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Spencer Skeen

LDSPMA Member Spotlight: Randel McGee

December 18, 2021 By Spencer Skeen 1 Comment

Randel McGee lives in Orem, Utah.

What are some names of the books or other media you have created?

  • Getting Along with Groark—A puppet video series of five episodes in association with the Character Counts Foundation.
  • Popcorn Park: The 6 Pillars of Character—A six-episode puppet video series with the Character Counts Foundation
  • Sixteen titles under Celebrate Holidays with Paper Crafts: Christmas, Chinese New Year, Halloween, Day of the Dead and more. (Enslow Publishers)
  • Four titles in the Fun and Festive Crafts series: Winter, Spring, Summer, and Fall. (Enslow Publishers)
  • Zhang Heng and the Incredible Earthquake Detector—Author & Illustrator with Familius Publishers (Just released!)

What inspired you to become a creator of media?

A deep desire to share my talents with others. A realization that the arts are a way to reach people spirit-to-spirit and share Gospel principles.

What has been the highlight of your career so far?

There have been so many amazing aspects of my career, but one of the most memorable was a three-month artist-in-residence program in Omagh, Northern Ireland, in 2019 teaching storytelling and puppetry skills to children and educators there. My wife and I quickly came to love the people and culture of Ireland. We became especially close to the small LDS branch in town.

What was the best advice you’ve ever been given in your creative journey?

Do your best to be honest in your performances, don’t try to be something you are not. Do not “talk down” to young audiences; treat them with respect.

What advice do you have for someone just starting out in your field?

Strive for friendly professionalism. Maintain high standards of personal integrity and honor. Be a team player, and support fellow artists who share similar standards.

What keeps you inspired in your daily creative work?

Seeing the work of other artists. And the barrage of new ideas that I often get.

What would you like others to know about you or your creative process?

I get sparks of story or program ideas that I then start to flesh out aloud and on paper. A similar process can be said of my visual works—the images start to form in my mind’s eye, and then I see myself add the details mentally before doing rough sketches and finished pieces.

In what ways do you feel you have been able to be a voice for good in your creative pursuits?

In my hometown I often have adults come up to me and say, “I remember when you came to my school when I was a child. It was always the high point of my school year. I now bring my children to your shows whenever I can.”

If you want your spotlight to link to your website or any of your social media platforms, include the URLs here.

http://mcgeeproductions.com/

https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100046132796100

https://www.facebook.com/Randel-McGee-as-Hans-Christian-Andersen-178341550996

https://www.facebook.com/Paper-and-Scissors-ROCK-411456305654

Filed Under: Member Spotlight Tagged With: artist-in-residence, Celebrate Holidays with Paper Crafts, Character Counts Foundation, Fun and Festive Crafts, Getting Along with Groark, Illustrator, Latter-day Saint Publishing and Media Association, LDSPMA, LDSPMA Member Spotlight, Popcorn Park: The 6 Pillars of Character, Puppeteer, Puppeteering, Randel McGee, young audiences, Zhang Heng and the Incredible Earthquake Detector

LDSPMA Member Spotlight: Bradley McBride

December 11, 2021 By Spencer Skeen Leave a Comment

Bradley McBride currently lives in Gilbert, Arizona.

What are some names of the books or other media you have created?

  • “Up on the Housetop: A Christmas Story,” released November 23, 2021. It’s my first foray into fiction.
  • I have been blogging for eleven years, first as Middle-aged Mormon Man, now, as ThusWeSee.com (since President Nelson threw down the gauntlet).
  • One blog collection book: “There’s a Message in There Somewhere.”
  • One collection of new material: “There’s a Message OUT There Somewhere.”

What inspired you to become a creator of media?

I’ve always enjoyed writing. After being released as a bishop, I found I had a lot of time on my hands yet still much to share, so I started a blog. Eleven years and 1500 posts later, I’m still at it. I like sharing my thoughts about gospel topics and my testimony to anyone and everyone.

What has been the highlight of your career so far?

Getting a shout-out from an Apostle at Women’s Conference was great, but the highlight is the steady stream of notes and comments I get from readers who connect with what I am writing. It is a great joy to be able to help people in their struggles, amplify their faith, and share what is most important to me.

