Greetings caring viewers, 
and welcome to 
Enlightening Entertainment. 
From the silent spread 
of drought, 
to the dramatic loss of ice 
in the Arctic and 
Antarctic lairs, the perils 
of climate change 
are accelerating, 
catching all 
too many of us unaware.
Fortunately, 
they have been brought 
to light before our eyes 
through informative 
and creative media, 
including films. 
They shed light on how 
these complex situations 
affect our lives and 
call us to bold action. 
Please join us 
as we come to know 
some of these films 
and their creators who 
have made it a mission 
to help save this planet 
we called home.
We’re doing what 
no wild animal will do; 
we’re fouling our own nest.
The 2006 documentary, 
“An Inconvenient Truth,” 
produced by 
former US Vice President 
and Nobel Laureate 
Al Gore, has been 
credited for raising 
real global awareness 
on climate change. 
In 2007, “The 11th Hour,” 
was released as made by 
the famous American 
actor Leonardo DiCaprio. 
From political leaders 
to celebrities, 
voices of concern were 
speaking ever louder, 
especially through film.
In 2007 and 2009, 
Disneynature made two 
spectacular documentaries. 
“Earth” showed 
the beauty of wildlife 
and the harsh ways 
their habitats are threatened. 
“Oceans” dived into 
the mysterious depths to 
see the amazing creatures 
that inhabit most of 
the planet’s surface. 
But the life force of 
the Earth’s flora and fauna 
are becoming 
more fragile each day.
And as their co-inhabitants, 
human lives 
are precarious as well.
Award-winning Irish 
American filmmaker 
Michael Nash traveled 
around the world to collect 
first-hand testimonies 
from climate victims who 
are being uprooted due to 
the unlivable conditions. 
His heart-wrenching 
documentary, 
“Climate Refugees,” 
was released in 2010. 
As climate change issues 
made us see ourselves 
as connected with 
a greater environment, 
some filmmakers made it 
a point to broaden 
our viewpoint even further: 
we are connected 
with the environment and 
all the lives in it as well.
In 2005, US director 
Shaun Monson presented 
his multi-award-winning 
documentary “Earthlings,” 
which explores the 
interspecies relationship 
between humans and 
other species on Earth. 
Mr. Monson discussed 
the film’s title, which is 
also its central concept.
I kept thinking, 
“Well what would be 
a good title that 
encompassed everything?” 
What term, 
what definition could 
there be no division among? 
What word encompassed 
the animal-human-tree? 
You know, “Earthlings,” 
that seems to be 
the most fitting. 
If you look at the cover 
of the DVD as well, 
it has a leaf 
and it has this cow
and it has a human in it. 
It says, “Nature . . . 
make the connection” 
between
the three Earthlings, 
and so that was the idea 
for the title.
American photographer 
and director 
Louie Psihoyos, 
also illustrates the
human-animal relationship 
in his documentary 
“The Cove,” which won 
the 2010 Academy Award 
for Best Documentary Film. 
Both “Earthlings” and 
“The Cove” send 
a powerful message 
that our disregard 
for the planet and 
for our co-inhabitants 
must be stopped if 
humanity is to be redeemed.
One of the tragic ironies 
of this movie 
is that the dolphin 
is the only wild animal 
throughout history to save 
the life of a human being. 
The only way that we can 
save the life of a dolphin 
now is to prove that 
we made his environment 
so toxic, that we can 
no longer eat them. 
It shows you the amount 
of respect that we lost 
for the animal and
the amount of respect 
that we lost for ourselves. 
As the Executive Director 
of the Oceanic 
Preservation Society, 
Mr. Psihoyos also talks 
about the dire situation 
of our oceans 
which is endangering 
all the marine species.
The dead zones are 
increasing in number and 
they’re increasing in size. 
We’re trying 
to solve the problem
in one little cove, but
it’s really a microcosm 
of what’s going on 
in the oceans. 
With all the fertilizers and 
run-offs and pesticides, 
it’s killing the oceans. 
If the global temperature 
rise exceeds 
2 degrees Celsius, 
many islands 
and coastal regions 
will be among the first to 
face increased disasters 
on a most frightening scale. 
In 2010, 
a Formosan (Taiwanese) 
documentary to bring 
this reality closer to home. 
The film, produced by 
the famed Formosan 
(Taiwanese) media 
personality Sisy Chen, 
is called “±2 Degrees C.”  
