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Richard Carlson
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Carlson Richard Carlson is an experienced print and broadcast journalist. He has written, produced and directed three documentary filmsfor ABC TV and one for NBC TV. “Hello Again-With Rod McKuen," was about the poet and songwriter Rod McKuen's search for his missing father. It won a Hollywood Emmy and a “Golden Mike” and was made into the book, "Finding My Father” by Rod McKuen. Carlson has won two other Hollywood Emmy's and two other “Golden Mike” Awards for investigative reporting and was once the head of the ABC-TV Investigative Unit in Los Angeles, which specialized in long-term corruption and malfeasance investigations. Carlson wasalso a general-assignment reporter and columnist for United Press International and has written hundreds of magazine and newspaper stories.
Richard Carlson Dr. Richard Carlson is considered to be one of the foremost experts on happiness and stress reduction in the U.S. and around the world. He is the author of twelve popular books including the runaway best seller, Don't Sweat the Small Stuff, and It's All Small Stuff which has sold 3 million copies in its first year alone. His most recent best-seller, Don't Worry, Make Money, rose quickly to number one on the New York Times best-seller list. Other best-selling books include You Can be Happy No Matter What and Feel Good Again. A popular talk show guest, Carlson is frequently featured by the major news media. In his presentations Carlson reveals ways to make your actions more peaceful and caring, while at the same time making your life more calm and stress free.
you-can-feel-good-again-richard-carlson-book-Covert-Art Richard Carlson has one simple message: changing your thinking changes your life. He offers a common sense method that allows anyone to release unhappiness and negativity related to present circumstances or past events, and return to a state of well-being in the present.
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Richard Carlson Born in April 1912 in Albert Lea, Minnesota, Richard Carlson studied drama as a college student in his home state, eventually teaching acting at the college level before striking out as an actor and director on the legitimate stage. The talented Carlson performed in a number of Broadway productions in the mid to late 1930s, including The Ghost of Yankee Doodle (1937) and Stars In Your Eyes (February 1939-May 1939). Carlson's first film appearance came in the David Selznick production The Young in Heart (1938; with Janet Gaynor). In mid 1939, Carlson made a permanent move to Hollywood and freelanced in a number of films at different studios, including The Howards of Virginia (1940; with Cary Grant), Too Many Girls (1940; with Lucille Ball), Hold That Ghost (1941; with Bud Abbott and Lou Costello), and The Affairs of Martha (1942; with Marjorie Main). As with other actors during the era, Carlson served in World War II, interrupting his career. And as was the experience of many other actors, after coming back from the war he found it difficult to land the good roles he had previously been offered.
Richard Carlson received his M.A. at the University of Minnesota and taught there briefly before working in the theater as an actor, director, and writer. He appeared on Broadway, then was brought to Hollywood in 1938 by David O. Selznick, who hired him as a writer assigned to work on the film The Young at Heart; Janet Gaynor, the film's star, urged that he appear in the movie, which became his debut. After that, he had lead and costarring roles in many films of the '30s, '40s, and '50s. Typecast early in his career as a diffident juvenile, he had trouble breaking out of the mold and landing more mature roles; he tended to appear in monster flicks and B-movies in the '50s. He turned to directing in that decade, beginning with Riders to the Stars (1954), which he ... wrote and in which he acted. Besides acting and directing, he also became a magazine writer and wrote scripts for TV.
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Author and psychotherapist Richard Carlson was born on May 16, 1961 and grew up in Piedmont, California. He received his undergraduate degree from Pepperdine University, his Ph.D. in psychology from Sierra University, and an honorary law degree from Pepperdine University. Before becoming a full-time author, he was a psychotherapist in private practice. His wrote 30 books that deal with psychological and spiritual health, including the Don't Sweat the Small Stuff series. He was a supporter of the National Center for Family Literacy. He died of cardiac arrest on December 13, 2006.
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