What was the best advice you’ve ever been given in your creative journey?

I was told to “be myself” (by the Spirit). My interpretation of that was not to write to chase readership but to write what I feel and what is in my mind and heart. It has made the journey a great personal growth experience for me.

What advice do you have for someone just starting out in your field?

You be you. Write what is important to you. Don’t chase trends. Always stand strong in your support of the Gospel and the Church and its leaders. Do not compromise orthodoxy to stir up controversy, and/or contention.

What keeps you inspired in your daily creative work?

The ever-evolving nature of life in the Gospel. Challenges change. Faith ebbs and flows. There are always new things to talk about, to study, and to discuss.

What would you like others to know about you or your creative process?

I didn’t start writing for public consumption until I was almost fifty, and I didn’t create any fiction until recently at sixty. However, I believe that a life lived gives me much more fodder for creating, and my life’s experience in the Church gives me perspectives that might be unique.

In what ways do you feel you have been able to be a voice for good in your creative pursuits?

I feel that I have a gift for taking complex Gospel subjects and doctrines and finding ways to teach and discuss them that make them more understandable. I also enjoy walking the tightrope between spirituality and humor, all the while standing as a witness of Christ, His servants , and His Church.

If you want your spotlight to link to your website or any of your social media platforms, include the URLs here.

http://www.ThusWeSee.com

Filed Under: Member Spotlight Tagged With: Author, blog, blogger, Bradley McBride, humor, Latter-day Saint Publishing and Media Association, LDSPMA, LDSPMA Member Spotlight, Middle-aged Mormon Man, novella, There's a Message in There Somewhere, Thus We See, ThusWeSee.com, Up on the Housetop: A Christmas Story

LDSPMA Member Spotlight: Michael Young

December 6, 2021 By Spencer Skeen Leave a Comment

Michael Young currently lives in Tooele, Utah.

What are some names of the books or other media you have created?

Nonfiction:

  • Chapter and Verse (volumes I-III)
  • Before Sunset
  • Song of the Saints
  • In the Quiet Heart

Fiction:

  • A Past with Two Faces
  • First Things First
  • The Lost Barge
  • The Penultimate Dawn series:
    • The Hunger, The Thirst, The Longing
  • The Canticle Kingdom series:
    • The Canticle Prelude, The Frozen Globe, The Skyward Isle
  • The Last Archangel series:
    • Age of Archangels, The Last Archangel, The Last Kingdom, The Last Struggle
  • The Chess Quest series:
    • Paladin:Pawn, Nemesis:Knight, Rook:Revenge, Bishop:Betrayal, Sovereigns:Song
  • Advent Anthology series:
    • Carol of the Tales, Angels from Their Realms of Story

What inspired you to become a creator of media?

I’ve always had an active imagination, and I read as many book as I could growing up. As I got older, I had some amazing literature and writing teachers, and I wondered if I could write down some of the stories in my head. I wrote my first novel in high school to prove to myself that I could do it, and then I’ve been writing ever since. It has been a wonderful way to express myself in a way that nothing else quite does.

What has been the highlight of your career so far?

The highlight was seeing one of my novels on the shelf in a major bookstore for the first time. It had taken a lot of work to get there, and it validated everything that I had done up to that point and helped motivate me to keep going and to keep improving.

What was the best advice you’ve ever been given in your creative journey?

Create to serve and to uplift. When you use your God-given talents for good, you are entitled to his help and blessing. His grace will enhance your natural abilities and allow you to create things much greater than you would on your own. Talents are meant to be shared, and you can be a light to the world, the proverbial city on the hill, if you take the time to climb the hill.

What advice do you have for someone just starting out in your field?

Ask yourself if you are a patient person and if you have a thick enough skin to put yourself out there. There is a lot of waiting around, a lot of long, thankless hours of work, and there will always be people who want to put you down. If you can work with that, move forward and don’t look back.

What keeps you inspired in your daily creative work?

I’m constantly inspired by music. I hear different songs and they drive my creative juices and inspire my writing. That’s the great thing about being in a choir that meets every week as I’m constantly exposed to high-quality music to keep me going.

What would you like others to know about you or your creative process?

