DWTS Judge Carrie Ann Inaba on the Phone!
Carrie Ann's been hanging with her DWTS Co-Stars! Bet you didn't know Bruno could man the Bar-B-Que, and Len is a Video Game Hustler on the Wii! Carrie Ann spills the beans and gives us the inside scoop on next weeks show.
"DWTS" host Tom Bergeron on with Lisa & Ray!
We get to talk to Chuck Wicks every week, but to have the man who keeps all the Dancers in line, and the man who knows what goes on behind the scenes call in was awesome. He had us cracking up this morning and he even dishes out some predictions this morning!
Chuck Wicks talks DWTS!
Bruno was impressed with Chuck's ability to shake that "booty." But we had to play fashion police on that Leotard he was wearing. Whose getting the boot tonight? Chuck gives us his predictions for Tonights Results Show.
Chuck Wicks talks DWTS!
We thought we'd play fashion police on Chuck this morning, the lace just isn't working! He didn't promise anything for next week! But Chuck gives his picks and was impressed with Ray's Bruno impersonation.
Chuck Wicks talks DWTS with Dierks Bentley!
Dierks doesn't think he's got the moves to be on DWTS! But Chuck's proven he can move once he's on the dancefloor. Last night he got down & dirty and he called this morning to tell us all about it!
Chuck Wicks makes his DWTS Predictions!
We saw it on TMZ, so we had to ask him about the flat tire! Alright we'll cut him a little slack. Chuck gives us his predictions for whose not gonna make it past tonights eliminations!
Chuck Wicks Scores a 24!
The judges gave Chuck & Julianne all 8's last night. Carrie Ann Inaba told Chuck that he is a front runner to win DWTS! Chuck called in this morning to talk about last nights show.
Chuck Wicks talks DWTS!
Chuck Wicks talks about his debut on DWTS with Lisa & Ray!
Jewel talks "Dancing with the Stars"
We saw her the other night on the show sidelined with an injury! She told Kosty she's staying on the set to support her hubby PBR Champion Ty Murray, and you can catch this week performing one of her new songs off her "Lullaby" album!

Julianne Hough Takes US99.5 Backstage of Dancing With the Stars




 




Julianne Hough


ACHIEVEMENTS:
    •    International Latin Youth Champion
    •    Junior Blackpool World Latin Champion
    •    United States National Latin Youth Champion

CELEBRITY PARTNER:
Chuck Wicks

STATS:
Style: Latin
Nationality: American
Based in: Salt Lake City
Status: Not Currently Competing

BACKGROUND:
Julianne's first season on Dancing with the Stars was quite successful. She and partner Olympic Gold Medalist Apolo Anton Ohno were the Season 4 champions, and she followed it up with another win in Season 5 with Helio Castroneves, making her the only pro besides Cheryl Burke to win twice.

Julianne grew up with her ten siblings in Utah. A born entertainer, Julianne has always loved singing, dancing and acting and at the age of 10 she left her home and family to move to the other side of the world to live and train with her coaches in London. While living there, Julianne partnered with Mark Ballas (the son of her world renowned coaches Corky and Shirley Ballas). It was with Mark that Julianne won all of her titles. Julianne is the youngest (and only) American dancer to have become both International Latin Youth Champion and Junior Blackpool World Latin Champion.

After graduating high school Julianne moved to Los Angeles to pursue her dreams of acting, dancing and singing. She landed a role as a dancer on ABC's game show Show Me The Money, and shortly after joined the Dancing with the Stars tour as a company dancer. When DWTS dancer Kym Johnson injured her arm, Julianne stepped in as her replacement and Cha Cha cha'ed across America with Season 1 DWTS competitor Joey MacIntyre. She was also Assistant Choreographer on Gwen Stefani's Wind It Up video and has recorded her debut country album.


Chuck Wicks

Everyone has heard the phrase “practice makes perfect” and though it’s a mantra more often associated with sports than songwriting, it’s just as apropos for that vocation as any other endeavor--just ask singer/songwriter Chuck Wicks.

Though he recently began taking the country format by storm with his hit debut single, “Stealing Cinderella,” Wicks spent several years paying his dues by parking cars and writing songs. He developed his craft, apprenticing with some of the top songwriters on Music Row. That hard work pays off on “Starting Now,” Wicks’ RCA Records debut, which showcases the depth of his artistry as a vocalist and songwriter.

“If it wasn’t for the Music Row community and a lot of the songwriters around town, there’s no way I would be where I’m at now,” says Wicks, who wrote or co-wrote every song on his debut album, except one.

