Welcome to the Talks at Google podcast, where great minds meet. I'm Emma, bringing you this episode with Luke Wilson, Anna Villafane, and Jimmy Canton. Talks at Google brings the world's most influential thinkers, creators, makers, and doers all to one place. You can watch every episode at youtube.com slash talks at google.com.
The Hole in the Wall Game Camp was founded in 1988 by legendary actor and philanthropist Paul Newman. The camp is a haven for children with serious illnesses and their families, fostering joy, hope, and friendship through both summer camp and year-round programming. Jimmy Canton, Ana Villafane, and Luke Wilson all joined Google to talk about the Hole in the Wall Game Camp and its mission.
Jimmy is its CEO and has been with the organization since its founding. Rising from counselor to CEO, he grew the camp from serving 288 children in its first summer to over 20,000 children and family members annually. Anna Villafane is a board member for the camp and a Broadway actress. She recently starred opposite Holland Taylor in the world premiere of N.A. at Lincoln Center.
and plays the title character in the upcoming feature film Castro's Daughter. Luke Wilson is an advocate for the camp and an actor, writer, and director. He's collaborated with Wes Anderson and Owen Wilson on films like Rushmore and The Royal Tenenbaums. And he's known for iconic comedies like Legally Blonde and Old School.
Recently, he starred in films like 12 Mighty Orphans, You Gotta Believe, Kevin Costner's Horizon, and the Netflix series No Good Deed. Here are Jimmy Canton, Anna Villafane, and Luke Wilson. The Hole in the Wall Gang Camp. So let's kick it off. The Hole in the Wall Gang was founded by Paul Newman in 1988. Can you share a little bit about the original vision of the camp and kind of how the spirit continues on today through what was founded in 1988? Yeah.
I'd love to. So there's this famous quote that Paul shared about the motivation to start camp. And it goes, I wanted to acknowledge luck, the benevolence of it in my life and the brutality of it in the lives of others made especially savage for children who may not be afforded a long life to make up for their bad luck. And he was a remarkable man and
was keenly aware of being in the right place at the right time and how fortunate he was. And so Hole in the Wall was his way to pay it forward and recognize that the children that we're so lucky to serve have been dealt a really challenging hand. And so he wanted to level the playing field for these children with cancer, sickle cell, HIV,
rare diseases, metabolic mitochondrial disease. They get all their treatments at the camp. We have an infirmary of doctors and nurses. They get chemotherapy, oral chemo, blood transfusions, infusions. And he wanted to just level the playing field and allow them to forget about their illness for a moment and get in touch with being a child again and, in his words, raise a little hell.
And he was a really mischievous guy. And it worked so much better than he ever imagined. It started in 1988. And I think what none of us, and I was lucky to be a counselor that first summer, what none of us realized was how profoundly healing it would be for a child to be surrounded by a hundred other children who looked like them and who were truly walking their walk. And...
A lot of hell was raised. But those, that sense of connection and to look around and realize I'm not the only one and look, they're doing well or look, they have it so much harder.
was healing and centering. And so that community and that play is what Paul referred to as a different kind of healing. And so we've continued to grow programming over the last 38 years. We started with 288 children. This year we'll serve thousands of children and family members,
nearly 50,000 healing experiences this year alone, serving children from Boston down to Washington, D.C. And whatever we can do to create that sense of community
allows our children and their family members to realize that they're not alone. And that goes a long way in contributing to their healing. So, Anna, can you talk a little bit? You had camp experience as a child. And so a little bit about how your camp experience almost was
What was part of the formative part of what you do now as an advocate? So I was a camper myself. The camp has expanded to have a network even further than this region. And so I went in Florida to Boggy Creek and
And I remember just it gives you this sense of, you know, in a classroom or even at home when you have a serious illness as a child, you feel really isolated and you feel like an alien and you feel like you can't really relate. You know, I couldn't relate to my peers or my siblings. And so camp did provide this like magic where suddenly I had a place to belong, which I think is.
any group needs a place to belong and people in general need a place where they feel that they belong in order to feel empowered, in order to find out who they are, in order to feel like they can add something to the world. And I think that the pipeline from camp and performing at camp and just being a normal kid at camp to becoming an actress was 100% related. You know, I definitely count it as a part of what gave me
a sense of self and a sense of identity, let alone a sense of I have something to add to the world.
