Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Song of the Day

Song of the Day


from
Average Joe Radio





"Lost Again" from Joe Colledge

Jersey Joe, on Joe Colledge:
Listened to the latest show. Fantastic. I'll tell you a bit how I met up with Joe. My friend Phil Ayoub was making his NJ debut in Morristown, N.J. near where Joe lives back in Feb.(a snowstorm no less). That same day Joe's pic was on the front page of the entertainment section as favorite male performer for the county. Out of the blue I emailed him and told him my friend was playing that night. He came with his drummer. I think it is great when artists support each other. I mentioned to him I'd like to attend a recording session just to see how the process works. Studio is only 20 minutes from my house. He was more than happy to oblige. Ironically the session I attended is not on the PMN. It was backing tracks on a song. Joe is a huge Tom Petty fan and does a nice version of "American Girl" on the cd. He invited me to the CD release party last weekend. ...

Joe is a good guy. He is in his 30's with a few young kids just following his dream. The song you played is another one of my favorites from the cd. It was the highlight of his live performance. He calls it his "angry" song. I spoke to the drummer and bass player seperately that night and asked them their favorite track. After much thought they both said "Table For One"..the title track. That song does make me smile when I hear that Joe Average line. The sleeper of the cd is "Blue Sky Days". It is the last song on the cd and I think is being overlooked by podcasters. Check it out.

Talk to you in July.


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Monday, June 25, 2007

Toddler Tragedy

It could happen to anyone. It may very well have happened to you before. You go out somewhere with a loved one, have a good time, then head home for a relaxing evening in your recliner with a good book. Only to discover when you decide to call it an early night that when you started home for the evening, you left your loved one behind! What are you going to do? You made it all the way home, relaxed a little while, got ready for bed, only to find that when you crawled into bed, someone was missing!

Can you imagine such a tragedy? What if it was your wife or child that you left behind? Or a pet? All very tragic situations, to be sure. But you're an adult, you can deal with it. You can hop in the car and go back to pick up your forgotten loved one. Or call them, or hope that they call you. You can probably remember right where you left them. Everything's going to be allright.

But what if you were a child. Not yet four years old. With no real control over what happens. You can't drive, you can't call your missing loved one, because your missing loved one can't answer a phone -- can't, in fact, even speak (to anyone except you, that is) -- because your forgotten loved win is Winnie the Pooh.

Can you even imagine how tragic that would be? It happened to my son last night. We went into church and dropped him off in the children's area. The last time I saw him, he was happily walking into his play group holding Pooh by the arm. Ninety minutes later when we picked him up to go home, it didn't even occur to me to look for Pooh because he usually doesn't take Pooh to church with him.

At 8:30, one hour after leaving church, as we prepared to put our son down to bed for the night, he started looking for Pooh. I knew it immediately. When he got out of the car to come into the house, Pooh wasn't with him. I knew that. When he walked from the church to the car, Pooh wasn't with him. I knew that, too. Which could only mean one thing: Pooh was still at church, potentially locked in for the evening!

In my shorts and t-shirt, I threw on some flip-flops and dashed for the car, racing at speeds somewhat in excess of the legal speed limit, barely stopping at stop signs, rushing to get to the church in hope that someone would still be there -- a custodian, someone, anyone -- that could let me in to retrieve my son's forgotten loved one, talking to my wife on the phone while I drove asking her to call the church to see if she could catch someone there, which she couldn't, and pulling into the church parking lot in less than ten minutes.

I immediately spied what appeared to be a custodian or grounds keeper walking across the parking lot with shovel in hand and raced across the lot to meet him.

"Is there anyone still in the church?" I asked.

"Probably in the office," he said. "But services are over."

"I know, my son left his Pooh here tonight," I explained.

He directed me to the back of the building where I would find the only unlocked entry door to the building at 8:45 on a Sunday evening. I pulled to the curb and jumped from the car, scanning the windows for any sign of life. There, in the second window from the door, I saw movement. Maybe, just maybe, I wasn't too late.

I rushed into the door and tried to get into the administrative offices where the movement in the window had come from -- locked! I walked briskly around the large church building toward the children's area while calling my wife to give her an update. When I got to the children's area, Pooh's impromptu prison, that door was locked as well!

Now, as I worried about my son not having his beloved Pooh until the next day, I also began to grow concerned that the movement I had seen in the window was someone beginning to leave the building -- that I, too, might be locked in for the evening if I didn't get back near the offices quickly. As I raced back around the large church toward the door I had entered through, I was approached by a man carrying a key.

I explained my predicament and he took me immediately to the children's area, where we began our search and rescue operation for Pooh. He was in one of two rooms, I knew that, unless another child had stumbled across him and taken him home. I checked the first room -- the room I had last seen my son carrying Pooh into -- and there, atop a white wire shelf well out of the reach of every human three year old I have ever seen, sat a tattered and worn, but much loved, Pooh bear.

When I got back home and poked Pooh's head into my son's room, he cried out, "Thank you, Daddy!" He came to me and gave me a hug and said, "Thanks for finding Pooh. I missed him. He's my friend."

As I tucked my son into bed, he told me, "He was on that white thing and I couldn't reach him and they wouldn't let me get him."

"Pooh?" I asked him.

"Yes," he said.

All that time, while I dashed and raced and risked mistaken confinement myself, my son knew exactly where his beloved Pooh was.

In the end, everyone was where they belonged, tucked happily and safely into bed.

Tragedy averted.

Just barely, though. My son had been asking all evening if he could stay up to watch Scooby Doo, which comes on at 8:30. Often we allow him. If we had done so last night, he wouldn't have discovered Pooh's absence until after 9:00, surely too late to catch someone in the church and recover Pooh.

Joe

Song of the Day

Song of the Day


from
Average Joe Radio





"Where The Truth Lies" from Jeremy Rowe

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Sunday, June 24, 2007

President Bush's Weekly Radio Address

20070623.a.mp3
(audio/mpeg Object)
In his weekly radio address President Bush said, “This bill provides an historic opportunity to uphold America's tradition of welcoming and assimilating immigrants and honoring our heritage as a Nation built on the rule of law. We have an obligation to solve problems that have been piling up for decades. The status quo is unacceptable. We must summon the political courage to move forward with a comprehensive reform bill. By acting now, we can ensure that our laws are respected, that the needs of our economy are met, and that our Nation treats newcomers with dignity and helps them assimilate."

Song of the Day

Song of the Day


from
Average Joe Radio





"If Only It Would Stop Raining" from Tom Paul

Listen for details on the Song of the Day Album Art Giveaway.

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Epiphany

It's actually 11:30 pm Saturday night as I write this. I just got home from work and don't feel like messing with the computer to make a post right now. But there's something I just have to get out, so I'm writing this post on my Palm Tungsten T3 and will post it by HotSync on Sunday.

I just went into my (almost) four-year-old son's room to check on him before going to sleep. I called him from work at his bedtime (8:30) and sang his favorite (silly) bedtime song to him over the phone. So I popped into his room to check on him. He was covered up and sound asleep, so I just lightly laid my hand on his shoulder gently as a little "goodnight." He stirred a little, shifted his position a bit, and was sound asleep once again.

At that moment I felt an indescribable emotion sweep over me. Something like love, and pride, and joy all rolled into one, with just a dash of sadness that it can't last forever -- some day my kids will be grown up.

Kiss your kids today. Tell them you love them. Play.

Joe

Saturday, June 23, 2007

Song of the Day

Song of the Day


from
Average Joe Radio





Finally got around the ftp problems, and today's song of the day is:

"Any Day Now" from Tim Foley


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