New Music – Marching Band

Action Item has just released their new single “Marching Band” to iTunes and my friend Christine has so kindly offered to “gift” this song to one of my readers!  You can catch Action Item on tour opening for Hot Chelle Rae this spring and they will  for sure be playing Marching Band in their set!  This band is going to be HUGE and you can say that you heard them on Concert Katie first!

This is a really easy contest – 1 way to enter – leave us your email address.  Winner will be chosen at 12:01 AM on Friday April 13th and will have 48 hours to reply to the winning email to be sent the redemption code from iTunes (US iTunes accounts only)

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Idol – Top 8!


Wednesday night it was time for the 80s! on Idol… we were also treated to some duets.  Here are my thoughts on the night.

DeAndre – I Like It – This was really good. I like that there wasn’t much falsetto in it. I like it!

Elise – I Want To Know What Love Is – So glad that she didn’t do Hallelujiah. It is SO SO SO overdone.  However, the performance she ended up doing wasn’t that great.  Especially after doing so great last week.

Colton & Skylar – Islands In The Stream – Skyler was good, Colton, not so much.

Phillip – Thats All – When I saw the setlist for the night (w/o who was singing what) I said “That’s All? Sounds like a going home song to me!” But… it’s Phillip so I take that back. haha he did great, of course.

Hollie & DeAndre – I’m So Excited – Cute performance. Better than the first one.

Joshua – If You Don’t Know Me By Now – Another amazing performance from Joshua!

Jessica – How Will I Know – I used to rock out to this song over and over and over when I was in 1st grade haha I think Jessica definitely did it justice (to Whitney, not my 6year old version.. she blew that one out of the water haha)

Phillip & Elise – Stop Dragging My Heart Around – I think they sounded great together! Elise did much better in this song than she did with her solo number.

Hollie – What A Feeling – Good performance, but not great. Not sure it will keep her out of the bottom 3.

Jessica & Joshua – Knew You Were Waiting For Me – Great duet!

Colton – Time After Time – I so badly wanted him to suck again… because I don’t like him. But crap. He did good.

Skylar – Wind Beneath My Wings – Another great performance from her. I hope it is enough to keep her out of the bottom 3 because I love her!

Bottom 3: Hollie, Elise, DeAndre

Going Home: Elise

HEY! I got the bottom 3 right for once! Go me 🙂  But I got my going home wrong 🙁  Bummer.

Tyler Hilton at The Space

Monday night, Tyler Hilton played The Space in Hamden, CT.  He is promoting his new CD, Forget the Storm, which comes out on April 3rd.  Support for the show was Dakota & Will and Dion Roy. (As well as Sam Allesandrine but I came in during the last song of her set.)

I was a bit disappointed to see that Tyler did not have the CD available early to those of us who came out to the show, especially when it came out the next day, but with the big NYC CD bash being the next night, I kind of expected it. (I just ordered it from his website now – I hope it still comes signed even though it is now release day and not a pre-order!)

Anyway, back to the show!  Dakota & Will (http://www.dakotaandwill.com/) are 2 guys from Nashville. At first I didn’t really like them, but I have to say as their set went on they started to grow on me. They describe themselves as ‘country pop that doesn’t suck’ and I think that description is pretty accurate.  Will even went in the crowd during a song (while Dakota was singing) and gave a CD out to one of the girls in the crowd which I thought was pretty cool.

Next up was Dion Roy (http://www.dionroy.com) .  I saw Dion Roy with Tyler once before, and I don’t think I was actually all that sold on him.   However, I certainly was sold on him this show! His voice was great! (That’s all I can really go by because I was sitting in the back and couldn’t see the stage for most of the openers sets) He has a new CD coming out in June.  I probably should have bought one of his older ones at the show but I guess I wasn’t thinking straight. (There’s always iTunes!)

