Media Personality

Eve has had an immense amount of experience with media. She has co-hosted her own radio show, Heart Talk Radio, and her own local television show on Maui, Let’s Talk About Love.

“Eve is a producer’s dream come true.”

“The camera loves her…”

“In a world full of ‘fluff’—Eve offers her listeners depth. She has a rare ability to speak to the masses in a language that they understand.”

“When it comes to media, Eve is a natural.”

 

She has appeared as a relationship expert on numerous national television shows including Love Letters of a Life Time on LifeTime TV, the Iyanla Show with Iyanla VanZant, and The Other Half with Dick Clark. and radio shows including BBC Worldwide Radio and Playboy Radio. She has been quoted in several national magazines including Cosmopolitan, CosmoGirl, Divorce, Men’s Health, Conception, Bride, and National Geographic Adventure. Eve authored a relationship Q and A column, With Aloha, in The Maui Weekly for nearly a decade and is a writer for Spirituality and Health Magazine and Real Love Blog on their web site.

Eve can offer insight, wisdom and tips in any arena related to human relationships whether that relationship is in the workplace, the home, the heart, or on the internet. She specializes in sharing interpersonal skills, personal and spiritual growth and self-mastery. As an educator, her primary interest is to leave listeners with practical skills and tools that they can apply immediately in their lives.

Some of the topics of her expertise:

• Marriage, Internet dating, face-to-face dating, relationships, creating lasting love and evolving intimacy, making communication (even email) more romantic…

• Self-esteem and personal empowerment, self-mastery—essential life skills

Labyrinth Walks, spiritual growth, self-discovery

Weddings, unique/theme weddings—labyrinth and underwater weddings, boat weddings, Maui Hawaii weddings

• Writing and publishing—Organizing your thoughts and research for a book, presentation or report. Writing memoirs with a heartwarming, “chicken soupy” style.

Sample Media Questions for an Interview with Eve Hogan (separated by book topic):

How to Love Your Marriage: Making Your Closest Relationship Work1. Who is your book for? Is it just for people who hate their marriages or is it also for couples who simply need a fine-tuning? 2. You provide 10 relationship principles. Which are the “most important”?

3. The last of the ten relationship principles, and the last chapter, have to do with marriage as a spiritual journey. Can you explain what you mean by this?

4. So many couples bicker and fight. What do you suggest for dealing with anger?

5. How can couples become more physically and emotionally intimate?

6. What are the “integrity agreements” you mention in your chapter on managing emotions?

7. Are you saying that ONE person can make a marriage work? Do you believe that love can be rekindled after one partner believes that they’ve fallen out of love?

8. Most of us have experienced how relationships can impact our self-esteem — but how does our self-esteem impact our relationships?

9. In the beginning of the book you mention that your own marriage “hit a wall” and that you used this material to turn it around. Can you tell us about that? Also, what immediate advice would you give to couples who are “hitting a wall” in their own marriages?

10. Your first book was Intellectual Foreplay: Questions for Lovers and Lovers-to-Be, for couples trying to determine long-term compatibility and facing the decision to commit — or not. In How to Love Your Marriage you discuss why the concept of “intellectual foreplay” is important even within a marriage. Can you speak to that?

Way of the Winding Path: A Map for the Labyrinth of Life

1) We’ve all heard of mazes, what is a labyrinth and how is it different than a maze?2) So, you’re saying walking around in circles can produce a profound experience? How so?

3) Where can people find them?

4) You say that Way of the Winding Path though isn’t really a “labyrinth book” though,—isn’t it a book about the labyrinth?

5) You talk about metaphor and one of the chapters in your book is called “The Magic of Metaphor.” Explain how looking for metaphors—on the labyrinth or in life—can help you with self-discovery.

6) You talk about “Divine Alignment” what do you mean by that?

7) What are the “Five steps to Divine Alignment”?

8) What will people gain by practicing the skills you share?

9) Your book is full of practical, simple steps that people can implement immediately in their lives. If you were going to give someone just one step that they could start practicing now that would help them to create a stronger sense of well-being, balance and joy?

10) Do you need to walk a labyrinth to benefit from Way of the Winding Path?

11) I understand you perform Labyrinth weddings as well. How does that work?

12) In addition to being a labyrinth facilitator, you are also an online relationship advisor for Dreammates.com—one of the leading online dating sites. These seem like pretty divergent topics, how do you go from one to the other?


Intellectual Foreplay: Questions for Lovers and Lovers-to-Be1. You’re a great example of someone writing the book they needed to read. What was going on in your love life that caused you to write “Intellectual Foreplay?”

2. You talk about wondering what questions to ask Steven when it was your first turn to ask, so now we’re all dying to know…which questions were the first ones that you asked?
3. In what ways are “Intellectual” foreplay and “Sexual” foreplay alike?

4. If “love” really “is blind,” then all the questions in the world aren’t really going to matter, right?

5. I’m already in a relationship, so I guess that means I don’t need your book.

6. Isn’t intellectualizing a relationship the surest way to put out the fire of romance, yet isn’t that precisely what you’re advocating?

7. What if you ask the right questions, but your partner lies the right answers?

8. Don’t you run the risk of scaring someone away who doesn’t like being interviewed on a date?

9. Is this really just “Truth or Dare” for adults?

10. What is the funniest question you ever heard of someone asking?

 


Virtual Foreplay: Making Your Online Relationship a Real-Life Success 1. “Virtual Foreplay” –sounds like one of those kinky sex sites on the Internet, or is it?

2. Dating is dating, right? If not, how is online dating different than offline dating?

3. Aren’t all online dating sites the same? What should you look for?

4. You know something about long distance relationships. How did you and your then, future husband transition from that to an everyday relationship? How does that relate to online dating?

5. You’ve said that online dating is a lot like job hunting. What do you mean by that?

6. When you’re not looking someone in the eye it’s easier to open up and speak your truth. Unfortunately, the same is true for lying. How do we deal with online lying?

7. Is online dating safe?

8. Cheating is particularly easy online. How do you know if your online love is also a lot of others’ online love?

9. When you talk about watching out for the “big but” you’re not talking about people’s anatomy. So what do you mean by that?

10. What are the other benefits to dating online—besides finding a sweetheart?

12. So, if our listeners wanted to get started right now, what is the first thing they would need to do?