Drop-off childcare spots that don’t require reservations are a parent’s dream — but they’re hard to come by in Chicago. That’s what makes the opening of one new kids’ activity center so special. Take a Break Playcare just flung its doors open in Lakeview and welcomes kids ages 3 months to 13 years for a day or even just two hours of supervised play while you go to work, run errands or just relax. Nope, you’re not dreaming. Read on.

A Flexible, Playful Concept
You probably know the uh-oh moment of having a sitter bail on you last-minute. And also the feeling of just needing a little “me” time during the day or a much deserved date night. Take a Break Playcare is open morning through night (and even until midnight on weekends!) so you have backup. It’s an intimate spot filled with toys, play structures and organized activities and, best of all, offers drop-off, last-minute care at prices comparative to a sitter, and discounts for bulk, weekly and monthly packages.

You don’t have to worry about calling to see if your child can stay a little longer than whatever time you estimated you’d be away. Just pick them up by closing time. Reservations aren’t required but are recommended for infants (ages 3-18 months) and for all ages on Friday or Saturday nights.

Activities for All Ages
Littles and bigs both find their niche in a divided space that has a little something for everyone. For older children there is a tech lounge, video game lounge, mini sports court, books and board games. For younger ones, there is a separate infant and toddler playroom. The larger playroom is best for active and imaginative play and features a slide, costumes, a train table, dolls, LEGOs, blocks and more. Bouncing babies have goodies needed to develop their social and motor skills, including busy boxes, rattles, a pounding bench and musical toys.

To give it all structure, there are designated quiet times when children are encouraged to rest, do arts and crafts, or read books. There is also organized snack and meal times (food isn’t provided but parents can bring a meal or have one delivered). On weekends, expect movie nights, air hockey competitions, karaoke bouts and more. At all other times, it’s open play.

Other Perks
The staff at Take a Break Playcare is CPR/First Aid certified, fingerprinted and background checked. For children with separation anxiety, parents are invited to visit the center with their child for a half-hour to acclimate them. And parents are invited to be on hand to celebrate during birthday parties — this friendly spot hosts bashes for all ages, and gives party hosts two free hours of childcare for a future date when they book a party.

The Nuts & Bolts
Take a Break Playcare is located at:
2855 N. Lincoln Ave., 1st Floor, in Lakeview

Hours:
Monday-Thursday, 8:30 a.m.-9 p.m.
Friday, 8:30 a.m.-midnight
Saturday, 9 a.m.-midnight
Sunday, noon-6 p.m. Before noon and after 6 p.m. you can reserve the space for birthday parties
The last check-in time is 90 minutes before each scheduled closing
A 2-hour minimum charge is required for all children

Fees:
Rates are $13.50/hour for first child ages 3-18 months
Rates are $12/hour for ages 19 months and older
Bulk hours are also available for purchase and never expire
10 hours first child, $102
15 hours first child, $144
Weekly play package is $175 includes up to 4 continuous hours of play each day for 7 days from the first use
Monthly play package is $400 and is good for 31 days from first use
Discounts are available for siblings; the 4th sibling is free

Contact:
773-661-9944
Online: takeabreakplaycare.com

What do you think of this new spot for drop-off childcare? Let us know in the Comments!

— Kelly Aiglon

She loves Lady Gaga, you’d love a latte.  Fancy this: kids sing, moms and dads sip, and just like that, everyone is as “Happy” as Pharrell.  At Chirp Kids Karaoke Cafe, the new spot in Pasadena, they can warble along with “Frozen” to their hearts content, while you read, chat with friends and relax in air conditioned comfort.  Now that’s music to our ears.

Two Moms Got Creative So That Kids Can, Too
It was a light bulb moment ignited between two lovely ladies from Pasadena.  Moms, naturally. Jennifer Gunn and Carole Fleischman realized reserving the fun factor in karaoke exclusively for adults was a grown-up sized goof. What inhibition? Kids love to croon! And they often do, with a beautiful disregard for pitch, key and volume. So, while we can eek out a smile and a rhythmic nod to the first song or four, after that, is it so wrong to want to exit stage left and settle in with a cup of joe and a celebration of the sounds of silence?

