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Burt Shavitz, Face Of Burt's Bees, Dies At 80

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Burt Shavitz, the eccentric co-founder of Burt’s Bees skin care products, has died at age 80. His bearded face is on your lip balm.

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KELLY MCEVERS, HOST:

The Burt of Burt’s Bees has died. Burt Shavitz was an actual beekeeper who co-founded the company. Today, it’s a brand known around the world for lip balm, lotions and baby products. Shavitz died of respiratory complications yesterday in Bangor, Maine. He was 80 years old. As NPR’s Elizabeth Blair reports, he was an eccentric nature lover.

ELIZABETH BLAIR, BYLINE: Even though he’s the bearded, cap wearing face of the company, the real Burt Shavitz was not interested in lip balm or moisturizer and definitely not big business. His passions were bees, his golden retrievers and privacy. In the early years, he sold honey out of his van on the side of the road in Maine as he told filmmaker Jody Shapiro in the documentary “Burt’s Buzz.”

(SOUNDBITE OF DOCUMENTARY, “BURT’S BUZZ”)

BURT SHAVITZ: There was no company. My bees were the company. My truck was the company. My chainsaw was the company.

BLAIR: Then he met Roxanne Quimby. She was hitchhiking during the summer of 1984. She told NPR Burt the bee man, as he was known, offered her a ride in his pickup and the two began a romantic relationship.

ROXANNE QUIMBY: He’s kind of bizarre with his long, curly, flowing hair and very independent kind of a fellow, thinks for himself.

BLAIR: But she’s the one who thought about business. Quimby started making candles from Burt’s unused beeswax. They started making other products like soap and the lip balm, a big seller at crafts fairs. In the early days, Burt’s Bees was very do-it-yourself.

(SOUNDBITE OF DOCUMENTARY, “BURT’S BUZZ”)

QUIMBY: We had one high school boy and he was our accountant. He was on the math team, so he was qualified to do – run the accounting department. He was 14.

SHAVITZ: And made deposits.

QUIMBY: He made…

SHAVITZ: And wanted to wear a suit – and wanted to wear a white shirt and tie to work every day.

BLAIR: Clothes Burt Shavitz probably never wore himself. Shavitz was raised in Great Neck, N.Y. His father and grandfather were in the graphic arts business. In the 1960s, Shavitz worked as a freelance photographer, shooting images of the civil rights movement and artists for The New York Times and Life magazine. With a small inheritance from his grandfather, he bought land in Maine and became a beekeeper.

(SOUNDBITE OF DOCUMENTARY, “BURT’S BUZZ”)

SHAVITZ: And living on the land and having the opportunity to see the seasons is part of the joy of life as far as I’m concerned.

BLAIR: Shavitz and Quimby eventually parted ways and not happily. In 1999, she bought him out for $130,000, according to The New Yorker. She later sold most of her share to a private equity firm for more than $140 million. She reportedly gave Shavitz $4 million. Burt’s Bees was sold again to the Clorox Company for nearly a billion dollars. Today, the products are sold in over 50 countries. Shavitz was compensated for the use of his image on the label, and he was paid to make special appearances to promote the brand. On one such trip to Taiwan, Shavitz visited a beekeeper he knew there. Mariah Eckhardt, the marketing director of Burt’s Bees, says it was quite a sight.

MARIAH ECKHARDT: The rest of the people that were there were all covered in all of this kind of bee protective gear and he just kind of walked right in. And he would have hundreds of bees crawling on his hands, and he used to say you don’t need all this equipment if you know how to handle bees.

BLAIR: Burt Shavitz likely had enough money to live however and wherever he wanted. He preferred a remote cabin in the Maine woods.

(SOUNDBITE OF DOCUMENTARY, “BURT’S BUZZ”)

SHAVITZ: A good day is when no one shows up and you don’t have to go anywhere.

BLAIR: He was, to be sure, the reluctant face of a giant personal care products brand. Elizabeth Blair, NPR News.

Copyright © 2015 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio.

