All posts by jamaicaninchina

"Once upon a time, there was a Jamaican civil engineer living in New York City who hated his job. He followed his passion, started a sideline business publishing his own books, quit his job, escaped the rat race, ran off to a tropical island in the Pacific, and started a tourism business so he could give tours of the island to pretty girls every day! He now lives a nomadpreneur's dream life, while helping others do the same!" This is his story: Read more at : https://www.jamaicanonsaipan.com/

In search of Japanese tunnels on Saipan!

I joined Patrick (of Island Nursery & Landscapes) along with Mel & Justin last week on a fun and informative trek into the mountains of As Falipe, Saipan (as shown on a topographical map given to me by past tour client, Fred Brems)…Well, at least it STARTED as a fun trek….(cue ominous music at the end of the video)

Join the Youtube channel at https://www.youtube.com/discoversaipan?sub_confirmation=1

 

 

 

Travel Itinerary 2022!

My travel itinerary has been limited over the past two years. However, I have had the opportunity to give history tours of Saipan and Tinian over the past several weeks. Many people aren’t aware that Tinian is the location from which, in 1945, the US’ Enola Gay B-29 bomber took off on its mission to drop an atomic bomb on the Japanese city of Hiroshima. (and, from which Bockscar took off to bomb Nagasaki).  So for those interested, here are recaps of current flights from…

Saipan to Tinian:

 

Tinian to Saipan

 

The thing that freed me to roam…

Want to know how I create an untethered lifestyle of money and mobility? Want to know how I generate “location-free” income even when I’m Jamaican in Vietnam? Thailand? Singapore? Laos? and Saipan? Want to know one of the best, zero-cost, zero-barrier-to-entry nomadpreneur strategies around? Well, I’ve got a course for that! See details:

Click HERE

Behind the Scenes: My in-home studio

Things are falling into place! I’ve been meaning to raise the level of
my Youtube game for some time, but always get too excited and distracted by every new book idea that comes to me! Towards the end of last year, however, I decided to really do it this time! So, now, as of January 5, 2022:

The studio is set up:
(green screen; Blue Yeti microphone w/pop filter;
box light; umbrella light, Logitech 920c webcam, Galaxy (used/pre-owned) on a tripod

The software is in place:
• Galaxy camera software for recording video
• Audacity (free) for recording audio
• Openshot (free) for editing, effects & synching

The video elements are ready to drag and drop
•introbrand animated intro ($19.95); CANVA-created thumbnail(free);

I’m establishing my ideal routine
So, as I tweak my operation, it’s getting easier to simply
sit, flip a light switch, camera and Audacity and start
recording.

I get up at about 4:00am ( this gives me two hours before the garbage trucks and traffic and restaurant opening at 6:00am) and record one or more videos. As proof that things are coming together, I recorded my SECOND video in the PassionProfit™ series this morning! Look for the new bold thumbnails at https://www.youtube.com/passionprophet

The whole set up (new additions) cost*
Green screen/lighting kit: $175
Webcam: $72 (it’s only for Zoom calls; not video production)
Blue Yeti microphone: $112
Pop filter: $12 at local electronics store
TOTAL: $371

Check out my NEW Zero Cost Business Operations Manual on sale
for 2022! https://www.waltgoodridge.com/store/product/the-zero-cost-business-operations-manual-checklist/

 

Local author receives CNMI Governor’s Humanities Award(s)!

A few weeks ago, a former workshop attendee and coaching client revealed that she nominated me to be considered for this year’s Governor’s Humanities Award here on Saipan. I thanked her (Thanks, Riza!), but I didn’t really believe I qualified because the period of time under consideration was “during the past 12 months.” While I’ve done some workshops and zoom classes over the past year, many of my potentially qualifying projects took place prior to the pandemic.  In any event, as we often say in JA, “nothing ventured, nothing gained,” so I mentioned that I had recently created a video resumé she could reference if she needed to provide supporting documentation for the nomination.

Well, I was pleasantly surprised days later when the Director of the Humanities Council, Leo Pangelinan, emailed me a congratulatory letter on being selected for the “Humanities Award for Research and Publication in the Humanities, Outstanding Humanities Teacher, and Preservation of CNMI History.”

