Joanne Liu

Dr. Joanne Liu has served as International President of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) from 2013 to 2019. At the helm of MSF, she was a leading voice on medical humanitarian crises, namely in the Ebola outbreak of West Africa, attacks on hospitals, and forced displacement crisis, and has engaged with world leaders at the highest levels.

Dr. Liu’s role builds on a career of fieldwork with MSF, including over 20 medical-humanitarian field assignments. Dr. Liu trained at McGill University School of Medicine in Montreal. She holds a Fellowship in Pediatric Emergency Medicine from New York University School of Medicine and an International Masters in Health Leadership, also from McGill University. 

Dr. Liu’s operational work has ranged from introducing comprehensive care for survivors of sexual violence to developing a telemedicine platform for connecting doctors in rural areas with specialists worldwide. 

Dr. Liu remains a practicing doctor, both in the field with MSF and also through hospital shifts in her home town of Montreal. She believes strongly in bringing and delivering high-quality, patient-centered care in all medical work contexts.

3 words to describe Nature?

Wholeness. Strength. Wisdom

3 things Nature taught you?

Humility 

Endurance 

Reverence 

3 most treasured Nature spots?

Desert of Yémen

Rice fields in Sri Lanka

Manado diving spots

When you look at the OCEAN, it makes you feel...?

Overwhelmed

When you see a FOREST, it makes you feel...?

Like whispering

When you see a VOLCANO, it makes you feel...?

Mesmerized 

When you see a SUNRISE or SUNSET, it makes you feel...?

Calm and centered

When you hear THUNDER, it makes you feel...?

Awake

When you hear the WIND HOWLING, it makes you feel...?

Foreboding

Are you an Ocean, Mountain, Forest, or Desert person?

Sky

On a scale of 1 to 10, how important is Nature to your well-being?

9

Share with us a childhood nature memory?

When I was a kid, I would go camping and I remember how much I liked to fall asleep while listening to the sound of the river.

 


Michael Rosenblum

For more than 30 years, Michael Rosenblum has been on the cutting edge of the digital ‘videojournalist’ and Citizen News revolution. 

During this time, he's led a drive for video literacy, and the Democratization of Video and Video news. His work includes: the complete transitioning of the BBC's national network (UK) to a Vj-driven model, starting in 2002; the complete conversion of The Voice of America, the United State’s Government’s broadcasting agency, (and the largest broadcaster in the world), from short wave radio to television broadcasting and webcasting using the ‘VJ” paradigm (1998-present); the design behind Current TV in partnership with former US VP Al Gore; the construction of a national hyperlocal citizen journalist network with Verizon; and the construction of NYT Television, a New York Times Company and the largest producer of non-fiction television in the US.

He has partnered with a number of major media companies including The Guardian (UK), USA Today, New York Magazine, The Travel Channel and others to create video ‘Academies’ where anyone can learn to report, shoot, edit and produce video on their own. 

In 2009 he co-founded TheVJ.com, along with his wife, Lisa Lambden, an online video training site. 

He has also designed, built and implemented VJ-driven news channels around the world, including Time/Warner’s New York 1, Associated Newspapers (UK) London based Channel 1, Young Broadcasting stations in the US, Switzerland’s largest commercial TV broadcaster, TeleZuri, as well as a host of smaller projects such as Eritrea’s ERI-TV and Sri Lanka’s SLBC. His consulting clients include The BBC, McGraw-Hill, TV-24/Germany, TV4/Sweden, Oxygen Media, National Public Radio, Danmarks Radio (DK), TV-3 Sweden, Norway & Denmark, Tokyo Broadcasting, Korea Broadcasting.

As a producer, Rosenblum has produced or overseen production on more than 3000 hours of programming for both network and cable. His shows have included the long-running TRAUMA: LIFE IN THE ER, Paramedics, Police Force, Labor and Delivery, Science Times. These series have aired on TLC, Showtime and National Geographic. He has also produced for ABC, CBS, Oxygen and the BBC. Most recently his groundbreaking 5Takes series for Discovery has completely rewritten the production paradigm. The company currently has more than 350 hours in production for this year alone. 

