The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Homegrown show enlivens nature

Deputy ethics chief filed complaint against former boss.

- Maureen Downey

Biologist Michael Martin starts a new semester Wednesday teaching cell biology and genetics to Emory at Oxford students. On this humid August morning, Martin’s teaching a boisterous orange furry puppet to take deep breaths in a bee pollinator garden in Decatur.

This summer, Dr. Martin became Mr. Michael, genial host of a series of beguiling nature videos aimed at preschoole­rs. A father of two young children, Martin impressed Decatur neighbor Elise Potts with his ability to entrance her young son with an examinatio­n of leaves in the yard.

A writer of social and emotional learning curriculum, Potts saw nature and natural systems as an ideal way to help children understand interconne­ctedness. She enjoined Martin to become host for the newfound “Nature Time” series videos. Potts’ husband, engineer and cinematogr­apher Alan Melling, serves as videograph­er and puppeteer.

At this day’s filming, Melling likely regrets his multiple titles. He’s crouched and compressed behind a stand of flowers manipulati­ng the star of the show, a puppet he designed and sewed named Garbanzo. “You can learn to do anything on Youtube,” he says.

Mr. Michael is trying to show Garbanzo a relaxing stretch that requires the puppet to reach two arms in the air. That feat brings Potts out from behind the camera to assist, leading to a Twister game to maintain her balance and raise the puppet’s arms on cue without being seen.

The trio is on its sixth attempt to nail the complicate­d shot and manages to do so, despite noise delays as trucks rumble by the city of Decatur’s Willow Lane Pollinator Habitat off North Decatur Road. The film equipment and puppet attract neighborho­od residents walking dogs and pushing baby carriages. The kids receive waves from Garbanzo.

In January, Martin, Potts and Melling began to write and record the first four videos in the series, working around fulltime jobs and parenting duties. Their kids have helped out on occasion. One-year-old Max Potts doubled as Garbanzo for close-ups of furry legs running in yellow rain boots. Martin’s 7-year-old son Jackson helped with a session on creating a compost jar.

Potts is now working full time on the series, spurred by the initial reception to the “Nature Time” episodes, which made their debut on Youtube in mid-july. In three weeks, the episode “Garbanzo Learns About Composting” drew 44,000 views.

Though Martin is fairly new at video narration, he’s good at it, partly because his approach is not that of a showman, but a guide.

“Instead of amping kids up to run around, I want to slow them down, to look at something and employ some curiosity on their own,” he said. “So maybe the next time they are outside, they will turn over a rock to see how many worms they can count or see.”

“There is not a whole lot of wild out there for kids anymore,” said Martin. The videos suggest activities — watching squirrels and bees — that can be done in backyards.

For years, Potts and Melling had mulled over a project around kids that combined her skills as a writer and learning designer and his as a cinematogr­apher. Both regarded “Mister Rogers’ Neighborho­od” and the tranquilit­y of host Fred Rogers as their north star.

In Martin, they found their own Mr. Rogers and a fellow believer that children thrive in nature.

“Today’s children’s shows have quick cuts to here and there,” said Potts. “For really young kids, that is not good for their attention span. That was something Mr. Rogers focused on — being slow with one perspectiv­e and not a lot of fast cuts.”

Melling had worked on nature programs that presented nature as spectacle with big cats and exotic vistas. Filming animals in the wild taught him to “bring a stillness and calm to my work to be effective,” he said. That lesson undergirds the “Nature Time” approach.

The goal of “Nature Time” is to celebrate the nature within reach and nurture children’s inherent curiosity. “Even though we are on Youtube and kids have to engage with a screen, our hope is that they watch and then go outside,” said Potts.

Potts, Melling and Martin realize they are competing with the gizmos, glitter and glamour of Disney and Nickelodeo­n. As parents, they understand the appeal, but believe a slower pace allows room for kids to grow and think.

“To take care, you have to pay attention, you have to slow down and look around,” said Melling. “Contempora­ry children’s media is busy so it can entertain kids and hold them down. We want to give them space and time to develop their own knowledge and skills, to be little scientists. You can’t shout at a garden, ‘Grow!’ You have to give it what it needs.”

An independen­t investigat­ion has found that alle- gations of racial bias against now-former Dekalb County ethics officer Stacey Kalber- man “appear to be unsubstant­iated.”

The investigat­ion also found no evidence to support claims that members of the county ethics board retaliated against deputy ethics officer Latonya Nix Wiley for bringing the complaint against Kalberman, or that they intentiona­lly delayed looking into the matter.

The probe was completed by attorneys from the local employment law firm Mcfadden Davis LLC, which the ethics board hired to investigat­e Wiley’s claims. The firm’s findings were provided to The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on late Friday.

Wiley, who has been on paid administra­tive leave, did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment Monday. Curre nt e thics board chair Alex Joseph also declined to comment.

Kalberman — who left her position with Dekalb in February, shortly before her sixyear term as ethics officer was set to expire — has previously denied the allega- tions against her and maintained that her departure was unrelated.

“I believe the ethics board went out of its way to ensure that the investigat­ion was fair to all parties,” she told the AJC on Monday.

The ethics officer provides ethics training to thousands of Dekalb County employees and officials, and investigat­es allegation­s of wrongdoing and brings the findings to the ethics board. The board is ulti- mately tasked with making rulings and doling out punishment­s.

Kalberman, who is white, had served as ethics officer since the board’s original inception in 2016.

Wiley, who is Black, lodged her initial com- plaint against Kalberman in October 2021, but it didn’t become public until the AJC reported on it in April.

Wiley accused her boss of failing to respond appropriat­ely to racist or insensitiv­e comments made by other people in her presence, as well as making statements of her own that Wiley felt were “deeply rooted in negative stereotype­s about Black people.”

Investigat­ors found that the examples Wiley provided to back up her claims were “highly subjective and unrelated to Ms. Wiley herself.”

Wiley also claimed Kalberman failed to act when a white subordinat­e subjected her to “a constant stream of slights, indignitie­s and outright disrespect.”

The report found that both Kalberman and Wiley addressed the behavior of that subordinat­e, a now-former administra­tor in the eth- ics office, in her 2018 and 2019 performanc­e reviews. The administra­tor also was placed on a “performanc­e improvemen­t plan” in 2020.

The office’s current ethics administra­tor, who is Black, told investigat­ors that she did not observe Kalberman treat Wiley differentl­y than anyone else. The administra­tor, Kristin Rodgers, said she had a “wonderful” working relationsh­ip with Kalberman and “did not observe or perceive any racial bias.”

Wiley later filed an additional complaint arguing that the ethics board retaliated against her for making accusation­s against Kalberman. She also accused certain board members of deliberate­ly delaying an investigat­ion into her complaints.

The outside investigat­ors, who interviewe­d board members and reviewed emails and other documents, also found those claims to be unsubstant­iated.

 ?? COURTESY ?? Three friends in Decatur decided to combine their talents and create “Nature Time,” a children’s video series on Youtube: Michael Martin (from left), a college biology professor, learning designer Elise Potts and cinematogr­apher Alan Melling, who also brings the puppet Garbanzo to life.
COURTESY Three friends in Decatur decided to combine their talents and create “Nature Time,” a children’s video series on Youtube: Michael Martin (from left), a college biology professor, learning designer Elise Potts and cinematogr­apher Alan Melling, who also brings the puppet Garbanzo to life.
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Latonya Nix Wiley (left) brought a complaint against former ethics officer Stacey Kalberman.
Latonya Nix Wiley (left) brought a complaint against former ethics officer Stacey Kalberman.

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