App Store

pecos bill

Another Holiday Gift from Us to You

 

by Holly Fink, Ruckus Media Staff Marketing Specialist

12/19/2010

A bit of big Ruckus news this weekend: we released free “lite” versions of The Night Before Christmas, narrated by Meryl Streep, Pecos Bill, narrated by Robin Williams, and The Velveteen Rabbit, also narrated by Streep, on iTunes. 

As relayed by Jim Young, our CEO, in our press release, "We want to offer families the opportunity to download a few beloved children’s stories that they can sync with Apple device gifts. Instead of giving a blank slate, they can, in turn, be giving gifts pre-loaded with the beginnings of an award-winning digital storybook library."

Having the stories available without video footage, this will allow you and your family to read the classic stories and record your own or loved one’s voice for personalized storytelling.  Our new lite versions make traveling lighter on the bag and the wallet, plus they're easy to preload for gifts and travel.

Upgrades to the full feature apps, which feature the videos, are available for $0.99 on iTunes. For a complete list of what we have to offer in our library, go to our Apps page, and get preloading.  Don't forget to let your friends know, too.

Jill's Corner: A Guest Post By Sunday from Adventures in Extreme Parenting

by Jill Smokler of Scary Mommy, Ruckus Media Contributing Writer

12/01/2010

Adventures in Extreme Parenthood

Today, I’m excited to introduce you to a friend of mine and my hero in all things parenting, Sunday Stilwell.  Sunday blogs at Adventures in Extreme Parenthood about raising two autistic boys while maintaining a sense of humor and (some amount of) sanity.  She is the sort of parent you wish every special needs kid had.  Hers are truly blessed…

Parenting The Trouble Brothers (Sam age 7 and Noah age 5) is very much like raising typical kids (or so I have been told) with one large exception.

My boys are autistic.  Both fall on the severe end of the autism spectrum and while they share a diagnosis their similarities end there.

Sam is mostly verbal and can request an item he needs or wants.  He adores loud music and is often found banging rhythmically on any object within his grasp.  He especially loves the sound of metal or wood objects. Sam is my whiz kid.  He taught himself to read at the age of 2 (which was long before he was talking) and at age 4 he taught himself to navigate the computer and locate his favorite websites and learning games.

Noah, on the other hand, can ask for a cookie or drink but is otherwise non-verbal.  He spends much of his day scripting lines from his favorite TV shows and books out loud to himself and can entertain himself for hours at a time with his foam letters which he uses to spell words and phrases on his bedroom floor.  Much of the time Noah appears to be in his own little world.  I am thankful it appears to be a happy world for the most part.

However, the boys are not complete opposites.  There is one item they both love with a fervent joy that is palpable.....Mommy's iPhone,

I have had to resort to keeping my smart phone on top of the refrigerator behind the baby gate that restricts the boys entry into our kitchen in hope of merely slowing them down in their attempt to snatch it.  Typically I can hear one (or both) of them trying to scale the baby gate and thwart their plans before they are successful.

However, at certain times the iPhone is theirs to enjoy.  When we are waiting for the school bus the boys are allowed to play with the phone and choose the games or videos they want to watch.  Recently both Trouble Brothers have developed a love for Ruckus Mobile Media Group's digital storybooks.  Both were enthralled with the first book, Pecos Bill, and Robin Williams' humorous voice and antics.  Sam especially loved replaying his favorite parts by a simple flick of the finger.

Just this week I downloaded 'Twas The Night Before Christmas and instead of playing the boys the narrated version by Meryl Streep I recorded my own voice telling the story.  Talk about making a HUGE difference in the boys' attention span!  Both looked at me when they heard the first words as if they were thinking, "How did Mommy get in that story?"  I can't tell you what a big deal that was to me.  To see their faces and the recognition of my voice.

I have beautiful memories of my mother reading me stories when I was a child. Our favorites were The Velveteen Rabbit and Tikki Tikki Tembo (which I hope someday Ruckus will include as well!).  In this day of digital immersion and our children spending more and more time at the computer, playing video games, or watching TV it is nice to know that a company like Ruckus has brought together the best of both worlds in a mobile app that keeps the love of storytelling alive.

Ruckus Apps Are For All Ages

 

by Allyson Kane, Ruckus Media Staff Marketing Specialist

11/22/2010

Pecos Bill on iPad"Mommy!  There's a cowboy story on Daddy's iPad!"

These are the words that my two-year-old daughter exclaimed on Sunday morning.