How do you think about that now as you join the board? Like how much of that comes to the current life? I think it's really surreal that, you know, even moments like this and even when I first met Jimmy and the rest of the team and the rest of the board, it's really surreal for me because, again, going back to that sense of feeling empowered, it's like the least I could possibly do is try to,
give that same experience to other kids because I know exactly what it's like, you know, and I think that like my packaging doesn't scream, oh, I was a kid with a serious illness that went to this camp. So I also kind of like love that because I think more and more kids
not letting the assumption of what somebody's going through dictate the way that you treat them or the way that you see them or the way that they see themselves as part of society is hugely important, maybe more than ever. So Luke, you've been a longtime supporter and advocate for the program. How do you see Paul's kind of legacy alive in the camp from the outside looking in at times?
Well, I mean, kind of getting back to what Jimmy said, that was always one of the most incredible things about when I first went to the camp and meeting the kids and seeing the counselors as I was kind of wandering around and went to the back of the theater and I read that quote that was up on the wall about the benevolence of God.
of luck and how he'd had, how he felt he'd had so much in his life and then the brutality of it in others. And that always really stuck with me, that quote. I mean, I took a picture of it and all and have written it down just to remember it. But in terms of Paul's legacy, um,
you know, for me, obviously just started as a fan of his movies and, you know, things like HUD and the hustler and, uh, you know, the color of money and the verdict, you know, it was almost kind of to me getting better as he was getting older. And then, you know, he would have been around 60 or 61 when he got the idea of,
for the camp. And I mean, he had had this friend named Bruce Falconer who was an architect in Connecticut and he died at 52. Um,
And Paul, just thinking to himself, "Gosh, this is so terrible how this happened." And then that led him to think, "Well, what about someone who's eight or 10 or 12 years old who never got to have the life that Bruce did or get to be an architect or have a job or start a family? What about that?" And that's one of the things that I think had led him to the idea of the camp. So to me, in terms of his legacy,
I mean, it's pretty incredible that what he's done could make all those classic movies seem like, okay, those movies are great, but this is really something. At least that's how it seems to me. And just kind of an incredible guy. There's a really good book about him that came out through his family called The Extraordinary Life of an Ordinary Man that came from these recordings he'd made. And I mean, I wrote down a couple of them. Yeah.
And but just there's a great quote about him from John Houston just saying what a good person he is, very talented, but also very ethical. And I think, you know, that he was someone who had struggles in his own life and struggles with his family where he had lost everything.
the child and that somehow he found it in himself to follow through on a great idea. I mean, I think we can all identify with having a great idea, but the follow through that it takes. And then also, you know, excuse me, somebody like Paul, I'm sure, you know,
This is before the day when people did commercials and things like that. And he came from the school of Marlon Brando and Jack Nicholson, where maybe Steve McQueen did a Honda commercial in Japan. But for Paul to kind of put his money on...
Excuse me, put his face on lemonade and popcorn and salad dressing and then go have to ask for money from different people and going to, you know, Anheuser-Busch to get the $800,000 to build the incredible facility.
dining hall they have there. And then he wrote a great letter to Anheuser-Busch saying he did the numbers and based on when he started drinking beer at 18, he'd had over 200,000 cans of Budweiser and that it actually worked out to a pretty good deal for them. And with Paul, he used to come to camp and walk around camp. The only food fight we ever had at camp was started by Paul.
And he was so, you could just see the wonder on his face when he would walk around that it was so much more than he ever expected it to be. And the joy is off the hook.
