Carrie Gerlach Cecil
Carrie Gerlach Cecil is an American writer, television show producer, public speaker, and businessperson. She wrote the novel on which the television show Emily's Reasons Why Not was based.
Early life and education
Carrie Gerlach grew up in Phoenix and Tucson, Arizona, where she lived with her divorced mother. She attended Sabino High School, where she was a cheerleader. She attended the University of Arizona in Tucson. It is where she would meet her future husband, Chuck Cecil. The two started dating in college, but he broke up with Gerlach within two months. She transferred to Arizona State University.[1]
She eventually relocated to New York, after visiting The Hamptons. She was an intern at MTV in the 1980s.[1]
Gerlach moved to Los Angeles and started working at a Hollywood public relations firm. She left that job and worked for Turner Network Television. She also started doing public relations on her own, providing support for the movies Air Force One Return to Paradise in the 1990s. During that time, Chuck Cecil entered back into Gerlach's life. The two married and moved to Nashville, Tennessee when Cecil got a coaching job for the Tennessee Titans.[1]
Career
She is the CEO of a communications firm[2] and founded a social media training and education firm for athletes.[3][4] She authored the 2004 Emily's Reasons Why Not, which was turned into an ABC television show.[1][5] The book was chosen as one of US Weekly's "Hot Book Picks" and was featured in Seventeen, Cosmopolitan, and Organic Style.[6]
She also wrote a Christian themed book titled One Sunday.[7]
She writes a football related column for the Arizona Daily Star[8] and did a feature on her Chuck Cecil's legendary play intercepting a ball in the end zone and running it all the way back more than 100 yards for a touchdown to seal a team victory.[9]
She was involved in the proposed Divas for Jesus television show.[10]
Personal life
She is married to Chuck Cecil, a University of Arizona football hall of fame player, NFL player, and coach. They have one daughter and have lived in Manhattan Beach, California when Chuck Cecil has not been coaching.[7]
References
- Schmitt, Brad (8 January 2006). "Meet the woman behind 'Emily's Reason's'". Newspapers.com. The Tennessean. Retrieved 9 January 2020.
- Smola, Jennifer. "Ohio State's actions will determine how it weathers public-relations storm, experts say".
- "Firm tailors social media training to sports". Sports Business Daily.
- "LA-area firm combs social media as background check on coaches, athletes". www.bizjournals.com. Retrieved 2020-04-06.
- "Women's lives are reflected in 'chick lit' genre".
- Schmitt, Brad (7 August 2004). "Love lessons learned". Newspapers.com. The Tennessean. Retrieved 8 January 2020.
- "Author and speaker Carrie Gerlach Cecil talks about new novel".
- Star, Special To The Arizona Daily. "Carrie Cecil's Red Zone: On our positive practice, hiring coaches in the AARP and giving back".
- Star, Special to the Arizona Daily. "Carrie Cecil's Red Zone: Remembering 'the greatest defensive play in Arizona history'".
- "Christian Reality TV Shows on the Rise — What's Behind the Trend?". Christian Post.