Sunday, May 12, 2013

Kelly Clarkson - First American Idol Winner

Kelly Clarkson - First American Idol Winner


ItemTitle

Kelly Clarkson has not always had it easy, both pre and post Idol. Growing up in Burleson, Texas, she comes from a family of divorce and hardship. Working several jobs, she tried to stay afloat and make ends meet. Ironically, the very gift that changed her life was never her intention. Kelly Clarkson didn't even know she could sing until she was in junior high school when the choir teacher overheard her singing. She originally wanted to be a marine biologist.

Kelly Clarkson - First American Idol Winner

Fan Houston

Unbelievable Dubstep Dance Crew | Crave you (Adventure Club) | MUST WATCH!!





Click Here FLV MPlayer - Free Download

Video Clips. Duration : 3.60 Mins.



Unbelievable Dubstep Dance Crew | Crave you (Adventure Club) | MUST WATCH!!



Dancer: http://www.youtube.com/user/WHZGUD2 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Facebook Fan Page: https://www.facebook...

Unbelievable Dubstep Dance Crew | Crave you (Adventure Club) | MUST WATCH!!

Unbelievable Dubstep Dance Crew | Crave you (Adventure Club) | MUST WATCH!!


Unbelievable Dubstep Dance Crew | Crave you (Adventure Club) | MUST WATCH!!

Unbelievable Dubstep Dance Crew | Crave you (Adventure Club) | MUST WATCH!!

No URL Unbelievable Dubstep Dance Crew | Crave you (Adventure Club) | MUST WATCH!!




Dancer: http://www.youtube.com/user/WHZGUD2 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Facebook Fan Page: https://www.facebook...




Keywords:


In 2002, Kelly entered a contest after returning home from L.A. not too long before that. She'd gone out to work with a hit songwriter, responsible for Aretha Franklin's "Natural Woman." However, he fell ill and could no longer work with her. The very day she moved into a new apartment, it caught fire while she went to eat. Living in her car for three days, she returned to Texas where her friend Jessica had given her the American Idol contest papers. Having auditioned in Dallas, she was accepted to the next round in Hollywood.


Fan Houston

Kelly Clarkson - First American Idol Winner



When Kelly Clarkson first appeared on American Idol, she had no real sense of style but her voice was as big as many out there and her personality lit up faces nationally each week on TV. Singing songs by artists such as Aretha Franklin, Mariah Carey, Celine Dion and Dionne Warwick, she never saw herself sitting in the bottom contestants while in the beginning, she was considered the underdog. On September 4th, 2002, Kelly Clarkson had become our American Idol. She released her winning song "A Moment Like This" and watched it soar up the charts, beating a record on the Billboard Hot 100 previously held by The Beatles for highest jump to No. 1.



Kelly Clarkson - First American Idol Winner

In April of 2003, Kelly Clarkson released her debut record Thankful. The record saw moderate success as an Idol souvenir as well as an album to kick off an optimistic future in the recording industry. The album has sold over 2 million copies in the U.S. in part to her lead single "Miss Independent," co-wrote by Christina Aguilera. The album combined pop elements with a more R&B style. What was about to happen no one saw coming nor took seriously until Kelly found herself as one of the top female vocalists in the world.

In November of 2004, Kelly released her sophomore effort Breakaway. The title, also a song that appeared in a movie, is appropriately titled for many reasons. Kelly had split with manager Simon Fuller in order to hire a company who would be there to help the budding superstar reach incredible heights. No hard feelings were left. The direction of the album had been changed dramatically to an edgy pop rock sound that allowed her thunderous voice to shine. She also had fought the label suites to include material penned by her as well. She had a lent her love for writing to the first record, however, more than half of the new record was penned by Clarkson herself, including hit singles "Behind These Hazel Eyes," "Walk Away," and "Because of You." The latter being a song written at the age of 16 and was a song the record label, RCA, told her she couldn't include on her first record. The album's lead single "Since U Been Gone" rocked out radio and clubs nationwide and is to date her best selling single. Breakaway has sold 12 million copies worldwide and brought in her parent record label over 0 million in revenue.

