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Rob Thomas Talks About the Live Earth Run for Water

rob thomas live earth 2010

Rob Thomas performed Sunday morning April 18th at Atlanta's World of Coca-Cola following the 6K Dow Live Earth Run for Water Atlanta. Like all U.S. events, the Atlanta Run for Water benefits Global Water Challenge and included an educational water village including efforts from local nonprofit the Chattahoochee Riverkeeper.

Thomas was interviewed this week by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution:

Q. As a celebrity you must be asked to help many causes. What appealed to you about this one?

A. You do [get approached] and you try to fit in as many as you possibly can. As much as we talk about the effects of global warming and things which are really devastating, this crisis has been happening for a long time and it’s something that doesn’t get attention. I went to the doctor the other day and one of the things he said was wrong with me is that I don’t drink enough water. That’s such an easy thing to cure, but it’s not for millions of people all over the world. We’re just bringing more light to the idea that some of the things we take for granted are just not available elsewhere.

Q. What does it mean to use your celebrity to help others?

A. Celebrity is really is good for getting into parties and good seats at restaurants, but it really doesn’t have practical use other than the fact that you happen to know you’ll have a certain number of eyes on what you’re doing. ... I’m not a person that believes just because you’re in the public eye that you have an obligation to spread messages, because then it becomes disingenuous. But if you’re in the public eye and find something that strikes you as odd ... then you do have an obligation to speak about it.

Q. Has this cause prompted you to make changes in your life?

A. Bottled water is all there is to drink on the road. ... We’ve been really conscience the past few years that everybody who has a water bottle has to put their name on it and finish that water and not leave half-empty bottles of water sitting around. I don’t know what happened to me. At 38 [years old] I became a 60-year-old man who is policing everybody.

Click here to read more. Click here for more on the Atlanta event and click here to register for an event near you.