Additional Cooking Regis Resources

by cooking on April 28, 2010

regional-cookbooks Additional Cooking Regis Resources

I had been wanting this cookbook for a long time but never got around to ordering it. (I know – excuses, excuses!) Normally, I like to order by mail (like Amazon), but not too ago, I walked into a major bookstore chain in Houston where they had some copies on sale. I thumbed through it and saw many enticing recipes at first glance – not just one! Like Aunt Pittypat’s Pecan Poundcake – you can’t go wrong with this one! Buy the book and see the surprise ingredients! Anyhow, because of a silly habit I have, I always reach down and get from the middle bottom. When I opened up the book, there in the front cover was Regis Phlbin’s personal signature. It read, “Thanks & Bon Appetit – Regis Philbin.” I asked the clerk about it and she said sometimes they send out signed copies. Thanks, Regis, for making my day! The wonderful and funny personalities of Regis & Kathy Lee and their guests come alive all throughout this book which makes it that much sweeter! I love the book! The garlic rice with pine nuts (yum! yum!) is worth the money all by itself! I can’t wait to try more recipes. But now I have to buy another copy so I can actually turn the pages! (I’m saving this copy!) To all who buy it – bon appetit!


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What are some of your favorite family guy saying?
A couple of mine are :Peter (when he's shungover): This sucks worse than that time I went to that museum. (Flashback to childhood, standing in museum looking at dinosaur skeltons.)Peter (as a child): Why did all the dinosaurs die out?Man at Museum: Because you touch yourself at night.Peter (narrating his life): "I walked into the kitchen and sat down at the table. I looked with a grimace at the questionable meal Lois had placed in front of me. Of course I'd never tell her how disgusted I was with her cooking, but somehow I think she knew. Lois had always been full of energy and life, but lately I had begun to grow more aware of her aging. The bright, exuberant eyes that I had fallen in love with were now beginning to grow dull and listless with the long fatigue of a weary life. (Lois knocks Peter out.)I woke several hours later in a daze."Peter: Oh my god, Brian, there's a message in my Alphabits. It says, 'Oooooo.'Brian: Peter, those are Cheerios. Chris: Dad, what's the blow-hole for?Peter: I'll tell you what it's Cooking Regis not for, son. And when I do, you'll understand why I can never go back to Sea World. Peter: Well, I'm gettin' something really special too. And by special I don't mean special like that Kleinaman boy down the street. More special like... like Special K, the cereal. Hey, what do they do with the regular K? And for that matter, what ever happend to K. Ballard? You know, if you said mallard and you had a cold, it would sound like ballard.Brian: Do you listen to yourself when you talk?Peter: I drift in and out. Peter: Excuse me, is your refrigerator running? Because if it is, it probably runs like you - very homosexually.Pat Sajak: Alright Peter, you’ve made it to the bonus round. Congratulations!Peter: Thanks Regis.Pat Sajak: Okay, the category is actor and show, so we need five consonants and a vowel.Peter: Uhh, ok… Uhhmmm… Z, four, Q (slight pause), another Q, uhhh… a third Q and the batman symbol.Pat Sajak: OK no help there, umm… 15 seconds if you want to take a shot at it, talk it out.Peter: Is it Alex Karras in Webster?Pat Sajak: (slowly) I don’t believe it.Peter: Oh my god, I just took a shot in the dark! Holy crap!!Pat Sajak: OK you have thirteen hundred dollars, why don’t you go ahead and pick out some prizes from our showcase?Peter (floating through room of prizes): Okay let's see, uhh… oh boy everything looks nice, uhmm… alright I'll take the ceramic dalmatian for six hundred, and uhh… boy that TV looks nice, uhmm.. uhh.. gimme the one free week of maid service, and uhh… I'll take the hat rack, uhhmm… hey how much for that fat guy in the circle, I don’t see a price tag on that.Announcer voice: That’s you.Peter: Oh, oh, embarrassing, uhm.. okay well in that case I'll take the rest on a gift certificate.Lois: Together we can do anything: face any foe, overcome any obstacle.Peter: Yeah, climb any mountain, rent any video, dial any phone. And not just our phone, Lois, other people's phones. Decent phones, God-fearing phones, phones that everybody else gave up on, but we knew better because we were a team!Brian: What the hell are you talking about?If you dont like family guy don't comment, please.

Betsy (my domestic partner) and I were just talking about the difference between how things feel when you're in the "gold zone" and how they feel when you're not.

Julia Cameron calls it the "Vein of Gold," and wrote a great book about it. Athletes call it "the zone."

Let's call it the "Gold Zone."

She was reminding me of the months right before I got serious about internet marketing.