I’d like other people to know that everything I do is meant to inspire and uplift others. I think there is no greater calling in art than to use your talents to serve and uplift others. Before I start any project, I ask myself how it is meant to help others.

In what ways do you feel you have been able to be a voice for good in your creative pursuits?

Many of my works have been specifically aimed at spiritual topics and helping people appreciate the scriptures and religious music better, but even my fiction is geared toward morality and nobility. I never want to club people over the head with a moral in my stories, but if you look, you should be able to take away truths that I hold dear.

If you want your spotlight to link to your website or any of your social media platforms, include the URLs here.

http://www.authormichaelyoung.com

Filed Under: Member Spotlight Tagged With: A Past with Two Faces, Advent Anthology, Angels from Their Realms of Story, Author, Before Sunset, Carol of the Tales, Chapter and Verse, choir, First Things First, In the Quiet Heart, Latter-day Saint Publishing and Media Association, LDSPMA, LDSPMA Member Spotlight, Michael Young, music, series, Song of the Saints, talents, teacher, The Canticle Kingdom, The Chess Quest, The Last Archangel, The Lost Barge, The Penultimate Dawn

LDSPMA Member Spotlight: Steve Simmons

December 4, 2021 By Spencer Skeen Leave a Comment

Steve Simmons currently lives near Providence and Millville in Cache County, Utah.

What are some names of the books or other media you have created?

I did all of the writing and artwork for 90+ titles for Planet Archipelago, a TTRPG. I also have educational material I have written on the website Teachers Pay Teachers.

What inspired you to become a creator of media?

I has been drawing since my youth. I was president of my high school art club. Over time I have gone from oils, pastels, and watercolors to digital art and from creating western Americana and ghost towns or wildlife art to science fiction fantasy/medieval art for the game.

What has been the highlight of your career so far?

I have taught almost everything from a one-room school with eight grades and sixteen to seventeen students in the backwoods of western Montana to university classes in the humanities at Utah Valley University.

What was the best advice you’ve ever been given in your creative journey?

My uncle, Grant Simmons, was an early cartoonist for Walt Disney. He advised me to never become an artist. So I became a teacher instead and continued to do my artwork with some confidence I could support my family.

What advice do you have for someone just starting out in your field?

Have a day job. Learn to network and do not ever give up.

What keeps you inspired in your daily creative work?

I have an entire alien planet to create, populate, map and explore.

What would you like others to know about you or your creative process?

I often create a picture first then write the story around the image. I am open to collaboration with other writers/artists who would like to explore the planet Archipelago.

In what ways do you feel you have been able to be a voice for good in your creative pursuits?

Back in the 1970s I played D&D. I liked the sense of adventure, the social interaction, the problem solving, and the reading and math development but found the game dark, introducing young people to dangerous amounts of the occult, soft porn, and things that are in the realm of the adversary. Things which are not harmless. So I developed a game that kept the adventure and positive traits but cut out the dark content. Instead of magic there is lost alien ancient technology that can look like magic, and instead of magical creatures, hungry and curious alien animals.

If you want your spotlight to link to your website or any of your social media platforms, include the URLs here.

http://www.planet-archipelago.com

Filed Under: Member Spotlight Tagged With: art, D&D, digital art, Fantasy, Latter-day Saint Publishing and Media Association, LDSPMA, LDSPMA Member Spotlight, Planet Archipelago, role playing games, Science Fiction, Steve Simmons, teacher, Teachers Pay Teachers, TTRPG

LDSPMA Member Spotlight: Mary Beesley

November 27, 2021 By Spencer Skeen 1 Comment

Mary Beesley lives in St. George, Utah.

What are some names of the books or other media you have created?

Dragon Blood and Wolf Pack are books 1 and 2 in the Draco Sang Trilogy, a YA fantasy series.
To Unite a Realm is my adult fantasy.
Betting on Love, is my romantic comedy.
My next project is a women’s fiction piece.

What inspired you to become a creator of media?

When I found out I was going to have a fourth child, I got discouraged and overwhelmed. God inspired me to start writing stories. At first it was a place for me to be creative and decompress, then I fell in love with it. I took classes and worked hard to practice and improve. I write because I want to, and I’m good at it.

What has been the highlight of your career so far?

