Reporting is Not Enough
Throughout my two decades at CRTV, I have had the privilege of telling thousands of stories. But there comes a point in every journalist’s career where “reporting” the struggle no longer feels like enough. You begin to feel the weight of the gap between the story told and the help needed.
The Empatie Foundation was born in that gap. It was created from a conviction that media influence is a loan that must be paid back to the community with interest.
Empathy is a starting point, but action is the destination. We don’t just broadcast the need; we build the solution.
From Awareness to Action
In this column, I often speak about Strategic Architecture. Usually, I am referring to media, but at the Foundation, we apply that same structural thinking to humanitarian aid. We focus on three core areas:
Media for Development: Using broadcast reach to educate rural communities on health and digital literacy.
The Mentorship Pipeline: Providing resources for young girls to enter the communications field.
Crisis Response: Leveraging our network to provide immediate, transparent aid during community hardships.
A Shared Vision
To date, we have reached over 2,000 lives. This isn’t my achievement alone; it is the result of a global diaspora that refuses to forget its roots. When we move with intention, we aren’t just changing a news cycle—we are changing a life cycle.
