
These will take in Sydney, Canberra, Moruya on the New South Wales south coast, Brisbane, the Gold Coast and rural Victoria at Wahgunyah.
"The Australian Missionary News IPTV idea came from my visit to Los Angeles in February when I was myself interviewed by Dan Wooding on IPTV," Well-Being Australia Chairman Mark Tronson exclaimed.
In his 'Frontline' program, shown on the Missionary News Channel 'Faith Hope & Charity' on the SafeWorlds E-business network, Wooding interviews people engaged in Christian missions and associated ministry.
After his interview, M V Tronson was invited to establish the Australian Missionary News IPTV. Like Dan Wooding's programs, the Well-Being Australia interviews have two housings: one on the SafeWorlds network www.safeworlds.net (password secured) and the other on an open IP web site, http://tv.bushorchestra.com
Television on the Internet is increasingly becoming the preferred medium for news and views among the younger generations, closely followed by their older family members.
Many retirees find it convenient and inexpensive not to have to buy newspapers and magazines, and they can watch what they want, when they want to, while conveniently sitting at their own work table or desk.
The Australian Missionary News IPTV is getting into this communication methodology on the ground floor with the two different platforms mentioned above.
Already the Australian Missionary News IPTV has numerous interviews online, including several South Pacific and Australasian Christian leader's testimonies and a discussion about 'athlete respite' by retired Australian cricket captain Greg Chappell, now Head Coach of the Australian Institute of Sport's Men's Cricket Unit.
"The Australian Missionary News IPTV has no limits about who is interviewed and what their area of interest is," M V Tronson noted. "Well-Being Australia's major consideration is illustrating a whole plethora of subjects."
One forthcoming interview is with Kim Gillis, the founding chairman of the Emmaus Christian School in Canberra, which has honoured him and his wife Michelle by naming its assembly hall 'Gillis Hall'.
"We will also interview the Australian Institute of Sport chaplain of 20 years, Peter Nelson as well as the Canberra Baptist Church senior minister, the Reverend Jim Barr," commented Mark Tronson. "He will talk about the various significant Aids projects his church is supporting in the third world."
Other interviews in the pipeline is with Dave Moyle from the Stringybark Express Museum and Heritage Park tourist enclave at Wahgunyah in Victoria, a 40 minute drive from Wodonga. Another is former Socceroo Gerry Gomez and Canterbury Rugby League chaplain Ken Clendinning.
In addition interviews being lined up on the Gold Coast include celebrity comedy corporate speaker Homer Papantonio, the Reverend Russell Hinds who gets multi-functional church buildings constructed in three days and travelling evangelist David Smethurst who has orphanage projects in Latvia, Estonia, the Ukraine and a ministry in Lebanon.
"As you can see, we are very keen to expand this area and to include a wide a variety of people and subjects," M V Tronson noted.