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Mom Asks Social Media If Her 10 Year Old’s Music Can Be Played — The Answer Is Yes!

Social media brought out the best this time! Ten-year-old Olive Wallace of Pennsylvania plays violin. She recently wrote her first piece of music. Her mom, Michelle Wallace, was so proud….

Social Media Mom

Social Media mom

Mario Tama via Getty Images

Social media brought out the best this time!

Ten-year-old Olive Wallace of Pennsylvania plays violin. She recently wrote her first piece of music. Her mom, Michelle Wallace, was so proud. She shared the piece her daughter penciled with the TikTok community and asked if it could be played, "I need to know if it's any good, or if it makes any sense."

Well, as it turns out, social media CAN produce some great things, and Olive's piece has been be played!

Actually, several musicians saw the TikTok post, and stepped up to perform Olive's work which has since been titled, "For Greatness We Bring." A bunch of people played it on piano, violin, and other instruments.  But here's the best one:  The Director of Music Education at Seattle Pacific University arranged it for a full string orchestra.

Dr. Christopher T. F. Hanson, Seattle Pacific University's Director of Music Education and Orchestral Activities, is one of the people who saw Michelle's video and took the challenge. He first arranged the piece for a string orchestra and then had educators at the recent National Association for Music Education (NAfME) conference play it.

I think you'll agree that this interpretation is pretty amazing, and very moving.

How does Olive Wallace know how to compose music to begin with? Her mom Michelle says, "She has played the violin for 2 years at her elementary school in southern Pennsylvania. She also plays the clarinet and sings in her school's choir and honor choir. She loves music! Her grandma is a retired music teacher in California, and her aunt currently teaches music."

If you go to TikTok, you can listen to many other musicians play the work including Casey Bozell of Keep Classical Weird on violin.

And to Olive Wallace we all say - KEEP IT UP! And way to go TikTok!

-Carla Rea

Digital Cameras Are Back Along With Other Tech That’s ‘New’ Again

Hey Boomer - the digital camera is back. Just point and shoot!

There is a new camera trend that isvery popular among Gen Z'ers on social media, and beyond. It features grainy images and these weird timestamps. Yep - the point-and-shoot digital cameras of the early 2000s are making a comeback!

In the last year, these 'pre-smartphone cameras' have been made popular, once again, by celebrities on Instagram like, Bella Hadid , Emily Ratajkowski, and Nicola Peltz Beckham. In the words of Jerry Seinfeld, "Who are these people??

"These people" are some of the biggest influencers on social media, and they've turned it back over to the Boomers, and gone old school!

When these influencers, and Gen Z'ers, are not taking photos on their old point-and-shoot digital cameras, they are posing with the 2000s relics looped around their wrists. Why? Because like my very wise mom told me, when me and my friends all started wearing what we thought were the new trendy "saddle shoes" - "Carla, everything old is new again!"

On TikTok, #digitalcamera has over 124 million views with videos saying “this is your sign to buy an old digital camera.”

There are many clips recommending specific cameras, like the one many of us still have tucked away in that one drawer, the Sony Cybershot. The Nikon Coolpix L15, the Samsung MV900F, and the Canon Powershot SD1300 are touted as some of the best "second-hand" digital cameras. Second hand - if they only knew how much, and how long we had to save to buy the first hand.

Why are 'old school' cameras so popular again? A photographer friend of mine says, “I think we’ve become numb to the novelty of a lot of things. Everything is on our phone now, and we're attached to them.  You basically choose between an Apple or Android, but in reality, the cameras are all pretty similar. With digital cameras, and film cameras, they all have a different quality, and feel.”

It's probably inevitable that so many things would make a comeback - they always do.

Our society, and its trends, are so cyclical. Is there really anything that hasn't been done, used, or worn before? Whatever the case, there is likely to be a generation of younger users that will be using this new camera technology for the next few years to come.

Oh, and if you're using a camera that takes film, be prepared to pay a bit more for it than you used to - if you can find it.

Hey Boomer - here are some other trends that are popular again -

-Carla Rea

Flip phones

Flip phones actually never really disappeared, but they did fall from grace. Motorola's iconic RAZR sold over 130 million phones before the iPhone changed things. So in 2020, Motorola re-released their flip phone, followed by Samsung.

Boomer technology comes backiStock via Getty Images

Vinyl Records

Vinyl records have been gaining ground again in recent years. In 2020 vinyl outsold CD's for the first time since 1986, and they are showing no signs of slowing down. Vinyl is particularly popular among Millennials and Gen Z'ers who grew up with CD's and streaming.

Boomer tech is backiStock via Getty Images Plus

Polaroid Cameras

Polaroid is the namesake of all instant photography. The first Polaroid came out in 1940, and allowed people to shoot, then shake it (like a polaroid picture), then share - in a matter of minutes!

Boomer tech is backiStock via Getty Images Plus

Fax Machines

May seem a little odd, but the numbers are growing for fax machine users. It has to do with legality.Unlike electronic signatures, fax is a recognized form of legal communication. And it allows for instant confirmation that a message has been sent.

Boomer Technology

Typewriters

Much like vinyl, and Polaroids, typewriters are drawing in younger people who grew up with computers and smartphones.Typewriters are a way to slow down in today's non-stop digital world. It's just you and the keys - with no distractions from the internet!

Boomer technology is back
Carla ReaWriter
Carla Rea is the morning show co-host on “The Mike and Carla Morning Show" on 96.3 KKLZ, in Las Vegas. She has been working with her partner and friend Mike O'Brian for the past 25 plus years. At KKLZ for 12 years. Carla Rea is a Gracie Award winner. She started out in talk radio, "when talk radio was still fun" Rea says. Prior to, and along with doing the morning show, Carla is also a comedian. You may have seen her on Conan O'Brien, Evening at The Improv, Showtime, or several comedy clubs across the country. Carla also worked as a light feature reporter at KSNV/NBC Las Vegas, going behind the scenes at various shows, and restaurants on the Las Vegas strip. As a content creator 96.3 KKLZ, Carla writes in a sarcastic, cheeky, unapologetic way on Las Vegas, movies, TV, celebrities, and this thing we call life.