Product Review: Decanus Car Seat Organizer

Backseat Organizer was just what I needed for my car to keep things organized and within reach.  Top clear opening is great for holding a tablet to watch movies or GPS tracking from the backseat Or organizing items that you need to see to quickly grab. 2 other openings are large – one is mesh with elastic top and one is solid so you can hide items out of view.  Easy to attach to the back of the car seat around the headrest with a clip, so it will work on pretty much every car.  Very sturdy and durable and able to hold all the items that were cluttering up my backseat without taking up a ton of room in the backseat.

decanus

I received this product for free or at a discount in order to write this review. I was not otherwise compensated.

Dear Ticketmaster, I Am Not A Robot

Dear Ticketmaster –

It’s me, ConcertKatie.  You see, I got this nickname because I go to a lot of concerts.  And unfortunately, you seem to have a monopoly on venues and I have no other choice to get tickets legitimately than through you.  StubHub could work, but they make me too nervous. And usually they’re too expensive.  Recently, you decided I must be a “bot” because I refresh a lot.  Well, let me tell you, I refresh a lot because I am picky. When you’ve gone to as many shows as I have, there are sections in venues you have come to know and love and you want to sit there.  And not way up high or way in the back.  And since you don’t give me the tickets I am looking for right away (and only sometimes offer a map where I can pick seats myself) I keep on searching until I get what I want or decide to settle.

A few weeks ago I realized that I was getting a “forbidden” notice when trying to buy tickets to the annual radio Christmas show.  I ended up getting 6th row on my phone after 2 tries. (Jokes on you.)  Then I wanted to see about seeing Jonny Lang – but I was still blocked. (Got those on a different computer, jokes still on you) Your customer service site claims that this lasts for 24 hours, but I know it’s full of crap. (I do also know that sometimes if you try to search again you’re “in jail” another 24 hours – but this is forbidden and worse than ticketmaster jail)  If this went away in 24 hours then the 48 hours over the weekend when I didn’t even touch the internet on this computer, things would have reset.  They didn’t.

Now I’m trying to look for Demi Lovato and Nick Jonas tickets for the Citi Presale. And once again I’m forbidden.  You won’t let me look on my computer while looking on my phone too – in hopes that ONE ticket that I want will come up. (You see, this venue makes it nearly impossible for me to ever get a ticket in a pair to sit with my friends)

Jokes STILL on you – keep me forbidden and I’ll just buy tickets the night of – that will probably end up better than anything your stupid website will ever offer me.

And PS. I am not a robot and stop making me select pictures of doughnuts that are actually BAGELS.

Crest Pro-Health Extra Deep Clear Purple


Recently I got the chance to try out Crest Pro-Health Advanced thanks to BzzAgent.  I have tried a lot of mouthwashes in the past and usually they all burn or taste so gross that you don’t want to use them as often as you really should.  But with the Extra Deep Clean Purple I didn’t have that problem at all.  The flavor was just right and it didn’t burn. I also didn’t have a nasty after taste for hours after using it. It made my morning and nightly teeth cleaning routine a lot more tolerable! I get to feel clean and fresh with ease!

Book Review: Rhythm Ride

rhythmRhythm Ride is a Road Trip through the Motown Sound.  It is a children’s novel so it is written in a way that is quick to read and easy to understand. There are also a lot of images throughout, which I always appreciate!  The road trip of course begins with Berry Gordy Jr – in Detroit Motor City.  It talks about his record company, Hitsville USA and how he built Motown to be more like a family than a record company.  Motown had a lot of hitmakers and when you read about them all at once you really get the impact of how successful it was.  It talks about how it survived the Detroit riots, the war, etc.   The book ends with a timeline from Berry Gordy’s birth and throughout all the signings and releases of the Motown hits.  Definitely a lot a great book to read and full of lots of great Motown information presented in an easy to understand format for kids (or big kids, like me)

I received a free e-copy of this book in order to write this review. I was not otherwise compensated.