The app she was referring to was Pecos Bill, a storybook app that is part of our growing Rabbit Ears library.  Climbing up in the rocking chair that I have sat in and read stories to her every night since she was an infant, she settled in, brushed her hair out of her eyes and pushed the icon to open the app.  I watched her little expressive face as she listened to Robin Williams read the story about how Pecos Bill grew up in the Wild West.  She mimicked the howling of the wolves and pointed out the moon in the illustrations.

I didn't know if this app would be too much for a two-year-old, but the video feature accompanied by Robin Williams' amazing impersonations and voice inflections kept her engaged through the entire story.  As a parent, I feel good about the fact that she's engaging with a story using the technology she and the rest of her generation are so familiar with.  As a part of the Ruckus Media team, it feels even better to be able to wholly endorse our products with my own personal experience.

Just in time for your own holiday travels, Pecos Bill is available on iTunes for just $1.99.  Don't miss out on the discounted rate, which is valid until Monday, November 29th.  Give your kids a chance to read along with Robin Williams as he narrates one of the classics.  Click here to download.

Weekly Ruckus Round-Up and a Special for your Cowboy

 

by Holly Fink, Ruckus Media Staff Marketing Specialist

11/19/2010

 

 

Pecos Bill

 

Yee-haw! A special for your cowboy!

Starting today, we're running an exciting promotionPecos Bill, the story about the bravest cowboy in the Wild West, and narrated by Robin Wiliams and with music by Ry Cooder, is on sale for only $1.99 a download on iTunes

Williams once said that “No matter what people tell you, words and ideas can change the world.”   Both he and the story of Pecos Bill are an inspiring combination, so head over to iTunes to pick up your copy.  The promotion ends on Monday.

This week we continued to feel the blogger love.  Faith, Family and Love is running a Ruckus giveaway which will run until November 27th – so head on over to enter.  Other sites are running giveaways, and printed generous reviews including Mom Confessionals, Baby Razzi (the giveaway runs until November 21st) and ToyxPlosion (which runs thorugh November 29th).  Mommy Goggles also ran a review, with an adorable picture of her son attached watching one of our apps.  We also had featured reviews on Apps 4 Kids and NYC Single Mom.

Stay tuned for more Ruckus news on Monday and head on over to iTunes for your copy of Pecos Bill!

Jill's Corner: I'll Let Robin Williams Do the Reading

by Jill Smokler of Scary Mommy, Ruckus Media Contributing Writer

11/04/2010

Child readingI’ve always loved to read. As a kid, I would devour books nightly as the rest of my family lay sound asleep, barely keeping my eyes open the next day at school. I have fond memories of my mom tearing up as Charlotte took her last breaths and flipping pages furiously in The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe. Reading is something I want my children to value as well, and I really want to love reading to them. But, it's not always so easy.

At the end of the day, I am spent. While I love the idea of cuddling with my kids and savoring pages together, what I really want to do is snuggle with my laptop after reading one measly story. But, the kids have other ideas. They want books! Lots of books! So, I do something I'm not proud to admit: I skip pages. I skip paragraphs, too. Sometimes I change the whole story around, if I'm really feeling lazy.

The only problem with this? I have a daughter who is reading now and she's on to me. Mommy, that's not what it says! Mommy, you missed something! Mommy, what about this part? Mommy, Mommy, Mommy!

Sigh. I think, tonight, I'll let Robin Williams do the reading.

Teachers & Touch Screens

by Gale Pryor, Ruckus Media Contributing Writer

11/3/2010

Teachers are often the earliest adopters of new technology. If a device or software can help them be more effective in the classroom, they’re all for it. While hands-on learning with blocks and paints will always be a part of their students’ days, many teachers also see how iPads, iPods and other touch screen devices attract and engage kids. They’re putting that attraction to work to teach literacy, math skills and social skills. Parents can put their iPads to work at home in many of the same ways.

How are trailblazing teachers using iPads in their classrooms? It’s early yet, and many more innovations are sure to come. Here are the best ideas we’ve found to date for integrating touch screen technology and early learning:

Top Ten List of Cool Ideas from the Classroom:

1. Create an iPod/iPad activity center. Kids rotate through this new center along with other hands-on activities in the class. Teachers report that kids are so comfortable with touch screens that they teach each other, share and explore independently and that “so much learning takes place when they do!”

Velveteen rabbit screenshot2. Collaboration and brainstorming. Because several kids can work on an iPad at once, drawing with their fingertips they can sketch out ideas, showing each other what they mean while they talk. Several apps even give each user a different colored line so kids can see who has drawn which part of their creation. Read aloud The Velveteen Rabbit  app from Ruckus, and ask children to draw their best-beloved stuffed animals, each in a different color, then brainstorm a story in which each animal is a different character.

