National Anthem Girl (2019) - full transcript

'National Anthem Girl' tells the story of Long Island native, Janine Stange, who, in 2014, became the first person in U.S. history to perform The Star Spangled Banner in all 50 states.

(NO AUDIO)

Okay...(SIGHS)

The first time I ever
sang The National Anthem

was before a homecoming basketball
game at my high school on

Long Island. I was 16 years old. All I

remember is being so nervous, that I had
this death grip on the microphone cord,

and after I finished singing, I walked
over to where my mother was standing and I

said, "Mom, I can't open my hand!"

(EPIC STRING MUSIC)

♪ Oh, say,

can you see... by the dawn's



early light... ♪

(EPIC STRING MUSIC)

(EPIC STRING MUSIC)

♪ ...what so proudly we hailed, at the

♪ twilight's last gleaming... ♪

(EPIC STRING MUSIC)

(EPIC STRING MUSIC)

(EPIC STRING MUSIC)

♪ ...whose broad stripes and bright ♪

♪ Stars through the perilous ♪

♪ Fight...♪ (EPIC STRING MUSIC)

(EPIC STRING MUSIC)

(EPIC STRING MUSIC)

(EPIC STRING MUSIC) ♪.
..o'er the ramparts ♪



♪ We watched were ♪

♪ So gallantly streaming... ♪

(EPIC STRING MUSIC)

(EPIC STRING MUSIC)

(EPIC STRING MUSIC)

(EPIC STRING MUSIC)

(EPIC STRING MUSIC)

(EPIC STRING MUSIC) ♪...and
the rockets' red glare ♪

♪ The bombs bursting ♪

♪ In air, gave ♪

♪ Proof through the night that our ♪

♪ Flag was still there... ♪

Hi. My name is Janine Stange and I'm

The National Anthem Girl

(MAJESTIC ORCHESTRAL MUSIC)

(MAJESTIC ORCHESTRAL MUSIC)

(MAJESTIC ORCHESTRAL MUSIC)

(MAJESTIC ORCHESTRAL MUSIC)

(MAJESTIC ORCHESTRAL MUSIC)

(MAJESTIC ORCHESTRAL MUSIC)

(MAJESTIC ORCHESTRAL MUSIC)

JANINE: I grew up on Long Island,
New York, in a very normal,

very Italian, very patriotic family. My

great grandparents came here from
Italy at the turn of the century.

(CAMERA CLICK SOUNDS)

(CAMERA CLICK SOUNDS)
JANINE: Every day after school and every

weekend, I worked in my parents' bagel shop.
We had the best bagels,

but I really think that people
came in just to see my mother.

Everyone loved her, and there were
lots of regulars, but there was one

group that she had a major soft spot for...
and that was

our men and women in uniform.
She always went above and beyond

to make sure they felt like a million
bucks when they came in. That really

made an impression on me.

JANINE: I was always singing The National
Anthem... at high school functions, later

on in college, community events...
just anywhere and everywhere I could.

I loved singing The National Anthem.

In 2007, I moved to I.A.
with the intention of recording a CD.

(ROCK MUSIC)

(ROCK MUSIC)
JANINE: I had a producer...

had lots of connections... and I wound up

spending all my savings on this album.
Unfortunately, it didn't

turn out to be something I was uber proud
of, and not the album where

I would finally make it.
It wasn't a good thing.

JANINE: My family thought I was staying
in I.A. because I was having such

a great time, but the truth was I
didn't even have enough money to

move back to New York, and I didn't
want to tell them this. So here I was,

at this point in my life,
tired from all the rejections of trying

to self-start a music career.
But most of all, I was concerned

about my lack of direction and the
time I spent floundering because of

my 'when-then'.
A 'when-then' is a statement that

Goes something like this...
"When I win the lottery,

then I'll buy my parents a new house."

"When I feel motivated,
then I'll go to the gym."

My personal 'when-then' statement
always went something like this...

"When I get that record deal and have a
hit song, then I'm going to give back."

JANINE: And I had no idea
what that meant: I didn't know

what I was going to do. I just knew,
"when I'm this famous philanthropic

artist, then I'm going to give
back and make a big difference!"

JANINE: But my 'when-then' wasn't happening,
because my music career wasn't taking off,

and most of all, because of the
'when-then', I was feeling disgruntled.

JANINE: I'm not sure what
specifically happened to cause it...

maybe I was just fed up...
but something changed inside of me one

day... and I stopped the insanity of
the 'when-then delusion' and decided,

"I'm going to do what I can with what I have

from where I am." I'd like
to say I came up with that,

but it's a modified Theodore Roosevelt quote.
So I asked myself,

"What do I have?" Well,
I could sing, and the one song

that I loved to sing was The
National Anthem. It was a song

that I believed in, and I'd been
singing practically all my life.

JANINE: What if I could use that song
to promote a dialogue about patriotism

and pride? And when I did that,
when I attached myself to something

that was bigger than me, instead of
feeling sorry for myself, that's when

my mind and my heart began to get on a roll.

JANINE: And shortly after that, it occurred to me,
" You know, nobody's ever sung The National Anthem

in all 50 states. That would be perfect!"
JANINE: Some people run marathons for

a cause. This will be my marathon.
I'll promote patriotism by being

the first person to sing The Star
Spangled Banner in all 50 states!

Now, how do I do that? Okay,

Here's the deal: I had no
corporate sponsorships...

no over-the-top connections...
no booking agent

support team...
and very little money in my bank account.

How in the world was I going to fly
all over the country, including Alaska

and Hawaii, and sing The
National Anthem in every state?

Then a light bulb sort of went off
in my head as I realized something:

JANINE: Since I was 16,
and over the years, I'd already sung

at events in New York, New
Jersey, Connecticut, Texas,

Arkansas, Maryland, Georgia,

Massachusetts, and California.
So I started off

the mission with 9 states
already under my belt. Just

41 states to go.

So I was all set. With the money I had
in my savings, I was just going to pay

as I went along and hope for the best.
One foot in front of the other.

And one other thing: In every
place I was going, every state,

every event, the focus was
going to be on the melody

as it was written.
No vocal acrobatics, no poetic

license. ♪ And the home, of the ♪

♪ Braaa-aaaave. ♪

JANINE: This song was not going to be my

my American Idol audition.
This was not my song. It was our song.

So that was settled.
All I had left to figure out was how to sing

The National Anthem in
41 states to make all 50.

JANINE: Okay, so my new-found mission
officially kicked off in Florida

on July 3rd, 2012. I sang The National

Anthem for the Single-A Tampa
Yankees at George Steinbrenner

Park. Okay, so we are here
in the main lobby of the

Tampa Yankees... so, I thought that we
would video some things so that you all

could see different memorabilia from the

Yankees that's here. We have a
picture of George & Joan Steinbrenner.

