Makes the case for a plant-based diet which is good for our bodies, good…
Meat the Future
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Imagine a world where real meat is produced sustainably without the need to breed, raise and slaughter animals. This is no longer science fiction, it’s now within reach.
At the forefront of this urgent frontier is Mayo Clinic trained cardiologist Dr. Uma Valeti, the co-founder and CEO of Upside Foods (previously Memphis Meats), the leading start-up of the “cultivated” meat revolution. From the world’s first meatball which cost $18,000 per pound to the first chicken fillet and duck a l'orange for half the cost, the film follows Valeti and his team over five years as the cost of production plummets, and consumers eye the imminent birth of this timely industry.
Narrated by Jane Goodall and featuring music by Moby, Meat the Future explores a game-changing solution to a global, unsustainable hunger for meat and its impact on climate, animal welfare and public health.
"A must-see movie for anyone interested in how science and technology is being used to transform the modern food system to make it more sustainable, healthy, and ethical. It gives fascinating insights into the people behind this movement: their passion, curiosity, drive, and ambition to create a better world through the use of (some very cool) science. I highly recommend Meat the Future to anyone who is interested in addressing some of the big challenges facing the modern world, such as global warming, pollution, biodiversity loss, animal welfare, and zoonotic diseases." David Julian McClements, Professor of Food Science, University of Massachusetts, Author, Future Foods: How Modern Science Is Transforming the Way We Eat
"Thoughtful...Filled with humanity...Informative." Marc Glassman, POV Magazine
"Engrossing...Persuasive...Compelling...Elegantly simple and kind of mind-blowing" Guy Lodge, Variety
"Meat the Future is a must-see for meat-eaters and non-meat-eaters alike. This forward-looking highly educational film offers a paradigm shift - a much-needed global cultural revolution - for future meal plans absent formerly sentient beings and so-called factory farms that destroy earth and air." Marc Bekoff, Professor Emeritus of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Colorado, Author, The Animals' Agenda: Freedom, Compassion, and Coexistence in the Human Age
"Meat the Future is an inside look into a technology that has the potential to revolutionize our relationship not only to animals and our planet, but ourselves. When future generations look back at our time, they may just think of us as living in the dark ages of agriculture, and cell-cultured meat may represent the light of a new era." Dr. Nina Gheihman, Sustainable Food Initiative, University of California Berkeley, Co-Founder, Plant Futures Initiative, Author, In Plants We Trust: How Vegans Changed the Future of Food
"If COVID-19 in meatpacking plants has you concerned, you'll be especially interested in this documentary." Volkmar Richter, Canada's National Observer
"A revolutionary eye-opener that could easily change the way consumers look at food forever, without losing their appetite." Seth Eelen, into:screens
"Fascinating...Marshall tackles an under-the-radar subject that is destined for mainstream attention...Meat the Future is informative, easy to follow, and guaranteed to spark some riveting discussions." Victor Stiff, That Shelf
"An eye-opening look at how science is revolutionizing the meat industry...A film that will leave you with plenty to chew on." Courtney Small, In The Seats
"I am sold...Filmmaker Liz Marshall answers all the questions you might have about what is cell-based meat, how and who is producing it, and what does it mean for our future." Leanne McLaren, iHeartRadio
"Revolutionary...It presents an innovative solution to a seemingly relentless problem. Meat production isn't just unsettling to some, it's destroying the planet." Charlotte Pointing, LIVEKINDLY
"This engaging and ambitious film provides a unique look at the history, potential, and future of cultivated meat. It is a must-watch for anyone who is interested in learning about or getting involved in the upcoming food revolution." Matti Wilks, Assistant Professor in Psychology, University of Edinburgh
"An inspirational documentary following the people behind one of the most exciting innovations of the 21st century. Meat the Future brilliantly captures the tenacity behind the protagonists of the cultivated meat adventure, and the vast significance of disrupting modern meat production." Christopher Bryant, social scientist, Bryant Research Ltd, Research Associate of Psychology, University of Bath
"Meat the Future is a fantastic documentary for anyone concerned about how our global food system is impacting climate change, environmental sustainability, animal welfare, and social equity. We get an inside glimpse into how Dr. Valeti and his team, as well as many others working in the cultivated 'clean' meat space, navigate lifelong values and ethics, the complex science, the regulatory mine fields, and most importantly, the fastidious consumer." Jessica Fanzo, Professor and Director of Global Food Policy and Ethics, Johns Hopkins University
Citation
Main credits
Marshall, Liz (film director)
Marshall, Liz (film producer)
Marshall, Liz (screenwriter)
Price, John (director of photography)
Christie, Caroline (editor of moving image work)
Schlimme, Roland (editor of moving image work)
Correia, Igor (composer)
Goodall, Jane (narrator)
Other credits
Editors, Caroline Christie, Roland Schlimme; cinematographer, John Price; composer, Igor Correia.
Distributor subjects
Animal Rights,Biotechnology,Business Practices,Climate Change,Consumerism,Food And Nutrition,Science, Technology, Society,Keywords
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JANE: This is the story
of planetary hope,
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inspired by one of the
biggest ideas of the century.
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The fate of our planet may
depend on a new food science
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that grows real meat
directly from animal cells
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without the need to breed,
raise, and slaughter animals.
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Let's face it:
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conventional animal agriculture
is wreaking havoc.
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It occupies nearly half
of the world's land,
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produces huge amounts
of greenhouse gases,
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and is a potential breeding
ground for health pandemics
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like Covid-19.
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With meat consumption
expected to double by 2050,
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we urgently need solutions.
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Welcome to the next
agricultural revolution.
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UMA: You know, this is the first
time a meatball has ever been
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cooked with beef cells
that did not require
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a cow to be slaughtered.
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[seagulls calling]
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UMA: This has been
something that
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I've been dreaming about
since I was a kid.
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Thinking about the impact
on human lives
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and on animal lives...
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and the ails of food production.
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♪
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[tap running]
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UMA: It's been ten years
since I finished training
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in cardiology at the Mayo Clinic
and wanting to be able to...
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pursue an idea of "Can you
grow meat from animal cells?"
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And I'm extremely fortunate to
have the support I have at home.
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My wife and kids being
proud of what I'm doing.
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Over the last few years
we've spent a lot of time
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talking about, "What if Dad
started this company,
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"and if he had to move,
how would it look like?"
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It was extremely hard for us
even to have the conversation
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because I'm
a very involved dad.
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The last year has been
a tremendous amount of
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changes in our life.
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So, you know,
I founded the company,
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built an amazing team here,
I quit cardiology,
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uprooting from
my home in Minnesota.
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I've never been away from home
more than 20 days a year,
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and the last year it's been
like 250 days or something.
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So it just
went up in magnitude.
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I can see it only
getting busier,
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and I can see that.
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You know, this requires
a tremendous amount of focus
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and passion.
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We just have to keep trying.
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UMA: Oh, hi, Jason.
Can you hear me well?
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JASON: [on speaker]
Yes, I can.
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And how do I sound to you?
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UMA: You sound clear.
JASON: Okay, great.
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So, let me make sure
I'm pronouncing your name right,
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Dr. Uma Valeti, right?
UMA: That's correct.
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JASON: How much funding
did you take on?
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Is this venture backed now?
Give us some idea.
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UMA: So, this was founded
by Nick and myself
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and Will from Memphis.
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And the three of us,
we raised about $3.1 million.
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We had a venture capital group
called Indiebio that funded us.
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JASON: Okay, this'll be an edit,
so just a moment.
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What type of doctor are you?
UMA: I'm a cardiologist.
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JASON: Okay.
Oh, great.
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Well, let's just dive in
and do this, okay?
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It's my pleasure to
welcome Dr. Uma Valeti.
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He is CEO of Memphis Meats.
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So, Uma, lab-grown meat
brings to mind
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"frankenfood,"
uh, playing with nature,
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all of this kind of stuff.
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Take us through the process of
how you grow meat in your labs.
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UMA: Yeah, so let me just
preface this by saying
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we are not calling this
lab-grown meat,
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because there is
confusion out there that,
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"Oh, are you making
this from plant proteins?
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"Are you synthesizing something?
What is this?"
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This is authentic meat.
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JASON: But when you say
it's authentic meat,
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I just beg to differ
with you, maybe.
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Just correct me if I'm wrong.
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You are engineering it.
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It's not completely...
natural, if you will.
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UMA: So, we take cells from,
whether it's a cow, a pig,
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or a chicken, and we provide
them with rich nutrients,
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These cells grow
and become meat tissue.
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So that's the process
of making the meat.
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JASON: Okay, okay,
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but I want you to explain
what's happening here.
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I mean, you're basically
cloning meat, right?
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Is that what you're doing?
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UMA: So, we are not
cloning anything;
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we are growing these cells.
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So these cells are growing
and becoming muscle tissue.
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Look, we are pioneers
in this area.
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We're starting this
on the commercial side.
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JASON: But it's
so funny, like...
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you have to change your
thinking and your vocabulary
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to even discuss the subject.
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It's just such
an odd new concept.
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This is a real mind-blower.
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This is a huge shift.
I'd like to be an investor,
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because I have
a feeling this might be
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one of the biggest IPOs
in the history of the world.
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♪
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UMA: So, we literally
moved into this space
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about four and a half weeks ago.
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You know, it'll take
another four to six weeks
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to get this place
up and running,
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and that creates a sense
of restlessness in me
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and Nick and, you know,
everybody on our team,
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because, you know, we want
to get going, like, yesterday.
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I know eventually the speed at
which we can come to the market
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is going to be
a function of funding,
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and I think it's our goal to
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keep sprinting when we can,
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take brief periods of rest,
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and then start sprinting again.
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UMA: So, operations
update, right?
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This is the key for us.
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The focus for April,
clearly, for all of us,
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is to get up and running.
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And I'm thinking
we should look at the farm,
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the large equipment
and the small equipment,
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and, you know,
what you have
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in terms of timelines
for those.
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There'll be lots of, you know,
challenges we have.
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Of course there are challenges.
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It's never been done
in the history of the world,
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but I think we're
taking the first step.
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And I think this first step
is going to have
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lots and lots of people
also join us in that step.
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And we feel like we're going
to kickstart a revolution.
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♪
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♪
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[inaudible conversation]
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[inaudible conversation]
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♪
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MATTHEW: I've always had
an interest in, like,
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social justice issues,
environmental justice issues.
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MORGAN: Pretty much my whole
life all I wanted to do
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was be a chef,
and I wanted to focus on meat.
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ERIC: About halfway through
college and I was like,
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"No more basketball.
I need a career."
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I love science.
I always have.
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MICHAELA: What I get
really excited about
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is engineering biology.
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So my training is in
biomedical engineering.
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MATTHEW: I was actually
a tissue engineer.
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DAVID: I learned about some of
the animal welfare implications
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of animal agriculture,
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and that was kind of
what did it for me.
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MORGAN: I learned a lot
about factory farming
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and the conditions
the animals are kept in,
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the impact is has
on the environment,
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that I just had no idea about.
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DANIELLE: I took an urban
agriculture class that really
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opened my eyes to what
we're doing to the planet
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just by feeding ourselves.
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MICHAELA: At first I actually
thought it was kind of strange,
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because I had been
very ingrained
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in the medical applications.
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And then I started
reading more about it.
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DANIELLE: Uma Valeti wanders
across my Facebook feed
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with a meatball...
[laughs]
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My brain exploded,
and I was like,
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"I have to talk
to these people."
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MATTHEW: Yeah, it's like,
"I gotta be a part of this."
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Like, I have the skills.
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DANIELLE: Assert yourself
and it will happen.
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MATTHEW: Basically, pretty much.
It's like... [laughter]
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MICHAELA: I thought this
could be a really great way
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to change the world and
incorporate my love of science,
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but also my desire
to make cool stuff.
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Um, so...
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DANIELLE: That's kind of my
story of why and how I got here.
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MATTHEW: So these are
samples of live tissue.
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Billions of cells in this
tiny portion right here.
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These were so-called
punch biopsies,
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where a large needle,
essentially,
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is inserted into the animal,
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and takes out a small
cylinder of tissue.
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The taste, texture,
flavour of meat
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is a combination
of many factors.
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It's not just muscle cells,
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it's fats,
it's connective tissues,
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it's all sorts of things.
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And we're taking those small
samples of meat or tissue apart
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so that we can better understand
the different components,
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and use that to
build our product.
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These are very precious
biological samples
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which are going to
give us huge insights
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into the biology
of the animals,
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and these are stem cell sources
for future products.
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These small tissue samples
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will produce extremely
large amounts of meat.
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MICHAELA: Traditionally
in tissue culture,
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one of the elements of the food
that you're giving the cells
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is fetal bovine serum.
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If you start with
fetal calf serum,
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essentially you're
starting with this perfect
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rich broth of awesome stuff
that is designed
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to make things
grow and thrive.
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But one of the scientific goals
of the company right now
00:11:26.227 --> 00:11:29.980
is to eliminate any
animal-derived product
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from our process
as soon as possible.
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We want to separate
the animal from meat making.
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MICHAELA: To develop
a consistent media
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with no animal-derived
components
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in which our cells could
thrive at a large scale,
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that would definitely
be a really great
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moment for our company.
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It'd probably be a while
before we announced
00:12:02.847 --> 00:12:04.515
that that had happened,
because, you know,
00:12:04.598 --> 00:12:08.769
you want there to be
a lot of internal validation.
00:12:10.062 --> 00:12:11.230
MICHAELA: There are
all these systems
00:12:11.313 --> 00:12:12.731
that animals have
been building up
00:12:12.815 --> 00:12:16.110
through millions of
years of evolution,
00:12:16.193 --> 00:12:19.321
and that includes a digestive
system and an immune system.
00:12:19.405 --> 00:12:21.949
So, in some ways,
00:12:22.032 --> 00:12:23.701
cellular agriculture
is more simple
00:12:23.784 --> 00:12:26.454
because you're just focusing
on this one part of the animal
00:12:26.537 --> 00:12:29.498
instead of saying, you know,
"All I want is the tenderloin,
00:12:29.582 --> 00:12:31.375
"but I have to grow
the liver too."
00:12:31.459 --> 00:12:33.127
But it's also a little
bit more complicated,
00:12:33.210 --> 00:12:35.129
because you need to
engineer these systems
00:12:35.212 --> 00:12:36.630
to protect the cells.
00:12:36.714 --> 00:12:38.716
And, you know, "engineer"
sounds like a big word,
00:12:38.799 --> 00:12:40.009
but it's just like figuring out
00:12:40.092 --> 00:12:42.303
what's the best fence
to keep the cow in
00:12:42.386 --> 00:12:43.929
but keep the wolf out.
00:12:44.013 --> 00:12:47.349
Except kind of in a more
modern environment.
00:12:47.433 --> 00:12:50.436
It's what's the best fence
to keep the bacteria
00:12:50.519 --> 00:12:52.646
out of our cells
but keep the cells healthy
00:12:52.730 --> 00:12:54.607
without using antibiotics,
00:12:54.690 --> 00:12:57.860
because that's a major concern
with current animal agriculture.
00:13:02.615 --> 00:13:05.451
DANIELLE: The whole goal
here is to make cells
00:13:05.534 --> 00:13:08.329
exist in a bioreactor.
00:13:08.412 --> 00:13:11.457
So it's like what you would
00:13:11.540 --> 00:13:14.251
grow yeast in
if you were making beer.
00:13:14.335 --> 00:13:15.920
So we're going to take cells
00:13:16.003 --> 00:13:18.464
and put them in
an artificial environment
00:13:18.547 --> 00:13:21.425
so that they can
grow and proliferate.
00:13:34.480 --> 00:13:39.610
ERIC: There are known ways
of producing animal muscle
00:13:39.693 --> 00:13:41.237
in a laboratory.
00:13:41.320 --> 00:13:43.781
The science is established,
00:13:43.864 --> 00:13:45.908
in that lots of people
have studied it.
00:13:49.411 --> 00:13:52.665
ERIC: What we're looking at is
chicken, the sort of structure,
00:13:52.748 --> 00:13:56.961
the typical structure
of chicken.
00:13:57.044 --> 00:14:01.799
I'm still blown away by how
complex the tissue itself is.
00:14:05.928 --> 00:14:07.179
ERIC: All of poultry
is very similar,
00:14:07.263 --> 00:14:08.806
and these are very
early in the process,
00:14:08.889 --> 00:14:10.474
so they haven't completed
anything yet, but...
00:14:10.558 --> 00:14:12.977
you can see it starting
to adopt this sort of--
00:14:13.060 --> 00:14:15.396
it looks like a Van Gough,
like Starry Night.
00:14:15.479 --> 00:14:20.109
The muscle fibres
are trying to align and...
00:14:20.192 --> 00:14:23.279
form these beautiful tendrils.
