nkotb 02-2009

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nkotbthing.com USA

NKOTBCOM & MySpace

Danny checking in Hi everyone, Just wanted to say thank you to all our UK, Irish, Scottish and German fans for making our European tour so special. You guys are making us feel right at home. We have been able to let loose and give you guys some shows I will never forget. After 17‐18 years it is amazing the support you guys have shown. I love all of you. And to everyone back home in America, we can’t wait for March 7th. We are starting a new leg to our North American tour. Also be on the lookout for our new video for “2 in the morning”. Lets make this one a big hit by calling the radio stations and hitting up VH1. This song has always been one of my favorites and I have been waiting for the release. Lets make a big push into the summer. 2am, the spring tour, the cruise, and then the all new summer tour. I still catch myself in disbelief. I am so grateful to all of you and lets keep this ride going. All my love Danny

UK The

Guardian

Backstage with New Kids On The Block Alexis Petridis sets out to meet the roadies, managers, stylists and technicians who really make gigs happen As a teenager, Joe "Kentucky" Zaccone used to enjoy videos of Texas heavy‐metal band Pantera. What struck him, however, wasn't really the band but the roadies he saw backstage: "I just saw the way the crew interacted with the band and got interested." He had inadvertently alighted on what he has come to regard as "the greatest job in the world". He went on to spend 10 years learning his craft in the world of metal, with Slipknot, Danzig, Hatebreed, Type‐O‐Negative and Fear Factory. "Travelling technician, roadie, whatever you wanna call it," he says. "It's my life." As he stands in a corridor at the Manchester Evening News Arena, now a stage manager and a "backline crew chief" responsible for maintaining the instruments on a world tour, you might say that Kentucky is a man living his dream ‐ were it not for the fact that it's hard to believe that any of his teenage dreams involved working with New Kids On the Block. And yet that definitely is New Kids over there in the background, going through a soundcheck in the main hall. The original 1980s boyband, recently reformed to the delight of thirtysomething women around the globe, New Kids frequently interrupt our conversion with the deafening strains of Tonight, the jaunty single that gave them their ninth consecutive US top 10 hit back in 1990. Journalist and broadcaster Stuart Maconie once said that one of the defining characteristics of the roadie is his refusal to pass judgment on the musical worth of the bands he works for: "Ask about any of his previous employers and his answer will be the same, 'He's a really nice bloke, actually.' He could have worked Hitler's Sudetenland tour, and his verdict would have been, 'Hard‐line politics, yes. But he's a really nice bloke, actually.'"

That certainly seems to be the case with Kentucky, who has been with New Kids since rehearsals for their comeback tour began last summer. "Since June," he says, "it's been New Kids all the way, straight and strong." With his arms and legs covered in tattoos, his hair dreadlocked, and his beard arranged in a plait, Kentucky doesn't look like the sort of man who would ordinarily have much time for I'll Be Loving You (Forever), but he seems confused by the suggestion that he might be happier working for a metal band. "No," he frowns. "It doesn't matter what music is playing. Actually, working with bands you wouldn't usually be listening to ‐ it kind of broadens your mind." Certainly, his duties on the New Kids tour are slightly different from those he would have had working with Hatebreed. As well as setting up, dismantling and checking the sound of the drumkit, he's responsible for handing out mics, towels, water and hats to "the guys" during the show, every item colour‐coded to match each of New Kids' five members. Woe betide the roadie who inadvertently hands Donnie's hat to Jordan. The one concession Kentucky has made to his own musical leanings involves the drumkit he designed for this New Kids reunion tour. "I'm like, OK, I'm a metal guy, so I'm going to make this huge, overly dramatic drumkit ‐ like something Lars Ulrich from Metallica would play ‐ for this pop tour. Everyone's like, why would you do that? You're just adding to your work, making it three hours [to set up] instead of one. You know what? I love it." The British leg of the tour has a crew of 35, overseen by production manager Bobby Schneider, a 49‐year‐old who looks a little like Phil Silvers of Sergeant Bilko fame, had Silvers spent his formative years on the road tending to the needs of Metallica. Like


nkotbthing.com "It would be gratifying if the audience understood the amount of effort that went into putting on the show," says Dave Pinksy, the front‐of‐house sound engineer, a man not only charged with tuning the PA, overseeing the soundcheck and "standing in the midst of the crowd, wrangling 100 different audio inputs into what you hear", but with providing the pre‐ and post‐show auditorium soundtrack. This he does using tracks from his own iPod, his brief chance to put his personal stamp on proceedings. He knows, however, that all this effort "has to remain as invisible to the fans as possible. That mystique is part of the illusion that we're here to provide." Pinksy has mixed the sound for everyone from metal bands to Nick Lachey, the boyband star and former husband of Jessica Simpson. He says every genre has a different "fingerprint" that requires a different skill: in metal, it's all about the guitars; in hip‐hop, the drums and bass. And with pop, he says, you need to keep the sound light and airy. This sets him apart from everyone else I speak to ‐ since the other thing that seems to unite New Kids' workforce is the belief that working on their live show is no different from working on any other band's, up to and including Aerosmith, the previous employers of wardrobe mistress Johanna Pepitone. Kentucky, Schneider began working on the New Kids tour in June, choosing the crew and checking seating plans against stage layouts. Schneider arrives at the arenas first thing in the morning, as the carpenters start building the stage and the equipment is unloaded, to put up signs guiding artists and crew around the often labyrinthine backstage areas, and to issue schedules detailing what time New Kids go on, when they come off and what time everyone has to get out of there by. The schedules carry a line from Cicero: "The shifts of fortune test the reliability of friends." Despite having more than 50 dates under his belt, Schneider has yet to see a New Kids show all the way through: "That's my downtime, when I can catch up on emails. I'm already working on the March dates of the US leg. It's not like I'm sitting there reading the paper." I tell him that his job doesn't sound like much fun and he looks genuinely shocked: "I wouldn't trade it for the world." Schneider says the crew is less than half what a star of Madonna's stature would have, which seems in keeping with the relatively stripped‐down nature of the show: there's no big theme and not much in the way of special effects, beyond an interlude when New Kids gather around a grand piano on a rather precarious‐looking secondary stage in the middle of the crowd. "So many pop shows right now have huge concepts," says artistic director and choreographer Kevin Maher, "but I think the idea behind this one is just to see them. It's about the fans enjoying that they're back." You also get the feeling that the lack of concept may have something to do with the kind of concepts New Kids tours used in the past. "We had one called Magic Summer," Joey McIntyre says with a shudder. "We had to do, like, magic tricks on stage. It was kind of embarrassing." You certainly can't fault them for the diversity of the staff. At one extreme, there is Vincent Boucher, the urbane former fashion director of US Esquire magazine, brought in to style the group. He talks of presenting "mood boards" to the band, of the necessity to mix "high and low fashion" and uses the phrase "he understands a Raf Simons shirt with an attached scarf". At the other, there is Kentucky, who is erudite, funny and far removed from the troglodytic gear‐humper of popular myth ‐ though you suspect he would no more understand a Raf Simons shirt with an attached scarf than he would Old Norse. Two things unite them all. The first is a certain reticence. You might think that living a life just out of the spotlight would leave you with a burning desire for recognition, but apparently not. Many people working behind the scenes on the tour decline to be interviewed, or will be interviewed but not photographed, or will only supply responses by email. And, despite repeated entreaties, concert promoters SJM refuse to answer any questions about the processes by which a major tour for a reformed boyband is booked in Britain. It's hard to see why, unless they pick the venues using sacrifice‐based necromancy: "Oh mighty Satan, will New Kids On the Block sell out Wembley?" But then again, those who work behind the scenes on a rock tour are conditioned to be imperceptible. If they come to the public's notice at all, something has gone wrong. And a pop show, after all, is about the suspension of disbelief. "I've come to Manchester lookin' for a girl," yells Donnie Wahlberg midway through the show; yet he's no more here lookin' for a girl than he is lookin' for an elephant, but the audience scream as if he means it. It's as if the people behind the show think that if they reveal too much, the pact between artist and audience will be broken. If people know how the tricks are done, no one will believe in the magic any more ‐ and the screaming will stop.

