Monday, June 25, 2018

HOT HAWAIIAN ROMANCE: DEANNA CABINIAN SHARES ONE NIGHT & ONE LOVE



ONE NIGHT Synopsis

Breakups are the worst.
Thompson is miserable. Can he get Caroline back?
With his mind on HER, his life takes an unexpected turn. Elvis gives him a job. He knows nothing about the world of celebrity impersonators, but he does know social media.
And so starts his adventure…
…where will it take him?

Will he find his true love?
If you liked John Green’s Paper Towns or the film The Way Way Back, you’ll love this contemporary YA novel. If you like teen angst with a bit of romance this book is for you.
Buy Links:

Excerpt

I had a decision to make: Elvis or Mr. Wonderful. I loved listening to Mr. Wonderful tear apart idiotic business ideas; more than that, I admired him because he wasn’t afraid to tell the truth. But I’d stayed home the last three Friday nights watching Shark Tank with my parents, and I couldn’t do it for another week.
I drove my rusty white Corolla toward the Tiki House, a family restaurant on Honolulu’s northwest side that was a cliché of itself. My heart pounded and my palms soaked the steering wheel with sweat. My body was telling me not to do this, but I kept going. I parked fifty feet away from the entrance and turned off the engine. The Tiki House shared a plaza with Starbucks, T.J. Maxx, and a movie theater, and had achieved a certain level of infamy. It was where everyone took out-of-town guests from the mainland who demanded an “authentic” Hawaiian experience. There were countless other restaurants in Honolulu with better food and less-tacky furnishings, but the Tiki House was an event tourists lived for.
I considered pulling out of the parking lot and going home, but I’d clocked out of Super Kmart six minutes early to be there on time. I got out and walked up to the bamboo front door. There was a hot pink flier taped to the outside promoting Elvis night featuring Eddie King, Harold Rogers, and Johnny Lee Young.
I’d watched Eddie King once with my ex-girlfriend Caroline and her friend Becca. Caroline loved Eddie and had only missed two of his shows in the past year. On Wednesday she’d posted on Facebook that she’d be at tonight’s performance. I was counting on it. I hoped she’d see me across the room and then walk back into my arms as if nothing had changed, as if the Worst Valentine’s Day in History™ had never happened. It was a long shot, but it was a shot I had to take.
I pulled out my phone and dialed Ronnie. “Are you sure you can’t meet me at the Tiki House?”
“Can’t. It’s mahjong night at casa de Medina, and I gotta watch Ella. Sorry, T-dawg.”
God forbid Ronnie call me by my actual name, Thompson. It was always T-dawg, T-money, T-dubs, or my personal favorite, T-cup, as if we were popular jocks with cheerleader girlfriends who could pull off such ridiculous nicknames. Instead, we were scrawny AP class nerds who played NBA Live instead of real basketball.
“Can’t you just put your sister in her playpen?” I asked. “Have Barkley watch her?”
Barkley was his family’s neurotic West Highland terrier. He weighed all of eighteen pounds, but had the guard dog tendencies of a Rottweiler.
“That’s cruelty to two year-olds,” he said. “Besides, you know how I feel about your quest to get the CW back.”
“Who says I’m trying to get her back? Maybe I’m just embracing the pain. Wallowing if you will.”
“Yeah right. I think we might need to have an intervention soon. You are very close to hitting rock bottom, my friend. You might already be there.” He hung up before I could think of a witty comeback.
Inside, the Tiki House looked like the island section of a party supply store had thrown up. Magentas, purples, and greens practically punched you in the face as you walked in. Synthetic palm trees and multi-colored lights on strings multiplied in places they shouldn’t, like the urinals in the restroom. The female wait staff wore grass skirts over their khaki shorts and all the employees draped rainbow leis around their necks. The food was so-so at best. The fries weren’t salty enough and were often undercooked, and locals knew it was a bad idea to order the cheeseburger, or any beef dish they had on offer.
I sat at a small round table meant for two and ordered a chocolate shake and fish tacos. I scanned the bamboo- and palm-encrusted room, hoping I’d see Caroline’s wavy red hair in the crowd. Caroline had an unrivaled obsession with Elvis and I had what was probably, in retrospect, an unhealthy obsession with her. I loved that she didn’t worship boy bands like other girls or listen to obscure alt-rock bands that were supposed to be cool. After we became a couple, “Sweet Caroline,” a song I had loathed previously and that I was sure had no business being played for anyone except the unfortunate souls who actually attended Neil Diamond concerts, became my ring tone. It was in my top twenty-five most played songs on iTunes, sitting comfortably in the number three spot. I had every word memorized and sang the song with gusto whenever my phone went off, grinning like an idiot when it played. Elvis songs held five of the twenty-five spots, another side effect of Caroline. Caroline loved Elvis so much that I myself became enamored with him. I bought his CDs, read up on his life (Me & A Guy Named Elvis: wow, what a book), and watched his movies, even though they all followed a similar formula:

