Episode Summary – SMALL TOWN GIRL DOES NOT STOP BELIEVING! In Episode 88 of the Shining Brightly Podcast Show (links in the comments) titled, “AND THE EMMY GOES TO MIRACLE TWINS”, I am joined by Danette Kubanda a two-time daytime EMMY Award winning television producer turned media and publicity coach who helps authors, experts, entrepreneurs and companies share their message with the masses. She grew up in a small town in Pennsylvania and wanted to be in TV as a little girl. She followed through on her dream to help produce the Oprah Winfrey Show (what’s up Oprah!), HGTV, CBS and Fox programs. We discuss her Amazon best selling book “Creativity Is…Whatever You Want It To Be”. Her pride and joy are her three children. Miracle girl and boy twins just like me and my twin-sister. Please listen, download, share, review and come check out this cool show.
Mentioned Resources –
About the guest – Danette Kubanda is an Emmy award winning television producer turned media and publicity coach, who helps authors, experts and entrepreneurs share their messages with the masses so they can help the people who need them most. Her career spans more than twenty years in the TV business where she earned the highest award in the field – twice – with two Daytime Emmy Awards to her credit. She began her career at CNN, before moving on to the legendary Oprah Winfrey Show, where she spent four years helping viewers to “live their best lives.” She then went on to write and produce for HGTV, Fine Living Network, CBS and Fox Twentieth Television. She’s the co-author of the Amazon Best-Selling book, “Creativity Is…Whatever You Want It To Be.” Today, Danette serves as a publicity consultant and media coach for the National Publicity Summit, the Quantum Leap Program and the Super Connector Media Mastermind in addition to her own private clients. Her mission is to help experts become the media guests she would have wanted to book on her shows.
About the Host:
Howard Brown is a best-selling author, award-winning international speaker, Silicon Valley entrepreneur, interfaith peacemaker, and a two-time stage IV cancer survivor. He is also a sought-after speaker and consultant for corporate businesses, nonprofits, congregations, and community groups. Howard has co-founded two social networks that were the first to connect religious communities around the world. He is a nationally known patient advocate and “cancer whisperer” to many families. Howard, his wife Lisa, and daughter Emily currently reside in Michigan, and his happy place is on the basketball court.
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Instagram - @howard.brown.36
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Hello, it's Howard Brown is the Shining Brightly
Show. Oh my goodness. I am just so excited for this show. I have
topics about winning really shiny trophies and talking about
twins. Oh my god Danette Kubanda, welcome. I'm so glad to
see you. I am thrilled to be here. Thank you so much for
having me, Howard. We're gonna have some fun. But let me tell
you about the superstar that I have. You know, I'm looking on
the screen and you're listening or watching right now. So,
Danette Kubanda is an Emmy Award winning television producer turn
Media and Publicity coach, she helps authors, experts,
entrepreneurs share their message with the masses, very
important to be heard, right? So they can help people who need
them most. Her career spans 20 years in the TV biz. And I was
in the TV biz on the back end of it, the backside of it behind
the camera. And she earned the highest award in the field
twice, two Daytime Emmy Awards to her credit, and she began her
career at CNN. And then she moved on to the legendary Oprah
Winfrey Show. What's up Oprah shout out. Okay. We she spent
four years helping the viewers there to live their best lives.
I love that that was such a great show. We still get her
magazine, I think what an influence right worldwide. She
went on to write and produce for a Home and Garden Television,
find living network, CBS, Fox 20 television, and you are the co
author of Amazon Best Selling but creativity is wherever you
want it to be. Love that. Today, you serve as a publicity
consultant and media coach for national publicity summit, the
Quantum Leap programme, super connected media mastermind and
decision you have your own private coaching clients. Your
mission is to help experts become the media guests they
wanted and you wanted to book on your shows. This is awesome. So
welcome. Glad to be here. But before we do that, okay, you
have to share something that you know you not everyone knows
about you. So give me give us a little little tea here on
something we may not know.
I once had to charter an aeroplane for a
gorilla.
Come again. Why would you have to do that?
It was actually for a show we were doing for
animal planets. And the gorilla didn't fit in a commercial
cabin. And they didn't want him to fly cargo. So he got his own
chartered aeroplane to make it to Chicago.
That's different. And the gorilla made it the
first class of course.
Absolutely. And it was such a fun show. But it's
so important to just like think outside the box and figure out a
way to solve whatever problems in front of you. I can imagine
that your manager goes get that gorilla here. Go figure it out.