Actually, Pepitone doesn't just look after the clothes; she looks after everything from buttons and zips to Odour‐Eaters and tampons. She also sends unwanted gifts from fans to charity: "Whaddaya gonna do with a soft toy when you're a 30‐year‐old man?" She has a Brooklyn accent and a demeanour that hovers between no‐nonsense and terrifying. "These artists," she sighs, "they like to think they're different, but they're all the same. New Kids different from Aerosmith? You kidding me? Five boys, that's all it is."

Nevertheless, there are certain special considerations that come with a reformed 1980s boyband. "It's a weird thing," says choreographer Kevin Maher of New Kids who, being in their 30s, are now neither new nor kids. "You still want them to dance, because that's what they were known for back in the day, but they're grown men now ‐ so you want it to be age‐appropriate. You don't want it to look like they're trying too hard. I didn't want them to feel, you know, ridiculous. You have to give certain moves a different feeling." It seems to work, at least as far as the women of Manchester are concerned. As New Kids On the Block perform, they go crazy in time‐honoured shrill style. The show looks effortlessly slick, a blur of costume changes, confetti canons and featherweight pop hits. Watching them, it's somehow hard to imagine that, somewhere to the side of the stage, there is a man with dreadlocks, tattoos and a liking for Pantera, ensuring that the hats and mics are being handed out according to their correct colour‐coding. But there is. As the house lights go up, Kentucky appears on stage and begins dismantling that overly dramatic drumkit. Filing out, none of the audience seem to notice him ‐ which is, of course, the point.

Glossary: teach yourself gig‐speak Front‐of‐house engineer: person responsible for mixing the band's live sound. Briefcase engineer: disparaging term used by roadies for the above, since they lift nothing heavier than a briefcase. Foldback: speaker placed on stage so artists can hear themselves. Backline: instruments and amps, as well as the people employed to maintain them. Soundboard: control panel used by front‐of‐house engineer, usually situated in middle of audience. DFW: knob on soundboard with no function, turned when interfering artists demand nitpicking alterations. It stands for Doesn't Fucking Work. Linecheck: basic soundcheck to ensure musical equipment is working. Soundcheck: fine‐tuning of musical equipment, sound levels, etc. Usually involves the performers, so DFW may be employed.


nkotbthing.com Load in/out: transfer of equipment from trucks to venue and back again. Stage crew: locals hired for above.

Production manager: in charge of sound, lighting, stage, trucking, special effects ‐ everything except money and the band. Those are the responsibility of the tour manager.


nkotbthing.com The Netherlands

BackStage NL

Live beelden en een backstage interview met Donnie en Danny van NKOTB in de Heineken Music Hall Amsterdam 03‐02‐2009


nkotbthing.com GERMANY

RTL Boulevard

Jeugdsentiment met New Kids

De New Kids on the Block hebben dinsdagavond de harten van menig fan weer sneller doen kloppen. Jordan

Renate interviewt New Kids The New Kids on the Block zijn in Nederland. Aan Renate Verbaan de eer om twee heren van deze boyband aan de tand te voelen over de Wallen en schreeuwende fans van 35. Voor hun concert in de Heineken Music Hall namen Joey McIntyre en Jordan Knight de tijd om eens even gezellig met Renate te kletsen over hun comeback. Dinsdag zag je al een deel van het interview in RTL Boulevard. Bekijk hier het complete interview. CAPTURES

RENATE WITH NEW KIDS

en Jonathan, Joey, Donnie en Danny gaven een optreden in de Heineken Music Hall in Amsterdam. De Amerikaanse boyband, die eind jaren tachtig en begin jaren negentig wereldwijd meer dan tachtig miljoen albums verkocht, bracht naast nieuwe nummers van het recente album 'The Block' oude hits als 'Step by step' en 'Tonight' ten gehore. Het enthousiasme zat er nog steeds in bij het vijftal, dat behalve hun zang‐ ook hun danskunsten nog niet verleerd bleek te zijn. Danny Wood werd altijd al gezien als een van de beste dansers van de groep. Tijdens 'Games' liet hij een extra staaltje van zijn breakdancekunsten zien aan het publiek. De New Kids on the Block scoorden eind jaren tachtig en begin jaren negentig hits als 'The right stuff', 'Hangin' tough' en 'Cover girl'. In 1994 ging de band uit elkaar, maar begin vorig jaar werd een reünie aangekondigd.


nkotbthing.com GERMANY

RTL (4)

