunity.com, recognized various NGOs, honoring the work that they do in light of Human Rights Day [December 10th].  About 400 guests were in attendance - over 1,200 were on the waiting list!

    Aid Still Required was asked to participate with other NGOs that included the One Campaign, Artists for Human Rights, CARE, the Enough Project, and Amnesty International.

    Bonnie Abaunza, ASR friend, fierce human rights advocate, and Director of Special Projects for Remote Control Productions emceed the screening.  A video presentation was shown before the film, in which Archbishop Desmond Tutu gave his illuminary words of gratitude toward Clint Eastwood for making the film, the collective work of NGOs and the essential work that they do in preserving our universal human rights [stay tuned for the video link of his message].

    The performances in the movie were effortlessly brilliant, conveying this compelling true story about Nelson Mandela's endeavors to reunite his country through reconciliation and forgiveness...and rugby!

    ASR's table got a lot of buzz as people came by, picking up ASR bookmarks, brochures on our upcoming projects, and asking more about our work.  Hollywood Weekly also came by the table to take pictures of Andrea and Hunter with ASR volunteers Kanoe Y. Wheeler and Eileen Kim, as well as to get a few words from Hunter about our work.

  • UDHR Campaign Continues - Lakers Photo Shoot

    As part of its continuing participation in the UDHR Nobel Peace Laureate Campaign, ASR organized a photo shoot with Lakers Andrew Bynum, Luke Walton, and Jordan Farmar at the Lakers' practicing facility.

    The three athletes held up signs representing the various articles numbers from the UN document, Universal Declaration of Human Rights, as well as signs that say, "Join Us!", written and signed by each of them in their own handwriting. Luke's dad, basketball hall of famer Bill Walton is also participating in the campaign.

    ASR had the pleasure of seeing photographer Zoe Zimmer again, whom we had met at the Sunset Gower Studio shoot, a former UK high fashion model and daughter of renowned film composer, Hans Zimmer.

    It was a particularly exciting day for Andrea and Hunter, who were able to have a brief conversation with Kobe Bryant and pass along to him a long-awaited gift of gratitude for his previous PSA work with Aid Still Required: a custom-made ASR t-shirt with Kobe's high school team motto, "Refuse to Lose"...written in Italian.  Kobe was appreciative of the gift, continuing to show his very gracious support to ASR's work.

    After the shoot ended, we ran into Lakers general manager and long-time friend of Hunter's, Mitch Kupchak, with whom we got to have an enjoyable conversation.

    Seen below is Andrew Bynum, graciously posing with 5'5" ASR volunteer Eileen Kim.

    Here's Luke Walton saying cheese with UDHR Article 14.

    We are very grateful to all of the wonderful support we've received from our home team, the Los Angeles Lakers!

  • Universal Declaration of Human Rights Campaign - Sunset Gower Photo Shoot

    Thecommunity.com had invited ASR to participate in its Universal Declaration of Human Rights Campaign featuring Nobel Peace Laureates including the Dalai Lama and Archbishop Desmond Tutu.

    The Universal Declaration of Human Rights was created by Eleanor Roosevelt and adopted by the UN in 1948.  Its 30 articles spell out the fundamental facets of human rights for all people.  UN General Secretary Ban Ki-Moon said, "The Declaration was the first global statement of what we now take for granted - the inherent dignity and equality of all human beings."  ASR is honored to join a campaign that speaks so true of what it stands for...what we hope all of you will take a stand for.

    Andrea, Hunter, and actress / filmmaker / ASR volunteer Lindsay Huff were at Sunset Gower that Monday doing a photo shoot with actors and athletes such as CCH Pounder from The Shield and Law and Order and Lakers Josh Powell and Didier Ilunga-Mbenga.

    Seen below are Didier Ilunga-Mbenga giving a group hug to Producer Terri Melkonian, Coordinator Nikkie Pacuk, Production Assistant Raffi Petrossian, Associate Producer Larry Laboe, and Production Assistant Valentine Mathieu.  Just how many people can DJ fit in his arms?!

  • The Most Famous Woman in Afghanistan

    Andrea is seen here with Malalai Joya, also known as "the most famous woman in Afghanistan."  In 2003, at the age of 25, Joya stood up at a constitutional assembly and denounced the NATO-backed warlords.  She was elected to parliament in 2005 at age 27, and in 2007, she was suspended for her persistent criticism of the warlords and the government.

    Currently on tour of the US to promote her new book, A Woman Among Warlords, Hunter and Andrea met Joya at the home of CODEPINK Co-Founder Jodie Evans.  Joya is petite and soft-spoken until she starts speaking about the tragedies currently going on in her country and about the calling for the withdrawal of NATO troops there.

