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Roadtrip Nation

by Mike Marriner, Nathan Gebhard, Joanne Gordon

"SO WHAT ARE YOU GONNA DO WITH YOUR LIFE?
""You should be a lawyer, a doctor, an accountant, a consultant, blah, blah, blah. Everywhere you turn people try to tell you who to be and what to do with your life. We call that the noise. Block it. Shed it. Leave it for the conformists. As a generation, we need to get back to focusing on individuality. Self-construction rather than mass production. Define your own road in life instead of traveling down someone else's. Listen to yourself. Your road is the open road. Find it."
—Mike and Nathan

After college Mike Marriner and Nathan Gebhard had no idea what to do with their lives. All they'd been exposed to were standard career paths like doctor and consultant—roads that didn't fit them at all.
To see what else was out there they took a roadtrip across the nation in a huge forty-foot RV to meet with people who had successfully defined their own paths in life—including the chairman of Starbucks; a lobsterman from Maine; the director of "Saturday Night Live"; the conductor of the Boston Philharmonic; the first female Supreme Court Justice of the United States; head stylist for Madonna; and the CEO of National Geographic Ventures. All told, one hundred and forty people candidly shared their stories about how they got from college to the present. Now in "Roadtrip Nation," Mike and Nathan share the most compelling tales with you.
Along the way, they explain how you, too, can get out there and meet people on your own. From making cold calls to asking stimulating interview questions, "Roadtrip Nation" will give you the tools to create a life that you'll look back on and say: "I was true to myself every step of the way."

FORMAT
Paperback
LANGUAGE
English
CONDITION
Brand New


Publisher Description

SO WHAT ARE YOU GONNA DO WITH YOUR LIFE?

"You should be a lawyer, a doctor, an accountant, a consultant, blah, blah, blah. Everywhere you turn people try to tell you who to be and what to do with your life. We call that the noise. Block it. Shed it. Leave it for the conformists. As a generation, we need to get back to focusing on individuality. Self-construction rather than mass production. Define your own road in life instead of traveling down someone else's. Listen to yourself. Your road is the open road. Find it."—Mike and Nathan

*****
After college Mike Marriner and Nathan Gebhard had no idea what to do with their lives. All they'd been exposed to were standard career paths like doctor and consultant—roads that didn't fit them at all.

To see what else was out there they took a roadtrip across the nation in a huge forty-foot RV to meet with people who had successfully defined their own paths in life—including the chairman of Starbucks; a lobsterman from Maine; the director of Saturday Night Live; the conductor of the Boston Philharmonic; the first female Supreme Court Justice of the United States; head stylist for Madonna; and the CEO of National Geographic Ventures. All told, one hundred and forty people candidly shared their stories about how they got from college to the present. Now in Roadtrip Nation, Mike and Nathan share the most compelling tales with you.

Along the way, they explain how you, too, can get out there and meet people on your own. From making cold calls to asking stimulating interview questions, Roadtrip Nation will give you the tools to create a life that you'll look back on and say: "I was true to myself every step of the way."

Author Biography

Mike Marriner, Nathan Gebhard and Brian McAllister are from California. Nathan and Mike met in sixth grade, and have been friends ever since. Brian and Mike played water polo together in college, and since then the three have embarked on several eye-opening experiences.Post-college, feeling sheltered and underexposed to the world around them, they hit the road in an unsound 1985 green RV to connect with people who defined their own roads in life. Contrary to what they had learned in school or growing up in California, they discovered that people can build lives in line with their individuality.That trip inspired them to create Roadtrip Nation, a grassroots organization that mobilizes students to hit the road and explore the world for themselves. Footage from these trips are shared with people all over, through the Roadtrip Nation Series on PBS, books, various broadcast partnerships, and online.

Mike Marriner, Nathan Gebhard, and Brian McAllister are from California. Nathan and Mike met in sixth grade, and have been friends ever since. Brian and Mike played water polo together in college, and since then the three have embarked on several eye-opening experiences. Post-college, feeling sheltered and underexposed to the world around them, they hit the road in an unsound 1985 green RV to connect with people who defined their own roads in life. Contrary to what they had learned in school or growing up in California, they discovered that people can build lives in line with their individuality. That trip inspired them to create Roadtrip Nation, a grassroots organization that mobilizes students to hit the road and explore the world for themselves. Footage from these trips is shared with people all over, through the Roadtrip Nation series on PBS, books, various broadcast partnerships, and online (roadtripnation.com).

Joanne Gordon was a writer at Forbes magazine from 1998 to 2003 and has written about management, career, and workplace issues for Boston Magazine, Working Mother, Seventeen, and the Chicago Tribune. Before becoming a professional writer, she spent six years in marketing and, in 1997, earned a graduate degree from the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University. She is the coauthor of Roadtrip Nation with Mike Marriner and Nathan Gebhard, as well as the author of Be Happy at Work and Career Bliss. She lives in the Pacific Northwest.

