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  • Ted Williams, The Man With the Golden Voice Gets a Job, Fame on Random Awesome Homeless People Saved by Internet

    (#2) Ted Williams, The Man With the Golden Voice Gets a Job, Fame

    "I have a God given gift of voice. I'm an ex-radio announcer who has fallen on hard times. Please! Any help will be greatfully appreciated. Thank you and God bless. Happy holidays."

    Those were the words that Ted Williams held up on a cardboard sign in the first week of 2010 to commuters driving down Ohio's I-71 in hopes to get a job or, even more pressing, a motel room to sleep in at night.

    Just 24 hours later after a video was posted of him exhibiting his voiceover talents to a passerby who decided to put it on YouTube, Williams began receiving numerous offers from prestigious companies such as the Cleveland Cavaliers (who also offer housing), MSNBC, ESPN, and MTV. He's been interviewed on various television shows and on Thursday, January 6 of 2011, he introduced NBC's Today Show. Just two days after living on the street.

    On the popular website Reddit.com (aka Digg with a brain/conscience), people have donated a cellphone, business suit and over $1,000 to help jumpstart his career. Williams has already made appearances on "The Early Show" and "Good Morning America" and is set to do a taping with "Late Night with Jimmy Fallon" and "The Last Word with Lawrence O'Donnell."

    Most recently, he's been offered a job by Roger Ebert, who wants him to do an Orson Welles impression for his new show.

    Watch the video below for the full, awesomely inspiring story that makes you love the internet for who we are and the power that we have as a world community. hell yes:

  • Eric Sheptock Uses Facebook For Change on Random Awesome Homeless People Saved by Internet

    (#3) Eric Sheptock Uses Facebook For Change

    There are plenty of people who use the Internet to make a living, but Eric Sheptock uses the Internet for homelessness-based activism, all while being homeless himself.

    Sheptock refuses to work a 9-to-5 job or move out of the shelter where he shares a room with 11 other men in downtown Washington, D.C. in order to continue his unique ability to advocate for others in the same situation. He has about 5,000 Facebook friends, 1,200 followers on Twitter, and thousands of emails notifying him of press mentions.

    But Sheptock is interested in only one thing: to spread social justice using social media. He's a blogger for Chang.org, and is a known speaker of the National Coalition for Homelessness. So far, he's been able to get a leak fixed at a homeless shelter and stop harassment at another through his continual messages for change on the Internet.

    Watch the video below for the full story:

  • Tim Edwards Gets Pimped Out on Random Awesome Homeless People Saved by Internet

    (#5) Tim Edwards Gets Pimped Out

    Pimpthisbum.com is a father-and-son run website that raises money for one lucky homeless person.

    It follows the story and rehabilitation of Tim Edwards, an alcoholic homeless man who was found under the 1-10 overpass at Highway 6 in Houston.

    Once he and the Dolans (owners of the site) met, it was a moment in Internet-homelessness history. He began carrying a cardboard sign with the website url scrawled on it, and donations began pouring in. Soon enough, he was remitted into a rehab center in Seattle for free, reunited with his long-lost family, and got a job as an apprentice machinist, all for pimping his own URL on the street... and he didn't even have to twirl it.

    Watch the video below for the full, heartwarming story:

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  • James Montgomery's Got Everything He Needs on Random Awesome Homeless People Saved by Internet

    (#6) James Montgomery's Got Everything He Needs

    James Montgomery may not have a physical home, but he calls the sky his home, using the Internet as his outlet for it. Unlike everyone else on this list, he isn't rich, famous, or 100% assimilated back into normal society. Using the Internet can save lives (as we've learned from that one Robert Downey, Jr. movie), providing an outlet for someone who may otherwise dive off the deep end in a downward spiral of self-destruction.

    Here's James Montgomery's story:
    After having his guitar and amplifier stolen at a bus transfer station, he had to make a decision: keep playing jazz and rock at the public station or buy a computer. He decided on the latter and purchased a $400 Dell laptop from a pawn shop and moved to Lodi, CA in the San Joaquin County, which he found to be much safer than San Francisco (which seriously, makes perfect sense).

    There, Montgomery started writing about metaphysical philosophy using the internet connection at the Lodi Public Library, as well as reading books about it. The Lodi News-Sentinel has reported on the man who stays connected to the world through the Internet, despite not having a home. It's something that keeps him thinking and driving forward to enjoy his life every day.
  • Adrian Lamo, Homeless Hacker Genius on Random Awesome Homeless People Saved by Internet

    (#4) Adrian Lamo, Homeless Hacker Genius

    It's always the smart people who get caught. In this case, it's Adrian Lamo, who was arrested in September 2004 by the FBI for computer fraud.

    He was charged with breaking into the private network of the New York Times Company and running a bill upwards $300,000 on the pay-per-use search tool, Lexis-Nexis, with a possible 15-year prison sentence.

    This wouldn't be too surprising if Lamo was an Ivy-League graduate with a rebellious streak (we've all seen Social Network three times by now to get the picture), but Lamo, one of the best-known hackers in the country, was homeless.

    Given the name "The Homeless Hacker" by some, Lamo traveled around with just his eight-year-old Toshiba, blanket, change of clothes, and Taser stun gun, which he used to shock vending machines to see if they'd drop any food or spare change. He did most of his virtual exploring from the internet connections of Kinko's copy shops, which if you wear the right stuff, is actually pretty smart if you're a hacker (assuming you're paying in cash).
  • Xi Li Ge Lived On the Street, Now Walks On the Runway on Random Awesome Homeless People Saved by Internet

    (#1) Xi Li Ge Lived On the Street, Now Walks On the Runway

    Xi Li Ge wasn't just any old beggar off the street before becoming an Internet celebrity and fashion icon. He was also a guy with the fashion sense of an avant garde stylist, who could run with the best of those guys who act like they're too good for you on television, matched with the broody demeanor of a tortured poet and the cheekbones of a Dolce & Gabbana model. Basically, this guy was BUILT for fashion.

    Xi Li Ge, or "Brother Sharp" as he's more commonly known in the fashion webosphere because of his "sharp/penetrating eyes," first attracted the attention of fashion lovers in March 2010 when someone testing out a camera accidentally photographed him and uploaded the image to the Internet.

    In the photo he's wearing a coat over a leather jacket, sporting full locks of messy hair and smoking a cigarette while walking down a road in Ningbo, China. Girls everywhere started commenting on the photo saying things like "Look at him wrinkle his brow...nothing needs to be said...sexy..." and "Brother Sharp, you are truly too handsome."

    He was, though, afterall, homeless. So...

    His internet popularity soon allowed him to sign with a fashion company, walk a fashion show in Guangzhou, be a subject of a huge painting on the street of Hangzhou and, now, have a movie in the works based on his story.

    Billionaire Yang Meimei announced in July that she plans to invest RMB 70 million to produce the movie and Hong Kong model-actor Carl Ng is rumored to play "China's sexiest homeless man."

    This guy wins. At everything.

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About This Tool

Social networks have become one of the most innovative ways to ask for help. Some homeless people set up blogs to solicit donations, they share their experiences on the internet, also can set up a website dedicated to collecting donations, some homeless people even ask for cash on the BBS. Even Wikipedia also has an entry about online begging. Entering this keyword on Google can search for more than 3 million websites.

It is true that the power of the network is unlimited, but the Internet environment still has risks. Everyone should be more vigilant. The generator displays 6 entries that some awesome homeless people saved by the Internet, they even come from different countries.

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