By on

Although actor Alan Rickman passed away 11 months ago, the OneClickGiving fundraising video for which he did the voiceover, which appeared on YouTube a year ago this week, is still generating revenue for charity.

Called This Tortoise Could Save a Life, the video shows a tortoise eating a strawberry, while click-by-click, each view earns advertising revenue from YouTube, which OneClickGiving passes on to Save the Children and Refugee Council to help refugees.

The humorous 30-second video shows the slow moving reptile chomping at the fruit, while Rickman narrates and the music of Strauss’ Wiener Walzer plays.

“We’re trying to make a viral video to help refugees as this tortoise munches away,” says Rickman tediously, and then goes on to explain how.

OneClickGiving was founded by a group of students from Oxford University in 2015. With no operating costs and no profit, all the money generated by the video goes to the two charities.

“OneClickGiving is a new way of giving to charity,” says the student-run charity initiative. “All you need to do is watch and share.”

Slow and steady wins the race.

comments powered by Disqus

Latest news

Meryl Streep to Serve as Honorary Chair of Women Making History Awards Gala

Meryl Streep to Serve as Honorary Chair of Women Making History Awards Gala Jan 23, 2025

The National Women’s History Museum (NWHM) announced today details surrounding their annual Women Making History Awards Gala, set to take place on March 20 at The Anthem in Washington D.C. More
More news