And, um, and there's, and campers not knowing who he was, where he loves that too. There's a great picture of him, you know, in the dining hall where a kid's talking to him and Paul has an expression that you've never seen on him in any other photograph where he just seems
totally open. He was Uncle Paul. And there are random shots, pictures of Paul in every cabin. And so we suggested Uncle Paul is always around. But there's a very funny quick story. He was sitting at a table with some campers and the Newman's own lemonade carton was on the table. And so this
Child was looking at the picture of him and looking at him and looking at the picture. And he finally said, Mr. Are you lost? Yeah, a true story. True story.
So Luke, you mentioned the architect and design being a piece of this. So Jimmy, can you speak a little bit about how the camp was actually designed to kind of really spark some of that innovation and be centered around the children? Yeah. And the flavor of it is from Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, right? So it's a traditional Western town.
but everything needs to be wheelchair accessible. And we need to anticipate on the campus, in the infirmary, with the counselors, what are the physical needs of each child coming in? And they all differ. So how are you thinking ahead to make sure that every child is included?
if we as a staff fail to anticipate that and a child feels excluded,
then we as a staff have failed. So it's got to be, and this was back in 1988, how do we include every single child? So the campus, our pool is heated to 90 degrees throughout the summer. In the middle of August in Connecticut when it's 100, that pool is 90 degrees. And that's so that children with sickle cell can swim for the first time in their lives.
And our horse barn has a ramp for children in wheelchairs to be able to get them on with special saddles that'll hold them up tight. And the number of walkers all around those horses needs to be a certain amount because of perhaps the body weakness. Our climbing tower has to have assisted belays so that a child who's had a stroke or a child who has had an amputation can...
climb the tower with whatever part of their body has strength and then the other part of their body is compensated with the counselor who can help them ascend to where they can grasp with their strong limbs again. So everything around the camp has to anticipate some physical challenge and it's...
It's just such a happy place because you can see that when those children are included in things that they've never thought that they could do, there's not only a deep joy, but there's a spark of, I can do that. And
Capability is fed, right? So possibility is fed. I have to say, how tall is the tower? 40. I think it's about 40 feet high. Okay. So imagine, if you will, in your mind's eye, I'm there in May and we were doing a family weekend and my boyfriend and I, we were just kind of observing, right? And there were a number of families there. So the child, siblings, parents, everything.
And one of the most impactful moments was witnessing a child who with mobility challenges wouldn't have otherwise been able to get up without this system that is specifically tailored for this child and children like them to get up there. But watching the mother experience that and getting to...
as a complete stranger, watch this mother watch her child experience climbing the tower and getting to the top and then zip lining down. So again, things that can't gets kind of eradicated from the vocabulary. That was major. And she was just like crying and she was so excited for her child to have that experience. That was like etched in my mind.
I'd love to hear from all of you kind of around that same topic, which is this camp, obviously you focus a lot on the campers, but it's the whole family, parents, siblings, and everything involved. So you've all had very different experiences either working there as a camper, as an advocate. What have you seen for like the whole family's perspective of how this camp is able to support beyond just the child too? Just as an outsider for me to, to see something that, that is so perfectly run, um, you
Jimmy has fine-tuned it over the years with the help of incredible people. But I think probably whether it's a movie or a company like Google or the government to see things that are difficult to run well and to see something like this dealing with such serious issues that they really anticipate and have great people and really fine-tune things so that they run well. And one of those things is
And the first time I learned about it was how they take care of the siblings of the children that are experiencing the hardships, how they have a special program for them. And that just seemed so thoughtful to me and so kind of obvious once you'd had the idea, but just how...
It just seemed like an incredible idea to me. And then you think about these families where even the kid that's not experiencing the hardship can feel forgotten or that all the energy is going towards the child that's going through the hardships. And it's just seemed that's what the camp does. Dozens and dozens of things like that. And Jimmy was just telling me about a bereavement program they have now for orphans.
when throughout the year taking care of parents whose child has died and where they're around other families and can, you know, be around other people experiencing the same things. With the siblings and with the parents, I think early on at camp, we started as that summer camp program, traditional summer program. So it was just children with illness at that time in those first years and
And very quickly you saw that behind every one of those children was a family in crisis. So whatever we could do to extend that healing love and touch to that child's family could have a rippling healing impact on the child with illness, on the diagnosed child.
