United Nations screens TV series illuminating worldwide child issues. ('What's Going On?').The United Nations Department of Public Information on 15 April hosted a screening of one episode of "What's Going On What's Going On is a record by American soul singer Marvin Gaye. Released on May 21, 1971 (see 1971 in music), What's Going On reflected the beginning of a new trend in soul music. ?", a ten-part series produced by the UN Works The UN Works Program is a unit of the United Nations’ (UN) Educational Outreach Section that puts a human face on the work of the UN by focusing on real people and their stories. programme in collaboration with Showtime Networks and RCN RCN n abbr (= Royal Canadian Navy) → kanadische Marine Entertainment. It explores critical global issues, such as fighting, poverty, racism and environmental matters, through the eyes of a child. No matter where children live, the series portrays their shared experiences, even if they are on opposing sides of a conflict. It is a breakthrough effort to make those in the modern world more aware of the issues by bringing them into homes via primetime television. A spokesperson for the United Nations hosts each half-hour episode on a chosen topic via one-on-one interactions with the children involved. The first episode, hosted from Trinidad and Tobago Trinidad and Tobago (trĭn`ĭdăd, təbā`gō), officially Republic of Trinidad and Tobago, republic (2005 est. pop. 1,088,000), 1,980 sq mi (5,129 sq km), West Indies. The capital is Port of Spain. by Danny Glover, Goodwill Ambassador This title may refer to:
Personal life Bridges was born in Los Angeles, California, the son of Dorothy Dean (Simpson) and actor Lloyd Bridges. covering poverty in the United States Poverty in the United States refers to people whose annual family income is less than a "poverty line" set by the U.S. government. Poverty is a condition in which a person or community is deprived of, or lacks the essentials for, a minimum standard of well being and life. , Laurence Fishburne Laurence John Fishburne III[1] (born July 30 1961) is an American Academy Award-nominated, Emmy- and Tony Award-winning actor of screen and stage, as well as playwright, director, and producer. showing the deadly impact of landmines in Cambodia, Susan Sarandon speaking with child labourers in Brazil, and Glenn Close presenting girls' education in Morocco. What's Going On? is broadcast on the Showtime television network and is intended for audiences of all ages. The goal is for parents and children to watch the documentaries together and learn about the origins of the problems that children of the world encounter and how the United Nations attempts to address them. In addition, through the UN Works web site, children are able to respond to the episodes. There are also online learning resources available, developed through the CyberSchoolBus, which acts as a liaison between audiences and children in the field. The 15 April event was opened with remarks from UN Under-Secretary-General for Communications and Public Information Shashi Tharoor, followed by Matthew Blank and David McCourt, Showtime and RCN Entertainment Chairmen and Chief Executive Officers, respectively. The event was also attended by actors Michael Douglas, Danny Glover and Glenn Close, as well as by UN Deputy-Secretary-General Louise Frechette, who spoke of the importance of the series and the different ways in which the UN can get its messages across to the public. Assistant Secretary-General for External Relations Gillian Sorensen was also present at the event. After the episode on child soldiers in Sierra Leone aired, Carmel Mulvany of the UN Works programme spoke of the importance of the efforts to inform and educate audiences on critical global matters. What's Going On? Provides the American public with insight into the atrocities affecting children in remote parts of the world. Through celebrity goodwill ambassadors and messengers of peace, viewers are presented with familiar figures who make them realize that the events that affect these children's lives are indeed real. They come to embrace these issues and get the sense that they are happening closer to home. The series is truly the quintessential embodiment of the work that the United Nations puts forward in order to aid children. In the case of Mr. Douglas' episode, he helped a former child soldier locate his long lost mother (seepage 54). Perhaps more importantly, however, is how What's Going On? puts a human face on these issues and promotes a message of tolerance and understanding for all children, and that problems for children around the world are everybody's problems. |
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