Some trophies. I don't think this is
the real one because I think it would

be in glass and somebody would be yelling
at me right now because I'm touching it.

This is my favorite piece of the whole place.

So there you have it. So, we're going to go
upstairs in a little while. This right here is

a, um, a artifact as well. It's my
hairclip because it's really humid outside,

and uh, I'm trying to keep it back so
I don't look like a crazy person when I

go out there and sing.
♪ And the home of the ♪

♪ Brave ( APPLAUSE AND CHEERING)

JANINE: Florida was State #10,

and I was off to the races. Next, I

sang in Williamsport, PA,
before the Williamsport Crosscutters

minor league baseball game... then it
was on to Newport, Rhode Island, where

I sang in the company of Pete
Sampras at the Tennis Hall of Fame

Championship Weekend. After that,
I sang for The Denver Outlaws at Mile High

Stadium, then it was on to Great
American Ballpark in Cincinnati, Ohio...

for the Reds versus the Mets game: My first

performance at a major
league baseball stadium.

State #15 was a pro Bullrider's event

in Greensboro, NC, and the spectacle of

an Italian girl from Long Island
surrounded by a sea of cowboy hats.

JANINE: I finished out 2012 at
another pro Bullriders event,

this one in Las Vegas, NV,
broadcast on CBS Sports.

So 2012 was over.
16 states under my belt. I felt like I

was making, you know, some progress.
But with 34

states still left to go,
I was starting to the enormity

of what I had committed to taking on.
I started off

2013 in The Windy City
for another pro Bullriders

event. State #18, I sang The Anthem

for The High School Dream Bowl in Salem. VA.

I also got a lesson how brutally
cold and windy the Southeast can

be at the end of January.
In July 2013, I sang

The National Anthem before a lacrosse
event sponsored by Nike in Beaverton, OR.

Bringing my total states up to 19. This event

was also where I received a
pair of fluorescent yellow Nikes

that would become my permanent travel
companions throughout every airport on my

journey. So for the entire year of 2013, I

only added 4 states to my total.
"Not bad," I said,

"19 states down, 31 more to go."
I wish could have added more,

but I had limited resources.
And hey, who cared

how long it took me to sing The Anthem in all
50 states. I mean, it's not like there was

a time limit, right? Wrong!

It was January, 2014,
and I was in Baltimore, Maryland.

As I was shutting the trunk
of my boyfriend's car, I

noticed something on the license plate.
It said, 'Star Spangled

200 dot com'. I grabbed my phone,

went to the website...
The Star Spangled Banner was

turning 200 years old that year,

2014, on September 14th. Oh my gosh.

What are the odds? I said, "That's it!
That has to be the completion

date... the goal that brings
this whole thing home!

What better way to raise awareness for
the song, and all the brave men and women

it represents? The 200th
anniversary of The National Anthem!"

I had never been so excited and so panicked

at the same time. It also meant that I had

exactly nine months to sing The
National Anthem in 31 states.

Cue the hyperventilating.

Okay, so that wouldn't be so bad.
I mean, that only meant, what,

like, 3 or 4 states a month? I could do

that, right? I had to find
events and convince people

to book me to sing at them in 31 states:

And of course, figure out to pay for all of it
while not getting kicked out of my apartment.

JANINE: My bank account would probably
get me through about 5 or 6 states.

I remember, I converted my bedroom
to, what I called, 'The Situation

Room'. I called every major

college, minor league, major league,
teams, charity events, anything

I could find. I would explain to them what I was
doing, and, hopefully, if they didn't hang up on me,

I would get booked.
RADIO HOST: Janine stange, aka national anthem

Girl, welcome to the show.
JANINE: Thank you. It's great to be on.

HOST: Well, you know, singing in all
50 states, that is an ambitious goal.

JANINE: I just, I felt for the need.
You know, The National Anthem

is turning 200 on September 14th, and

even prior to realizing that,
I always said I'd link to sing

The anthem in all 50 states.
HOST: I can tell in your voice, that's truly a passion

Of yours.
JANINE: It's really to promote awareness for

the fact that The National Anthem is
not just, like I said, a formality.

And there was also one other thing.
(JET SOUNDS)

(EPIC MUSIC)

I decided I wanted to give back even more.

JANINE: The sole purpose of the journey was
to honor our brave and raise awareness

that the song our armed
forces give meaning to

was about to turn 200. So I got

in touch with a woman named Carolyn Blashek.
She's the founder of

Operation Gratitude, which is an organization
that sends out thousands of care packages

every year to military personnel who are

deployed. And in those care packages, there's
always a handwritten note to people in

uniform. So I said to Carolyn,
"I'm going to all these venues

across the U.S...
what if every place I go, I set something

up so private citizens,
everyday people, from all

over the country,
write thank you notes to go into these

packages that you're sending out?"
And Carolyn said, "Go for it."

So with that, the bar on my
journey was raised again: I was

actually going to be able to attach
this act of gratitude to those who

serve while I was promoting
The National Anthem's 200th.

(LIVELY PIANO MUSIC)

(LIVELY PIANO MUSIC)

(LIVELY PIANO MUSIC)

TV HOST: One thing we all do,
no matter how big or small the game,

is stand, remove our hats,
as we listen to the nation's

song. One woman is trying to
remind everyone just how important

that its. Meet Janine Stange,
better known as, The National

Anthem Girl. Stange is performing
The Star Spangled Banner

in all 50 states this year. Alabama is

number 20 under her belt
as she spreads patriotism

throughout the country. Along with singing
our country's song, The National Anthem

Girl is collecting handwritten
thank you cards that will go into

care packages for deployed
military and veterans.

JANINE: Alabama marked the first venue where
I implemented the thank you cards for

the troops... and people loved it... which
was very exciting for me, to see college

students, older veterans,
young kids, all come

together at a table,
even kneeling on pavement, expressing their

gratitude, in their own words, to those
who protect our freedom. The mission

was coming to life.
So with this new sense of urgency, I

started to get a little wiser with how I
did my bookings to sing The Anthem: Meaning,

trying to choose states that
were next to each other, which

helped alleviate the expensive flights,

due to the dart board planning approach that
I'd used early on. So, on this particular trip

down south, I sang The Anthem at
The University of Mobile baseball

game in Alabama.
The next day, it was another baseball

game for Southern Miss
University in Hattiesburg, MS...

and the next day a baseball game
for The Tulane Green Wave in

New Orleans, LA. ♪ ...And the home

of the brave ♪

(CROWD CHEERS)

JANINE: Three days. Three states.
Now I was getting into a rhythm.

On April 1st, I had the honor of singing
The Anthem at the Orpheum Theater

in Phoenix for Navy Seal Marcus
Luttrell's Patriot Tour Event.