00:14:26.156 --> 00:14:30.327
NICK: Now, this is
a huge, huge paradigm shift.
00:14:30.411 --> 00:14:33.455
This meat production depends on
00:14:33.539 --> 00:14:36.750
the division cycle of the cell
00:14:36.834 --> 00:14:41.171
rather than the reproductive
cycle of the animal.
00:14:44.842 --> 00:14:48.178
NICK: This was a goal that
for many years I sought out,
00:14:48.262 --> 00:14:51.098
but there were no like-minded
individuals or resources
00:14:51.181 --> 00:14:53.934
to support this goal.
00:14:54.018 --> 00:14:56.478
Uma was very passionate,
00:14:56.562 --> 00:15:01.442
and we both took a leap of faith
00:15:01.525 --> 00:15:04.737
and decided to start a company,
00:15:04.820 --> 00:15:09.742
and use our complementary
areas of expertise.
00:15:09.825 --> 00:15:14.663
You know, his business
and administrative expertise,
00:15:14.747 --> 00:15:18.125
and my scientific expertise,
00:15:18.208 --> 00:15:21.545
driven by the same mission,
the same motivation.
00:15:25.924 --> 00:15:29.470
NICK: You know, personally,
growing up in a family farm,
00:15:29.553 --> 00:15:34.183
I would raise the animals,
and they looked up to me
00:15:34.266 --> 00:15:36.310
for their care
and their protection.
00:15:36.393 --> 00:15:38.020
I was their guardian.
00:15:38.103 --> 00:15:42.107
And as their guardian,
I sent them to auction.
00:15:42.191 --> 00:15:46.028
I sent them to auction,
and I sent them to slaughter.
00:15:46.111 --> 00:15:50.199
And this...
00:15:50.282 --> 00:15:54.370
After doing this
for a couple of years,
00:15:54.453 --> 00:15:57.331
I realized this is a problem.
00:15:57.414 --> 00:16:01.877
So I wanted to be
part of the solution.
00:16:05.923 --> 00:16:08.384
MORGAN: So this is
conventional beef
00:16:08.467 --> 00:16:12.471
from a local store
to compare against our product.
00:16:13.514 --> 00:16:18.310
[sizzling]
00:16:18.394 --> 00:16:20.562
MORGAN: We want to make sure
that whatever we've giving
00:16:20.646 --> 00:16:23.357
to consumers is the same
as what they're used to,
00:16:23.440 --> 00:16:24.817
that when they get it
in their hand
00:16:24.900 --> 00:16:27.027
that it'll behave
just the same.
00:16:27.111 --> 00:16:30.906
And so I'm today
looking at cooking loss;
00:16:30.989 --> 00:16:32.491
I want to make sure that
the moisture loss is the same,
00:16:32.574 --> 00:16:34.493
the fat loss is the same.
00:16:34.576 --> 00:16:36.745
It needs to behave, like,
00:16:36.829 --> 00:16:39.915
functionally
as close as possible.
00:16:39.998 --> 00:16:42.751
MORGAN: Coming up
to temperature.
00:16:42.835 --> 00:16:45.087
UMA: And are we targeting
185 on this, or...?
00:16:46.171 --> 00:16:47.923
UMA: The meat industry
knows that they can't meet
00:16:48.006 --> 00:16:49.383
the demand of the people.
00:16:49.466 --> 00:16:53.220
And if the demand for meat
is going to double by 2050,
00:16:53.303 --> 00:16:55.931
there is just no
method of production
00:16:56.014 --> 00:16:58.517
that they have
at their disposal now
00:16:58.600 --> 00:17:02.646
that would satisfy
that hunger for meat.
00:17:02.730 --> 00:17:05.941
There just isn't.
00:17:06.024 --> 00:17:09.778
♪
00:17:09.862 --> 00:17:14.032
♪
00:17:14.116 --> 00:17:18.370
♪
00:17:18.454 --> 00:17:23.250
♪
00:17:23.333 --> 00:17:27.796
♪
00:17:27.880 --> 00:17:31.884
♪
00:17:31.967 --> 00:17:35.637
♪
00:17:35.721 --> 00:17:40.559
♪
00:17:40.642 --> 00:17:45.481
♪
00:17:45.564 --> 00:17:50.402
♪
00:17:50.486 --> 00:17:55.240
♪
00:17:55.324 --> 00:17:58.494
♪
00:17:58.577 --> 00:18:03.081
♪
00:18:03.165 --> 00:18:07.669
♪
00:18:07.753 --> 00:18:11.423
♪
00:18:11.507 --> 00:18:15.803
♪
00:18:15.886 --> 00:18:20.015
♪
00:18:20.098 --> 00:18:24.436
♪
00:18:24.520 --> 00:18:28.524
♪
00:18:28.607 --> 00:18:33.445
♪
00:18:33.529 --> 00:18:38.283
♪
00:18:38.367 --> 00:18:40.035
♪
00:18:40.118 --> 00:18:44.498
♪
00:18:44.581 --> 00:18:49.044
♪
00:18:49.127 --> 00:18:52.130
♪
00:18:52.214 --> 00:18:56.677
[inaudible conversation]
00:18:56.760 --> 00:19:01.014
[inaudible conversation]
00:19:01.098 --> 00:19:06.061
[inaudible conversation]
00:19:06.144 --> 00:19:08.146
[camera shutter clicking]
00:19:08.230 --> 00:19:09.565
MAN: Uma, would you
just take your hands
00:19:09.648 --> 00:19:11.567
and clap them in front
of your face like that?
00:19:11.650 --> 00:19:12.651
[sound of clap]
00:19:12.734 --> 00:19:13.902
MAN: Okay, everybody standing?
00:19:13.986 --> 00:19:14.945
MAN 2: Yup.
00:19:15.028 --> 00:19:16.989
MAN: Okay, any time, Uma.
00:19:17.072 --> 00:19:20.868
UMA: So, March 14th, 2017,
that is today, team,
00:19:20.951 --> 00:19:24.538
we are here to do something
that has never happened
00:19:24.621 --> 00:19:26.498
in the history of humanity.
00:19:26.582 --> 00:19:27.958
Thank you guys.
Thank you for being here.
00:19:28.041 --> 00:19:28.834
MAN: Here we go.
00:19:28.917 --> 00:19:30.043
Ready?
Let's roll it!
00:19:30.127 --> 00:19:32.129
[applause]
00:19:33.881 --> 00:19:35.591
MAN: Whenever you're ready.
00:19:35.674 --> 00:19:37.050
Alright, everybody's gotta roll.
00:19:37.134 --> 00:19:38.969
[sizzling]
00:19:40.178 --> 00:19:42.848
[inaudible conversation]
00:19:42.931 --> 00:19:44.725
[sizzling]
00:19:44.808 --> 00:19:48.979
[inaudible conversation]
00:19:49.062 --> 00:19:52.107
[inaudible conversation]
00:19:52.190 --> 00:19:55.360
[inaudible conversation]
00:19:56.486 --> 00:19:58.030
MAN: Let's just get me
a [inaudible] shot of that,
00:19:58.113 --> 00:19:59.865
if you would.
00:19:59.948 --> 00:20:02.367
UMA: In terms of technical
breakthroughs that allowed us
00:20:02.451 --> 00:20:04.703
to do what we did
over the last year,
00:20:04.786 --> 00:20:08.415
we had a few substantial
isolated breakthroughs.
00:20:08.498 --> 00:20:11.710
So, one of the things that was
more relevant to the poultry
00:20:11.793 --> 00:20:13.879
is starting to have texture,
00:20:13.962 --> 00:20:16.798
because with the meatball
there was texture,
00:20:16.882 --> 00:20:19.635
but not the types of texture
we had with poultry,
00:20:19.718 --> 00:20:22.804
where we could
have very clearly
00:20:22.888 --> 00:20:24.222
fibres that you
could see in there.
00:20:24.306 --> 00:20:27.142
Fibrosity, starting to have
three-dimensional nature
00:20:27.225 --> 00:20:30.103
to the meat that
we are producing.
00:20:30.187 --> 00:20:31.480
[people exclaiming]
00:20:31.563 --> 00:20:35.984
ALL: Cheers!
00:20:36.068 --> 00:20:37.361
MAN: Woo!
[applause]
00:20:39.571 --> 00:20:41.198
ALL: Mmm.
MAN: Wow!
00:20:41.281 --> 00:20:43.909
MAN: Wow.
MAN: Nice.
00:20:43.992 --> 00:20:46.286
♪
00:20:46.370 --> 00:20:49.957
♪
00:20:50.040 --> 00:20:52.167
UMA: August 23rd, 2017
00:20:52.250 --> 00:20:55.671
we announced the closing of
a major round of financing.
00:20:55.754 --> 00:20:59.841
♪
00:20:59.925 --> 00:21:03.053
♪
00:21:03.136 --> 00:21:06.890
UMA: We were able to put
together a group of investors
00:21:06.974 --> 00:21:10.185
that really care about
what we're doing,
00:21:10.269 --> 00:21:13.188
and it includes
impact investors,
00:21:13.271 --> 00:21:17.234
but it also includes
meat industry incumbents.
00:21:17.317 --> 00:21:21.613
♪
00:21:21.697 --> 00:21:23.824
DAVID: So it's all
about sustainability.
00:21:23.907 --> 00:21:26.576
It's about, call it
"clean meat," if you will.
00:21:26.660 --> 00:21:29.496
It's not going to replace
the consumption of beef
00:21:29.579 --> 00:21:31.623
or chicken or duck overnight.
00:21:31.707 --> 00:21:34.459
But nonetheless,
it's a way to produce meat
00:21:34.543 --> 00:21:37.295
in a different alternative that
isn't as resource-intensive.
00:21:38.714 --> 00:21:42.634
ANCHOR: Memphis Meats has
raised a total of 22 million,
00:21:42.718 --> 00:21:46.471
which signals a commitment
to the "clean meat movement,"
00:21:46.555 --> 00:21:48.932
which other companies
are working on as well,
00:21:49.016 --> 00:21:53.270
including Tyson, which is one
of the largest chicken suppliers
00:21:53.353 --> 00:21:56.064
in the United States.
00:21:56.148 --> 00:22:00.027
♪
00:22:00.110 --> 00:22:03.739
♪
00:22:03.822 --> 00:22:07.576
♪
00:22:07.659 --> 00:22:12.039
♪
00:22:20.422 --> 00:22:26.011
HEIDI: So, here we are in the
epicentre of venture capital.
00:22:26.094 --> 00:22:31.016
We have invested
about $4 billion.
00:22:31.099 --> 00:22:33.810
Companies like
Skype, Hotmail,
00:22:33.894 --> 00:22:37.481
Baidu, Tesla,
Twitter, Twilio...
00:22:37.564 --> 00:22:39.441
[laughs]
I mean, there's a long list.
00:22:39.524 --> 00:22:41.943
We've had, I think,
28 companies
00:22:42.027 --> 00:22:45.697
that have exited with over
a billion-dollar valuation.
00:22:45.781 --> 00:22:47.282
And certainly food
is a huge area,
00:22:47.365 --> 00:22:48.784
it's certainly a big market.
00:22:48.867 --> 00:22:51.495
And there's a lot of change
going on with technologies
00:22:51.578 --> 00:22:55.373
with respect to the production
and distribution of food.
00:22:55.457 --> 00:22:57.751
And then there are also
changing consumer behaviours
00:22:57.834 --> 00:23:01.505
and changing consumer taste.
00:23:01.588 --> 00:23:05.675
And Memphis was really special.
00:23:05.759 --> 00:23:07.385
The timing felt right.
00:23:09.805 --> 00:23:11.348
So, we, uh, you know,
00:23:11.431 --> 00:23:13.433
DFJ led the series A.
00:23:13.517 --> 00:23:15.769
Memphis Meats was
in the enviable position
00:23:15.852 --> 00:23:19.481
of having more money coming
at it than it wanted to take,
00:23:19.564 --> 00:23:23.443
so it was an interesting--
an interesting dance, to,
00:23:23.527 --> 00:23:26.905
for example, consider,
do you want strategic investors?
00:23:26.988 --> 00:23:30.575
So, investors who themselves
are in the meat industry.
00:23:30.659 --> 00:23:32.160
What are the pros
and cons of that?
00:23:32.244 --> 00:23:33.411
What would that say about us?
00:23:33.495 --> 00:23:35.247
What kind of restrictions
might they put on us
00:23:35.330 --> 00:23:36.581
in order to do that?
00:23:36.665 --> 00:23:39.126
So, you know, we ultimately
ended up with both
00:23:39.209 --> 00:23:40.961
Tyson's and Cargill
as investors,
00:23:41.044 --> 00:23:42.838
and they've been
wonderful partners,
00:23:42.921 --> 00:23:45.215
and they've been really
helpful in various ways,
00:23:45.298 --> 00:23:47.843
such as understanding some of
the regulatory environment.
00:23:47.926 --> 00:23:51.847
♪
00:23:51.930 --> 00:23:55.058
[sound of drill]
00:23:55.142 --> 00:23:57.018
[sound of drill]
00:23:57.102 --> 00:24:00.397
♪
00:24:00.480 --> 00:24:01.898
MAN: Hey...
00:24:01.982 --> 00:24:05.193
[inaudible conversation]
00:24:05.277 --> 00:24:09.072
♪
00:24:09.156 --> 00:24:13.118
♪
00:24:13.201 --> 00:24:15.287
♪
00:24:15.370 --> 00:24:17.164
WOMAN: I don't think
110 pounds of dry ice
00:24:17.247 --> 00:24:20.375
is going to be enough.
00:24:20.458 --> 00:24:22.544
WOMAN: And now we just
have to move them.
00:24:22.627 --> 00:24:25.881
♪
00:24:25.964 --> 00:24:28.008
DANIELLE: We currently occupy
about this much space.
00:24:28.091 --> 00:24:29.134
UMA: Yeah?
00:24:29.217 --> 00:24:31.303
DANIELLE: And we're
getting this much space.
00:24:31.386 --> 00:24:33.763
Which is 17,500 square feet.
00:24:33.847 --> 00:24:36.349
KC: We have these two rooms
that are functional cold rooms,
00:24:36.433 --> 00:24:39.060
and then the process
development space over here,
00:24:39.144 --> 00:24:42.564
where we define the right
conditions to grow the cells
00:24:42.647 --> 00:24:46.318
into functional meat tissues,
00:24:46.401 --> 00:24:47.652
all of that space is here,
00:24:47.736 --> 00:24:50.071
and then leads right
into the kitchen space.
00:24:50.155 --> 00:24:54.576
♪
00:24:54.659 --> 00:24:59.080
♪
00:24:59.164 --> 00:25:02.751
♪
00:25:02.834 --> 00:25:04.961
♪
00:25:05.045 --> 00:25:08.882
KC: We are going to build out
the process to allow us
00:25:08.965 --> 00:25:13.136
to make scalable large
quantities of meat.
00:25:13.220 --> 00:25:15.263
We can do this
at small scale now,
00:25:15.347 --> 00:25:17.140
but to scale that up
is going to be
00:25:17.224 --> 00:25:19.476
one of the really,
really big challenges.
00:25:19.559 --> 00:25:21.978
WOMAN: Yeah, if you just want
to throw it in that small room--
00:25:22.062 --> 00:25:23.521
KC: The scale for
food production,
00:25:23.605 --> 00:25:26.233
the more we dig into this
and think about it,
00:25:26.316 --> 00:25:30.320
it's unfathomable.
It's so large.
00:25:30.403 --> 00:25:33.323
And so, I have this
analogy that I say,
00:25:33.406 --> 00:25:36.368
if San Francisco is
roughly a million people,
00:25:36.451 --> 00:25:38.787
and if every person
had one burger a week,
00:25:38.870 --> 00:25:40.580
which is like
a quarter of a pound,
00:25:40.664 --> 00:25:42.791
then in a month,
they would each eat a pound,
00:25:42.874 --> 00:25:45.502
which is 12 million
pounds a year.
00:25:45.585 --> 00:25:48.505
And so, to feed everyone
in San Francisco
00:25:48.588 --> 00:25:49.965
one burger a week,
00:25:50.048 --> 00:25:54.177
12 million pounds a year,
if we make meat 50 weeks a year,
00:25:54.261 --> 00:25:57.555
that's 240,000 pounds
every week,
00:25:57.639 --> 00:26:01.142
which is approximately
the size of a blue whale.
00:26:01.226 --> 00:26:04.980
And so, every week,
week after week after week,
00:26:05.063 --> 00:26:08.316
for San Francisco,
it's a blue whale.
00:26:08.400 --> 00:26:10.235
[inaudible conversation]
00:26:10.318 --> 00:26:11.987
KC: We need a marker.
UMA: We have Sharpies.
00:26:12.070 --> 00:26:13.655
HEIDI: Alright, here.
UMA: We want our present.
