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When my first children's book was published
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in 2001,
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I returned to my old elementary school
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to talk to the students about being an author
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and an illustrator,
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and when I was setting up my slide projector
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in the cafetorium,
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I looked across the room,
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and there she was:
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my old lunch lady.
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She was still there at the school
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and she was busily preparing lunches for the day.
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So I approached her to say hello,
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and I said, "Hi, Jeanie! How are you?"
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And she looked at me, and I could tell
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that she recognized me,
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but she couldn't quite place me,
and she looked at me and she said,
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"Steven Krosoczka?"
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And I was amazed that she knew I was a Krosoczka,
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but Steven is my uncle who
is 20 years older than I am,
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and she had been his lunch lady when he was a kid.
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And she started telling me about her grandkids,
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and that blew my mind.
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My lunch lady had grandkids,
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and therefore kids,
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and therefore left school at the end of the day?
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I thought she lived in the cafeteria
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with the serving spoons.
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I had never thought about any of that before.
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Well, that chance encounter inspired my imagination,
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and I created the Lunch Lady graphic novel series,
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a series of comics about a lunch lady
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who uses her fish stick nunchucks
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to fight off evil cyborg substitutes,
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a school bus monster, and mutant mathletes,
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and the end of every book,
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they get the bad guy with their hairnet,
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and they proclaim, "Justice is served!"
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(Laughter) (Applause)
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And it's been amazing, because the series
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was so welcomed into the reading lives of children,
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and they send me the most amazing letters
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and cards and artwork.
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And I would notice as I would visit schools,
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the lunch staff would be involved in the programming
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in a very meaningful way.
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And coast to coast,
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all of the lunch ladies told me the same thing:
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"Thank you for making a superhero in our likeness."
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Because the lunch lady has not been treated
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very kindly in popular culture over time.
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But it meant the most to Jeanie.
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When the books were first published,
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I invited her to the book launch party,
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and in front of everyone there,
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everyone she had fed over the years,
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I gave her a piece of artwork and some books.
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And two years after this photo was taken,
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she passed away,
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and I attended her wake,
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and nothing could have prepared
me for what I saw there,
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because next to her casket was this painting,
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and her husband told me it meant so much to her
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that I had acknowledged her hard work,
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I had validated what she did.
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And that inspired me to create a day
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where we could recreate that feeling
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in cafeterias across the country:
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School Lunch Hero Day, a day where kids
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can make creative projects for their lunch staff.
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And I partnered with the
School Nutrition Association,
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and did you know that a little over 30 million kids
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participate in school lunch programs every day.
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That equals up to a little over five billion lunches
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made every school year.
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And the stories of heroism go well beyond
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just a kid getting a few extra chicken nuggets
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on their lunch tray.
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There is Ms. Brenda in California,
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who keeps a close eye on every
student that comes through her line
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and then reports back to the guidance counselor
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if anything is amiss.
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There are the lunch ladies in Kentucky
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who realized that 67 percent of their students
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relied on those meals every day,
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and they were going without food over the summer,
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so they retrofitted a school bus
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to create a mobile feeding unit,
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and they traveled around the neighborhoods
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feedings 500 kids a day during the summer.
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And kids made the most amazing projects.
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I knew they would.
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Kids made hamburger cards
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that were made out of construction paper.
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They took photos of their lunch lady's head
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and plastered it onto my cartoon lunch lady
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and fixed that to a milk carton
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and presented them with flowers.
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And they made their own comics,
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starring the cartoon lunch lady
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alongside their actual lunch ladies.
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And they made thank you pizzas,
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where every kid signed a different topping
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of a construction paper pizza.
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For me, I was so moved by the response
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that came from the lunch ladies,
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because one woman said to me, she said,
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"Before this day, I felt like I was
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at the end of the planet at this school.
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I didn't think that anyone noticed us down here."
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Another woman said to me,
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"You know, what I get out of this
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is that what I do is important."
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And of course what she does is important.
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What they all do is important.
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They're feeding our children every single day,
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and before a child can learn,
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their belly needs to be full,
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and these women and men
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are working on the front lines to create
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an educated society.
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So I hope that
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you don't wait for School Lunch Hero Day
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to say thank you to your lunch staff,
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and I hope that you remember
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how powerful a thank you can be.
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A thank you can change a life.
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It changes the life of the person who receives it,
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and it changes the life of the person
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who expresses it.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)