(EMCEE SPEAKING)

(EMCEE SPEAKING)

(EMCEE SPEAKING)

(EMCEE SPEAKING) (CHEERS AND APPLAUSE)

♪ Oh, say, can you see ♪

♪ By the dawn's early ♪

♪ Light... o'er the land ♪

♪ Of the free, ♪

♪ And the home of ♪

♪ The brave (CHEERS AND APPLAUSE)

(CHEERS AND APPLAUSE)

JANINE: The line at my

thank you card table was so long.
Priceless.

JANINE: The next day, I flew to

Utah, State #24, for the Utah Grizzlies

minor league hockey team.
Now, this was an interesting one. In the

past, when I've sung on ice.
They give you a rug to stand on.

JANINE: But not here. They swore it was
safer, but I was there with these high

heeled boots on with hockey players
whizzing past me during the intros.

Thank God I did not fall flat on my face.

The Utah trip was also when I realized
that it seemed a few people were beginning

to hear about what I was doing.
This nice couple who had been following me on

Twitter came to the game with their kids,
took me to dinner, and dropped me off

back at the airport. This journey
was starting to make me feel like

we are really all one big family.
It was nice.

JANINE: My next state was
Delaware: My halfway point. State

#25 out of 50. I was scheduled to sing The

National Anthem for The University of
Delaware Women's Lacrosse team, The Blue

Hens. Delaware was not only my midpoint
state, it was also my planes, trains,

and automobiles state.
To get to Wilmington, I

had flow from Utah to New
York, took a taxi to my

brother's house,
then too a subway to the Amtrack station,

and rode the train down to
Delaware, where I took the scenic

route to the stadium on foot.
But I did get good

photos. After I sang The
Anthem, I rode back to the

train station on a bus.
The only thing I was missing

was a boat. My next state that marked
the beginning of the second half of my

journey was West Virginia: State #26.

JANINE: West Virginia... let me
tell you about West Virginia.

I was scheduled to sing The
Anthem for The Musselman High

School Applemen baseball
game in Inwood, WV.

The day of the event,
the game got rained out. So,

since I was already there, and needed
a venue so I could add West Virginia

to my list of states,
the nice people at Musselman High offered

me an alternative sporting event. Donkey

basketball. Up until this point, I'd sung

on diamonds, gridirons, ice,

tennis courts, in boxing rings...

never before had I sung in the presence of

donkeys. If you told me
when I started out that

I'd be promoting patriotism
around a bunch of high

schoolers in helmets, indoors,
shooting baskets while

sitting on the back of donkeys...
it was actually pretty fun.

Smelly, obviously, but fun.

PRINCIPAL'S VOICE: ...all 50 states.
Last night, she sang for our donkey

basketball game, making us the 26th state

in which she has sung.
At this time, Janine Stange,

who lives in California,
is visiting us here this

morning, and she is going to open
up our announcements and our day

by singing our National Anthem.

JANINE: ♪ Oh, say, can you ♪

♪ See, by the dawn's early ♪

♪ Light... o'er the land ♪

♪ Of the free, and the ♪

♪ Home of the brave ♪

(APPLAUSE)

JANINE: The next day

I traveled to Charleston,
SC to perform The Anthem for

the Single-A Charleston River
Dogs of the South Atlantic League,

marking my singing of The Star
Spangled Banner in State #27.

JANINE: And right after South
Carolina, I headed back up

to New York to get ready for
what would be my most important

appearance yet. Quick sidebar. One the

questions I'm asked most often is...
was I getting compensated for singing

The Anthem in all these events.
The answer is no.

JANINE: I footed the bill
for all my travels to the

27 states I'd completed thus far.
That's plane tickets, train

tickets, rent-a-cars, cabs, clothes,

Ubers, busses, hotels, meals,

websites, printing my thank
you cards for all the troops...

all self funded - meaning
my own personal savings,

credit cards, frequent flyer miles...
all of which were

getting close to bottoming out.
So, back to my most

important upcoming appearance.

(CITY SOUNDS)
JANINE: I was scheduled to appear

live on the Fox & Friends
morning show on April 14th with

27 states down and 23 still to go.
I had just recently

Put together a crowdfunding page
to A: Make more people aware

Of what I was trying to
accomplish, and, B: Help

raise funds through donations so I
can complete my journey by September

14th. (JANINE, IN VIDEO) This is about
us, uniting as one

nation, for one song, our song,
The Star Spangled Banner...

so please, help support this mission.
Help me get this message out

to all 50 states by September 14th, our

National anthem's 200th anniversary.
JANINE: (NARRATION) An appearance

on a nationally-televised morning
program could not hurt my chances.

HOST: So far, she has
checked 27 states off

...hopes to complete her task by this
September, when our National Anthem turns

200 years old.
2ND HOST: Joining us now, Janine stange.

2ND HOST: Well, so 27 down. JANINE: Yes.
3RD HOST: We actually have a map right her

to take a look at here, so the red indicates those that you have
performed in already... you're booked in the pink states...

JANINE: Mm-hmm. 3RD HOST: The brown states, you're working
on it. Yes. And you're going to make this happen. Why

did you start this? JANINE: Really, there's
got to be respect, and I think that's

what my mission is, is to bring respect and
highlight that, so people can say, "You know

what? This is an awesome, you know, song."
HOST: You've got a job in Los Angeles.

How do you find the time?
How can you afford to do this?

JANINE: I..I don't... it's... amazing that I've been
able to do this. I've funded the whole half pretty much

by myself. Uh,
it's a miracle that I did that... but

I need to get done by September 14th,
and I need people's help at this point.

National exposure can be a beautiful thing.

Since I first started,
I spent all my time on the phone

...calling places to see
if they'd have me to sing

The Anthem,
and then trying to explain what I was

doing and why.
And now, I was getting inundated

with people contacting
me, offering me venues.

I remember, I got home from the
studio and was up for two days

straight, fielding calls
and replying to emails.

Sitting in my apartment, I felt like an
air traffic controller. I had all these

flight schedules and maps everywhere,
trying to figure out which venues

were close to state borders,
where the airports were, and how many

states I could hit within a two
hour radius of my anchor state.

And best of all,
locking in Anthem performances in states.

With a little under 5 months
left, and 23 states

to go, May, June,
and July could literally be described

With one word... "Whirlwind".

RADIO HOST: We have Janine
Stange, and, uh, she's

she's attempting to go to all
50 states and sing our National

Anthem in every state. Can you tell my
listeners, and you viewers on Ustream here,

Um, why you're doing this.
JANINE: (ON PHONE) I'm doing this because

I absolutely love America
and I love what The National

Anthem represents. It's, um,
it's not just a song, it's our song.

RADIO HOST: And how many are you up to
right now... 27? JANINE: (ON PHONE) 27...

JANINE: (ON PHONE) ...yes, tomorrow will be 28. Radio
HOST: Tomorrow will be 28? Where are you going tomorrow?