Then Tyler came through the crowd and up on stage.  He apologized for being out of breath and said that he had been dancing around to Carly Rae Jepsen’s “Call Me Maybe” and that Dakota and Will had turned him on to the song last night. (Random Fact: Both Tyler and Carly have opened for Hanson!)  He also had his glasses on which he had not intended on wearing but forgot with all the rocking out to Canadian Pop Stars…  I stood up for a few of his songs so that I was able to take some photos. I was pleasantly surprised that they turned out so well because usually the lighting at The Space is not that great, but I guess I found a nice spot to shoot from. Even sitting I could still see him, thank goodness he is soo tall! 🙂

He talked about how the new album was coming out the next night and that tonight was the last night that would be like this of the past before the album came out.  He said he’d do some new and old stuff and that he did.  Pink and Black was shouted out from the crowd and The Letter Song he wasn’t sure he would remember the words and actually told some girls to keep singing it because he was reading their lips to remember the words!

Based off the few new songs he did, I am very much so looking forward to getting the new album to hear it all for myself.  It’s been quite some time since he last released a cd! He said he liked the idea of releasing CDs every 5 years because it showed a different side of him – but his first CD had songs he wrote literally while he was in high school and now he is 28 – so it’s actually been 10 years and that he wouldn’t do again.

For the last song – his latest single – Prince of Nothing Charming – he stood in the middle of the crowd and sang loud without his mic.  It was really neat (aside from the fact that the kid next to me was talking THE. WHOLE. SHOW. and didn’t bother to shut up at this point either – even though Tyler politely asked for everyone to try and be quiet since he had no mic)

I opted to head home instead of hanging around to meet Tyler – it seemed like everyone wanted to hang out and he said they had to leave sooner than they thought so I figured that was a good time to make my escape. But it was certainly the best $10 ticket I’ve bought in a long time! (I only wish it was at a seated venue.)

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Rascal Flatts Fly-Away Contest

Rascal Flatts is giving away a trip for 2 and tickets to see them live this summer! Entries thru 4/30. http://bit.ly/RascalFlattsFlyAway

One lucky winner and their guest will be treated to two tickets and meet-and-greet passes to see Rascal Flatts on their summer American Band Tour kicking off in June with Eli Young Band, Little Big Town and Edens Edge. They’ll even get the rock star treatment with round-trip airfare and a night’s stay in a hotel. Contest ends April 30th.

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I was given this information from One2OneNetwork. By posting this I am entered to win prizes. I was not otherwise compensated.

The Voice – Live Rounds


Monday night was the first of the Live Rounds with Team Christina and Team Blake performing for America’s vote.  There are many ways to vote-  by phone, text, facebook, NBC.com and by buying the songs you liked on iTunes!  I was not home to actually watch the show “live”, I instead fast forwarded through everything but the performances so I have no idea if the coaches and I agreed or disagreed and I don’t know that I’ll ever know because I probably won’t have time to re-watch and find out.  Oh well, I should be around for the rest of the live rounds so the posts won’t be so half-assed 😉

Jermaine – Livin on a Prayer
Team Blake
Some parts of this performance seemed strained, but over all it was a good start to the show and a good performance

Chris – Bridge Over Troubled Water
Team Christina
I’m not in to Chris with this song. I don’t know why. I think he could have gone bigger. But it certainly wasn’t awful

RaeLyn – Wake Up Call
Team Blake
I don’t think she should have even made it to this round. She was out of breath and I was not a fan of this performance at all.

Moses – Stronger & Power
Team Christina
Another out of breath performance. I was not digging it.

Naia – Turning Tables
Team Blake
I really like her voice and I liked this performance, though it probably is not my favorite from her.

Lindsey – Somebody I Used To Know
Team Christina
Ok performance, she seemed overpowered by the background at times.

Jordis – Alone
Team Blake
In the beginning when she was singing softly, she was being overpowered by the background. But she did much better in the middle thr0ugh the end of the song.

Sera – Find Your Love
Team Christina
Wow. So many shirtless men! I like her, but I was not really a fan of this performance.

Erin – Living For The City
Team Blake
I loved her performance! Best of the night!

