
Lizzie Sider
Lizzie Sider is continuing her tour of elementary and middle schools in Florida where she is conducting her Bully Prevention Assembly at over 100 schools during January, February and March. The tour continues after a successful weekend in Nashville, where Sider performed the national anthem at the Nashville Predators game before taking the stage at the historic Bluebird Cafe.
“Bullying doesn’t just happen in October during Bullying Prevention Awareness Month, it happens all year,” says Sider. “As someone who understands what it is like to be bullied, I am on a mission to help anyone who doesn’t think anyone will listen.”
During the 30- to 40-minute assembly, Sider will encourage kids to help prevent bullying as she recounts her own personal journey as a young student being teased and ridiculed in elementary school, what it felt like, and how she tried to deal with it. In addition, Sider discusses the importance of everyone standing up to stop bullying. She will also perform her original song “Butterfly,” which Sider co-wrote about her experience. Her goal is to help kids as a positive role model, having risen above her own ridicule, to pursue a career in music.
As a spokesperson for PACER’s National Bullying Prevention Center, Sider visited over 80 schools in California before starting her school tour in Florida.
Lizzie’s Upcoming Assembly Tour Dates
Feb. 3 South Daytona (2 Assemblies) – Deland, Fla.
Feb. 3 Manatee Cove Elementary – Orange City, Fla.
Feb. 4 Citrus Grove Elementary – Deland, Fla.
Feb. 4 Blue Lake Elementary – Lake Helen, Fla.
Feb. 5 Volusia Pines – Lake Helen, Fla.
Feb. 5 Woodward Elementary – Deland, Fla.
Feb. 5 Umatilla Elementary – Umatilla, Fla.
Feb. 6 George Marks Elementary (2 assemblies) – Deland, Fla.
Feb. 6 Southwestern Middle – Deland, Fla.
Feb. 11 Lake Okeechobee Girls Academy – Okeechobee, Fla.
Feb. 11 Country Oaks Elementary School- La Belle, Fla.
Feb. 12 Pinecrest Elementary School – Immokalee, Fla.
Feb. 12 Highland Elementary School -Immokalee, Fla.
Feb. 12 LaBelle Middle School – LaBelle, Fla.
Feb. 13 Miami Childrens Museum Charter School – Miami, Fla.
Feb. 13 Plantation Key School – Tavernier, Fla.
Feb. 13 Key Largo School – Key Largo, Fla.
Feb. 14 Stanley Switlik Elementary – Marathon, Fla.
Feb. 14 Sugarloaf School Sugar Loaf — Key, Fla.
Feb. 14 Horace O’Bryant School – Key West, Fla.
Feb. 18 Dixon School of the Arts – Pensacola, Fla.
Feb. 18 Liza Jackson Preparatory – Ft. Walton, Fla.
Feb. 19 Franklin County School – Eastpoint, Fla.
Feb. 19 Apalachicola Bay Charter School – Apalachicola, Fla.
Feb. 19 Altha Public School – Altha, Fla.
Feb. 20 Emma Love Hardee Elementary – Nassau, Fla.
Feb. 20 Yulee Middle School – Yulee, Fla.
Feb. 20 Callahan Middle School – Callahan, Fla.
Feb. 20 Nassau City Homeless – Nassau, Fla.
Feb. 21 Shadowlawn Elementary School – Green Cove Springs, Fla.
Feb. 21 Lakeside Junior High – Jacksonville, Fla.
Feb. 21 Mandarin Middle School – Jacksonville, Fla.
Feb. 25 Parkway Magnet Middle School – Lauderhill, Fla.
Feb. 25 Deerfield Park Elementary School – Deerfield Beach, Fla.
Feb. 25 North Broward Preparatory – Coconut Creek, Fla.
Feb. 26 Tavares Elementary – Tavares, Fla.
Feb. 27 Sorrento Elementary – Sorrento, Fla.
Feb. 27 Seminole Springs Elementary – Eustis, Fla.
Feb. 27 Windy Hill Middle School (2 assemblies) – Clermont, Fla.