Elvis meets girl + Elvis punches guy in dancelike fight over girl + Elvis wins girl + catchy songs = cash cow

I noticed I was one of maybe six males in the restaurant. There was a table full of women who, based on their soft bodies and day glo crocs, had to be moms. They were acting like they didn’t get out much, shrieking and laughing as if everything that was being said was the funniest thing they’d ever heard. This, I knew, was statistically impossible. There were groups of younger females in their twenties wearing high heels, low-cut shirts, and bright red lipstick, with the occasional couple thrown into the mix. There was also an old couple with silver hair at a table near the stage with a large pepperoni pizza and margaritas in front of them. For a second I thought about leaving, but didn’t. I wanted to “run into” Caroline and this was the only way to do it.
The first guy to come out was Eddie King. When he walked onto the wood stage, one of the moms let out a shrill whistle. Eddie King was young, twenty-something, and wore Elvis’s trademark gold lamé jacket over tight black pants. His outrageously poufy black hair was clearly a wig. But, as he swiveled his hips across the stage, the ladies in the Tiki House went ape-shit, especially the girl in the barely-there lime green shirt who grabbed at him like he was the King himself, digging her long pink nails into his right arm. I scanned the crowd again for Caroline, but didn’t see her.
Eddie sang three songs before making way for the next Elvis, Harold Rogers, who was ancient and out of shape. His wig had seen better days and hung loosely against his wrinkled brow. Gobs of flesh prayed to be freed from his synthetic navy blue jumpsuit. The rhinestones on his suit were one false move away from popping into an unintended firework display of silver sequins and glitter. I almost hoped it would happen since the show was guaranteed to be spectacular, but I really didn’t want to see this guy without any clothes on. His chest heaved with exhaustion as he plodded through “Suspicious Minds.” Beads of sweat dripped from his forehead and hit the stage like fat drops of rain.
“Thank you, thank you very much,” he gasped at the end of his set.
I asked my waitress for a refill of my shake before the last guy came on. I didn’t get to eat junk food a lot since mom was the queen of low-fat, organic, non-GMO eating. She blogged about clean living in addition to doing her day job (she did something with spreadsheets for the Four Seasons Resort, I still wasn’t sure what exactly) and had made a nice side-business of it. She sold enough advertising to subsidize our astronomical Whole Foods’ bills.
The last Elvis was older than Eddie King, maybe thirty, and had a spark in him that made the women of the Tiki House swoon. His thick black hair was real—it wasn’t clipped on and fake like the last two guys’. His jaw and nose were narrower than Elvis’, but his eyes were just as big. He wore a black button-down shirt, matching slacks, and a yellow lei, and from the way he shuffled his feet as he performed “Jailhouse Rock,” I could tell he’d been doing this a long time. Unlike the previous performers, he ventured off the stage and into the heart of the restaurant, stopping to greet every patron as he sang. He moved with the kind of confidence and charisma I could only dream about. He locked eyes with me as he approached my table and winked. He tipped his head, spun around, and continued on.
He waved to the old couple with the pizza at the table in the front and returned to the stage before breaking into a song I’d never heard before, one that hadn’t made its way into my larger-than-average Elvis catalog. It started with a grand crescendo to a high note that made the hairs on my arms stand up, before dropping back down to a low register. It was about being lied to and led on, but loving the girl anyway. There were no backing vocals or gratuitous instrumentation to tone down the emotion. It was just this guy in black putting his heart on the floor.
He sang about being blindsided by his one true love, which I knew something about. The song was simple—there weren’t any extended metaphors or complicated language—but it was effective. I could tell by the way he clutched at his shirt that he’d lived through what the lyrics spoke of. Either that or he was one hell of an actor. I tried looking up the song on my phone but, like most things at the Tiki House, the Wi-Fi was terrible. I’d been listening to so many sad songs in recent weeks about regret, loss, and heartache—even country songs about drinking your problems away—but this one was different.
“I’m Johnny Lee Young, everybody,” he said at the end of the song, a slight drawl in his voice. “Though not so young anymore. I’ll be here all night. Please stick around for my second set.”
The moms’ night out table whooped with delight. The young girls in heels whistled.
As Johnny Lee Young stepped down from the stage and made his way to the bar, I zoomed past the rowdy ladies and accosted him.
I had to know the name of that song.





