Caitlin wrote an article for Huffington Post about The Giving Keys. Read all about it HERE!
Caitlin wrote an article for Huffington Post about The Giving Keys. Read all about it HERE!
Hello! How is everyone? Hope you’re all doing fabulous! Can you believe it’s almost March? Sheesh! Summer will be here before we know it! Do any of you have a family vacation planned for the summer? If so, where are you going? My family and I are still figuring out where were gonna go this year. Ok, question: If you could go anywhere in the world this year, where would you go? France? Fiji? Italy? Greece? Ever since I saw the movie “Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants” I want to go to Greece. It looks beautiful there!!! So I would go to France or Greece.
READ THE REST AND SEE THE PICTURES HERE.
Los Angeles-based singer/songwriter Caitlin Crosby is summed up best in the line of one of her own songs: “I’m too colorful to conceal.” Not only is the husky-voiced 26-year-old beautiful to look at, she’s grabbing the attention of listeners the world over with her lyrics. Her newest video, “Flawz,” is a labor of love for her, and it reached No. 1 on YouTube when it debuted a few short weeks ago. People in twenty-one countries — from Australia and Isreal to South Korea and Ireland — took notice. Under the “Nonprofits & Activism” category on YouTube, it might seem an unlikely place for a music video. The message she emits with her music and persona, however, proves the video is right where it belongs. It’s a song about embracing your flaws. Why? Because your flaws make you uniquely you.
In a society where image has become an obsession, songs that don’t focus on being center of attention, living the party life or keeping the status quo are rare and often shoved into the indie/folk category musically. But Caitlin’s music isn’t that obsure. The rock-pop ballads contain catchy beats and lyrics that stick. Actually, they more than stick; they’re positive food for thought to much on over and over.
The one — and only – time I witnessed a music video on the big screen before previews at a movie theater was the first time I heard Caitlin Crosby. The song, “Still Have My Heart,” caught my attention because, even then, I perceived a theme of not living life based off others’ opinions of what’s acceptable. That was just last year, and it also was the beginning of a my love for her music and an admiration for another passion of hers outside of music. Read full article.
Caitlin Crosby is not just sitting around crying after breaking up with Chuck star Zach Levi a few weeks ago.
Oh no, she’s had plenty to keep her busy and away from that. The L.A.-based singer/songwriter has been writing while on the road opening for Jason Castro and adding new cameos to her ever-expanding video for her song, “Flawz” (I have seen it in several incarnations already).
“The only thing I’m passionate about is saying something that means something, makes people think and not in a preachy way, ” she has said.
She does just that addressing women’s body issues in the clip — with the help of stars including Levi and Castro, plus Jennifer Love Hewitt, Olivia Munn, Russell Simmons, Linda and Brooke Hogan, Margaret Cho and Jordin Sparks.
It’s an A-list version of MTV’s True Life with a clear message! [SOURCE]
ELIZA is a big fan of Caitlin Crosby. Check out her video above and the article written by Brook Flagg, from our last issue here.
Her teen years may be behind her, but 25-year-old singer/songwriter Caitlin Crosby still has a message for girls: Love your flaws. The mantra, encapsulated in her debut studio album Flawz and a new website, loveyourflawz.com, has struck a chord with women her age and younger – in a big way.
“I get notes from girls everywhere, high school and college both,” said Crosby. Through two of the album’s standout songs (“Imperfect is the New Perfect” and the record’s title track), Crosby addresses polarities that regularly confront young women: the endless pursuit for outer perfection, and what she calls “the things inside that make us real, beautiful, and unique –— the things we perceive as flaws.” [READ THE REST HERE]