3. Share picture books apps. Our library of classic picture book apps collect all the stories that belong in every child’s memory: The Velveteen Rabbit, John Henry, Johnny Appleseed, Pecos Bill, and Tom Thumb and the Knights of the Round Table . Read aloud by Meryl Streep, Robin Williams, John Cleese, and other celebrities, each story is accompanied by beautiful illustrations and music by some of today’s best-loved artists. Each story can be listened to, read aloud, or watched as a video. Best of all, you or your child can record your own voices reading the stories, for an intimate reading experience at home or away.

4. Record kids reading aloud. Listening to your child reading is more than heartwarming. When children read aloud, recording and listening to their own voices as they do, word comprehension and pronunciation improve dramatically. When they record themselves at different points in the year, they can hear themselves becoming better and better readers.  Record your child reading aloud—and even singing!--the rhythmic lines of John Henry, an American folk hero.

5. Explore the world of game apps: Amazing new educational game apps help preschoolers to practice math, pattern, color and spatial concepts, as well as coordination, concentration and motor skills. Teachers carefully select apps to ensure that every activity supports independent learning. Apps popular with teachers and parents alike can be found at Tech Talk for Moms

6. Play board games: Scrabble, Monopoly, Chutes and Ladders! Classic board games are now apps for the iPad. Teachers know that playing board games is a rich opportunity for children to practice social skills, develop their vocabularies and practice math skills. And when the board is a touch screen, all those tiny pieces won’t get lost.

johnny appleseed7. Share kid-created podcasts. Even kindergarteners can create their own podcasts.  A classic story like Johnny Appleseed can inspire a podcast that begins with reading the story aloud. Follow the story with a recording of kids talking about it and everything they know about apples and pioneers. Add an apple recipe at the end, and you’ve got a podcast to share with classmates and grandma.

8. Play the piano. Teachers rarely have space for pianos right in their classrooms, but can easily handle a keyboard app on an iPad.

9. Tell a story together. After reading the tall tales of Pecos Bill, the orneriest cowboy in the west, ask children to tell their own tall tales. If you have a bunch of kids, children can add to each other’s story, each recording for one minute before the next adds to it, making the tale taller with each new teller! Upload photos or use a drawing app to illustrate the story.

10. Subscribe to magazines. More and more periodicals are being re-imagined for the iPad format in amazing ways—and a few of these are for children. A few magazines for sports and science fans may also be appropriate for classrooms.

Pretty cool, don’t you agree? How is your child’s teacher using touch screen technology? How do you support your child’s learning at home? Are you a teacher? Tell us your best ideas and we’ll share them here!

Message from Jim

10/19/2010

Giving Kids What They Like Most in an App
Jim Young, Chief Operating Officer

Great stories, told well, is an art form that has endured the test of time. That’s why we’ve joined forces with Rabbit Ears Entertainment for our initial launch.  They share the belief that quality entertainment can enhance a child’s appreciation of literature, art and music while also having fun.  By combining today’s most well-known, talented celebrities with great musicians and beautiful animation we can inspire children to appreciate and learn to love classic tales, art and music as much as we do. 

The apps that we've launched include all of these ingredients, and many more. They are classic stories like The Velveteeen Rabbit and Pecos Bill whose magic is enjoyed by adults and children alike.  Our apps are extremely unique as they combine a celebrity telling the story with wonderful animation and music.  In addition, these apps include additional features in which you can read the story, watch the video or record your own voice.  I am blessed to have two wonderful and curious kids.  They can’t keep their hands off of my phone or ipad.  But kids aren’t the only ones who enjoy the features of our apps.  Our app's record-your-own voice option allows parents to stay close to their children even when they are far away. For me this is really a nice feature.  Whether I am off on a business trip, working late (often lately) or just out to dinner, I am still able to tell my two children a bedtime story. 

We’re lucky to have the original executive producing team from Rabbit Ears, Mark Sottnick and Doris Willhousky, working with us to maintain the original works and content but to help transform them into a ground-breaking, new experience.  Together, we’re making sure not to let the technology drive the original works, but rather enhance the story and reading experience through a smart phone or tablet’s touch screen and recording capabilities.

We’ve retained the original video, illustration and narration and re-formatted it for the iPad,iPhone, iPod and soon to come, the Android.  This has enabled us to give kids what they like most in an app, entertainment and interactivity. 