ONE LOVE Synopsis
Long-distance relationships are tough. Thompson should know.
He’s going to college in Hawaii, but Greta’s in Italy.
When he meets Charlotte things get complicated.
Is it Greta he wants to be with?
Or Charlotte?
Will he discover that, despite what he believes, a person can have more than One Love?
One Love, the companion novel to One Night (2016), is a contemporary YA novel about college, first love, and friendship. Though it is technically a sequel to One Night it can be read as a stand-alone novel.
Buy Links:
Amazon – http://amzn.to/2zYjHlj
iBooks – http://apple.co/2zDc1Gk
Kobo – http://bit.ly/2i3hLlb
B&N – http://bit.ly/2zEW16D



About the Author 
Deanna Cabinian is the author of One Night and One Love. When she isn’t working or writing she enjoys traveling and spending time with her husband and their Havanese dog, Cuba. Her writing has appeared in Writer’s Digest, Writer Unboxed, and YA Interrobang. Find her online at http://www.deannacabinian.com.



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Monday, June 18, 2018

SUMMERTIME: What's Up With Me & What's Next for Writing Belle Publishing


I'm one of the few people in the Central Valley who really likes the heat. Why? Because the heat means that it's summertime. Summertime is my favorite time of the year (it's not just because my name is Summer). I love the smell of fruit on the trees. I love the long evenings and swimming parties. I love having a break from teaching and being able to cut my work days in half for a couple of months. Summertime is simply the best - and I always get my best reading done during the summer. Seriously. Every year! 

What's up with me? 
When I write What's Up With Me articles, I always try to condense everything that's going on in my life into a collection of paragraphs. Let's start with my books. I just released Resurrection: Civil War, and it's doing amazing! Thank you for supporting and reading the series, and for keeping Cassidy Hart on the front lines of the fictional world. A lot of people have been asking me what's next for Cassidy. Her next installment, Resurrection: Sign of Six, will release on schedule, either in December 2018 or January 2019. We don't have an official date yet! 

In July 2018, I will finally be releasing Prolific: Writing a Hit Novel. I am also beginning work on a brand new historical novel that I am ridiculously excited about! I will be doing research on the book this summer, and I can't wait to share with you all what the novel is about. It's going to be different, fun, and enlightening. In addition, I've got a couple of other ideas that I'm refining, but none of them are quite ready to share yet, either. 

In all, expect about 3 releases from me within the next 8 months. I will keep you all up to date as things progress! 



What's up with baby? 
Some of you may have already heard that I'm pregnant with my first baby. This summer definitely looks a little different for me because for the first time, I'm beginning to realize that I'll be a mother in just a few months. YIKES. This pregnancy has been rough so far. I've been really sick and learning how to manage the sickness has been an interesting challenge. Outside of my constant sickness, my baby is growing healthy and strong, and I thank God for that! 

So many people ask me if I'm having pregnancy cravings yet (I'm a little over 10 weeks along). I've been so sick that hardly any food has appealed to me. I've been asking for cucumbers, cherry tomatoes, celery, and carrots. I also really like cashews, nectarines, and oranges. Anything else grosses me out at this stage! And another fun little side note that a first-time mama like me is discovering: "morning" sickness is a total myth! It should be called "24/7 sickness," because it NEVER. ENDS. If you suffered while you were pregnant, you know exactly what I'm talking about! 