00:26:13.738 --> 00:26:15.323
HEIDI: You want your present!
UMA: The housewarming gift.
00:26:15.407 --> 00:26:17.325
HEIDI: Alright,
let me get the gift.
00:26:17.409 --> 00:26:19.369
One of the most important
milestones you guys have,
00:26:19.452 --> 00:26:21.663
at least one of the ways
we think about it,
00:26:21.746 --> 00:26:23.999
is price per pound,
00:26:24.082 --> 00:26:27.961
which is kind of a singular
thing that over time,
00:26:28.044 --> 00:26:30.672
presumably,
will continue to go down.
00:26:30.755 --> 00:26:34.175
So I went home last night
and I made you this little sign
00:26:34.259 --> 00:26:36.428
as an office warming gift.
UMA: Okay.
00:26:36.511 --> 00:26:39.139
HEIDI: So it's like a little
old grocery store sign,
00:26:39.222 --> 00:26:42.017
and it says "Memphis Meats,
today's price..."
00:26:42.100 --> 00:26:43.268
[laughter and applause]
00:26:43.351 --> 00:26:45.186
HEIDI: And it's
made out of glass,
00:26:45.270 --> 00:26:47.355
because this is my hobby;
I make glass.
00:26:47.439 --> 00:26:49.733
So, alright, you want to
write in today's price?
00:26:49.816 --> 00:26:51.026
ERIC: Go ahead, Nick.
MAN: Yeah.
00:26:51.109 --> 00:26:54.696
HEIDI: Do it.
00:26:54.779 --> 00:26:56.698
NICK: Oh, do we need
to consult on this?
00:26:56.781 --> 00:27:00.201
UMA: No, go for it.
HEIDI: Go for it!
00:27:00.285 --> 00:27:04.122
See if it matches what I saw
in the deck yesterday.
00:27:05.790 --> 00:27:09.002
NICK: Oh, I like that.
HEIDI: Alright.
00:27:09.085 --> 00:27:10.879
Just a little ways to go.
UMA: Yeah.
00:27:10.962 --> 00:27:12.005
[laughter]
00:27:12.088 --> 00:27:14.049
UMA: We had a couple of
extra zeros next to it
00:27:14.132 --> 00:27:15.133
when we started.
00:27:15.216 --> 00:27:16.885
HEIDI: I know, I know!
This is already progress.
00:27:16.968 --> 00:27:18.261
UMA: Maybe three
zeros next to it.
00:27:18.345 --> 00:27:19.929
HEIDI: Like I said, if you
keep going at the same rate,
00:27:20.013 --> 00:27:20.930
we'll be there in no time.
00:27:21.014 --> 00:27:23.933
UMA: Okay, so,
February 16th, 2018,
00:27:24.017 --> 00:27:26.728
the last harvest of meat
at Memphis Meats was
00:27:26.811 --> 00:27:29.898
$1,700 a pound.
[chuckles]
00:27:29.981 --> 00:27:31.399
NICK: That was beef.
00:27:31.483 --> 00:27:33.485
UMA: Beef.
Yes, yes, yeah.
00:27:33.568 --> 00:27:34.903
[cheering]
00:27:34.986 --> 00:27:36.237
HEIDI: Super exciting.
00:27:36.321 --> 00:27:38.239
Day one in a new building
is always extra exciting, so...
00:27:38.323 --> 00:27:41.409
[cork pops]
[applause and laughter]
00:27:41.493 --> 00:27:42.619
[cork pops]
00:27:42.702 --> 00:27:44.537
[applause and laughter]
00:27:44.621 --> 00:27:47.457
[inaudible conversation]
00:27:47.540 --> 00:27:49.167
UMA: I'm filled with gratitude.
00:27:49.250 --> 00:27:52.796
I've always said
I'm here because of my family.
00:27:52.879 --> 00:27:54.839
Then it started out with
Nick and I joining here,
00:27:54.923 --> 00:27:56.508
and now this is
our extended family,
00:27:56.591 --> 00:27:58.593
and I want to really
thank you very much.
00:27:58.676 --> 00:28:01.596
And I raise a glass for
better meat, better world.
00:28:01.679 --> 00:28:04.557
ALL: Cheers.
00:28:04.641 --> 00:28:08.686
♪
00:28:08.770 --> 00:28:10.230
MRUNALINI: I haven't
been here since 2012.
00:28:10.313 --> 00:28:12.273
UMA: Yeah, you haven't
been here since 2012, I know.
00:28:12.357 --> 00:28:13.942
MRUNALINI: I'm excited.
It's gonna be so different.
00:28:14.025 --> 00:28:17.153
You were still practising
as a cardiologist then.
00:28:17.237 --> 00:28:19.656
[laughs]
That seems like eons ago.
00:28:19.739 --> 00:28:21.324
UMA: Yeah.
[both chuckle]
00:28:21.408 --> 00:28:24.035
[phone ringing]
UMA: Someone is calling.
00:28:24.119 --> 00:28:25.995
Hello?
00:28:27.789 --> 00:28:29.541
UMA: We are still near
the airport right now.
00:28:34.295 --> 00:28:36.506
We are coming out
from the airport now.
00:28:36.589 --> 00:28:38.633
There was a little delay
in luggage claim.
00:28:38.716 --> 00:28:41.010
MRUNALINI: Uma has talked
about this idea of growing meat
00:28:41.094 --> 00:28:45.265
for as long as I've known him,
which is almost 25 years.
00:28:45.348 --> 00:28:49.769
He's talked about this
in some form or another.
00:28:51.312 --> 00:28:55.984
It's among the values that
we talk about as a family.
00:28:58.570 --> 00:29:00.738
UMA: Is it the third row?
00:29:02.532 --> 00:29:05.952
MRUNALINI: Hm, excited?
UMA: Yeah.
00:29:08.413 --> 00:29:13.001
[inaudible conversation]
00:29:13.084 --> 00:29:18.006
[inaudible conversation]
00:29:18.089 --> 00:29:22.635
[inaudible conversation]
00:29:22.719 --> 00:29:25.305
MRUNALINI: He's spent a lot
of time thinking about it,
00:29:25.388 --> 00:29:26.931
and one thing you know
00:29:27.015 --> 00:29:29.184
is that when you have
a desire like that,
00:29:29.267 --> 00:29:31.728
it doesn't go away
with ignoring it.
00:29:31.811 --> 00:29:34.481
It only grows, especially when
you know it's meant to be.
00:29:41.571 --> 00:29:44.365
UMA: The only process that
we're changing is one step.
00:29:44.449 --> 00:29:46.826
Instead of these cells
growing in an animal,
00:29:46.910 --> 00:29:48.661
we are growing them
outside the animal.
00:29:48.745 --> 00:29:49.537
ANJULY: Oh, okay.
00:29:49.621 --> 00:29:51.122
UMA: The meat is
still the same meat,
00:29:51.206 --> 00:29:54.334
and we're harvesting it.
00:29:54.417 --> 00:29:57.253
The idea was to go to the US,
00:29:57.337 --> 00:30:00.548
wanting to do cardiology
or cardiac surgery at Mayo,
00:30:00.632 --> 00:30:02.842
and I had a number of interviews
at the Mayo Clinic,
00:30:02.926 --> 00:30:04.594
but my visa got rejected
multiple times.
00:30:04.677 --> 00:30:05.720
ANJULY: Oh!
00:30:05.803 --> 00:30:07.889
UMA: So, back then,
when your visa was rejected,
00:30:07.972 --> 00:30:11.309
you could try, I think,
three times in total,
00:30:11.392 --> 00:30:15.605
and, um, I believe
I got rejected three times.
00:30:15.688 --> 00:30:19.108
ANJULY: Oh, any reason
why they rejected you?
00:30:19.192 --> 00:30:21.569
UMA: No.
I mean, it was hard to know.
00:30:21.653 --> 00:30:23.655
Like, I think
I went well-prepared.
00:30:23.738 --> 00:30:25.031
ANJULY: Okay.
00:30:25.114 --> 00:30:26.616
UMA: But it was all
over in a few seconds,
00:30:26.699 --> 00:30:28.535
and there was really no...
00:30:28.618 --> 00:30:31.371
no explanation,
so it was...
00:30:31.454 --> 00:30:33.498
At that time, I thought
the world was turned upside down
00:30:33.581 --> 00:30:35.959
and it was a state of shock
because I...
00:30:36.042 --> 00:30:38.378
pretty much thought
this is where I would train,
00:30:38.461 --> 00:30:39.921
but then you go
into solutions mode,
00:30:40.004 --> 00:30:44.175
and I decided that
I would go to Jamaica
00:30:44.259 --> 00:30:45.510
and work there for a while
00:30:45.593 --> 00:30:48.763
and reapply to go
to the US to train again.
00:30:48.846 --> 00:30:51.224
So that started
my journey to leave India.
00:30:51.307 --> 00:30:54.394
But if I didn't
get those rejections,
00:30:54.477 --> 00:30:56.229
I wouldn't have gone to Jamaica,
00:30:56.312 --> 00:30:58.773
and if I didn't go there,
I wouldn't have met my wife.
00:30:58.856 --> 00:31:01.067
ANJULY: Oh!
00:31:01.150 --> 00:31:03.194
Can you tell me
the moment when you took
00:31:03.278 --> 00:31:04.320
that big leap of faith?
00:31:04.404 --> 00:31:08.992
You know, your journey
from cardiology to business?
00:31:09.075 --> 00:31:12.370
UMA: As I started working in
cardiology at the Mayo Clinic,
00:31:12.453 --> 00:31:14.205
um...
00:31:14.289 --> 00:31:18.376
that's when stem cell research
was really being worked on
00:31:18.459 --> 00:31:20.461
to grow heart muscle,
and starting to think about
00:31:20.545 --> 00:31:22.839
how can we transfer
the benefits of stem cells
00:31:22.922 --> 00:31:24.882
into treating disease?
00:31:24.966 --> 00:31:27.719
And later on in my practice,
I was injecting stem cells
00:31:27.802 --> 00:31:30.388
into patients' hearts
to re-grow heart muscle,
00:31:30.471 --> 00:31:33.057
and that's where
the idea came from.
00:31:33.141 --> 00:31:36.728
I started thinking about,
if I practice cardiology
00:31:36.811 --> 00:31:38.855
for another 30 years,
I would probably save
00:31:38.938 --> 00:31:40.607
two or three thousand lives.
ANJULY: Mm-hm.
00:31:40.690 --> 00:31:44.068
UMA: But there's very little
00:31:44.152 --> 00:31:46.863
in the form of any idea
that even comes close
00:31:46.946 --> 00:31:49.073
to the level of impact
of what this could be.
00:31:49.157 --> 00:31:51.409
Impact on billions
of humans lives,
00:31:51.492 --> 00:31:52.910
and trillions of animal lives.
00:31:52.994 --> 00:31:56.789
And it felt like
it was not even close to
00:31:56.873 --> 00:31:58.583
the choice of me
continuing in cardiology...
00:31:58.666 --> 00:31:59.792
ANJULY: Right.
00:31:59.876 --> 00:32:02.795
UMA: ...although it was
enormously satisfying.
00:32:02.879 --> 00:32:04.756
I felt good about
leaving cardiology
00:32:04.839 --> 00:32:09.344
and starting something that
had a transformative impact.
00:32:09.427 --> 00:32:12.555
♪
00:32:12.639 --> 00:32:15.516
GIRABALA: It's enough.
00:32:15.600 --> 00:32:20.521
♪
00:32:20.605 --> 00:32:25.276
♪
00:32:25.360 --> 00:32:28.279
UMA: I would say coming to India
feels like connecting back
00:32:28.363 --> 00:32:32.825
with the roots of
where the idea came from.
00:32:32.909 --> 00:32:34.535
GIRABALA: Okay.
00:32:34.619 --> 00:32:36.537
♪
00:32:36.621 --> 00:32:39.540
♪
00:32:39.624 --> 00:32:42.627
♪
00:32:42.710 --> 00:32:44.504
UMA: When I was 12 years old,
00:32:44.587 --> 00:32:47.757
there was a party for one of my
friends in this neighbourhood.
00:32:47.840 --> 00:32:50.385
It was a birthday party;
there was a lot of people.
00:32:50.468 --> 00:32:55.264
Music, dancing,
and there was a lot of food.
00:32:55.348 --> 00:32:58.643
And I just happened
to walk to the back of the home
00:32:58.726 --> 00:33:01.938
where they were making the food,
00:33:02.021 --> 00:33:03.898
where I saw the animals,
00:33:03.981 --> 00:33:08.194
chickens,
being slaughtered.
00:33:08.277 --> 00:33:12.198
It was an experience where
I saw intense and, you know,
00:33:12.281 --> 00:33:14.158
true happiness
in the front of the home,
00:33:14.242 --> 00:33:15.952
where we were celebrating
my friend's birthday,
00:33:16.035 --> 00:33:20.331
and then I walked back, and then
there was this moment where
00:33:20.415 --> 00:33:22.500
that happiness was being
supported by ending life.
00:33:22.583 --> 00:33:25.169
And that was very hard for me.
00:33:25.253 --> 00:33:28.131
And it was just this feeling
in me that how as humans
00:33:28.214 --> 00:33:30.508
we were incredibly capable
of having a lot of joy,
00:33:30.591 --> 00:33:33.010
fun, generosity,
and on the other side,
00:33:33.094 --> 00:33:37.682
there was the stark reality of,
you know, ending life.
00:33:37.765 --> 00:33:39.016
There was a birthday
on one side,
00:33:39.100 --> 00:33:40.518
and there was a death-day
on the other side,
00:33:40.601 --> 00:33:44.647
and it was happening
at the same time.
00:33:44.731 --> 00:33:46.357
Obviously as a kid
I thought,
00:33:46.441 --> 00:33:48.192
"Why don't we all
stop eating meat?"
00:33:48.276 --> 00:33:51.529
And that is a solution
that is on the table always.
00:33:51.612 --> 00:33:53.948
♪
00:33:54.031 --> 00:33:58.786
♪
00:33:58.870 --> 00:34:00.705
UMA: What I thought
I'll do today
00:34:00.788 --> 00:34:05.084
is talk to you about
the stages in my life.
00:34:05.168 --> 00:34:06.836
I want to talk about
00:34:06.919 --> 00:34:10.590
the four-kilometre
circle I grew up in,
00:34:10.673 --> 00:34:13.134
about some of the things
that happened in my life,
00:34:13.217 --> 00:34:17.430
the experiences and the stories
that shaped who I am.
00:34:17.513 --> 00:34:20.141
I want to talk about
my progression from
00:34:20.224 --> 00:34:22.226
being a kid
walking the streets here,
00:34:22.310 --> 00:34:25.646
to what brings me
back here today.
00:34:25.730 --> 00:34:28.983
[inaudible conversation]
00:34:29.067 --> 00:34:31.694
[inaudible conversation]
00:34:31.778 --> 00:34:34.655
MAN: A warm welcome
to all of you.
00:34:34.739 --> 00:34:39.118
♪
00:34:39.202 --> 00:34:42.997
[applause]
00:34:43.080 --> 00:34:47.335
[applause]
00:34:47.418 --> 00:34:50.713
♪
00:34:50.797 --> 00:34:54.926
♪
00:34:56.135 --> 00:34:58.888
MAN: We are introducing
eminent personalities
00:34:58.971 --> 00:35:01.516
who sacrifice their lives
00:35:01.599 --> 00:35:05.019
for the betterment of society.
00:35:05.103 --> 00:35:08.022
Who are role models.
00:35:08.105 --> 00:35:10.858
He placed Vijayawada
on the international map
00:35:10.942 --> 00:35:13.903
as an entrepreneur,
00:35:13.986 --> 00:35:16.239
and people know about
Vijayawada now.
00:35:16.322 --> 00:35:19.033
TEACHER: What I want is,
00:35:19.116 --> 00:35:22.453
out of 1,200 students,
00:35:22.537 --> 00:35:24.914
if two people get ignited,
00:35:24.997 --> 00:35:28.501
and if two people reach
the level of Shankar
00:35:28.584 --> 00:35:30.837
where he is,
that's wonderful.
00:35:30.920 --> 00:35:32.505
That is our wish.
00:35:32.588 --> 00:35:35.842
[applause]
00:35:35.925 --> 00:35:38.719
[applause]
00:35:38.803 --> 00:35:41.764
♪
00:35:41.848 --> 00:35:45.768
UMA: Okay, can you
hear me okay?
00:35:47.603 --> 00:35:51.023
Thank you very much
for having me.
00:35:51.107 --> 00:35:53.818
I feel like I'm
still a 16-year-old,
00:35:53.901 --> 00:35:56.821
seeing all of you
in this room.
00:35:56.904 --> 00:36:00.032
I want to talk to you guys.
