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Tony Robbins: I Am Not Your Guru is a 2016 documentary film directed by Joe Berlinger. It goes behind the scenes of Tony Robbins’ annual seminar "Date With Destiny" in Boca Raton, Florida. The film captures the efforts of producing the seminar as well as the effects on the participants. [1] [2] [3]
In 2015, filmmaker Joe Berlinger directed and produced the documentary Tony Robbins: I Am Not Your Guru, about the Tony Robbins event "Date with Destiny" after filming it in Boca Raton, Florida, in December 2014. [25] It premiered at the South by Southwest film festival in March 2016 [26] and was released by Netflix on July 15, 2016. [25] [27]
“Soon, Robbins was taking his seminars on the road. People loved it. By the time he was 26 years old, Tony had added best-selling author to his title and was a millionaire,” Capitalism.com ...
Tony Robbins hates the term "motivational speaker," because he thinks its suggests he just gets people thinking positively and then send them off. Tony Robbins explains why positive thinking will ...
He's sold millions of books, videos, audio recordings, and tickets to his seminars. Robbins is 55 years old now, but he still maintains a packed schedule of events and is more frenetic than ever ...
Joseph Berlinger (born October 30, 1961) is an American documentary filmmaker and producer. Particularly focused on true crime documentaries, Berlinger's films and docu-series draw attention to social justice issues in the US and abroad in such films as Brother's Keeper, Paradise Lost: The Child Murders at Robin Hood Hills, Crude, Whitey: United States of America v.
Life coach and business strategist Tony Robbins is known for his high-energy self-development seminars and for helping countless people reach their personal and career goals. He started making just...
The seminar, for which Robbins received seventy-five thousand dollars, was part of the company's "human systems" program for developing its workers' potential to the fullest. As the chairman of the board of Record Bar told a reporter, "If you can walk on hot coals, it's fairly easy to sell a record."