JANINE: (ON PHONE) New Mexico.
RADIO HOST: Oh, New Mexico! JANINE: May 6th, 2014,

JANINE: I sand The Anthem for the
Triple-A Albuquerque Isotopes in

Albuquerque, NM. On May 15th, I was

in Wisconsin and sang for The University
of Milwaukee Panthers baseball team.

JANINE: Wisconsin. Something
different happened in Wisconsin.

After hearing about a study that said one

third of all Americans don't
know the words to The National

Anthem, a Milwaukee reporter
from a local new station

had me walk up to random
people in town and do impromptu

duets, to see how many
people knew all the words.

JANINE: ♪ Oh, say, can you see... ♪

MAN: By the dawn's early light.
JANINE: ♪ What so proudly we hailed... ♪

WOMAN: At the twilight's last gleaming.
JANINE: ♪ Whose broad stripes and ♪

♪ Bright stars... ♪ REPORTER: Through.
WOMAN: ♪ Through... ♪

REPORTER: The.
WOMAN: Check this out...

JANINE: ♪...the ramparts we watched... ♪
WOMAN: Were so gallantly streaming.

JANINE: ♪ ...and the rockets' red glare... ♪
MAN: ♪... bunch of bombs ♪

♪ In the air... ♪ REPORTER: No, no, no...
JANINE: ♪ ...gave proof through the night... ♪

MAN: ♪... that our land was still there ♪
REPORTER: Our flag... our flag.

MAN: Yeah, and our flag, too.
JANINE: ♪ ...oh, say, does that star spangled... ♪

WOMAN: ♪ ...banner yet wave... ♪

JANINE: ♪... o'er the land of the free... ♪

WOMAN: ♪ ...and the home of the brave ♪

JANINE: Yayyy!
REPORTER: Wow, that was amazing.

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

( RADIO HOST VOICE)

( JANINE VOICE)

( RADIO HOST VOICE) (JANINE VOICE)

(JANINE VOICE)

JANINE: May 22nd found
me in Clarinda, Iowa,

for the Clarinda Chamber
of Commerce Annual Golf

Tournament... and I think that was the
first time I ever performed The Anthem

without a microphone. ♪ ...And the home of ♪

♪ The brave ♪

(APPLAUSE)

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

JANINE: The next

day, I was in Nebraska for the Omaha
Parks and Rec Bridgebeats event.

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

JANINE: And the next day,
I sang in Maryville, MO.

Missouri... okay, so I'd never
been to this part of the country

before, so, as I was driving through
the state, I kept looking at all these

great views of the countryside,
with this big sky and all these

cows and horse... they were like paintings...
and I kept stopping the car

to take pictures for my social media pages.
It just so surreal to me...

and then, some Missouri Good Samaritan saw
me by the side of the road and stopped to

see if I needed help. I was, like, "No,
I'm just taking pictures of all the cows!"

Missouri was also the venue where
two local DJ's had me convinced

that both snipe hunting and cow
tipping were real sports. They even

Offered to take me snipe shooting.
DJ: ...yeah, snipe hunting's another thing, uh,

DJ: Because normally, they... well...
JANINE: Oh, a snipe is an animal? Just asking...

JANINE: I want to know what a snipe looks like now.
DJ: Janine, there's no such thing

As snipe. (LAUGHTER)
JANINE: Comedians.

JANINE: May 26th, Tulsa, okay,

was another humbling intersection
of sports and patriotism. I sang

The Anthem at The Patriot Cup
Invitational Golf Tournament, hosted by

Folds of Honor. Folds of Honor
provides scholarships to children

of fallen or disabled heroes.
I'll never forget

the sight I saw as I was going
into the building to sing.

JANINE: Two little boys,
dressed in patriotic colors, standing

at this memorial statue out front.
As I walked closer,

I realized they weren't just playing
around near the statue: They were

looking at the names inscribed on it.
Looking for

A name: Their dad... Who had made the

ultimate sacrifice in combat.
They were Gold Star Kids.

JANINE: While so many kids are
eating hot dogs and hamburgers,

happy to have a day off of school,
these two sons were remembering

their dad.

Since that day, I use that experience
of seeing those two little boys

to explain the difference...
the very important difference... between

Veterans Day and Memorial Day.
Veterans Day honors those

who served, and are still with us.
Memorial Day

is for the fallen.

Oklahoma, State #33,

was also where I was coined for the
first time. I was given a challenge coin,

which is a medallion
bearing a military insignia.

My coin was presented to me
by American hero, Major Ed

Pullido, who lost his leg
when he was hit by an IED

in 2004.

(DOG SLED SOUNDS)

JANINE: You'd think my stop in Alaska
would be for a dog sledding event,

but it was actually singing The Anthem for
The Collegiate Summer League baseball game

between The Anchorage Bucs and The
Glacier Pilots. It was Military

Appreciation Day at the ballpark.

Also, while I was there,
I saw my first ever moose while I was on a

sightseeing trip at Katmailand
National Park near Anchorage, where

I also encountered a slight
timing problem. You see,

that time of year, it doesn't get
dark, so you can lose track of time.

I came very close to getting locked
inside the park. That was June 8th,

in Alaska, State #34. A week

later, I marked off Kansas
as State #35. I sang

The Anthem for The Independent
League Kansas City T-Bones.

HOST: Welcome to Community America Ballpark. I am
Matt Fulks, director of broadcasting & media relations, along with

Janine Stange, better known
as The National Anthem Girl.

HOST: This will be her 35th
state out of, you know, about 50.

That you're going to try to hit before
middle of September. JANINE: That's 15

Left. It's been quite an undertaking.
HOST: 9-11 has

a huge impact on everyone in this country,
but especially has a huge impact on

People in New York. JANINE: Yep.
HOST: Did that precipitate any of this for you?

JANINE: It definitely played a part, absolutely.
You know, I was there when it happened. I

was actually supposed to be in the city
that day. My mom was like, "I don't think

you should go.." and I ended up not going,
and thank God I'm here today. The National

Anthem causes you to think of those
things, and, uh, it was tough... you know,

and that really drives it home, how important
it is for us to be one. What's great about

this is, you know, going through every state,
you're really promoting awareness, and people

are really thinking, "I should tell my kids
what this really means," and it's causing a

dialogue, that, you know, I'm happy to
help, uh, you know, perpetuate.

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

JANINE: So that brings us

up to State #36. Oh, my

goodness... Wallace, Idaho. I was

given the opportunity to
sing somewhere very special.

I sang The National Anthem from
The Center of the Universe.

Wallace, Idaho, is this little mining

town of about 800 people, and they claim to

actually have the center of the
universe right there, in the middle

of the intersection of Bank and 6th Street.

JANINE: So when I got there,
I wasn't sure what to expect...

but it turned out to be one of the
stops that I talk about the most.

