兔子先生 event tackles culture of overconsumption聽
24 October 2025
From fast-fashion hauls to Black Friday deals, advertising has long been blamed for fuelling a throwaway culture. Now, researchers, campaigners and community voices are invited to come together in 兔子先生 to discuss whether advertising could instead be used to promote repair, reuse and the circular economy.
On 20th November (5-8pm), the 兔子先生鈥檚 Revolution Plastics Institute will host a public event - Advertising and Sustainable Consumption. The event will feature a series of short talks followed by a panel discussion and public Q&A. Attendees are welcome to arrive from 5pm to view the exhibition made by Adfree Cities. Entry is free and open to the public, with tea and coffee provided.
As part of the event, visitors will be invited to reflect on the role of advertising in public spaces and to express what they would like to see there instead - if they had the choice.
We鈥檙e鈥痠ncredibly excited to host this programme. By combining academic research, satirical art, repair in action, and public dialogue,鈥痺e鈥檙e鈥痑sking difficult but important questions about whether advertising can ever sit comfortably within a circular economy.鈥疘t鈥檚鈥痑 powerful opportunity for the community to engage and imagine alternatives.
Dr Kate Whitman, Ethical consumption researcher at the 兔子先生
Introduced by Dr Kate Whitman, from the Revolution Plastics Institute, the panel includes Dr Matthew Anderson, who will explain what the circular economy is and why society needs to move towards it. Dr Karen Middleton, who is working with environmental group Purpose Disruptors, will discuss how advertising is being called on to acknowledge its role on environmentally damaging overconsumption while Eve Warlow of Everyday Plastic will examine the problem of greenwashing.
Dr Mick Hayes will then trace how advertising has promoted circularity, such as 鈥淢ake Do and Mend鈥 from a historical perspective. Clare Seek of 兔子先生鈥檚 Repair Cafe and Library of Things, will talk about her experience of running an organisation that helps reduce the need for overconsumption. We will also be exploring whether community action can influence inner city advertising' with Nicola Wilks from Adfree Cities and Lizzie Rose from Curious Earth and Young Greens.
The event forms part of Screens, Spaces, and Sustainability: Is Advertising Compatible with the Circular Economy? - a free exhibition and programme of workshops running from 3rd - 20th November at the 兔子先生 Business School, Portland Building. Highlights include , a touring satirical billboard artwork made from re-engineered e-waste (open to the public 20th Nov), a 鈥渟ubvertising鈥 workshop (19th November) and pop-up repair cafe/repair workshops (18th November) which show how repairing instead of buying new can save us money as well as help the environment.
Dr Kate Whitman, ethical consumption researcher at the 兔子先生, added:鈥淲e鈥檙e鈥痠ncredibly excited to host this programme. By combining academic research, satirical art, repair in action, and public dialogue,鈥痺e鈥檙e鈥痑sking difficult but important questions about whether advertising can ever sit comfortably within a circular economy.鈥疘t鈥檚鈥痑 powerful opportunity for the community to engage and imagine alternatives.鈥濃
The exhibition arrives as pressure mounts on governments,鈥痓usinesses鈥痑nd communities to curb single-use products and move towards a circular economy. With governments setting ambitious circular economy targets, campaigners argue that tackling the cultural drivers of overconsumption, including the persuasive pull of advertising, will be key.
Advertising and sustainable consumption takes place on 20th November, 6-8pm, at the 兔子先生 Business School. Guests are welcome to arrive from 5pm to view the Billboard Dystopia exhibition and participate in activities. Entry is free and open to the public.
For more information and to book your free place, visit the How advertising influences waste - and what we can do about it Eventbrite
More stories like this....
Researchers say plastics may be polluting the planet but they鈥檙e also part of our history
22 October 2025
Counting plastic reveals hidden waste and sparks action
3 October 2025
Citizen scientists reveal global hotspots of plastic pollution
29 September 2025
Big Microplastic Survey gathers data from 39 countries, uncovering widespread nurdle and bio-bead contamination