The Sunday Post (Dundee)

The day I... took George Clooney out to lunch

- As told to Alice Hinds

It was a typical cold November day when the glitz, glamour and excitement of Hollywood descended on Edinburgh’s grey, cobbled streets.

But George Clooney wasn’t visiting to film a big blockbuste­r – he was here to have lunch at Social Bite, one of the five social enterprise cafes I helped to build, and which tackles homelessne­ss.

It really was such an incredible day. I’m sure sometimes when a celebrity is attending an event that memos are circulated stating “no selfies” and “profession­al photos only, please”. But George was more than happy to take pictures with the crowds of fans who had lined up to see him arrive.

He was so generous with his time, spent ages talking to our staff, and even left a big donation in our “Pay it Forward” system, which allows customers to buy food in advance for people experienci­ng homelessne­ss.

Although grabbing a sandwich with a Hollywood A-lister is up there with some of the most memorable events in my life, it wasn’t the first time I had brushed shoulders with famous faces since we first had the idea for Social Bite in 2012.

My business partner, Josh Littlejohn, and I actually first thought about setting up a social enterprise when we were on our way to meet a Nobel Peace Prize winner.

At the time, we were setting up the Scottish Business Awards, and we wanted Muhammad Yunus to speak at the event. We kept calling and calling his office but we couldn’t really make any meaningful contact. Then someone finally said: “If you come to Bangladesh we’ll put a five-minute meeting in his diary.”

So we got on a plane.

While we were there, we visited lots of social businesses and micro-finance projects, and seeing that work really made us think we had to bring the same model back home.

We didn’t manage to get philanthro­pist Muhammad Yunus to come to Scotland in the end – Bob Geldof ended up taking his place – but the trip sparked an idea, which turned into a truly amazing project that has gone from strength to strength.

Our initial idea was simple: we wanted to make it really easy for people to do good, putting cafes on the high street which would donate all profits to good causes.

Instead of going to, say, Pret a Manger, Subway or Greggs, people could buy an equally tasty lunch or coffee at Social Bite, with their money then fuelling a movement rather than helping to make a lot of money for company boards.

If Social Bite proves anything, it’s that people really want to do good when they’re given the option.

Since George Clooney’s visit we have been lucky enough to attract a few more celebritie­s who have helped take our message to the world stage.

Leonardo Dicaprio popped along in 2016, and Prince Harry and then-fiancée Meghan Markle visited early last year. They were both so passionate about tackling homelessne­ss and poverty.

When we started, we wanted to have several cafes and become an example of how you can do business differentl­y. But we didn’t imagine we would go on to do some of the amazing things we have.

As well as running our cafes in Edinburgh, Glasgow and Aberdeen, we distribute more than 140,000 items of healthy free food each year, our weekly Social Supper events connect 400 vulnerable people with food, support and opportunit­ies, and one in three of our staff have had their own issues with homelessne­ss.

If that wasn’t enough, we now also run annual Sleep in the Park events, which have so far raised more than £7.5 million. And in May last year we opened the Social Bite Village in Granton, Edinburgh, where up to 20 people affected by homelessne­ss can find accommodat­ion and support.

My own personal project is the Wee Sleep Out programme, which aims to encourage 10,000 young people across the country to host their own sleep-outs and come along to social workshops.

It’s been great to almost go back to where we started, picking up the phone again to persuade the education section to join us.

We’ve come a long way in the last seven years, but I don’t think of myself as a “successful person” and I don’t feel responsibl­e for Social Bite’s achievemen­ts. Everything we’ve done has been down to the support and hard work of the people who have helped us along the way.

I have really grown alongside Social Bite. But I’ve still got a lot left to do and a lot left to prove.

Grabbing a sandwich with an A-lister wasn’t my first brush with fame

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 ??  ?? Alice Thompson, 29, entreprene­ur, Edinburgh
Alice Thompson, 29, entreprene­ur, Edinburgh

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