On a global scale, 
the first group of people 
who might be wiped out 
the most vulnerable are
those on the islands in the
Pacific Ocean and Africa. 
Next, it affects the Asian 
countries like Formosa.
I’m so much concerned 
about climate change, 
because I don’t want 
our future generations 
to question us, just as 
I’m questioning the need 
for more concrete action 
on climate change today.
If the situation 
doesn’t change, 
any one of us can become 
the next climate refugee. 
So, what is the best way 
to stop global warming? 
More respected 
filmmakers respond, 
when we return. 
Please stay tuned 
to Supreme Master 
Television.
The central driving issue 
behind the show is one of 
the most important issues 
facing all of us today, 
and that is the 
desecration of the planet, 
and global warming, 
and how we can reverse 
the horrible trend of what 
can happen to this planet. 
If you look at a planet 
like Venus, 
Venus is suffering
 from global warming; 
and the Earth can easily 
go that way. 
Welcome back to 
Enlightening Entertainment 
and our program 
featuring environmental 
films and filmmakers and
their timely messages.
Through 
appealing storylines 
and state-of-the-art 
special effects, eco-dramas 
and science fiction 
movies such as 
“The Day After Tomorrow,” 
“2012,” and “Avatar” 
remind people 
of the importance 
of preventing 
irreversible harm or loss 
of our one and only planet. 
Eminent US filmmaker 
James Cameron wrote 
and directed “Avatar.”
There is an interesting 
thing that is happening 
with “Avatar,” that a lot 
of environmental people 
who represent various 
causes are coming to me 
and saying, 
‘Can we do something in 
connection with Avatar?’ 
To celebrate Earth Day 
and its DVD release, 
the box-office hit “Avatar” 
teamed up with 
Earth Day Network 
to plant one million trees 
by the end of 2010.
Maybe this film can do 
more than just sort of 
be a movie that 
kind of makes people 
think about something. 
Maybe it can actually 
be a way to focus energy 
on certain specific causes 
and specific places where 
people can take action.
The mesmerizing beauty 
of our planet and 
the shocking impacts 
humans have had on it 
are depicted vividly 
via aerial-only view 
in the 2008 documentary, 
“Home.”
This film was the result 
of the hard work 
of renowned 
French photographer 
Yann Arthus-Bertrand 
to present the large scale 
of the human impact 
on the environment.
“HOME,” produced by 
distinguished filmmaker 
Luc Besson, was 
simultaneously released 
in dozens of countries, 
via theaters, television, 
and the internet, 
free of charge. 
This was the wish 
of director and 
2009 United Nations 
Environment Program 
Goodwill Ambassador 
Yann Arthus-Bertrand, 
who ceded 
his author’s rights 
in order to reach 
as many people 
as possible. 
I made this film for you. 
Please share it. 
People told me that 
“HOME” is 
an impossible initiative. 
So I would like to tell you 
tonight: 
Let’s believe together 
in impossible initiatives. 
Let’s believe in it.
The film also addresses 
the environmental damage 
caused by 
the livestock raising. 
Nowadays 
Eating less meat 
is certainly 
a healthier way of living. 
Eating less meat is to send 
less CO2 and methane 
in the atmosphere. 
Because meat is
unfortunately responsible 
for huge deforestation. 
We know that the solutions 
are there today.  
We all have the power
to change. 
Conscientious 
French filmmakers, 
Mr. Pierre Barougier and 
Mr. Olivier Bourgeois, 
produced 
an eco-documentary, 
“Nous resterons sur terre,” 
or “Here to Stay,” 
released in 2009. 
It was chosen by 
the United Nations 
Educational, Scientific 
and Cultural Organization 
(UNESCO) 
to be screened ahead of 
the 2009 Copenhagen 
Climate Change Conference. 
In this film, the directors 
address humans’ 
exploitative relationship 
toward the planet, 
including factory farming.
This system of intensive 
livestock farming and 
the massive production 
of meat, has already 
disastrous effects 
on the environment. 
If all agricultural land 
occupied by 
those livestock farms, by 
soy cultivation necessary 
to feed the livestock, 
would be used to produce 
grain and vegetables 
and fruit to feed 
the entire population 
of this planet, 
we could reduce hunger 
in the world 
to a large extent.