The first moment when I was reading my manuscript and I realized it was good, really good. It hit me that I’d finally found what I want to do with my talents and time. That sense of rightness and belonging has filled me up and fueled me through hard writing sessions and painful rejections.

What was the best advice you’ve ever been given in your creative journey?

Don’t give up. Take a rest, but don’t quit.

What advice do you have for someone just starting out in your field?

Be patient! With yourself and your work and your editors. Read a lot. Becoming a great writer takes time. Enjoy the journey because there is no finish line. Give yourself grace and trust your gut. Art is subjective, don’t let someone else’s negative option of your creation become your own. Your voice is unique and important. It will take time and effort and learning to be a good writer. Put in the work.

What keeps you inspired in your daily creative work?

Nature. Being out among the beauties and intricacies makes me want to create. Observing humanity. Reading books, essays, and poetry. And of course, writing. Writing begets writing.

What would you like others to know about you or your creative process?

My creativity is incredibly important to me, and I try to honor it. I respect my writing time by making sure to schedule it when my mind is most active and fresh. I own my art. I write from my heart and don’t force stories that don’t feel genuine or important. It’s hard work to write well, and I expect round and rounds of edits. The time at the keyboard is only a fraction of all that goes into a story. Thinking time is vital, and I don’t skimp on listening to the silence and going on walks.

In what ways do you feel you have been able to be a voice for good in your creative pursuits?

In all my books, I aim to show the light and hope amidst the darkness. There is pain and grief in every life. I try to be real about that place but show the rays of goodness and courage that are there to be found.

If you want your spotlight to link to your website or any of your social media platforms, include the URLs here.

https://www.marybeesley.com/

https://www.instagram.com/marybeesleywriter/

https://www.facebook.com/MaryBeesleyAuthor

Filed Under: Member Spotlight Tagged With: adult fantasy, Author, Betting on Love, Creativity, Draco Sang Trilogy, Dragon Blood, Latter-day Saint Publishing and Media Association, LDSPMA Member Spotlight, Mary Beesley, romantic comedy, To Unite a Realm, Wolf Pack, YA fantasy

LDSPMA Member Spotlight: Cris Conerty

October 30, 2021 By Spencer Skeen 1 Comment

Cris Conerty currently lives in Colbert, Washington.

What are some names of the books or other media you have created?

I created Mary’s Easter Morning (a children’s picture book based upon my original children’s folk song), many hymns, choral compositions, and children’s songs for the Christian church/Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints setting (see http://www.whitepoppycreative.com).

What inspired you to become a creator of media?

It all started at age five with the Christmas gift of the Linus-like toy piano. Many years of piano playing, a variety of college courses, voice lessons, arranging classes and self-study, and a good amount of performance experience has gotten me to where I am today. I have always found a way to make music and let my heart sing. Composing and arranging music for the Christian church setting is one of my favorite things to do, and much of my work is a collaboration with my daughter, Alaina Larsen. I have been inspired by the work of Janice Kapp Perry.

What has been the highlight of your career so far?

The highlights of my career thus far have been collaborating with my daughter, Alaina Larsen, since 2018 to compose music and producing creative works for children and adults that help to generate, build, and repair individual testimonies of Jesus Christ. We are a mother-daughter team who love the Lord, His gospel, and the power music has to share His message. We recently celebrated being offered a publishing contract for our first children’s book, which is based on an original song.

What was the best advice you’ve ever been given in your creative journey?

Find your own authentic voice and say what only you can say.

What advice do you have for someone just starting out in your field?

In the area of songwriting, my best advice is to be open to suggestions and input from others—remain teachable—then review and revise your lyrics and creative works many times, so that you can bring your very best product to your audience, publishers, and to all with whom you share your work.

What keeps you inspired in your daily creative work?

My age inspires me—as an empty-nester and grandparent I realize life is short. It is never too late to begin the journey of creating and sharing your original, inspired material. I am also inspired by my personal awareness of the gifts God has given me and my responsibility to be a voice of light.

In what ways do you feel you have been able to be a voice for good in your creative pursuits?

Through our joint venture, White Poppy Creative, my daughter and I have composed music that highlights time-tested virtues, illuminates the role of women in the scriptures, deepens faith in Jesus Christ, and brings comfort and joy to Latter-day Saint and Christian congregations. Through the power of inspiring music, meaningful word, and impactful visuals, we will continue to bring hope-filled inspirational works to light.