Long Description

"SO WHAT ARE YOU GONNA DO WITH YOUR LIFE? ""You should be a lawyer, a doctor, an accountant, a consultant, blah, blah, blah. Everywhere you turn people try to tell you who to be and what to do with your life. We call that the noise. Block it. Shed it. Leave it for the conformists. As a generation, we need to get back to focusing on individuality. Self-construction rather than mass production. Define your own road in life instead of traveling down someone else's. Listen to yourself. Your road is the open road. Find it." --Mike and Nathan ***** After college Mike Marriner and Nathan Gebhard had no idea what to do with their lives. All they'd been exposed to were standard career paths like doctor and consultant--roads that didn't fit them at all. To see what else was out there they took a roadtrip across the nation in a huge forty-foot RV to meet with people who had successfully defined their own paths in life--including the chairman of Starbucks; a lobsterman from Maine; the director of "Saturday Night Live"; the conductor of the Boston Philharmonic; the first female Supreme Court Justice of the United States; head stylist for Madonna; and the CEO of National Geographic Ventures. All told, one hundred and forty people candidly shared their stories about how they got from college to the present. Now in "Roadtrip Nation," Mike and Nathan share the most compelling tales with you. Along the way, they explain how you, too, can get out there and meet people on your own. From making cold calls to asking stimulating interview questions, "Roadtrip Nation" will give you the tools to create a life that you'll look back on and say: "I was true to myself every step of the way."

