Thursday, November 30, 2006

Get your move on?

Mayor Miller asks Torontonians "How Do You Get Your Move On?"
TORONTO, Nov. 30 /CNW/ - The "How Do You Get Your Move On?"
media
campaign is being launched this week with print advertising and a series of Public Service Announcements (PSAs) to air on Rogers OMNI Television in four languages, Farsi, Mandarin, Spanish and Tamil, in addition to English. The PSA features a cycling Mayor David Miller, Honorary Chair of Toronto's Get Your Move On (GYMO) initiative, encouraging everyone to join him in being physically active. "I'm pleased to be able to join leaders from health, recreation, and corporate sectors as well as others to take action on an important issue for the health and vitality of our city," the Mayor said. The media campaign promotes the GYMO website and phone line where people can get information about thousands of physical activity opportunities in Toronto, as well as multilingual physical activity resources. Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment Ltd., owner of the Toronto Maple Leafs and Toronto Raptors and a lead member of Get Your Move On, is showing the PSA on Air Canada Centre's Jumbotron and airing it on Leafs TV and Raptors NBA TV. The PSA will also be streamed on the YMCA of Greater Toronto website, another key GYMO partner. "Get Your Move On is connecting Toronto to opportunities for healthy, active living," said Scott Haldane, President and CEO of the YMCA of Greater Toronto and co-chair of the initiative. "Children, youth, and adults of all ages and backgrounds need to move more." In 2004, leaders in the public, voluntary and private sectors started Get Your Move On to address epidemic levels of physical inactivity by making it easy for people to be active, any time, any place. "Get Your Move On is about reducing barriers so everyone can become healthier," said Dr. David McKeown, Toronto's Medical Officer of Health. "Reaching people in many languages is fundamental to the campaign." "We applaud GYMO for creating an inclusive campaign that recognizes the importance of extending its message to local ethnocultural communities in their language of comfort," said Madeline Ziniak, vice president and station manager of Rogers OMNI Television. Funding for the GYMO PSAs was provided by OMNI Television's Public Service Announcement Production Fund, which supports local community groups and helps ensure the accessibility of important public information to third language communities. Alison Duke of Goldelox Productions and Susan Nation of Tween Entertainment were responsible for creation and production of the PSAs, working in association with the GYMO Public Awareness Action Group. For more information and to view the PSAs, visit the Get Your Move On website.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Thie BIG ? - Will that Board of Health and the city staff actually dare to begin a clean air corridor on Bloor St. as part of the GYMO to make the streets safer for cyclists and the air cleaner for everyone? Part of the TTT motion languishing at City Hall was to make a smog day bikeway on Bloor St. as the subway provides non-car access - and this comes to the BofH in Feb.