Feb. 28 Challenger 7 Elementary – Port St. John, Fla.
Feb. 28 Enterprise Elementary – Cocoa, Fla.
Feb. 28 Discovery Intermediate – Kissimmee, Fla.
March 3 Kingsway Elementary School – Port Charlotte, Fla.
March 3 Port Charlotte County School to be scheduled
March 3 Vineland Elementary – Rotonda, Fla.
March 4 Myakka River Elementary School – Port Charlotte, Fla.
March 4 Port Charlotte County School to be scheduled
March 4 Peace River Elementary School – Port Charlotte, Fla.
March 5 Liberty Elementary School – Port Charlotte, Fla.
March 5 Neil Armstrong Elementary – Port Charlotte, Fla.
March 5 Deep Creek Elementary School – Punta Gorda, Fla.
March 6 Meadows Park Elementary – Port Charlotte, Fla.
March 6 Port Charlotte Middle School – Port Charlotte, Fla.
March 11 Wesley Chapel Elementary School – Wesley Chapel, Fla.
March 11 Cypress Elementary – New Port Richey, Fla.
March 11 Woodland Elementary – Zephyrillis, Fla.
March 12 Fuguitt Elementary – Largo, Fla.
March 12 Eisenhower Elementary — Clearwater, Fla.
March 12 Melrose Elementary – St. Petersburg, Fla.
March 13 Laurel Oak Elementary – Naples, Fla.
March 13 Naples Park Elementary – Naples, Fla.
March 13 Palmetto Elementary – Naples, Fla.
March 14 Tommie Barfield Elementary – Marco Island, Fla.
March 14 Gulf Coast Academy Charter South – Naples, Fla.
March 18 Hobe Sound Elementary (2 assemblies) – Hobe Sound, Fla.
March 18 Pine Crest – Boca Raton, Fla.
March 24 Wildwood Middle School – Wildwood, Fla.
March 24 Lake Panasoffkee Elementary – Lake Panasoffkee, Fla.
March 25 Webster Elementary School — Webster, Fla.
March 25 South Sumter Middle School — Webster, Fla.
March 26 Forest City Elementary School – Altamonte Springs, Fla.
March 27 Roundlake Elementary School – Mt. Dora, Fla.
March 27 Bushnell Elementary – Bushnell, Fla.
March 28 Pine Crest School – Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
Industry Pics (1/30/14)
/by Jessica NicholsonRadio and fans packed Smith’s Olde Bar in Atlanta on Jan. 23 to hear Natalie Stovall And The Drive perform songs from their new Paul Worley-produced EP on HitShop Records including the single, “Baby Come On With It.”
Pictured (L-R): HitShop President Skip Bishop, Cumulus Sr. VP Mike McVay, Joel Dormer, Natalie Stovall, Zach Morse, Miguel Cancino, James Bavendam, and Cumulus Corporate Program Director Greg Frye
• • •
SESAC’s Tim Fink visits with Georgia Middleman and Gary Burr from the acclaimed act Blue Sky Riders.
Pictured (L-R): Ellen Truley, SESAC’s Vice President, Corporate Relations, with husband, actor Todd Truley (Nashville, Prisoners, Grudge Match).
• • •
Lizzie Sider Promotes Anti-Bullying Message Via Florida School Tour
/by Jessica NicholsonLizzie Sider
Lizzie Sider is continuing her tour of elementary and middle schools in Florida where she is conducting her Bully Prevention Assembly at over 100 schools during January, February and March. The tour continues after a successful weekend in Nashville, where Sider performed the national anthem at the Nashville Predators game before taking the stage at the historic Bluebird Cafe.
“Bullying doesn’t just happen in October during Bullying Prevention Awareness Month, it happens all year,” says Sider. “As someone who understands what it is like to be bullied, I am on a mission to help anyone who doesn’t think anyone will listen.”
