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Clay Aiken – Love For Children and Music

By musicfan123 · Comments 14391(8)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2012%2F02%2F03%2Fclay-aiken-love-for-children-and-music%2FClay+Aiken+-+Love+For+Children+and+Music2012-02-03+07%3A27%3A54musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D14391
Friday, February 3rd, 2012

In February,  2006, UNICEF Magazine was a best seller.

The issue included a great profile of one of their newest Goodwill Ambassadors, Clay Aiken.  The article included information on Clay’s career and educational background.  But the  center of the article was about all that Clay had done for UNICEF in the short time which he had been a representative for the organization.

The following is a copy of the two page article.  Remember, if you have trouble reading the small print,  just click on the graphic and it will expand to a larger size.

Whenever I read an article like this, it reminds me of one of the reasons I support Clay Aiken.  Had you read this article before?  Do you think Clay will travel for UNICEF again?

 

Comments 14391(8)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2012%2F02%2F03%2Fclay-aiken-love-for-children-and-music%2FClay+Aiken+-+Love+For+Children+and+Music2012-02-03+07%3A27%3A54musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D14391
Categories : Clay News
Tags : American Idol, Clay Aiken, Dina V Montes, Uganda, UNICEF, UNICEF Magazine

Clay Aiken – Looking Ready To Rule The Pack

By musicfan123 · Comments 12572(19)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2011%2F10%2F16%2Fclay-aiken-looking-ready-to-rule-the-pack%2FClay+Aiken+-+Looking+Ready+To+Rule+The+Pack2011-10-16+07%3A12%3A05musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D12572
Sunday, October 16th, 2011

So…Clay Aiken is in New York, preparing for his participation on Celebrity Apprentice.  Personally, I am excited.  What a great opportunity to raise money for Clay’s charity.

The only problem I see is that we have to wait months before we really know what is happening.  I can’t wait to watch Clay as he attacks each project with intelligence and business savvy.  I believe that he will surprise many people who only remember Clay from his American Idol days!

It was so much fun to see the picture of Clay that was taken Friday evening.  He was dressed “to the nines”.  He looked as though he had been dressed by one of the top stylists around.  From his clothes to his hair, he was up-to–date and looked ready to rule the pack.

As an older fan, I have to remind myself that Clay is not dressing to appeal to middle-aged ladies.  I am not a huge fan of the spiky hair, but there are many men who wear this style and are considered in-style.  Some are older than Clay and some are younger.  I really like the following comment I found on the Internet:

 I do not for a second believe that people will decide they don’t like Clay based solely on his hairstyle. I think most people are not that superficial (at least I hope not anyway). I think they will form their opinion of Clay based on his personality and how he handles himself. Some will base their decision on how he looks, but I would say the vast majority won’t.

OK………..When will we get the next picture?

I found the following article about Clay on my computer.  It has been a long time since I have read it and it is worth another read.  I hope you will take a moment and read this interview.  I just know you will smile and feel so proud of Clay and the work he does to make the world a better place.

An Idol Who Really Gives Back
05/07/2007 7:00 PM, Yahoo! Music
Laura Hertzfeld

Before charming the hearts of American Idol fans in 2003, singer Clay Aiken was a teacher, focusing on special education in his native North Carolina. Today, in addition to performing and recording, Clay acts as an education ambassador for UNICEF, most recently in post-Taliban Afghanistan. Still jetlagged, Clay told Yahoo! Music in his smooth drawl why Idol Gives Back won’t solve the poverty problem, what it was like to grow a beard and wear long robes, and why he never sings when visiting schools abroad.

YAHOO! MUSIC: What were your overall impressions of Afghanistan?

CLAY: I think, more than anything, the trip to me was a stereotype-breaker because there are so many times in the U.S. that we see in the news the negative things that happen in Afghanistan. We see the head coverings and we think Muslim, we hear about suicide bombings and terrorists, and we think “Middle East.” Afghanistan’s not in the Middle East, it’s in South Asia, and it’s not a desert. My friends were all, “It must have been so hot there!” But you can see in some of the pictures the snow-capped mountains. There are many parts of Afghanistan that are really quite a lush landscape. I had a lot of misconceptions about the country and about the people there.

YAHOO! MUSIC: Why education? 

CLAY: Well you know, I was a teacher, so education is kind of important to me. I focus on education mainly with UNICEF on every trip that I take. A number of schools [in Afghanistan] were destroyed during the Taliban era. The schools that were around only housed male students–girls were not allowed to go to school. So now there are twice the number of students and there’s just not enough room to hold these kids. They are sitting outside on the ground all day.