Ashley – Right Through You
Team Christina
Another great performance. A few off moments, but nothing too major that made it any less great.

Charlotte – Misery Loves Company
Team Blake
Great Voice!

Jesse – What A Wonderful World
Team Christina
A very wonderful way to end the night!

 

The singers I think will be advancing to the next round are:

Team Blake
Jermaine
Naia
Erin
Charlotte

Team Christina
Chris
Lindsey
Ashley
Jesse

We found out that Erin, Jermaine and RaeLyn were going through for Team Blake.  I was 2 for 3 there.

Naia, Jordis and Charlotte would have to perform for Blake’s choice.

For Team Christina: Jesse, Lindsey, Chris.  3 for 3!

Of Blake’s 3, I had Naia and Charlotte on my list, but I kind of think that Jordis did the best of the 3 sing for your life performances!  It’s no surprise that Blake chose her too – but that puts me at 50% correct choosing for Team Blake!

Of Christina’s 3 – I have Ashley as my pick. Based on the 3 performances, I stick with Ashley.   Christina’s pick of Ashley putting me at 100% for my picks with Team Christina!

Book Review: A People’s History of Baseball

In A People’s History of Baseball by Mitchell Nathanson, Baseball is broken up into 6 chapters: A Game of Their Own, The Soverign Nation of Baseball, Rickey, Race and “All Deliverate Speed”, Tearing Down the Walls, “Wait Till Next Year” and the Denial of History and The Storytellers.  The book is written in an eay to read and well flowing manner and talks about a lot of baseball subjects that most fans probably know about, but in a more indepth manner than most fans have probably seen before.  There is talks about steroids, the first televised games and why they didn’t work, Jackie Robinson, evolution of the game and rules and players unions.  While I did know about most of the things mentioned in this book, I didn’t know about them in as much detail as Nathanson provided.  As a baseball fan I found this book to be interesting and was a pretty quick read as well, which is always appreciated.  I’d prefer to read books about facts and stats that don’t read as a text book and this one does not.

For anyone looking to use this book for research – I think it would be a valuable resource and the bibliography and index at the end are quite in depth as well so it could also be used as a great starting point for a research paper with a lot of other sources that can be checked out as well.

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

About this Book

Baseball is much more than the national pastime. It has become an emblem of America itself. From its initial popularity in the mid-nineteenth century, the game has reflected national values and beliefs and promoted what it means to be an American. Stories abound that illustrate baseball’s significance in eradicating racial barriers, bringing neighborhoods together, building civic pride, and creating on the field of play an instructive civics lesson for immigrants on the national character.

In A People’s History of Baseball, Mitchell Nathanson probes the less well-known but no less meaningful other side of baseball: episodes not involving equality, patriotism, heroism, and virtuous capitalism, but power–how it is obtained, and how it perpetuates itself. Through the growth and development of baseball Nathanson shows that, if only we choose to look for it, we can see the petty power struggles as well as the large and consequential ones that have likewise defined our nation.

By offering a fresh perspective on the firmly embedded tales of baseball as America, a new and unexpected story emerges of both the game and what it represents. Exploring the founding of the National League, Nathanson focuses on the newer Americans who sought club ownership to promote their own social status in the increasingly closed caste of nineteenth-century America. His perspective on the rise and public rebuke of the Players Association shows that these baseball events reflect both the collective spirit of working and middle-class America in the mid-twentieth century as well as the countervailing forces that sought to beat back this emerging movement that threatened the status quo. And his take on baseball’s racial integration that began with Branch Rickey’s “Great Experiment” reveals the debilitating effects of the harsh double standard that resulted, requiring a black player to have unimpeachable character merely to take the field in a Major League game, a standard no white player was required to meet.

Told with passion and occasional outrage, A People’s History of Baseball challenges the perspective of the well-known, deeply entrenched, hyper-patriotic stories of baseball and offers an incisive alternative history of America’s much-loved national pastime.