The Author Program! 
I usually run an author program every year at Writing Belle, and while I will be taking maternity leave from January 2019-March 2019, I plan on booking features ahead of time. This means that you should be contacting me NOW if you want to be featured next year on Writing Belle. Remember, my features are free for you. I'll start the author program in February, so hit me up. Spots always fill up fast. For example, the entire calendar years for 2018 was booked in just a couple of weeks. 

How can I get on your ARC program? 
To be an advanced reader, you have to keep your eyes peeled on my Facebook page. I will open up a sign-up sheet on a random day and the first 20 people to sign up (sometimes more), will receive a book. Usually, sign-ups hit the ceiling almost immediately. 

What are you reading right now? 
Well, because I've been so ill the last few weeks, I've downloaded some great books on my Kindle to keep me busy. For a while, I couldn't read without getting a migraine (this baby is a beast, I'm telling ya), but I've managed to figure out how to outsmart the tiny bean in my belly. More nutrition = more stamina for reading! And let's face it...reading is all that matters, right? 

At the moment, I'm almost done with the phenomenal Wolf Road by Beth Lewis. I highly recommend the book, as it wraps all of my favorite elements into one: survival, Alaska, wolves, the wilderness, and a strong heroine. Seriously, run and get this book. It's amazing. I am mesmerized by it. The writing is raw and gritty and as unforgivingly realistic as the post-apocalyptic landscape it's set within. Beth Lewis is legendary. 

I'm also tiptoeing through What Happens When Women Walk in Faith, by Lysa Terkeurst. She's one of my favorite Christian non-fiction writers. Her books are uplifting and touching in a way that speaks to women's souls and hearts. I also highly recommend her work - all of it, including her Proverbs 31 Ministries. They offer encouragement daily on their social media feeds, and I especially enjoy Lysa's 60-second podcasts of encouragement to help you jumpstart your day with the right mindset! 

I just downloaded The Gender Games, by Bella Forrest (YA dystopia) and The Last Thing She Ever Did, by Gregg Olsen (adult mystery/thriller). Lastly, I'm looking forward to reading Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee: An Indian History of the American West, written by Dee Brown. It's a non-fiction look at the utter tragedies and ultimate destruction of the beautiful native American tribes here in the United States. It will be very educational, I'm sure. 

Next Week...!
The author program will continue next week with a fun romance series and its respective author. I can't wait to share. Until next time...enjoy your summer and eat lots of watermelon! 








Friday, June 15, 2018

RESURRECTION: CIVIL WAR RELEASE DAY! + WIN A REGAL ENTERTAINMENT GIFT PACK



Title: Resurrection: Civil War
Author: Summer Lane 
Series: Resurrection #2 
Release: GET IT TODAY on AMAZON and Barnes & Noble
(Note, the print copy will be available next week. Today heralds the international digital release ONLY!)

Synopsis: 

THE SECOND INSTALLMENT IN THE NEW SERIES!

CASSIDY HART’S PRESIDENCY IS IN TROUBLE.


A house divided against itself cannot stand.


As the Western Republic and the Eastern Coalition are thrust into the beginning of a civil war, President Cassidy Hart fears for the survival of the country that she has worked so hard to protect.


A new, dangerous Omega Chancellor has taken control of the Eastern Coalition, heading up a new division of technological warfare, in an attempt to crush the Freedom Fighters and the entire structure of leadership built around Cassidy’s presidency.

While a new type of advanced warfare begins, Cassidy and her team penetrate the dangerous underbelly of Omega’s remaining secret societies to get closer to the Chancellor and to seize Omega technology…before it’s too late to save the Western Republic.

Torn between loyalty, duty, and love, Cassidy Hart will go down in history as either the most beloved – or most hated – president of all time.
This means war.



From the bestselling author of 20 hit novels, including the popular Collapse Series, Summer Lane. This novel continues the adventures of the Resurrection Series and beloved heroine, Cassidy Hart.