And you did. That's all thank you for sharing that amazing. So
as Danette and I have gotten to know each other she calls
herself a small town girl from Pennsylvania and I can't get the
journey song out of my head now because it's one of my my faves
all time don't stop believing that small town girl. But tell
us about that small town girl and how she eventually got to
the Emmy stage. Yeah, I I grew up in in Johnstown,
Pennsylvania, which if anyone's heard of it, they only know it
because of the flood. So you know, it's an old steel town. By
the time I got to high school, the mills had already closed
down. It was just, you know, there wasn't much there. So it
wasn't a situation where I had role models, you know, who were
out there becoming television producers are chasing big
dreams. But in my head, I always wanted to work in TV, and I was
going to do whatever it took to get there.
So you went to college for journalism? Is that
what it was?
I did, I actually started working in TV
when I was 16. In high school, I had to become a Boy Scout, a boy
scout explorer, they had a programme where we can work at
our local Cablevision station. And through that, I was able to
learn the ropes of running a camera. We've covered city
council meetings, we did local sporting events. It was just a
really great introduction into the industry. And from there, I
chose that top 10 journalism schools so that I could get more
hands on experience. I knew being in the field was better
than just book learning.
But what How did you know you knew that you
wanted to be you know, in the in the television business and
maybe just as a little girl, that's that was the goal and you
made it happen?
I was obsessed with TV. I watched absolutely
every sitcom that was available to me. I watched all the talk
shows. And yeah, that's just what I wanted to do. I wanted to
be Donna Reed, you know, she was the first woman who was credited
as a producer on her own show and I loved that girl and she
was out there you know, making her dream happen. So I knew what
I wanted. And I just had to go about figuring out how to make
it happen.
I have to tell you because I actually worked at
avid technology. And we changed from analogue to digital how
broadcast and film and TV and commercials were all made. I got
to see it from the backside. Like, I think I told you in the
green room, like I was in KNBC studios in LA during the OJ
Simpson Chase. I mean, we were glued to it. I mean, we were
like fans, and you know, the helicopters and everything and
the big lineup, but you know, chase him and things like that.
But I really feel very proud of that in my career. I never
wanted to be on TV, but I was got to be in support how
television was made. It was cool. And so you know, with that
comes some privileges, like meeting Jay lenno, and going and
seeing cool TV shows, like friends and things like that
being made up and all that. So it was a lot of fun. But it's
it's really amazing. But this is, you know, that take us
through here that you know, where were you actually, I think
it was some type of Judge show, right? What was the show that
actually got you some awards?
Yeah, I was working for Christina's court.
So it was a quick it was supposed to be three months in
Texas. And I figured I could live anywhere for three months.
And it ended up being one of the best experiences, I was able to
win two Emmys from it. That's where I met my husband. So it it
was a pretty productive three months for me.
Wow, look. And by the way, those that are will be
watching the video. I mean, she's got the Emmys right there
will show a picture of that right behind her. So she's got
the goodies right behind her, which is really impressive. And
so that's absolutely incredible. But I mean, again, you've been
really persistent in your career, you've made it happen.
But I want to talk about some personal struggle and things
like that. So take us into your miracle twins. And then being a
twin. It's just brings such joy, because I'm a twin and my twin
saved my life. So tell me about your story there.
Oh, and I love hearing that. I love hearing
that you and your twin are still so close. I hope that for my for
my babies too. Yeah, it was, it was a situation where I never
thought I'd have to worry about having kids. I'm the youngest of
six. I have 15 nieces and nephews, I thought, okay, that's
just something that you know, anybody can do. But when it came
my turn, it wasn't so easy. And we had to turn to science. I'm
so thankful for IVF I'm so thankful for the amazing doctors
who are out there. And even with those medical advancements, we
still have struggles, I still went through two different
miscarriages, I we lost an embryo during a thaw. We lost we
had a vanishing twin, my first baby had a twin, and that didn't
make it past eight weeks. You know, and so now I have the
healthy 11 year old boy and healthy nine year old twins. And
I'm so thankful for them. But it was a very scary time. We didn't
know what was going to happen, you know that they the
statistics are out there. That one in 10 couples struggle with
infertility. And they share that so that you don't feel so alone.
But it's a very dark time where you do feel very alone. So I
think that's part of the big reason I share my story is
because there is hope. And there are different avenues you can
explore. And I was ready and willing to explore whatever
options were available to me.