New Kids On The Block are back in town FRANCE Fan Musik

TWO KIDS ON THE BLOCK

New Kids on the Block, 4 février 2009 ‐ Zénith de Paris (report' live & photos) 2008, marque le retour du groupe New Kids on the Block ‐ NKOTB. Après quinze ans d'absence, six albums et une compilation, ils reviennent... avec un nouvel album The Block (Polydor / Universal) sortie aux Etats‐Unis en septembre 2008 et en France le 2 février 2009 et une tournée. Agés de 36 ans pour le plus jeune à 40 ans, certains avaient mis de côté leur carrière musicale et d'autres ont sorti des albums en solo. Le 4 février 2009, NKOTB était au Zénith de Paris. Le public, en majorité féminin (de 20 ans à 35 ans), attend avec impatience le début du spectacle. Seuls cinq pieds de micros sont alignés au centre de la scène... La musique débute... C'est alors qu'un message apparait sur l'écran géant central: 15 years ago ... They walked away... Tonight... The Block... is Back... ARE YOU READY ? It's TIME... accompagné par les cris de leurs fans. Alors qu'à l'écran se dessine le logo "NKOTB", des jets de fumée jaillisent du sol de la partie supérieure de la scène. Et... ce sont Joey McIntyre, Jordan Knight, John Knight, Danny Wood et Donnie Wahlberg... les New Kids on the

Block qui vont leur apparition sur le titre Single. Les cris s'intensifient. Le groupe prend alors possession du balcon..., puis des escaliers et enfin de la scène principale. Ils enchaîneront ainsi, tout au long du concert, anciennes et nouvelles chansons, changements de costumes, moments d'émotions, d'humour, d'échanges avec le public... tous les ingrédiens d'un bon spectacle. Troisième titre avec The Right Stuff (1988) et l'ambiance est déja à son comble. Le public dans les gradins est debout. Puis vient le moment où Donnie vient s'adresser au public : Bonsoir Paris ! et rajoute : 15 years, forgive us because tonight we back ! Are you ready ? tout en ayant le drapeau français sur ces épaules. On pouvait imaginer au début que la scène serait trop grande, mais cette pensée est vite oubliée quand on voit comment ils se déplacent, dansent avec des chorégraphies toujours aussi travaillées. De son côté, le public demontrera qu'il connait toujours autant les paroles et ceci même après cette longue absence.


Un moment d'émotion lors du titre If you go away, au cours duquel un hommage en photos sera rendu aux personnalités, ainsi qu'aux proches du groupe, disparus depuis les quinze dernières années : James Brown, Heath Ledger... We miss you... Chacun des membres du groupe aura son moment pendant le concert. Danny fera une démonstration de break dance avec des figures étonnantes. Jordan, seul à l'étage, chemise ouverte et ventilo à fond avec la chanson Baby I believe in you, puis enchaînera avec Give it to you. Joey seul également, interprétant un medley de trois titres : I remember when, Where do I go from here ? et Because of you. Donnie entouré de danseuses... sur Cover Girl. Quand à John il se fera gentillement charrier par ses camarades lors de l'arrêt sur image à la fin de Click click click afin qu'il danse. Lors de la chanson I’ll be lovin’ you (Forever), le mot "Toujours" sera traduit dans plusieurs langues faisant ainsi réagir le public selon leur origine. Ils interprèteront ce titre tout en blanc, assis. Le public fait flotter des ballons rose, blanc, en forme de coeur... Step by step, la chanson que beaucoup attendaient a été jouée après le rappel, ils sont revenus argentés, puis disparaissent par le même chemin qu'à leur arrivée. Et reviennent en basketeur... sur We will rock you et Hangin’ tough... Fin du concert, Joey, Jordan, John, Danny et Donnie saluent le public français.

A chacun de leur concert il est possible, moyennant l'achat de pass spéciaux (250 euros), de rencontrer le groupe avant le spectacle. A Paris ce seront ainsi plusieurs privilégiés qui en profiteront. Une photo souvenir avec le groupe, des cadeaux, des réductions sur le stand du merchandising et l'assurance d'être dans les dix premiers rangs pendant le concert, font également partis de ce pack... A noter que sur les stand de merchandising et dans la boutique en ligne, Danny propose aux fans l'achat de tee‐shirt pour soutenir la lutte contre le cancer. Les mauvaises langues diront qu'ils se sont reformés pour l'argent... Il faut tout même souligner le plaisir qu'ils communiquent à être sur scène ensemble. Dès le mois de Mars ils seront en tournée aux U.S.A. et au Canada pour donner de nouveaux concerts. Reste à espérer qu'ils reviennent en France pour une nouvelle tournée... sans attendre quinze ans... © texte FanMusik ‐ A.L. © photos AWcreation pour FanMusik

Set List du concert (liste non exhaustive) Single, My favorite girl, (You got it) The right stuff, Didn’t I (Blow your mind this time), Please don’t go girl, Grown man (avec Nicole Scherzinger/Pussycat Dolls), Games, If you go away, 2 in the morning, Dirty dancing, Tonight, Twisted, Baby I believe in you, Give it to you, medley (par Joey) "I remember when" , "Where do I go from here?" "Because of You", Cover girl (par Donnie), I’ll be lovin’ you (Forever), Click, click, click, Summertime, (rappel), Step by step, Hangin’ tough and We will rock you.

USA RetroRewind

Retro Rewind: Dave Harris' conversation with Joey McIntyre of New Kids on the Block (Part 7) Dave & Joey wrap up with their conversation about being father's.

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nkotbthing.com USA

NKOTB.COM

Donnie says… Hey All…. Canada? NUTS! The US? CRAZY! The UK and Europe? INSANE! The US and Canada again??? ARE YOU F@#*ING KIDDING ME?! Is your head really screwed on straight??? Is your mind really right????? Are you absolutely sure you want to do it again?? Cuz guess what? I AM READY!!!!!! I am more than ready!!!!! I was ready the day we stopped. Here’s the thing….We had so much fun….Can we have more? We let ourselves go…. Can we go further? We pushed it to the limit….Can we push it harder? We got crazy… Can we really get any crazier??????? HELL YEAH WE CAN!!!!!!!!!!! This is your time!!!!!! This is our time!!!!!! It only gets better!!!!!!!!!! I’M GETTING TOO EXCITED!!!!! I can’t even type no more….. It’s 4 am in Amsterdam and I gotta go for a run in the sub‐zero temperatures to cool off!!!!! It’s about to get real crazy. You’ve been warned. Come ready or don’t come at all!!!!!!! In 2009 we go harder. There is too much to be down about in the world right now….. Let’s laugh and sing and dance and hug and kiss and spread the love all the way through it!!!! It’s our time. Nuff said. As Always Your Man‐ Donnie W PS‐ you ain’t get enough face time? You ain’t get any face time? It’s 4AM‐ I don’t sleep. Find me!!!!! Owwwwww!!!!!!!!!!