    The Paynes deeply appreciated the opportunity to hear a firsthand report about life in Afghanistan from Joya as well as from activist Sara Nichols, who traveled there recently on a CODEPINK delegation.  What was especially moving was the story of a young girl, who had been given in marriage against her will as a child, escaped twice, found refuge in a woman's shelter, and who is now committed to becoming a lawyer on behalf of other women.  There are only six women's centers to serve the approximately 13 million women estimated to be victims of domestic abuse.

    Whatever point of view you may have about the US troops being in Afghanistan, you cannot help but be moved by Joya's courage and passion.  She has survived four assassination attempts; for this reason, CODEPINK is requesting contributions to help provide an armored car for Joya's safety.

  • Clippers vs. Maccabi Event - Oct. 20th, 2009

    "For the children" - Aid Still Required Joins the Clippers and Maccabi Tel-Aviv for Migdal Ohr Benefit

    In 2007, the New York Knicks and Maccabi Tel Aviv sold out Madison Square Garden in the first basketball benefit game for Migdal Ohr, the world's largest orphanage located in Northern Israel.

    As the benefit was such a success, Migdal Ohr created two pre-season exhibition games for 2009, one rematch in NYC and the other at the Los Angeles Staples Center with the LA Clippers facing the Maccabis.

    Migdal Ohr Executive Director Robert Katz had heard about ASR's work with the NBA players and offered ASR an invitation to participate.  Proceeds went to Migdal Ohr, with a percentage of sales going to help the work of other NGO's such as ASR and LA's Best, in addition to area synagogues.

    Over 26,000 people total attended the two games.  Andrea and Hunter sat in the midst of a lively group of male middle-schoolers, who could barely stay in their seats.  When they weren't hooting and hollering, the young men were texting the latest scoop.  Founder and president Rabbi Yitzchak Dovid Grossman, alos the 2009 Caring Institute International Humanitarian of the Year, addressed the crowd at half-time.  A delicious post-game feast was held for VIPs and the athletes.  In addition to meeting basketball legend Rick Barry, Andrea was espcially happy to meet up with her old friend, talented marketer, Lauren Becker.

    This West Coast game went off without a hitch, though the same could not be said about the game at the Garden, where Maccabi coach, Pini Gershon, had to be removed from the game over a heated disagreement with a referee.  We were glad to see him more at ease here in LA!

  • Dirt The Movie - Getting Dirty at the Dirt The Movie screening @ the 2009 Bioneers Conference

    After seeing Dirt! The Movie, you will never think of the ground beneath you in quite the same way.

    Sometimes red, sometimes chocolaty brown, sometimes black, sometimes beige, we usually think of dirt as something we want to clean up and get rid of.  However, Dirt! The Movie was an eye-opener for the Paynes.  ASR thanks producers Bill and Laurie Benenson and Gene Rusow for getting the word out...and for making the film a lot of fun as well as informative and inspiring.

    Dirt! The Movie has been chosen as PBS's 2010 Earth Day special.  The DVD is now available for purchase at dirtthemovie.org/buydirttoday.

    Watch the trailer here:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n8_dN5YWnyc&feature=player_embedded

  • Bioneers Conference 2009

    This year's Bioneers Conference, held in Marin County from October 16-18th, was Aid Still Required's fourth year in attendance, in conjunction with Andrea and Hunter's wedding anniversary.  The Paynes were fortunate enough to be joined by Board member Maureen Charles, who found the conference equally inspiring, a gathering of amazing people focusing on visionary solutions to preserve and revitalize the planet in addition to restoring social justice to a broken world.

    One of their favorite workshop presenters was Dr. John Todd of Todd Ecological Design and Engineering - the 2008 winner of the Buckminster Fuller Challenge.  He spoke about his revolutionary approach to coal mining mountain top restoration in Appalachia.  After hearing Dr. Todd and seeing Diane Sawyer's Children of the Mountains television special on malnutrition in Appalachia, the beautiful land and forgotten people of Appalachia are now on ASR's radar where we hope to make a difference.

    The Paynes first heard Dr. Todd and his wife, Mary Jack Todd, speak at a local Los Angeles Bioneers meeting regarding their visionary simulated ecosystems that purify sewage and waste water.  He has created a method that changes human waste into drinkable water through the practical use of plant filter systems as eco-machines.  Who knew that waste management could be so fascinating?!?!  For more about Dr. Todd's work, check out his site at http://toddecological.com.