Elvis joined me on stage. An artist gave me a

litho portrait of Marilyn Monroe.
And I received a silver coin that

was salvaged from The Great Fire of 1910.
But when the time

came for me to sing The Anthem,
it was like something out of a movie.

The whole town showed up.
It was such an incredible

experience: An entire community
standing shoulder-to-shoulder

To honor America.
JANINE: ♪... and the home of ♪

♪ The brave (CHEERS)

When I had

gotten there, the organizer of the
event, Dave Deroos, said to

me, "When you get here,
just follow me: And you'll see me, because

I'm in a yellow ATV." (JANINE VOICE)

(JANINE VOICE)

(JANINE VOICE) So,

we dropped off my bags...
we went ziplining... we had so much fun...

Wallace, ID had like, so much stuff
going on... everybody was so friendly.

WALLACE MAN: We've screwed it up
every year for the last 5 years!

JANINE: It's all screwed up.

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

JANINE: I needed Idaho... State 36.

JANINE: The Center of the Universe,
and my breath of fresh air.

Okay...

I still had 14 states to go,
and a little under 12 weeks

to get it done.
After I said goodbye to all the nice

people in Wallace, I drove back
west to Washington State to sing

For the class-a Spokane Indians.
JANINE: ♪ ...Oh, say,

♪ does that star spangled ♪

♪ Banner yet wave ♪

♪♪

♪ O'er the land of the ♪

♪ Free, and ♪

♪ The home of the ♪

♪ Brave (CHEERS AND APPLAUSE)

(SOMBER WOODWIND MUSIC)

(SOMBER WOODWIND MUSIC)
(DISTANT TARMAC SOUNDS)

(DISTANT AIRPORT SOUNDS)
(SOMBER WOODWIND MUSIC)

(SOMBER WOODWIND MUSIC)
(DISTANT AIRPORT SOUNDS)

(SOMBER WOODWIND MUSIC)

After I was done with

Spokane and Idaho,
I was on my way back and I was in the

airport. Standing on line in front of me was

a man who was carrying a US Army garment bag.

And, you know, I always would strike
up a conversation if I saw somebody was

in the military... and I was like, "Hey,"
I said, "where you headed?" And instead, he

told from where he had just come...
and that was his friend's

funeral. He escorted his friend's body home.

It was Corporal Justin Clouse. He had

given his life for our freedom on June 8th,

2014. This was his friend,
and he had just been with

all of Justin's family.
After he checked through security, I

turned around, and I remember looking
through, he was going through Gate A...

and I just watched him...
like this solitary figure...

with this heavy burden... walking

alone. (SOMBER PIANO MUSIC)

(SOMBER PIANO MUSIC)

(SOMBER PIANO MUSIC)

(SOMBER WOODWIND MUSIC)

(SOMBER WOODWIND MUSIC)

(MUSIC FADES)

(MONTAGE RADIO HOST VOICES)

(RADIO HOST VOICE) (JANINE VOICE)

(RADIO HOST VOICE #2)

(RADIO HOST VOICE #2)

(MONTAGE RADIO HOST VOICES)

(MONTAGE RADIO HOST VOICES)

(MONTAGE RADIO HOST VOICES)

(RADIO ANNOUNCER VOICE)

(RADIO HOST #3 VOICE)

(RADIO HOST #3 VOICE)

(JANINE VOICE)

RODEO ANNOUNCER: And now, we welcome

in The National Anthem Girl, Janine Stange...

she's on a mission. She's on a
mission to sing our beautiful song in

all 50 states in honor
of our nation's heroes...

Janine's performance
tonight is the 38th state...

which she made the beautiful state
of Wyoming... (APPLAUSE AND CHEERS)

RODEO ANNOUNCER:
Ladies and gentlemen, our National

Anthem...

(JANINE BEGINS TO SING)
JANINE: My next stop was in Cody, WY, for

The Cody Stampede Rodeo.
The president of the rodeo...I

didn't even realize rodeos had presidents...
had actually seen me

on the news back in April and
invited me to sing at the Stampede.

The people there were like it was the
WIld, Wild West... but I

tell you... there was an opening
prayer, and every single person

bowed their head. One nation under God.

And when The Anthem was sung,
everyone stopped, stood with their hand

over their heart, and sang along.

It was such a moving experience... being
right there in the middle of what was truly

the heart and soul of America.

JANINE: (SINGING)
♪ ...that our flag was still ♪

♪ There ♪

As you might have guessed,
July 4th I was somewhere

singing The National Anthem.
The venue was Red Lodge, MT...

and the event... what are the odds... another

rodeo. (JANINE VOICE)

(JANINE VOICE)

( JANINE VOICE)

( JANINE VOICE)

( JANINE VOICE)

(JANINE VOICE) ( COWBOY VOICE)

JANINE: The event was great...

people were so into it...
4th of July... but something else

from my visit to Montana
literally stopped me in my tracks.

People we coming up to my thank you
card table like always... lining up

to fill out cards for the troops...
and an older man walked

up to the table and was watching
the others filling out cards:

And I could tell their actions
meant a lot to him... so I

asked, "Did you serve?"...and
he looked at me and said,

"No, I didn't. And I've

Regretted it every day of my life."
JANINE: He went on to explain how, when he

was 18, several of his friends had
gone off to serve, and a lot of them

didn't come back. As if on cue,

the wind picked up, and the thank you
cards began to blow off the table.

With tears still in his eyes,
he told me he would be back. About

10 minutes later, he came walking back
up, and handed me a rock.

He said, "This is for you,
from Montana with love." He

told me he looked for a rock that was shaped
like a heart: And he placed it on the pile of

thank you cards to keep them from
blowing away again. I always say

this rock was the most
priceless gift anyone gave

me on my journey. You may have regrets
in your past, but never let that

stop you from serving, now or in the future.

JANINE: State #40 was Indiana,
at the South Shore Car Show in

South Shore, IN. State #41 was

New Hampshire...
my first NASCAR event, singing The Anthem

before The Sprint Cup at New
Hampshire Motor Speedway.

(LOUD RACE CAR SOUNDS)

(LOUD RACE CAR SOUNDS)

(LOUD RACE CAR SOUNDS)

(LOUD RACE CAR SOUNDS)

In a town called 'Loudon', no less.

(JANINE SINGING) Oh, say, does that star ♪

♪ Spangled banner yet ♪

♪ Wave, o'er the ♪

♪ land of the free, ♪

♪ And the home of the ♪

♪ Brave ♪

RADIO HOST: 42 under your belt.
JANINE: (LAUGHS)

JANINE: I continued my New England
loop singing The Anthem for

WTSA Radio in Brattelboro, VT.

(HOST VOICE) (JANINE VOICE)

(JANINE VOICE) ( HOST VOICE)

(HOST VOICE) (JANINE VOICE)

(JANINE VOICE) (HOST VOICE)

FEMALE RADIO HOST #1: The rain cleared out,
the sun is out, and it's doing that just

FEMALE RADIO HOST #1: Who is arriving in our
wonderful state today? FEMALE RADIO HOST #2: Janine

FEMALE RADIO HOST #2: Stange! FEMALE RADIO HOST #1: Janine
Stange, otherwise known as National Anthem Girl...

