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The Happiness Show Expands with Three New Co-Hosts
The Happiness Show, produced by George Ortega, premiered last May as the first ever television program entirely devoted to helping viewers become happier. Recently having expanded its potential audience to over 350,000, it will now be co-hosted by Lionel Ketchian, Aymee Branch, Mary Berry, and Mr. Ortega.
(PRWEB) January 1, 2004 -- The Happiness Show, which premiered last May as cable televisions first program entirely devoted to helping viewers become happier, is starting 2004 with three new co-hosts, and greatly expanding its potential audience. Show producer George Ortega, and Lionel Ketchian, Founder and President of The Happiness Club of Fairfield, Connecticut, have already taped seven episodes together that are scheduled to be presented to a potential audience of over 350,000 starting January 1st. At the end of February, Aymee Branch, a Ph.D. student in Organizational Psychology, and Mary Berry, a corporate leadership development consultant, both from San Francisco, will also be co-hosting the program with a special West Coast Happiness" segment.
A few months ago Mr. Ortega was delighted to learn that Mr. Ketchian and he, both promoting happiness through different strategies, lived only 35 miles apart. Now working with Ms. Branch and Ms. Berry on the show as well as several other happiness promotion projects, they are very optimistic about The Happiness Shows new academic and corporate dimensions.
According to Mr. Ortega, the show is now in an expansion phase, and by May its potential audience is expected to exceed 500,000. With the average level of happiness here in the United States at only 69 percent, and no one region of the country happier than any other, Ortega, Ketchian, Branch, and Berry are working to create more happiness programs throughout the country.
In fact, Ms. Branch has already secured studio time for her own happiness show in San Francisco, and Mr. Ortega has consulted with Dr. Haider Rizvi, a psychology professor from Pakistan, regarding the possibility of creating a happiness show there. As Aristotle said, Happiness is the best, most pleasant, and noblest thing" and with television programs like The Happiness Show, growing numbers of viewers are tuning in each week to learn its secrets.
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