If you want your spotlight to link to your website or any of your social media platforms, include the URLs here.

https://whitepoppycreative.com/

Filed Under: Member Spotlight Tagged With: Alaina Larsen, arranger, children's book, choral, Christian, composer, Cris Conerty, hymns, Latter-day Saint Publishing and Media Association, LDS, LDSPMA, LDSPMA Member Spotlight, Mary's Easter Morning, music, musician, songwriting, women

LDSPMA Member Spotlight: Maleah Day Warner

October 23, 2021 By Spencer Skeen Leave a Comment

Maleah Day Warner currently lives in American Fork, Utah.

What are some names of the books or other media you have created?

Lies of the Magpie is my debut memoir and the 2020 AML award winner for Creative Nonfiction. I also host the Power Principles Podcast.

What inspired you to become a creator of media?

My fourth grade teacher told me I would be a writer, and I believed her.

What has been the highlight of your career so far?

Meeting Alex Boyé at LDSPMA conference 2021, of course!

Winning the 2020 AML (Association for Mormon Letters) award for Creative Nonfiction was thrilling and an absolute surprise. Many thanks to AML for boosting my confidence as an author. 🙂

What was the best advice you’ve ever been given in your creative journey?

Ally Condie said she gave herself permission to take her time in her writing journey. This advice has helped me to be patient in the LONG process of becoming a writer and the even LONGER journey to publication.

What advice do you have for someone just starting out in your field?

Be willing to be really bad at your craft. You have to be bad BEFORE you can be good. But no one wants to be bad, so we procrastinate creating. Go ahead and be bad. Produce that cringe-worthy first draft. Clunk through the gag-inducing second draft. Imagine that you’re required to produce 200,00 really awful sentences before your brilliance can shine. Then you can sit down and start writing junk. Jeff Savage says you have to dump a whole lot of manure on your page before the flowers will grow.

What keeps you inspired in your daily creative work?

Most of the day I wrestle with enormous amounts of self-doubt. When I’m on top of my creative game, it’s remembering my WHY that keeps me going. And reading. When I lack motivation, reading gets me back on track.

What would you like others to know about you or your creative process?

I love mothering and writing and try to combine the two whenever I can. I want to see more stories with mother protagonists.

My mission is to educate, validate, and elevate the work of mothering.

In what ways do you feel you have been able to be a voice for good in your creative pursuits?

I believe that a healthy world starts with healthy mothers. Postpartum depression, anxiety and mental health issues are a huge battle for mothers right now. I also believe in the healing power of story. Maybe a mom who feels alone and is struggling can find hope, healing, and an enormous hug and boost of encouragement from reading my story.

If you want your spotlight to link to your website or any of your social media platforms, include the URLs here.

[email protected]

Instagram: @maleahdaywarnerwrites

https://www.facebook.com/maleah.warner

Filed Under: Member Spotlight Tagged With: AML, Association for Mormon Letters, Author, creative nonfiction, Latter-day Saint Publishing and Media Association, LDSPMA, LDSPMA Member Spotlight, Lies of the Magpie, Maleah Day Warner, memoir, mothering, mothers, Power Principles Podcast

LDSPMA Member Spotlight: Thomas Laughlin

October 16, 2021 By Spencer Skeen Leave a Comment

Thomas Laughlin lives in Clinton, Utah.

What are some names of the books or other media you have created?

In my over twenty-year career, I’ve been privileged to have worked with and mentored by several LDS filmmakers such as TC Christensen ASC (producer/cinematographer for Love Kennedy and 17 Miracles), Peter Czerny (film editor of the original Johnny Lingo and LDS film classics of the 1960s-1990s), Dennis Lisonbee (film director and composer), and so many who have worked for the BYU and LDS Motion Picture Studio. I’ve done several award-winning documentaries, including A Reel Legacy: The History of Judge Whitaker and the LDS Motion Picture Studio, Stripling, and more recently I was director and producer of Remembering Heaven.

What inspired you to become a creator of media?