To celebrate this release, enter to win a Regal Entertainment Gift Pack, courtesy of the author (U.S. Shipping Only). This includes two movie tickets! Also up for grabs are two free print books from Summer Lane, Running with Wolves, and Bravo: Apocalypse Mission. 




Thank you all so much for reading and for supporting Cassidy Hart! This is the twelfth overall book concerning Cassidy's story, and my twenty-first publication. Wow! For this weekend, Resurrection: Shadows of Omega will be available for 99 cents, in case you haven't had a chance to read it yet before Civil War. This should give you a chance to catch up! THANK YOU AGAIN, and have a WONDERFUL weekend! 








Monday, June 11, 2018

TAKE SOMETHING WHEN YOU GO - Poetry Collection from Dawn Leas



Title: Take Something When You Go 
Genre: Poetry 
Buy Links: 


Synopsis:
Navigating the open highways of our life decisions, Take Something When You Go shows us how to let go while still holding on to love, memory, family, and friends. We can learn to identify our many beginnings and endings, and come to terms with loss and renewal. And while it’s always okay to acknowledge what’s in the rear-view, we must constantly strive to move the odometer forward.



Accolades For 'Take Something When You Go'

 “Dawn Leas’ first book, Take Something When You Go, is the work of a mature writer, both in her life and craft. These poems explore the tenderness and tensions of a long-married couple, empty-nesters who suddenly must confront the emptiness at the center of their relationship. Leas explores with great passion and strength, with equal parts guilt and desire, the moment when we tear aside the veil to confront uncomfortable truths, and to discover how to reanimate the old life or prepare for the messy, terrifying, possibly exhilarating journey into a new one.”


—Neil Shepard, author of Hominid Up and Vermont Exit Ramps II

“Take Something When You Go by Dawn Leas is powerful in what it says and what it whispers… “a wish, or a prayer. / Almost a dream. Almost real. Always moving, toward and away.” Her poems reveal the “View from Canyon Lake Overview at the Top of Superstition Mountains,” the eye of Hurricane Sandy, the mystery of imaginary numbers. They travel through time, through different stages of the body, and lead to powerful healings. Pay attention to the light as “The Morning Wakes Up”… “We circle Sugar Magnolia / twice with the emerging sun, / breathe in the silence.” Her language transmits music, image, body presence, emotion, and spiritual awakening. This book is a joy to read.”

—Diane Frank, author of Swan Light, and Yoga of the Impossible, and editor of River of Earth and Sky: Poems for the Twenty-First Century



 Special Selections from Dawn's Collection


Empty Cars
You walk into the kitchen,
shaking the February cold
from your coat,
flecks of snow melt in your hair.

I stir a pot of sauce, its steam carries past Sunday
dinners at my parents’, kids playing Go Fish

in the family room. You lean against the island
and cross your arms. I’m slicing cloves of garlic

when you say that empty cars, dark and idle,
in the driveway, make you sad sometimes.

I stop chopping and for the first time since the boys left,
I see you, really know you. I no longer question

what keeps a marriage together through years of northern
winters, no sun, only grey clouds, slick ice,

what moves people past the fringe into longing again.

               Kith

The party always began in the back yard—
            coolers filled with ice, beer and soda,
            burgers spitting into lighter fluid and charcoal.

A circle of lawn chairs with frayed webbing
            held aunts in bell bottoms and halter tops,
            their gossip only interrupted to yell at children

running with sparklers in hand. Inside the Victorian,
            grandfather sat for hours at an old upright
            against the back wall of dining room, a line

of Budweiser cans sweat circles into the wood's grain.
            Playing by ear, he ran through his song list
            always ending with “Danny Boy” or “When Irish

Eyes are Smiling” just as the marathon game of Jeopardy
            fired up around the mahogny table, siblings
            and spouses divided into teams with red, green, and yellow

clickers in one hand, Coors Light and Camels in the other.
            As the game entered its third hour, arguments rose
            over Potent Potables and who forgot to shout

their answers in form of a question. The kids were a patchwork den carpet
            using each other as pillows, the youngest in charge
            of cranking the volume on the console to make

Gilda Radnor's laugh win over dining-room noise. Cigarette
            smoke coiled through the first floor, hung above the kids
            for just a second before escaping through open windows

dissolving into the dark back yard while mosquitoes
            skittered against dusty screens, always
            a frenetic dance toward unreachable light.