During the 30- to 40-minute assembly, Sider will encourage kids to help prevent bullying as she recounts her own personal journey as a young student being teased and ridiculed in elementary school, what it felt like, and how she tried to deal with it. In addition, Sider discusses the importance of everyone standing up to stop bullying. She will also perform her original song “Butterfly,” which Sider co-wrote about her experience. Her goal is to help kids as a positive role model, having risen above her own ridicule, to pursue a career in music.
As a spokesperson for PACER’s National Bullying Prevention Center, Sider visited over 80 schools in California before starting her school tour in Florida.
Lizzie’s Upcoming Assembly Tour Dates
Feb. 3 South Daytona (2 Assemblies) – Deland, Fla.
Feb. 3 Manatee Cove Elementary – Orange City, Fla.
Feb. 4 Citrus Grove Elementary – Deland, Fla.
Feb. 4 Blue Lake Elementary – Lake Helen, Fla.
Feb. 5 Volusia Pines – Lake Helen, Fla.
Feb. 5 Woodward Elementary – Deland, Fla.
Feb. 5 Umatilla Elementary – Umatilla, Fla.
Feb. 6 George Marks Elementary (2 assemblies) – Deland, Fla.
Feb. 6 Southwestern Middle – Deland, Fla.
Feb. 11 Lake Okeechobee Girls Academy – Okeechobee, Fla.
Feb. 11 Country Oaks Elementary School- La Belle, Fla.
Feb. 12 Pinecrest Elementary School – Immokalee, Fla.
Feb. 12 Highland Elementary School -Immokalee, Fla.
Feb. 12 LaBelle Middle School – LaBelle, Fla.
Feb. 13 Miami Childrens Museum Charter School – Miami, Fla.
Feb. 13 Plantation Key School – Tavernier, Fla.
Feb. 13 Key Largo School – Key Largo, Fla.
Feb. 14 Stanley Switlik Elementary – Marathon, Fla.
Feb. 14 Sugarloaf School Sugar Loaf — Key, Fla.
Feb. 14 Horace O’Bryant School – Key West, Fla.
Feb. 18 Dixon School of the Arts – Pensacola, Fla.
Feb. 18 Liza Jackson Preparatory – Ft. Walton, Fla.
Feb. 19 Franklin County School – Eastpoint, Fla.
Feb. 19 Apalachicola Bay Charter School – Apalachicola, Fla.
Feb. 19 Altha Public School – Altha, Fla.
Feb. 20 Emma Love Hardee Elementary – Nassau, Fla.
Feb. 20 Yulee Middle School – Yulee, Fla.
Feb. 20 Callahan Middle School – Callahan, Fla.
Feb. 20 Nassau City Homeless – Nassau, Fla.
Feb. 21 Shadowlawn Elementary School – Green Cove Springs, Fla.
Feb. 21 Lakeside Junior High – Jacksonville, Fla.
Feb. 21 Mandarin Middle School – Jacksonville, Fla.
Feb. 25 Parkway Magnet Middle School – Lauderhill, Fla.
Feb. 25 Deerfield Park Elementary School – Deerfield Beach, Fla.
Feb. 25 North Broward Preparatory – Coconut Creek, Fla.
Feb. 26 Tavares Elementary – Tavares, Fla.
Feb. 27 Sorrento Elementary – Sorrento, Fla.
Feb. 27 Seminole Springs Elementary – Eustis, Fla.
Feb. 27 Windy Hill Middle School (2 assemblies) – Clermont, Fla.
Feb. 28 Challenger 7 Elementary – Port St. John, Fla.
Feb. 28 Enterprise Elementary – Cocoa, Fla.
Feb. 28 Discovery Intermediate – Kissimmee, Fla.
March 3 Kingsway Elementary School – Port Charlotte, Fla.
March 3 Port Charlotte County School to be scheduled
March 3 Vineland Elementary – Rotonda, Fla.
March 4 Myakka River Elementary School – Port Charlotte, Fla.
March 4 Port Charlotte County School to be scheduled
March 4 Peace River Elementary School – Port Charlotte, Fla.
March 5 Liberty Elementary School – Port Charlotte, Fla.