FRANCE 20 MIN A quoi ressemble un fan des... New Kids On The Block? C'était l'événement ce mercredi 4 février au Zénith de Paris. ¡Error! Referencia de hipervínculo no válida., NKOTB pour les intimes, le boys band américain qui a donné naissance au genre à la fin des années 80... Mais alors, 15 ans après leur séparation, à quoi peut donc ressembler aujourd'hui un fan des NKOTB? Ethnologie express des groupies de Danny, Donnie, Joey, Jordan et Jonathan. Ca paraissait évident mais un rapide tour d'horizon du Zénith à moitié rempli le confirme. 95% de la salle est composé de jeunes filles entre 25 et 35 ans. Les mêmes qui étaient ado à l'époque de

«You Got It (The Right Stuff)», à l'image d'Elisabeth et d'Alexandra, 34 ans chacune, qui étaient déjà à Bercy à la belle époque. Logique, Joey, c'est le benjamin des Kids. Qui affiche tout de même aujourd'hui 36 ans au compteur. Et ouais! Audrey aussi était très jeune à l'époque. Originaire de Louisiane, elle a eu l'occasion de voir les New Kids en concert 3 ou 4 fois! Et si elle était d'abord fan de Jonathan... Ces deux barcelonaises ont fait spécialement le voyage et s'attendent à «un show» hors du commun. Nostalgiques des boums dans les garages, ils sont toujours à bloc sur Donnie, «Celui qui a le moins vieilli». Evidemment.


nkotbthing.com GERMANY

Rhein Main TV Medienauflauf, Blitzlichtgewitter und aufgewühlte weibliche Fans: Als die New Kids on the Block auf der Bühne der ausverkauften Jahrhunderthalle stehen, ist alles fast wie früher ‐ nur stehen im Publikum keine 14‐Jährigen mit Zahnspange mehr, sondern Frauen um die dreißig.

capturas GERMANY Brisant capturas

Sie waren die Vorreiter aller Boy Bands, die bestbezahltesten Entertainer der Welt, sie haben achtzig Millionen Platten verkauft. Jetzt sind sie um die vierzig ‐ 15 Jahre nach der Trennung sind die New Kids on the Block zurück. rheinmaintv‐Reporterin Katharina Wagner hat die Band in Frankfurt getroffen.


nkotbthing.com USA

Nashua Telegraph

I confess, I’m a New Kids on the Block fan I’m going to share something that only a handful of people know about me. After all, it just isn’t something one talks about in polite conversation. It is a bit embarrassing, but, here goes: I was a closet New Kids on the Block fan. I know, I know. I’ve put on a brave face these many years, trying not to hum “You Got It (The Right Stuff),” when I watch VH1s “I Love the 90s,” holding my feet still when I feel like “Hangin’ Tough,” quietly dying inside when I hear “I’ll be There.” But I can hide my love no longer. Mock me if you will, and you will. For the New Kids are on the comeback. Yes, our boys – Jon, Jordan, Joey, Danny and Donnie – are heading toward New Hampshire for a show at the Verizon Wireless Arena in March. I’m not kidding. The boys, who were a concoction of boy band uber‐guru Maurice Starr, sold more than 80 mllion albums worldwide in the salad days of the late ’80s and early ’90s. They sold out stadiums, had dolls in their likeness, even a Saturday morning television show. And they had millions upon millions of teenage girls enraptured by their very presence.

from a popped pin in my pegged pants.But I didn’t care. I was caught in the frenzy, the wave of unadulterated swoon and ecstasy brought about by these pre‐pubescent crooners. I was hooked. Joey didn’t want me to go, Donnie wanted me to hang tough, I couldn’t understand what Jordan wanted because only dogs can hear that pitch, but by God, I would do it whatever it was. Suddenly, I could sing every song, whether I knew the words or not. I wanted posters, trading cards, bubble gum, sweat from the stage, I didn’t care. I just wanted a part of that feeling to take home with me. But then the concert was over. Still lost in a fog of new‐found unattainable puppy love, Kristy and I swore to each other we’d never breathe a word to anyone else of our adulation, but somehow we knew there were others. We sought them ought, through casual mock mockery. We held clandestine meetings along with a few other girls who shared our secret, vowing someday we may be able to speak of our love in the light of day without being pantsed or shoved in a locker.

I was late to that party. See, I was about 12 when they hit it big. But, I was what you might call – oh how to put this delicately – a wicked big dork. The kind of girl who liked moody standards and rollicking show tunes, the kind of girl who could debate the merits of “Mr. Mistoffelees” over the clearly inferior “Starlight Express.” Needless to say, I was not popular. But I could totally beat anyone at musical theater trivia. So I missed the big New Kids on the Block craze. In fact, by the time I actually went to my first NKOTB concert, their star was on the wane. Which is actually how I ended up going to the show. See, at the time a kid would be roundly criticized, even completely ostracized, for proudly displaying her heart‐shaped Trapper Keeper New Kids folder. So it was in hushed tones over bad cafeteria nachos that my friend Kristy Ritzenheim asked me to go to the show. We both figured it was free music, and why not, and we certainly would keep it to ourselves that we were going. So, later that week I went to my first big‐girl concert, the kind you go to with a friend and not your dad. My bangs were a perfect gravity‐defying wave across my forehead, held firm by a noxious cocktail of Rave and Aqua Net, my pink jeans perfectly pegged and pinned. The lights went down, and the crowd erupted in time to the flashing light pops on stage. Then, they came out. The roar was something I can still feel in my feet if I try. Kristy said something to me, a gleeful and doe‐eyed look across her face. I didn’t hear a word of it. Before I knew it, I was screaming, crying, jumping, bleeding from the ankles