I had been a working musician since I was 15. I went "on the road" the first time when I was 17. I was gone for three months, and it was hard on me and hard on my family when I had to come back from being "on the road" to finish high-school. I took several detours, but for the most part, I was a musician for over thirty years.

In spite of some success, I never really "made it" as a musician.

I got really, really close a few times... but something would always go wrong.

For example- in 2003, I played an extended tour of Europe. We went to Sweden, Holland, France, and England. I played from Bogner Regis in the far south of England all the way up to the Isle of Aaron in Northern Scotland. It was a wonderful tour, and the people seemed to like my music.

The scenery was breathtaking- from Moose in Sweden to the Holy Isle in Scotland to the coffee shops in Amsterdam to the street performers in London...

Everything was wonderful except... things kept going wrong. My band-mates made the decision to stay completely amphibious for the whole tour. Blame it on Amsterdam. The big festival in Sweden got no promotion, and nobody came. That's a long way to drive to play for twenty people.

And then I got robbed at Waverley Abbey, outside of London. Lost both guitars and all the money. And my passport.

I was clearly not in the "gold zone."

After I finally got home- and believe me, with no money and no passport, getting home was tricky- I took some time off to think things through.

I had started researching the internet marketing game, and met some of the players. It was interesting... but there were a lot of unknowns. There were also some very steep (but relatively short) learning curves involved.

So, while I was thinking, my agents booked another tour- this time to Germany.

That was the tour when all hell broke loose.

Betsy was alone with the boys, both of whom woke up one morning and decided to start acting like the teenagers they were. It was like fishing at the old pond, where the most dangerous thing you'd had to deal with was a catfish, and suddenly a fifty-foot alligator jumps in the boat.

And I was over 3,000 miles away.

After that tour, I really did some thinking.

I either had to move to Europe and play music, or do something else. Moving to Europe, at that time, just wasn't going to work... and, more importantly, it just didn't feel right. Betsy and the boys also had strong opinions about that.

Worse, every time I strapped on my guitar, I felt like the "rock-star police" were going to arrest me. For impersonating a musician. I never once felt authentic as a musician.

This is odd- I was an award-winning songwriter, with a recording contract, zealous agents, and a publishing deal.

I was a fraud.

I know some "real" musicians. I have a guitar-player friend who has several gold records on his wall. He tours with a band that has had #1 singles. When he's home, he sits in his studio and plays guitar. For fun.

I once heard an interview with YoYo Ma, and it really touched me. He talked about the most wonderful moments of his life. Those moments are when he takes his million dollar+ cello out of its case and sits alone, just loving the sound and touch of his instrument.

My guitars stay in their cases between tours. That was a clue.

Ever since I discovered internet marketing, I've been in the "Gold Zone." It was like finally seeing the "Pull" sign on a door I had been trying to push open for decades.

Duh.

It was crystal-clear to me.

I "got it" at the first internet marketing seminar I attended.

The people who were successful were the ones who made products and sold them.

The people who were not successful were the ones who did something else- or did nothing.

I had a lot of help. I've immersed myself in internet marketing, read scores of books, and sought out the company of successful internet marketers. I threw myself at learning curves, and bounded right up them.

I had a blast. I quickly made a pile of money. I found my "Gold Zone."

Have you found your "Gold Zone," yet?

It's easy- especially in the internet marketing world. You can make a good, even a GREAT, living by solving other people's problems. It pays well, and it's karmically good for you. You can pick almost any subject- cooking, driving, relationships, ebook authoring, etc... anything but how to get rich online (please- unless you have become rich online), and build a portable empire by solving problems in that niche.

I have a saying, which will eventually be turned into a book- "Every problem is a product."

My most popular book- which I give away- is "The Absolute Beginner's Guide to Internet Wealth." It was easy to write. I just identified the five essential problems that "Absolute Beginners" to internet marketing have and gave the solutions.

Thousands and thousands of people now have copies of that book. That's good for them, because the book really does line out all the problems and solutions that a new internet marketer needs to know about.

It's good for me. I used that book to build a large and responsive list. I also get the psychic benefits of helping a lot of people- I like that.

So, I make money and I help others. Perfect niche.

How can you tell if you're in your "Gold Zone?" Things get real easy.

One of the things I stress to my coaching clients is, "if this is hard for you, you're doing it wrong."

If you find yourself getting bogged down and disinterested in your topic- you've picked the wrong topic. Quickly choose another one. If your subscribers consistently choose to not buy your products, quickly change your strategy. In the online world, you can make dramatic changes instantly.

Life is too short to bang your head against the door marked "pull." You can push and push and bang and hit and throw bombs and cry and just generally exhaust yourself... and the door will stay closed.

I would say that the most important thing you can do to improve your life is find your "Gold Zone." Find your passion, and then find people to pay you for doing what you love.

Quit banging on the door and just open it.

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