He has conducted his unique VJ training classes and boot camps all over the world, from Thailand to Marrakech, and has lectured extensively both overseas and in the US. He recently entered into a partnership with Discovery Communications to set up the Travel Channel Academy, a national training facility open to anyone. For 8 years he was an adjunct professor of communication at New York University, where he taught “Television and the Information Revolution”, a course of his own design and at The Bauhaus in Germany. Prior to that he taught at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism. His Brussels based Rosenblum Institute trains European journalists to work as vjs. He is the author of Videojournalismus (germany) and iPhone Millionaire (McGraw Hill, 2013). 

He and his wife live both in New York and in the UK and teach at Oxford University in Britain. 

3 words to describe Nature?

Real. Unmediated. Honest

3 things Nature taught you?

Who I was

Who I am

Who I could be

3 most treasured Nature spots?

Coast of England at Northumbria

Middle of Sahara Desert

Lamu, Kenya

When you look at the ocean, it makes you feel…?

Humble

When you see a forest, it makes you feel…?

Connected

When you see a volcano, it makes you feel…?

Terrified

When you see a sunrise or sunset, it makes you feel…?

Grateful

When you hear thunder, it makes you feel…?

Alive

When you hear the wind howling, it makes you feel…?

Connected

Are you an Ocean, Mountain, Forest, or Desert person?

Ocean

On a scale of 1 to 10, how important is Nature to your well-being?

10

Share with us a childhood nature memory?

When I was about 10 years old, my father had a friend named Eddie Durban who had a wood Lightning sailboat - 19 foot.  No motor. One day, he took me out for a sail and we turned up into a series of small estuaries that ran in the wetlands that are now almost gone on the East Coast.  The boat was silent, but it ghosted along, and as we drifted in the marsh, the whole place around us seemed alive and vibrant. 

 


Nicole Davis-Bisnow

Nicole Davis-Bisnow is the founder of RedFlag.org, a 501c3 nonprofit dedicated to inspiring and supporting grassroots activism. Her passion for global activism started early in her career when she worked as an international vanguard journalist covering conflict and human interest stories for Current TV. Davis-Bisnow earned a Bachelor’s Degree in philosophy and a Master’s in Art History from New York University. She is also certified as a facilitator in Equine Therapy from Eponaquest in Southern Arizona. She is currently creating a “healing ranch” in Liberty, Utah as a meeting place for people of all ages, backgrounds and economic access to reconnect with nature and experience the healing power of horses.

3 words to describe Nature?

My. Best. Friend

3 things Nature taught you?

Unconditional Love

Self-Confidence

My Truth

3 most treasured Nature spots?

The American National Parks (a special mention for my hometown parks: The Florida Everglades and Biscayne Bay National Park)

“The Enchanted Forest” a secret spot on Powder Mountain, my current home in the Wasatch Mountains of Northern Utah.

Sarara Camp in Namunyak Sumburu Country, Northern Kenya—a place I consider my home away from home.

When you look at the ocean, it makes you feel…?

The presence of a great compassionate mother

When you see a forest, it makes you feel…?

Connected to ancient wisdom and magic

When you see a volcano, it makes you feel…?

The beating pulse of our Earth’s molten heart

When you see a sunrise or sunset, it makes you feel…?

In awe that no matter how many times I’ve seen a sunrise or sunset I still fill with the same delight and gratitude as the first one

When you hear thunder, it makes you feel…?

 Nostalgic for my childhood in Florida

When you hear the wind howling, it makes you feel…?

A stir in my heart to play outside

Are you an Ocean, Mountain, Forest, or Desert person?

An Old Growth Forest and A High Alpine Meadow Person

On a scale of 1 to 10, how important is Nature to your well-being?

10 - My well being and the well being of nature are inextricable.

Share with us a childhood nature memory?

I grew up in a city without a night sky. When I was about five my parents sent me away to the mountains of West Virginia for summer camp. One night our counselors rustled us awake with hushed voices—beckoning us to follow them out into the forest surrounding our cabin. We walked bewildered in the cold night air through excited whispers, until we came to an open meadow. They laid a blanket on the ground for us and had us lay back and look up. My heart ceased. There was not a patch of that moonless sky that didn’t have a glittering star. Just remembering how stunned and enamored I was with that sky, that moment, that ageless understanding of truth, brings tears back to my eyes. Then came my first shooting star, and there was no turning back.