JANINE: I headed up to Sanford, ME,
where I sang for The Sanford Mainers

of The New England Summer Collegiate League.
Something that never happened

before happened there.
Broose D'Moose, the Mainers' mascot,

made a beeline over to my table and
filled out a thank you card for the

troops. It was the first time a
mascot had ever done that for me:

And as crazy as it sounds,
that image, of a man

dressed as a moose in a baseball uniform,

who was pouring his heart out with words
that he was writing in that thank you card...

it meant so much to me.

JANINE: August 2014, my last full

month before the deadline,
started off with an upper Midwestern bang.

Over the course of 4 days, I sang The Anthem

for The Fargo-Moorhead Redhawks of
The Independent Pro Baseball League

In Fargo, Nd...
ANNOUNCER: ...Janine's performance tonight in Fargo

ANNOUNCER: Marks North
Dakota as her 44th state.

ANNOUNCER: Please join The National Anthem
Girl, Janine Stange... (APPLAUSE AND CHEERS)

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

JANINE: ...The American Legion Division
Two Championship in Milbank, SD,

where I took lots of photos of hay...
(JANINE SINGING) and the ♪

♪ Home of the brave ♪

( CHEERS AND APPLAUSE)

ANNOUNCER: On behalf of American Legion Post 9,
The City of Milbank, the state of South Dakota,

ANNOUNCER: We present Janine Stange
with a bat to commemorate the day.

ANNOUNCER: Janine, thank you for your passion in
honoring our great nation and our true heroes...

ANNOUNCER: Both past, present and
future servicemen. Janine, thank you

ANNOUNCER: For allowing us
to be a part of your journey.

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)
JANINE: Then I drove

to Minnesota and sang for The St.
Paul Saints,

another IPBL team in St. Paul, MN. An

adorable group of kids... they were all
cousins... sang with me on the field.

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

JANINE: That was 3 states,
4 days, 46 states down, and

just 4 more to go before September 14th.
The end was

in sight. State #47 was my first

trip ever to Kentucky...
to sing for the Triple-A Louisville

Bats at Louisville Slugger Field.
The Kentucky stop was unique

Because I had something that
I'd never had before: My own

film crew. They followed me
around from the moment I landed

at the airport. When I saw the footage,
all put together, even I was surprised at

how much I was cramming
into each day on the road.

(AIRPORT TERMINAL SOUNDS)

(AIRPORT TERMINAL SOUNDS)

JANINE: Hi. How cute that is!

JANINE: What's your name? So this

is Louisville, KY,
this is my first time ever at this

airport, or hear...
I'm really excited, because it's my 47th

state, and, um, I get to sing for
The Louisville Bats tomorrow night...

Hi. This is, uh,

my, uh, house in Kentucky...
there's no horses here...

but I think there are horses, we just
haven't found them yet... here's breakfast...

real exciting,
a lot of yogurt I didn't eat yet...

so I probably should eat...
so, I'm printing my boarding

pass, I typically use my app...

feels like all I do is print boarding passes.

(TV STATION SOUNDS)

(TV STATION SOUNDS)

JANINE: Time is always of essence when you're
tweeting things out, because you have to

tell people when you're going to be on air, and you
don't always know when you're going to be on air. So...

HOST: This is Janine Stange, on the
tour of the U.S., where she will sing

The Star Spangled Banner in all 50
states by September the 14th, that's

the 200th year anniversary of the song
that written by Francis Scott Key.

HOST: Tell us, uh,
I'm so inspired by what inspired this

HOST: Idea in the first place... why did
you come up with this idea to do this?

JANINE: I love singing The National Anthem.
I love what it represents. HOST: You think?

JANINE: Yeah, I would have
to at this point, you know?

JANINE: ...what I may do is take my
camera out and take a photo of it.

(CAMERA CLICK SOUNDS)

...I sang The Anthem from the bleacher

section, I just remember everybody looking around, like,
"okay, there's somebody singing where is she?..."

...but I wasn't going to not sing The
Anthem... phone-calls (LAUGH) a lot of

phone-calls, a lot of looking online to
see, well, this state, this city,

and this state is pretty close to this one, so this could
work if I flew in and drove to the other state... it's a

lot of logistics...
Okay, this is it, people...

we're going to The Louisville
Slugger Field for The Louisville

Bats game in Kentucky... State 47!

JANINE: They have my intro.
HOSTESS: Yeah, see, I pulled it right off the Dropbox.

JANINE: That's good. HOSTESS: I want to make sure it's
the 45 intermission. JANINE: So, all you have to do is

Hold it like this...
ANNOUNCER: The bats are pleased to introduce the national

Anthem Girl, Janine Stange... she's

singing anthems in all 50 states,
in honor of our nation's heroes by September

14th, which is the 200th anniversary
of The Star Spangled Banner...

ladies and gentlemen... Janine Stange!

♪ Oh, say, can you

♪ by the dawn's early ♪

♪ Light, what so proudly ♪

♪ We hailed at the twilight's ♪

♪ last gleaming... ♪

♪ ...o'er the land of the free ♪

♪ And the home ♪

♪ Of the brave (CROWD CHEERS AND APPLAUSE)

ANNOUNCER: Ladies and gentlemen,

how about a welcome hand for The
National Anthem Girl, Janine Stange!

...to sing that song, it's not something
to take lightly... it's not a formality...

The national anthem is our song.
CAMERAMAN: That's perfect. Thank you so

Much, I appreciate it. Good luck on the rest of your journey.
JANINE: Oh, thank you. Thanks so much.

WOMAN: ...sign our name to it, or?
JANINE: You can even say where you're from, if you want...

because that's nice. You could even
say, like, you were at the Bats game...

TEEN: Sign it?
JANINE: Say something nice, like put like...

...a message that's going to go to somebody that's deployed,
so they're going to be reading something from you...

JANINE: Okay? Hi.

Do you want to sign a card?
ANNOUNCER:... at theanthemgirl on Twitter...

yep... and you can find all the different
events that are coming up, or that I

...a lot of people are, like, "Where did you
sing in Wyoming?"...so you can go to that

page and you'll see all the
events that I've performed for.

JANINE: Do you have to leave now?

WOMAN: Yeah.
JANINE: It's okay I can, we can take... thank you

so much. Did you see about that? You can follow
me on Facebook and Twitter, okay? The Kentucky

venue was also memorable,
because between innings, I went

into the stands to spend some time
with some veterans who were at the

game... listening to their stories about
serving our country, and getting their

viewpoints on what it meant to be a patriot.
The most profound

of these was a 92 year-old WWII veteran named

Cliff, who stormed
Normandy on D-Day... and he

told me what I believe is
the most clear and concise

definition that I've ever heard.