00:36:00.116 --> 00:36:01.409
Jipmer was an autonomous school,
00:36:01.492 --> 00:36:03.452
so we had to run
our own cafeterias.
00:36:03.536 --> 00:36:06.330
And we would go to the market,
shopping for, you know,
00:36:06.414 --> 00:36:09.792
a thousand kids,
and I saw large-scale slaughter.
00:36:09.876 --> 00:36:11.919
So, when you see large-scale
slaughter like that,
00:36:12.003 --> 00:36:15.214
that's automated on machines,
like, in a few seconds,
00:36:15.298 --> 00:36:17.425
you know, hundreds of
lives are taken...
00:36:17.508 --> 00:36:20.052
it was hard for me
to understand how
00:36:20.136 --> 00:36:22.555
we could allow
some things like that,
00:36:22.638 --> 00:36:24.056
which at that point
is when I said,
00:36:24.140 --> 00:36:25.766
"Okay, I'm going
to stop eating meat."
00:36:25.850 --> 00:36:27.393
But I love the taste of meat.
00:36:27.476 --> 00:36:30.062
It's not something that
you want to give up easily,
00:36:30.146 --> 00:36:31.981
but it was one of
those things I said,
00:36:32.064 --> 00:36:33.357
"Well, let's just stop."
00:36:33.441 --> 00:36:35.985
And I used to dream
at that point about
00:36:36.068 --> 00:36:37.612
meat growing on trees.
00:36:37.695 --> 00:36:40.156
But [laughs] that was
pretty unusual to dream about,
00:36:40.239 --> 00:36:42.033
meat trees.
00:36:42.116 --> 00:36:44.619
Fifty years from now,
people will look back and say,
00:36:44.702 --> 00:36:47.413
"Oh my gosh, you had to
raise billions of animals,
00:36:47.496 --> 00:36:49.916
"kill them to get
meat to the table?
00:36:49.999 --> 00:36:51.959
"Why could you not just
have grown it directly?"
00:36:52.043 --> 00:36:54.879
So the implications are massive.
00:36:54.962 --> 00:36:57.506
I know I've spoken for
about 30, 40 minutes.
00:36:57.590 --> 00:37:00.092
I want to kind of bring
this back in a full circle,
00:37:00.176 --> 00:37:03.679
back to this colony.
00:37:03.763 --> 00:37:05.848
I grew up in front
of this building.
00:37:05.932 --> 00:37:08.225
My entire life before
I left Vijayawada was
00:37:08.309 --> 00:37:11.103
in a four-kilometre radius
in this colony
00:37:11.187 --> 00:37:13.606
with a number of people
that I fondly remember
00:37:13.689 --> 00:37:18.611
as people that I depended on.
00:37:18.694 --> 00:37:20.988
It's the relationships around me
00:37:21.072 --> 00:37:23.574
that made me pull through.
00:37:23.658 --> 00:37:28.412
My family, my friends,
my teachers, my neighbours.
00:37:28.496 --> 00:37:30.164
Thank you again
for having me.
00:37:30.248 --> 00:37:32.959
I'm happy to take
some questions.
00:37:33.042 --> 00:37:36.754
[applause]
00:37:39.257 --> 00:37:41.092
UMA: Hey!
00:37:41.175 --> 00:37:43.636
Hello.
00:37:43.719 --> 00:37:46.055
Oh, Auntie Aranaru!
I'm so happy to see you.
00:37:46.138 --> 00:37:50.726
[inaudible conversation]
00:37:50.810 --> 00:37:52.687
MRUNALINI: Yeah,
so nice to see you.
00:37:52.770 --> 00:37:55.773
Thanks for coming.
Yeah.
00:37:55.856 --> 00:38:00.736
[inaudible conversation]
00:38:00.820 --> 00:38:04.240
[inaudible conversation]
00:38:04.323 --> 00:38:06.117
[inaudible conversation]
00:38:06.200 --> 00:38:09.578
UMA: What do you want me
to write on this one?
00:38:09.662 --> 00:38:13.207
[inaudible conversation]
00:38:14.208 --> 00:38:18.713
GIRIBALA: I am slightly afraid
how it goes,
00:38:18.796 --> 00:38:20.881
what will be
the future of him?
00:38:20.965 --> 00:38:23.676
He left his original field,
00:38:23.759 --> 00:38:26.387
which is a very great field,
00:38:26.470 --> 00:38:30.558
and he came with flying colours
into that field,
00:38:30.641 --> 00:38:32.893
and he left that,
00:38:32.977 --> 00:38:37.189
and entered into this new field,
complete new field.
00:38:37.273 --> 00:38:40.192
And how he ends up,
no one can say it.
00:38:40.276 --> 00:38:43.237
No one can say the future,
how it will be.
00:38:47.742 --> 00:38:51.912
♪
00:38:51.996 --> 00:38:54.081
[siren in distance]
00:38:54.165 --> 00:38:57.418
♪
00:38:57.501 --> 00:38:59.253
[siren in distance]
00:38:59.336 --> 00:39:03.966
♪
00:39:04.050 --> 00:39:08.220
♪
00:39:08.304 --> 00:39:12.016
♪
00:39:12.099 --> 00:39:15.102
JESSICA: The US Cattleman's
Association filed a petition
00:39:15.186 --> 00:39:17.521
with the US Department
of Agriculture
00:39:17.605 --> 00:39:22.359
asking for the USDA
to change its policy book
00:39:22.443 --> 00:39:24.361
to define meat and beef
00:39:24.445 --> 00:39:26.572
in ways that make it
impossible for clean meat
00:39:26.655 --> 00:39:28.240
to use those terms
on their labels.
00:39:28.324 --> 00:39:31.577
♪
00:39:31.660 --> 00:39:34.997
♪
00:39:35.081 --> 00:39:37.333
LIA: Usually when consumers
pick up a package of beef
00:39:37.416 --> 00:39:38.501
in the grocery store,
00:39:38.584 --> 00:39:40.628
they expect it to be
from the flesh of an animal
00:39:40.711 --> 00:39:42.296
harvested in
the traditional manner.
00:39:42.379 --> 00:39:46.467
♪
00:39:46.550 --> 00:39:49.178
♪
00:39:49.261 --> 00:39:50.971
If you have these other
products floating around
00:39:51.055 --> 00:39:54.058
on shelves and potentially
being commingled
00:39:54.141 --> 00:39:57.812
with our products, we see
not only food safety concerns
00:39:57.895 --> 00:39:59.980
but obviously
consumers' rights issues,
00:40:00.064 --> 00:40:01.565
because everybody
deserves to know
00:40:01.649 --> 00:40:03.442
where their food comes from.
00:40:03.526 --> 00:40:06.904
It should be more along the
lines of alternative protein,
00:40:06.987 --> 00:40:10.366
or, you know, specifying
that it's coming from
00:40:10.449 --> 00:40:13.077
a muscular tissue sample.
00:40:13.160 --> 00:40:15.121
JESSICA: Right now is
a make-or-break moment
00:40:15.204 --> 00:40:16.372
for clean meat.
00:40:16.455 --> 00:40:18.707
Is it going to be FDA,
or is it going to be USDA?
00:40:18.791 --> 00:40:20.417
And whichever agency it is,
00:40:20.501 --> 00:40:25.131
is it going to be a reasonable
process for coming to market?
00:40:25.214 --> 00:40:28.759
♪
00:40:28.843 --> 00:40:31.804
UMA: So, we started talking
to the Meat Institute...
00:40:31.887 --> 00:40:36.433
♪
00:40:36.517 --> 00:40:39.061
UMA: ...and on
August 23rd, 2018,
00:40:39.145 --> 00:40:42.356
we wrote a letter
to the president.
00:40:42.439 --> 00:40:45.568
♪
00:40:45.651 --> 00:40:49.029
♪
00:40:49.113 --> 00:40:50.281
UMA: The letter
was a culmination
00:40:50.364 --> 00:40:51.866
of lots of discussions.
00:40:51.949 --> 00:40:54.785
It took a lot of
back-and-forth conversations.
00:40:54.869 --> 00:40:59.623
♪
00:40:59.707 --> 00:41:03.210
♪
00:41:03.294 --> 00:41:06.964
♪
00:41:07.047 --> 00:41:10.217
♪
00:41:10.301 --> 00:41:13.888
♪
00:41:13.971 --> 00:41:17.558
♪
00:41:17.641 --> 00:41:21.228
♪
00:41:21.312 --> 00:41:24.398
♪
00:41:27.026 --> 00:41:28.485
UMA: We, you know,
00:41:28.569 --> 00:41:30.738
we wouldn't have
even dreamt of this
00:41:30.821 --> 00:41:34.533
a year ago or two years ago.
00:41:34.617 --> 00:41:37.578
I think at the moment
felt very surreal.
00:41:42.583 --> 00:41:46.337
And I also saw...
00:41:46.420 --> 00:41:47.796
um...
00:41:47.880 --> 00:41:50.424
enormous amounts of,
you know,
00:41:50.507 --> 00:41:52.343
conflict within me of,
00:41:52.426 --> 00:41:55.930
I can't imagine
I'm signing a letter with
00:41:56.013 --> 00:41:59.391
the largest meat trade
association in the world.
00:42:01.936 --> 00:42:03.479
It felt like
the right thing to do,
00:42:03.562 --> 00:42:05.856
and this is signing
my name behind it,
00:42:05.940 --> 00:42:10.194
and saying we are
going to truly
00:42:10.277 --> 00:42:13.364
bring everybody under this tent
in saying this is a solution
00:42:13.447 --> 00:42:16.242
that the world is
looking forward to.
00:42:22.790 --> 00:42:25.542
BRUCE: Using markets and food
technology to solve problems,
00:42:25.626 --> 00:42:30.464
that's not a left
or a right issue.
00:42:30.547 --> 00:42:31.590
This should be
governments;
00:42:31.674 --> 00:42:33.926
this should be
massive foundations;
00:42:34.009 --> 00:42:38.013
this should be billion, you
know, dollar philanthropists.
00:42:40.140 --> 00:42:42.518
We need Manhattan projects,
we need moon landings.
00:42:42.601 --> 00:42:44.812
We need, you know,
absolute commitment
00:42:44.895 --> 00:42:48.732
to making this happen
as quickly as possible.
00:42:50.192 --> 00:42:53.988
[keyboard clicking]
00:42:56.407 --> 00:42:59.868
BRUCE: It is just true that
the vast majority of people
00:42:59.952 --> 00:43:03.414
are not going to incorporate
ethical considerations
00:43:03.497 --> 00:43:08.085
into their dietary choices.
00:43:08.168 --> 00:43:11.171
So let's take ethics
off the table,
00:43:11.255 --> 00:43:14.383
and let's just create products
that people want to buy
00:43:14.466 --> 00:43:17.052
because they are delicious,
they are reasonably priced,
00:43:17.136 --> 00:43:18.804
and they are everywhere.
00:43:18.887 --> 00:43:22.725
So that's the brainstorm
and the focus of GFI.
00:43:22.808 --> 00:43:25.019
One of the things that GFI does
00:43:25.102 --> 00:43:28.397
is thinks about consumer
acceptance issues.
00:43:28.480 --> 00:43:31.859
And we just had so many people
who would hear "cultured meat"
00:43:31.942 --> 00:43:33.444
and they would
just sort of recoil.
00:43:33.527 --> 00:43:35.446
And obviously "lab-grown meat"
is even worse;
00:43:35.529 --> 00:43:38.407
"in-vitro meat" is even worse.
00:43:38.490 --> 00:43:42.202
And so we surveyed everybody
in sort of the community
00:43:42.286 --> 00:43:45.372
of clean meat
at the beginning of 2016.
00:43:45.456 --> 00:43:48.250
We said, "What do you think?
What should we call it?"
00:43:48.334 --> 00:43:51.086
And the results came back,
and "clean meat" was about--
00:43:51.170 --> 00:43:54.381
led to about 20% greater
consumer acceptance
00:43:54.465 --> 00:43:56.884
than "cultured meat."
00:44:01.555 --> 00:44:04.933
We can eliminate
industrial animal agriculture
00:44:05.017 --> 00:44:08.228
in the next 20 to 30 years.
00:44:08.312 --> 00:44:10.898
The best way to do that,
it's markets,
00:44:10.981 --> 00:44:12.399
it's food technology,
00:44:12.483 --> 00:44:15.402
it's creating products that
people actually want to buy,
00:44:15.486 --> 00:44:17.738
that they can afford,
and that they can find.
00:44:17.821 --> 00:44:20.032
♪
00:44:20.115 --> 00:44:22.701
[inaudible conversation]
00:44:22.785 --> 00:44:27.581
♪
00:44:27.664 --> 00:44:32.378
[inaudible conversation]
00:44:32.461 --> 00:44:36.882
♪
00:44:36.965 --> 00:44:41.011
♪
00:44:41.095 --> 00:44:42.721
BRUCE: Hello!
00:44:42.805 --> 00:44:46.809
Hello.
00:44:46.892 --> 00:44:49.770
Hello, everyone.
WOMAN: Hello!
00:44:49.853 --> 00:44:53.816
BRUCE: Welcome to the first
annual Good Food Conference.
00:44:53.899 --> 00:44:58.612
[applause and cheering]
00:44:58.695 --> 00:45:02.908
♪
00:45:02.991 --> 00:45:06.370
♪
00:45:06.453 --> 00:45:07.871
MARK: Hey, hey, Uma.
UMA: How are you?
00:45:07.955 --> 00:45:09.415
MARK: How are you?
Good to see you.
00:45:09.498 --> 00:45:10.624
UMA: Welcome to our home town.
00:45:10.707 --> 00:45:12.167
The last time we met
was [inaudible].
00:45:12.251 --> 00:45:14.086
MARK: What do you call this,
our home town?
00:45:14.169 --> 00:45:15.337
UMA: It's our hometown.
MARK: Yes.
00:45:15.421 --> 00:45:16.880
[both laugh]
00:45:16.964 --> 00:45:19.758
MARK: So we started
to think about
00:45:19.842 --> 00:45:22.010
making a hamburger
from stem cells,
00:45:22.094 --> 00:45:26.098
or making meat from
stem cells in 2004.
00:45:27.433 --> 00:45:28.851
Funded by the Dutch government,
00:45:28.934 --> 00:45:31.019
we could start
those technologies,
00:45:31.103 --> 00:45:33.355
develop those technologies.
00:45:33.439 --> 00:45:35.441
Unveiling of
that first hamburger
00:45:35.524 --> 00:45:40.821
was in August 2013 in London.
00:45:40.904 --> 00:45:43.574
We got the money for that
from Sergey Brin,
00:45:43.657 --> 00:45:48.620
who put something like
$1.5 million in it.
00:45:48.704 --> 00:45:53.417
We made three hamburgers
for that money.
00:45:53.500 --> 00:45:56.128
What I knew is this is
a big societal problem,
00:45:56.211 --> 00:46:00.507
and this is a potential solution
for that societal problem.
00:46:00.591 --> 00:46:03.760
What we had experienced
of course in the project was,
00:46:03.844 --> 00:46:06.930
yes, there was media
attention for it,
00:46:07.014 --> 00:46:10.726
but there was not a whole lot
of public interest for it.
00:46:12.311 --> 00:46:14.521
MARK: Actually, the trigger
for the whole thing
00:46:14.605 --> 00:46:17.065
was the story of
Willem van Eelen,
00:46:17.149 --> 00:46:21.361
at that time already 86,
00:46:21.445 --> 00:46:24.781
who basically was so
enthusiastic about this project
00:46:24.865 --> 00:46:26.658
and really wanted us to do this.
00:46:26.742 --> 00:46:28.911
IRA: Send it to me too.
MAN: Will do.
00:46:28.994 --> 00:46:30.370
UMA: I'm really honoured
to meet you,
00:46:30.454 --> 00:46:32.372
and your dad's work
has inspired me
00:46:32.456 --> 00:46:34.124
while I was in training
in cardiology.
00:46:34.208 --> 00:46:37.044
IRA: I was about 14 when
he started working on this.
00:46:37.127 --> 00:46:38.337
UMA: Oh, I see.
Okay.
00:46:38.420 --> 00:46:39.963
IRA: And that's
40 years ago now,
00:46:40.047 --> 00:46:43.926
and there was a handful of
people that you could talk to.
00:46:44.009 --> 00:46:47.137
And to be here now
with about 450 people
00:46:47.221 --> 00:46:49.223
in a sold-out conference,
00:46:49.306 --> 00:46:51.141
and everybody knowing
what clean meat is,
00:46:51.225 --> 00:46:53.101
is for me, like...
00:46:53.185 --> 00:46:55.229
a very weird situation.
00:46:55.312 --> 00:46:56.939
UMA: In many ways your dad
00:46:57.022 --> 00:46:59.358
kind of stimulated an entire
generation of thinking.
