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The Rich Roll Podcast

NASCAR Driver Leilani Münter Is Racing For The Planet

The Rich Roll Podcast

Rich Roll

Health & Fitness, Education, Self-improvement, Society & Culture

4.812.9K Ratings

🗓️ 10 July 2017

⏱️ 137 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

“Our generation must fulfill the most noble of duties by ensuring the survival of future generations through the most basic of survival mechanisms – adaptation.” Leilani Münter If you want provoke change — real change – it's imperative to take a stand outside the echo chamber of the converted. That's the ethos of professional race car driver and environmental activist Leilani Münter. Named one of the top ten female race car drivers in the world by Sports Illustrated, Leilani races in NASCAR's ARCA Series and is the fourth woman in history to race in the Indy Pro Series (the development league of IndyCar). She has logged impressive performances at both Daytona and Talladega and set the record for the highest finish for a female driver in the history of the Texas Motor Speedway when she finished fourth in 2006. But what’s most intriguing about Leilani — beyond the inherent intrigue of being one of the only female drivers in her sport — is her singular commitment to leveraging her profile to educate, inspire and raise awareness around environmental issues. Winning isn't everything. Change is the goal. Putting her money where her mouth is, Leilani has foregone traditional sponsorship opportunities to race cars draped in oversized logos promoting the documentaries The Cove and Blackfish. At Daytona in February 2017, she raced a car displaying Vegan Powered bills across the hood and sides. And since 2007, she adopts one acre of rainforest for every race she runs. Leilani has presented before the UN in Geneva in 2015 and has appeared on Capitol Hill to speak on behalf of clean energy legislation. In addition, she was one of the first activists to arrive at the 2010 Gulf oil disaster and traveled to Taiji, Japan three times to document the dolphin slaughter depicted in the Academy Award winning documentary The Cove. She sits on board of the Oceanic Preservation Society and on the advisory board of The Solutions Project, a nonprofit dedicated to accelerating the transition to 100 percent renewable energy. Leilani appears in the 2015 documentary Racing Extinction and her accomplishments have been profiled in USA Today, Italian Vogue, The New York Times, The Washington Post, Reader's Digest, Esquire, and Newsweek. Discovery’s Planet Green named Münter the No. 1 eco-athlete in the world, she is a recipient of ELLE Magazine's 2012 Genius
Award, and Glamour Magazine named her an “Eco Hero.” This conversation explores Leilani's upbringing, what motivated her to become a race car driver, and what its like to be one of the only females in her male dominated sport. It's a discussion about the intersection of activism and sport — how Leilani infuses performance with her strident commitment to principles. But mostly this is a conversation about the why behind Leilani's drive. A strong, powerful female role model committed to positively impacting culture, shifting consumer habits and catalyzing beneficial environmental policy change, I aspire to her level of dedication to a better world. As Leilani is fond of saying, never underestimate a vegan hippie chick with a race car. After this conversation, you won't either. I love this exchange and sincerely hope you do too. Peace + Plants, Rich Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript

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0:00.0

I just really feel strongly that I want to raise, but I'm not gonna sell my soul so that I can raise.

0:08.3

It's not that important to me, whereas the causes to me, these are the most important challenges that the human race has ever faced.

0:16.2

I mean, we're living through the six mass extinction of species.

0:19.4

We're killing offlands and animals at a rate that's like a thousand times faster than the normal natural background rate.

0:26.0

Oceanist certification, climate change, all of these things.

0:30.0

This is too big to ignore.

0:33.0

I mean, all of us have to try and become part of the solution, and that includes NASCAR fans.

0:38.0

And, you know, fans of every sport, we can't just be talking to our friends.

0:43.0

They're harder conversations to have, right?

0:45.0

It's hard to sit and talk to somebody who you know coming to the table is on the other side of you and doesn't agree with what you're saying.

0:53.0

But that's how you eventually change people.

0:57.0

That's Lailani Munter, this week on the Retro podcast.

1:02.0

The Retro podcast.

1:15.0

Hey, everybody. How you guys doing? What's happening? My name is Retro. I am your host. Welcome to my podcast, the show where each week I delve deep

1:22.0

with some of the most inspiring and compelling thought leaders. I can find across all categories of health, fitness, athletic performance, medicine, entrepreneurship, spirituality, creativity.

1:33.0

You get the idea. Really appreciate you guys tuning in today for subscribing for sharing the show with your friends for leaving a review on Apple podcasts for supporting my work via Patreon.

1:43.0

Really happy and grateful, mostly grateful to have your attention here today.

1:49.0

Got a super interesting show for you today. I sit down with the super cool professional race car driver, passionate vegan and environmental activist, Lailani Munter.

1:59.0

So who is this person? Lailani has been racing in the ARCHIS series, which is a development league of NASCAR.

2:06.0

Lailani is the fourth woman in history to race in the Indie Pro series, which is the development league of Indie Car.

2:13.0

She set the record for the highest finish for a female driver in the history of the Texas motor speedway when she finished fourth in 2006, and sports illustrated named her one of the top 10 female race car drivers in the world.

2:26.0

But what's really interesting about Lailani beyond the inherently intriguing appeal of being one of only a few female NASCAR drivers is that for her racing or winning or performance really take a back seat to

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