     

    Mari Margil, the associate director of the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund (CELD) was one of the standout plenary speakers with her presentation "Who Speaks for the Trees?: Driving Nature's Rights into Law."  The focus was Ecuador's Constituent Assembly's landmark decision to enshrine the rights of three cities in the US who are drawing up city ordinances to strip corporations of their rights constitutionally, even as the cities grant nature rights under the law.

    Creating a parallel between how we treat nature and slavery, Ms. Margil made the point that most laws govern the use of nature as property, but do not grant it rights or protection, just as laws regarding slavery addressed slaves as property without granting them rights or protection.

    CELD promotes affordable legal services to grassroot groups and municipal governments for democratic control of environmental rights.  Their Democracy School is a series of weekend seminars that helps groups and communities create organizing strategies to resist corporate rights that impose on the rights of those communities.  For more information, please check out their website: www.celdf.org.

    Please consider joining ASR for next year's Bioneers Conference.  Only four can fit comfortably in the Prius, but the Paynes are not adverse to finding a bus that runs on biodiesel to increase the Los Angeles constituency!

    ASR Board Member / Secretary Maureen Charles with Andrea and Hunter

    [Photos of Dr. Todd and Ms. Margil are accredited to results from a Google image search.]

  • Daniel Ellsberg is the Most Dangerous Man in America.

    When CODEPINK Co-Founder Jodie Evans told the Paynes about an upcoming screening of The Most Dangerous Man in America, they changed their schedule and showed up for the Thursday night screening and Q&A session with film subject Daniel Ellsberg and his wife, Patricia.

    For those of you who might not know this important piece of history, the film documents Ellsberg's transformation from Defense Department analyst to whistleblower concerning the government cover-ups about the Vietnam War and finally to anti-war and anti-nuclear activist.  Ellsberg is specifically known for releasing what became known as the Pentagon Papers, detailing the United States' involvement in the escalation of the war, which had been denied by the government.  The New York Times was the first to release the story and begin publication of the documents and when the Nixon White House shut down the presses, The Washington Post took over.  After the White House took actions to shut down The Post, 15 other newspapers took up publishing sections of the Pentagon Papers until the Supreme Court ruled in favor of freedom of the press and the Nixon White House had to withdraw.  Ellsberg was jailed but finally acquitted.  Now in his late seventies, he and Patricia have continued to speak out against war and in favor of social justice.

  • The Third Wave - Volunteering in Sri Lanka after the Tsunami

    September 22nd marked the LA premiere and Academy Awards qualifying screening of the documentary, The Third Wave.  Made by ASR friend, Alison Thompson and her producing partner Oscar Gubernati, The Third Wave chronicles their experiences volunteering in Sri Lanka after the tsunami.

    It is a spectacular cinema-verite film, depicting the human reality of what it was like in the days, weeks, and months following the disaster.  In 2008, after seening an early cut of the film, Sean Penn asked for a special screening at Cannes when he was head of jury there.  The film is scheduled to open nationally in March 2010.
    Thompson continues to stay involved on the ground in Sri Lanka and founded The Community Tsunami-Early Warning Center, the only early warning tsunami system in Sri Lanka.  Aid Still Required plans to provide support to CTEC in part through the AllStar Tsunami Relief CD.
    With its message that "everyone is needed," The Third Wave is a moving and inspiring film - put it on your March 2010 calendars!
    Alison, Oscar, Andrea, and Hunter
    Doing the wave!
  • ASR's FIRST MAJOR FUNDRAISING EVENT - "A Night of Culture for a Cause"

    "June 20th" quickly became an ASR household buzzword with weeks of tireless preparation, culminating into A Night of Culture for a Cause.  Actress and ASR friend Barbara Bosson hosted the fete at her stunning Pacific Palisades home.  Thanks to Marble Arch Fine Afts and the Cracking Art Group, guests were greeted by eco-friendly, larger-than-life animal sculptures made out of recycled plastic, highlighting ASR's commitment to environmental issues.  Animals included giant bulldogs and terriers, oversized sneaker-wearing chihuahuas, goats, giraffes, and alligators.

    Giant terrier with goat friends guarding the premises.

    Colorful chihuahuas enjoying the poolside with N. African art hanging in the back.

    ASR's various projects in the tsunami region in Southeast Asia, Sudan, and New Orleans were featured on displays in the living room while silent auction items were lined up on tables on the poolside veranda.

    With close to a hundred people in attendance, Whole Foods and Taste of Hope Catering provided a topical spread for dinner - authentic Northeast African food from Ethiopia, Eritrea, and Sudan were prepared and served by chefs from those countries in their traditional apparel.  There was also Ethiopian coffee, ground directly by these women in the idyllic backyard of Ms. Bosson's home.

    Saba and Mbraty putting together a wonderful meal!