JANINE: What would you tell the
youth of today about America?

JANINE: What would you tell them... about
this country, would be the advice

you'd give them? (CLIFF'S VOICE)

(CLIFF'S VOICE)

(CLIFF'S VOICE)

JANINE: I always pass on his

advice... in fact,
anyone who asks me about my journey will

absolutely hear about Cliff.

JANINE: The next day,
I was on a plane headed to

Michigan, State #48. I sang The Anthem at

Comerica Park before a game between The
Detroit Tigers and the Seattle Mariners.

(JANINE SINGING) ...o'er the land of the ♪

♪ Free ♪

♪ And the home of the ♪

♪ Brave (CROWD CHEERS AND APPLAUSE)

ANNOUNCER: Ladies and
gentlemen, Janine Stange...

with our National Anthem!

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)
JANINE: A week

later I was in Honolulu, HI, State 49.

I sang aboard the historic
battleship, USS Missouri, anchored

in Pearl Harbor.
(JANINE SINGS) Oh, say, can you see, ♪

♪ By the dawn's early ♪

♪ Light, what so proudly we ♪

♪ Hailed at the twilight's ♪

♪ last gleaming, whose broad stripes ♪

♪ And bright stars, through the ♪

♪ Perilous fight... ♪
JANINE: Hawaii was incredible.

JANINE: The USS Missouri and
USS Arizona sit side by side

in Pearl Harbor.
They bookend World War 2. An officer

gave me a tour of Hickman Air Base, Ford
Island... and some of the buildings still

have shrapnel damage. 2403

souls were lost right there 75 years prior...

JANINE: ...and our flag is still there.

JANINE: Also in Hawaii,

The Today Show was there to tape an
interview segment about my mission...

the segment would hopefully air
on the day I made it to State #50.

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

JANINE: One state left to go.
It almost didn't seem real.

Okay, let's take a to recap

and fill in some frequently
asked questions...

JANINE: Where did I come

up with the name, 'National Anthem Girl'?

JANINE: I was scheduled to sing The
Anthem at Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego.

JANINE: On the way there, traffic was
so bad that I barely made it there.

Right before I was supposed to go
on, I got out of my car,

rushed to the stadium entrance,
right past all the people in line, and told

the gate attendant, "Look, you got to
let me in. I'm the National Anthem girl!"

And once I got in,
I thought two things: One...

so much for security, and two...
that's a really good name.

So, when I got back home,
I bough the domain handle and

went with it from there. Another question...

JANINE: How did you
keep things rolling all

by yourself? Two words: Social

media. Throughout my journey,
I was constantly posting

to Facebook, Instagram, Twitter,
to let people know where I

was, where I'd be next,
which state number I was up to...

some nights, depending on what
time zone I was in, I'd wake up at

3 a.m., with one eye open,
just to update any status for the

next event. I don't what I would do
if I was only able to rely on faxing

press releases or calling people,
because I was on a plane or driving

most of the time.
And it was because of social media

that Heather Nauert from
Fox News caught wind of my

goal and shared it with her producers,
which culminated in my appearance

on Fox & Friends, which wound up
being the turning point in the

national awareness for my journey.
If it wasn't for this little device,

I might not have made it. Next question...

JANINE: After 2 years

promoting The Anthem, did I receive
many marriage proposals along the way?

Yes, I did. (SILENCE)

(SILENCE) Question...

JANINE: After performing
The Anthem so far in

49 states, after 2 very intense
years, how does

it feel to finally get to the
finish line with State #50?

It feels like I've truly seen

the real America. On

49 separate occasions,
I performed our song for the people that

make up this nation.
At every ballpark, every speedway,

every basketball court, every hockey rink,

every rodeo arena, I would always look

in the stands to see
people who understood that

regardless of what team they wanted to
win, and which politician

they would vote for,
in the 90 seconds it took for The Anthem

to be sung, we were all as one...

one home... one voice... on nation under God.

Every now and then, I'd look up and

see some young person not singing
along, looking around like they

were bored... and I prayed that kid
would have someone in their life

to just explain to them just why
this song was so important...

that this song, it's not a
formality, and singing it

is not something we have to
do, but it's something we

get to do. Other times,
I'd look up and see a person with a

certain look in their eye, and their hand
over their heart, rendering a salute,

and you could tell they had
served, or were close to someone

who had. These were the people I
would focus on while I would sing.

JANINE: After one performance,
a veteran came up to me and said,

"Thank you for singing The Anthem
the way it was meant to be sung."

And I looked at him and said, "Oh my gosh,
like, you served. It's because of you

that I can even sing this song." I
also got to see, up close and personal,

the debt of gratitude that
Americans feel for those

who put their lives on the
line every day to protect us...

GIRL'S VOICE: Thank you so much for
being so brave... you kept us so safe...

MAN'S VOICE:...thank you for your service, and
may God richly bless you, your family, your...

Fellow service personnel...
WOMAN'S VOICE: From the bottom of my heart for your sacrifice...

And love for our country...
GIRL'S VOICE: Thank you for keeping our country

safe. You're my hero!

JANINE: So yeah, I've seen America, and

I've learned two things:
America is beautiful, and

Americans are beautiful.

Because, at the end of the

day, what I've witnessed on
this journey is that we're

a country of dreamers,
and we're also fighters.

Deep down, we all want what's best for our

country, and especially
for the next generation.

JANINE: Last question...

JANINE: Who or what was your motivation?

I believe I did it for the heroes...
the men and women

who sacrifice everything to
serve our country, believing

in something bigger than themselves...
I remember their faces...

World War 2, Korean War, Desert Storm...

Vietnam veterans,
the Purple Heart recipients...

the worried, yet proud,
faces of dads and moms,

brothers and sisters whose loved
ones were currently deployed...

the Gold Star parents...
they made a mark on my life... I'll never

be same as a result of
meeting these people...

And I did it for the people of
America, the ones who

needed a gentle reminder that
we're all in this together,

and that freedom is not free.

(SOFT PIANO MUSIC)

(SOFT PIANO MUSIC)

JANINE: And I did it for my mother, Patty,

who passed away from breast cancer in 2011.

JANINE: How much do I wish she could have
been here to see all that's happened

these last 2 years. She was the
kind of mother who would've slapped

me silly if I wasn't using my gifts
to give to others in some way.

My mother never told me to do
something patriotic. She showed me

by example. (SOFT PIANO MUSIC)

(SOFT PIANO/STRING MUSIC)

(SPONTANEOUS APPLAUSE)

RADIO HOST:...Jersey girls in the
house, studio filling

up, and now the beautiful
Janine Stange is in our nook...