00:46:59.441 --> 00:47:00.442
IRA: Yes, he did.
00:47:00.526 --> 00:47:01.944
UMA: You don't have
to be a scientist,
00:47:02.027 --> 00:47:02.986
you don't have to be--
00:47:03.070 --> 00:47:05.364
you have to have
conviction on your vision,
00:47:05.447 --> 00:47:07.366
and I think he's
kind of sown the seeds
00:47:07.449 --> 00:47:09.701
for all of us to kind of
stand on his shoulders.
00:47:09.785 --> 00:47:12.788
IRA: He wrote the patent,
and then he got funded,
00:47:12.871 --> 00:47:19.336
and then of course Mark took up
the torch, which was good.
00:47:19.419 --> 00:47:22.130
I am the daughter of
Willem van Eelen.
00:47:22.214 --> 00:47:25.551
He's considered the
great-grandfather of clean meat.
00:47:25.634 --> 00:47:30.180
In 2010, I organized
the first ever clean meat--
00:47:30.264 --> 00:47:32.224
or at that time
it was called "pure meat"--
00:47:32.307 --> 00:47:36.478
conference in NEMO
technical museum in Amsterdam,
00:47:36.562 --> 00:47:38.772
and there we got
the first footage
00:47:38.855 --> 00:47:41.608
of very small slivers
of pig meat
00:47:41.692 --> 00:47:43.485
that Mark Post had made.
00:47:43.569 --> 00:47:48.115
And that was the first ever
pictures of actual clean meat,
00:47:48.198 --> 00:47:50.200
and they went into the media.
00:47:50.284 --> 00:47:53.453
And that is actually how
the investors of [inaudible]
00:47:53.537 --> 00:47:55.205
found Mark Post.
00:47:55.289 --> 00:47:58.375
So this is a story
full of domino tiles.
00:47:58.458 --> 00:48:01.420
REGAN: Tell me, you are
kind of the rock star here.
00:48:01.503 --> 00:48:05.591
You've been described to me as
a rock star, you and Mark Post.
00:48:05.674 --> 00:48:07.593
People are so interested
in Memphis Meats;
00:48:07.676 --> 00:48:10.053
you've got all these investors.
00:48:10.137 --> 00:48:12.889
Why is there so much
interest in your company
00:48:12.973 --> 00:48:14.766
in particular, do you think?
00:48:14.850 --> 00:48:17.686
UMA: Well, I'm flattered
to hear what you're saying
00:48:17.769 --> 00:48:19.646
about me and Mark,
00:48:19.730 --> 00:48:22.691
but ultimately
this is something that
00:48:22.774 --> 00:48:24.776
caught the imagination of
00:48:24.860 --> 00:48:28.280
I'd say every country,
every continent.
00:48:28.363 --> 00:48:30.449
REGAN: "Cell-based"
sounds a little scary,
00:48:30.532 --> 00:48:34.077
and "clean meat" implies that
conventional meat is dirty.
00:48:34.161 --> 00:48:37.164
UMA: Right, so
the background for this,
00:48:37.247 --> 00:48:39.958
or the context of it is
when we started talking about
00:48:40.042 --> 00:48:43.962
this industry,
and starting the company--
00:48:44.046 --> 00:48:46.256
Memphis Meats was
the first company in the space--
00:48:46.340 --> 00:48:48.425
we started talking
to a number of people,
00:48:48.508 --> 00:48:50.469
and people uniformly
got excited.
00:48:50.552 --> 00:48:52.804
And we started calling
the product "clean meat,"
00:48:52.888 --> 00:48:53.930
"clean duck,"
"clean chicken,"
00:48:54.014 --> 00:48:56.475
"clean beef," because
it mainly communicated
00:48:56.558 --> 00:48:59.061
the benefits of a cleaner
production environment,
00:48:59.144 --> 00:49:03.440
as well as the benefits
00:49:03.523 --> 00:49:05.901
we thought we
could have at scale
00:49:05.984 --> 00:49:08.236
in terms of energy savings.
00:49:08.320 --> 00:49:11.406
But as we started talking
more and more about this,
00:49:11.490 --> 00:49:13.784
it became
particularly clear that
00:49:13.867 --> 00:49:17.454
there are people
that felt like,
00:49:17.537 --> 00:49:20.290
while they want this innovation
to come to market,
00:49:20.374 --> 00:49:24.503
using a prefix like "clean"
was not inclusive.
00:49:24.586 --> 00:49:27.589
UMA: How about nomenclature?
00:49:27.673 --> 00:49:31.885
Why "cell-based" or why "clean"
or why "cultured"?
00:49:31.968 --> 00:49:33.345
NIYA: Rather than
saying what it is,
00:49:33.428 --> 00:49:34.805
because what it is
is meat,
00:49:34.888 --> 00:49:37.349
isn't there a quick way
to just say how it's made?
00:49:37.432 --> 00:49:38.767
UMA: When a consumer
is buying it,
00:49:38.850 --> 00:49:41.812
we want them to know
it's coming from animal cells,
00:49:41.895 --> 00:49:43.814
versus a meat alternative.
00:49:43.897 --> 00:49:46.858
NIYA: Why are we so fixated on
having a word in front of meat?
00:49:46.942 --> 00:49:48.193
ERIN: It's almost
like "gluten-free."
00:49:48.276 --> 00:49:50.696
Like, you want it to be
"factory-farm-free."
00:49:50.779 --> 00:49:51.988
LOU: Consumers
want transparency.
00:49:52.072 --> 00:49:53.657
They want you to be honest
with what you're doing,
00:49:53.740 --> 00:49:55.075
so that's why
I support cellular...
00:49:55.158 --> 00:49:56.618
NIYA: And we want
to be transparent.
00:49:56.702 --> 00:49:59.287
I don't want people mixing up
my stuff with regular.
00:49:59.371 --> 00:50:00.455
LOU: But on the other hand,
00:50:00.539 --> 00:50:02.040
what we're not
communicating is...
00:50:02.124 --> 00:50:03.458
You know, we're communicating,
00:50:03.542 --> 00:50:06.211
back to being
too technically driven,
00:50:06.294 --> 00:50:07.796
we're communicating the process.
00:50:07.879 --> 00:50:11.341
What if the adjective was
more about a global solution?
00:50:11.425 --> 00:50:13.051
ERIN: Yeah, I'd focus on
factory-farm-free.
00:50:13.135 --> 00:50:15.178
#FFF.
UMA: FFF.
00:50:15.262 --> 00:50:16.638
NIYA: But there's
a lot of meat out there
00:50:16.722 --> 00:50:17.806
that's factory-farm-free.
00:50:17.889 --> 00:50:20.100
So you shouldn't define it
by what it's not.
00:50:20.183 --> 00:50:21.893
UMA: How's it going?
JOSH: Good, rolling, yeah.
00:50:21.977 --> 00:50:25.272
UMA: Put this away.
JOSH: How's life?
00:50:25.355 --> 00:50:27.482
UMA: Really good, really busy.
JOSH: Good.
00:50:27.566 --> 00:50:29.526
UMA: The alternative
would be bad, so...
00:50:29.609 --> 00:50:31.236
How about you?
Are you travelling, or...?
00:50:31.319 --> 00:50:34.656
JOSH: Uh, yeah.
Just got back from Zurich.
00:50:34.740 --> 00:50:36.908
JOSH: When we thought
about the next thing,
00:50:36.992 --> 00:50:38.994
we were in 4,000 Walmarts,
00:50:39.077 --> 00:50:40.746
we were in 3,300
public schools,
00:50:40.829 --> 00:50:43.749
we were making tens of
millions of dollars in sales.
00:50:43.832 --> 00:50:46.084
So we easily could have
done meat with plants.
00:50:46.168 --> 00:50:48.336
That was there for us to take.
00:50:48.420 --> 00:50:51.590
But I couldn't imagine
a world where McDonald's
00:50:51.673 --> 00:50:53.425
would replace all
of their hamburgers
00:50:53.508 --> 00:50:54.760
with a plant-based burger.
00:50:54.843 --> 00:50:58.180
And we decided to go
headlong into cultured meat.
00:50:58.263 --> 00:50:59.556
WOMAN: Alright, guys,
we're gonna get ready here
00:50:59.639 --> 00:51:00.891
in just a second.
00:51:00.974 --> 00:51:04.227
This is a jam-packed panel.
I'm so excited for it.
00:51:05.395 --> 00:51:07.063
JOSH: More people are eating
meat today than yesterday,
00:51:07.147 --> 00:51:09.316
and more people unfortunately
will eat meat tomorrow
00:51:09.399 --> 00:51:10.525
than today.
00:51:10.609 --> 00:51:12.569
We think it's going to
be critical ultimately
00:51:12.652 --> 00:51:16.531
to get the price of meat below
the cost of conventional meat.
00:51:16.615 --> 00:51:20.494
MAN: Proof of concept has been
demonstrated to the public,
00:51:20.577 --> 00:51:22.329
but now we're about
proof of scale.
00:51:22.412 --> 00:51:24.790
You know, what is this
factory of the future?
00:51:24.873 --> 00:51:28.084
It is a food factory;
it has a lot of similarities
00:51:28.168 --> 00:51:29.503
to any other food factory
00:51:29.586 --> 00:51:31.463
following some of
the same principles.
00:51:31.546 --> 00:51:34.508
NIYA: And I really see
this industry as being
00:51:34.591 --> 00:51:36.009
a parallel supply chain,
00:51:36.092 --> 00:51:38.345
or maybe integrated
into the food system.
00:51:38.428 --> 00:51:40.680
Which I like that people
are starting to talk about
00:51:40.764 --> 00:51:42.390
the food ecosystem,
and the system,
00:51:42.474 --> 00:51:44.935
that's what we're part of;
we're not a separate entity.
00:51:45.018 --> 00:51:47.270
UMA: The lowering the cost of
feed is the biggest challenge
00:51:47.354 --> 00:51:48.855
in this field.
00:51:48.939 --> 00:51:51.650
And right now that's a problem,
00:51:51.733 --> 00:51:54.694
because no one's producing
those ingredients at scale.
00:51:54.778 --> 00:51:57.572
But as we start figuring out
the key ingredients that our
00:51:57.656 --> 00:52:00.075
animal cells need to grow,
00:52:00.158 --> 00:52:01.493
I have very little
doubt in mind
00:52:01.576 --> 00:52:02.786
that those things
can be scaled up.
00:52:02.869 --> 00:52:05.121
JOSH: I think for the folks in
the audience that are thinking
00:52:05.205 --> 00:52:06.623
about starting
their own company,
00:52:06.706 --> 00:52:09.292
don't just look at
what the folks up here
00:52:09.376 --> 00:52:10.752
on the stage are doing;
00:52:10.836 --> 00:52:13.463
think about how you can provide
something to the ecosystem
00:52:13.547 --> 00:52:16.633
that could be even more valuable
than what we're doing up here.
00:52:16.716 --> 00:52:19.719
WOMAN: Right, so, for example,
I'd imagine that if a company
00:52:19.803 --> 00:52:22.889
were to start
trying to create steak,
00:52:22.973 --> 00:52:24.641
there might be another
startup that would emerge
00:52:24.724 --> 00:52:26.226
that would try to produce
the fat that would
00:52:26.309 --> 00:52:30.480
fit in to the marbled steak.
00:52:30.564 --> 00:52:32.941
♪
00:52:33.024 --> 00:52:34.067
SARAH: From the
consumer perspective,
00:52:34.150 --> 00:52:35.735
we're facing a brave new world,
00:52:35.819 --> 00:52:38.405
with technology that was once
the stuff of science fiction
00:52:38.488 --> 00:52:41.366
now becoming a reality.
00:52:41.449 --> 00:52:43.869
♪
00:52:43.952 --> 00:52:45.704
JACK: I think it's also
worth pointing out that people
00:52:45.787 --> 00:52:48.748
love innovation almost as much
as they despise change,
00:52:48.832 --> 00:52:50.959
and there's no place
they despise change more
00:52:51.042 --> 00:52:53.211
than in the food they eat.
00:52:53.295 --> 00:52:56.131
♪
00:52:56.214 --> 00:52:58.675
KEVIN: Consumers have
come to expect satisfaction
00:52:58.758 --> 00:53:03.305
and a high-quality eating
experience from real beef.
00:53:03.388 --> 00:53:06.766
The manufacturers of lab-grown
products should be required
00:53:06.850 --> 00:53:09.686
to invest in their own
market development efforts
00:53:09.769 --> 00:53:13.565
and not ride the coattails
of beef's success.
00:53:13.648 --> 00:53:16.443
♪
00:53:16.526 --> 00:53:19.946
♪
00:53:20.030 --> 00:53:21.656
JESSICA: Consumers
are enthusiastic
00:53:21.740 --> 00:53:23.325
about these products.
00:53:23.408 --> 00:53:25.702
We did a poll with [inaudible],
00:53:25.785 --> 00:53:28.413
and we found that two thirds of
Americans are willing to try
00:53:28.496 --> 00:53:31.291
meat grown from cells
without slaughtering animals,
00:53:31.374 --> 00:53:33.460
and 40% said they
would pay a premium
00:53:33.543 --> 00:53:34.836
for these products.
00:53:34.920 --> 00:53:38.173
DANNI: Allowing cellular-based
proteins or plant-based proteins
00:53:38.256 --> 00:53:40.467
to bear the label
"meat" or "beef"
00:53:40.550 --> 00:53:44.220
or the USDA federal
meat inspection shield or stamp
00:53:44.304 --> 00:53:45.722
would be misleading.
00:53:45.805 --> 00:53:47.807
SPEAKER: Thank you.
00:53:47.891 --> 00:53:50.560
♪
00:53:50.644 --> 00:53:53.521
JUSTIN: We fully recognize
that debate will continue
00:53:53.605 --> 00:53:56.441
as to what these products
should be called moving forward,
00:53:56.524 --> 00:53:58.735
and although we have not firmly
determined what the nomenclature
00:53:58.818 --> 00:54:01.738
should be, our producers
will seek a labelling regime
00:54:01.821 --> 00:54:05.075
that provides a clear separation
between lab-produced products
00:54:05.158 --> 00:54:07.535
and conventionally grown meat.
00:54:07.619 --> 00:54:09.955
ERIC: Some terms, like
"fake," "synthetic,"
00:54:10.038 --> 00:54:11.581
or "artificial" meat
are intended
00:54:11.665 --> 00:54:13.792
to not only cast our products
in a negative light,
00:54:13.875 --> 00:54:17.128
but are also simply
false and misleading.
00:54:17.212 --> 00:54:19.089
We're making real
meat and seafood,
00:54:19.172 --> 00:54:21.216
and that's the whole point.
00:54:21.299 --> 00:54:24.761
The term "lab-grown" has
an accuracy problem as well.
00:54:24.844 --> 00:54:26.596
As with many familiar
and currently marketed
00:54:26.680 --> 00:54:28.723
food products,
the early development
00:54:28.807 --> 00:54:30.558
of our products
happens in food labs.
00:54:30.642 --> 00:54:33.395
But the products that we bring
to consumers will be produced
00:54:33.478 --> 00:54:37.148
in food production
facilities, not labs.
00:54:37.232 --> 00:54:42.070
♪
00:54:42.153 --> 00:54:44.072
SPEAKER: We really want
to hear from you today.
00:54:44.155 --> 00:54:46.074
That's really what
this meeting is about.
00:54:46.157 --> 00:54:48.994
Anyone else, would you like to
come forward and make a comment
00:54:49.077 --> 00:54:51.329
during this open comment period?
00:54:51.413 --> 00:54:52.956
MICHAEL: We cell-based
food producers
00:54:53.039 --> 00:54:55.667
do need to use the terms
"fish" and "meat."
00:54:55.750 --> 00:54:58.503
To reiterate, if one is allergic
to animal-based seafood,
00:54:58.586 --> 00:55:00.338
that person has
a high probability--
00:55:00.422 --> 00:55:02.966
I would say almost
a 100% certainty--
00:55:03.049 --> 00:55:04.551
that they will be allergic
00:55:04.634 --> 00:55:07.220
to the seafood produced
using our technology.
00:55:07.303 --> 00:55:09.639
ERIC: Me as a cattle producer,
we've worked a long time
00:55:09.723 --> 00:55:14.185
to build trust between
consumers and stuff like that.
00:55:14.269 --> 00:55:17.355
That's why I urge these
companies or individuals
00:55:17.439 --> 00:55:20.316
that are doing
this technology to
00:55:20.400 --> 00:55:24.612
maybe step back and educate us
so we understand it.
00:55:24.696 --> 00:55:27.449
It might help us
be more accepting
00:55:27.532 --> 00:55:29.200
to what you want to accomplish.
00:55:29.284 --> 00:55:30.243
Thank you.
00:55:30.326 --> 00:55:31.786
SPEAKER: Thank you
for your comments.
