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TrashTag

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TrashTag Challenge

TrashTag is an internet challenge and hashtag campaign where people clean up a heavily littered area, posting before and after photos with the hashtag #trashtag [1]

Examples and initiatives

Steven Reinhold started the TrashTag Challenge in 2015 after accidentally littering on a road trip. He vowed to gather 100 pieces of trash.[2] "On this road trip, we went to all these different national parks and we were basically geotagging the trash as we picked it up," Reinhold said. "At some point, we said 'why not hashtag it #trashtag?'" Reinhold partnered with UCO Gear and developed a cleanup ambassador program spreading the challenge in the outdoor community.[3]

Byron Roman, a Phoenix, Arizona, resident, reposted a picture on March 5, 2019, of a litter-strewn roadside area in Algeria along with an "after" shot of Drici Tani Younes posing with nine massive bags of trash, all stuffed to the brim in the middle of the freshly cleaned strip of dirt. The post went viral and was shared more than 300,000 times, prompting over fifty million new posts and imitators seeking to outdo Román or simply add to the impact of the #trashtag efforts. Trashtag has an estimated five million monthly participants.[4][5][6]

TrashTag cleanups have been held globally in cities, mountains, rivers, and beaches. They have ranged from Mount Everest to undersea diving excursions.[7][1] Cleanup challenges have been held globally including the United States, Algeria, Malaysia, Mexico, India, Nepal, Norway, Scotland, Taiwan, and China as well as being replicated in other languages such as "#basurachallenge" for Spanish.[8][9][10] As Talia Lakritz of Insider wrote, "It's more than just 'bored teens' who have done their part. People all over the world are collecting trash from outdoor spaces in their area."[11] National Cleanup Day maintains the website Trashtag.org to support people and organizations holding #Trashtag events.

National Cleanup Day, Keep America Beautiful, Ocean Conservancy, World Cleanup Day, and Earth Day advocate the Trashtag Challenge as a way to cleanup and keep the outdoors clean.[12][13][14][15]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "What Does trashtag Mean? | Pop Culture by Dictionary.com".
  2. ^ {https://www.snewsnet.com/press-release/ucos-trashtag-makes-a-major-comeback
  3. ^ On this road trip, we went to all these different national parks and we were basically geotagging the trash as we picked it up,” Reinhold said. “At some point, we said ‘why not hashtag it #trashtag?’”
  4. ^ "Trashtag". National CleanUp Day. Retrieved April 10, 2021.
  5. ^ carterg@themountaineer.com, Carter Giegerich. "#trashtag takes off". The Mountaineer.
  6. ^ Poulet, Maëva. "How the #Trashtag challenge got people all over the world picking up litter". The Observers.
  7. ^ "Trash tag challenge sweeping across China - People's Daily Online". en.people.cn.
  8. ^ [1][dead link]
  9. ^ Nace, Trevor. "#TrashTag Challenge Goes Viral As People Share Before/After Photos Of Their Cleanup". Forbes.
  10. ^ Vaillancourt, Cory. "Haywood County native behind '#trashtag' sensation". www.smokymountainnews.com.
  11. ^ Lakritz, Talia. "A new viral challenge for 'bored teens' is inspiring people to clean up trash in parks and beaches". Insider.
  12. ^ "Trashtag Challenge". National CleanUp Day.
  13. ^ "Interview with the Founder of #TrashTag, Steven Reinhold". Ocean Conservancy. March 18, 2019.
  14. ^ "How to do cleanups during the pandemic". Earth Day.
  15. ^ "Great Global Cleanup". cleanup.earthday.org.