March 5 Neil Armstrong Elementary – Port Charlotte, Fla.
March 5 Deep Creek Elementary School – Punta Gorda, Fla.
March 6 Meadows Park Elementary – Port Charlotte, Fla.
March 6 Port Charlotte Middle School – Port Charlotte, Fla.
March 11 Wesley Chapel Elementary School – Wesley Chapel, Fla.
March 11 Cypress Elementary – New Port Richey, Fla.
March 11 Woodland Elementary – Zephyrillis, Fla.
March 12 Fuguitt Elementary – Largo, Fla.
March 12 Eisenhower Elementary — Clearwater, Fla.
March 12 Melrose Elementary – St. Petersburg, Fla.
March 13 Laurel Oak Elementary – Naples, Fla.
March 13 Naples Park Elementary – Naples, Fla.
March 13 Palmetto Elementary – Naples, Fla.
March 14 Tommie Barfield Elementary – Marco Island, Fla.
March 14 Gulf Coast Academy Charter South – Naples, Fla.
March 18 Hobe Sound Elementary (2 assemblies) – Hobe Sound, Fla.
March 18 Pine Crest – Boca Raton, Fla.
March 24 Wildwood Middle School – Wildwood, Fla.
March 24 Lake Panasoffkee Elementary – Lake Panasoffkee, Fla.
March 25 Webster Elementary School — Webster, Fla.
March 25 South Sumter Middle School — Webster, Fla.
March 26 Forest City Elementary School – Altamonte Springs, Fla.
March 27 Roundlake Elementary School – Mt. Dora, Fla.
March 27 Bushnell Elementary – Bushnell, Fla.
March 28 Pine Crest School – Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
Garth Brooks Comeback Special Is Total Sell Out
/by Sarah Skates10,000 people stood in line across the country to buy tickets. Some fans camped outside for days, braving downpours and biting winds.
The concerts are taking place ahead of Brooks’ world tour. He last played at Croke Park in 1997.
Brooks’ longtime manager Bob Doyle said, “We’re thrilled. Peter Aiken, his team and Ticketmaster have done an amazing job.”
“In 52 years of business this is the fastest selling concert Aiken Promotions have ever been involved in,” added Aiken.
Brooks also sold out his recent appearance at the 100th anniversary of the Calgary Stampede. The sell out of 15,000-plus seats happened in less then a minute. He was recently inducted into the International Songwriters Hall of Fame in New York, the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame and the Country Music Hall of Fame.
Brooks has sold in excess of 128 million albums and was certified by the RIAA in 2000 as the No. 1 selling solo artist in U.S. history.
CRS Announces Keynote Speaker
/by Jessica NicholsonGavin McGarry
Multimedia strategist and Jumpwire Media co-founder Gavin McGarry has been announced as the CRS 2014 keynote speaker. McGarry’s educational address will take place at 10:15 a.m. on Wed. Feb. 19, 2014 at the Nashville Convention Center in downtown Nashville, Tenn.
“As we have built CRS 2014, a focus emerged around ‘Branded Content,’ which has very clearly become a cornerstone this year,” said CRS President Charlie Morgan. “Gavin McGarry has exceptional innovative experience in this arena and will bring his compelling perspective to all of our attendees in his keynote on Wednesday!”
McGarry is the co-founder/president of Jumpwire Media. Since founding the company in 2009, Jumpwire Media has delivered innovative and effective media and marketing strategies to both Fortune 500 and SME clients from countries all over the world including: USA, Russia, India, South Africa, Australia, United Kingdom, Canada, and others.
McGarry aims to present the best practices every radio executive should be implementing to build a station’s audience and engagement on Facebook, Twitter, Vine, Snapchat, Pinterest and more. Gavin will also present ideas and strategies around monetizing your social media platforms using your sales teams.
Prior to his launch of Jumpwire Media, Gavin worked for online video start up Joost and was the Head of Cross Platform Business Development at global television production company Endemol. He has been working in the media space for more than 20 years. His company created some of the first cross media TV content and worked with major networks including NBC, Discovery, CTV, and Global Television.