Mitchell Nathanson is a professor of legal writing at Villanova University School of Law and the author of The Fall of the 1977 Phillies: How a Baseball Team’s Collapse Sank a City’s Spirit.

Book Review: A People's History of Baseball

In A People’s History of Baseball by Mitchell Nathanson, Baseball is broken up into 6 chapters: A Game of Their Own, The Soverign Nation of Baseball, Rickey, Race and “All Deliverate Speed”, Tearing Down the Walls, “Wait Till Next Year” and the Denial of History and The Storytellers.  The book is written in an eay to read and well flowing manner and talks about a lot of baseball subjects that most fans probably know about, but in a more indepth manner than most fans have probably seen before.  There is talks about steroids, the first televised games and why they didn’t work, Jackie Robinson, evolution of the game and rules and players unions.  While I did know about most of the things mentioned in this book, I didn’t know about them in as much detail as Nathanson provided.  As a baseball fan I found this book to be interesting and was a pretty quick read as well, which is always appreciated.  I’d prefer to read books about facts and stats that don’t read as a text book and this one does not.

For anyone looking to use this book for research – I think it would be a valuable resource and the bibliography and index at the end are quite in depth as well so it could also be used as a great starting point for a research paper with a lot of other sources that can be checked out as well.

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

About this Book

Baseball is much more than the national pastime. It has become an emblem of America itself. From its initial popularity in the mid-nineteenth century, the game has reflected national values and beliefs and promoted what it means to be an American. Stories abound that illustrate baseball’s significance in eradicating racial barriers, bringing neighborhoods together, building civic pride, and creating on the field of play an instructive civics lesson for immigrants on the national character.

In A People’s History of Baseball, Mitchell Nathanson probes the less well-known but no less meaningful other side of baseball: episodes not involving equality, patriotism, heroism, and virtuous capitalism, but power–how it is obtained, and how it perpetuates itself. Through the growth and development of baseball Nathanson shows that, if only we choose to look for it, we can see the petty power struggles as well as the large and consequential ones that have likewise defined our nation.

By offering a fresh perspective on the firmly embedded tales of baseball as America, a new and unexpected story emerges of both the game and what it represents. Exploring the founding of the National League, Nathanson focuses on the newer Americans who sought club ownership to promote their own social status in the increasingly closed caste of nineteenth-century America. His perspective on the rise and public rebuke of the Players Association shows that these baseball events reflect both the collective spirit of working and middle-class America in the mid-twentieth century as well as the countervailing forces that sought to beat back this emerging movement that threatened the status quo. And his take on baseball’s racial integration that began with Branch Rickey’s “Great Experiment” reveals the debilitating effects of the harsh double standard that resulted, requiring a black player to have unimpeachable character merely to take the field in a Major League game, a standard no white player was required to meet.

Told with passion and occasional outrage, A People’s History of Baseball challenges the perspective of the well-known, deeply entrenched, hyper-patriotic stories of baseball and offers an incisive alternative history of America’s much-loved national pastime.

Mitchell Nathanson is a professor of legal writing at Villanova University School of Law and the author of The Fall of the 1977 Phillies: How a Baseball Team’s Collapse Sank a City’s Spirit.

Book Review: Playing with Purpose: Baseball by Mike Yorkey

Back in February, I reviewed Playing with Purpose: Basketball, well, now that we’re approaching Baseball Season, Playing with Purpose: Baseball has been released! Unlike the basketball book, I had actually know of a majority of the players included in this book, but I do watch a whole heck of a lot more baseball than basketball.  The book features chapters on Clayton Kershaw, Ben Zobrist, Albert Pujols, Carlos Beltran, Adrian Gonzalez, Josh Hamilton, Stephen Drew, Jeremy Affeldt, Matt Capps, Mark Teixiera, Brian Roberts, Josh Willingham and appropriately, is closed out with a chapter on Mariano Rivera.

All these players have different paths that led them to God and their faith, some were a bit rockier than others (Josh Hamilton had struggled with drugs and alcohol and realized making God #1, his family 2nd and baseball 3rd was the key to turning his life around) but all play with their faith as an important aspect of their life.