00:55:31.870 --> 00:55:33.288
Do we have anyone else
that would like
00:55:33.371 --> 00:55:35.290
to come forward and comment?
00:55:35.373 --> 00:55:38.001
[inaudible conversation]
00:55:38.084 --> 00:55:40.712
ISHA: I suspect that producing
meat from animal cell culture
00:55:40.795 --> 00:55:44.174
rather than whole animals could
result in fewer viral epidemics,
00:55:44.257 --> 00:55:47.510
fewer threats to food security,
and fewer externalized costs
00:55:47.594 --> 00:55:51.222
to environment, public health,
and animal welfare.
00:55:51.306 --> 00:55:54.100
HOLLY: Currently 815 million
people around the globe
00:55:54.184 --> 00:55:57.687
are malnourished, as has been
discussed a few times today.
00:55:57.771 --> 00:55:59.981
Hunger has been on the rise
for the last three years,
00:56:00.065 --> 00:56:02.942
and this number is expected
to drastically increase
00:56:03.026 --> 00:56:05.028
as the world's population grows.
00:56:05.111 --> 00:56:08.656
We must rethink the global
food production system.
00:56:08.740 --> 00:56:10.325
MICHAEL: For us,
producing bluefin tuna,
00:56:10.408 --> 00:56:12.285
cell-based bluefin tuna,
00:56:12.368 --> 00:56:14.871
there will be no mercury,
no plastic;
00:56:14.954 --> 00:56:16.748
we are not using antibiotics;
00:56:16.831 --> 00:56:18.333
we are not
over-fishing the ocean;
00:56:18.416 --> 00:56:20.335
we are not engaging
in animal cruelty.
00:56:22.545 --> 00:56:24.047
ELIZABETH: On the
question of safety,
00:56:24.130 --> 00:56:26.966
innovation in the meat
industry is urgently needed.
00:56:27.050 --> 00:56:29.344
Conventional methods rely
on the intensive confinement
00:56:29.427 --> 00:56:33.848
of animals in unsanitary
and inhumane facilities.
00:56:33.932 --> 00:56:36.434
These unnatural conditions
require extensive use
00:56:36.518 --> 00:56:38.853
of antibiotics
to address diseases
00:56:38.937 --> 00:56:42.232
that proliferate among
the crowded, stressed animals,
00:56:42.315 --> 00:56:45.068
contributing to the spread
of drug-resistant superbugs.
00:56:45.151 --> 00:56:48.029
ERICA: We need real
alternatives to the suffering.
00:56:48.113 --> 00:56:50.907
We need real alternatives
to the cruel and inhumane
00:56:50.990 --> 00:56:54.077
conditions forced
upon billions of animals.
00:56:54.160 --> 00:56:57.122
We need alternatives to
artificial insemination,
00:56:57.205 --> 00:56:59.749
overcrowding,
genetic manipulation,
00:56:59.833 --> 00:57:03.837
long transport,
and slaughter.
00:57:03.920 --> 00:57:05.505
ERIC: Without a clear,
predictable,
00:57:05.588 --> 00:57:09.634
and timely framework,
this industry cannot succeed.
00:57:09.717 --> 00:57:11.970
Any delays in moving
forward would jeopardize
00:57:12.053 --> 00:57:14.055
the US's standing
in the world as the leader
00:57:14.139 --> 00:57:15.431
in protein production
00:57:15.515 --> 00:57:19.894
and responsible, science-based
food innovation.
00:57:19.978 --> 00:57:24.399
[inaudible conversation]
00:57:24.482 --> 00:57:28.736
[inaudible conversation]
00:57:28.820 --> 00:57:30.613
[inaudible conversation]
00:57:40.540 --> 00:57:45.211
[camera shutters clicking]
00:57:45.295 --> 00:57:47.130
[camera shutters clicking]
00:57:47.213 --> 00:57:48.715
PAUL: In addition
to providing clarity
00:57:48.798 --> 00:57:50.258
in terms of
the regulatory pathway,
00:57:50.341 --> 00:57:51.593
are there any other incentives,
00:57:51.676 --> 00:57:53.386
either through research,
maybe through ARS,
00:57:53.469 --> 00:57:56.806
or any other type of ways
that can be implemented
00:57:56.890 --> 00:57:59.559
to help ensure that
the American startups
00:57:59.642 --> 00:58:01.769
pursuing cellular
agriculture products
00:58:01.853 --> 00:58:02.896
can move forward?
00:58:02.979 --> 00:58:05.481
SONNY: Well, the good thing
about the environment,
00:58:05.565 --> 00:58:08.568
the economy, and the democratic
process we have here
00:58:08.651 --> 00:58:10.653
is our innovators
and entrepreneurs
00:58:10.737 --> 00:58:12.864
and our risk-takers
are very creative
00:58:12.947 --> 00:58:13.948
in their efforts.
00:58:14.032 --> 00:58:15.241
We want to be
ahead of the game.
00:58:15.325 --> 00:58:18.077
I think the regulatory framework
needs to be there
00:58:18.161 --> 00:58:20.622
to provide guidance for our
entrepreneurs and innovators
00:58:20.705 --> 00:58:22.290
to work towards.
00:58:22.373 --> 00:58:25.877
So, we will be moving
posthaste after this meeting
00:58:25.960 --> 00:58:28.504
to more clearly define that.
00:58:28.588 --> 00:58:30.757
SCOTT: I think this is
one of those unique examples
00:58:30.840 --> 00:58:32.133
where we're contemplating
all these things
00:58:32.217 --> 00:58:34.135
really early in the process,
really in advance
00:58:34.219 --> 00:58:35.678
of the products
even being available.
00:58:35.762 --> 00:58:38.681
And that's going to, I think,
help the innovation take root,
00:58:38.765 --> 00:58:40.767
and provide really clear
guidance to the manufacturers,
00:58:40.850 --> 00:58:42.977
and I think it should
accelerate the innovation.
00:58:43.061 --> 00:58:44.646
LIZ: Would you like
America to be first?
00:58:44.729 --> 00:58:46.940
SONNY: Yes.
00:58:47.023 --> 00:58:50.151
[traffic sounds]
00:58:50.235 --> 00:58:53.112
ERIC: I've been, like, thinking
about this for the last month,
00:58:53.196 --> 00:58:55.448
obviously, in preparation.
00:58:55.531 --> 00:58:59.744
This moment where
heavily-vested parties
00:58:59.827 --> 00:59:04.374
and cultural identities
would intersect in a formal way.
00:59:05.375 --> 00:59:06.876
ERIC: Hi, you're for Eric?
00:59:06.960 --> 00:59:09.796
ERIC: What little company
with no product on the market
00:59:09.879 --> 00:59:13.049
gets two federal agencies
to talk to each other
00:59:13.132 --> 00:59:14.467
in the most productive way?
00:59:14.550 --> 00:59:18.137
It was incredible.
It is incredible.
00:59:18.221 --> 00:59:20.974
Food is regulated by the US
Food and Drug Administration,
00:59:21.057 --> 00:59:24.310
and it's about 85% of
the domestic food supply.
00:59:24.394 --> 00:59:27.981
And then the remainder
is largely under the USDA.
00:59:29.857 --> 00:59:32.735
The US food system splits into,
for meat and poultry,
00:59:32.819 --> 00:59:35.280
animals that are alive
the FDA regulates,
00:59:35.363 --> 00:59:37.657
and then basically from
the moment of slaughter forward,
00:59:37.740 --> 00:59:40.201
the USDA regulates.
00:59:41.703 --> 00:59:42.912
DRIVER: [inaudible]
00:59:42.996 --> 00:59:45.957
ERIC: Uh, yeah, if you want to
pull up right here, that's fine.
00:59:49.002 --> 00:59:51.504
ERIC: We want to compete
on market with products
00:59:51.587 --> 00:59:52.880
that are safe and labelled,
00:59:52.964 --> 00:59:54.716
and then that's
where we want to be.
00:59:54.799 --> 00:59:56.926
And the way to get there,
the last hurdle,
00:59:57.010 --> 00:59:58.303
is the regulatory system.
00:59:58.386 --> 00:59:59.429
And that's why we're
putting so much energy
00:59:59.512 --> 01:00:00.972
into it right now.
01:00:01.055 --> 01:00:06.686
♪
01:00:06.769 --> 01:00:09.439
♪
01:00:09.522 --> 01:00:12.608
♪
01:00:12.692 --> 01:00:15.486
♪
01:00:15.570 --> 01:00:18.614
♪
01:00:18.698 --> 01:00:22.201
♪
01:00:22.285 --> 01:00:25.705
♪
01:00:25.788 --> 01:00:29.459
♪
01:00:29.542 --> 01:00:33.463
♪
01:00:33.546 --> 01:00:37.133
♪
01:00:37.216 --> 01:00:40.511
♪
01:00:40.595 --> 01:00:44.974
♪
01:00:45.058 --> 01:00:48.144
♪
01:00:48.227 --> 01:00:50.021
♪
01:00:50.104 --> 01:00:53.775
ERIC: So, we have jurisdiction
for both FDA and USDA.
01:00:53.858 --> 01:00:55.860
UMA: You've done
a fantastic job
01:00:55.943 --> 01:00:58.488
leading this effort
for Memphis Meats, so...
01:00:58.571 --> 01:01:01.824
I hope you take
a moment, pause,
01:01:01.908 --> 01:01:03.785
and recognize
it's a big milestone.
01:01:03.868 --> 01:01:06.079
ERIC: Yeah, I think
all these big moments happen
01:01:06.162 --> 01:01:08.998
and then we sort of like,
"Wait, did it just happen?"
01:01:09.082 --> 01:01:10.750
UMA: Right, yeah.
ERIC: We're just like, um...
01:01:10.833 --> 01:01:12.085
We have to, like,
pinch ourselves
01:01:12.168 --> 01:01:13.294
and make sure
it really happened.
01:01:13.378 --> 01:01:15.546
Like, that we finally
get to this end point.
01:01:15.630 --> 01:01:17.256
UMA: So, one thing
I was thinking of--
01:01:17.340 --> 01:01:18.549
what is next now for us?
01:01:18.633 --> 01:01:20.259
ERIC: Doesn't matter
how great our tech is,
01:01:20.343 --> 01:01:22.678
if we can't sell it
legally, who cares?
01:01:22.762 --> 01:01:24.430
UMA: Yeah.
ERIC: I think the next step is,
01:01:24.514 --> 01:01:26.057
one, we're working on
the pathway.
01:01:26.140 --> 01:01:27.517
But it could slow down.
01:01:27.600 --> 01:01:30.853
There's a possibility the
pathway negotiations stall,
01:01:30.937 --> 01:01:32.772
or if there's
congressional intervention,
01:01:32.855 --> 01:01:34.273
which is still lingering.
01:01:34.357 --> 01:01:36.901
We know that there's
language in the approps bill.
01:01:36.984 --> 01:01:39.821
So there is a chance
that this could still delay.
01:01:39.904 --> 01:01:41.531
I want to be
realistic about that.
01:01:41.614 --> 01:01:44.283
UMA: The risk, let's say
the pathway gets slowed,
01:01:44.367 --> 01:01:45.868
at least we have
a reasonable timeframe
01:01:45.952 --> 01:01:47.787
of getting onto the market.
We can continue
01:01:47.870 --> 01:01:50.748
to do technical development,
continue to lower cost,
01:01:50.832 --> 01:01:53.918
continue to increase scale,
and be ready for that moment.
01:01:54.001 --> 01:01:58.589
Okay, what would be
motivating factors for that?
01:01:58.673 --> 01:02:03.886
ERIC: Very successful
lobbying against us.
01:02:03.970 --> 01:02:06.556
UMA: Okay, so safety
and truthful labelling, right?
01:02:06.639 --> 01:02:07.723
ERIC: Correct.
01:02:07.807 --> 01:02:09.225
Those are the two legal
requirements for us.
01:02:09.308 --> 01:02:10.226
UMA: Yeah.
01:02:10.309 --> 01:02:12.728
This will be FDA
and this will be USDA.
01:02:12.812 --> 01:02:14.188
ERIC: The big unknown,
of course,
01:02:14.272 --> 01:02:15.731
is where inspections
will be split.
01:02:15.815 --> 01:02:17.775
Labelling is going to
be handled by USDA.
01:02:17.859 --> 01:02:19.360
We know that,
but we don't know how.
01:02:19.444 --> 01:02:21.654
So this is a bare bones
pathway right now.
01:02:21.737 --> 01:02:22.697
UMA: Okay.
01:02:22.780 --> 01:02:24.699
USDA comes in here...
01:02:24.782 --> 01:02:26.868
And the bio system
we're talking about,
01:02:26.951 --> 01:02:28.035
where's the bio system?
01:02:28.119 --> 01:02:29.704
Then this is the bio system
01:02:29.787 --> 01:02:33.583
where the animals cells
and the feed are growing.
01:02:33.666 --> 01:02:35.084
ERIC: They would do it
as part of a pre-market
01:02:35.168 --> 01:02:36.377
safety evaluation.
01:02:36.461 --> 01:02:39.547
So they'd evaluate the safety,
they'd inspect it,
01:02:39.630 --> 01:02:42.758
and then they would
check to make sure
01:02:42.842 --> 01:02:48.097
we're following our
inspections by ourselves.
01:02:48.181 --> 01:02:51.309
So they wouldn't come on site
and check regularly.
01:02:51.392 --> 01:02:52.351
UMA: Okay.
01:02:52.435 --> 01:02:53.603
ERIC: That's currently
what we're thinking.
01:02:53.686 --> 01:02:54.854
UMA: Yeah.
01:02:54.937 --> 01:02:56.439
AMANDA: I think we have--
there's a lot of fear
01:02:56.522 --> 01:02:58.691
around the intersection
of food and technology.
01:02:58.774 --> 01:03:00.776
We really want--
many of us want
01:03:00.860 --> 01:03:02.403
to go sort of
back to the land,
01:03:02.487 --> 01:03:06.324
and have our own little backyard
gardens and chicken coops
01:03:06.407 --> 01:03:07.909
and do it the way
that, you know,
01:03:07.992 --> 01:03:09.660
they did in
Little House on the Prairie.
01:03:09.744 --> 01:03:13.539
But that won't work to feed
9 billion, 10 billion people.
01:03:13.623 --> 01:03:15.917
And tech will have a role.
01:03:16.000 --> 01:03:19.462
The question is, what role,
and how can you do tech right?
01:03:19.545 --> 01:03:21.088
UMA: Hey there.
AMANDA: Hi, Uma!
01:03:21.172 --> 01:03:22.673
UMA: Hey, Amanda, how are you?
AMANDA: How are you?
01:03:22.757 --> 01:03:23.883
Good to see you
after all this.
01:03:23.966 --> 01:03:25.051
UMA: Yeah, likewise.
AMANDA: It's so nice.
01:03:25.134 --> 01:03:26.219
UMA: So, what's the schedule?
01:03:26.302 --> 01:03:28.221
DAVID: Yeah, so I think
in the interest of time,
01:03:28.304 --> 01:03:30.515
we should probably start heading
over to the R&D facility.
01:03:30.598 --> 01:03:31.557
AMANDA: Okay.
01:03:31.641 --> 01:03:33.059
DAVID: Should we start
heading over this way?
01:03:33.142 --> 01:03:34.685
UMA: Yeah, so what
we believe in is,
01:03:34.769 --> 01:03:36.938
it starts with the consumers and
ends with the consumers, right?
01:03:37.021 --> 01:03:39.398
So they have to get behind it.
And we want to get this right,
01:03:39.482 --> 01:03:40.691
as opposed to being
first to market.
01:03:40.775 --> 01:03:43.486
First to market, you know,
sounds really exciting to do,
01:03:43.569 --> 01:03:46.072
but doing the most
desirable product that
01:03:46.155 --> 01:03:50.952
consumers love
is what we're trying to do.
01:03:51.035 --> 01:03:52.411
UMA: Hey, guys.
Good morning.
01:03:52.495 --> 01:03:53.829
AMANDA: Hi.
KC: Hi, how are you?
01:03:53.913 --> 01:03:54.914
AMANDA: Nice to meet you.
01:03:54.997 --> 01:03:56.290
KC: Yeah, nice
to meet you as well.
01:03:56.374 --> 01:03:58.334
UMA: KC is our vice president
of process development
01:03:58.417 --> 01:04:01.045
and has enormous experience
in growing cells
01:04:01.128 --> 01:04:02.672
at very, very large quantities.
01:04:02.755 --> 01:04:05.841
KC: I've been growing
cells for a long time,
01:04:05.925 --> 01:04:08.219
and it never dawned on me
to eat them, ever.
01:04:08.302 --> 01:04:12.598
So it's a little bit of a shift,
but it's so exciting,
01:04:12.682 --> 01:04:14.267
because the things
that we've been learning
01:04:14.350 --> 01:04:16.602
for decades all totally apply.