It's amazing. So there's a chapter in my book
called Miracle Girl. And you know, when you're diagnosed with
cancer at 23 years old, I was not thinking I was gonna have
kids I was thinking I wasn't going to live. And the fact that
either the god vision or the genius of Dr. Eric Rubin, my you
know, oncology Harvard fellow told me before chemotherapy, to
go to the cryogenic centre and preserve sperm and then to meet
my wife in Los Angeles and to call for that sperm 11 years
later and go through in vitro fertilisation which is
expensive, which is just emotionally draining right as
you now and she grew eight eggs and then they defrost the sperm
and put four back in and a harvest and and one became out
our beautiful healthy, you know, baby girl, and you know all that
goes back to my twin saving my life with her bone marrow. And
I'm going to let you in a little secret. Okay. My twin sister has
an older daughter, and she's now 25 But she has two twins that
are 22 girl boy just like you. It's incredible.
That's the best. I'm so happy for your
family. That's amazing.
So the message the message out there to anyone
listening and watching is that you know that fertility
conversations with your doctor. Okay, whether you're healthy or
not, you need to have those but there are all surrogacy and
there's adoption. There's lots of little ones out there.
There's orphans out there are that, that need good families,
they really do. And I think that's the message that you and
I come together on is that, but we are I know you and I, we are
so blessed to be able to have that and, and, and twins. It's
it's incredible. It's really an incredible thing I can tell you
that my sister is clearly you know, one of my best friends in
my world. And on May 24, I celebrated my 34th year my bone
marrow birthday. So happy bone marrow birthday, that's a
birthday, celebrate 34 years alive, right? Unfortunately, it
was a little hiccup in the winter with colon cancer, but
all healthy and things like that now, so, but we all struggle,
and then it's just such a beautiful thing. You know,
family illness is important, right? And you have a very big
family, lots of cousins. And again, you're just saying that
over the holiday weekend, you are actually getting everyone
together. And it's probably a big scene. But well, you got to
take that all in. That's good stuff.
It absolutely is. And we've you know, I'm
working in TV, I lived far away from my family for many, many
years. And we actually just moved closer to them about two
years ago. And I always say it would have been so much better
to live in your family when I had newborn twins, you know, to
have family to help out. But I'm so happy we have it now. And my
babies get, you know, they get their aunts and their cousins
show up to their baseball games and their basketball games. And
it just makes such a difference to have people around.
Alright, so my sister and I, we actually used
to watch this. And again, people maybe they might not remember
it, but there were the superheroes, right? And so there
were the wonders. Activate, no form of water. So so every our
birthdays are March 10. And when your twins birthday, April 8,
April 8, okay, so we actually call ourselves the Wonder Twins.
So I post a little thing on Facebook or whatever. And we do
the Wonder Twin powers activate. It's, it's really cute. But you
know, twins, they just have a bond. You know, I don't know
about your twins. But they do. I'm sure they do. And, you know,
hopefully they protect each other and support each other.
It's awesome. So any quick twin story that you have.
It was about two summers ago, and they both
came to me. And they both had the tiniest little booboo in the
exact same spot on the exact same knee. You know, and they're
both showing me my look, isn't this fun? I was like, it must be
a twin thing. I didn't have any other explanation for it.
I love it. It's a twin thing for sure. So I think
like there's a day for everything. I know, there's a
national twin day out there someday, I don't know the exact
date,
August and we now live near Twinsburg, Ohio,
where they have the twins day festival, which you should check
out at some point.
All right, I didn't even know that a
Twinsburg Ohio, so we'll definitely do that. So tell me,
you know, you know, the you're, you know, competent, combining
being a working mom and having a family and things like that, you
know, what are your takeaways from from being able to now be
blessed with such a cool family? And also, you know, hitting the
Emmy stage and all that, what are your big takeaways?
You know, I think the big thing for me was
that I really had goals in life, I had things I wanted to do. And
I knew that I wanted to do them and be able to focus on them. So
I'm really happy that I was able to go out and hit those career
milestones before I became a mom so that I didn't have any
regrets. So I have all of those career things out of the way.
And now I can focus on being the mom I wanted to be, you know,
I'm able to go to their all of their school functions and
volunteer for field trips, and still be a working mom and still
show them how important it is to still have have dreams and have
goals. But I feel like there's a better balance now than there
would have been if I was still working TV hours, which are very
long, very involves a lot of travelling, I wouldn't have been
able to be the mom I wanted to be and do that at the same time.
So I'm very thankful that I was able to work it out where I'm
still doing something I love, I'm still contributing to
amazing television shows, and amazing other media outlets,
because I'm working as a media coach now. But I can do it from
home and I can still be actively involved in my kids lives. It's
it's difficult to strike that balance, but it's possible. And
again, if it's something that you really want, there's a way
to make it happen, that you are making it happen and you're
living hopefully some type of balanced life and dedicated to
the family. You're you're you're managing it all.
So tell me about your coaching and what you're
doing now. And then give me real short one tip that someone could
get to be better be media Ready.
