Life Changes Show, January 15, 2018
Life Changes Show with Filippo Voltaggio and cohost Mark Laisure
“It’s All About Showing Up,” with Guest, Author, Marketing/PR Consultant, Certified National Speaker and NAFE Global Coordinator, Robbie Motter; and Musical Guest, Singer / Songwriter, Michael Mc Ginnis on The Life Changes Show
GUEST: ROBBIE MOTTER and MUSICAL GUEST: MICHAEL MC GINNIS
Guest, Robbie Motter
ROBBIE MOTTER
Robbie Motter is a Marketing/PR Consultant, Certified National Speaker, author and a VIP Member of the 20% Cash Back Club as well as an Author.
She is also a monthly staff writer for the Menifee & Murrieta Buzz, and the Inland Empire Business Review.
She also writes articles as well as the Nafe pages for the E Magazine for Executive Female a beautiful 186 color global magazine where she also features a Nafe member each month and also a testimonial each month from one of our Global Nafe members.
Robbie serves on the Board of the Temecula Valley Symphony, is the PR Chair for the Menifee Valley Lions Club and the GFWC Menifee/Sun City Women’s Club and also is a member of the Menifee Valley & Wildomar Chamber of Commerce.
Robbie has been featured in numerous chapters of books across the country and has written forwards in many published books. She is currently working on her book “It’s All About SHOWING UP and the POWER is in the ASKING.
Robbie served a year ago as the part time events coordinator for the Menifee Valley Chamber of Commerce in Menifee, CA and for many years chaired their Annual Anniversary event and the also their So Strategies for SuccessWomen’s Conference. She also did several events for the GFWC Menifee/Sun City Women’s Club. She has a passion for doing events and every event she has done has been a big success.
She continues to each year chair the Nafe Western Regional Conference SUCCESS UP which is held in April. The 2017 conference will be April 22nd Sat from 7:30 am to 4:30 pm at the Corporate Room in Wildomar, CA. She has already lined up some dynamic speakers and this year will add ten vendors, so if you are interested in being a vendor contact Robbie.
Robbie also hosts her own radio show “Diva Strategies for Success” on Blog Talk Radio, here she gets to interview dynamic guests from all over the world.
For over 19 years Robbie has served as the NAFE Western & Mid Atlantic Regional Coordinator and last year became the Nafe Global coordinator where she gets to interact with Nafe members all over the Country. Nafe is the largest Global network for women, and is headquartered in New York on Park Avenue, they recently celebrated 45 years of serving women.
Robbie is also the Director of three Nafe Affiliate Networks in Southern CA, they are in Menifee, CA, Murrieta CA and Temecula, CA. Check out for the list of Southern CA Nafe Networks, and the times and locations of those networks. More networks are being added for Nafe networks in other areas and you can check them out on the same page.
Robbie also serves on many boards of directors across the country. As a speaker she has spoken the last 18 years for many organizations and corporations and has a variety of topics that she can speak on.
Prior to being an entrepreneur Robbie spent many years in Corporate America in top positions in New York, Washington DC and other states.
Guest, Michael McGinnis
MICHAEL MCGINNIS
During Michael McGinnis’ long career as a singer, songwriter, actor, poet, and storyteller, He directed the music for, and performed with, the internationally popular New Christy Minstrels, a group that spawned Kenny Rogers, The rest of the First Edition, Kim Carnes, and Barry McGuire. He has also toured extensively with his own band, the Rodeo Gypsies. Michael has six major label recordings to his credit, Besides It’s All Good, and was the first artist ever to produce a full-length music video for EMI Video. Many major artists, including Kim Carnes, Don Henley, Michael McDonald, Wayne Newton, and Captain Kangaroo have recorded his songs. He is a published poet, and contributes to several literary magazines. He and his friend the legendary David P. Jackson, have collected Michael’s best ever performance pieces on It’s All Good, producing a compilation of material which showcase his experience, strength and hope in a sensitive, funny, and altogether delightful way. Featured on this album are Stephen Geyer, (Great American Hero, and Hotrod Hearts) and Danny Wheatman (John Denver Band, and Marley’s Ghost).
More About Michael Mc Ginnis…
Born in February of 1942 in Peoria, Illinois, the third and last child of Francis and Dr. Clifford McGinnis, Michael spent his early years riding his pony, Star, and fantasizing about being a cowboy movie star. When he started school, the reality that hardly any of the other children in his class acted this way was quite startling to him. Often he wore his pajama top to school, because it was the closest thing he had to a pirate shirt. He never quite understood why that didn’t completely bowl the girls at school over, when it worked so well for Burt Lancaster or Kirk Douglas in the movies.
His parents were quite musical, and Michael started taking piano lessons from his mother at the age of five. This was disastrous, because he already knew all the beginning piano tunes by ear from listening to his older brothers play them, so he didn’t really bother with learning how to read the music, he just played them from memory. This of course displeased his teacher greatly, subsequently, Michael could often be found hiding behind the chicken house when it was time to practice or take a lesson.
