Appetite for Change Brings Fresh Ideas to the Table

When Princess Titus set out to spread the message about the importance of eating healthful foods, she faced the challenge of doing it in a community overrun with fast food chains serving up anything but.

Her task, which has grown from a mission into a movement called Appetite for Change (AFC), meant not only steering people away from the high-calorie fast food fare but also making healthier options such as fresh produce more accessible.

Six years ago, Jessie McDaniel and LaTaijah Powell saw potential in a youth program with Appetite for Change to raise awareness. Now McDaniel and Powell are youth leaders and program facilitators.

Appetite for Change is spreading the message of healthy eating to a community that lacks fresh food options.
Appetite for Change is spreading the message of healthy eating to a community that lacks fresh food options.

McDaniel and Titus both saw a need for a change toward better health. They also saw the importance of inspiring youth in the community, and how building trust within the community is part of the process.

“If we were not training young people and exposing them how to feed themselves that we were disadvantaging our future,” Titus said.

The program’s message went viral when they released a song called “Grow Food.” In the video, some of the youth from AFC rapped about the importance of nutrition while comparing the adverse effects of poor nutrition to things like urban crime.

Although the video has led to an increase in valuable donations and publicity, Titus and McDaniel emphasize their unique mindsets toward the movement. They also hope the public realizes their genuine ambition and dedication to improve eating habits, even though a snapshot of the north side and its sea of too-convenient takeout eateries shows a formidable challenge, not unfamiliar to other communities they’ve visited.

Some might wonder if it’s just a coincidence. “We’ve been to California and Seattle and as soon as you see the black or brown people, you start to see the bad (unhealthful) food,” Titus said.

Said McDaniel: “I don’t care if we get a million dollars tomorrow, and if they tell us we don’t even have to work no more, I’ll still be in the community, at the garden putting in that work because my people gotta eat.”

AFC, with a staff of 40 to 50 full-time employees and more than 20 part-timers, created the vehicle to allow young people to let their voices be heard and address social issues. McDaniel shows his belief in immersing the youth into a healthier future, while being convinced “the youth is the truth.”

Titus even takes it a step further, emphasizing the community gardens, where she hopes to see the community unite and change the narrative.

“The stories have to be told, that we are courageous enough to go to those places of soil and plant with strangers to meet at our basic human need,” Titus said.

Appetite for Change is having a domino effect around the country with more people buying into the idea of a healthier future. AFC is still gaining traction, but at this rate the possibility of expanding AFC seems more likely rather than less.

AFC has been fighting to change, along with the rut of unhealthy eating habits, the narrative on the north Minneapolis community, even the negative label “food desert” and perceptions about things like high rates of diabetes.