With the success of the record come the perks. She embarked on several tours, three in 2005 alone. Two of the tours in the U.S. were sold out and her international world tour was a success as well. 2006 saw Kelly taking home two Grammy Awards and performing for her peers. She beat out some of music's biggest names including Mariah Carey, Paul McCartney, Sheryl Crow and Gwen Stefani. Capitalizing on her success, she ventured out on yet another tour beginning June 30th to preview songs she'd like to include on her follow up to Breakaway. She'd reported that she would be ditching the bubblegum pop and would be writing and recording with her backing band. The idea was embraced largely by the public as she included new songs in each tour she'd written with someone in the band. However, the album that was supposed to be the most anticipated of 2007 turned out to be another one of music's infamous turmoil challenges: the label vs. the artist.

Kelly Clarkson paired up with legendary David Kahne, responsible for songs such as "Manic Monday" and "Walk Like An Egyptian," to produce her third studio effort. Co-writing over 50 songs, her team narrowed it down to 26 songs to record and kept 14 for the standard track listing. The album that would be called My December, took on a more mature, raw and emotional approach. During the Breakaway era, she'd worked herself to death, missing family and friends and having a hard time finding good people to surround herself with. Needless to say, the stress took its toll, including a relationship that ended shortly before the release of her second record. Dating producer and ex-guitarist of Evanescence David Hodges, she found herself being cheated on with his former girlfriend. He'd produced "Because of You," "Addicted," and a track that didn't make the cut titled "Bleed For Me." After he married the former flame two months after Clarkson found out, she penned the song "Never Again" that would become the lead single for her next record 2 ½ years later.

Turning in the material to her RCA label, they were not pleased with the record, especially legendary record producer Clive Davis, responsible for Whitney Houston, Pink Floyd, Janis Joplin, Hall and Oates and many more. Clarkson and her manager at the time were executive producers of the record and that didn't sit well with Davis. He quickly dismissed the record as unsellable, he didn't hear any hits and it wouldn't sell more than 750,000 copies. Shelving the record for four months, he tried every trick in the book to get her to change her mind. He reportedly offered her million to replace or change 5 songs to make them more radio friendly. However, after receiving rip off "Since U Been Gone" compositions and a song from Lindsay Lohan's second record, she stuck to her ground and compromised to release My December as is and she would in turn create a more mainstream record the next time around.

A week before it's June 26th release date, she fired management The Firm and hired Reba McEntire's husband for Starstruck Entertainment. McEntire, Clarkson's childhood hero, had already formed a budding relationship with the American Idol Grammy winner.

RCA had claimed that "Never Again" was too bitter and the public wouldn't accept it as Alanis Morissette already had "You Oughta Know" in the 90's. However, numbers proved them wrong. The song only peaked at No. 8 on the Hot 100 but has since went on to sell just 10,000 copies shy of being a platinum selling single. While the video reached No. 1 on VH1, the song was being pulled from radio while a second single was planned to arrive in July titled "Sober." The label not wanting to promote the record at all did not push the single to radio and it failed to chart inside the 100, peaking at 124. The U.S. received no more singles. Fans were outraged that an artist of such calibre would be treated so disrespectfully. Although the record only has been certified platinum one time in the U.S., it proves that real music is not dead and that you don't need a formula hit song to sell records, especially to your fans. Media was very positive and remained mainly on Clarkson's side throughout the whole entanglement stating she'd "earned the right to call the shots."

Connecting deeper with her fans, Clarkson has stated time and time again that she will not release a record just to sell millions. To her, it's about the music. While many artists need several songs to sell a million copies of a record these days, Clarkson only needed one, proving her to be one of the best in the business today. Her writing ability has been questioned and also put down, stating behind closed doors that she's "25 and a female vocalist." Clarkson immediately hung up from the conference call in disgust. To date, she's won three writer's awards from ASCAP, two of them being for "Because of You," in which one was awarded for her remake of her own song as a country duet with Reba McEntire.