01:04:16.686 --> 01:04:18.771
AMANDA: And this is the brew.
This is the special broth.
01:04:18.854 --> 01:04:20.189
KC: Yeah, this is
an example of it, yeah.
01:04:20.273 --> 01:04:21.524
UMA: It's the super food.
KC: Yeah.
01:04:21.607 --> 01:04:23.276
AMANDA: This is a super food,
the cellular super food.
01:04:23.359 --> 01:04:24.777
And it's a nice lavender...
01:04:24.860 --> 01:04:26.404
UMA: Why don't we walk
over to the next spot?
01:04:26.487 --> 01:04:27.780
AMANDA: Let's do that.
01:04:27.863 --> 01:04:29.115
DAVID: Maybe you should
actually do that now.
01:04:29.198 --> 01:04:30.616
UMA: Okay, let's just
walk over there.
01:04:30.700 --> 01:04:33.619
AMANDA: Thank goodness
David is keeping us on time.
01:04:33.703 --> 01:04:35.871
'Cause, you know,
I'm really showing restraint.
01:04:35.955 --> 01:04:37.707
I have a lot of
other questions.
01:04:37.790 --> 01:04:40.585
UMA: Um, this lab is
just being set up now.
01:04:40.668 --> 01:04:42.295
There will be a lot of
automation units in there.
01:04:42.378 --> 01:04:44.797
There's some-- they're called
liquid-handling robots.
01:04:44.880 --> 01:04:47.258
That means they're handling the
feed that KC is working with.
01:04:47.341 --> 01:04:49.969
AMANDA: Did you say
"liquid-handling robots"?
01:04:50.052 --> 01:04:52.096
UMA: I'll take you
around, and...
01:04:52.179 --> 01:04:54.390
When we first started,
we were only producing
01:04:54.473 --> 01:04:56.809
very small quantities
where, you know,
01:04:56.892 --> 01:04:58.477
you can make a meatball
out of it.
01:04:58.561 --> 01:05:02.481
Now, since then, we can pretty
much grow as much as we need
01:05:02.565 --> 01:05:04.150
for our tasting
and testing purposes.
01:05:04.233 --> 01:05:08.571
So we can do several pounds
of, you know, meat production
01:05:08.654 --> 01:05:11.198
and testing at this point,
but the goal is to be able
01:05:11.282 --> 01:05:13.826
to say, can we scale up
to a few thousand pounds?
01:05:13.909 --> 01:05:17.413
[sizzling]
01:05:17.496 --> 01:05:19.165
UMA: [inaudible]
01:05:19.248 --> 01:05:21.667
MORGAN: There we go.
01:05:21.751 --> 01:05:25.004
Trying to get it
just nice and seared.
01:05:25.087 --> 01:05:28.841
[sizzling]
01:05:28.924 --> 01:05:33.721
[sizzling]
01:05:40.186 --> 01:05:41.187
UMA: Let's see.
01:05:41.270 --> 01:05:43.022
If you want to quickly
take a picture?
01:05:43.105 --> 01:05:44.940
AMANDA: This feels...
this feel about
01:05:45.024 --> 01:05:48.361
as low-risk a food
as I have ever eaten.
01:05:48.444 --> 01:05:51.697
Even if I just signed
a high-risk agreement.
01:05:51.781 --> 01:05:56.285
UMA: You're not eating anything
that I'm not eating, so...
01:05:56.369 --> 01:06:01.540
You're eating meat
that comes from cells
01:06:01.624 --> 01:06:04.543
from a very high-quality animal.
01:06:04.627 --> 01:06:06.629
This is still
an early-stage product.
01:06:06.712 --> 01:06:10.549
But I just want to make sure
you're looking at this
01:06:10.633 --> 01:06:13.761
as a very big historic
thing in this world.
01:06:13.844 --> 01:06:18.182
So I'm anxious to see
what you think about it.
01:06:18.265 --> 01:06:19.350
See...
AMANDA: Wow!
01:06:19.433 --> 01:06:21.102
UMA: It's really, you know...
01:06:21.185 --> 01:06:25.231
See all the fibres in there;
see the browning of the skin.
01:06:25.314 --> 01:06:26.357
As you pull apart--
01:06:26.440 --> 01:06:27.650
you know,
meat's hard to pull apart,
01:06:27.733 --> 01:06:29.485
because it's got those
features and those proteins
01:06:29.568 --> 01:06:32.446
and the elasticity,
which is...
01:06:37.952 --> 01:06:40.329
AMANDA: That is meat.
UMA: [laughs]
01:06:40.413 --> 01:06:43.916
AMANDA: That is duck meat.
01:06:43.999 --> 01:06:48.879
It's delicious!
01:07:01.100 --> 01:07:04.228
AMANDA: It's got
all the stringiness of...
01:07:04.311 --> 01:07:09.191
you know, the strands
of muscle, which...
01:07:09.275 --> 01:07:12.778
that's something you don't get
in plant-based meats, of course,
01:07:12.862 --> 01:07:14.405
and you don't
get that resistance,
01:07:14.488 --> 01:07:15.865
the chew resistance.
01:07:15.948 --> 01:07:18.534
I mean, the chew is very chewy.
UMA: Yes.
01:07:18.617 --> 01:07:22.246
AMANDA: Very...
It's very meaty. [laughs]
01:07:22.329 --> 01:07:24.832
Wow.
Um, amazing.
01:07:28.169 --> 01:07:31.964
UMA: We don't take a very
long time to grow meat, right?
01:07:32.047 --> 01:07:34.759
So if you have
to think about a cow
01:07:34.842 --> 01:07:37.178
from conception
all the way to slaughter
01:07:37.261 --> 01:07:38.888
at the age of
18 to 24 months,
01:07:38.971 --> 01:07:40.890
the whole process
is about 2.5 years.
01:07:40.973 --> 01:07:44.351
For us to grow beef
it takes about four weeks,
01:07:44.435 --> 01:07:46.812
at the most six weeks.
01:07:46.896 --> 01:07:48.272
AMANDA: So, tell me
about your inputs.
01:07:48.355 --> 01:07:50.149
I mean, and this gets to
the bovine growth serum
01:07:50.232 --> 01:07:52.318
and also the, um...
01:07:52.401 --> 01:07:53.861
and the environmental
implications, right?
01:07:53.944 --> 01:07:54.945
UMA: Yes, yeah.
01:07:55.029 --> 01:07:57.490
So, in the early parts
of research in this area,
01:07:57.573 --> 01:07:59.533
the supply chain includes serum.
01:07:59.617 --> 01:08:02.119
And when we think
about scaling this up,
01:08:02.203 --> 01:08:04.997
we cannot have a supply chain
that is going to have serum.
01:08:05.080 --> 01:08:07.249
That's why we want to
separate out serum
01:08:07.333 --> 01:08:09.210
from meat production.
AMANDA: Mm-hm.
01:08:09.293 --> 01:08:11.170
UMA: Or blood from
meat production,
01:08:11.253 --> 01:08:13.005
and have our own feed for it.
01:08:13.088 --> 01:08:15.758
So that's the process
we are working out,
01:08:15.841 --> 01:08:17.718
and we've developed
a full end-to-end method
01:08:17.802 --> 01:08:21.639
of growing cells
without any serum at all.
01:08:21.722 --> 01:08:24.016
For us to put
products on the market
01:08:24.099 --> 01:08:27.812
completely animal-free,
it's going to take a while.
01:08:27.895 --> 01:08:30.064
There are still parts of
our research that depend
01:08:30.147 --> 01:08:33.818
on getting that serum in, to
understand how these cells grow.
01:08:33.901 --> 01:08:35.277
AMANDA: Yeah, I guess
I'm wondering,
01:08:35.361 --> 01:08:36.654
so, for the carbohydrate,
for example, like,
01:08:36.737 --> 01:08:40.491
are you actually using some
kind of carbohydrate source?
01:08:40.574 --> 01:08:42.243
You know, for example,
some grain?
01:08:42.326 --> 01:08:45.412
Or, I mean, are there actual
sort of recognizable ingredients
01:08:45.496 --> 01:08:47.456
that go into the production?
UMA: 100%.
01:08:47.540 --> 01:08:48.791
They're all recognizable.
01:08:48.874 --> 01:08:50.709
They're already in
the current feed system.
01:08:50.793 --> 01:08:53.879
It's still proprietary
what kinds of feeds
01:08:53.963 --> 01:08:55.589
that we're using, because
we're trying to break it down
01:08:55.673 --> 01:08:58.092
and saying, "Okay, what
is the most efficient source
01:08:58.175 --> 01:08:59.802
"of carbohydrate feeds?"
01:08:59.885 --> 01:09:02.263
AMANDA: So it might be
some crop that we recognize?
01:09:02.346 --> 01:09:04.265
UMA: Right.
Yeah, yeah, 100%.
01:09:04.348 --> 01:09:06.433
AMANDA: Okay, so it's,
you know, maybe--
01:09:06.517 --> 01:09:09.186
might include some amount
of corn or soy or something.
01:09:09.270 --> 01:09:10.604
UMA: Yeah.
01:09:10.688 --> 01:09:13.148
AMANDA: I just want to address
that this is an important point.
01:09:13.232 --> 01:09:15.526
It doesn't mean that we're
going to stop growing corn
01:09:15.609 --> 01:09:18.612
just because
we stop growing cows.
01:09:18.696 --> 01:09:19.989
UMA: Right.
01:09:20.072 --> 01:09:23.033
There are estimates of
40% to 50% of land being used
01:09:23.117 --> 01:09:24.952
to grow crops to feed animals.
01:09:25.035 --> 01:09:26.662
We'll still need crops,
like you said,
01:09:26.745 --> 01:09:29.039
but it's not even close
to the degree that we need
01:09:29.123 --> 01:09:31.625
for keeping a, you know,
very, very large herd
01:09:31.709 --> 01:09:33.711
of 70 billion animals
on this planet.
01:09:33.794 --> 01:09:36.547
Keep in mind, you're seeing
very small-scale production
01:09:36.630 --> 01:09:39.675
at this point, and as we start
thinking about scaling this up,
01:09:39.758 --> 01:09:43.721
one of the big areas of
innovation that we'll start
01:09:43.804 --> 01:09:45.806
seeing is decreasing
the environmental impact,
01:09:45.890 --> 01:09:47.850
or decreasing
the environmental footprint.
01:09:47.933 --> 01:09:50.686
UMA: It also makes me feel like
that is the reason we are here,
01:09:50.769 --> 01:09:53.480
to solve this problem,
so... it keeps us going.
01:09:53.564 --> 01:09:55.316
AMANDA: Biomimesis, right?
01:09:55.399 --> 01:10:00.112
You're listening and learning
from the animal.
01:10:00.195 --> 01:10:03.157
UMA: There's a pretty
intense need to innovate
01:10:03.240 --> 01:10:06.660
how we produce food.
01:10:06.744 --> 01:10:11.206
[machine chugging]
01:10:17.212 --> 01:10:21.926
♪
01:10:22.009 --> 01:10:24.762
♪
01:10:24.845 --> 01:10:27.014
UMA: Almost everything we are
doing in terms of innovation
01:10:27.097 --> 01:10:29.600
is to do more with less,
01:10:29.683 --> 01:10:33.604
and that's really foundational
to all the conversations
01:10:33.687 --> 01:10:39.234
on climate that are happening.
01:10:39.318 --> 01:10:40.569
And, for instance,
01:10:40.653 --> 01:10:43.697
our idea is to be able
to grow more food,
01:10:43.781 --> 01:10:46.450
more nutrient-dense food
01:10:46.533 --> 01:10:49.995
with less resources
to get a pound of meat.
01:10:50.079 --> 01:10:53.415
♪
01:10:53.499 --> 01:10:57.002
♪
01:10:57.086 --> 01:11:01.423
♪
01:11:01.507 --> 01:11:06.303
♪
01:11:06.387 --> 01:11:08.430
UMA: Our target
is to be able to say
01:11:08.514 --> 01:11:11.684
we could use almost
ten times less land,
01:11:11.767 --> 01:11:13.811
almost ten times less water,
01:11:13.894 --> 01:11:17.940
and less deforestation.
01:11:18.023 --> 01:11:20.943
And all of these have
a direct impact on climate,
01:11:21.026 --> 01:11:24.530
the amount of CO2
that is released.
01:11:24.613 --> 01:11:28.534
♪
01:11:28.617 --> 01:11:32.204
♪
01:11:32.287 --> 01:11:35.165
♪
01:11:35.249 --> 01:11:36.625
UMA: There is no
methane production
01:11:36.709 --> 01:11:38.252
when you're growing cells.
01:11:38.335 --> 01:11:41.338
When you culture cells,
the cells are basically--
01:11:41.422 --> 01:11:43.590
it's oxygen and carbon dioxide
exchange that's happening.
01:11:43.674 --> 01:11:45.509
Methane doesn't
come into the picture.
01:11:45.592 --> 01:11:47.469
So we don't expect
to have methane
01:11:47.553 --> 01:11:50.556
in our production process
as we scale up.
01:11:50.639 --> 01:11:54.059
♪
01:11:54.143 --> 01:11:56.937
♪
01:11:59.857 --> 01:12:01.358
[dog barking]
01:12:05.362 --> 01:12:07.531
MRUNALINI: So, I'm gonna make
some pancakes for breakfast.
01:12:07.614 --> 01:12:08.782
UMA: Okay.
MRUNALINI: Is that good?
01:12:08.866 --> 01:12:10.409
UMA: Um, blueberries?
01:12:10.492 --> 01:12:12.828
MRUNALINI: I have some
blueberries and blackberries.
01:12:12.911 --> 01:12:14.705
Do you want coffee?
01:12:14.788 --> 01:12:15.998
UMA: Um, sure, yeah.
01:12:16.081 --> 01:12:18.000
MRUNALINI: Or you want decaf?
UMA: You have a decaf?
01:12:18.083 --> 01:12:19.668
MRUNALINI: Sure.
01:12:19.752 --> 01:12:21.712
UMA: Um, bananas?
MRUNALINI: I'll cut them.
01:12:21.795 --> 01:12:24.715
UMA: Okay.
01:12:24.798 --> 01:12:27.217
It's turning out nicely too.
01:12:28.552 --> 01:12:30.262
This is from...
01:12:31.680 --> 01:12:35.434
MRUNALINI: So, I'm leaving
on Sunday for Minneapolis.
01:12:35.517 --> 01:12:37.519
UMA: Okay, yeah.
MRUNALINI: So you have a lot of
01:12:37.603 --> 01:12:39.313
late meetings this week.
UMA: Yeah.
01:12:39.396 --> 01:12:41.690
MRUNALINI: Can you not
do that next week, please?
01:12:41.774 --> 01:12:44.568
Make sure that you get home
at a decent hour so that
01:12:44.651 --> 01:12:46.653
you can spend some time
with the kids in the evening.
01:12:46.737 --> 01:12:48.322
UMA: Yeah.
I actually told Jerry
01:12:48.405 --> 01:12:51.075
to have me out
every day by 5:30 or 6,
01:12:51.158 --> 01:12:54.203
so I should be home
pretty early.
01:12:54.286 --> 01:12:55.871
UMA: When I moved
to the Bay area,
01:12:55.954 --> 01:12:57.998
of course my family
was still living in Minnesota,
01:12:58.082 --> 01:13:00.876
and the kids were
going to school there.
01:13:00.959 --> 01:13:02.669
MRUNALINI: Thank you
for making breakfast.
01:13:02.753 --> 01:13:05.756
UMA: Mrunalini had her
paediatric practice there,
01:13:05.839 --> 01:13:09.093
and it was not easy.
01:13:09.176 --> 01:13:12.012
But ultimately being able
to move the family here,
01:13:12.096 --> 01:13:13.889
and just having...
01:13:13.972 --> 01:13:17.101
just being able to
talk to them every day,
01:13:17.184 --> 01:13:21.814
and seeing them, I think has
completely changed my life.
01:13:21.897 --> 01:13:24.900
Just having the opportunity
for us all to, as a family,
01:13:24.983 --> 01:13:27.277
spend time under one roof
01:13:27.361 --> 01:13:29.822
as we are going after this
01:13:29.905 --> 01:13:33.575
very big idea in this world...
01:13:33.659 --> 01:13:35.119
I'm just very grateful.
01:13:35.202 --> 01:13:37.704
UMA: I actually brought
some mock-up boxes of our--
01:13:37.788 --> 01:13:39.373
what packaging could look like.
01:13:41.041 --> 01:13:43.293
MRUNALINI: Is it gonna be like
vacuum, like, you know,
01:13:43.377 --> 01:13:45.754
that seal thing,
so you can...