And one of the times that came screaming out loud was in the last 10 years or so, we started to run family programs. So we have our traditional summer program and then our fall and spring are filled with family weekends. And one of those extended weekends we had for children with progeria.
And progeria is the rapidly aging disease. All those children will pass in their adolescent years. And they're physically very, very different and so stigmatized throughout their lives, their short lives. And so we invited families of, there are only 18 children involved.
in the United States with progeria, 250 worldwide. And so we invited those families to come to camp. And over two consecutive years, we saw every child in the United States, Mexico, and Canada. And only two children had ever met another child like themselves. So not only was that liberating and healing for the children, but we had the parents and the healthy siblings join us
And so you could imagine the lifelines of support that were cast from one parent to the next, from one healthy sibling to the next, to connect on things that they were really struggling with. How do you care for their teeth? How do you keep them warm? So these conversations, that's the other beautiful part of the family program was
is the joy, the experience of the parents witnessing their child thriving. And then the other part is this incredible networking that's happening between people who are, who have truly walking the same walk. That's so unique and so hard to
to find in your local community? I have to say, I am not an only child. I am part of a very big, very loud Latin family. And when I would go to camp, you know, first of all, it is free. So that in and of itself, you know,
a week of a sleepaway camp in this like Western, like, you know, you're riding horses and fishing, not a Fisher. Okay. Uh, fishing and doing woodwork and all these activities. They also had an incredible theater, um, doing all these activities that I would not have been doing at home. Um, and,
And my siblings like didn't believe me when I would come home and tell these stories. They're like, sure, sure. Yeah. You and your horse, you know, or whatever. And so it was, it was this like really, uh, there's already a divide, right? Because they don't have the illness or not a diagnosed illness or whatever, but, um, but you're, you know, you already feel different. And, um,
And so the addition of the family programs, for me, as...
They're newer, so we did not have that, or at least we didn't participate. But it's so beautiful to know that that exists now because the whole well-rounded experience of what camp does for us as the individual kids, but then for what it could provide to everybody is sensational. And I'm really happy that as an adult going back into camp,
the camp world that my first experience and going to visit camp was during a family weekend because of exactly that, because I always felt like it was this private, safe place for us. And so the fact that then like your family can experience, it can know what you're talking about when you say the tower, when you say, you know, the, the pool and all these things, it kind of takes it away from being this magical place.
another isolating experience. You know, it was like Narnia, but it only existed in my head. So I think it's a huge, major, major, major addition. So you mentioned a little bit, Jimmy, about
certain diseases, hardships where it's 200 or so, how do you think about how to expand and be able to have more opportunity to service everybody that's in need with all the different types of children that you could service and families you could service? Yeah, that's a great question. There's so much more. We will never tire of being able to think of new ways to
to serve. And that also was a reflection of our founder. He was just a very innovative entrepreneurial guy. So he wanted to try things, not spend too much time in the planning, but just try it.
And so what started at Hole in the Wall on-site as a summer program went to a year-round program relatively on-site. Then when we filled up every bed, we realized there were more children that could come that wouldn't have a bed. So how do we go to them? We started a hospital outreach program.
Today we're in 40 hospitals between Boston and Washington, D.C., with a team of 30 full-time staff who do nothing but bring camp to a child's hospital bedside. And then we have our home care program. If a child is declining in health, we'll set up a day camp in their homes so that they can remember camp. We'll do activities in the local neighborhood programs.
inviting families that don't know one another that we know should know one another. And then the latest is this new campus. We were gifted this magnificent site in Queenstown, Maryland, on the eastern shore of Maryland, to create a second hole-in-the-wall campus. And that one will be much more family-focused from the very beginning, and
and will be much more focused on ultra-rare disease. In addition to cancer and sickle cell, it will have a stronger focus for ultra-rare disease inviting the families. And I think for us, I mean, there's so many illnesses, so many rare diseases to consider. I mean, you could have multiple camps just for children with sickle cell. So how do you decide? And I think...