 

About the Book

From award-winning author Andrea Davis Pinkney comes the story of the music that defined a generation and a movement that changed the world.

Berry Gordy began Motown in 1959 with an $800 loan from his family. He converted the garage of a residential house into a studio and recruited teenagers from the neighborhood-like Smokey Robinson, Mary Wells, Marvin Gaye, Stevie Wonder, and Diana Ross-to sing for his new label. Meanwhile, the country was on the brink of a cultural revolution, and one of the most powerful agents of change in the following decade would be this group of young black performers from urban Detroit. From Berry Gordy and his remarkable vision to the Civil Rights movement, from the behind-the-scenes musicians, choreographers, and song writers to the most famous recording artists of the century, Andrea Davis Pinkney takes readers on a Rhythm Ride through the story of Motown

Book Review: From Skedaddle to Selfie

selfieFrom Skedaddle to Selfie: Words of the Generations talks about what words were created by each generation and how slang words that seemed to have been created with each generation came about and how they are used today. It starts with The Republic Generation – 1742-1766 and goes all the way to the Homeland Generation – those born 2005 to present.

It was interesting for me to see what words came about from my generation (The Millennial Generation or Generation Y) and how I feel about some of the words – like “Selfie”, “Yolo”, etc. and wonder if some of the people living in earlier generations had any distaste for words that I use all the time now, like “fan” or “rock and roll” or “ok” or “sexy” or “slacker” to name a few.  And some of the words I hadn’t even heard of before reading this book.

I like how the book was separated out by generation, and then by word. It talked about what the word meant and some uses of it in novels, etc. So in addition to being a bit of an english language book it is also has some history included.

It was also interesting to see the creation of one of my least favorite words – “deadline” – that it first was an actual line in the ground or a fence at a prison camp! If you crossed it, you’d be shot dead.  I’m certainly happy when I say “deadline” now, that’s no longer what I am talking about! Also surprising was “dude” was actually from The Progressive Generation – those born in 1843-1859. YES, the 1800s!!

It was also amused by the fact that the words I use the most in my every day life are those from the Thirteenth Generation or Generation X, which is those born in 1961-1981 – or the generation before mine. Words like Slacker, Hacker, Geek, Nerd, Dork, You Guys, Like (as much as I try not to), Hey, Road Trip!, Hook Up, Whatever, Fun – and well that is almost all the words in that section.

I’m also kind of bummed about the semicolon being included. I get that it’s a “thing” now – but it’s all about sentences not ending.  When I write code, the semi colon means… the line has ended.  Kind of the opposite of what they’re going for and as someone who has been writing a lot of code lately (between a class I’m auditing and working on my own websites) “the end” is the first thing I think of when I see a semi colon. Kind of defeating the purpose of this movement or whatever that is going on. (See, there I go using whatever, though perhaps not in the sense that it was being talking about earlier. Whatever!)

If you are into writing and language and stuff like that (so profound), I think you’ll find this book as interesting as I did. It was fun to read and interesting to see how all these words came about.

I received a free e-copy of this book in order to write this review. I was not otherwise compensated.

About the Book

From baby boomers with ‘groovy’ and ‘yuppie,’ to Generation X with ‘whatever’ and ‘like,’ each generation inevitably comes to use certain words that are particular to its unique time in history. Those words not only tell us a great deal about the people in those generations, but highlight their differences with other generations.

In this entertaining compilation, Allan Metcalf, author of OK: The Improbable Story of America’s Greatest Word, shows that each generation–those born within the same roughly 20-year time period–can be identified and characterized by its key words. Metcalf tells the story of the history and usage of these words, starting with the American Revolution and ending with the post-Millennial Homeland generation. With special attention to the differences in vocabulary among today’s generations–the sometimes awkward Millennials, the grunge music of Generation X, hippies among the Boomers, and bobbysoxers among the Silents–From Skeddadle to Selfie compiles dozens of words we thought we knew, and tells the unheard stories of each and how they accompanied its generation through its time.