Comes With Costumes And A Side Of Babysitting
They’re singing. Top of their lungs. They’re in costume. Perhaps some high heels. Maybe wigs. (All provided). They’re attempting harmony. (Not provided.) They’re supervised, and best part, you’re not the one doing the supervising. That’s what the Chirp staff is there for. There’s a whole other land laid out for you: a place to have your own playdate, solo or otherwise. Take it in. In an immaculately clean sprawl, there are magazines. Free Wi-Fi. A full beverage café and don’t look now, but a liquor license may even be in the works. One more round of “Do You Wanna Build a Snowman”? Go for it.

No Windowless Parent Prison
You won’t want to leave as much as your kids won’t want to leave. When’s the last time that’s happened at a kid-catering venue? Maybe never. Honestly, someone here should  issue parents the five-minute warning. This place is sun bathed, spacious, pristinely clean, and beautiful. One visit and your offspring will know exactly where they wanted to have their next birthday. And, done.

Classes and Camps and Birthdays, Oh My
The free-play floor is open (see open mic times below), but so are classes, sing-alongs, talent shows, and summer camp. Story Time Sing-Alongs (Wednesdays, 3 p.m. – 4 p.m.) are ideal for kids who covet the classics (and by classics we’re referring to “The Jungle Book” and “Cinderella”). Move to the Music targets the toddler scene; particularly the 2-5 year old Idol-ettes who know you barely have to walk to rock. And summer camps are offered up à la carte, one week at a time, celebrating creativity, crafting, song writing, and so very much singing.

Who’s Party is It Anyway?
Booking a birthday at Chirp is a gift to parents and kids alike. With three different party packages to pick from, you pretty much send out the invite, sit back, and enjoy it as much as your guests will. For the kids that need a little warm up before they feel like bursting into song, arts and games and blocks and basketball options abound. Clean up? They gotcha there too. Who’s singing now?

Frozen Fridays & Open Mic

Innnnn Summmmmmmmer! Bring it Olaf. From 2 p.m. – 4 p.m. every Friday. It’s a Friday Frozen-a-thon. Because as long as they won’t let it go, you may as well given them a place to sing about it.

What else? Open Mic time is 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays & 11 a.m. – 4 p.m. Wednesdays and Fridays. $12/kid, $8/sibling, $0/chaperone. Have some coffee. Stay as long as you like, the rate is flat.

Where It Began…
Karaoke is infectious. And while you will thoroughly enjoy your retreat with coffee and  magazine, free Wi-Fi and  refreshing AC, somehow, you just may find that you end up with a mic in your hands on stage singing “Sweet Caroline”. This is the place where they can don a day glow fedora, grab their pals, and live out their American Idol dreams. No need to admit it mom, but you probably will too. No charge for embarrassing your kid. And good times never seemed so good.

-written and photographed by Jolie Loeb

Got one at home who likes to belt it out? Here’s their number. So call them maybe.

Chirp Kids Karaoke Cafe
2302 East Colorado Blvd.
Pasadena, Ca
Phone: (626) 356-9100
Online: chirpkidskaraoke.com

If you think about it, getting a baby to sleep is a lot like karaoke night with your friends: There’s a lot of singing, someone has to be carried to bed, and details are a bit hazy in the morning. The two are practically destined to be a winning combination. Introducing Lullaby Karaoke, the new app that does just that.

Here’s how it works: Pick a popular lullaby, then choose from accompanying instruments — piano, bells, guitar and others, depending on the song. Click the recording button and croon along to the lyrics that highlight slowly, karaoke-style. Once you’re done, save the recording as an mp3 file, play back, delete or record again. There’s even a charming little animation to help tots along in their journey to la-la land.

The app really stands out for its sharing options. Send recordings to Grandma via e-mail, share with other Lullaby users, or make your debut on Facebook or Twitter. Create playlists, keep baby’s favorite on repeat, or jazz things up by shuffling songs. Little ones will love hearing Mom or Dad’s voice, or your mini American Idol can record his or her own. Hey, parents need help falling asleep, too.

Download the app on iTunes or Android; the first song is free, and one $2.99 purchase unlocks the other nine.

