A 589-page American odyssey part memoir, part record, part inside look at a world most people never see.
From the jungles of Vietnam to the inner sanctums of Hollywood, The Observer is a raw, cinematic journey through a life lived at gunpoint and center stage.
This expanded edition includes rare insider interviews and the provocative three-act play The People vs. The Method.
This is not one story—it’s five interwoven journeys:
I didn’t set out to become anything. I just set out.
Some call it coincidence. Others call it luck.
But when the actors who shaped your childhood become the people you work with… something else is at play.
Call it fate. Or call it a pattern you don’t recognize until it’s already happened.
Sometimes the turning point isn’t dramatic.
It’s a quiet decision: stay where you are… or step into something uncertain.
One morning, a film crew showed up in the office where I worked.
I had a choice: do my job… or watch the thing I had come to Los Angeles to do.
I chose wrong— at least on paper.
By lunch, I was fired.
By the next day, I was in the newspaper.
I didn’t break into Hollywood.
I drifted into it— through people, through accidents, through doors I didn’t even know existed.
A boxer who knew Lucky Luciano gets me into a Cassavetes film.
A teacher tells me: “You need Strasberg.”
I move 100 feet from the Institute— and stay there sixteen hours a day.
Not chasing a career. Living inside it.
And somewhere along the way, the question changes:
Was I finding the path— or was it finding me?
---Experience what it was like for one man who started out as a nobody— and became a very special nobody.