YAHOO! MUSIC: The Idol Gives Back charity event raised more than $70 million. Could you relate to what you saw your fellow idols doing in Africa and other places?

CLAY: I think there’s definitely a problem–and I’ll point to recent charity events–when people go and they talk about the need in an area or a country and they don’t have the information. If you come back and you talk about the need in a country and don’t know what’s going on in the country, then you’re completely remiss. There’s always a greater cause [to poverty] than throwing money at the issue, and I think the strongest solution, the strongest weapon we have against poverty and hunger is education. When you take a look at something like Idol Gives Back and you realize that the main piece of information we got is that people are hungry in Africa, but we didn’t find out why they are hungry in Africa and we didn’t out where in Africa they are hungry, nor did we find out the major causes. Without the education about what’s going on in the country, we’re doing no service except for perpetuating that same stereotype that Africa, or any other country in the world, is lesser than the U.S., and we’re in the role that we have to give to them.

YAHOO! MUSIC: Did you perform for the kids you met in Afghanistan? How did they like your music?

CLAY: [Laughing] I made the mistake in Uganda of performing for some kids who were in a night commuter center, and they were singing a song and they were clapping. It was kind of a joyful, cheerful song. They didn’t know me, but they had heard that I was a singer, and so they asked me to sing a song, and I couldn’t think of what to sing. And someone whispered to me, “Sing ‘Bridge Over Troubled Water.’” And so I got through maybe a line of the song before the kids started laughing at me so hard. They’d never heard any music like that before in their lives. So I’ve made it a point when I take these trips to never sing.

YAHOO! MUSIC: Maybe someday you’ll get a request.

CLAY: Maybe next time I take a trip I’ll make it a point to learn a native song.

YAHOO! MUSIC: Do you have a favorite story of any of the people you met in Afghanistan or a moment during your trip that touched you the most?

CLAY: One of the things that stuck with me more than anything else was just the hunger, the thirst for education. I mean, these kids wanted to go to school. My social studies teacher [who accompanied me on the trip]–she was quite jealous. She’s been teaching for 30 years and she’s never had a class full of students who wanted to be there as much as these kids in Afghanistan wanted to be there.

YAHOO! MUSIC: How has your work with UNICEF influenced your music? What do you take back with you?

CLAY: Every time I come back from these situations, you take a look at what’s important to you, and how privileged we are, and it’s easy to take that back. But it’s important to remember that we have to be a proactive society. It’s interesting to me to look at Afghanistan and realize that there are countries all around the world that we haven’t looked at because they haven’t affected us and yet, one of these days it’s possible that one of them could affect us. Had we taken a hard look at the needs of women and children in Afghanistan in 1996, it’s possible that we could have prevented September 11, 2001.

YAHOO! MUSIC: How did it feel to be an American in Afghanistan? Were you welcomed in the towns you visited?

CLAY: One of the main things to remember is that people in Afghanistan did not like the Taliban, either. I was worried going in, imagining what I was going to be involved with and what I was going to find myself running into. But, it was quite different. The people were nothing but hospitable, they were completely welcoming and so wonderful. We really just had nothing but a warm welcome everywhere. I thought [Kabul] was going to be a lot more antiquated. It’s a bustling metropolis. There was wireless internet in our hotel, glass elevators, it was right inside a shopping mall like we’d see in the U.S. It’s not some sort of deprived and destitute city like I expected to see.

YAHOO! MUSIC: I saw in pictures of you that you’d changed your looks a bit to fit in there.

CLAY: I wanted to be culturally respectful to the country and the people there. Its kind of part of their culture to be bearded and to be dressed appropriately. But that again is kind of part of the stereotype about Afghanistan, but there’s quite a bit of what I guess we’d call “Western” attire in the country.

YAHOO! MUSIC: How can young people get involved? 

CLAY: Learn about the things! You have to be educated about what’s going on in your world. You have to know the problems. Poverty and hunger are only the effects of larger problems.

YAHOO! MUSIC: Why is it important for celebrities to be the face of UNICEF?

CLAY: I haven’t necessarily heard too much negative, but I think the main problem is the media’s attention. We are a society that only pays attention to in the media. We put too much emphasis on celebrities. And even though I am one and I don’t mind the attention every once in a while, it’s sad that you have to have a celebrity to bring attention to these causes.

YAHOO! MUSIC: Do you still watch American Idol, and do you have an opinion on who’s going to win this season?

CLAY: No comment.

SO….What do you think?