 

Book Review: The Girl Who Broke the Rules

brokeI used to have a rule – that I would finish every book I had to review because you never knew if you couldn’t get into it but it would find its groove later in the book and end up actually being good.  But when it came to The Girl Who Broke the Rules, I broke my own rule.  This book is long. It is over 400 pages and it is 95 chapters.  I didn’t want to end up wasting what could have been days worth of reading time on it.  It promotes itself for anyone who loves Stieg Larsson and if you’ve read my book reviews regularly you know that The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo and that series are some of my favorite books, ever. So you can see why I was excited to check this one out.  But, it just missed the mark for me.  This book takes place in Europe, it has strong language, and is the 2nd book in a series (which may have something to do with why I couldn’t get into it, I never read the first one.)  It’s about a serial sexual killer, it’s fast paced and it is a thriller – but just not for me.

If you think you may like the book, I’d suggest starting with the first one in the series, just in case that is what did me in.  Other reviews on GoodReads seem to be that it was excellent (though there are a few that felt the same as I do.)

I received a free e-copy of this book in order to write this review. I was not otherwise compensated.

About the Book

The pulse-pounding new thriller from Marnie Riches. For anyone who loves Jo Nesbo and Stieg Larsson, this book is for you!
When the mutilated bodies of two sex-workers are found in Amsterdam, Chief Inspector van den Bergen must find a brutal murderer before the red-light-district erupts into panic.

Georgina McKenzie is conducting research into pornography among the UK’s most violent sex-offenders but once van den Bergen calls on her criminology expertise, she is only too happy to come running.

The rising death toll forces George and van den Bergen to navigate the labyrinthine worlds of Soho strip-club sleaze and trans-national human trafficking. And with the case growing ever more complicated, George must walk the halls of Broadmoor psychiatric hospital, seeking advice from the brilliant serial murderer, Dr. Silas Holm…

From the winner of the 2015 DEAD GOOD READER AWARD FOR MOST EXOTIC LOCATION

Tickets without Barcodes

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I’ve bought a lot of concert tickets. And since tickets have started having a bar code on them to scan, I’ve never had tickets that arrived without the barcode before.  But after doing the Hanson.net presale for New York City tickets – the tickets arrived without a barcode.  I wasn’t even the one to notice it, a friend of mine was.  The afterparty tickets had barcodes but the tickets to the shows themselves did not.

When my friend called Ticketmaster she was told they’d just rip the tickets instead of scanning them, but since Irving Plaza and I have had so much drama in the past, I was hoping to not let them find another reason to start trouble so I emailed ticketmaster to see what they’d say.  They ended up mailing me new tickets – this time ALL with barcodes!

I’ve only heard about myself and 2 others who had this problem, but I wouldn’t be surprised if there are more that night who have trouble getting into the show. (I did my duty and posted about it in a few spots in hopes more fans would see it.)

I am not sure what caused the glitch but I will definitely pay closer attention to the rest of my tickets in the future!

CD Review: Harry Connick JR That Would Be Me

TRACK LISTING:

1.       (I Like It When You) Smile
2.       (I Do) Like We Do
3.       Tryin’ To Matter
4.       Songwriter
5.       Do You Really Need Her
6.       You Don’t Need A Man
7.       You Have No Idea
8.       Where Prisoners Drown
9.       (I Think I) Love You A Little Bit
10.    Every Time I Fall In Love
11.    Right Where It Hurts
Harry Connick Jr is back with his latest release “That Would Be Me”.  The album gets off to a great start with probably my favorite song off the album, (I Like It When You) Smile.  I think it kind of reminds me of one of the goofy songs Zac Hanson posts on Hanson.net and that is why I like it so much.  My second favorite song on the album is Songwriter. It is all about wanting to write a song to make someone love you.

Definitely two thumbs up from me on this album! Love it and I think it will be getting heavy spins at work and probably while I am scrapbooking New Orleans as well 🙂

Buy it here:

I received a free download of this CD in order to write this review from One2One Network.  All opinions are my own and by posting this review I have been entered to win prizes.
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