|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
GOOD PEOPLE GOOD WORKS
Laurent Imbault and GoodnessTV: Uplifting the World - P1/2
|
|
|
|
|
In this world there are
thousands and thousands
of people working to
make a difference,
working to help
other people regardless
of creed, religion,
or political affiliation.
And it is of those people
that Goodness TV
wants to talk about.
Halo, kind viewers,
and welcome to today’s
Good People, Good Works
featuring the first
in a two-part series on
Internet television station
GoodnessTV which airs
inspirational programs
on noble individuals and
groups who are uplifting
our world through
their sincere efforts
to better humanity.
The station’s founder is
Laurent Imbault,
a noted Canadian actor
and comedian.
Mr. Imbault starred
in the Canadian television
drama “Watatatow,”
a long-running series
that addressed
important social issues
faced by youth.
He has also appeared
in films produced both
in Canada and the USA.
What inspired
Mr. Imbault to
create GoodnessTV?
Surprisingly, he realized
the need for such a station
after speaking with
his elderly mother.
My mother, she’s now 95
and three years ago
she broke her hip and
I spent a lot of time
at the hospital with her.
We talked a lot.
At some point she said,
“You know, I’m happy
I am going to die soon,
and I am not going to see
all of this anymore.”
And I asked,
"What are you talking
about, Mama?
What is all of ‘this’?"
And she said “You know,
all of this violence and
all the bad news
in the world.”
She said, “I am tired of
seeing this; I don’t see
that there is hope.”
And I thought,
"Wait a second, Mama.”
I said, "There’s hope."
And then I realized that
we live in a world
where we’re lacking
positive input.
There is no place where
I can just relax and
see good news,
and think that maybe
we’re going to make it
as a human race!
So I came back and
I told my wife, “Why
don’t we do something?
Why don’t we start
a television station of
good news,
only good news?”
And it turned out that
it was easier to do it
on the Internet.
So I met some
young programmers and
I talked to them about
the project, and
everybody was really
enthusiastic, so we
started Goodness TV.
What is the mission
of Mr. Imbault’s
television station?
Basically, the mission is
to talk about people that
are working to make
this world a better place.
It’s really dedicated
to good news.
The people I meet,
the people I meet
in my everyday life
are good people.
And basically there are
millions of good people
working to help others
and working towards
the good of others.
So GoodnessTV
is basically about those
people, whether they are
individuals, whether
they are working within
the frameworks of
non-governmental
organizations (NGOs) or
the United Nations
or Oxfam, or
whether they are working
within societies.
A lot of corporations
are totally involved in
their environment and
help people in all kinds of
projects, and
we never hear about
these corporations.
We never hear about
these people because
there’s nowhere that
you can hear about them.
With the help of
several professionals who
generously volunteered
their time and expertise,
Mr. Imbault developed
GoodnessTV and
quickly got the station
up and running.
The official launch
was last September,
so September 2009.
And we launched the
official French website.
The English website was
launched the first week
or second week
of January 2010.
We’re about 10 people
now around the table,
and I am totally amazed
because nobody
gets paid.
Everybody’s working
volunteer and pro-bono.
And everybody shares
ideas, everybody is
really enthusiastic, and
hopefully, as it grows,
it’s just going to grow
by itself.
All are welcome to
introduce their work
to the world on
GoodnessTV.
How does one get
their show broadcast
by the station?
There’s three points of
entry for GoodnessTV.
Individuals, you and me
and anybody that’s
watching, can come and
create a profile exactly
like on YouTube, and
upload videos that
they feel are important
or significant to them.
One very important thing
is that all the videos on
GoodnessTV
have to be watched
and approved
by my people.
We will not broadcast
everything; it has to be
within the framework
of the mission of
Goodness TV.
So individuals can come
in and create profiles
and upload videos
they feel are important
to them, and they want
other people to see
and share those videos.
NGO’s, foundations,
non-profit organizations
can come
and create profiles.
And those two points
of entry are free
for everybody, so it’s free
for individuals and
it’s free for NGOs and
non-profit organizations.
Corporations,
on the other hand, can do
exactly the same thing,
but at the same time they
have to have a profile.
So for instance,
a car company could not
just advertise on
Goodness TV.
The car company has to
have a profile, and
the profile has to be
within the mission of
Goodness TV.
After this brief message
we’ll return to our
fascinating interview
with Laurent Imbault,
founder of GoodnessTV.
Please stay tuned to
Supreme Master
Television.
Welcome back to
Good People, Good Works,
as we continue
our program featuring
Laurent Imbault,
a noted Canadian actor
and comedian who has
started a unique Internet
television station,
GoodnessTV,
which focuses on
the goodness in life.
I am basically
a media person.
I’ve always been
in front of cameras.
I’m not afraid to be today
in front of a camera,
and I’m quite at ease
with cameras.
We’ve produced theater;
we’ve produced
small videos
on all kinds of things.
So it’s
a whole experience
for me to be able to
finally put together
all these experiences.
So GoodnessTV for me
is the sum total of
all my experiences as
an actor, as a producer,
as a human being.
The GoodnessTV
website is in French
and English, but plans are
in the works to make
the site more accessible
to a global audience by
adding other languages
as well.
