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| Chance Nye, 13, performs Thursday for the Just Teens program that will showcase his talents on Pinellas County School TV 14. | 
By Andrew Ford
St Petersburg Times Correspondent (Florida, USA)
CLEARWATER — Chance Nye casually improvised on a grand piano. 
The 13-year-old fluidly moved among popular melodies like Flight of the Bumblebee and ABC by the Jackson Five. 
He has come a long way from  Cambodia, where he was born, to play for a television segment called  Fingers of Nye on the Just Teens program that will showcase his talents  on Pinellas County School TV 14. Dates and times of the broadcast have  not been set. 
About 40 people showed up  Thursday afternoon for the taping, which took place at La Grande Hall at  Piano Distributors in Clearwater. 
Chance was adopted when he was 4 months old in 1997 by Destiny Masters, 50. 
"The minute I laid eyes on him, I knew it was meant to be," she said of her adopted son. 
She is raising Chance with her husband, Steve Masters, whom she met in 2002. They live in Wesley Chapel. 
At age 2, Chance started fooling  around with an organ owned by Destiny Masters' godfather. By the time  he was 5, he could play the Rugrats television theme song. 
As he warmed up on stage  Thursday, his mother said, "I get to listen to this all the time. It's  great until dad wants to watch football." 
Chance performed several pieces,  including Rachmaninoff's Prelude in C sharp minor and a medley  containing River Flows in You. As his friends urged him to play  something they would recognize, he did the theme from the video game  Modern Warfare 2. 
Chance has some classical music  on his iPod, but much of it is rap and hip-hop, featuring artists like  Jay-Z and Lil Wayne. BedRock is one of Chance's favorite songs. 
During the performance, the  camera man moved around the pianist, shooting from many different  angles. Afterward, Chance said it was "a little distracting, but not too  much." 
Teen Tyme Productions was  responsible for putting on the event. The nonprofit organization works  to create positive programming for teens and relies on viewer  contributions. 
Stacey Spencer, 42, founded the  production company 13 years ago in Louisville, Ky. The company moved to  Largo four years ago. She started Teen Tyme to spread a positive  message. 
"I believe that music, movement and the arts are all too often forgotten," she said







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