See also: www.tobaccofree.org
Live talks
for middle schools,
high schools or colleges
Patrick
Reynolds is a grandson of the tobacco company founder, R.J. Reynolds,
but the family's brands, Camel and Winston, killed his father and eldest
brother.
This nationally known speaker combines tobacco education with motivational
speaking. Local press coverage of his talks will carry the tobaccofree
message to your community, and this will build excellent goodwill for
sponsors.
"In
a little over an hour, Reynolds went from being just another anti-tobacco
speaker to something special," commented a front page story in one
local paper. See recent
press coverage.
Faculty and school district officials have high
praise for Patrick Reynolds' talks for grades 7-12. He also offers
a highly motivational lecture
program for universities, health conferences and community members.
The Five Minute Plan
to bring Patrick Reynolds in to speak
Suggested co-sponsors and talking
points
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By making one local phone
call, you'll plant the seed with a likely sponsor for bringing Patrick
Reynolds to speak to youth at local schools or colleges.
Below are suggestions for who to call, and
what to say. It's easy!
You might wish to print this page out, and
keep it handy -- or just make a call now!
Thanks for making a difference in your community.
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Make a local call to
any of these
CO-SPONSORS
Choose one of the co-sponsors below, and place
a call to them.
- A good funding source for both Patrick Reynolds'
youth talk and his university program is hospitals. Call one
and ask for the Community Relations Director. The Marketing Director
is also a good bet. These executives often sponsor Mr. Reynolds' talks,
as a bridge-builder to their local community. Usually they will invite
local press and benefit from the goodwill generated. Some have chosen
to turn Mr. Reynolds' appearance into an event, by busing in 2,000 or
3,000 students from other local schools to hear him speak. Others have
toured him for several days, through schools in several counties.
- A second funding possibility is your local
tobaccofree coalition. The American Cancer Society branch in your
city can give you their phone number. Local anti-smoking coalitions
are frequent organizers and contributors to Mr. Reynolds' talks.
- County health departments in States that
have set aside tobacco education funding will often sponsor the full
cost of his talk at middle and high schools. To see whether your State
has some funding, click
here and then click on the map of the US. If your State comes up
in red, green, or orange, there is probably funding available.
Call your county public health department, and ask for the tobacco prevention
officer. Talking points are below. See our more detailed cosponsor
ideas for additional information, but, depending on the availability
of funds, your local county health department could be the best call
to make for his youth talk.
- At colleges, ask for the Student Activities
Director. They often have funds available for guest lecturers, or can
at least provide an auditorium. Also talk to the student lecture chairperson,
who makes the final decision about booking guest speakers. Click
here for info on the college talk.
Photo by Mickey Krakowski
This well known tobacco prevention speaker
has delivered his powerful motivational talk to thousands of children
and teens. These are the critical years: after age 19, almost no
one takes up the smoking habit.
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Talking
points
Let your enthusiasm show!
- Say you have an excellent speaker you'd
like to bring in to the community to speak in middle and high
schools.
- Tell them it's Patrick Reynolds, the grandson
of tobacco company founder R.J. Reynolds, who turned his back
on the family tobacco business after losing his father to smoking.
- Mention that his talk receives very positive
local media coverage. This will build community goodwill, and
bring the message to the wider community.
- Give them our phone number, 800-541-7741,
and the web page, www.tobaccofree.org/infopack.
Suggest they may wish to print out the information there.
- Cost For two middle or high school
assemblies, the fee is $3,000, plus travel expenses from Los Angeles.
Additional talks are $1500 each. For a college / community lecture,
the cost is $3950 for one 90 minute program, about half of which
is Q&A. These rates are for schools or non-profits only. Pending
availability, Mr. Reynolds can go on tour for several days. Click
here for additional cost
details.
- If time permits, read them a quote from
our page, What
past clients say.
- Ask if they would like for you to send
them an email about your idea. If so, get their email and send
them this link, or just leave it on their answering machine: www.tobaccofree.org/infopack.
- Also, leave our phone number, (800) 541-7741.
- If you need a cover letter to email, copy
the top of our www.tobaccofree.org/infopack9.html
page; it has a good cover letter to paste into your email. Add
a note at the top, asking them to circulate your email.
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If you wish,
make a second call
to another sponsor, listed above.
You might wish to print
this page out -- or make a call now!
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Thank you!
We acknowledge your caring, and are grateful for your phone call.
By educating our youth early about smoking, we can make a real difference
in their lives. We're all fighting on the same team, for the same
goal. Mr. Reynolds' closing promise and vision in all his talks is
that we will have a smokefree society in the 21st century. Thank you
for helping to make that dream come true. |
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