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Soccer Fan Displays Loretta Lynch Cutout At U.S. Women's World Cup Final

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For Nik Dahl, fan of the U.S. Women’s soccer team, Attorney General Loretta Lynch saved the sport of soccer by exposing corrupt FIFA leaders. To show his appreciation, he brought her to the Women’s World Cup Final — well, a 3-foot cutout of her face that is.

Transcript

ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:

Most people watching the World Cup last night would say Carli Lloyd was the most valuable player. The Olympic gold medalist scored three goals in the first 16 minutes of the match.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED COMMENTATOR: Quick shot – goal

(APPLAUSE)

KELLY MCEVERS, HOST:

The fans were going wild in Vancouver, to say the least, cheering for Lloyd and her teammates, Abby Wambach and Alex Morgan.

NIK DAHL: Our section had a lot of cut cutouts of Abby and Alex and Carli.

SIEGEL: But fan Nik Dahl chose to celebrate a different woman.

DAHL: My head was Attorney General Loretto Lynch.

MCEVERS: That’s right. He held a huge cardboard cutout of the face of the new U.S. attorney general.

DAHL: It’s about 3 feet tall, and it’s a lot of hair because Loretta has a lot of hair (laughter). But her face is smiling, and she looks beautiful.

SIEGEL: Dahl says he wanted to show his appreciation for the steps Lynch has taken to keep soccer honest, as in the corruption charges she unveiled against soccer’s governing body in May.

DAHL: I hope that she can know that we are thankful, as fans, for what she did. And it’s personally affecting to a lot of us. It’s a very local thing to us, and it’s nice to know that someone’s trying to make a difference there.

MCEVERS: And while some fans needed a little explanation about the face he was holding, Dahl says most reacted well.

DAHL: This cutout was a rock star. Everyone wanted a picture with it. I had to pose for many, many pictures. It was a lot of fun, and it brought a smile to a lot of people’s faces.

SIEGEL: Nik Dahl points out that neither the U.S. men nor women have lost a game since those charges were made on May 27.

Copyright © 2015 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio.

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service – if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.



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Will Target Corporation Sell Its Grocery Business Next?

Target Corporation (NYSE:TGT) is in the midst of a major transformation amid its exit from the Canadian market. Earlier this year, the company unveiled increased cost-cutting plans, including thousands of employee layoffs. The big-box retailers…


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After Measles Outbreaks, Parents Shift Their Thinking On Vaccines

Most of the people who got measles in last year's outbreaks hadn't been vaccinated with the MMR vaccine.

Most of the people who got measles in last year’s outbreaks hadn’t been vaccinated with the MMR vaccine. Photo illustration by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Photo illustration by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Nothing like a good measles outbreak to get people thinking more kindly about vaccines.

One third of parents say they think vaccines have more benefit than they did a year ago, according to a poll conducted in May.

Credit: NPR, Source: C.S. Mott Children's Hospital National Poll on Children's Health, 2015

Credit: NPR, Source: C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital National Poll on Children’s Health, 2015

That’s compared to the 5 percent of parents who said they now think vaccines have fewer benefits and 61 percent who think the benefits are the same.

Vaccine safety also got a boost, with 25 percent of parents saying they believe vaccines are safer than they thought a year ago, compared to 7 percent of parents who think they’re less safe. Sixty-eight percent didn’t change their minds.bee

The numbers came from a poll of 1,416 parents around the country conducted by the C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital.

So far this year 178 people have come down with measles, and many became infected after visiting two Disney theme parks in California, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Most of those people were not vaccinated.

Credit: NPR, Source: C.S. Mott Children's Hospital National Poll on Children's Health, 2015

Credit: NPR, Source: C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital National Poll on Children’s Health, 2015

Even though the Disney outbreaks got wide attention, 2014 was actually worse for measles, with 23 outbreaks including 383 cases among unvaccinated Amish communities in Ohio. In both 2014 and this year, measles is thought to have been brought to the U.S. by unvaccinated travelers.

Polls typically find that people’s opinions change very little in the course of a year, according to Matthew Davis, a pediatrician who directs the C.S. Mott poll. “These numbers are incredibly high, and suggest that parents are hearing about the outbreaks and responding.”