I did notice what I believe to be an error in Josh Hamilton’s chapter.  It said he turned 7 in 1998, but then by 1999 and 2000 he was looking at colleges.  Looks like he turned 7 in 1988!  Also interesting was the fact that all the chapters were decently long, however, former Met Carlos Beltran’s chapter (the one I was obviously most interested in reading, being a Mets fan) was ridiculously short compared to the others.  I thought I was just imagining things, but the table of contents does probe me right – it was only 5 or 6 pages versus the 20 or so for most of the other players.  Oh well, his chapter still did teach me things I did not already know about him, so I can’t be too upset over it!

If you are a baseball fan, this book is definitely a must read.  It really opened my eyes to a lot of the players that I have seen play but didn’t know much about.  (Although I did know most of Albert’s story because there is a book out that I reviewed last year that focuses on Albert’s life and is faith based.)

I recieved a free copy of this book from Net Galley in order to write this review. I was not asked to write a positive review and was not otherwise compensated.

About the Book

Just in time for the new baseball season, Playing with Purpose: Baseball chronicles the lives of several players who stand strong for their Christian faith on the professional diamond. Veteran CBA author Mike Yorkey, whose Playing with Purpose biography of NFL rookies Sam Bradford, Tim Tebow, and Colt McCoy was a best-seller, now profiles major league stars both established and up-and-coming—including Albert Pujols, Josh Hamilton, Clayton Kershaw, Carlos Beltran, Stephen Drew, Adrian Gonzalez, Ben Zobrist, Mark Teixeira, Jeremy Affeldt, and Mariano Rivera. Playing with Purpose: Baseball introduces readers to talented athletes with compelling faith stories.

About the Authors

Mike Yorkey, a former Focus on the Family magazine editor and author and co‐author or editor
of more than 70 books, has written about sports all his life for a variety of national publications.
He has collaborated with Cleveland Browns quarterback Colt McCoy and his father, Brad, in
Growing Up Colt; San Francisco Giants pitcher Dave Dravecky (Called Up), San Diego Chargers
placekicker Rolf Benirschke (Alive & Kicking), and tennis star Michael Chang (Holding Serve). In
2010, Mike authored Playing with Purpose, the story of college football’s “Holy Trinity”—Sam
Bradford, Colt McCoy, and Tim Tebow—highly talented quarterbacks who stood strong for their
faith through their collegiate and into their professional careers. He and his wife, Nicole, are the
parents of two adult children, Andrea and Patrick. They make their home in Encinitas,California, and his website is www.mikeyorkey.com.

Jesse Florea, has worked at Focus on the Family for more than eighteen years. He is currently the editorial director for youth magazines. He oversees Focus on the Family Clubhouse (for kids eight to twelve) and Clubhouse Jr. (for three- to sevenyear-olds). He also co-hosts the biweekly “Official Adventures in Odyssey Podcast,” which often exceeds 100,000 listeners. Jesse is an avid sports fan who has written thousands of high school sports stories and more than a hundred magazine articles on sports personalities, and he was the co-author of two devotional 244 playing with Purpose books for sports-minded children: The One-Year Devos for Sports Fans and The One-Year Sports Devotions for Kids. He’s cowritten or edited more than a dozen other books as well. Jesse’s greatest baseball memory is taking batting practice in Coors Field in the mid-1990s with the Colorado Rockies and alongside the “Blake Street Bombers”: Andrés Galarraga, Dante Bichette, and Larry Walker. He lives in Colorado Springs, Colorado, with his wife, Stephanie, and two teenagers, Nate and Amber.

