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Les Brown (speaker)

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Preceded by
  
William Kopp

Name
  
Les Brown

Succeeded by
  
Ray Miller

Role
  
Author · lesbrown.com

Political party
  
Democratic

Parents
  
Mamie Brown

Website
  
lesbrown.com




Full Name
  
Leslie Calvin Brown

Born
  
February 17, 1945 (age 79) Miami, Florida, United States (
1945-02-17
)

Spouse
  
Gladys Knight (m. 1995–1997)

Albums
  
Its Not Over - Smoothe Mixx

Books
  
Live your dreams, It's Not Over Until You Win, Up Thoughts for Down, Long Life and Good Days, The Creek Hole Story

Similar People
  
Gladys Knight, Eric Thomas, Tony Robbins, Zig Ziglar, Jim Rohn

Profiles

Leslie Calvin "Les" Brown (born February 17, 1945) is an American motivational speaker, author, radio DJ, former television host, and former politician. As a politician, he is a former member of the Ohio House of Representatives. As a motivational speaker, he uses the catch phrase "it's possible!" and teaches people to follow their dreams as he learned to do. He was the host of The Les Brown Show.

Contents

Les Brown (speaker) Leslie Calvin Brown Its Possible 2 YouTube

Early life

Les Brown (speaker) Leslie Calvin Brown Its Possible 4 YouTube

Brown was born with his twin brother, Wesley, in an abandoned building in Liberty City, a low-income section of Miami, Florida. He was subsequently given up for adoption and adopted by Mamie Brown, a 38-year-old single woman who worked as a cafeteria attendant and domestic assistant. He was declared "educable mentally retarded" while in grade school. Despite the self-esteem and confidence loss issues this created, he learned how to reach his full potential with the encouragement of his mother and assistance by a helpful teacher in high school, a key point in many motivational speeches he gives now.

Professional life

Les Brown (speaker) Les Brown Leslie Calvin Les Brown Best Motivational Sayings

According to many of Brown's speeches, he first decided to get into public radio and kept returning to the same radio station time and time again looking for a break, and it wasn't until the on-air failures of the afternoon DJ that he took his break in radio into his own hands and was hired full-time as on-air talent. Upon his termination from the radio station, he ran for election in the Ohio House of Representatives and won. After leaving the Ohio state legislature, he decided to get into television and eventually ended up on PBS. He also formed Les Brown Enterprises in order to support his newest career as a motivational speaker and was on KFWB in California on a daily syndicated radio program from 2011 to 2012. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, he also won many local and national awards for excellence and he has an Emmy to his name. Brown was a member of the Peabody Awards Board of Jurors from 1982 to 1988.

In 1993, he began hosting a new talk show, The Les Brown Show, which began airing on September 6, 1993. After nearly four months, it went on hiatus on December 3, 1993, and on January 17, 1994, King World Productions replaced this with Rolonda, a show hosted by Rolonda Watts.

Les collaborated with John C. Maxwell and The John Maxwell Team for a candid look into the lives of professional speakers called "The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly".

Personal life

Brown married Gladys Knight in 1995; they divorced in 1997. He has nine children: Calvin, Patrick, Ayanna, Ona Brown, Tad, Talia, Sumaya, Serena and John-Leslie Brown.

Awards

Council of Peers Award of Excellence, National Speakers Association, 1989; regional Emmy Award (Chicago), 1991, for program You Deserve with Les Brown; selected as one of America’s top five speakers, Toastmasters International, 1992.

References

Les Brown (speaker) Wikipedia