Category Archives: PSA

Unite For Japan with Ken Watanabe & friends

Unite For Japan with Ken Watanabe & friends

Ken Watanabe’s ‘Unite For Japan’ was launched with the aim to raise funds for the earthquake effort. Please join them in showing Japan doesn’t stand alone by making a donation. No contribution is too small, and if we work together, we can make a difference. Here’s why Ken Watanabe started this fundraising effort:

Japan was the recent victim of one of the largest earthquakes ever recorded. The magnitude 9.0 quake occurred off the coast of Sendai at 2:46pm on March 11, and triggered a powerful tsunami that engulfed the northeastern coast less than an hour later. The catastrophe left over 27,000 dead or missing and forced 450,000 into shelters. The earthquake also led to cooling problems at three of Japan’s nuclear power plants. After the meltdown of at least two nuclear reactors, residents in the affected areas were evacuated, and a state of emergency was declared.

When I first saw the catastrophic damage, I was in shock and utter disbelief. In the days following the earthquake, it was devastating for me to watch the homeless taking shelter at evacuation centers. Many were eating just one meal a day, and sleeping on floors with inadequate clothing to fight off the cold, all the while not knowing when or how their lives could change for the better after losing homes and, in some cases, loved ones. The events were so overwhelming that I felt powerless. But soon, I was no longer able to sit still and watch the horrifying events unfold. I decided to do two things, which was to help raise funds for the earthquake relief effort, and give the victims moral support by gathering messages from around the world.

A few months have passed since the deadly earthquake struck Japan, but hundreds of thousands are still living in shelters and many are reporting increased rates of fatigue, stress, and insomnia. In addition, a growing number of children are developing mumps, asthma, and pneumonia and other illnesses related to stress. Two months later, Japan still needs your help. If you haven’t already done so, please support by making a donation. No contribution is too small, and if we work together, we can make a difference

With one catastrophe after another, morale in Japan is low. But with your help, I know the people of Japan will make it through this catastrophe. Please join me in showing that Japan doesn’t stand alone by participating in the Unite for Japan relief effort. Thank you so much for your help, and please continue to keep the victims in your thoughts and prayers.

You can learn more about how you can help here (English) or here (Japanese).

Here’s a few more ways people have supported Japan:

Tsunami Relief: Download to Donate

Songs for Japan

2011 Japan Earthquake people finder

You can also click on the “donate to Japan” button on the toolbar at the footer of channelAPA.com.
We Pray For You : YouTube Japan Tribute

Unite For Japan with Ken Watanabe

Celebrities Unite For Japan with Ken Watanabe

(In order of appearance) Cobie Smulders, William Shatner, Jamie Lee Curtis, Apolo Ohno, John Legend, Cameron Diaz, Masi Oka, Matt Damon, Steph Song, John Travolta, Paula Abdul, Richard Lewis, Muramasa Kudo, Katy Perry, Jonah Hill, Sharon Lawrence, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Aisha Tyler, Amaury Nolasco, Charlize Theron, Hideki Matsui, Ellen Degeneres, Julian McMahon, Robert Patrick, Maggie Q, Mikael Hafstrom, Clint Eastwood, Jennifer Morrison, Cillian Murphy, Rob Marshall, Zoe Saldana, Mark Wahlberg, Leonardo Dicaprio and Jake Shimabukuro unite for Ken Watanabe’s earthquake relief effort.

“Amazing Grace” by Jake Shimabukuro is available on Amazing Grace - Amazing Grace - Single.

cellist Yo-Yo Ma: CBS PSA

cellist Yo-Yo Ma: CBS PSA

Musician Yo-Yo Ma is the next Asian American to be featured in the CBS PSAs for APA Heritage Month. He was born in 1955 to Chinese parents living in Paris. He began to study the cello with his father at age four and soon came with his family to New York, where he spent most of his formative years. He played for President Kennedy at the age of 7 and went on to be a world renowned cellist. He sought out a traditional liberal arts education to expand upon his conservatory training, graduating from Harvard University in 1976. Celebrating his 30th anniversary with Sony Classical and Sony Masterworks, Yo-Yo Ma is an exclusive Sony Classical artist, and his discography of over 75 albums (including 15 Grammy Award winners) reflects his wide-ranging interests. Across this full range of releases, Yo-Yo Ma remains one of the best-selling recording artists in the classical field. In 2006, He was named a U.N. Messenger of Peace.

Previous CBS PSAs
Olympic diver Sammy Lee
Senator Daniel Inouye
Congressman Dalip Singh Saund
Dr. David Ho

Actor Tim Kang from The Mentalist on cellist Yo-Yo Ma


A World Without Moms by Jubilee Project

A World Without Moms by Jubilee Project

In time for Mother’s Day, The Jubilee Project releases a video called “A World Without Moms” to support maternal health and help save the lives of moms around the world. Inspired by our desire to help moms because of the love and care we received from our own moms, The Jubilee Project is partnering with Every Mother Counts, an organization dedicated to improving maternal health and founded by women’s health advocate, filmmaker and model, Christy Turlington Burns.