Comments 12572(19)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2011%2F10%2F16%2Fclay-aiken-looking-ready-to-rule-the-pack%2FClay+Aiken+-+Looking+Ready+To+Rule+The+Pack2011-10-16+07%3A12%3A05musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D12572
Categories : Clay History, Clay News
Tags : Afghanistan, American Idol, Bridge Over Troubled Water, Celebrity Apprentice, Clay Aiken, Idol Gives Back, Laura Hertzfeld, Tried & True, Uganda, UNICEF, Yahoo Music

Clay Aiken – UNICEF Ambassador

By musicfan123 · Comments 9926(9)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2010%2F07%2F11%2Fclay-aiken-unicef-ambassador%2FClay+Aiken+%E2%80%93+UNICEF+Ambassador2010-07-11+07%3A06%3A52musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fwww.claynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D9926
Sunday, July 11th, 2010

I am still thinking about the wonderful speech that Clay Aiken gave at the Key Club Convention.  Clay is certainly a wonderful spokesperson for UNICEF and children all over the world.

We have been so lucky to see many wonderful pictures of the trips that Clay has taken in his role as Ambassador Aiken.  I hope the pictures will remind you of what a excellent person Clay Aiken is.

Comments 9926(9)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2010%2F07%2F11%2Fclay-aiken-unicef-ambassador%2FClay+Aiken+%E2%80%93+UNICEF+Ambassador2010-07-11+07%3A06%3A52musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fwww.claynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D9926
Categories : UNICEF
Tags : Clay Aiken, Indonesia, Key Club, Mexico, Somalia, Uganda, UNICEF

Clay Aiken – Helping Children

By musicfan123 · Comments 4593(16)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2009%2F05%2F25%2Fclay-aiken-helping-children%2FClay+Aiken+-+Helping+Children2009-05-25+16%3A58%3A35musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fwww.claynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D4593
Monday, May 25th, 2009

Uganda is twice the size of Pennsylvania and is in East Africa. It is bordered on the west by Congo, on the north by the Sudan, on the east by Kenya, and on the south by Tanzania and Rwanda. The country, which lies across the equator, is divided into three main areas-swampy lowlands, a fertile plateau with wooded hills, and a desert region. Lake Victoria forms part of the southern border.

In an effort to bring attention to the plight of children in northern Uganda, UNICEF Ambassador Clay Aiken traveled to the conflict affected region to witness the phenomenon of “night commuters,” children who trek from the countryside into slightly more secure towns and UNICEF supported shelters every night to avoid being abducted by the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA).

The conflict in northern Uganda has displaced approximately 1.4 million people — 80 per cent of them children and women — as the rebel (LRA) seeks to overthrow the Ugandan government. Each evening, the threat of LRA attacks and abductions drives over 40,000 child “night commuters” to leave their homes. An estimated 12,000 children have been abducted by the LRA in the conflict-affected districts since June 2002, to be forcibly recruited as child combatants and sex slaves.

Clay interacted with children who were abducted by LTA rebels and then visited the Pabbo IDP camp in Gulu on May 25.

“Northern Uganda is one of the most dangerous places in the world for children,” said Clay. “Children are being forced to commit appalling acts of violence. Children are being killed and raped. It was all too clear that those living in the conflict-affected districts of Uganda deserve much more. The global community must act now with utmost urgency to put an end to these atrocities. No progress will be made until there is peace throughout the country.”

Comparing the situation in northern Uganda to the tsunami disaster that hit Asia at the end of last year, Aiken said the Ugandan situation is worse because of the continuous war. In the case of tsunami, he said, reconstruction is already underway.

On his role as UNICEF ambassador, Clay said, “Everyone deserves the best start in life, which is what UNICEF is working to provide the world’s most vulnerable children with. Education is essential to a child’s development. I hope that as an ambassador, I can encourage people to join UNICEF’s mission to make education a reality for children throughout the world.”

The following is a video of  Clay’s trip to Uganda.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KBEGf4MMDKM

Comments 4593(16)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2009%2F05%2F25%2Fclay-aiken-helping-children%2FClay+Aiken+-+Helping+Children2009-05-25+16%3A58%3A35musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fwww.claynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D4593
Categories : Clay News, UNICEF
Tags : Clay Aiken, Uganda, UNICEF

Celebrity Apprentice: Clay’s Presentation

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It is not always about performance art, but about receiving positive energy from people with positive spirits. Sometimes we can see someone's spirit, and those are the people with great energy. Those are the people that get me through the day, especially on Broadway. -Clay Aiken

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