
AARON TAYLOR KUFFNER (ZEMI 17)
THE YES MEN
(ANDY BICHLBAUM AND MIKE BONANNO)
GAMELATRON: Robotic Gamelan Orchestra
LOST FILM FEST w vj Scott Beibin
SCIENTISTS ARE THE NEW ROCKSTARS
ABORTO SIN PENA: ABORTION WITHOUT SHAME AND PENALTY
ART IS A WEAPON: with Eric Drooker
DISPATCHES FROM REBEL MEXICO: with Greg Berger
GRASSROOTS PR AND PUBLICITY FOR FILM AND BANDS
GUERRILLA AND VIRAL MARKETING FOR MISCHIEF MAKERS
GUERRILLA POSTER ART with Robbie Conal
ILLEGAL PUBLIC ART IN UNDER 5 MINUTES! with Monochrom
INSTITUTE FOR APPLIED AUTONOMY
THE MOUNTAINTOP REMOVAL ROAD SHOW
OBAMA'S IRAQ hosted by Rick Rowley of Big Noise Films
PANDEMIC PREVENTION: BIRD FLU AND OTHER EMERGING INFECTIOUS DISEASES with Dr. Michael Greger MD.
PUBLICITY AND PR FOR SOCIAL CAUSES with Mahdis Keshavarz
RHIZOME COLLECTIVE: A WORKING MODEL FOR SUSTAINABILITY
RUST - RADICAL URBAN SUSTAINABILITY TRAINING with Scott Kellogg
SCIENTISTS ARE THE NEW ROCKSTARS with VJ Scott Beibin
SELF-DISTRIBUTION FOR INDEPENDENT FILMMAKERS, MUSICIANS AND ARTISTS
THE BRICOLEUR EXPERIENCE with Shrine
THE HOW AND WHY OF EFFECTIVE ETHICAL MASS CAMPAIGNS with Scott Beibin
THE LATEST IN HUMAN NUTRITION with Dr. Michael Greger MD
THE SECRET BASES: EXPLORING THE PENTAGON'S "BLACK WORLD" with Trevor Paglen
TRACKING THE CIA'S TORTURE PLANES with Trevor Paglen
USING YOUR WITS TO WIN with Alan Abel
VEG MY RIDE with Rob Del Bueno
BEYOND THE WALLS: THE BATTLE FOR IRAQ'S FUTURE
BRAD: ONE MORE NIGHT AT THE BARRICADES
HOT AND BOTHERED: FEMINIST PORNOGRAPHY
POPAGANDA: THE ART AND CRIMES OF RON ENGLISH
SIERRA LEONE'S REFUGEE ALL STARS
STOKED: THE RISE AND FALL OF GATOR
TAQWACORE: THE BIRTH OF PUNK ISLAM
THE REVOLUTION WILL NOT BE TELEVISED
Keith and seven friends started Food Not Bombs in 1980 out of their collective house in Cambridge, MA. They participated in street performances with music, theater, puppets, literature, movies and food every week in Harvard Square, provided food to most of the housing projects and shelters in the Cambridge area, produced a free concert with free food in a park, organized and provided meals at protests all over the east coast. After eight years of serving free food and doing graphic arts work in Boston, Keith moved to San Francisco where he started a second Food Not Bombs group. Since then, Keith has been arrested over 100 times for serving free food in city parks and he has spent over 500 nights in jail. In 1995 Amnesty International and the United Nations Human Rights Commission joined thousands of supporter in working for his release. He faced 25 years to life after being framed under the California Three Strikes Law, because of his Food Not Bombs work. He also co-authored and illustrated the book Food Not Bombs: How to Feed the Hungry and Build Community which has sold more than 10,000 copies in four languages. The 20th Anniversary English edition was published in Tucson by See Sharp Press.
His work with Food Not Bombs also appeared in Amnesty International's Human Rights Report in 1995, No Trespassing by Anders Corr, Interviews With Icons by Lisa Law and in Howard Zinn's A People's History of the United States. There is a chapter about him in 50 American Revolutions You're Not Supposed to Know by Mickey Z and his work on the UnFree Trade Tour are detailed in Por el Reparto del Trabajo y la Riqueza by Jose Iglesias Fernandez published in Madrid, Spain. The movements Keith helped start are featured in a number of books including Recipes for Disaster CrimethInc. ex-Workers' Collective, Food Not Lawns, How to Turn Your Yard into a Garden and Your Neighborhood into a Community, by Heather Coburn Flores and The Revolution Will Not Be Microwaved: Inside America's Underground Food Movements by Sandor Ellix Katz. Keith's character has appeared in several novels including Walking to Mercury by Starhawk and Homes Not Jails by Michael Stienburg. He is also featured in a number of documentaries including The Art of Being Mayor by Steve Tobin, Flashing on the Sixties by Lisa Law and The Sidewalk Sector by Richard Kaplin. For the entire list of books visit the Food Not Bombs books webpage.
He was the recipient the 1999 Local Hero Award by the San Francisco Bay Guardian, Resister of the Year in 1995 and the Arizona Coalition to End Homelessness gave him the Advocate of the Year Award in 2006. Keith was also a pioneer in the Low powered FM radio movement and a co-founder of San Francisco Liberation Radio. He is a co-founder of the October 22nd No Police Brutality Day protests and he helped start Indymedia and the Homes Not Jails squatters' movement in the United States. He coined the term "freegan" while dumpster diving in Edmonton, Canada on the Rent Is Theft Tour. In 1997 Keith helped organize and participated in the UnFree Trade Tour of North America where the idea to shut down the World Trade Organization in Seattle was first proposed. He has been maintaining the Food Not Bombs web site since 1994 and he still updates many of the movement's publications. Keith has been touring the world helping start Food Not Bombs groups and supporting existing chapters. He is also writing a book about the movement and his travels will be part of a documentary filmed and produced by Australian journalist Liz Tadic. Liz featured Keith's work in Nigeria on SBS-TV's Dateline. In 2005 Keith was busy coordinating busloads of food and kitchen equipment to the areas devastated by Katrina. Also in 2005 NBC-TV reported that the Pentagon classified a 2004 protest Keith helped organize against torture as an on-going, creditable terrorist threat. According to internal government documents the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force has been investigating and disrupting Food Not Bombs groups in Arizona, California, Colorado, Texas, North Carolina and many other states. Keith's name was in a New York Times article where they published a U.S. State Department list of the 100 people who were not free to travel outside the country to attend protests. Even so he still travels often and has visited Food Not Bombs groups all over Europe, the Middle East, Africa and the Americas.
He is currently focusing his attention on building the Food Not Bombs movement, resisting domestic surveillance and political repression in the United States. He helped open the Taos Peace House and Infoshop volunteering with the local collective. He works on the Taos Food Not Lawns Community Garden and cooks each week with Taos Food Not Bombs. He enjoys swimming, riding his mountain bike, hiking, camping and cross country skiing. His main passion is painting, drawing, graphic design and illustration. You can see his art and learn more about Keith on the website below. Keith is also the co-founder of the Taos Peace House and Infoshop. He helps staff the peace house and works with events.
For booking availability and press inquiries:
Please contact Keith McHenry's speaker agents at the Evil Twin Booking Agency.
email: Liz Cole and Scott Beibin [ info (at) eviltwinbooking (dot) com ]
+1.215.473.0308 | eviltwinbooking.com
Keith Henry Speakers Bureau Food Not Bombs founder Speakers Bureau





















