In 2004, he moved from his native Canada to the UK to better understand the rapidly emerging mobile phone space. Through his position at Endemol he worked closely with the UK’s largest mobile operator O2 and helped develop leading edge content for multiple platform release. In 2007, he moved into the web video arena based out of the Joost’s New York office. Throughout his career, he has spent time in Japan, Africa, Europe and China exploring and understanding the global digital media content market place.
As a sponsor of the keynote at the opening session of CRS, Folds of Honor Foundation will be sharing their mission with attendees and announcing an exciting program available to country radio stations. Folds of Honor provides educational scholarships to the children and spouses of military service men and women while serving our great nation. The foundation is supported by country stars Lee Brice, Craig Morgan, Dierks Bentley, Rascal Flatts, among many others, and is now presenting Country radio with the opportunity to give away educational scholarships in their local communities to qualified recipients of the brave soldiers defending our freedoms. As part of the turnkey program, Folds of Honor will provide content to engage listeners, especially over patriotic holidays such as Memorial Day and the 4th of July.
Talent Agent Moeller Passes
/by Robert K OermannNoted for his long-time association with Willie Nelson, Moeller died in Lyles, TN in Hickman County on Jan. 21 at age 75.
Born in Oklahoma City in 1938, Larry Allen Moeller began his show-business career in the 1960s working for his famed father, Walter Ernest “Lucky” Moeller (1912-1992). Denny-Moeller Talent, which became Moeller Talent, guided the careers of such future Country Music Hall of Fame members as Webb Pierce, Hank Snow, Minnie Pearl, Faron Young, Carl Smith, Kitty Wells, Porter Wagoner, Lefty Frizzell, Grandpa Jones, Bobby Bare, Jimmy Dean, George Morgan, Jimmy Dickens and The Duke of Paducah.
Larry Moeller formed his own Nashville agency around 1973. He handled Nelson, Waylon Jennings and Sammi Smith, among others. He later moved his company to Austin, Texas to focus exclusively on Nelson. He and Nelson remained associates for many years.
Moeller was a lifetime member of the Country Music Association. He is survived by his wife, Dee Reese Moeller of Lyles, TN, by son Ricky and daughter Pamela Moeller Butler, both of Nashville, by son Jett of Memphis, by granddaughter Rachel Jayne of Nashville and by sister Dixie Moeller Andrews of Okarche, OK.
A memorial service will be held at 2 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 1, at the St. James Episcopal Church in Dickson, Tenn. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to the Magdalene House in Nashville or to the Hospice organization of your choice.
Big Loud Shirt Industries Signs Matt Dragstrem
/by Jessica NicholsonMatt Dragstrem
Big Loud Shirt Industries has signed an exclusive publishing deal with Matt Dragstrem. A graduate from Belmont University, Dragstrem recently had his song, “Typical,” recorded by Amy Stroup, featured on the ABC drama Pretty Little Liars. He has also had songs used on the Game Show Network and penned pop artist Tiffany Houghton’s single “High.”
“I’ve known Matt since my freshman year of college in Greenville, Ill. Since the day I met him, his talent has been obvious and I knew he would do some great things one day.” says Big Loud Shirt’s VP, Seth England. “We couldn’t be more proud to bring him in the Big Loud Shirt family and bring our friendship full circle as well.”
Hal Leonard Celebrates ASCAP's Centennial With Two Titles
/by Jessica NicholsonThe organization has seen its ranks grow to 480,000 current members – many of whom have joined in the last few years. ASCAP processes 250 billion performances annually, resulting in $4.2 billion in distribution to members in the last five years.
In A Friend in the Music Business: The ASCAP Story (Hal Leonard Books; Feb. 4, 2014; $29.99), music writer Bruce Pollock looks back at ASCAP’s influence on the music industry over the last 100 years and its continued relevance and importance today. The book features a foreword by Quincy Jones and a preface by Lyle Lovett.
