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How Starbucks Saved My Life: A Son of Privilege Learns to Live Like Everyone Else is a memoir by Michael Gates Gill that chronicles his journey from a high-level advertising executive with J. Walter Thompson to a barista at Starbucks. [1] The book has been optioned by Tom Hanks for a film; [2] filmmaker Gus Van Sant has also been in talks to ...
The son of New Yorker writer Brendan Gill, Michael Gates Gill was a creative director at J.Walter Thompson Advertising, where he was employed for over twenty-five years. He lives in New York within walking distance of the Starbucks store where he works (Bronxville) and prior at Ninety-third and Broadway Starbucks store.
Michael Gates Gill (1963), advertising executive, author [125] William Dawbney Nordhaus (1963), Sterling Professor of Economics at Yale University and winner of the 2018 Nobel Prize in Economics [ 2 ]
Michael Gill hadn't thought too much about Rochester's unhoused community until he heard a city crew bulldozed a tent encampment beneath the Douglass-Anthony Bridge days before Christmas in 2014.
Michael J. Gill (horseman), American Thoroughbred racehorse owner; Michael Joseph Gill (1864–1918), American politician from Missouri; Michael Henry Gill, co-founder of the Irish publisher Gill; Michael Gates Gill, American author of How Starbucks Saved My Life; Michel Gill (born 1960), also known as Michael Gill, American actor
Brendan Gill (October 4, 1914 – December 27, 1997) was an American journalist. He wrote for The New Yorker for more than 60 years. Gill also contributed film criticism for Film Comment , wrote about design and architecture for Architectural Digest and wrote fifteen books, including a popular book about his time at the New Yorker magazine.
Allen, who also owned the NFL Seattle Seahawks and the NBA Portland Trail Blazers, died on Monday afternoon after a battle with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.
Michael shows up at Samantha's bedside in The Hanging Garden (1998), and he is often mentioned in succeeding books as someone Rebus thinks he should get in touch with. The Naming of the Dead (2006) opens with his funeral, and Rebus's difficulty in mourning his brother is an underlying current in that novel.