Doctors should know that parents’ opinions can change relatively quickly, Davis says, though in his medical practice, he still sees parents with a wide range of beliefs about vaccine safety.

“It’s important for the medical community to realize that parents care deeply about their children’s well being,” Davis told Shots. “And that is reflected in a wide range of opinions about vaccination.”

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Burt Shavitz, Namesake And Co-Founder Of Burt's Bees, Dies

Burt Shavitz, who co-founded Burt's Bees, died Sunday in Bangor, Maine.

Burt Shavitz, who co-founded Burt’s Bees, died Sunday in Bangor, Maine. Robert F. Bukaty/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Robert F. Bukaty/AP

Burt Shavitz, the man whose face is on your minty Burt’s Bees chapstick and body wash, died on Sunday in Bangor, Maine. He was 80.

NPR’s Elizabeth Blair reports that Shavitz’s death was as a result of respiratory complications.

“We remember him as a wild-bearded and free-spirited Maine man, a beekeeper, a wisecracker, a lover of golden retrievers, a reverent observer of nature, and the kind of face that smiles back at us from our Hand Salve,” the company says in a statement.

Burt’s Bees says that before Shavitz became a beekeeper in Maine, he was a photojournalist freelancing in New York City, documenting key figures in the civil rights movement, beat poets and artists in the 1960s.

When TV became popular, Shavitz realized that there wasn’t a big market for his photos anymore, The Daily Beast wrote in 2013.

It adds that:

“In 1970, Burt threw his mattress in his Volkswagen van and, along with a few buddies, drove upstate to the High Falls, New York, area. After a series of heavy rainstorms, Burt decided to drive around and survey the damage. He stumbled upon a swarm of bees on a fencepost.

” ‘The year before, a guy that I’d been buying honey from, who was a beekeeper, had given me everything I needed to be a beekeeper except the bees — a hive, a mask, gloves, a smoker, a hive tool, everything,’ Burt recalls. ‘So, there was this fencepost, and I said, “My lord, this is an act of God! I can’t turn this down.” ‘ “

Burt’s Bees began in 1984 when Shavitz met an artist named Roxanne Quimby. According to the company’s web site, Quimby “was thumbing a ride home (back when you could still do that sort of thing). Eventually a bright yellow Datsun pickup truck pulled over, and Roxanne instantly recognized Burt Shavitz, a local fella whose beard was almost as well-known as his roadside honey stand. Burt and Roxanne hit it off, and before long, Roxanne was making candles with unused wax from Burt’s beehives. They made $200 at their first craft fair; within a year, they’d make $20,000.”

The company grew and moved its headquarters to Durham, N.C., in 1993. But Shavitz’s partnership with Quimby unraveled in the late 90s. The Daily Beast, citing Shavitz and a documentary titled Burt’s Buzz, says the two reached a settlement after Quimby found out Burt had an affair with a college-age girl who worked at one of the Burt’s Bees stores.

Quimby eventually bought out Shavitz. Burt’s Bees is now owned by the Clorox Company.

Here’s the trailer for Burt’s Buzz. It’s a small window onto the life of the unorthodox man who, as Elizabeth reports, “co-founded a skincare company that began with beeswax.”

[embedded content]

Burt’s Buzz from FilmBuff on Vimeo.

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7 Myths About Doing Business in Sub-Saharan Africa

It’s 2015, and by now even latecomers among multinational corporations have decided to include African countries in their emerging market portfolios. However, many companies are not making the most of the Sub-Saharan Africa opportunity because…


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U.S. Women Shatter TV Ratings Record For Soccer With World Cup Win

Sunday's FIFA Women's World Cup final drew record U.S. TV ratings that are similar to the decisive Game 6 of last month's NBA Finals. Here, Carli Lloyd, No. 10, celebrates the second U.S. goal with teammates.

Sunday’s FIFA Women’s World Cup final drew record U.S. TV ratings that are similar to the decisive Game 6 of last month’s NBA Finals. Here, Carli Lloyd, No. 10, celebrates the second U.S. goal with teammates. Wang Lili/Xinhua /Landov hide caption

itoggle caption Wang Lili/Xinhua /Landov

The U.S. women’s national team is basking in the glow of the new FIFA World Cup trophy they claimed with an emphatic 5-2 win over Japan on Sunday. Led by Carli Lloyd’s three first-half goals, the win touched off celebrations and drew a huge TV audience, according to Fox.

