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Peter Guber
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・ Peter Guinness
・ Peter Guinness (actor)
・ Peter Guinness (diplomat)
・ Peter Guinness (writer)
・ Peter Gullestad
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・ Peter Gummer, Baron Chadlington
・ Peter Gumpel
・ Peter Gunby


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Peter Guber : ウィキペディア英語版
Peter Guber

Howard Peter Guber (born March 1, 1942)〔http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0345542/〕 is an executive, entrepreneur, educator, and author. He is Chairman and CEO of Mandalay Entertainment. Guber's most recent films from Mandalay Entertainment include ''The Kids Are All Right'', ''Soul Surfer'', and ''Bernie''. He has also produced ''Batman'', ''The Witches of Eastwick'', and ''Flashdance.'' Guber's films have earned over $3 billion worldwide and 50 Academy Award nominations.
Guber is also a co-owner of three professional sports teams: the Golden State Warriors of the National Basketball Association (NBA) the Los Angeles Dodgers of Major League Baseball and the Los Angeles Football Club of Major League Soccer.
Guber is Chairman of Dick Clark Productions, which produces the American Music Awards, Golden Globe Awards, and other programs. He is Chairman of NASDAQ’s Mandalay Digital Media and Mandalay Sports Media. He is a professor at the UCLA School of Theater Film and Television and the Anderson School of Management and an Entertainment and Media Analyst for Fox Business News.
Peter Guber’s most recent business book, ''Tell to Win – Connect, Persuade, and Triumph with the Hidden Power of Story'', became a #1 New York Times bestseller.
Guber is also noted for other books which include ''Inside The Deep'' and ''Shootout: Surviving Fame and (Mis)Fortune in Hollywood'', which became a television series on AMC called ''Shootout'', which he hosted from 2003 to 2008 with Peter Bart, editor of Variety. Guber wrote the cover article for the Harvard Business Review, “''(The Four Truths of the Storyteller )''.”
==Early life==
Peter Guber was born in Boston, Massachusetts. His parents Sam Guber and Ruth Anshen, of Jewish descent, married in 1929. Sam Guber owned a junk business in Somerville, Massachusetts. As a child, Guber was noted as a “very smart, wired kid” by a childhood acquaintance. He attended John Ward Elementary School and Newton North High School.) Guber’s childhood included a love of the Boston Red Sox and Fenway Park, which foreshadowed his later participation in the group that purchased the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Following high school graduation, Guber enrolled in the pre-law curriculum at Syracuse University. He played intramural football and pledged the Zeta Beta Tau fraternity.〔 Guber spent his junior year abroad at Syracuse's Florence, Italy campus. At Syracuse he met his future wife, Lynda Gellis.〔
Guber enrolled at New York University, where he earned his J.D. and LL.M. law degrees, studying for his MBA at night.〔 As he neared graduation in 1968, Guber accepted a position with Columbia Pictures, which was keen to recruit him, as a management trainee.〔

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