Pollock looks at the influences of radio, one of ASCAP’s prime sources of income since its inception in the 1920s and, in time, one of its prime sources of conflict. The book covers television, where Tin Pan Alley, Broadway and Hollywood songs found a whole new audience through adult-oriented hosts like Ed Sullivan and Arthur Godfrey. Also included is the emergence of rock ‘n’ roll in the late 1950s; of Bob Dylan and an influx of new folk, pop and rock writers soon after; and Berry Gordy’s decision to move much of his massive catalog to ASCAP in 1971.
The ASCAP Centennial Songbook (Hal Leonard; March 1, 2014; $19.99) recalls 55 song highlights spanning the history of ASCAP and celebrating its representation of some of the greatest songwriters of all time. Among the songs and sheet lyrics included are “Ah! Sweet Mystery of Life,” “Someone to Watch Over Me,” “Over The Rainbow,” “At Last,” “Moon River,” “The Way We Were,” “Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now),” and “Single Ladies (Put a Ring On It).”
“For one hundred years, ASCAP and its music creator members have been at the very heart of American music business with great songs and compositions and with a common sense way for songwriters and composers to earn a living,” said Williams. “ASCAP’s challenges, innovations and tireless efforts to protect its members’ rights over the past century is a story well worth telling and it all can be found in the newly published A Friend in the Music Business: The ASCAP Story. We are so grateful to author Bruce Pollock and the good people at Hal Leonard Books for putting together this deeply informative, entertaining and readable account. Bruce covers all the bases – the music business, the cultural impact, the personalities, and what lies ahead.”
Ellen DeGeneres Teams With Beats Music
/by Jessica Nicholson“I’m partnering with Beats Music. I love them because they’re changing the way you listen to music,” DeGeneres told the audience. “They have a new digital streaming service that brings you totally personalized music. You can download the app on your phone, then hear any song at any time.”
The Beats Music Super Bowl announcement follows a Beats Music TV spot that ran on the Grammys Sunday night narrated by Nine Inch Nails singer Trent Reznor.
Bonus for Brandy Clark fans: her song “Stripes” is featured in the commercial. Watch below.
LifeNotes: Settle Townsend, Sr.
/by Jessica NicholsonAfter being discharged from the service in 1955, Townsend, a Clarksville native, earned a degree in Biology and began working as a Research Assistant at Meharry University. At the time, Townsend needed extra income for his young family, so he joined Pinkerton security service, which led him to Warner/Reprise. Townsend began work at the label in August 1980, and still held the post nearly three decades later.
Visitation is Saturday, Feb. 1 from 10 a.m. until 11 a.m. at First Baptist Church Capitol Hill, located at 625 Rosa Parks Blvd. The funeral service will be held Saturday, Feb. 1 at 11:30 a.m.
Jelli Aims To Streamline Radio Ad Buys
/by Sarah SkatesRadioSpot is designed to increase efficiency, accountability and transparency for broadcast radio advertising. The dashboard, called RadioDash, provides stations, networks and advertisers details for ad campaigns in real time.
RadioSpot is now deployed at more than 350 radio stations in 128 cities nationwide. This growth has been achieved through partnerships forged over the past 12 months with major radio operators and networks including Townsquare Media, Entercom, Emmis owned WQHT-FM (HOT 97) in New York City, Sun Broadcast Group, Focus 360 and others. RadioSpot now reaches 44 million unique listeners weekly and manages approximately 4 billion radio ads on an annual run-rate basis.
“With almost four trillion radio ads delivered every year, radio is one of the largest advertising mediums, similar in scale to digital display advertising. However, unlike digital, radio has not seen the same investment in ad-tech innovation to buy, manage and serve these ads,” said Mike Dougherty, co-founder and CEO of Jelli. “We’ve worked for nearly five years to introduce technology that helps terrestrial radio become a 21st century medium, leading to RadioSpot.”
Jelli is based in San Mateo, Calif. and New York City.
Broadcast advertising is a $16 billion market in the United States and worth $40 billion globally, according to PricewaterhouseCooper’s 14th Annual Global Entertainment and Media Outlook.