Would you try Lullaby Karaoke? Let us know in the Comments section below.

— Selena Kohng

Lucky Diaz and Alisha Gaddis of Lucky Diaz and the Family Jam Band

Make no mistake about it, Lucky Diaz and Alisha Gaddis are superstars. This is a fact whether you’ve heard of them or not. The SoCal kindie rock husband and wife tandem are having a fantastic 2013, but their attack on all media this year isn’t nearly over yet.  We recently caught up with the lovebirds as they drove through the California desert having just embarked on their 20 shows in 30 days road trip tour of America with their 9-year-old daughter, to discuss their favorite soda pop, becoming a crossover act, and their brand new relationship with the iPad. We also got the exclusive scoop on their forthcoming new album!

Lucky and Alisha have been married for a year and a band for longer than that, but this story starts in mid-April when Coca-Cola decided one of the group’s original songs written for Massive Music would be the perfect final touch for their perfectly sweet “Falling” commercial that first aired during the early rounds of the NBA Playoffs and continues to make primetime TV viewers scooch a little closer to each other on the couch at night. Lucky’s sunsoaked vocals and tender lyrics about love at first sight add gravity to the on-screen teenage cuteness. Like most highly emotive music, the song operates on whatever level you need it to: nostalgia for a first love or the first time your newborn baby rested in your loving arms. Parenting sentimentality is what this daddy hears and it’s just the latest in a string of tearjerker all-ages songs by the band (see: “Light Beams” from A Lucky Day!)

Lucky & Alisha learned of their commercial success just before landing in NYC where they’d perform one of their patented concerts, commonly regarded as the musical equivalent of an all-natural energy drink, in front of a packed Brooklyn crowd at this year’s Kindiefest Public Music Festival.  Those lucky enough to secure tickets to the sold out show were treated to everything the band is famous for: sing-along pop songs, wild dancing, a lot of tambourine shaking, and a bit of stand-up comedy. That last ingredient is no accident as Alisha Gaddis, the Lucille Ball of the family music scene, is also an improv comic, Broadway actress, and author (she recently inked a book deal.)

There isn’t much the talented Gaddis can’t do, but singing in Spanish was never in her skill set. Fortunately, Diaz’s own Mexican heritage and his mom’s translating prowess have helped make Lucky Diaz and the Family Jam Band a muy respetado crossover act. The pair wowed the Latino community last month when they performed live on Telemundo to celebrate the Cinco de Mayo release of Fantastico!, an 8-song greatest hits package of sorts rewritten and rerecorded en español.

Lucky and Alisha on Vespa

You Heard It Here First: The L.A. duo hailed by the likes of PEOPLE Magazine and USA Today will return to English vocals on Lishy Lou and Lucky Too, their ambitious new album set to be released on September 13, with a grand old-time-style family variety show planned for the next day in Los Angeles at the Grammy Museum.

Finally, as if multiple CDs, crossing over into the Spanish-language market, a massive tour, and a national commercial campaign weren’t enough, Lucky Diaz and the Family Jam Band make their iTunes App Store debut this week with their “Blue Bear” iPad app. Your kids likely already know the tale of the colorful hungry bear from Sirius XM Kids Place Live, where it spent many weeks as the #1 song in the country. Now they can play two games related to characters from the song’s Etsy-worthy patchwork music video — the hot dog eating frog serves as a modern day Whack-a-Mole and the donut dropping birds (whose unique pattern is derived from an actual photo of Gaddis’ mom’s prom dress!) do everything they can to help you feed the big bear — sing-along with Blue Bear karaoke style, and watch the gorgeously handcrafted video again and again and again.

Lucky and Alisha are on tour now and will stay on the road for most of the summer, with multiple dates scheduled in Chicago, D.C., NYC, L.A. and beyond. If they are coming anywhere near your hometown, go see them, and have the time of your life! To get an extra high-five after the show, tell ’em Red Tricycle sent you!

The Lucky Diaz & The Family Jam Band “Blue Bear” app is available now for $1.99 in the iTunes App Store.

What is your kiddo’s favorite Lucky Diaz and the Family Jam Band tune?

–Jeff Bogle