As early as 1995, 
a succinct documentary 
“Devour the Earth” 
clearly illustrated the 
environmental consequences 
of human activities 
and the effects 
of the meat-based diet. 
Fifteen years later, 
the film’s ultimate message 
remains true. 
Taking off where 
“An Inconvenient Truth” 
leaves off, 
“Meat the Truth,” 
a 2008 Dutch documentary, 
shows how the livestock 
industry worldwide emits 
more greenhouse gases 
than all the transportation 
sources combined.
What are your hopes 
for the movie? 
I hope that a lot, a lot of 
people will see this movie 
and it will change 
their way of thinking, 
and they in the end 
are going to eat less meat.
“Meat the Truth” 
was presented by 
Dutch Parliament Member 
Ms. Marianne Thieme.
We are here surrounded 
by people 
who are interested 
in the number one cause 
of global warming and 
that is the meat industry. 
Well, it's great to see 
that the movie 
is well received. 
It's just the start 
of a world tour 
on compassion.
The severe drought 
in Australia in 2003 
motivated 
the young filmmaker 
Aaron Scheibner 
to produce his 
remarkable documentary, 
“A Delicate Balance – 
the Truth,” 
released in 2008.
It’s a feature-length 
documentary. 
The two main themes 
of the film are health 
and the environment. 
Health details how
the over-consumption 
of animal protein, 
specifically meat 
and dairy, is contributing 
to ill health in the world. 
The rise of cancer, 
diabetes, and obesity 
are linked to this and also 
how animal agriculture 
contributes 
to global warming 
more than cars combined. 
I’ve spoken to a lot of 
people about that, and 
some people think it’s 
too simple to switch to a 
vegetarian or vegan diet 
and that will solve 
a lot of problems. 
It may be simple but 
I think it is the answer.
Preserving this 
precious planet is 
everyone’s responsibility 
and a privilege. 
This is the message that 
Emmy-Award-winning 
producer, director, writer, 
and cinematographer 
Lionel Friedberg, 
who is also a vegan, 
conveyed in the powerful 
2007 documentary, 
“A Sacred Duty: 
Applying Jewish Values 
to Help Heal the World.”
That’s what 
“A Sacred Duty” is about. 
Global warming is here. 
What are we doing 
about it? 
Well, you've got
to change your diet, 
and what does that do? 
It stops the desecration 
and destruction 
of rainforests. 
It stops the destruction 
of all the land that we’re 
giving over to growing 
crops to feed animals. 
It stops the amount
of methane 
that comes from cows. 
You can 
make a difference! 
By changing your diet 
and by being
 peace-loving and 
by living a peaceful, 
compassionate lifestyle. 
And all it’s about is what 
you put on that plate 
for breakfast, for lunch, 
and for dinner. 
That’s where you make 
a difference. 
Our gratitude, 
all the esteemed 
environmental filmmakers, 
for delivering 
such important messages 
to the millions with 
your keen perception, 
profound knowledge, 
and deep commitment 
to saving the planet. 
May such engaging 
presentations prompt us 
to do our part, starting with 
the Earth-saving veg diet.
Hi, my name is 
Shaun Monson 
and I am the director of 
the film “Earthlings” and 
I'm here to say, 
please be veg, 
go green 
and save the planet! 
Thank you.
I am Sisy Chen. 
“±2 Degrees C.” 
Be veg, 
go green, 
save the planet.
Be veg, 
go green, 
save the planet.
Thoughtful viewers, 
thank you 
for joining us today. 
Coming up next is 
Words of Wisdom, 
after Noteworthy News, 
here on 
Supreme Master Television. 
Blessed be 
your noble endeavors.
In the book, 
“Dead Mars, Dying Earth,”
US theoretical 
plasma physicist 
John E. Brandenburg 
explains some of 
the latest developments 
in the study of Mars and 
their implications for the 
future of our own planet.
It’s a wonderful thing
to be living in this age 
where we’re finally 
getting the answers 
to all these mysteries 
we used to wonder about. 
They used to think there 
were canals on Mars. 
Well, there weren’t 
any canals but there are 
water channels. 
There’s everything on 
Mars that they actually 
imagined there was 
but it isn’t quite the same 
as they imagined it.
Join us for Part 2 of 
our intriguing interview 
with 
Dr. John Brandenburg, 
Monday, April 26 on 
Science and Spirituality.