On this new site, what was so moving to us was, if Paul started it today, what are those illnesses that are incurable, moderately treatable, if treatable, profoundly isolating, and physically very altering?
and also be able to give them an experience where the children have the cognitive ability to see the connection and to see the community and leave feeling that sense of normalcy, that sense of connection and community. So there are a number of rare diseases that we're just, we're looking forward to serving in Maryland.
I want to talk a little bit about advocacy because one thing that Paul referenced a lot was he was using a celebrity for good. So, Luke, how does that resonate with you for your involvement in camp? Well, I did write down something that I'd read in the book that I was mentioning. You have great handwriting. Hey, thanks. Well, I just want to read this. It was...
Paul talking about kind of how it all came together. And he said, now who can explain that? Who's going to know how the recognition of the pluck of those camp kids have and how they deal with their lives simply triggered an unknown and previously unresponsive mechanism in me, a mechanism that opens a door into myself and lets me actually see what might be lurking there. Then you simply change and
The answer may just be, it was time. Suddenly, here I am, an atheist, a non-metaphysicalist who finds himself stuck right in the middle of God. It's weird, it's human, and it's inexplicable.
I mean, I think that's the most incredible thing is how Paul, this is a guy who kind of lived in Connecticut and with Joanne and kind of had a quiet life, I think, and was not a part of the Hollywood scene or the New York scene. And
guy that liked to be kind of in the background and really did care about acting was one of those people that you know studied and had taken it very seriously, but then to turn and think okay like I was saying, you know, I'll be on the side of a lemonade bottle of lemonade and the popcorn and everything so I think that he recognized the power that that kind of celebrity can have he took you know a lifetime of work that he took very seriously and
And then used it somehow to start this other thing that was so incredible. And one thing I wanted to mention about the camp is, to me, part of what makes it so incredible is you have this terrible thing moving in one direction, you know, the illness. But then it meets up against people like Jimmy and the counselors and the kids that have been there.
And they hit and there is an energy that creates, that is created there. And you feel it at the camp just when you visit there. You know, like me, you can feel an energy and it is an incredible thing. And, you know, I can't quite put my finger on it. But, yeah, that's kind of my take on it.
I mean, I feel like I didn't really have a choice in the matter. I think as I started working and as I started becoming more and more of a public figure, my, you know, my desire to be an artist or well, not desire, you're either an artist or you're not. It doesn't matter if you're working. But my artistry led me to be in a position that people started to listen to what I would say and
And, and again, I think tapping into that, it's a little scary because it's not necessarily, you know, I wouldn't say society is going in that direction, but
But the reality is we're human and I think human connection is what everybody is after whether they want to admit it or not. And I think for me as a kid who grew up with a disability and who still has a very active disability, like, you know, I'm one of the lucky ones that, well, you know, it's a double-edged sword, but I have an invisible disability. But every single person,
is one life event away from becoming disabled. And a child, when you look at children, you know, I think that the inherent human instinct is to care for that child. So then that's, it's almost like this perfect cocktail if, you know, a child who's going through something that can't go away still deserves that childhood, you know? And I think that being a product of that myself
Two and a half years ago, I got a hip replacement. And when I was on the couch, I was like, well, this is awful because I'm not used to, I'm very restless. I need to be doing something. And so I sent an email and I was like, how can I get involved with camp now from this side of the table? And I wasn't looking necessarily to be on the board. I just wanted to volunteer or do whatever I could do. And one thing led to another and
And here I am. But it wasn't necessarily like the the angle I was going for. But now it just feels like like the perfect fit of what to do with all my energy that doesn't go toward work, you know, and and also it can one thing can help the other, you know, so as I keep working and
And hopefully continue to have a platform like how can I use that for good rather than just being another person doing the same thing, you know, and it's and it comes from a very real place. So and there's multiple ways, I think, to do that, whether you're a public figure or whether you're not, you know, right.
Which, perfect segue, I am running the marathon in November for camp. Didn't know that. I know you didn't know that. We kept it a secret until today. Holy mackerel. I know, so I'm very excited. How many years since the hip replacement? Yeah.
