C'mon is short for "come on". It may also refer to:
C'mon! is the second album by American country music artist Keith Anderson. The album was released by Columbia Records on August 5, 2008. It features the singles "Sunday Morning in America" and "I Still Miss You," the latter of which reached the Top 5 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart in August 2008. The third single "Somebody Needs A Hug" failed to reach top 40, peaking at #46. His next single "She Could've Been Mine" was released in January 2009, and it was even less successful, peaking at No. 56. Ten of the album's eleven songs were co-written by Anderson.
Radney Foster and Bill Lloyd, who comprised the 1980s duo Foster & Lloyd, appear on the track "Crazy Over You." The song is a cover of their debut single from 1987, which was a Top 5 country hit that year. "Lost in This Moment," co-written by Anderson, was a Number One single for the duo Big & Rich in 2007.
"C'mon (Catch 'em by Surprise)" is a song by Dutch DJ Tiësto and American DJ Diplo. It features vocals by American rapper Busta Rhymes. It was released on 14 January 2011 in the Netherlands, United Kingdom and Finland. The single was released in the United States on iTunes 24 January 2011.
"C'mon (Catch em' by Surprise)" is the vocal version of the 2010 single "C'mon". The song was meant to be the first single of an upcoming Tiësto album which was never released in favor of creating the Club Life compilation series. Although, the instrumental track was included as the last track of Club Life: Volume One Las Vegas. The single was released after "Who Wants to Be Alone", which was the last single from Tiësto's album Kaleidoscope (one of his last studio albums as Tiësto).
The music video premiered on Tiësto's official YouTube Channel on 17 December 2011.
Hoy is part of Tribune Publishing, publishing two of the leading Spanish language newspapers in Chicago and Los Angeles. Hoy and Hoy Fin de Semana have a combined weekly distribution of nearly 1.8 million copies nationally. Hoy claims the largest Spanish-language daily newspaper Monday-Friday in Chicago and the Los Angeles Hoy Fin de Semana product is the largest home-delivered Spanish-language newspaper in the nation.
On February 12, 2007, Tribune announced the sale of Hoy New York to ImpreMedia LLC, the parent company of El Diario La Prensa, for an undisclosed sum. Hoy Chicago and Hoy Los Angeles are not affected by the transaction.
Hoy, was a daily publication in Ecuador, was published from June 07, 1982 until 26-08-2014. Its editorial office is located in Quito, and it is currently published simultaneously in Guayaquil in electronic format. It was created by Jaime Mantilla Anderson. During its life, Hoy earned a reputation for openness to all political views in the Ecuadorian press.
Hoy's group of companies other products include the MetroHOY, distributed, in the public areas of the mass transport systems of Quito; MetroQuil, distributed in Metrovia of Guayaquil; The magazines Hoy Domingo (Sunday Today), Cometa (Comet), La Guía Inmobiliaria (Real Estate Guide) and the printing of Newsweek en Español (Newsweek in Spanish).
HOY Regional is a Peruvian newspaper, published in the city of Huánuco. It first appeared in 1986, under the name Via Gerencia. It was founded by a professional journalist and entrepreneur, David Orosco Alania (who died in November 2010 at the age of 57). Since 1996, it has been a daily newspaper, first under the name Diario Regional. Published from Monday to Saturday, it had a Sunday edition with a cultural magazine, but some weeks later the Sunday edition stopped appearing. A daily newspaper was something absolutely new in the city; the first daily newspaper in a city that was founded on 1539. Competing with national newspapers from Lima was hard. Orosco seems to have applied an old Chinese saying: "Be like a rice plant, it bends to strong storms, but turns right after the storm passes."
The name was modified later to "Periódico Regional," and finally to "HOY Regional." The green logo has been a feature for the last 7 years. Editions are made for Pasco and Ucayali neighboring departments. Nevertheless, it is known that it also reaches parts of Ancash and Junin department.