Growing up on his family’s farm in Smyrna, Delaware, Wicks immersed himself in a variety of music from traditional country to R&B and cites a diverse array of influences, among them Alan Jackson, Kenny Rogers and Brian McKnight. As much as he loved music, he really didn’t give much thought to making it a career. Like many young men, sports dominated his world, and he dreamed of being a professional baseball player. He moved south to attend Florida Southern College and play baseball, but it was during his senior year that the desire to play music began eclipsing his athletic aspirations.

“My passion for country music just kind of took over and I learned about Nashville,” recalls Wicks, who began performing during college. “I decided to take a couple of trips there and figure out how to get into music. I quit college two classes short of graduation and ended up getting a development deal on RCA.”

Long on desire and talent, but short on experience, the timing just wasn’t right, and that initial development deal didn’t lead to an album. As Wicks would learn, it takes so much more than talent to achieve success in the country music arena. If good looks and a great voice were the only ingredients necessary to launch a career, small town America wouldn’t be littered with the broken dreams of every aspiring artist who gave up and went home.

Giving up and going home never crossed Wicks’ mind. Instead he dug in deeper and spent the next several years writing songs, learning and practicing his craft alongside such well known Music Row writers as Monty Powell, George Teren, Rivers Rutherford, Neil Thrasher and Wendell Mobley and his brother Mike. “I had a lot of great songwriters take me under their wing and show me the ropes--how to sit down and put pen to paper and try to write a song. So that’s all I did for four years. I just sat in a writer’s room and wrote with some of the best writers in the world. I learned from them and just kept writing and developing my own style.”

Wicks would write songs during the day and at night he often found himself parking cars that belonged to some of the co-writers he’d just written with. “As soon as I moved here I had to get a job,” Wicks says. “I parked cars seven days a week at Fleming’s Steak House. I was writing during the day and working at night. Some of those songwriters that I was writing with, I would actually park their car at night when they’d go out to dinner. It was a humbling experience for sure. I knew that I had to work hard and I knew there was a time where it wasn’t going to be easy--and that was definitely the time--but I knew I just had to keep on going.”

When asked what kept him going during those lean years, Wicks replies: “I’ve always believed in myself. I knew I had work to do. I knew my songs had to get better and that’s why I really worked on the craft of songwriting. When you have a good meeting, it makes you want to stay a little longer. If you have a good writing appointment, you want to stay a little longer. When someone tells you ‘Man, I like your songs!’ or ‘I like your voice!’ it’s those little things that make you want to stick around and keep going for it.”

Perseverance paid off. Wicks landed a deal with RCA Records and began working on his album with producers Monty Powell and Dann Huff. The result is a compelling debut, a collection of songs that demonstrate a depth of artistry not usually found on a first album. The strength of the record is a reflection of the years Wicks spent honing his talent. There’s a warm, self-assured quality to his voice, and the songs give voice to the hopes, fears and dreams of today’s Americans.

“When You’re Single” is an unflinching look at a solitary life and the desire to be in love. The song boasts a warm, lilting tone reminiscent of James Taylor at his best. On the flip side, “She’s Gonna Hurt Somebody” is an up tempo ode to a woman who has been done wrong and is looking for revenge. “Man of the House” is a tender ballad about a young boy trying to help take care of his family while his father is away serving in the war. “Mine All Mine” showcases Wicks’ penchant for R&B and the soulful edge in his voice.

The first single, “Stealing Cinderella,” is about a guy asking his girlfriend’s dad for her hand in marriage and seeing all the photos of her growing up. It’s obvious she’s the apple of her dad’s eye but to him, the young man is “just some fella, riding in and stealing Cinderella.” “There are a lot of great songs that I can’t wait to get to, but as far as coming out of the box as a new artist, we wanted something that would stand out,” says Wicks of the song, which was inspired by a girlfriend whose job was playing Cinderella at Disney World. “Just the title alone, ‘Stealing Cinderella,’ makes you want to listen to it and when you listen to it, it’s such a great story. We knew it was the right choice.”

It’s just latest in a long line of right choices for Chuck Wicks. He’s a talented young artist, unafraid of hard work, and with a strong sense of his own musical identity. “This record reflects who I am as a person. I hope people will hear that and want to be a part of what I sing and write about,” says Wicks, who will take these songs on the road in 2008, opening for Brad Paisley. “I don’t think I’m like anybody else, and it translates through my music and the album that I made.”

It may have taken a few years to get to this point, but Wicks wouldn’t change a thing. “I’m a much better artist now,” he says. “I wasn’t ready before and now I am. I’m glad I parked cars for five years. It makes me appreciate everything that I’ve had to work for to get to this point.”

 

  06:17pm CST, 11/04/09
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