Here’s the really fun stuff, our original storybook apps, soon to be released, incorporate even more features that kids love – hot spots, gaming, painting and story creation.  We have partnered with many New York Times Bestselling authors (including Jon Scieszka, Rosemary Wells, Andrew Clements, Alan Katz and David Carter, to name a few) in agreement to develop original works. Unlike many children’s apps where touch screen technology is used as an add-on to the story, we at Ruckus believe the story comes first and the technology is used to propel the story.  We even have an app where your child has to “drive” to another part of the story using the iPad’s accelerometer funcitionality.  How cool is that!  Our exclusive partnerships allow for terrific storytellers to develop and enhance their story even further, through technology and interactivity.  And this is just the start!

This new art form marries and leverages todays everyday mobile devices so children can interact with a story in new and exciting ways.  So, go ahead and check out our apps that launched this weekend in the iTunes store.  We look forward to your feedback!

A Week of Winning! The Lucy’s, Willette Designs & Ruckus Media Twitter Contest

by Holly Fink, Ruckus Media Staff Marketing Specialist

10/18/2010

We’re excited to announce a special week-long promotion with our friends at  Lucy’s  and Willette Designs!   Each winner (multiple winners each day!) will receive 1 Ruckus Media storybook app, a cookie prize pack featuring a variety of delicious gluten-free cookies from Lucy’s and a Photographer’s Bag O’Tricks from Willette Designs (with games and tips that encourage kids to smile for the camera!).  A $35 value.  How great is that?!

Want to enter to win? It’s easy! Simply follow us on Twitter (@RuckusMedia) and be on the lookout for chances to win all week long!

WilletteLucy's

Here are the Ruckus Read-Play-and-Record-Along apps YOU could win:

· The All-American story of Johnny Appleseed, narrated by Garrison Keillor with music by Mark O’Connor.

· The timeless tale of a man born with a hammer in his hand, John Henry, narrated by Denzel Washington with music by B.B. King.

· The Western classic, Pecos Bill, narrated by Robin Williams, with music by Ry Cooder.

· The not-so-tall tale of Tom Thumb and the Knights of the Round Table narrated by John Cleese, with music by Elvis Costello.

· The classic story of The Velveteen Rabbit, narrated by Meryl Streep with music by George Winston.

So what are you waiting for?  Starting following us on Twitter (@RuckusMedia) and get ready for giveaways galore!

A Ruckus App is Born

by Holly Fink, Ruckus Media Staff Marketing Specialist

10/15/2010

Hear that noise?  Yes, it’s champagne corks popping here at Ruckus Media headquarters!  Apple has just flipped the switch and our apps are live! 

Head over to the store now to find one these digital classic stories: Pecos Bill, Johnny Appleseed, and John Henry. Look out for The Velveteen Rabbit and Tom Thumb coming up soon!

Pecos BillJohnny AppleseedJohn Henry

Then join us on Twitter, YouTube, Flickr or Facebook and let us know what you think.

The Ruckus Media Celebrity Factor

by Holly Fink, Ruckus Media Staff Marketing Specialist

10/14/2010

The iPad can do a lot more than just display static pages, books and magazines. Thanks to the latest technology, the iPad, iPod and iTouch can read stories aloud and enrich a classic tale. The digital enhancements really bring the story to life.  Imagine all of these features  PLUS having your favorite celebrity read your child a bedtime story.  How cool is that?!  Each one of Ruckus Media’s upcoming releases is not only narrated by a well-known celebrity, but the music is equally as familiar.  You want to hear about star power?  The list of names attached to our brand is staggering: Meryl Streep, Jack Nicholson, Whoopi Goldberg, Elvis Costello – and these are only a few.  Each talent contributes something special to every story, making your children want to play and hear the stories over and over.

In one of the first apps we’re launching, The Velveteen Rabbit, Meryl Steep’s narration (delivered with an impeccable British accent, if we do say so ourselves) shifts from the Velveteen Rabbit and the boy to the wild rabbits, to the rough Nana, who rules the nursery where the rabbit lives.  Joined by the music of George Winston, the duo creates a beautiful version of the story that children are sure to love.

Your child will go back in time with Ruckus Media’s soon-to-be released version of The Legend of Pecos Bill, narrated by Robin Williams, with music by Ry Cooder.  Imagine them learning the timeless tale of the man born with a hammer in his hand, John Henry, narrated by Denzel Washington, with music by B.B. King.   Coming out at the same time are two other classics you’ll want to introduce to your kids: the not-so-tall tale of Tom Thumb, narrated by John Cleese, with music by Elvis Costello, and the All-American story of  Johnny Appleseed, narrated by Garrison Keillor, with music again by B.B. King.

For a sneak peek of each of these upcoming releases, check out the clips on our YouTube page.

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