Does your hip know? She knows. She knows. She's coming. It will be at that time, because it's November 2nd, it'll be exactly like three years and two weeks. Amazing. Thank you. Yeah, I'm excited. Awesome. I'm excited.
So yeah, anybody can do those things. You know what I'm saying? Well, that was going to be my next question. What advice would you give to people who either have a platform or don't to use their voice for good? Send the email. Find out what you're passionate about. Find out what you care about, what makes you a little bit extra excited to get out of bed in the morning. And it can be anything. I don't think there's a shortage at the moment of people who could use you. And so send the email and you never really know
And even Paul, you know, he was 61 when he started this. And then, you know, to think about all the counselors that, you know, Jimmy had started as a counselor and he then became camp director and now he's the CEO. But they really are incredible counselors. And I'm sure there's quite a vetting process because it takes a special person. But yeah, I think...
It's such a privilege to be there. And I think, you know, Paul set that humble example of, you know, to those who were given much, much is expected. And I think one of the things I saw as something that we might discuss is, you know, what has camp taught you and what's it left you? And for me, it's just...
it's a constant reminder that life is short and life is fragile and unexpected. And like you said, it can take turns, good or bad. So being involved in something that advances good, that leaves the world a bit better than you find it, is if we have the capacity to do that now, then it's incumbent upon us to do as much of that as we can.
So I love that question. I had it ready for you. What lessons have you learned from camp that you've brought into your personal and professional lives? Well, I mean, I just, a couple of things happened to me my first couple of days at camp that one was I was with some boys and one of them had said to me, oh, where's Owen?
And I said, oh, Owen's not here. And he said, oh, when's he get here? And my heart just dropped. And this was my first day at camp. And I thought, what am I doing here? Owen should be here. He's done these Cars movies. These kids would love to see him. What am I doing here? And then the kid said, so Owen's not coming?
And I just said, no, he's not. He just said, hey, that's okay. I'm kidding with you. And I was like, okay. And then later that day, a kid was in the infirmary. He wasn't feeling well, and he was hooked up to an IV. We were just kind of talking. He reached for something on the bedside table and knocked a few things over. Then he said something. I couldn't quite hear what he said and leaned over, and he said, clean up on aisle five. Okay.
And I thought, okay, this is a great place, you know, where you realize what a big part humor plays in it. And it is a normal camp right down to, I mean, I was thinking this morning, I can remember seeing a kid that was from, you know, the city and he was really homesick. He'd really never been out kind of in nature before. And so he was feeling a little down about that. And then of course, you know, saw him later in the day.
And you could see he was making an effort and was having a little more fun. But yeah, it's incredible in that way. But what was the question? Yeah. I think the humor part is how you bring it into your life and professional and personal. Okay, yeah. Well, just...
And for me, it's just I'm always so affected by the time I've spent at camp. And it just can what Jimmy was saying about, you know, trying to make a difference, you know, anything you can can do. But, yeah, I what happens at camp just makes everything else kind of pale in comparison. You see so many kind of incredible things and incredible kids and the families, you
And like I said, there is just an energy when something is being done for the greater good. You can just kind of feel it. And hopefully you can just kind of take a little of that with you to kind of bring it out outside the camp. It's deeply centering. I know Paul, from the beginning, wanted to make sure that the community understood
was involved because he really, and I can remember him saying this, that if you touch it, you'll leave changed. So anyone who touches it will leave better and inspired and centered and having perspective. I think that the blessing that we get to not only work with the children and the families, but to be reminded on a daily basis that
That love is the most important thing you can offer. That connection, that human connection is the most important thing. And I don't know how much time I'm going to have to connect. So let me just immerse myself in it as much as possible.
One of those funny stories, though, how hilarious the kids are. There are so many stories. But I had this one boy who came into the cabins that I was volunteering for the summer. And he came into the cabin. His mom came in. He was sullen and limping and walked into his camper room and was taking his stuff out of the luggage. And mom pulled me aside. He's been in the hospital for the last three months. He's just really down.
