Michael Vaughn
Featured Guest
on Marathon Media Stations
COMPANY PRESS RELEASE HOQUIAM, WA – 25
August 2000: Dead End StreetSM is pleased to announce that double
Frankfurt eBook Award Nominee Michael Vaughn has been booked to
appear on Wisconsin's Marathon Media station member WFAW's morning
talkie. Scheduled to discuss the enormous popularity of his Dead
End StreetSM opera novel GABRIELLA'S VOICE, Vaughn's interview
will be from 8:30 till 9:00 AM CDT on 7 September 2000. Pertinent
excerpts will be rebroadcast periodically on fellow Marathon Media
stations WKCH and WSJY. For those who haven't heard about the story
yet, GABRIELLA'S VOICE chronicles the life of Bill Harness, a man
in his fifties who's been wandering the country in an old Pontiac
and leaving generous checks with small-town opera companies to
help support young singers with promising voices. Bill journey
ends outside of Seattle where he finds an extraordinary soprano,
Gabriella Compton, performing "The Barber of Seville" on
Bainbridge Island. The power of Gabriella's voice, and the strength
of her compassion and friendship, help Bill slowly untangle the
three family tragedies that propelled him to make the strange journey.
About Michael Vaughn:
Michael J. Vaughn was born in Brunswick, Maine, where his father,
a Navy pilot, flew P-3 Orion submarine runs over the Atlantic during
the October Missile Crisis. His childhood in the military subsequently
brought him to Pennsylvania, Whidbey Island, Washington State (just
across the Puget Sound from Bainbridge Island, the setting of "Gabriella's
Voice"); Hawaii, and San Jose, California, where he has lived
since 1973. Vaughn earned a B.A. in Journalism with a minor in
choral music from San Jose State University in 1984, singing tenor
with the San Jose State Concert Choir. He has worked as a theater
and opera critic since his graduation, mostly for Metro Publications
in San Jose and the Palo Alto Weekly. From 1989-1992, he was publicity
director for Villa Montalvo Center for the Arts in Saratoga. Vaughn
is the author of the choral novel "Frozen Music" (Northwest
Publishing, Salt Lake City, 1995) and the illustrated storybook "An
Agnostic Christmas" (Dragonfly Press, Chicago, 1999). For "Gabriella's
Voice," he received a 1998 Novelist Fellowship from Arts Council
Silicon Valley. His poems have been published in more than two
dozen literary journals, winning an Editor's Choice Award from
Plainsongs literary journal (Nebraska) and an Honorable Mention
in the Emily Dickinson Poetry Competition (Arizona).
About Marathon Media:
Marathon Media was established in 1996, with a goal of consolidating
quality local radio stations into highly efficient regional clusters.
Since it's inception, the company has experienced explosive growth.
Now approaching 100 radio stations, either owned or under contract,
Marathon Media is becoming well known as one of America's premier
mid-market radio groups.
About Dead End Street:
Founded in 1997 by Ivan R. Black, John P. Rutledge and Fred M.
Straughn, the company was originally named Dead End Street Publications,
LLC. But, upon filing its servicemark with the United States Patent & Trademark
Office, the company changed its name to Dead End StreetSM to
maximize the value of its servicemark. It has grown from a pioneer
in the
electronic publishing industry to a leader in the field. The company
recently teamed with NuvoMedia, among others, to sponsor ReBA-Con
2000 – the wildly successful industry gathering held June
17th and 18th at San Francisco’s Fisherman’s Warf Marriott
Hotel. Dead End StreetSM banners and promotional materials
were displayed prominently throughout the much trafficked convention
site, and its flyers were in almost everyone’s hands. Company
officials drew large crowds to their panel discussions, and everyone
was talking about Dead End StreetSM.
With unquestionably the strongest management team in the industry,
Dead End StreetSM has become the prototype of a "branded" business.
Synonymous with originality and high quality, the company is recognized
as a prominent member of an industry still in its infancy. It has
an extremely strong business model and intellectual property foundation.
Its current stable contains authors with print publishing credits
that include Random House, Dell, Harcourt-Brace and Greenwood/Praeger.
Clearly, the world is becoming one big Dead End StreetSM.
Investment inquiries should be directed to John P. Rutledge at: jrutledge@deadendstreet.com.
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