In school, I managed to maintain a steady dole of mockery, but safely at home, I took out my treasure box where I kept my NKOTB magnet, Tiger Beat magazines and video collection. Carefully I would take out the video, put it in and sit transfixed as I watched the boys in grainy ’90s black and white kiss the girls I wanted to be, knowing full well they were just biding their time with those strumpets until they met me. Then, I would totally Yoko the band because they all would love me and then there would be a fight with Joey and/or Jonathan winning out in the end and crowning me princess of the music world, where I would be revered, and my parents would love them, and we would get married and have falsetto‐singing babies! But I digress. Sadly, my love for the boys went the way that all childhood things must. I went onto high school, college and career, eventually leaving the treasure box to molder in my parents’ basement. But then, sitting in my living room one day last year, I saw the announcement I had been waiting for. The boys – now men – were back together. They were touring. They were making music, and they were coming my way. I saw grown women on television swooning and crying, likely looking just as they did at their first big‐girl concert. I felt a feeling in my heart, growing like a wave that can’t be stopped – a determination. I would once and for all never be ashamed of my love for those boys. I would proclaim it loudly, I would hope for their success, I would be a fan, openly and unafraid. So I say it to you now, loud and proud: I love New Kids on the Block, and I dare you to tell me you don’t.


nkotbthing.com USA

NKOTBCOM & MySpace

Joe checking in… I have had a really sweet time on this UK/Ireland/Germany/Amsterdam/Paris tour. It was so cool to be able to kick off another tour. It was like a rebirth. The crowd in Manchester really sent us off on a wave and each city has caught that wave and sent us higher and higher. We’ve always said that the UK ‐ England, Scotland, Wales‐ has had a certain energy and we’ve always taken to that. I liken it to going on vacation‐ you feel like you can be a different person. And that’s sort of how I felt during these shows. Our history with our German fans is long and strong and its is lives on. It was great to see our German fans so happy that we were finally in their country ag ain performing! I had 3 of the most peaceful days in Amsterdam. I forgot how wonderful that place is. I want to move there for a summer…Thank you Amsterdam. Paris will always have a special place in my heart, a very special place. I wish we could have spent more time there. To perform in Ireland (Northern too!) was a soulful experience. My homeland…The Irish are my peeps and they didn’t let me down. I love ya! Of course I always have a blast on stage no matter where I am and I cant wait to get back to the states and Canada, but is was nice to spice things up midway thru this awesome journey. I’ve also enjoyed doing my new medley… I’ll talk about that at alater date because I don’t like going into detail about something that everyone hasn’t seen yet. I love performing it. Right now I don’t miss Stay the Same. Some of the fans say how they miss it and that’s nice to hear‐ it says that it means something to them. But I think folks are digging the new Joe Mac medley. We will miss Europe!!!! I can’t write a big enough blog to explain all the love and fun we’ve experienced over here. I can only keep doing my thing and continue to try and give the best show I can. Its a blessing and a privilege to entertain you. Thank you thank you thank you. oxoxxox for now…. ‐jm

GERMANY

Web.de New Kids On the Block in Frankfurt


nkotbthing.com GERMANY

ZDF Volle Kanne FRANCE Musique

SFR

New Kids On The Block : retour vers le futur Article de type Live Report publié dans le genre Variétés Internationales le 07/02/2009 par Michael Rochette

progressivement sur l’écran et que le groupe apparaît enfin en haut de la plateforme dressée au milieu de la scène… Sur scène, chacun des New Kids se taillera une portion plus ou moins égale du show (à l’exception de Jonathan Knight, qui donnera sa part). Ainsi, chaque fan aura droit à

Ça va bientôt faire un an que la nouvelle est tombée : les New Kids On The Block se reforment ! Le 4 février 2009, c’est une réalité : dix‐sept ans après son dernier concert parisien, le premier boys‐band de l’histoire investissait le Zénith pour une soirée placée sous le signe de la nostalgie… Mais pas seulement. Assemblés en 1984 par le producteur Maurice Starr, les New Kids On The Block représentent le prototype originel du boys‐band de l’ère MTV. De 1986 à 1994, les cinq garçons de Boston connurent un succès planétaire sans précédent couronné d’or et de platine. Les multiples tentatives infructueuses de réanimer le groupe lors des quinze dernières années prouvent que le temps du retour n’était pas encore venu. En 2009 : ils sont prêts ! Et à voir l’état de surchauffe du Zénith ce soir‐là, il semblerait que nous l’étions nous aussi. Comme lors de ces soirées rétro‐90 (de type We Are The 90’s) qui fleurissent de‐ ci de‐là, ce sont environ trois mille adolescent(e)s trentenaires qui se sont replongés dans la folie de leurs années collège. À l’extinction des lumières, une clameur surréelle emplit la salle tandis qu’une constellation de téléphones portables se braque sur la scène. Projeté sur l’écran géant qui surplombe le décor, un petit film à la gloire du groupe se charge de faire monter la pression à base de "Il y a quinze ans, ils disparaissaient… Aujourd’hui, ils sont de retour !", le tout sur une musique outrancièrement épique à faire passer Gladiator pour un film de Woody Allen… L’hystérie culmine lorsque les lettres NKOTB se tracent

un passage solo de son chouchou. Avec son impérissable sourire béat planté au milieu de la figure – encore un truc qui nous avait manqué – Jordan Knight étendra sa bonne humeur communicative à tout le public, tout en le régalant de ce timbre suraigu très caractéristique (appelé "fausset", pour les amateurs de technique), miraculeusement resté intact. Son passage solo, il le fera au sommet d’une plateforme hydraulique, chantant Baby, I believe in you torse nu sous une chemise blanche ouverte ballottée par un ventilateur qui souffle par en dessous. On frôle le kitsch… Longtemps considéré comme le "bébé" du groupe, Joey McIntyre – aujourd’hui 38 ans – n’a pas tout à fait perdu ses traits juvéniles et reste encore pour beaucoup le chéri de ces dames (à en croire le nombre de "Joeeeeeeeeey !" entendus lors du concert). Son passage solo, lui, se fera sur Where do I go from here, façon crooner : feutre sur la tête, chemise entrouverte, nœud papillon défait, veste pliée sur l’épaule et un jolie performance vocale en prime, enrichie de quelques faux pas de claquettes. Classe, Joey


