Connecticut Filmmaker Wants To Know Who Believes in the Afterlife

HDTV-Entertainment Developing TV Show with Written Proof of Spiritual Communications New TV Show Features Acclaimed Medium Roland Comtois and his Signature Purple Papers

The existence of an afterlife is a controversial topic that has been debated since the beginning of time. Both believers and skeptics are passionate about their opinions of this subject, each side on equal footing due to a lack of tangible evidence to support their convictions.

Not so fast, says Richard Spangenberg, filmmaker owner of Westport, Connecticut-based HD-TV Entertainment, who, along with more than a thousand followers on his newly launched Purple Papers website, believes unequivocally that the afterlife exists. He is on a mission to prove it to the world via a new Internet television show that claims to have written proof of the other side with Purple Paper messages written by grief counselor and psychic medium Roland Comtois.

"Roland Comtois has a unique spiritual gift that enables him to write down intimate, uncannily accurate and very personal messages from departed souls to deliver to the loved ones they left behind. That alone may not be proof that what he actually writes on his Purple Papers comes from the hereafter. But how and when he writes them and what he does with the messages after he records them is the most compelling proof that ever existed," said Spangenberg.

Roland has heard voices of spirit since he was a small child. But it was only in the last 10 years that he started writing down what he hears on the purple papers that have become his calling card. He writes his Purple Paper messages in the privacy of his home as he hears them, well in advance of knowing or meeting the people who are ultimately meant to receive them, and well in advance of even them knowing they would meet Roland. He writes each one on a separate piece of purple paper, dates them and files them in the stack of papers that he carries with him wherever he goes. He never knows when he will meet the persons the messages are for. He has been carrying one message for the Walcott family with since 2005. He has made it his mission to give them their message when the time is right.

Spangenberg says that Roland Comtois' Purple Papers, incredibly detailed, often with names, initials, drawings and dates long passed, make a statement that gives hope and healing to those who have suffered the loss of a loved one as well as to those who someday will pass away themselves. He believes these messages are irrefutable evidence that there is something more on the other side, that our loved ones can still communicate with us and equally as important, that we will not be alone when we die.

The people who receive them are "blown away" by their accuracy and heartened by their content. The messages typically reveal personal information about private conversations, illnesses, personality traits and the like that verify their authenticity and refute all doubts.

"Make no mistake," says Spangenberg, "there is no showmanship here, no exploitation, no smoke and mirrors, investigative research or audience reading tricks. Roland writes these papers way before he hands them out in his presentations. He has no way of knowing who will be attending or what their stories are. His papers are proof of the spiritual conversations he has with spirits who want to communicate with their loved ones. And when you witness the reactions of the people who receive them, it is one of the most powerful moments of healing and hope you will ever see from a live audience."

He is intent on bringing the messages to the Internet on his Purple Papers television show and is curious to find out how many people share his belief that the afterlife exists. Until the show is on the air, Spangenberg wants people to visit www.purple-papers.com to learn more about Roland Comtois and his Purple Papers and register their opinion on this evocative topic.

The results, which will be made public, are key to the timing and success of the TV show, says Spangenberg, who predicts that the dialog the survey will inspire will probably make a fascinating show by itself.

For more information about Roland Comtois and the Purple Papers TV show and for media interviews, please call Cindy Clarke at 203.613.9163 or email [email protected]

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Tags: afterlife, grief, medium


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