Key Points

Benedict Cumberbatch has called out Hollywood for its excessive waste, particularly in food consumption during extreme actor diets. He criticized the industry’s unsustainable practices, from set builds to energy use. The actor advocates for greener initiatives, despite pushback from critics. His comments highlight broader concerns about environmental responsibility in entertainment.

Key Points: Benedict Cumberbatch Slams Hollywood as Wasteful Industry

  • Cumberbatch condemns Hollywood's food waste during extreme diets
  • Highlights unsustainable set builds and energy use
  • Advocates for green initiatives on film sets
  • Faces criticism for speaking on climate issues
3 min read

Benedict Cumberbatch calls Hollywood grossly wasteful industry, here is why

Benedict Cumberbatch criticizes Hollywood's food waste and unsustainable practices, calling it a "grossly wasteful industry" on Ruthie's Table 4 podcast.

"I could feed a family with the amount I'm eating. – Benedict Cumberbatch"

Washington DC, July 23

Actor Benedict Cumberbatch called out Hollywood for being a "grossly wasteful industry," specifically when it comes to food waste, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

Recently, he appeared on Ruthie's Table 4 podcast, where he discussed seeing wastefulness firsthand, such as the strict diet he had to follow to undergo a "body transformation" for his role as Doctor Strange in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

Although Cumberbatch shared that he likes the physical transformation aspect of his job, he also recalled having to eat five meals a day to meet his calorie intake goal, in addition to snacks like boiled eggs, crackers, almonds and cheese, which he called "horrific."

"The exercise is great, and the end result is that you feel strong and you feel confident. You hold yourself better. You have the stamina to endure the exercise and the food that enables you to last through the gig. But it is horrific," he shared, adding, "I don't like it personally. I think it's horrific, eating beyond your appetite," as per the outlet.

Cumberbatch added, "Going back to responsibility and resourcefulness and sustainability, it's just like, what am I doing? I could feed a family with the amount I'm eating."

However, the actor said that it's not just food waste that makes the film and television business a "grossly wasteful industry," according to The Hollywood Reporter.

"Think about set builds that aren't recycled, think about transport, think about food, think about housing, but also light and energy. The amount of wattage you need to create daylight and consistent light in a studio environment. It's a lot of energy," he said, as per the outlet.

Cumberbatch shared that actors regularly get criticised when they speak out on "climate and excessive use of things" in Hollywood. But as an actor and producer, that hasn't stopped him from trying to "push the green initiative" and sustainability on sets.

"Whether it's just a gentlemanly discussion about, 'Can we not have any single-use plastic? Really, I think we're beyond,'" he said. "You don't have to give the crew plastic bottles. If you're in the middle of a desert and you can't get glass bottles there, fair enough, but we're in the 21st century," as per The Hollywood Reporter.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
While I appreciate his concern, this feels hypocritical coming from someone who earned millions from those very movies. First reduce your own carbon footprint by taking fewer private jets, then lecture others.
A
Aryan K
Hollywood/Bollywood should learn from Indian weddings - we reuse decorations, donate leftover food to NGOs, and minimize waste. Our traditions have sustainable practices built in since ages!
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Sarah B
The food waste part really hits home. In India we have so many hungry people while film crews throw away untouched meals. Maybe they can partner with Robin Hood Army or similar organizations?
V
Vikram M
Good points but let's not forget Indian OTT platforms are becoming just as bad - multiple retakes wasting electricity, unnecessary location shoots abroad. Sustainability should be industry-wide policy.
N
Nisha Z
As a film student, I appreciate him raising this. We're taught to focus only on creative aspects, never about environmental impact. Need to change curriculum to include sustainable filmmaking practices.

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