I have always loved cinema. I was always enamored with the process from writing to editing. My parents encouraged me to follow my dream, so after a mission to Sao Paulo Brazil, I left my hometown of Wichita, Kansas, and headed to Provo, Utah, went to UVU, got married, and have been married for the past twenty years.

What has been the highlight of your career so far?

Before I came to live in Utah after my mission, I came out here to visit some mission friends and attended the first LDS Film Festival. It was a tiny festival back then, but I was amazed by all the filmmakers—I had found my people! This festival is what brought me to Utah. Twenty years later, we entered our documentary Remembering Heaven and won the Twentieth Annual LDS Film Festival, with my wife and kids looking on, as we took the stage and got the “Best Documentary” award. It felt amazing!

What was the best advice you’ve ever been given in your creative journey?

The best advice I ever got was to study storytelling. Every filmmaking process is tied to story. It’s the same whether it is a novel, book, short film, or whatever the medium. You have to have a strong beginning, middle, and ending. At the recommendation of a college film friend, I read Screenplay by Syd Field, and it changed everything for me. I wrote around fifteen feature film scripts in college—so do a lot of writing, shooting, and editing.

What advice do you have for someone just starting out in your field?

Whatever background or experience you have, learn as much as you can about the “film business.” If you have a great idea, manuscript, or a book (that you want to make into a film or a documentary), take the time to research and learn about filmmaking, scriptwriting, marketing, and distribution. Have a specific goal and run to that goal and don’t stop until that goal is achieved. Intern on a film set or work on a short film. This will add to your experiences and skills. Be tenacious and passionate!

What keeps you inspired in your daily creative work?

What inspires me is my inner drive to always tell a story with the most emotional or uplifting impact. Oftentimes, we don’t always get to work on big projects. Maybe they are small car commercials or corporate videos. But even still, you can always try and make the content inspiring or uplift your viewers. There are so many film pioneers before us, who had to work with more primitive filmmaking tools. We have digital tools like the iPhone, that can film anything. We have laptops that can edit. Tell those stories!

What would you like others to know about you or your creative process?

The creative process is like a muscle. The more you do it, the stronger and better you get. Like bodybuilding, you can target certain muscle groups or areas of focus. The creative process is a journey. Just keep going.

In what ways do you feel you have been able to be a voice for good in your creative pursuits?

Especially with my last two documentaries, Stripling and Remembering Heaven, I have tried to inform and truly inspire the members of our LDS youth and members to remember the gospel of Jesus Christ. In everything I try and do, I look at it as if the Lord is looking at the film and ask, would he accept this offering? As many artists know, we do our best and hope that what we do turns people’s hearts to (or back to) the Savior. (And, I hope to work on future projects with others in the LDSPMA!)

If you want your spotlight to link to your website or any of your social media platforms, include the URLs here.

https://www.facebook.com/tomyboy342000

Filed Under: Member Spotlight Tagged With: A Reel Legacy: The History of Judge Whitaker and the LDS Motion Picture Studio, Best Documentary, documentary, filmmaker, Latter-day Saint Publishing and Media Association, LDS Film Festival, LDS Motion Picture Studio, LDSPMA, LDSPMA Member Spotlight, Remembering Heaven, Storytelling, Stripling, Thomas Laughlin

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Advice from the Experts: Suzy Bills (Editor, BYU Professor, Former LDSPMA President)

By Lessa Harding – Suzy’s not the only one with diverse and demanding responsibilities. So how do we keep working toward reaching our goals despite the busyness of life? Suzy mentioned a number of ways she keeps her life moving forward, including by picking herself up after making mistakes and by reciting her mottos: “you can do hard things” and “pain is temporary—hard work brings fulfillment.”

A notebook with 'New Years' Resolutions" written at the top, and the first line being "Stop making New Years' Resolutions"

Why We Should See Goals as the Means, Not the End

By Jeremy Madsen – The value of goals is not so much in achieving them, but in how the process of setting and striving for goals alters our behavior.

The Creation of Utah’s Book Marketing Symposium 2018

By James Beers – No matter how many Facebook friends I garnered, how many blog and social media posts I put up, or how many freebie promos I offered, book sales would not increase. There was something about marketing that I was missing, and I was bound and determined to figure it out. That’s where the idea for Utah’s 2018 Book Marketing Symposium started.

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