Some may say Kelly Clarkson put her career up as collateral when she released My December while many who have actually heard the record defend her stand. Life is bigger than being No. 1 all the time and in order to be No. 1 on today's music charts, formula songs must be crafted and Kelly has so far stayed true to never releasing the same project twice.

The first American Idol winner will be releasing a fourth record in March 2009, taking elements from her massive sophomore disc, including many of the same songwriters, and injecting it with a more aggressive pop rock. Though Kelly may have been lucky to find Idol when she did, American Idol got lucky to find Kelly's voice and talent. Unfortunately for her, she will have to tread the murky waters of an industry plagued with corruption, dirty politics and a tendency to manufacture and pre-package their acts to rise above circumstance and release music that will create new fans as well as keep the core group that voted her to No. 1 more than six years ago.


Kelly Clarkson - First American Idol Winner






Monday, May 6, 2013

Always Dreamed of Being a Sportscaster? Here Is a Day in the Life of Your Dream Job

Always Dreamed of Being a Sportscaster? Here Is a Day in the Life of Your Dream Job


ItemTitle

I am asked some form of the following questions almost every day:

Always Dreamed of Being a Sportscaster? Here Is a Day in the Life of Your Dream Job

Fan Houston


"What's it like being a sports anchor and reporter?" Fun but hard.


Fan Houston

Always Dreamed of Being a Sportscaster? Here Is a Day in the Life of Your Dream Job



"How did you get into this business?" Long story.



Always Dreamed of Being a Sportscaster? Here Is a Day in the Life of Your Dream Job

"Have you always wanted to do this?" Yes. This and more.

But more and more, the individuals who want to enter the sports media world think we spend our days cheering at games, chugging champagne with owners and chest bumping athletes. Not quite.

Take Easter Sunday 2013, for example. Photographer Bill Ellis and I left San Antonio at 10:30am, where the Rangers had just wrapped up their spring training schedule with a two-game series against the Padres. Our final destination? Houston for the season opener between the Rangers and Astros on Sunday night.

Here's a typical "day in the life" that includes everything from stale hot dogs to a drunken Astros fan bum rushing our live shot:

7:30am: Wake up.

8am: Head to the hotel lobby to FaceTime with my daughter and husband.

8:15am: Workout for 45 minutes. I'm always fighting that extra 10 pounds a camera adds.

9am: Breakfast and blogging about things to do in Houston.

10am: Back to the room to pack.

10:30am: Leave for Houston

1:30pm: Arrive at Hilton Americas. Start getting dressed immediately with big hair and TV anchor makeup.

2:45pm: Leave for Minute Maid Park. It's about 8/10 of a mile from the hotel, so we walk.

3pm: Arrive at the park, get credentials, go through security and get lost in the bowels of the facility trying to find the Rangers clubhouse. Talk to producer at the station about our plan for the evening.

3:30pm: Rangers clubhouse opens. We interview David Murphy, Lance Berkman, Mitch Moreland and Ian Kinsler. Adrian Beltre and AJ Pierzynski turn us down for interviews.

4:30pm: Interview Ron Washington amidst a gaggle of reporters in the Rangers dugout. Once done with Wash, we start shooting video and gathering interviews with fans for our story on Opening Day that will air on the Score on CBS11 later that night.

5:15pm: Fight our way upstairs to the press box to see if there is a seat for us to watch the game and space for Bill to set up equipment to begin editing our story. No space, as they are at maximum capacity. Reporters are sitting in the dining room and at spare tables in the hallway. Bill and I go downstairs to find a space to work.

5:30pm: Set up shop in the Astros press conference room on the completely opposite side of the Park from the Rangers clubhouse, about a four-minute walk. I begin logging sound and video to write my story.

6pm: Done writing story. It's time to voice audio. There is no ideal sound proof area to record audio, so we use the Astros cloth press conference backdrop to muffle the sound. A photographer from a Houston station leaves the room in the middle of our tracking session, so I start over. Repeatedly. It takes me three or four attempts to get the audio recorded. By now it's freezing in the press room. Bill and I are shivering. There is no cell service in this room. We have to leave the room and walk to a lobby area for text messages or phone calls. Luckily the building's Wi-Fi signal works in this room.