About the Author 

Dawn Leas is the author of a full-length collection, Take Something When You Go, (Winter Goose Publishing 2016), and a chapbook, I Know When to Keep Quiet, (Finishing Line Press, 2010). Her work has appeared in Literary Mama, Southern Women's Review, San Pedro River Review, The Pedestal Magazine and elsewhere. Her work won an honorable mention in the 2005 Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Poetry Prize and has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize. In past lives she has been a copywriter, freelancer, English teacher, higher-education administrator, and stay-at-home mom. Currently, she is an independent writer, editor, and writing coach. For more information, visit www.dawnleas.com.





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Monday, June 4, 2018

25 YEARS INSIDE UNIVERSAL STUDIOS: Special Interview with Entertainment Director Jerry Green


Jerry's Big Adventure



Jerry Green was a kid from the sticks of Panama City, Florida, who dreamed of going to Hollywood and becoming an actor. He made it to Hollywood, but instead of acting, his rural-to-riches story put him at the epicenter of a theme park revolution—the one without the mouse.
Like a lot of kids in southern California, Jerry was a regular at Disneyland. But it was the nascent Universal Studios Tour that captured his imagination, and soon after college he became one of the tour guides, Universal's tram-bound counterparts to Disney's Jungle Cruise skippers.
Jerry had a knack for connecting with his audience. Before long, he was hosting Universal's popular audience participation shows, and then he ascended to the upper echelon of Universal management, becoming the studio's entertainment director. From there, he was sent to Orlando to assist in the development of Universal Studios Florida, where he worked on rides and shows that wowed the crowds on opening day, and sent Mickey-down-the-road into an existential crisis.
Full of humor, celebrity encounters, stories of Universal's cast and culture you've never heard before, and healthy doses of "jerryosophy", Jerry Green's memoir of his 25 years with Universal Studios is that rarest of business books: a truly fun read, loaded with laughs and appropriate for theme park fans of all ages.





How many of you have visited Universal Studios? While I haven't yet had the pleasure of traveling to the Orlando location, I have gone to Universal Studios Hollywood. It was so much fun! Since I've been there, they have opened The Wizarding World of Harry Potter, a Fast and Furious attraction, and a Walking Dead Walk-Through attraction. Universal is the competitor to Southern California's Disneyland and Florida's Disney World. Like any theme park, Universal is fun for the whole family. 

I'm so excited to feature Jerry Green on Writing Belle today. His memoir, 25 Years Inside Universal Studios, is the perfect read for anyone who loves and is fascinated by theme parks. Jerry began as a tour guide on a tram and eventually worked his way up to become the entertainment director.  Over the course of his career, he has hosted more than 32,000 live shows - how amazing is that?! He even wrote and directed shows for the Florida park's debut. With such an incredible and fun career, I was thrilled to be able to interview Jerry and ask him about his life experiences at Universal. I hope you enjoy this interview. Remember to check out his book on Kindle and paperback

Interview with Jerry Green 



Thanks so much for being here! Can you give us a little background on yourself? Where are you from? Where did you grow up?
Thank you for a wonderful opportunity to talk about writing, something I’ve come to love.

I was born in Panama City, a small town of 50,000 located on the panhandle of north Florida.  For many years our beaches were considered the most beautiful in the world.  Also it was the busiest Spring Break destination in the world for many years … that is until the city council banned liquor on the beach during Spring Break.

I left there at the age of fourteen when my mom remarried and moved to Phoenix.


How did you find your way from Florida to the bright lights of Hollywood and Universal Studios?
Honestly, growing up in a poor family I never envisioned getting out of Florida, but my mom moving to Phoenix was all part of a providential design.  I lived in Phoenix for six years, married at the age of 19 (I know, way too young), and for our honeymoon we drove west to visit the tourist hot spots … Disneyland and Universal Studios.  Once I saw Universal I was hooked.  Interesting side note: when I was in the 7th grade in Panama City I took an aptitude test and scored highest in show biz related vocations.  Who knew?!