In preparation for the upcoming event, I ordered a few new shirts through an Amazon vendor (they were all sold out of white, by the way), had them shipped to a friend in NYC who subsequently shipped them to me here on Saipan. (Luckily, they arrived the Wednesday before the event)! I brushed the dust off my one pair of dress shoes and waited for Friday. Comes the day of the event, and I really believed I was going to be called up on stage to accept ONE award with a very long name. Imagine my surprise when I was presented with THREE separate awards at last night’s ceremony! As I told my friend, Cinta Kaipat, not many things surprise me, but THIS did! Many thanks to Leo, the entire board, Andrew (who made sure my name was spelled correctly!) and to Isaac Anderson, my photographer drafted for the night! The clip below is NOT the entire ceremony, just the first awardee, then my friend, Catherine C. Perry, then me. (A Walt-specific press release is available here: https://www.waltgoodridge.com/pressrelease/

…and, in case you’re wondering, masks were worn by most folks throughout the event (I met one lady–who was “in the family way”–who wore two masks!) but were occasionally removed for photo ops!


Emcee for the night: Romolo Orsini


Master navigators perform Phon Chant


Lino Olopai explains the chant’s purpose and meaning


All 5 award recipients with Humanities Board members


Attorney Joe Hill, the first person I met on Saipan back in 2006! I am wearing a mwar, traditional Carolinian (head lei) headwear typically worn for special occasions.


Cinta Kaipat, the fourth person I ever met on Saipan back in 2006!

 


Posing with Ralph Torres, Governor of the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands


Award number 1: for Research and Publications in the Humanities


Award number 2: Outstanding Humanities Teacher


Award number 3: Preservation of CNMI History

A Saipan-Specific Video Resumé

Here’s a video resumé of my Saipan-specific books, websites, workshops, school visits, campaigns and adventures from 2006 to the present! If you’ve ever attended or been part of Beautify CNMI, blogger, Friends of the Monument get-together, you might have been captured by the camera! (a sequel to the “What’s It Like Being Jamaican in Saipan” interview!)

 

0:33 Introduction

2:01 SECTION • Saipan-Specific Creations
Walt has written a slew of Saipan-specific books, websites, mobile phone apps and designs for t-shirts and merchandise!

2:06 Books

4:09 Websites

6:03 Apps & Merchandise

7:01 SECTION • Helping Others
Walt has conducted workshops, visited schools, created health groups in an effort to help others

7:05 Workshops

13:49 School visits

14:15 Health&Wellness

15:41 SECTION • Showcasing Saipan to the World
From the Saipanpreneur Project to the “What’s it Like to Be Jamaican on Saipan” interview, walt has showcased the best of Saipan in his Saipan Tribune column, 3rd party documentaries and books, websites, tours and in the media!

15:45 Saipanpreneur Project

16:08 Saipan Documentaries & Books

17:35 Jamaican on Pagan

19:03 Tourism (clients, cruises, vets, authors, researchers, filmmakers)

23:49 Media Appearances

26:37 SECTION • Community Involvement & Activism
Walt has launched crowdfunding campaigns and petitions, co-created a platform for bloggers, volunteered for community movements and launched the first Speech & Essay contest as part of the CNMI’s annual Martin Luther King, Jr. commemoration.

26:43 Campaigns (GoFundMe, Change.org)

28:02 Community Matters (Bloggers & Tree Huggers)

31:20 MLK Day annual commemoration

36:08 Closing (patience)

What’s it like being Jamaican on Saipan?

WATCH NOW! What’s it Like Being Jamaican in Saipan?”
Leave a comment on Youtube, ask a question! If you’re Chamorro or Carolinian, let me know if I got anything wrong!

BACK STORY:
Way back around 1996, before many of us even heard about the internet, Jamaican native and techie, Xavier Murphy, got a head start and was able to secure the JAMAICANS.COM domain name in anticipation of ‘big tings to come!’ His prescience proved correct, and over the years, this wildly popular website has served as a repository of all things Jamaican for Jamaicans and the people who love them!

As Youtube, Facebook and other online media platforms gained in popularity, Jamaicans.com was there as well! Xavier’s popular Youtube video series, “What’s it Like Being [probably the only] Jamaican in ___________?” has provided a way to connect Jamaicans around the world and showcase our presence and impact abroad! Korea? Ireland? Norway? Zambia? Kuwait? Bali? Russia? Malawi? Yep, we deh deh! (Translation: We are there!)