Sometime around the age of seven, Michael’s dad took him to a nighttime rodeo at the Peoria motor speedway. This was a particularly special event for several reasons. They did not take the rest of the family; it was at night after dark, and past his bedtime; and something life changing occurred in the middle of the whole thing. The McGinnis family owned lots of horses, and Michael had already been to many horse shows and rodeos in his young life, but at this one, during the intermission, the lights went down, and the spotlight came up and out of the shoots on a big white horse, and dressed in a burgundy cowboy suit trimmed in rhinestones, rode Tex Ritter, the singing cowboy movie star. Tex rode to the center of the arena, and strumming his rhinestone-decorated guitar, sang, “Blood on the Saddle”. The story goes that upon completion of the tune, Michael leapt to his feet, and screamed, “Daddy, I want to do that!”
Michael bugged his folks for a guitar, until they finally bought him a ukulele. With a little help from his mom, he taught himself to play it, and began entertaining his family, and performing in school variety shows. Eventually he graduated to a four-string guitar, and by the time he entered high school, he was playing a full- sized electric guitar, and had formed a Doo-wop group called the ‘Six-teens’. The group had a rehearsal policy which said that if a member heard a song during the week that they thought would be good for the group, they should bring it to rehearsal, and the group would vote on it. It is important to note that in those days, radio in the Midwest was still segregated, and it was very difficult for young white boys to hear, let alone get their hands on real black rhythm and blues. But dauntless, Michael pursued several avenues and emerged on one occasion with a copy of “Daddy Cool” by the Cadillacs. He was sure that when he brought this record to the group they would be overwhelmed with excitement to learn it and perform it. Another member of the group came to that rehearsal with a record by an unknown trio of white Ivy League college students who played acoustic guitars, and banjos called the Kingston trio. The record was called “Hang down your head Tom Dooley”, and little did the boys realize at the time that this was the beginning of what was to become known as the Urban Folk Revival. The group elected to sing the folk song much to Michael’s chagrin. Soon after that experience he gave up on that group.
Synonymous with the Six-teens, Michael also played guitar in a Dixieland band which featured a trumpet player who sang folk songs just like Harry Bellefonte. He did not, however play the guitar, so Michael became his accompanist. When that boy graduated, Michael was left with an entire solo folk repertoire, which he continued to perform. This became the basis of the repertoire that he perfected in college, and eventually took on the road in the summer of 1962.
By 1962, Folk music in America was a viable popular art form, and groups like Peter Paul and Mary, the Kingston Trio, the Limelighters, the Brothers four, and the New Christy Minstrels were touring nationally. Similarly, on the East Coast, Joan Baez, Bob Dylan, Judy Collins, Josh White, and of course Bellefonte. Pete Seeger and the Weavers, were making a big noise with songs of the people. So having failed his French class at De Pauw University, which put his academic endeavor in question, Michael took his guitar, and one suitcase of clothes and stuff, and went to St. Louis to Gaslight Square, where he was hired for fifty dollars a week, at a club called “Jack’s or Better”, which was a steak house catering to a mostly Jewish clientele. Michael strolled through the tables singing folk music for tips, and immediately had to learn standards like Hava Nagila. At the end of six weeks of this he got a raise, the owner built a stage with lights and sound, stopped serving meals, and turned the place into what became known as a “Folk House.”
The next two years were spent touring America’s cities playing in coffee houses, and folk clubs. The Viet Nam war was in full-tilt Boogie, so the draft was looming. Michael joined the Army Reserves, and spent 7 months of 1964 at Fort Knox, Kentucky as a Battalion Talent Director. Following this he returned to College at Bradley University in his home town, and one night at about three o’clock in the morning he received a phone call from Michael Settle who was in town at the local hotel with the New Christy Minstrels. He told Michael that Berry McGuire had left the group, and they needed a replacement. Long story short, four days later, Michael was out of school, out of the army reserve, out of Peoria, and on the road. The rest, as they say, is history.
Life Changes Show
Come and join the conversation about what's going on and what we can do together about it, with it, and for it. We have the choice, we have the power. We can do magic if we just believe!
A show about the changes going on in us, to us, around us, and because of us. Therefore, it's technically a show about "Everything," only with a how to make it better, see it better, be better.
In the show, there is talk about, and with, people who have either been through major changes, are helping others with major changes, or people who are changing the world for the better in a major way.
The show is a one-hour talk show format with a monologue by the host, a 30 minute interview with a guest of note, capped by a "Producer's Wrap" segment, in which Filippo and Co-Host Mark Laisure, and sometimes surprise guests, bring it all home for the listeners in a sometimes humorous and sometimes touching, but always entertaining conversation.