nkotbthing.com Depuis le départ une des têtes pensantes des New Kids (première recrue de Maurice Starr, il participera au casting de tous les autres membres – notamment son frère Mark ou son meilleur ami Danny Wood), Donnie Wahlberg s’impose désormais comme le leader naturel de la formation. Il se chargera aussi de toute la communication avec son public lors de quelques interventions mémorables – comme lorsqu’il s’empare d’un drapeau tricolore au premier rang pour s’en vêtir quelques instants. Plus classe encore, son petit speech de remerciement : "On vous aime tous. Même les mecs. Ou plutôt les mecs, on vous respecte. Car si vous êtes là ce soir, de deux choses l’une : soit vous accompagnez une fille et ça fait de vous un gentleman. Soit vous êtes fans des New Kids On The Block et vous assumez." Passage solo : un Cover Girl plutôt rock’n’roll… Danny Wood, quant à lui, a toujours un peu représenté le bad boy des New Kids. Traits anguleux, voix grave, style "urbain", Wood apportait un côté voyou romantique au quintet. C’est aussi un sacré danseur de breakdance qui nous régalera, affublé d’un survêtement Adidas (et entouré de danseuses dans la même tenue), d’une petite démonstration de danse hip‐hop old‐school sur Games. C’est également lui qui animera et commentera le "Facetime", où Jon Knight, armé d’une caméra, filme la foule qui peut s’admirer en temps réel sur l’écran géant. Enfin, fidèle à lui‐même, Jonathan (ou Jon) Knight a pris un malin plaisir à jouer à l’homme transparent. D’une timidité presque maladive, le grand frère de Jordan parvient à assurer le spectacle tout en maintenant le profil bas. Ce ténébreux mélancolique qui a énormément souffert du succès des New Kids (enchaînant attaques de panique sur dépressions chroniques durant toute cette période) aura même été à l’origine de la séparation du groupe en pleine gloire. Et même s’il vit désormais mieux les affres de la célébrité – au point de rejoindre ses anciens camarades dans leur reformation – Jon Knight reste un homme très discret, qui sait même se faire oublier sur une scène en face de trois mille fans déchaînés. À la fin du morceau Click Click Click (composé par Akon pour l’album The Block), le groupe a pour habitude d’organiser un concours de "poses". Joey prend alors quelques instants pour commenter la photo affichée sur l’écran géant et décernera ce soir‐là le prix de la meilleure pose à Jonathan, qui ne saura tout simplement plus où se mettre (d’autant que les autres improvisent une petite chanson/danse en son honneur). Il décrochera finalement un timide "merci" qui sera son seul mot de la soirée. Alors oui, avec une moyenne d’âge qui plafonne à 38 printemps, les New Kids On The Block ne sont plus tout à fait des "kids". Ils ne sont même plus tout à fait "new", d’ailleurs. Et à l’âge respectable où l’on aurait plutôt tendance à devenir cadre de sa boîte, on peut se demander ce que font ces cinq adultes à jouer aux vieux beaux qui tapent des chorégraphies désuètes habillés en faux jeunes, qui plus est dans une industrie musicale où les dates de péremption des artistes s’est cruellement réduite lors de la dernière décennie. Pour quiconque, un tel come‐back aurait été dangereusement casse‐gueule, mais pas pour les New Kids. Plus qu’un banal boys band, les NKOTB prouvent qu’ils sont un véritable phénomène appelé à durer. Mieux : en collaborant avec Ne‐Yo, Akon, Lady GaGa ou les Pussycat Dolls, ils se payent avec The Block un lifting next generation plutôt réussi qui pourrait bien leur ouvrir les portes d’une nouvelle jeunesse… Et oui : ils ont fait Step by Step. Et oui, c’était énorme !


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NKOTBCOM

Vlog Paris Or Bust


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nkotbthing.com UK

Polydor

NKOTB ‐ 2 In The Morning ‐ Sneak preview! A sneak preview of the special UK tourpiece ‐ exclusively available through iTunes from 23rd Feb! http://www.youtube.com/

USA NKOTBCOM Today Show Feb 20! Catch NKOTB LIVE on the TODAY SHOW FRIDAY FEBRUARY 20th They will be on during the 10:00am hour ‐ check local listings. Interview & performance of “Two in the Morning” The band will be performing inside but we want YOU to come out & support!!!!!!


nkotbthing.com Today Show 35 W. 48th Street New York, NY


nkotbthing.com GERMANY

BackStage NL

New Kids On The Block Live @ HMH Amsterdam Live beelden en een backstage interview met Donnie en Danny van NKOTB in de Heineken Music Hall Amsterdam 03‐02‐2009

USA The Monitor Are you the ultimate New Kids on the Block fan? Brandon Garcia The Monitor

The New Kids on the Block are set to ignite the Valley during BorderFest next month ‐‐‐ but it's not the first time they've come here. About 20 years ago, the fab five had to make a sudden exit just before their show because of chaos caused by manic Valley fans. If you were there and had your dream of getting to see the New Kids broken, Festiva and Dodge Arena want to give you another chance. Call Festiva reporter Amy Nichol Smith at (956) 683‐4420 to tell us about your experience ‐‐‐ and sign up for a chance to cover their upcoming concert, and even have a special meet‐and‐greet with the band.


nkotbthing.com USA

MySpace Jordan Knight

Like Woah! People keep asking me since I posted the vlog what does "like woah" mean? So I will clarify. In the vlog when I was talking to the girl from East Harlem I wrote in caption "homegirl is ...like woah"! That means she's hot, or fine or bangin, or sexy. A lot of people thought it meant SHE was thinking "woah! there's Jordan…. blah blah blah" but that’s not what I meant. You gotta realize I just woke up, I'm exhausted, I'm cold, I walk out and……………"LIKE WOAH". I was pleasantly surprised is all I'm saying! USA

Joey McIntyre. com

Joey McIntyre reflects on last year The last year has been an unexpected wonderfully strange journey. To be able to do what i love and perform for so many people on such a stage is a huge gift and one I will be truly grateful for throughout my life and career. We've had a blast making this album, producing this show and tour throughout North America and Europe. You learn so much about yourself and others when you have the opportunity to see so much. The all important balance in life is paramount to me in what i do. I don't always achieve it but i do strive to get there. You guys out there that have supported me through it all are owed a debt of gratitude. The only way that i know how to pay that debt is by being the most honest, engaged performer i can be. I have been blessed and i look forward to years and years to come filled with music and humor and education. Let's get this!!!


nkotbthing.com USA

MISOMAdigital

Interview with Kevin Cofield, Pro Tools Programmer for NKOTB Special Guest: Kevin Cofield, Pro Tools Programmer for New Kids On The Block/Babyface gives an in‐depth description of his duties and rig. Jan. 18th, 2009‐ Glasgow, Scotland USA News-Press Ft. Myers

Looking for The Right Stuff (Calling all New Kids fans) Do you know every word from “Hangin’ Tough”? Do you have a favorite New Kid? Did you sport a rat‐tail haircut back in the ‘80s (and do you have the photos to prove it)? The New Kids on the Block are coming to Southwest Florida on March 12, and we’re looking for former or current fans. Tell us why you like the New Kids and who’s your favorite one. Share your best (or worst) New Kids stories. And send us your most incriminating, cringe‐worthy photos. Include your full name, age, city of residence, phone number (the number won’t get published) and a mugshot‐style photo if you have one.