RADIO HOST: All right, you probably have heard this name
a lot, especially in the last few weeks, as her journey

has come to fruition...
everything she has dedicated the last

2 years to is finally culminated in this last

week... on this 2 year journey to sing
The National Anthem in all 50 states.

RADIO HOST: Now, Janine,
where did this idea come from?

JANINE: I just always loved singing The National Anthem.
I sang it since I was in high school. I always wanted

to do something to give back, so, I realized
nobody ever sang in all 50 states...

RADIO HOST: Nobody had ever done that before?
JANINE: No. Now I understand why nobody's ever

Done it. (LAUGHS)
JANINE: Tennessee... State #50.

The end of the road. This was it.
As my plane was landing

in Nashville, I remember thinking to
myself, "This is the last

time I'll ever mention the name
of a state with a number attached

to it." So, my journey
would end on August 28th at

LP Stadium in Nashville, TN,
singing The National Anthem

before The Tennessee Titans
played The Minnesota Vikings.

JANINE: As usual, my day started
out early, doing interviews

...meeting with local media.
RADIO HOST: Janine is going for

singing The National Anthem in all
50 states tonight at the Titans

Game... the state of Tennessee is #50.
JANINE: That's right. RADIO HOST: So by state #50,

it's pretty easy to get a National Anthem
gig somewhere in the state of Tennessee?

JANINE: Yeah, it wasn't that difficult. I'm
very happy to be, you know, singing for the

Titans, it's a big deal. RADIO HOST: So the response
has been really good everywhere you've gone?

JANINE: Yeah, and you know what I love about it? It's
because they, uh, the people are really embracing

this whole concept of, you know,
being grateful, attaching the meaning

of The National Anthem to the people who
represent it. It's a good thing that the media

is really catching on, because it shows that we
really are behind our troops... and I love that.

TV HOSTESS:... but you have now
traveled to sing at all of these big

Games in all the states, and you are wrapping it up tonight
right here in Nashville. JANINE: Yeah. I'm so excited...

#50! RADIO HOSTESS: I know. How are you feeling? I mean
are you feeling, your like, probably a little bit of

relief that this is it? JANINE: Sentimental. I
was even awarded the flag of Tennessee by the

Governor's office.
OFFICIAL: This is to certify that the

accompanying flag of the state of Tennessee

...this flag that I'm holding...
has been flown over

The Tennessee state capitol for
you, Janine stange. JANINE: Aww.

(UPBEAT MUSIC)

JANINE: I was so busy,
that what was about to happen hadn't

really registered yet.
I just told myself this was like

every other state so things would
feel as normal as possible. After

a full day of promoting,
I was all ready to take my

last trip to the middle
of a field to sing our

anthem in my 50th state.

Did I mention there was not
a cloud in the sky all day?

RADIO VOICE #1: Currently, it's 85 degrees. Clear
skies expected to continue into this evening...

RADIO VOICE #2: Your Nashville weather
today: Clear, dry and plenty of sunshine...

RADIO VOICE #3: If you're heading out to LP tonight
to see The Titans face The Vikings, it's going to

be a hot one. Clear skies in the forecast...
(JANINE'S VOICE)

(JANINE'S VOICE)

(JANINE'S VOICE) (HOSTESS'
VOICE) (JANINE'S VOICE)

JANINE: When I went down for sound
check, everything was clear...

but then, as I stood on the
sideline, minutes before I was

scheduled to sing,
storm clouds rolled over... then,

a few raindrops... (THUNDER CLAP)

(RAIN SOUNDS) (JANINE SINGS) Oh, say,

♪ can you see, by the dawn's ♪

♪ Early light, what so ♪

♪ Proudly we hailed... ♪
JANINE: ...And by the 2nd or 3rd line of the song,

JANINE: I was in a monsoon-type downpour.

I did not see that coming.
But you know what? At that

point, it didn't really matter.
Despite the fact that I was literally

getting drenched and fighting the
wind to keep the hair out of my face,

I knew that my mission was accomplished.
Two years

ago, when I started this
journey, never did I imagine

it would be such a life-changing experience.
(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

(LIVELY STRING MUSIC)

(JANINE SINGS) ...o'er the land ♪

♪ Of the free ♪

♪ And the home ♪

♪ Of the brave ♪

(CROWD CHEERS AND APPLAUSE)

(CROWD CHEERS AND APPLAUSE)

SOUND MAN: Wonderful job!
JANINE: Thank you.

FOOTBALL PLAYER: You're a trooper!
JANINE: Thank you!

JANINE: That morning, in Nashville,
I was getting ready for my first

interview, doing my hair, and I prayed to God

and I said, "Please let my mom know

that I finished." Some photographs came
out from those moments, with the rain

suspended all around me.
Someone posted a comment, saying,

'The raindrops were tears of joy

from Heaven.' I'd like to
think they were my mom...

wanting me to know she had gotten my message.

(STRIKING PERCUSSION HITS)

(STRIKING PERCUSSION HITS)

(STRIKING PERCUSSION HITS)

♪ Oh, say, can you see,

♪ by the dawn's early ♪

♪ Light, what so proudly ♪

♪ We hailed at the twilight's ♪

♪ last gleaming, ♪

♪ Whose broad stripes and bright stars, ♪

♪ Through the perilous fight ♪

♪ O'er the ramparts we ♪

♪ Watched were so gallantly ♪

♪ Streaming. And the rocket's ♪

♪ Red glare, the bombs ♪

♪ Bursting in air, ♪

♪ Gave proof through the night ♪

♪ That our flag was still there. ♪

♪ Oh, say, does that ♪

♪ Star spangled banner ♪

♪ Yet wave, ♪

♪ O'er the land of the ♪

♪ Free and the ♪

♪ Home of the ♪

♪ Brave. ♪

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

JANINE: I guess it would
be important to tell you

what I did on The National
Anthem's 200th Anniversary,

which was September 14th, 2014.
They wanted me to sing

at Fort McHenry.
I got to sing The National Anthem

at The Star Spangled Buoy in the eyeline

of where Francis Scott Key
was looking when he saw

our flag was still there, 200 years

to the day.

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

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(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

CAROLYN BLASHEK: ...to introduce to
you, no surprise that her name is,

'The National Anthem Girl', Janine Stange.
(CHEERS AND APPLAUSE)

(CHEERS AND APPLAUSE)

(CHEERS AND APPLAUSE)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

JANINE: I hope when people see

this, and realize how crazy and how

fun, and how emotional this journey
was, that they'll look at themselves

and say, "What can I do?"

Because, you're never too young to make a difference.
You're never too old to make a difference.

You just have to start where you are.
You have to do what you can,

with what you have, from where you are.

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(CLOSING CREDITS MUSIC)

(MUSIC ENDS)

(STADIUM SOUNDS)

JANINE: It's been an amazing journey,

and I'm so happy that I got to do this.
It's been an honor.

And... all 50.

JANINE: God bless America.

(NO AUDIO)