    Coffee-making Station

    Tracks from ASR's upcoming All-Star Tsunami Relief CD played quietly in the background as guests perused the North African art on display.  Representing the ASR project area of New Orleans, whiskey-voiced rollicking pianist Bob Malone played smokin' Nawlins style jazz keyboards, as shown below.

    Renowned interior designer, animal activist, and philanthropist Bobi Leonard, as seen below, was a lively auctioneer, whipping up excitement for items including a getaway trip to Tuscany, an ASR shirt worn and signed by Kobe Bryant, "Holding Onto" sculpture by Iranian American artist Rebecca Setareh, gift certificates to local spas and neighborhood restaurant legends like Michael's, Amici's, Cafe Delfini's, Giorgio's, and Rustic Canyon, photographs by award-winning conflict photographer Ron Haviv and the irrepressible Cat Gwynn, and custom-made stone jewelry made by Benita Pautz, also hairdresser extraordinaire, whose jewelry will soon to be made available for sale on ASR's online store.

    After a night of discussion, bidding, and winning, the guests left with their minds, stomachs, and hands full of cultural experiences.  On their way home, guests received party favors of original photographs taken by Andrea and Hunter themselves of Sudan's landscape and beautiful people as well as Sumbody salt scrub samples, scented with the Indonesian and Sudanese tropical flowers, herbs, and fruits.  It was a wonderful night to say the very least, and we thank all of our attendees, supports, and volunteers for making it a success!

    Andrea with sculpture artist Rebecca Setareh and actress, philanthropist, designer, model, ASR volunteer Sulinh LaFontaine.

    [All photographs were taken by Barry Schwartz.]

  • VRAI gets a Taste of METal

    ASR thanks METal [Media Entertainment Technology Alliance] for showcasing their VRAI video at A Taste of METal Media Festival on June 11th at the Los Angeles Center Studios.  For more about the wonderfully things being done by this group, check out their site at www.tasteofmetal.com.

  • Cocktails and Karaoke for a Cause - June 3rd, 2009

    On June 3rd, in conjunction with hiving.net, philanthropist Sarah Nicole Dolgen hosted a Cocktails for a Cause Karaoke Night in honor of Aid Still Required at her lovely apartment off of Sunset Strip.  It was a night of great Thai food from Sarah's favorite neighborhood Thai joint, great drinks, and vivid discussion, with many young socialites in attendance, engaging Andrea and Hunter with incisive questions.  We hear the singing went on until the wee hours.  Thank you to Sarah and all the attendees!

    Sarah Nicole Dolgen introducing the Paynes

    Andrea with attendee, Jessica Reid

  • Poker Night with Hope Artist - May 7th, 2009

    ASR was invited to participate in HOPE Artist's Vice for Nice Poker Invitational at Fred Segal Conveyor in Santa Monica, CA.  The store was transformed after hours into a mini-Las Vegas with players crowded around gambling tables, gambling for good!  Hope Artist Founder, Andi Scull Steidle is shown below with Hunter.

    Andi's husband, Marine Capt. Brian Steidle, was one of the key influences who inspired Andrea and Hunter's work on behalf of the people of Darfur.  They met Brian at a 2006 traveling art exhibit, "Darfur, Darfur," where Brian shared some of his experiences working as a photojournalist in Southern Sudan and Darfur for the African Union.  Brian's experiences were made into a riveting, heart-wrenching documentary produced by Global Grassroots, "The Devil Came on Horseback."

    Good Charlotte vocalist, DJ, actor, UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador and philanthropist Joel Madden co-hosted the event.  Here he is, strategizing his next move against fellow players, including ASR founder, Hunter Payne.

    Thanks to Andi and Joel for a wonderful night of awareness and fun!

  • Thank You, Jay Leno!

    Andrea and Hunter attended the ceremony for the Feminist Majority Foundation Global Women's Rights Award at the Beverly Hills Hotel on April 29th.

    They had the pleasure of seeing Jay and his wife Mavis there. They first met Jay and Mavis in a parking lot a couple of years ago to talk about what happening in Darfur. Two days later, Jay had George Clooney on the Tonight Show and and they discussed the history of the conflict, giving Darfur its due air time.

    Jay Leno and Aid Still Required Founders Hunter and Andrea Herz Payne

    Also at the April 29th event, Andrea and Hunter had a run-in with Christiane Amanpour, who  was one of the honorees that night.  She did a CNN special on genocides called "Scream Bloody Murder," in which a clip from ASR's public service announcement with Kobe Bryant was shown [http://www.aidstillrequired.org/media.html].  Check out the link for more on her special:http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2008/scream.bloody.murder/.

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