A few weeks ago, I sat on a beach on Saipan while Xavier–about 8 thousand miles away–asked me that very question: “What’s it like being Jamaican on the small, remote, Pacific island of Saipan???” We had fun as I shared facts and trivia about my new island home, talked nomadpreneuring and escaping the rat race, and during the course of the conversation, discovered that Xavier knows one of my long lost primary school classmates and has helped me re-connect with him!

The interview is FINALLY viewable:

The Youtube version of the video has a lively discussion to join in

https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=431285311574616

 

OUTTAKE
Here I am prepping the day before the interview:

Want to learn more about Saipan? Here’s a tour/documentary filmed by LaMancha Media featuring a guest tour guide you might recognize :

 

UPDATE (12 days later)

Narcisism alert! Yes, as a former civil engineer, these sorts of things
keep me awake at night. Ever since the release of the Jamaicans.com
interview video (“What’s it Like Being a Jamaican in Saipan?”), I’ve
been tracking the daily views on Xavier’s Youtube channel and Facebook page.

Here’s what my analysis revealed:

• The Youtube version had a total 599 views in the first 3 hours; and jumped to 766 in the 1 hour while I watched it

• The version of the video on the Jamaicans.com Facebook page already had an astounding 15,000 views by the time I first checked it out 3 days after upload; it now has 19,000+ views 12 days
after release.

• Here are the daily stats for the Youtube edition
Aug 30, 2021 3:00am 0 2,253/day         39 comments
Aug 31, 2021 3:00am 2,253 1,861/day     55 comments
Sep 1, 2021 9:00am 4,600 1,652/day      90 comments
Sep 2, 2021 9:00am 6,252 1,854/day      98 comments
Sep 3, 2021 9:00am 8,106 2,107/day        113 comments
Sep 4, 2021 9:00am 10,213 1,326/day         117 comments
Sep 5, 2021 9:09am 11,539 1,327/day        135 comments
Sep 6, 2021 9:01am 12,866 1,609/day       139 comments
Sep 7, 2021 9:00am 14,475 909/day           160 comments
Sep 8, 2021 9:00am 15,384 1,055/day      168 comments
Sep 9, 2021 9:00am 16,439 563/day         166 comments
Sep 10, 2021 9:01am 17,002 355/day      168 comments
Sep 11, 2021 9:00am 17,357 285/day      170 comments
Sep 12, 2021 9:00am 17,642                          170 comments

I discovered that my Canva.com account that I use for creating Youtube thumbnails, also has a graph feature. So, with nothing else to do on a Sunday morning at 6:00am:

Xavier has 25.2 thousand subscribers to his Youtube channel and this video generated an average of 1,500 views per day. If you have your own Youtube channel, this is definitely the sort of daily view activity you want to aspire to!

ANOTHER UPDATE:

26 days to get to 20,000 views! (Plus, there are an additional 21,000 views on the Facebook upload with its own set of comments.

S.W.E.A.T. Lifestyle Shorts: SUNLIGHT on the rocks!

In case you’re wondering,  being”Jamaican in China….and Beyond” is just one of my alter egos.  I’m also the “Ageless Adept,” a vegan, minimalist, self-health, natural living fanatic who promotes the SWEAT philosophy of rejuvenation and maintaining youth (SWEAT = Sunlight, Water, Earth, Air & Time). Here’s one way I fulfill the sunlight portion of that lifestyle:

After watching this video, a good friend asked, “What if something were to happen to you? It looks pretty steep and desolate there with no one around in case you needed a little help.”

To which I replied, “Well, in all likelihood, I probably wouldn’t lie there for more than 24 hours. There’s a path below the cliff that fishermen occasionally take to get to a particular fishing spot, so the carcass wouldn’t go unnoticed for too long. Now, if I happen to be on the TOP of the mountain, then I’d have to wait for someone to notice the vultures or the smell….Oh, and thanks for asking!”

Jamaican Air Macau Pilot flies me to Vietnam!

This pilot episode is literally a pilot episode! (and inspired the “Say Hello to My Little Friends” series) It’s pretty cool being flown on an international flight to Vietnam for the first time, aboard an Airbus 321 jet airliner, knowing that my best buddy–Ron McFarlane–is the captain in charge, and “dread at the controls!” It makes it a unique personal experience imagining my friend in the cockpit doing what he’s always wanted to do since he was five years old. Here’s a video recap of the whole experience featuring an in-flight interview with the captain himself with some words of advice for aspiring pilots and anyone pursuing a dream!