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Ed Over HeelsA new reality series reveals what it's like living with eco-celeb Ed Begley Jr.02 Jan 2007
Nick and Jessica had their "chicken of the sea." Sharon and Ozzy had their bleepity bleep-bleep. And now Ed and Rachelle have ... plastic rain barrels.
Ed Begley Jr.
Photo: Tricia Lee Pascoe
Take the rain-barrel squabble: He wants to capture and reuse precipitation. She doesn't want barrels that clash with the house. "Honey, what's more ugly?" Begley recalls asking. "The fish flopping in the mud there in the Owens Valley, or this color?" It's a constant battle over aesthetics, he says, but he's slowly showing her that it won't cost much extra money or time to live green. Now he'll show TV audiences the same thing. Perhaps best known for his Emmy-nominated turn in St. Elsewhere, Begley has most recently been featured in the Christopher Guest film For Your Consideration and guest starred on Veronica Mars, Arrested Development, and other series. Off screen, he's garnered attention for his role as a committed environmentalist in the Hollywood community. An active member and sometimes-chair on the board of a number of green orgs, including the Environmental Media Association, Begley has earned a number of prestigious awards for his eco-work, and encourages fellow actors to change their bling-y lifestyles. "You want to go to the Oscars? Go in a Prius. Go in an electric car," he advises. Or do as Begley has done: show up on a bicycle. This isn't just a publicity stunt or an effort to be hip. Begley's been driving an electric car since 1970. He recharges the current one, a Toyota RAV4, with the solar panels that provide all the electricity for his modest, two-bedroom home in sunny Studio City, Calif. He grows his own veggies and cooks them in a solar oven. He even powers his toaster with a stationary bike. When I got the chance recently to ask him what it's really like living with Ed, he had just arrived home from some errands. It was only 10 a.m., but he'd been out delivering cases of his Begley's Best eco-cleaning supplies to a nearby vendor, taking a natural-gas bus and the subway to make it back in time for my call. Despite his early day, Begley was chipper and entertaining, relaying conversations with his wife as if portraying characters in a play. Between laughs, I managed to ask him how he came to star in a reality show, whether Hollywood's recent green streak is sustainable, and which of his eco-projects he's most proud of.
Can she live with his ecocentricities? Stay tuned.
Photo: Aaron Rapoport
There's still much we battle about. There's a certain amount of conflict in the show, which is good television and also quite real. I assure you, we don't manufacture any of it. We have stuff we disagree on. I got these plastic rain barrels, and she was just adamant about that. She thought they were unattractive. I said I'd paint 'em. Still, it wasn't good enough. So all that stuff is the fun and the challenge that we have living a lifestyle that works for both of us.
About a year ago, [producer] Joe Brutsman comes to me with an idea for a reality show. ... "It's called Living with Ed," [he said]. "And it's like, she needs to go get her hair done and the nails, and you're there riding the bike and the compost and the solar panels, and she can't use the blow-dryer cause the solar's down too low."
"Wait a minute, this could be good," I thought. "And I like the title Living with Ed. This could be good, I don't know -- let's try it."
They shot this ten-minute thing, and they were in our house 13 hours or 14 hours. "I can't do this," I told Rachelle. "For them to be in my house 14 hours a day, five days a week, this would not be fun -- this will be a drag." She was gung-ho to do it. So I looked at the show, and I went, "This is very funny." It was informative. It was entertaining. It was everything you would have hoped it would be. And she said, "They said they would only be here a day or two a week." And as it turns out, that happened to be true. So we started doing it. We're doing six shows, and I have high hopes for the whole thing.
It's the best job I've ever had. I'm glad I did it.
I had a baby in 1999, so I needed a car with a backseat. I couldn't put her little child seat in the front seat with the airbag. I heard the RAV4s were gonna be available, so I got rid of my EV1. But it was a terrific car, really, a great car.
It's something a lot of people care about, and I think people years ago saw the connection with our consumption and some of the very-easy-to-quantify problems right here in L.A., like smog, and then the big-picture items [like] global warming. Also, people see the connection, I think, between our dependence on Mid-East oil and our national security.
But then a few years down the line, as more information came out about global climate change, about our dependence on foreign oil, about air-pollution issues, more people became interested and motivated to do something. And Hollywood still needs to do much more, but they've come a long way. There've been a lot of green productions and green production guidelines that have been implemented, but there needs to be more. We can't stop where we are.
And then the other thing he did that was very good for me that got me on this path -- he encouraged me to go into Cub Scouts and then Boy Scouts. So I had some contact with the natural world and developed a love of the natural world through scouting.
I now have a distributor called Nature's Best. They work west of the Rockies, so I'm in California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Washington, Utah -- just these Western states served by Nature's Best. A lot of people don't work with that particular distributor so those I drive myself in my electric car around L.A. For longer trips, I use my wife's Prius.
You ask the thing I'm the proudest of -- that's it. It's that my children know about these things, and they care about them, and they've embraced them. It means more to me than anything.
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