On our first anniversary my wife and I returned to California and Universal.  I discovered they were taking applications for tour guides the following week. We couldn’t remain in Hollywood and wait for the interview, so we went home and a week later I flew from Phoenix back to Burbank (my first time in an airplane) and interviewed for the job.  Much to my surprise I was told, “You’re hired.  Training starts Monday.”  Yikes!  Too soon!  But I wasn’t about to pass up the opportunity, so I called my wife and told her, then called my boss in Phoenix and told him.  So much for giving a 2-week notice.

Describe your journey from tour guide to entertainment director? 
I actually envisioned my job as a tour guide as the stepping stone to becoming a great actor.  That pursuit occupied the first several years of my life, acting classes, interviews, etc.  That’s a story that is on the horizon for one of my future books – Show Biz for Christians.

I worked as a tour guide for a year and a half, then was drafted into the Army, served for 2 years, then came back to the studio.  I returned to the position of tour guide, but when business slowed I was transferred to the wardrobe dept.  No, not making clothes, but handing out costumes to people like Frankenstein, Phantom, Woody Woodpecker, etc.

After 3 months of doing that my boss came in one day and said he liked my attitude, never complaining and doing a good job, and he was moving me to the Screen Test Show.  I was going to host a live stage show.  That was going to be the most defining part of my professional life and my job for the next many years.  Over the course of my career I hosted over 32,000 live stage shows at the studio, plus more in other places across the U.S. and Canada.  I also co-hosted a live stage show with Joan Embrey, the San Diego Zoo’s international ambassador.

In 1984 the boss called me to his office.  Again, Yikes!  I wasn’t sure what that was all about.  But long story short, I was offered the job as Director of Entertainment.

 Hosting a show at Universal Studios with Mike Douglas (wearing police uniform) as guest star


What exactly is the job description of an entertainment director?
During my 25 years, Universal Studios Hollywood, as it’s now called, had six live shows.  The entertainment director is responsible for overseeing all shows, including the performers, maintaining performance levels, hiring and firing, plus oversight of the strolling characters I mentioned before, and also a variety of other employees working in the theaters, stage managers, show control, park attendants, etc.  There were also special effects under my supervision, such as the KITT car, a talking car from the very popular TV show Knight Rider starring David Hasselhoff.
Depending on the time of year I had up to 350 employees.

Did you often run into high-profile entertainers or celebrities during your time at Universal? Any funny or interesting stories that stick out?
I met a plethora of celebrities, many of whom I talk about in my book, one of them none other than President Ronald Reagan.  Meeting him was the highlight of my professional career..  But one I forgot to mention in my book was Michael Jackson.  I co-hosted an event with Lew Wasserman and Steven Spielberg in Manhattan announcing the building of Universal Florida.  Wasserman was the CEO of MCA/Universal, and truly the last of the Hollywood movie moguls.  But it’s interesting the number of events and people I forgot to talk about when writing my story.

I imagine that the theme park business is high pressure and intense. What do you think is the key to running a successful theme park?
Interesting you should ask that question.  I was just talking about that yesterday.  The key to any business is the employees.  I guess it’s a general understanding whether talking about business or life in general.  My employees represented the studio and me.  My belief is that if we treat others with respect, most will live up to that trust and do a good job.
But the theme park business requires constant care.  It isn’t like making a movie where the director oversees the performance and can have a retake or edit out the missteps in postproduction.  Our shows were live every day, four to sixteen times a day. There were no retakes for the audience.  It was one and done.

During my years at the studio, MCA owned Universal and the executives were tight with the dollar.  Universal Florida, which I also worked to help develop, came after years of struggle with the ‘big bosses’.  The studio is now owned by Comcast.  They are throwing literally billions of dollars into it.  They’ve discovered that the theme park business is a safe investment while the movie and television business is always a risk.  Universal has become an entity on par with Disney.