Ready? Yeah, yeah. So now I'm working as a
media coach and publicity consultants. So I'm I'm coaching
people, authors, experts, entrepreneurs who want to share
their message With the masses, they just don't necessarily know
how to get in front of those large audiences. And I'm, I'm
really hoping that I'm guiding people into becoming the guests,
I would have wanted to book on my shows, I think one of the
things people really struggle with is when they're pitching
the media, they're pitching their product, they're pitching
their book, their pitch, pitching their service, instead
of pitching, how they can help. So turning it around and
thinking about the audience, what is the audience going to
get from an interview with you, that's really what those
producers and editors are looking for. And that's what the
audience is looking for? How can you benefit that audience, share
something with them, to make them start living a better life,
starting today, give them actionable steps that they can
take. And in sharing that piece of your expertise, it's going to
leave them wanting to know more, so they're going to want to go
buy your book, and they're gonna want to sign up for your
programmes, and they're going to want to buy your products. But
if you go out there talking about those, then they feel like
they're being sold. So you want to, like, be an example of what
you can do and how you can serve people.
I love it. And also, you know, there's got to
be an action. So my, my daughter, who's a TV reporter in
Missoula, Montana, she always says positivity is great, but
positivity without action and impact is just positivity. So I
love it that be able to show that impact. And, and that's
what I'm all about. So, you know, there's there's the
shining brightly, you know, moment is to be able to do that.
This is absolutely incredible. Well, the time goes by quick on
a short show. So I'm going to ask you to put on your
sunglasses right now. All right. We're going to shine the
spotlight on you all look at those. What type of sunglasses
are they?
My daughter? Let me borrow her Taylor Swift
sunglasses, because this was an important interview, and she
wanted you to be feel important.
All right, well, thank you, TJ. And they are
great. Their heart shapes, eyeglasses, they're amazing. So
shining, brightly spotlight on you dinette, tell people how
they should get a hold of you if you have talked about your book
a little bit, and then share some inspiration and we'll close
out the show.
Excellent. Well, absolutely, you can visit
my website. It's just Dannette commando.com. And there are
buttons on there to connect with me on Instagram, Facebook,
LinkedIn, all of the social media outlets, I would love to
hear from people and see how I can help you get your message in
front of the masses. And then as far as an inspirational the book
the book first. Oh, sure. So I was a co author on creativity is
whatever you want it to be. And I wrote about creativity as
resilience because again, the it's about problem solving. It's
about thinking outside the box, and finding unique ways to solve
a problem or a struggle that you may be facing. You know, so I
talked a little bit about my fertility journey, I talked
about some different problems that I came across as a
television producer. And and one thing that kind of keeps ringing
in my head, I have three little kids, I watch a lot of animated
movies. But there was a Toy Story Short, where they that
they did for Halloween and they had a toy, an action figure
named combat coral, and combat Carl never gives up combat Carl
finds a way. I love those lines, because it's so true. It's and
he was teaching Jesse you know, the little cowgirl how to get
out of a predicament. And that kind of that soundbite realm was
through my head. Don't give up find a way, look outside the box
and find a way to find your dreams, chase your dream dreams
Chase chase your goals. So thanks.
Thank you for sharing that. That's awesome.
We'll take that. So I take the glasses off. And we're we'll
close out the show. So this is the shining, brightly podcast
show. And I just want to give a big shout out and thanks to the
over 125,000 people that are actually downloading and
reviewing and listening to this show each week and getting some
inspiration getting something out of it to take action on it
makes me and just reinforces why I do this and why we why we
actually get out and try to broadcast and, and share some
positive messages. You can get a hold of me at shining
brightly.com my speaking the book, The podcast is there also
more importantly, my advocacy in the entrepreneurship world at
Babson College, cancer world and the interfaith world to get to
know the others especially in this time of, of hate and some
tough times we've got going on there, we need that positivity.
I really do emphasise that and again, Daniel, we've talked
about today, twins and being a force multiplier for good and
positive change. So just remember, okay, that we can do
it, we can get back up again from hard times. So shout out to
the folks that make me look good front edge publishing, read the
spirit.com and the Amplify You network that makes my podcasts
beautiful. And and then we'll just we'll close it up by saying
if you choose to shine brightly a little bit each day for
ourselves, take care of ourselves, and then go lift up
others in our communities in our neighbourhoods, the world will
be a better place, Danette it's been a real pleasure, thank you.
And I love the Emmys. Oh my god, it's sparkling. It's beautiful.
And keep being a beautiful mom and keep helping people and with
your media consulting. I just love to having you as a guest.
Thank you for being
I've had so much fun. Thank you for inviting me.