E‐mail Charles Runnells at crunnells@news‐press.com or mail your entry to: Charles Runnells The News‐Press 2442 Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. Fort Myers, FL 33901

All entries must be received by Friday, Feb. 27. The best of the bunch will appear March 6 on gulfcoastinglive.com and in Gulf Coasting magazine. For more information, e‐mail Charles or call him at 335‐0368.

USA

NKOTB.COM CALL US! +1 (617) 830‐1100 ‐ LEAVE US A MESSAGE! We might even call you back... And NO you should NOT leave your phone #...the service automatically records. For add'l terms and conditions, pls visit saynow.com


nkotbthing.com USA

NKOTBCOM & MySpace

From Danny Hi everyone, I want to tell you how touched and grateful I am for the outpouring of support you have given me, the Betty Wood Foundation and Susan G. Komen for the Cure. Thousands of you purchased the NKOTB pink ribbon tank tops, t‐shirts, and I’ve heard that you’re hosting fundraising events and organizing walk teams all over the world. I just want to say thank you to EVERYONE who is volunteering their time to help end breast cancer forever. I appreciate everything you’re doing, and the people at Susan G. Komen for the Cure really appreciate it as well. Every dime we raise from this effort will go directly to Komen, and we’re setting up a link right now that will allow you to make your donations directly to Komen through my site, in memory of my mother. We’ll post the link on rememberbetty.org, on Facebook and on Komen’s site as soon as it’s ready. I also want to remind you to do your breast self‐exams, get a mammogram when it’s time and to just take care of yourselves. 1 in 8 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer in her lifetime, but 98% of those women will beat it if they are diagnosed early. I promise you that I will keep fighting to help create a world without breast cancer, a world where my fans can be proud of the great things we are accomplishing together and most importantly, a world where my daughters will grow up without fear of losing their lives to this awful disease. LET’S FIND A CURE TOGETHER! Love Always Danny USA Jimmy Kimmel

Praying in a special place

Jimmy Kimmel Live New Kids On The Block outdoor mini‐concert Join us at Jimmy Kimmel Live with THE NEW KIDS ON THE BLOCK When: Mon Mar 02, 2009 Location: Los Angeles, CA Arrival Time: 6:45 PM Event Description : New Kids on the Block (also known as NKOTB) is an American pop group that enjoyed success in the late 1980s and early 1990s as a boy band which went on to sell 80 million records world‐wide.[1] Assembled in Boston in 1984 by producer Maurice Starr, the members consist of brothers Jordan and

Jonathan Knight, Joey McIntyre, Donnie Wahlberg, and Danny Wood. They won two American Music Awards in 1990 for Favorite Pop/Rock Band, Duo, or Group and Favorite Pop/Rock Album.[2] After having disbanded in 1994, several attempts were made to get the group back together, all of them unsuccessful. They reunited in 2008 and took on a new style, released a new album, and embarked on a concert tour in the fall. The album, entitled The Block was released on September 2, 2008.

#SOLD OUT# We have reached our eticket capacity for this date. Check back, sometimes tickets become available due to cancellations or click the see all tape dates link below to view other shows and guests.


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NKOTBCOM

The Party Continues… Hey All‐ Some fans just told me they aint coming to see us this Spring. They wanna wait til the Summer because the show “aint gonna change til then….” Excuse me but maybe you didn’t get the memo??? Did you get us confused with someone else??? Did you suddenly forget why we do this???? We aint them other groups!!!! We do it for you and for us! We earned this time. OUR TIME!!! Do you really think we gonna go into re‐runs already? Do you really think we are gonna suddenly rest after all these years???? Get your head right!!!! The Spring is the start of the next wave!!!! The party goes on in the Spring! You’ve been warned!!! If you miss it‐ Then you’ll miss it! As Always Your Man, Donnie W PS‐ Did I mention…….? THE PARTY CONTINUES 2009 USA Best Week Ever WWDWS?: What Would Danny Wood Say? By Michelle Collins

It took nearly 20 years, but looks like New Kids On The Block has finally “made it”, as they’ve received their portraits on the wall of The Palms restaurant in NYC today. Above, we see member Danny Wood about to write something next to his pastelled visage. Which leads us to ask: WWDWS? Leave your guesses in the comments.


nkotbthing.com USA

Accidental Sexyness

New Kids on the Block on Regis & Kelly! by Rosy

Our favorite boys from Beantown were on Regis & Kelly this morning performing their latest single 2 in the morning. Jonathan, Joey, Donnie, Danny and Jordan never fail to drive the crowd crazy!! While in New York the guys attended the unveiling of a new portrait of them at the Palm Restaurant. For right now this video is up of the performance. I’m currently uploading the whole portion with their little one question interview.

USA E! News


nkotbthing.com USA

PEOPLE & Vh1 Music News

FIRST LOOK: Behind the Scenes of NKOTB's New Video By Michelle Tan

A hot girl. A green screen. And loads of hair product. That all adds up to one thing: Another New Kids on the Block music video. In this exclusive behind‐the‐scenes peek at the group's new video for "2 in the Morning," Danny Wood takes you into a "pretty creepy old house" in the Pacific Palisades where he joined Joey McIntyre, Donnie Wahlberg and Jordan and Jonathan Knight for their latest project. While the video follows the narrative of a feuding couple, don't

SNEAK PEEK: New Kids Top 20 Premiere Video Next Tuesday, we’re dropping the New Kids on the Block’s “2 In The Morning” music video, and we wanted you get psyched a bit. So here’s a “making‐of” clip that finds the guys explaining what went into the shoot. It’s funny, they booked a glorious mansion for location, but wound up doing a fair amount of green screen action that was filled in after the shoot. Check it out: You’ll find out that there’s a personal twist to the tale, and you’ll be reminded that’s it’s one of the best songs on NKOTB’s latest disc.