Every year, 7 million women are injured and 350,000 women die due to complications related to childbirth. These deaths, though, can be prevented by providing basic medical care. The challenge is making this problem and solution known. Their hope is that the video can inspire, empower and enable others to take action and help moms everywhere have access to good medical care.

For Mother’s Day, please help them spread this important message and let us together celebrate and love the moms in this world. For every view this video gets in the month of May, sponsors will donate a penny to Every Mother Counts in order to support maternal health advocacy efforts worldwide. How this fundraiser works is that if you would like to support the cause financially, you can sign up to become a sponsor of the video. Each sponsor will pledge to donate 1 penny (or more) for each view the video receives in the month of May. So if the video receives 10,000 views by the end of the month, each sponsor will donate $100. The sponsor can also choose to cap the amount they donate. You can sign up to sponsor the video at any time in May by emailing project.jubilee@gmail.com.

See previous videos from Jubilee Project: Why I Sing, Love Language, Beautiful, and Waiting Game.

A World Without Moms by Jubilee Project

Dr. David Ho : CBS PSA

Dr. David Ho : CBS PSA

Dr. David Ho was profiled as part of the CBS PSAs for APA Heritage Month. He has revolutionized our understanding of AIDS. His research has led him to combine drugs in a unique way to make AIDS treatable. In 1996, he was named TIME magazine’s Man of the Year.

Previous CBS PSAs
Olympic diver Sammy Lee
Senator Daniel Inouye
Congressman Dalip Singh Saund

Julie Chen from The Talk on Dr. David Ho

Congressman Dalip Singh Saund : CBS PSA

Congressman Dalip Singh Saund : CBS PSA

The CBS Diversity ads for APA Heritage Month continues with another politician who paved the way.

Born in India in 1899, Dalip Singh Saund came to the US to study in the 1920’s. Saund began fighting discriminatory laws against Indians and campaigned to allow all people of South Asian descent to become naturalized citizens. In 1949, he and other Indians finally earned the right to become U.S. citizens. In 1956, he was elected to the U.S. Congress from the 29th California District, which then comprised Riverside and Imperial counties. He became the first Asian American, Indian American and Sikh member of the United States Congress. Read more from his autobiography “Congressman from India” here or here.

Previous CBS PSAs
Olympic diver Sammy Lee
Senator Daniel Inouye

Actor Kunal Nayyar from The Big Bang Theory on Dalip Singh Saund (the first South Asian to serve in the House of Representatives)

Senator Daniel Inouye : CBS PSA

Senator Daniel Inouye : CBS PSA

Here’s another CBS Diversity ad for APA Heritage Month. The Asian American profiled is Senator Daniel Inouye. Here’s more about him:

Daniel K. Inouye, the most senior member of the U.S. Senate and the President Pro-Tempore, is known for his distinguished record as a legislative leader, and as a World War II combat veteran with the 442nd Regimental Combat Team, who earned the nation’s highest award for military valor, the Medal of Honor.

He got his start in politics in 1954 when he was elected to the Territorial House of Representatives; soon after his election, his Democratic colleagues, well aware of Inouye’s leadership abilities, selected him as their Majority Leader. In 1958 he was elected to the Territorial Senate. When Hawaii became a state in 1959, he was elected the first Congressman from the new state, and was re-elected to a full term in 1960. He was first elected to the U.S. Senate in 1962 and is now serving his eighth consecutive term.Early in his tenure in the Senate, Senator Inouye delivered the keynote address at the 1968 Democratic National Convention, and was under consideration to become Hubert Humphrey’s vice-presidential running mate that same year. Although he was thrust into the limelight in the 1970s as a member of the Watergate Committee and in 1987 as Chairman of the Iran-Contra Committee, he has also made his mark as a respected legislator able to work in a bipartisan fashion to enact meaningful legislation.

Senator Inouye has championed the interest of Hawaii’s people throughout his career. With his support, Hawaii’s infrastructure has been strengthened, its economy diversified, and its natural resources protected and restored. For local residents, particularly Native Hawaiians, whose history and welcoming culture give the state its defining characteristics, Senator Inouye has increased job training and employment opportunities, provided more community healthcare, and provided support services and research to help small businesses and diverse sectors, from agriculture to high technology. Learn more about him here.

Previous CBS PSAs
Olympic diver Sammy Lee

Julie Chen from The Talk on Senator Daniel Inouye (first Japanese American to serve in the House of Representatives)