The programmers have
so far created a template.
So now we can add
a language very easily.
I would love to have
at least Spanish, Russian,
Chinese and Arabic,
which are the six
official United Nations
languages,
but we can have video.
Somebody wrote to me
the other day and said,
"Could we have videos
in Quechua?"
which is the language
of the Indians
in Northern Peru.
And I said,
"Well, why not?
If somebody watches
those videos in Quechua,
I can certainly broadcast
videos in Quechua."
We’ve added recently
the Hindi category, so
we have videos in Hindi.
We have videos
in seventeen languages
but the website is
only officially
in two languages.
But we’ll add languages
as they come along.
Mr. Imbault’s next
GoodnessTV project
involves producing
his own original shows
about benevolent
individuals and
organizations that are
contributing towards
the progress of
humanity and the world.
So what we’d really like
to do is also produce.
So we want to have
a daily broadcast.
We want to produce
videos with NGOs
(non-governmental
organizations).
A lot of NGOs treat
the Internet as
a reading media and
not as a cinema.
To me
it’s a cinema media,
it’s a new media.
A lot of NGOs
don’t have the capacity,
the knowhow or
the personnel to produce
for this new medium.
It’s a brand new medium,
with an attention span
of four, five minutes
maximum.
I find that NGOs
are not quite there yet.
They don’t know how to
use this medium yet.
So, hopefully,
what I’d like to do is
produce also a lot of
videos for NGOs,
in order for them
to spread the word about
what that they’re doing.
I am going to Africa
in the summertime
and we’re visiting
four countries in Africa.
And really what I want to
do is go in the field and
ask those people,
“What is working?”
If I see a smile of a child,
if I see happiness,
I know that you’re
doing good work.
The response to
GoodnessTV
has been remarkable,
with viewers from around
our globe watching
the posted videos.
We have all kinds of
viewers, and again I am
totally flabbergasted.
Sometimes I wake up
in the morning and
look at my Google report,
and I have people from
a hundred countries.
I would never have thought
in my wildest dreams
that I could reach out
and talk and
communicate with people
from a hundred countries
that I don’t know.
Sometimes I get people
from Yemen, I get people
from Saudi Arabia,
I mean they’re
foreign countries to me.
And I go “Wow,” I got
somebody from Japan,
and people from
Southeast Asia.
They come because they
find something there
that relates to them,
that talks to them.
And that’s how
I know that my idea is
a universal idea, and that
the site exists beyond me.
Our world is increasingly
getting closer
through the advancement
of communication
technologies.
Laurent Imbault
feels strongly that this is
a wonderful trend that
can only mean
great things for us all.
I truly believe that
we are the generation
that can put an end
to extreme poverty.
The human race today
is at a point where
it’s never been before.
We have never been
connected like this
in the whole of history.
We have never lived
the way we’re living now,
with the capacity
of touching people
hundreds, thousands of
miles away,
of communicating,
picking up the phone.
And my son is traveling
now in India and Thailand
and I can see him.
He connects
on the Internet.
The technology today
is unique in the whole
of the human race,
of the development
of history.
How did the station
help a teacher in India?
How was it able to bring
together the people
of India and Bolivia?
Find out by joining us
again next Sunday on
Good People, Good Works
for part two of
our engaging discussion
with Laurent Imbault.
Many thanks
Laurent Imbault and
dedicated, kind-hearted
associates for starting
GoodnessTV, which
brings happiness
to viewers and
makes our world a more
beautiful place to live.
For more details on
GoodnessTV,
please visit:
www.GoodnessTV.org
Our appreciation
enlightened viewers
for your company
on today’s program.
Up next is
The World Around Us,
after Noteworthy News.
May we all enjoy
abundance, friendship
and joy
each day of our lives.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Download by Subtitle
|
|
Arabic , Aulac , Bulgarian , Chinese , Croatian , Czech-Slovak , Dari , Dutch , English , French , German , Gujarati , Hebrew , Hindi , Hungarian , Indonesian , Italian , Japanese , Korean , Malay , Mongol , Mongolian , Persian , Polish , Portuguese , Punjabi , Romanian , Russian , Sinhalese , Slovenian , Spanish , Thai , Turkish , Urdu , Zulu ,
Bulgarian ,
Croatian ,
Dutch , Estonian , Greek , Gujarati ,
Indonesian ,
Mongolian , Nepalese ,
Norwegian , Polish , Punjabi ,
Sinhalese ,
Swedish , Slovenian , Tagalog , Tamil , Zulu
|
|
Scrolls Download |
|
MP3 Download |
|
|
|
|
MP4 download for iPhone(iPod ) |
|
|
Download Non Subtitle Videos
|
|
|
Download by Program
|
|
|
|
|
|
Download by Date
|
Sun |
Mon |
Tue |
Wed |
Thu |
Fri |
Sat |
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
6
|
7
|
8
|
9
|
10
|
11
|
12
|
13
|
14
|
15
|
16
|
17
|
18
|
19
|
20
|
21
|
22
|
23
|
24
|
25
|
26
|
27
|
28
|
29
|
30
|
|
|
|
|