Hosting a show at the San Diego Zoo.  The horse is the Black Stallion from the movie of the same name

Any favorite memories from your time at Universal?
My life is filled with memories.  Those were the best years of my life.  While hosting shows we had a team of five guys who became family. We worked together for twenty years and got along famously.  How can 5 guys work together for that long?  In my book I talk about ‘blood lettings’ we had from time to time.  Blood lettings – we guys would go into our break room, a room with no windows, take a seat, and turn off the lights so the room was pitch black.  Wait for it, don’t imagine what happened.  With the lights off each guy could say whatever he wanted about anyone on the crew, i.e., performance, attitude, appearance, etc. The person couldn’t respond until it was their turn.  They could then make a defense or apologize.  It was a catharsis that kept us together.  Three of the five guys have died but Don and I are still great friends even today.

Tell us, briefly, about what readers will find in your book.
I’ll quote what my publisher said when I first submitted the manuscript to him –
“Just finished your manuscript – and loved it.  Lots of details, anecdotes, and most important, well-written.  Overall, an easy, fun read, which is exactly what a book like that should be.”
My story is just that, my life at Universal during the early years.  Until 1964 the public wasn’t allowed inside a working studio.  The studio and I grew up together.  I was a young buck of 20 and ‘Universal Studios Tour’, as it was called then, was only four.

I talk of celebrity encounters, opening a show in front of a full house of 2,000 people plus media, with absolutely no rehearsal.  “Jerry, we have to do a show.  The press is waiting and we promised a show today.”  I said, “Okay, let’s do a show.”  I picked up the microphone, walked to the front of the stage and … “Good afternoon ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Screen Test Show.”  And with that we were off and running, making it up as I went along.  The first show took two hours.  But after a few days we trimmed it down to 35 minutes.

I remember opening day for the Star Trek live stage show with all the celebrities.  The intent was for William Shatner to co-host with me, but the crew forgot to have a microphone ready for him.  However, the show had to start.  The audience was waiting, plus hundreds of the press corp.


Universal wanted to create a more 'user friendly' monster.  A press event I hosted - the 'Birth of Baby Frankenstein'

If you could offer one piece of advice to anyone hoping to achieve their dreams, what would it be?
My advice may not be what your expecting, but I would tell anyone to never compromise, not even if that carrot is dangling just beyond your reach.  Character is more important than temporary success.  And ‘temporary’ can be twenty or thirty years, maybe more.

Another piece of advice is to be persistent – not in an annoying way, but pursue your dream with integrity.  Be a person who can be depended on.  Someone who’s done their homework and is prepared to perform, even if it’s in a business other than show biz.


Thank you so much for taking the time to visit with us today. 

Thanks Summer.

Visit Jerry at his Official Website.








ABOUT JERRY GREEN

Jerry Green was born into a very poor family in a small town in North Florida, the very deep South.  He admits he never dreamed of getting to Hollywood.  His dreams weren’t that big.  But through a series of unexpected turns that’s exactly where his path led.  And although acting was his goal, instead his rural-to-riches story put him at the epicenter of a theme park revolution, on the precipice of an industry that was about to explode.  His park, however was the one without the mouse.

On his first two visits to southern California, Jerry made the regular tourist stops,   
Disneyland and Universal Studios. But it was the nascent Universal Studios Tour that captured his imagination, and his timing couldn’t have been better.  The tour was only four years old.  He took a chance and applied for a job as a tour guide.  “You’re hired,” he was told.  “You start training in two days.”

Universal’s upper echelon quickly discovered that Jerry had a knack for connecting with his audience so they moved him through the ranks and before long he was hosting Universal's popular audience participation shows.  After hosting over 32,000 live stage shows he was promoted to Director of Entertainment.

When the green light was given to develop the studio in Orlando he was sent there to write, produce and direct several projects for the mega-attraction - Universal Studios Florida, which opened with higher attendance and approval ratings than Disney MGM Studio the prior year.

Filled with humor, celebrity encounters including President Reagan, stories of Universal's cast and culture you've never heard before, and healthy doses of "jerryosophy", Jerry Green's memoir of his 25 Years Inside Universal Studios is that rarest of entertaining/business books: a truly fun read, loaded with laughs and appropriate for theme park and show biz fans of all ages.”

Bob McLain
President
Theme Park Press





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