“It is the highest metered market rating ever for a soccer game in the U.S. on a single network,” the company says.

Update at 12 noon ET: More Than 20 Million Viewers

While some 17 million American viewers tuned in to the 7 p.m. ET start of Sunday’s game, that number quickly grew to 21.86 million an hour later — and reached 22.86 million at 8:30 p.m. ET, according to preliminary data from industry website TV Media Insights.

Those figures are comparable to the 2014 World Series’ Game 7, which attracted 23.5 million viewers — far more than any other game of the 2014 series.

Our original post continues:

Hosted by Canada, the tournament has brought a succession of ratings wins for Fox, which aired games on its main channel as well as Fox Sports 1. Along the way, the women’s game has drawn compliments for lacking the elaborate (and action-slowing) histrionics elite men display as they attempt to draw referees’ calls. It’s also been defended by comedian Amy Poehler, who urged Americans to support the U.S. team.

Sunday night’s game shattered viewing records for soccer in the U.S. — played by men or women — according to preliminary numbers Fox released Monday morning.

The final drew “a prodigious 15.2/27 metered market household rating/share” from 7-9 p.m. ET, Fox says, citing data from the Nielsen ratings service. The network adds that the audience “peaked at 18.3/31 from 8:45-9:00 p.m. ET,” as more Americans tuned in to watch the celebrations in Vancouver.

As a comparison, consider that the Golden State Warriors’ recent title-clinching Game 6 victory over the Cleveland Cavaliers in the NBA Finals earned a 15.9 overnight rating. That figure was hailed as a Game 6 record for ABC in a Finals series that drew the highest average numbers since the Michael Jordan era.

Compared to earlier soccer benchmarks, Fox says Sunday night’s game eclipsed “the previous mark set for the Women’s World Cup final between the USA and China in 1999 on ABC (13.3 mm rating).”

The figures also blew past the 8.6 mm rating earned by the 2011 Women’s World Cup final between the U.S. and Japan; that game was broadcast on ESPN.

More complete national data for Sunday night’s game will emerge later Monday; for now, Fox says the top five local markets were:

1. Kansas City (20.6/35)
2. St. Louis (20.5/33)
3. San Diego (19.5/41)
4. Denver (19.4/36)
5. Austin (19.1/37)

TV Media Insights reports that “Fox, overall, beat the Big 3 nets combined by 52 percent in the overnights,” while also noting that “results for any live sporting event are approximate.”

Fox Sports 1 will air an hourlong special at 1 p.m. ET Monday, when the 23-player national team and its coach, Jill Ellis, will unveil their new jerseys featuring three stars (denoting three World Cup titles).

Despite the excitement around this team and its new title, sports pundits noted that the prize payout for the women’s tournament is nowhere near the level of the men’s World Cup. The women’s championship team won $2 million — a fraction of what the men’s winners get.

FIFA will pay @USsoccer_wnt $2M for World Cup win. As a comparison, men’s teams ELIMINATED in GROUP PLAY receive $8M. (per BBC & Reuters)

— Randy Scott (@RandyScottESPN) July 6, 2015

For perspective: After Germany won the men’s World Cup last summer, the team was awarded $35 million — and each player also earned a bonus of more than $400,000 from their national sporting association, according to ESPN FC.

Shortly after Sunday’s resounding victory, President Obama tweeted his congratulations along with an invitation for the team to come visit.

What a win for Team USA! Great game @CarliLloyd! Your country is so proud of all of you. Come visit the White House with the World Cup soon.

— President Obama (@POTUS) July 6, 2015

Lloyd responded, “Thank you Mr. President! See you very soon at the White House!!”

Lloyd won the Golden Ball as the best player of the tournament; her teammate Hope Solo was named the best goalkeeper. And that gave U.S. Soccer an idea for the Treasury’s plans to feature a woman on America’s paper currency.

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