Joshua Cooley, a former full time sports editor/writer at The Baltimore Examiner and The Gazette newspapers in Maryland, has worked in the sportswriting industry since 1996. His first book— The One Year Sports Devotions for Kids (Tyndale), a collaboration with Jesse Florea and Jeremy Jones— was published in October 2011. Joshua currently works full time at his church, Covenant Life, in Gaithersburg, Maryland, and freelances for a variety of publications. His freelance credits include Sports Illustrated, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, the Baltimore Sun, the Orlando Sentinel , the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, Bethesda Magazine, Orioles Magazine , and Nationals Magazine. He has also written for Christian publications such as Sports Spectrum, Sharing the Victory , Breakaway, Brio, Focus on the Family Clubhouse, and Susie. In 2006, he contributed to the International Bible Society’s “Path to Victory” Sports New Testament. Joshua bleeds Baltimore Orioles’ black and orange, for better or worse. He and his wife, Kelly, are the parents of three children. The Cooleys make their home in Germantown, Maryland.

Book Review: The Stress Response by Christy Matta, MA

The Stress Response, How Dialectical Behavior Therapy Can Free You from Needless Anxiety, Worry, Anger, and Other Symptoms of Stress is a book by Christy Matta.

The book has 11 chapters:

Understanding Your Stress
Unwinding Your Mind
Using Acceptance Strategies
Using Crisis-Survival Strategies
Improving Relationships
Cultivating Mindfulness Practice
Decreasing Emotional Suffering
Approaching, Not Avoiding
Developing Trust In Yourself
Changing Problematic Coping Behaviors
Staying Motivated, Hopeful, And On Track

The book uses Dialectical Behavior Therapy  (DBT) as one of the main concepts.  The book is almost like a work book, encouraging readers to keep a journal with different exercises at the end of each chapter for you to figure out what is causing your stress and some ways that you can try to prevent it.  Either by figuring out what is triggering it, or realizing when you are stressed and doing exercises to calm yourself down a bit.

Almost every chapter also includes a situation of a real person, which better helps put the information into perspective and make it easier for you to relate it to your own life.  It shows the journal exercises that each person would use as well which I thought was helpful and made the whole thing a lot less confusing.

Some tips included – walking with a mantra such as “heel, toe, heel, toe”, this is something that I’ve used growing up, not to relieve stress, but because of my cerebral palsy.  My feet want to go up on their toes to walk so when I am trying to be careful to walk properly (at the doctor’s office or perhaps in front of people and don’t want to fall) this is something I would often say to mysef.  Knowing that it can help in making me less stressed, it might be a good idea to bring it back because the fear of falling when walking is definitely still there for me, which of course can lead to stress!

There are definitely a lot of strategies in this book that I will consider using, though I am not sure if I am at the point to be keeping a journal yet.  I guess I’ll have to see how working without it goes and decide if I do need the journaling too!

About the Book

Stress affects everyone in different ways. While it can actually help some people become more productive and innovative, extreme stress more often has a paralyzing effect, and can lead to negative coping behaviors like anger, emotional overreactions, anxiety, and alcohol, drug, or food abuse. The Stress Response is the first to offer a dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) program for coping with extreme stress in healthier ways. The four DBT skills can help those prone to overreactions and other negative responses to stress to embrace imperfections, expand their options, and soothe themselves in stressful situations.

The Stress Response invites readers to explore their personal stress reactions and practice these new methods of solving the everyday problems that trigger stress. Readers also learn to accept their most stressed-out emotions and thoughts without judging them, and gradually decrease their vulnerability to stress.

About the Author

Christy Matta M.A. is a trainer, consultant and freelance writer. She has worked in mental health since 1994, is intensively trained in Dialectical Behavior Therapy(DBT) and has extensive training in Mindfulness. She is an experienced group leader and trainer in Mindfulness and DBT Skills Groups.

She has provided clinical supervision to DBT residential programs and was a member of the senior administrative team that designed Grove Street Adolescent Residential Program, a winner of the American Psychiatric Association’s Gold Award. She functioned as The Bridge of Central Massachusetts DBT training supervisor for clinicians from the department of counseling psychology of Assumption College and the department of psychiatry at the University of Massachusetts Medical School.

I received a free electronic copy of this book from NetGalley and the Publisher in order to write my review. I was not otherwise compensated.

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