So just be gentle with him, right? And hopefully he'll perk up. So he packed everything, unpacked everything by his bed and he came out to the common room and I said, would you like to play a game? And he said, well, what games do you have? I said, what about Monopoly Deal? And he looked at me with this smirk and
And he said, I'm going to play you like a violin. And he did. He destroyed me. But it's so in there. And that's like when people hear about the camp and they think it must be a sad place. The joy that you unlock is what? What truly a privilege to witness it. Still kids being kids. Yeah.
So for anybody that's here or watching, what is your advice on if they want to get involved, that they want to know somebody who would be a camper? What's the best way for somebody to learn more and stay involved? We take hundreds, if not thousands of volunteers a year.
So you can be volunteering at the camp for a week. You can be volunteering for weekends. You could be volunteering in the hospitals. You could be volunteering at local community events. So please, I mean, go.
what would we say, 2,000 volunteers are involved in camp in some capacity annually. So if there's any inclination to be part of that interaction with families or with the children, go to the website, holeinthewallgang.org, and please look at volunteering. And I just need to plug, in my role, there's a...
We are a nonprofit, and Newman's Own, as generous as Newman's Own is, there's this significant misconception that Newman's Own underwrites the camp. And we are one of many charities that Newman's Own supports. So thousands, 15,000, 20,000 donors a year will help us to –
extend programming for those 50,000 experiences. So if there's anything you can do, run a marathon. If she can run marathons, come on. In high heels, I heard. Not these. So...
Please be a part of the community. It's a really enriching place. May I read one more Paul quote? And this goes back to an earlier question, but I really love this. I've always questioned my charitable impulses. I don't know how altruistic they really are or how generous or Christian or anything really. The only thing I can say readily in my defense is that I do them, and that's better than not doing them.
And that to me seemed so kind of humble considering what he's done, but it kind of goes back to what you were saying, just to try and do it no matter how you feel inside or what you think your motivations may be to just try and get it done. I love that. So we're going to open up to audience questions. So if you want to line up, please line up both sides. While people are lining up, I've got some very fun, simple questions for you all. So I
I'm going to ask both of them before. So Anna, what's your favorite camp song? And then Luke, what of all the characters you've played, who would be the best and worst camp counselor? Stars in the Sky. Stars in the Sky is okay. Stars in the Sky.
I mean, I've played so many screw-ups. I don't know that any of them should really be at camp. I'm always on my best behavior at camp. I mean, I did play one coach in this movie, 12 Mighty Orphans, that was a true story that he'd probably do well at camp. But thank you for asking. It's something I should work on. Hi.
- Hi, I'm Roya. Thank you all so much for being here and for the work you do. My mom is Paul Newman's number one fan, largely because of the philanthropic work he does. We bought, exclusively bought his lemonade and she would tell us every time, you know, portion of the profits go to his camp. So I grew up knowing about that. And my question is how do the children get accepted to the camp? Is there an application process? I'm sure you can't take everybody as much as you'd love to. So what is that process like?
So we have relationships with hospitals up and down the eastern seaboard. And sometimes, like for our service to children with sickle cell, we'll connect with various sickle cell clinics. And each clinic is serving Children's Hospital of Pennsylvania will have 800 children in their service. And they will recommend 20 to come to Hole in the Wall. So sometimes those applications are submitted by the social workers and the families and
And sometimes they're independent. So if you're being treated for cancer, your oncologist may know about hole in the wall. Your nurse may know about hole in the wall and recommend to the family, you know, you should really think about this place. They'll keep the child safe and it really can be life changing. So individual doctors or clinics. Okay. Thank you. Yeah. Thank you. Hi, I'm Abby. Thank you so much for being here. So I've had the incredible privilege of being a part of double H ranch for the past,
almost 20 years in various capacities. Yeah. And one of those ways is as a counselor. So I have two questions. The first is, when did you decide that you wanted this to be not only a part of the rest of your life, but your career?