01:13:45.838 --> 01:13:48.006
UMA: Yeah, so people can
see what they're buying.
01:13:48.090 --> 01:13:49.633
And this is the beef.
01:13:49.716 --> 01:13:51.760
MRUNALINI: I like it.
01:13:51.844 --> 01:13:53.971
I like this,
"Made with love in California."
01:13:54.054 --> 01:13:57.599
MRUNALINI: When I think about
the "why" of what we're doing,
01:13:57.683 --> 01:14:01.353
it's not a product;
it's much more than that.
01:14:01.436 --> 01:14:04.940
It's about the way that we
want the future world to look.
01:14:05.023 --> 01:14:08.861
And that's what drives
and motivates Uma every day.
01:14:08.944 --> 01:14:11.697
He has two hats
going at all times.
01:14:11.780 --> 01:14:15.159
It's the "what,"
like, what will it look like,
01:14:15.242 --> 01:14:16.952
but the "why" and the "how."
01:14:17.035 --> 01:14:18.495
UMA: The ingredients,
it says "cell-based"
01:14:18.579 --> 01:14:21.832
or "grown from cells,"
and salt, spices.
01:14:21.915 --> 01:14:23.417
MRUNALINI: Yeah,
that's what it says here.
01:14:23.500 --> 01:14:25.335
"Chicken, cell-based,
sea salt, spices,
01:14:25.419 --> 01:14:27.379
"including chipotle pepper."
01:14:27.462 --> 01:14:28.589
UMA: And same thing here.
01:14:28.672 --> 01:14:32.176
Of course, right, we need
to get labelling approved
01:14:32.259 --> 01:14:34.720
and all of the
materials approved,
01:14:34.803 --> 01:14:37.806
but this is
what we're thinking.
01:14:37.890 --> 01:14:39.975
We've gotta be
open to innovation
01:14:40.058 --> 01:14:41.852
and open to conversations,
01:14:41.935 --> 01:14:44.688
but also keep the focus
on which particular one
01:14:44.771 --> 01:14:46.648
will we bring forward
at the next step,
01:14:46.732 --> 01:14:48.734
knowing that
this is not a race,
01:14:48.817 --> 01:14:50.694
it's not going to be
a one-and-done,
01:14:50.777 --> 01:14:53.530
and that we'll be
doing it in sequence.
01:14:53.614 --> 01:14:56.241
So our focus is
entirely on scale.
01:14:56.325 --> 01:14:58.577
Like, we've got to
produce it at a scale
01:14:58.660 --> 01:15:02.039
that is meaningful.
01:15:02.122 --> 01:15:06.084
[inaudible conversation]
01:15:06.168 --> 01:15:08.086
KC: So this is just
about 70,000 square feet.
01:15:08.170 --> 01:15:09.421
MAN: Yeah.
KC: Rentable space here.
01:15:09.505 --> 01:15:10.672
MAN: Rentable.
KC: Yeah.
01:15:10.756 --> 01:15:12.716
UMA: So, this is
a 70,000-square-footprint,
01:15:12.799 --> 01:15:14.301
and the height is...
01:15:14.384 --> 01:15:17.596
STEVE: It will easily cost us
tens of millions of dollars
01:15:17.679 --> 01:15:21.850
to get this first production
facility up and running.
01:15:21.934 --> 01:15:25.103
The goal is not just to
make the meat in this facility,
01:15:25.187 --> 01:15:27.105
but also to have it
be a showcase
01:15:27.189 --> 01:15:30.692
for future facilities
and for partners who can join us
01:15:30.776 --> 01:15:32.986
and build out their own
production capacity
01:15:33.070 --> 01:15:35.239
in their facilities
using their capital.
01:15:35.322 --> 01:15:37.991
So it serves a lot of purposes
beyond just the meat.
01:15:38.075 --> 01:15:39.952
But it will not come cheap.
01:15:40.035 --> 01:15:42.996
It's a really heavy lift
that we're taking on here.
01:15:43.080 --> 01:15:44.915
MAN: There's a service elevator
that will take you down...
01:15:44.998 --> 01:15:46.750
KC: Yes.
MAN: ...that gives you access
01:15:46.833 --> 01:15:48.543
back down on the ground floor.
01:15:48.627 --> 01:15:50.128
KC: And if I wanted
a fireman pole?
01:15:50.212 --> 01:15:51.505
[laughter]
01:15:51.588 --> 01:15:52.798
MAN: You could
use that same one.
01:15:52.881 --> 01:15:54.091
UMA: So, these are
high ceilings, okay.
01:15:54.174 --> 01:15:55.717
KC: Yeah, so this is
a lot bigger.
01:15:55.801 --> 01:15:56.718
UMA: Oh, nice.
01:15:56.802 --> 01:15:58.136
This is more than 24 feet,
it looks like.
01:15:58.220 --> 01:15:59.513
Oh, maybe it's 24.
KC: Yeah.
01:15:59.596 --> 01:16:01.765
So this is 20,000
square feet here
01:16:01.848 --> 01:16:04.309
where you could do
the manufacturing operations.
01:16:04.393 --> 01:16:06.103
UMA: Okay.
01:16:06.186 --> 01:16:09.398
KC: And so you could
have a flow of...
01:16:09.481 --> 01:16:10.941
basically follow the process
01:16:11.024 --> 01:16:14.569
from an area
with your raw materials,
01:16:14.653 --> 01:16:17.030
your media preparation,
01:16:17.114 --> 01:16:18.907
provide all the nutrients
for the cells,
01:16:18.991 --> 01:16:22.911
back in to the bioprocessing
suite, harvest,
01:16:22.995 --> 01:16:24.997
and then to
the food formulation space.
01:16:25.080 --> 01:16:29.668
So you could follow a U-shaped
thing here for the process
01:16:29.751 --> 01:16:30.711
all the way around.
01:16:30.794 --> 01:16:32.337
It could be really nice.
01:16:34.715 --> 01:16:36.216
NICK: Our paradigm
for production
01:16:36.300 --> 01:16:38.218
will continue to evolve,
01:16:38.302 --> 01:16:42.597
but this seems like the most
accessible, relevant next step
01:16:42.681 --> 01:16:46.101
for translating from our...
KC: Yeah, it's a launching pad.
01:16:46.184 --> 01:16:47.352
MAN: Yeah.
UMA: It's always...
01:16:47.436 --> 01:16:49.938
KC: It's a launching pad.
It's transformative.
01:16:50.022 --> 01:16:51.815
KC: Having it all right here,
locally sourced...
01:16:51.898 --> 01:16:52.941
UMA: Yes.
01:16:53.025 --> 01:16:54.776
Locally sourced,
locally produced,
01:16:54.860 --> 01:16:56.612
locally distributed,
how's that?
01:16:56.695 --> 01:16:57.738
KC: Yeah.
Amazing.
01:16:57.821 --> 01:16:59.448
UMA: That's what you're
going to build me, right?
01:16:59.531 --> 01:17:01.491
KC: I'm working on it,
I'm working on it, yeah.
01:17:01.575 --> 01:17:05.412
Yeah, and I think, you know,
it has the potential
01:17:05.495 --> 01:17:08.915
to also be that
transparent venue
01:17:08.999 --> 01:17:10.834
where people can
really understand
01:17:10.917 --> 01:17:12.294
how we're making meat.
01:17:12.377 --> 01:17:14.838
UMA: There were times
when Nick and I, like,
01:17:14.921 --> 01:17:16.298
the first six months
of the company
01:17:16.381 --> 01:17:18.091
looked at each other and said,
01:17:18.175 --> 01:17:19.843
"I don't know if anyone
will believe us,
01:17:19.926 --> 01:17:22.721
"and if we can actually take
this to a stage where we can
01:17:22.804 --> 01:17:26.183
"scale it to producing
meaningful amounts of meat."
01:17:26.266 --> 01:17:29.853
And, you know, Nick said
in one of those tough moments,
01:17:29.936 --> 01:17:31.188
"We've got to have faith."
01:17:31.271 --> 01:17:32.981
I still remember that day,
01:17:33.065 --> 01:17:35.609
because it was one of
my lowest moments.
01:17:35.692 --> 01:17:38.236
It was challenging to
get people to recognize it.
01:17:38.320 --> 01:17:42.616
It was impossible for people
to understand that this was...
01:17:42.699 --> 01:17:44.409
this needed a chance.
01:17:44.493 --> 01:17:49.247
♪
01:17:49.331 --> 01:17:53.210
♪
01:17:53.293 --> 01:17:56.088
JANE: The birth of
this game-changing industry
01:17:56.171 --> 01:17:58.590
is no longer science fiction.
01:17:58.673 --> 01:18:02.010
It's reality.
01:18:02.094 --> 01:18:07.182
The innovation of cell-cultured
meat, poultry, fish, and seafood
01:18:07.265 --> 01:18:10.560
is accelerating quickly
around the globe,
01:18:10.644 --> 01:18:15.982
with pioneers
on every continent.
01:18:16.066 --> 01:18:20.987
Our shared humanity depends on
this hopeful and rapid momentum
01:18:21.071 --> 01:18:26.118
towards a sustainable future
for us, the animals,
01:18:26.201 --> 01:18:28.954
and for our beautiful
Planet Earth.
01:18:29.037 --> 01:18:33.959
♪
01:18:34.042 --> 01:18:35.293
♪
01:18:35.377 --> 01:18:37.712
MORGAN: This is like
a classic kind of technique
01:18:37.796 --> 01:18:40.632
to get chicken nice and brown
without it getting dry.
01:18:40.715 --> 01:18:41.842
UMA: Oh, I see.
01:18:41.925 --> 01:18:45.804
MORGAN: Just kind of spooning
hot fats over the top.
01:18:45.887 --> 01:18:49.724
♪ Growing in numbers ♪
01:18:49.808 --> 01:18:51.643
♪ Growing in speed ♪
01:18:51.726 --> 01:18:53.728
MORGAN: We're just gonna
let it rest for a minute
01:18:53.812 --> 01:18:54.938
before we slice into it.
01:18:55.021 --> 01:18:58.650
♪ Can't fight the future ♪
01:18:58.733 --> 01:19:02.904
♪ Can't fight what I see ♪
01:19:02.988 --> 01:19:05.449
♪ People, they come together ♪
01:19:05.532 --> 01:19:07.534
UMA: There it is, Morgan.
Thanks for cooking it for us.
01:19:07.617 --> 01:19:11.121
♪ People, they fall apart ♪
01:19:11.204 --> 01:19:13.331
♪ No one can stop us now ♪
01:19:13.415 --> 01:19:15.083
UMA: Alright, cheers.
NICK: Cheers.
01:19:15.167 --> 01:19:16.668
[laughter]
01:19:16.751 --> 01:19:20.172
♪ 'Cause we are all
made of stars ♪
01:19:20.255 --> 01:19:24.509
♪ Efforts of lovers ♪
01:19:24.593 --> 01:19:26.636
[laughter]
MAN: Go for it, go for it.
01:19:26.720 --> 01:19:28.597
♪
01:19:28.680 --> 01:19:32.350
♪ I sing in the reaches ♪
01:19:32.434 --> 01:19:33.518
NICK: Mmm.
01:19:33.602 --> 01:19:37.063
[laughter]
01:19:37.147 --> 01:19:41.443
♪ People, they come together ♪
01:19:41.526 --> 01:19:42.903
UMA: Delicious.
01:19:42.986 --> 01:19:45.697
♪
01:19:45.780 --> 01:19:49.868
♪ No one can stop us now ♪
01:19:49.951 --> 01:19:52.621
UMA: Everybody can come
and start taking pieces.
01:19:52.704 --> 01:19:54.581
Go for it, Jill.
01:19:54.664 --> 01:19:58.585
♪ People, they come together ♪
01:19:58.668 --> 01:20:01.713
♪ People, they fall apart ♪
01:20:04.216 --> 01:20:05.759
MAN: So good.
DANIELLE: So good.
01:20:05.842 --> 01:20:07.677
MAN: We did a great job.
01:20:07.761 --> 01:20:10.096
The texture is on point.
01:20:10.180 --> 01:20:13.099
[inaudible conversation]
01:20:13.183 --> 01:20:16.102
MAN: Go, team.
01:20:16.186 --> 01:20:17.562
Go, team!
01:20:17.646 --> 01:20:22.359
♪
01:20:22.442 --> 01:20:24.694
♪
01:20:24.778 --> 01:20:28.740
[inaudible conversation]
01:20:28.823 --> 01:20:33.745
♪
01:20:33.828 --> 01:20:38.875
♪
01:20:38.959 --> 01:20:43.838
♪
01:20:43.922 --> 01:20:46.174
♪
01:20:46.258 --> 01:20:49.970
♪ Slowly rebuilding ♪
01:20:50.053 --> 01:20:54.391
♪ I feel it in me ♪
01:20:54.474 --> 01:20:58.645
♪ Growing in numbers ♪
01:20:58.728 --> 01:21:02.941
♪ Growing in peace ♪
01:21:03.024 --> 01:21:07.153
♪ People, they come together ♪
01:21:07.237 --> 01:21:11.449
♪ People, they fall apart ♪
01:21:11.533 --> 01:21:15.662
♪ No one can stop us now ♪
01:21:15.745 --> 01:21:20.041
♪ 'Cause we are all
made of stars ♪
01:21:20.125 --> 01:21:24.296
♪ People, they come together ♪
01:21:24.379 --> 01:21:28.633
♪ People, they fall apart ♪
01:21:28.717 --> 01:21:32.846
♪ No one can stop us now ♪
01:21:32.929 --> 01:21:37.225
♪ 'Cause we are all
made of stars ♪
01:21:37.309 --> 01:21:41.438
♪ People, they come together ♪
01:21:41.521 --> 01:21:45.734
♪ People, they fall apart ♪
01:21:45.817 --> 01:21:49.946
♪ No one can stop us now ♪
01:21:50.030 --> 01:21:54.367
♪ 'Cause we are all
made of stars ♪
01:21:54.451 --> 01:21:58.622
♪ People, they come together ♪
01:21:58.705 --> 01:22:02.917
♪ People, they fall apart ♪
01:22:03.001 --> 01:22:07.213
♪ No one can stop us now ♪
01:22:07.297 --> 01:22:11.426
♪ 'Cause we are all
made of stars ♪
01:22:11.509 --> 01:22:15.722
♪ People, they come together ♪
01:22:15.805 --> 01:22:20.101
♪ People, they fall apart ♪
01:22:20.185 --> 01:22:24.230
♪ No one can stop us now ♪
01:22:24.314 --> 01:22:28.568
♪ 'Cause we are all
made of stars ♪
01:22:28.652 --> 01:22:32.906
♪ People, they come together ♪
01:22:32.989 --> 01:22:37.202
♪ People, they fall apart ♪
01:22:37.285 --> 01:22:41.498
♪ No one can stop us now ♪
01:22:41.581 --> 01:22:45.752
♪ 'Cause we are all
made of stars ♪
01:22:45.835 --> 01:22:50.090
♪ 'Cause we are all
made of stars ♪
01:22:50.173 --> 01:22:54.344
♪ 'Cause we are all
made of stars ♪
01:22:54.427 --> 01:22:58.598
♪ 'Cause we are all
made of stars ♪
01:22:58.682 --> 01:23:02.852
♪ 'Cause we are all
made of stars ♪
01:23:02.936 --> 01:23:07.107
♪ 'Cause we are all
made of stars ♪
01:23:07.190 --> 01:23:11.403
♪ 'Cause we are all
made of stars ♪
01:23:11.486 --> 01:23:15.573
♪ 'Cause we are all
made of stars ♪
01:23:15.657 --> 01:23:20.036
♪ 'Cause we are all
made of stars ♪
01:23:20.120 --> 01:23:24.249
♪ 'Cause we are all
made of stars ♪
01:23:24.332 --> 01:23:28.586
♪ 'Cause we are all
made of stars ♪
01:23:28.670 --> 01:23:34.342
♪
01:23:34.426 --> 01:23:36.845
UMA: We just grew the part
that we wanted to eat.
01:23:36.928 --> 01:23:40.014
This is what Winston Churchill
was talking about in 1931.
01:23:40.098 --> 01:23:42.434
I should remember
the exact quote.
01:23:42.517 --> 01:23:45.937
"We shall escape the absurdity
of growing a whole chicken
01:23:46.020 --> 01:23:48.273
"in order to eat
the breast or wing
01:23:48.356 --> 01:23:49.816
"by growing these parts
separately
01:23:49.899 --> 01:23:51.818
"under a suitable medium."
01:23:51.901 --> 01:23:54.446
That's exactly what we all did.
01:23:54.529 --> 01:23:55.905
Alright!
Distributor: Bullfrog Films
Length: 88 minutes
Date: 2021
Genre: Expository
Language: English
Grade: 10-12, College, Adults
Color/BW:
Closed Captioning: Available
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