expect one of the boys to bust out their acting chops. Jokes McIntyre: "We hired big‐time actors to do that for us." The video premieres on Feb. 23 on AOL but to give the guys an advance review, call the group's new number (617) 830‐ 1100 (Boston area code of course!) and "we'll hit you back," says McIntyre. "We'll call you when we're kicking back, onstage on tour, from the ocean, who knows?"


nkotbthing.com UK

The Guardian

New Kids On the Block Back in the late 1980s, when Gary Barlow was a still chubby teenager working the northern club circuit, New Kids On the Block were a knicker‐wetting pop phenomenon. Formed by producer Maurice Starr, NKOTB sold 70m albums and established what it was to be a boy band. Then, as it spells out in flaming letters on the giant screen tonight, "15 years ago, they walked away". The "kids" are creeping towards 40 now, but the faces that once stared out from lunch‐boxes and comics are still wrinkle‐free, and cause pandemonium among the overwhelmingly female, twentysomething crowd in Birmingham. The lack of tweenies in the audience points to the fact that NKOTB's synthy, sickly R&B hasn't stood the test of time. But the band give the same respect to old favourites as they do to songs from their comeback album, The Block. Dressed in sober suits, they refrain from embarrassing dance moves, but repeatedly grab their crotches. Cap‐wearing Donnie Wahlberg spends much of his time admiring the backsides of the four nubile dancers, and his incessant rapping is more squirm‐inducing than watching Jordan Knight writhe bare‐chested before a wind wachine. It is Knight's falsetto and Joey McIntyre's strong, Broadway‐honed voice that give some polish to rough pop fodder such as You Got It (The Right Stuff) and Games. On ballads Didn't I (Blow Your Mind) and I'll Be Loving You (Forever), the band recall the Stylistics rather than 'N Sync. Dirty Dancing, which they perform from a platform in the middle of the arena, is simply dull. But that charm that made them pop's first great white boy‐band still lingers. As they bounce up and down in Aston Villa football shirts for an encore of Hangin' Tough, this is one reunion it would be churlish not to applaud. • At Odyssey Arena, Belfast (028‐9073 9074), tomorrow. Then touring.

USA FOX Red Eye Still hanging tough New kids on the block crash “red Eye”


nkotbthing.com USA

The Boston Globe

NKOTB stops by Regis New Kids on the Block hit a few of the big morning programs last 20 years?" the host asked the group. "Solo records," this week, performing on NBC's "Today" show yesterday and Knight answered. "I was on your show. Nice you recognize hamming it up with Regis and Kelly on Thursday. Regis asked me." Oops. Trying to backpedal, Regis fired back: "Jordan. a question that ended up being embarrassing for Jordan You did solo records, right? Were they a big hit?" Jordan: Knight. "What did you do when you weren't singing over the "Big enough to be on your show." CANADA Chum FM Number One UK E! Candy Girls You've seen them featured in music videos with the likes of Kanye West, Outkast, and Jay‐Z, but don't let their supporting roles fool you—these women are anything but background players. Meet The

Dirty Dancing

First Ladies of Hip-Hop


nkotbthing.com USA

AOL Now Playing '2 in the Morning' UK Itunes

On the Road Montage 2009 02 25 USA AGENCIES Donnie in Boston Celtics v Los Angeles Clippers Boston Celtics v Los Angeles Clippers LOS ANGELES ‐ FEBRUARY 25: Singer and actor Donnie Wahlberg cheers on the Boston Celtics against the Los Angeles Clippers at Staples Center on February 25, 2009 in Los Angeles, California. Copyright 2009 NBAE (Photo by Noah Graham/NBAE via Getty Images)


nkotbthing.com USA

VH1 Newsletter Top 20 Premier

New Kids On The Block Relationships aren’t always easy at “2 In The Morning”. What their brand new video along with more clips that debuted on the show.

USA NKTV

TONIGHT! NKOTB performs TONIGHT on Live with Regis and Kelly 2/19/09 USA Agencies -GettyImages

Celtics Game


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Arizona Central

Guide to the new kids for another block of fans With "Jonas Brothers: The 3D Concert Experience," the nation's top teen‐idol group has reached the big screen. This is huge news, especially if you're 13 and female. If you're not, you may be wondering just what the big deal is about Nick, Joe and Kevin. To help put it into perspective, we've come up with a little guide: Just find your age below, and we'll show you which musical act may have filled a similar role during your youth • If you're 13 . . . the Jonas Brothers Hip name: the Jo Bros. The cute one: Joe. The one no one really likes: Kevin. Song you must know: "Burnin' Up." • If you're 23 . . . the Backstreet Boys Hip name: Backstreet. The cute one: Nick Carter. The one no one really likes: A.J. McLean. Song you must know: "I Want It That Way."

• If you're 33 . . . New Kids on the Block Hip name: NKOTB. The cute one: Joey McIntyre. The one no one really likes: Danny Wood. Song you must know: "You Got It (The Right Stuff)." • If you're 38 . . . Duran Duran Hip name for fans: Duranies. The cute one: Nick Rhodes. The one no one really likes: Andy Taylor. Song you must know: "Hungry Like the Wolf." • If you're 46 . . . Bay City Rollers Hip name for fans: Roller Maniacs. The cute one: Les McKeown. The one no one really likes: Derek Longmuir. Song you must know: "Saturday Night." • If you're 56 . . . the Monkees Hip name for craze: Monkee Mania. The cute one: Davy Jones. The one no one really likes: Micky Dolenz. Song you must know: "I'm a Believer."

USA NKTV

NKOTB on VH1 2/28/09

Canadian fans! Contest!

Check out NEW KIDS ON THE BLOCK on VH1’s Top 20 Countdown Show and catch the broadcast premiere of the new video for “2 IN THE MORNING”

Hey Canadian Fans – you could win a Trip To See NKOTB Live In Concert on April 14th in Victoria, BC!

airs Saturday, 02/28 @ 9am CHECK LOCAL LISTINGS!

Here’s how to enter: head to http://www.youtube.com/nkotbdirtydancing and make a video for the group’s latest single “Dirty Dancing” and if your video is chosen, you win! Contest closes March 28, 2009. Visit http://www.youtube.com/nkotbdirtydancing for full details

. USA Mix 107.9 Kvly 5 Questions with Alex and Meridee USA Vh1

Top 20 Premiere Video The guys roll through a nice ballad that detail with the tensions of romance. Watch along with other Top 20 hits


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