Excerpt from Book

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA EPIPHANY ROAD Gary Erickson Berkeley, California Founder, Owner, and CEO Clif Bar California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo GARY ERICKSON''S OPEN ROAD MAP "Cruises through college" at California Polytech and gets a business degree. Works as a mountain guide; travels the world for a year. Returns home to help launch a bike seat factory; manages it for ten years. Begins bike racing professionally; sells Greek pastries on the side. Takes his "epiphany ride": a 175-mile one-day bike ride during which, after five not-so-delicious Power Bars, he decides to make a tasty alternative. Founds Clif Bar within the year. I can''t eat another Power Bar. I can make something better than this. Gary Erickson didn''t just graduate from college and say "Gee, I think I''ll start a health bar company." Like many of the people we talked to on our roadtrip, Gary''s current place in life is not the result of some grand plan he put in place after college. Instead, it''s an unexpected culmination of experiences and hobbies that each reflected his interests at a particular time in his life. One decision eventually opened doors to other opportunities, and then more choices. Gary was the first interview we did on the roadtrip, and he told us his story from the passenger seat of the RV. He had a shaved head and wore running shoes, black pants, and a black golf shirt with a white striped collar. "The only thing black and white about my life is my shirt," he said. That''s an apt summary of his road because Gary is definitely comfortable living in the gray zone. I cruised through college not knowing what I was going to do. I was a business major because I always had entrepreneurial ideas, and I thought I''d open up a ski shop or something. But halfway through school I changed my mind and didn''t think business was something I''d do after graduation. For a while my life was about music. I played the trumpet, I was into jazz and thought about being in a band. It looked great, but then I realized that I didn''t want to be on the road playing every night, traveling all over the place. When I graduated from college I worked as a mountain guide and spent a few years taking kids hiking and sleeping outdoors, climbing big walls in the valley or wherever I could go. For a while climbing was my thing. Then I traveled around the world for a year and my parents were pretty cool about it. They gave me a few hundred bucks and said, "Have a great time," which surprised me because they''re pretty conservative. I got a backpack and took off to Europe, the Middle East, and India. It was a $10-a-day thing back then, one of those change-your-life-forever kind of trips. Seeing how the rest of the world lived changed my worldview. When I got home I was kind of down. I wondered, "Now what do I do?" The trip taught me that nobody has "the answer." There''s no roadmap. I had grown up in suburbia with Evangelical parents, and things seemed pretty black and white. But when I came back to the United States, I realized that there is no black and white. There is a huge gray area, and I was fine with living in the gray. I went to work for my brother at a foundry he owned that made high-tech metal parts and cool aluminum castings. He had just sold part of his company to another company that made bicycle accessories, and they asked him to open a bike seat factory from the ground up. He asked me if I wanted to come along to sweep the floors or do whatever. I did that for about eight months, until my brother went back to the foundry and I became the plant manager. I designed bike seats for ten years. Eventually we moved the production to Italy, which was really cool because I got to travel to Italy five times a year. I''d just go there and hang out and ride my bike. I started riding the Alps. Then it all started to come together. I had become a sort of consultant for my brother''s bike seat factory, making $7,000 to $10,000 a year, living in a garage in Berkeley with my dog, and going to Italy five times a year. I had also started bike racing and two things happened. First, I got an idea when I was at my mom''s house in 1986. She was always inventing recipes, and one day she made a Greek pastry with a meat and vegetable filling. I sat at her kitchen table and said, "Wow! I bet these things would sell." After all, I still had the entrepreneurial bug. I didn''t care about the money. I just wanted to do my own thing. I asked a friend to help me with the business. My mom made a bunch of samples that we put in pink boxes and took around to some delis in the San Francisco Bay area. People actually placed orders and boom [snaps fingers] we were in business, just like that! I juggled the baking business with bike racing. A few years later something happened that I now call "the epiphany ride." I was on a long, 175-mile, one-day bike ride with my friend Jay, and we had six Power Bars with us. After eating five I said, "That''s it! I can''t eat another one. These things suck!" [Laughs.] We went to a 7-Eleven and bought some powdered doughnuts. There I was: I owned a bakery, I was racing bikes, and I was in the bike industry. Plus, all the racers were eating Power Bars, which were selling well but lacked taste. I turned to my friend Jay and said, "Man, I can make something better than this." I had my bakery try to make a product that combined nutrition and taste, and about fourteen months later we introduced Clif Bar. Was I fearful along the way? I had learned from rock climbing not to be fearful because fear paralyzes you. Years and years of climbing taught me to stay calm, which was key because you can''t have fear when running a company, either. Fear spreads. Last year the company marked the ten-year anniversary of the epiphany ride, and we took employees on the 175-mile trek to celebrate the birth of the idea. There you have it. It''s all been one big adventure. SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA MAY THE FORCE BE WITH YOU Dennis Muren San Rafael, California Senior Visual Effects Supervisor Industrial Light & Magic California State University, Los Angeles Pasadena City College DENNIS MUREN''S OPEN ROAD MAP Enchanted by visual effects as a kid, spends allowance on film. Takes "practical route" in college with advertising major; graduates and takes freelance commercial gigs. Pressure to get practical and make money leads to job hunting; spies "inhalation therapy" in classifieds ads. In a last-ditch effort to make it in film, drops his price to work on his first "union film," with George Lucas. Star Wars catapults his career; still working and trying to surprise audiences as well as himself. Go into something that no one else is going into. Sitting before us in a black-and-white Hawaiian shirt was Dennis Muren, the man behind visual effects for movies like E.T., The Extra-Terrestrial, Terminator 2: Judgment Day and the Star Wars flicks. He has won eight Academy Awards for Best Achievement in Visual Effects throughout his career, which is ironic when you consider that when he started out in the 1960s, visual effects wasn''t even a career! Dennis had no road to follow and very few mentors, yet he clung to his fascination with visual effects. We had lunch with him just outside the set of the latest Star Wars film, Episode II: Attack of the Clones. They wouldn''t let us on the set, but we snuck a few peeks anyway. I grew up thirty minutes from Hollywood, but it might as well have been further because I didn''t know anyone in the business. When I was six or seven, I liked visual effects--I don''t even know why. There were no video cameras in those days, and I used an eight-millimeter camera in high school and college. I used my allowance to buy film, but back then you shot only two minutes of film, sent it to Kodak to be developed, and couldn''t get it back for two weeks! That made everything I shot really important. It made me focus on every little thing. But it was just a hobby. I never thought it would be a career. When I went to college, my folks told me to major in business so I had something to fall back on. I minored in advertising so at least I could do special effects for commercials. I crammed my classes into Tuesdays and Thursdays so I could make movies Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays. Between classes some friends and I spent two years making a low-budget film for $3,500. I sold it to a distributor for $6,000 or $7,000. He put another $40,000 into it, redid the sound, added some more shots, released it in L.A., and showed it all over the country. I think I learned more doing that film than I would have during four years at film school. So I am really self-taught. I just followed what I liked to do. My friends and I also went to films that we thought were really neat. Afterward, we''d call up all the people who did the movies'' special effects and ask them about their work. These people had never gotten a call from anybody asking them about their work before, so they were thrilled to talk about it. I sort of goofed off in my early twenties and had, like, four different jobs a year and earned maybe $1,000 for a commercial. I''m an independent person and didn'

Details

ISBN0345496388
Author Joanne Gordon
Short Title ROADTRIP NATION
Language English
ISBN-10 0345496388
ISBN-13 9780345496386
Media Book
Format Paperback
DEWEY 650.1
Year 2006
Affiliation Co-Founder, Roadtrip Nation
Subtitle A Guide to Discovering Your Path in Life
DOI 10.1604/9780345496386
Country of Publication United States
AU Release Date 2006-08-22
NZ Release Date 2006-08-22
US Release Date 2006-08-22
UK Release Date 2006-08-22
Place of Publication New York
Pages 304
Publisher Random House USA Inc
Publication Date 2006-08-22
Imprint Ballantine Books Inc.
Replaces 9780345460134
Illustrations PHOTOS THROUGHOUT
Audience General

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