Therese 'Tag' Goulet
- Produção
- Elenco
- Executivo
Tag (short for Therese Antoinette Goulet) became a film producer after a career as a book publisher and co-founder of FabJob, an indie publisher named "the #1 place to get published online" by Writer's Digest Magazine.
She also served as Managing Editor of Calgary: A Year in Focus, the host city's official gift book for dignitaries attending the 1988 Winter Olympics, described by critics as "Tag's best book since the one she did for the Helsinki Olympics."
Author and producer of a CD distributed in 65 countries, Tag's writing is often provocative. For example, her article titled "Why Bad Employees Don't Get Fired" was CNN's most viewed and most emailed story the day it was published at CNN.com, surpassing in popularity the latest celebrity news and a story about a cow crushing a minivan (no one was injured except the cow).
She has been published and produced under the names Tag, Therese, and Theresa Goulet. She has since settled on "Tag," which sometimes results in correspondents (usually those who haven't met her) referring to her as "Mr. Goulet."
For over a decade, she has served as head non-fiction judge and emcee of the Next Generation Indie Book Awards, the world's largest not-for-profit awards program for indie authors and publishers. It is during this event that she auditions a dress she is considering wearing on the red carpet for a film premiere. In 2020, she tagged along with her sister Catherine Goulet and Andrew Jenkins in founding the Next Generation Indie Film Awards.
Like some others in the entertainment industry, Tag lies about her age. She says: "Most people who lie about their age are doing it wrong. Instead of saying you're younger than you really are, telling people you're older will get you much better results! People will tell you how fantastic you look (just ignore the part about "for your age"), and they'll think you are much wiser than you probably are!"
A member of Canada's Métis Nation (mixed Indigenous and European ancestry), Tag is a self-described geek who wrote her Master's thesis on copyright law and new technological developments. Tag is still a geek, but doesn't usually talk about herself in the third person except when writing biographical information. She is 77 years old.
She also served as Managing Editor of Calgary: A Year in Focus, the host city's official gift book for dignitaries attending the 1988 Winter Olympics, described by critics as "Tag's best book since the one she did for the Helsinki Olympics."
Author and producer of a CD distributed in 65 countries, Tag's writing is often provocative. For example, her article titled "Why Bad Employees Don't Get Fired" was CNN's most viewed and most emailed story the day it was published at CNN.com, surpassing in popularity the latest celebrity news and a story about a cow crushing a minivan (no one was injured except the cow).
She has been published and produced under the names Tag, Therese, and Theresa Goulet. She has since settled on "Tag," which sometimes results in correspondents (usually those who haven't met her) referring to her as "Mr. Goulet."
For over a decade, she has served as head non-fiction judge and emcee of the Next Generation Indie Book Awards, the world's largest not-for-profit awards program for indie authors and publishers. It is during this event that she auditions a dress she is considering wearing on the red carpet for a film premiere. In 2020, she tagged along with her sister Catherine Goulet and Andrew Jenkins in founding the Next Generation Indie Film Awards.
Like some others in the entertainment industry, Tag lies about her age. She says: "Most people who lie about their age are doing it wrong. Instead of saying you're younger than you really are, telling people you're older will get you much better results! People will tell you how fantastic you look (just ignore the part about "for your age"), and they'll think you are much wiser than you probably are!"
A member of Canada's Métis Nation (mixed Indigenous and European ancestry), Tag is a self-described geek who wrote her Master's thesis on copyright law and new technological developments. Tag is still a geek, but doesn't usually talk about herself in the third person except when writing biographical information. She is 77 years old.