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GOOD PEOPLE,GOOD WORKS
Chantal Cooke's Passion for the Planet - P1/2
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It doesn’t matter what it is
you choose to do,
it’s about doing something.
Oh, yes,
take massive action
if you can,
but if you can’t
take massive action,
take some minute action,
just take some action.
Hallo, respected viewers,
and welcome to today’s
Good People, Good Works
featuring
British journalist
and environmentalist
Chantal Cooke,
who in 2002 co-founded
Passion for the Planet,
a UK-based radio station
that is dedicated to
helping listeners pursue
greener, healthier, and
more fulfilling lifestyles.
The London Leaders
program brings together
leading civic figures
of diverse backgrounds
to advise the Mayor
of London, England on
various important issues
concerning the city.
In 2009 Chantal Cooke
was appointed
a London Leader
in Sustainability
due to her experience in
promoting green living.
As a result
of her participation
in the program,
Ms. Cooke was inspired
to launch
the “Munch Less Meat”
initiative, which
encourages Londoners
to adopt a sustainable diet
by consuming
less or no meat.
For her vigorous efforts
to preserve
and protect the planet,
Ms. Cooke has received
many awards, including
the Triodos Women in
Ethical Business Award,
the Green Business Award
and the British
Environment
and Media Award.
Ms. Cooke now shares
how she first
became interested in
environmental issues.
I think it’s
one of those things I feel
has always been with me.
But of course,
if I had to look back
I’d say I was very lucky
that my grandparents,
in particular,
were very into nature and
plants and things like that.
They were
one of the first people
to bring certain cacti
and succulents
into this country.
So they had
this massive cacti
and succulent collection.
So I was always out
in the garden and
fiddling around
with the plants.
There was always this thing
about being out
in the garden
and looking at the plants
and those sorts of things.
As a young child,
in addition to her interest
in plants
and the environment,
Ms. Cooke also
truly loved animals
and even published
a magazine about them.
And when I was
about eight years old,
I wrote to a magazine
called “Animal Press,”
and I traced
lots of picture of animals
and did little quizzes
and all that kind of stuff
you do when
you’re eight years old.
And one of the teachers
at school was fantastic.
And she, I think xeroxed it.
I sold it around the school
for something
like ten pence a copy.
I think I made
the sum total of £1.20,
which I have to say,
in those days, was a bit
more than it is today.
So I sold these copies
of the magazine and then
I sent the money off
to charity.
And they wrote back
and obviously
were very grateful
and made me an
honorary lifetime member.
And of course
you can imagine
as an eight year old I was
“an honorary member.”
It was just so exciting.
As a young adult
Ms. Cooke began
working for
several UK radio stations
in various capacities.
My background really
has been as a journalist
but predominantly
focused on radio.
My actual first job in radio
was making radio
commercials for movies,
which was,
as you can imagine
straight out of university,
actually really
quite exciting.
So I got to meet some
really interesting people.
So it was a good grounding.
I think in lots of ways
the grounding
in commercials was,
the most useful bit, because
when you have to
produce a commercial,
you have to
make it very short.
You need to get
that information across
like that really quickly
and it has to stick.
And actually
if you can use those
same kinds of principles
for all sorts of information,
even when you’ve got
more than 30 seconds,
I think that’s a really
good discipline to have.
From there I moved to
the British Broadcasting
Corporation (BBC)
and then that was really
good because it was
a lot of grounding and
producing speech radio
and so on.
It’s a 24-hour
speech station,
so that was hard work,
But it was really good fun.
After leaving the BBC,
Ms. Cooke broadened
her experience
by working on other
radio related projects.
She then made
the courageous decision
to launch her own station.
And at the time
this was the very early days
of DAB radio.
And what that did was
give an opportunity
to have more
niche-focused stations
in a way that
the bandwidth
available on FM just
couldn’t allow to happen.
And DAB is?
Digital Air Broadcasting
is what it stands for.
And it’s what’s
replacing FM in the UK.
And the benefits are
there’s a lot more
bandwidth available,
so it actually means
there’s an opportunity
for stations like
“Passion for the Planet”
which has a more
kind of focused audience.
We’ll continue
our lively discussion
with Chantal Cooke
after these brief messages.
Please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television.
So I think it's about
thinking and remembering
that as individuals we do
have quite a lot of power.
I mean, we are consumers.
We consume
a massive amount.
Just think, if you took
even 10% of the money
that you use to consume
and shifted it, what
a phenomenal difference
that would make!