And then secondly, I would love to hear your favorite memory from being a counselor. My experience is when your planned plans fall apart, that's when the most beautiful things happen. So I thought I was going into the State Department. There was a time I thought I was going to go into medicine. And then it all shifted. So I don't know. I don't know.
I, as, um, so camp is, um, I mean, if I can pull in that, that front path, as I'm sure you do at double H and you get chills up right off your back, uh, you know, you still got more yet. You still have more to give. So that's been, um, my, my story and, um, and favorite camper story. I mean, they, they range, but, uh, yeah, uh,
The one that sticks out immediately that I share with our staff every year, our new staff every year, is about a young man who's one of my campers who I grew very close to. He had hemophilia and HIV. And when he was dying, I would go see him every two weeks and he
And he would always talk about coming back to camp. And I was like, I knew that that wasn't going to happen. And then shortly before he passed, he shared with me some extraordinary experiences he was having. And so that was mind blowing. And that...
His last wish was to be buried in a staff shirt because he knew he was never going to get back to camp to be on staff. So that just to me speaks of the impact and the privilege. As I share with our staff, that shirt is your admission ticket into some of the most memorable places
that you'll ever have. So yeah, it's not a hilarious one, but it is deep, deep for me. Thank you so much. Hi, I'm Monica. I just wanted to first commend you for your work. I myself am a cancer survivor, so I know how important and crucial these types of programs are. So just thank you for making it happen for kids.
My question is kind of around staffing and how you navigate going around staffing the camp. And specifically why I asked this, when I was a cancer patient, I really loved relating to people, whether they had been through something similar. Obviously they have the kids that have the same diagnosis as them, but are you ever intentional with hiring counselors or other staff who've been through an illness or currently going through an illness and are able to work at the camp? Yeah, that's a really important part of camp is developing our campers because there's no one better.
to comfort a homesick child at their bedside than someone who said, I used to sleep in that bed right down, right over there. So our summer staff will hire about 90 seasonal staff that stay with us all summer long, and then about 400 volunteers who come throughout the summer. Of those 90 staff, we fluctuate between this year will be about 25%, last year was 40% of those summer staff are former campers.
So there's a real dedication to that. And on our year-round staff, about 10% of our 100 full-time staff are former campers. So that's...
That's a really great, meaningful thing to be able to not only see them really thrive and flourish, but then also to be paying it forward. Awesome. Thank you. And good luck to you for the marathon. It's a really awesome experience. So it will be great. Thank you. We have some live questions. Can we pull them up?
Okay, I can read them too or I have some professional actors here if you wanna be Greg, if anyone wants to be Greg. - Take it away, Greg. - Greg, Greg Price here. I don't have a question, I just wanna add that as a former camper and long time volunteer, Hole in the Wall is quite literally my favorite place in the world and everyone watching should sign up to volunteer.
I'm happy to chat with anyone about my experience there and hi Jimmy. You booked it. I think we have one more. Alright, Caroline. I'm a former camper who attended Victory Junction and Roundup River Ranch. I'm old enough to remember when the whole network was named Hole in the Wall. I'm super grateful for my experience. I'd be interested to know how you think former campers particularly can best support the network and camps.
Send the email. Yeah, I think, Caroline, your Victory Junction is our camp in North Carolina and Roundup River Ranch is in Colorado.
I mean, yeah, you've walked the walk. So I would get involved with the volunteering. I think being an ambassador is really important and no one can talk about that experience like you can, Anna. So Caroline, I would just find out ways to be able to share your experience for camp because it's going to help Victory Junction and Roundup River Ranch grow.
in your writing. We put out newsletters all the time. People are always looking for great content on social media. So being able to
to share your experience would be really important. And, and I think for all the camps, I was just in a summit with all the camp CEOs from around the world and they were talking about a, a desire to really develop alumni programs at each one of their camps. So you could, you could really lead that charge for either one of those camps. Caroline. Amazing. Thank you all for being here and sharing. It's incredible stories and giving us the time and thanks everyone for watching and being here. Thanks.
Thank you, Mike.