6:20pm: Both of us are starving. I trudge back to the press room to grab something to eat. Bill is hungry but wants to edit this story and get it done. He asks me to get him a pretzel.

6:30pm: Buy media dinner for . I broke my fork trying to cut the meat offered. I take about three bites of everything: the freezing iceberg lettuce, the hard meat and greasy potatoes. I try the popcorn. It's stale. The frozen yogurt isn't bad. I leave to get Bill's pretzel. Every concession stand is packed. By the time I have waited my 22 minutes and get to the counter for his pretzel, this particular stand has run out of them. I try to text Bill to see if he wants something else. He doesn't get the text because of the bad cell signal. I march back to the press box to grab him one of three hot dogs left on the roaster. It looks like it's been sitting there for four hours.

7:45pm: Finally get back to our base in the bowels of Minute Maid Park. Bill gets his cold hot dog. I finally get the chance to watch the game on a TV in the press conference room. I don't actually see a single pitch in person. The Astros radio broadcast is piped through the TV. I use my MLB at Bat app to listen to Eric Nadel and Matt Hicks. In a rush to leave my hotel room, I leave my iPad charger in the room. I have to conserve battery life to use my iPad later in the evening so can't listen to them continuously.

9:55pm: Top of the 9th inning. We walk to the Rangers clubhouse to prepare for postgame interviews

10:05pm: It seems to take longer than usual to get into the clubhouse after the Rangers 8-2 loss. We enter Wash's office. Rangers PR guy John Blake says that TV reporters will ask questions first followed by print media but every media person packs Wash's tiny office. I ask two questions and leave.

10:30pm: Interview Matt Harrison, Derek Lowe and AJ Pierzynski. Get 1-on-1 interviews with Nelson Cruz, Elvis Andrus and David Murphy. Bill points out it's getting late and we need leave for our live shot location.

10:50pm: Arrive to live shot location outside Minute Maid Park. We need to feed back the interviews we gathered. We are working with our Houston "sister station" KTRK. Their technology is not compatible with ours so we must feed our material a second time using our "backup" equipment brought with us from Dallas. The video quality is not that great.

11pm: Touch up hair and makeup for live shot. Begin gathering my thoughts to determine how I am going to introduce my postgame sound and story that we shot earlier in the day. A nice young lady from Dallas starts asking me how to break into the sports broadcasting business. I chat with her for about 10 minutes. I've only spent five solid minutes preparing what to say before I am on television

11:15pm: In place for our live shot. An over-served fan shouts to us "Go back to Arlington!" His wife drags him away. Bill is still feeding material to our station. A photographer from KTRK is shooting my live shot. There is a monster truck cruising up and down the street behind us while sitting on his horn. Once I begin introducing my postgame interviews, I notice the KTRK photographer shaking his head "no". I feel a brush of air over my right shoulder. Out of the corner of my left eye I see Bill rushing towards me. He pushes a drunken Astros fan out of the way. Bill says this guy was charging towards us. I turn around to see briefly what's happening. I think I stumble on my intro.

11:19pm: Our live shot is over. Bill can't believe that guy came out of nowhere. My heart is still pounding because it freaked me out so much. We break down our equipment and walk back to Hilton.

11:45pm: Arrive at the hotel. We're starving. Again. There is a lone Easter basket leftover from the hotel's egg hunt with some Reese's peanut butter cup miniature candies. I grab six of those and go to the room for my "second dinner". Bill later tells me he ordered room service. It finally arrives at 12:45am. .50 for a chicken sandwich and carrot cake.

Monday Morning:

8am: Leave for Dallas and write this post in the car on the way home.

Noon: Arrive home. My daughter runs away when I try to hug her. I think that despite FaceTime, she forgot about me.

While we're not always on the road, we travel a fair amount. In fact our days are jam-packed a little tighter when we're at home. Long days with unexpected surprises and a few speed bumps are the norm. Is this an easy job? No. Is it fun? Without question. We wouldn't have it any other way... except the no-hug part from Jordan.


Always Dreamed of Being a Sportscaster? Here Is a Day in the Life of Your Dream Job