Welcome back to
Good People, Good Works
as we continue
our interview
with Chantal Cooke,
journalist, environmentalist
and co-founder
of the radio station
Passion for the Planet.
From her many years
of working
in the radio industry,
Ms. Cooke has realized
that radio can be
a powerful medium
for informing people
about environmental issues.
What radio can do is you
put it on the background
and you’re listening,
and then there’ll be a
little thing about wildlife
and you’ll go,
"Oh, that’s interesting.”
And then maybe
a little bit later you hear
something else and go,
"Oh, I didn’t know
that, really?"
Actually you’ve just
learned something,
and if the radio station
is doing its job properly,
hopefully
you’re inspired to go,
“Oh I could do that.
That would be
kind of interesting,” and
so on in whatever area
it happens to be.
It doesn’t have to be
wildlife, obviously.
So that, for me,
is the power of radio.
Radio is not great
at giving you
everything you need to know
on a subject,
but it is really good
at opening up new ideas
and opening doors,
if you like, in the brain.
So that’s why I love radio.
Ms. Cooke's experience
in radio advertising
showed her
the importance of
getting a message across
quickly but effectively.
As a result,
Passion for the Planet
has adopted
a unique approach
to programming.
So, on Passion,
nothing is longer than
five minutes, ever.
It’s a quick five minutes
and a few facts
about something,
and there’ll be some
great music afterwards or
there’ll be something else
to listen to.
So I think it is about
making it accessible
like that.
Passion for the Planet
offers a wide variety
of programming
to its audience.
In addition to
hearing music
from around the world,
the short informational
shows offered
are diverse in nature.
Basically, we have
a number of key areas
we focus on, so obviously,
anything to do
with the environment.
So I would class that
as whether it’s to do
with climate change,
waste and recycling
and things, wildlife,
conservation, nature,
farming, and anything
that basically affects
our environment.
Another area is health.
So that’ll be
both orthodox and
complementary medicine.
It could be physical
and mental health and
spiritual health as well,
because that’s all part of
human beings.
So that’s the health side
of it.
And then, attached to that,
but slightly different,
is personal and
business development.
And we do both because
a lot of our audiences are
people who want
to take responsibility
for the future of their lives.
So they perhaps
run their own business
or they aspire
to run their own business,
or perhaps they have
a small business
on the side of what they do,
which is where
their real passion lies.
So if we can give them
information to help them
build those businesses
and help them,
build themselves
as a person, or improve
what they’re able to
achieve in their lives
then I think
that’s really important.
So it’s basically personal
business development,
health and environmental
issues, and
those are the key areas.
And we mix it in
with music as well.
Since Kenny Stevens
and yourself founded
Passion for the Planet,
can you tell us
any touching feedback,
that you’ve had
from your audience?
I think very early on
we did get an email
from a lady who’d heard
one of the interviews, and
she was actually quite ill.
And she’d heard
this interview and it was
sort of a treatment that
could possibly help her.
It was a sort of a form
of exercise and so on.
And she’d gone off,
tried it out and
it had actually really,
really helped her health.
So I think those stories
are really amazing,
when you hear something
where, you’ve given them
that piece of information,
they’ve gone off
and researched it further,
because as I said
we’re not the font
of all knowledge,
and then actually
it has made a difference.
And she wouldn’t
have known about that
otherwise.
And then the other one is
where people just go,
“Oh I didn’t realize
I could do so and so,
I’ve just started doing it
actually;
it’s really easy, isn’t it?”
And so on.
And that sort of thing
as well, I really enjoy.
Many thanks
to Chantal Cooke
for her inspiring passion
to conserve
and safeguard our planet
and providing
constructive radio and
television programming
that is a vehicle
for growth and learning.
Please join us again
next Sunday on
Good People, Good Works,
for the concluding
episode of our interview
with this green leader.
For more details on
Passion for the Planet,
please visit
www.PassionforthePlanet.com
Information on the
Munch Less Meat project
is available at
MunchLessMeat.co.uk
Thank you,
precious viewers,
for your presence today
on our program.
Up next is
The World Around Us,
after Noteworthy News.
May we all be blessed
with lives
forever filled with
inner tranquility and grace.
Elisabeth Berger is
a vegetarian Austrian
telepathic
animal communicator
who has learned much
from her noble canine
companion, Wuno.
What are some of
Wuno’s heartfelt
messages for humanity?
It’s essential for us
to be a part of the family.
We’re animals and will
always remain so, but
we’re also a part of you.
Meet the vibrant
Ms. Berger and Wuno
in a two-part series airing
Friday and Saturday,
July 16 and 17,
on Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants.
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