1 registered members (Ciment),
106
guests, and 3
spiders. |
Key:
Admin,
Global Mod,
Mod
|
|
Forums21
Topics42,985
Posts1,074,820
Members10,349
|
Most Online1,100 Jun 10th, 2024
|
|
|
Re: 2011 Dead Pool
[Re: The Italian Stallionette]
#603473
05/19/11 10:16 AM
05/19/11 10:16 AM
|
Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 2,419 Bar Vitelli, Queens, NY
Signor Vitelli
Underboss
|
Underboss
Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 2,419
Bar Vitelli, Queens, NY
|
It was after Elizabeth Taylor's death. Jane Russell had died a couple of weeks earlier, and when Zsa Zsa heard the news about Liz (according to her publicist or husband, I can't remember which), she became hysterical and said, "Celebrities always die in threes - I'm next!" Anyway, they carted her off to the hospital (again) and probably sedated her for a few days before she was released.
But the old gal certainly has not had it easy: Last year her leg was amputated above the knee, and she recently refused to let the doctors amputate the other one. They said she probably would not live out the year without the surgery, but she was adamant about keeping her remaining leg.
I used to think the "real" Zsa Zsa had been replaced long ago by one of those alien pod-people from Invasion of the Body Snatchers, but now, given the recent turn of events, I'm not so sure.
In other celebrity news, actor Jeff Conaway is in very bad shape. He's in a coma and unresponsive in a California hospital following an apparent overdose of pain killers. The former star (Taxi, Grease, Babylon 5) has battled substance abuse problems for years. Reports are that the prognosis doesn't look good.
Signor V.
"For me, there's only my wife..."
"Sure I cook with wine - sometimes I even add it to the food!"
"When life itself seems lunatic, who knows where madness lies?"
"It was a grass harp... And we listened."
"Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it? Every, every minute?"
"No. Saints and poets, maybe... they do some."
|
|
|
Re: 2011 Dead Pool
[Re: Signor Vitelli]
#603474
05/19/11 10:25 AM
05/19/11 10:25 AM
|
Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 25,984 California
The Italian Stallionette
|
Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 25,984
California
|
SV, I posted about Conway in another thread. Boy, it sure doesn't look good for him. What a shame. TIS
"Mankind must put an end to war before war puts an end to mankind. War will exist until that distant day when the conscientious objector enjoys the same reputation and prestige that the warrior does today." JFK
"War is over, if you want it" - John Lennon
|
|
|
Re: 2011 Dead Pool
[Re: SC]
#604251
05/26/11 09:57 PM
05/26/11 09:57 PM
|
Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 25,984 California
The Italian Stallionette
|
Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 25,984
California
|
Oh no!! I know it seemed inevitable but how sad. He never seemed was able to beat his addiction. Sad news. TIS
"Mankind must put an end to war before war puts an end to mankind. War will exist until that distant day when the conscientious objector enjoys the same reputation and prestige that the warrior does today." JFK
"War is over, if you want it" - John Lennon
|
|
|
Re: 2011 Dead Pool
[Re: J Geoff]
#604306
05/27/11 02:08 PM
05/27/11 02:08 PM
|
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 14,900
Beth E
Crabby
|
Crabby
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 14,900
|
Jeff's Wikipedia page does have him listed as dying today. Here is a link to a story confirming his death. http://www.thewrap.com/movies/column-pos...s-dies-60-27777
Last edited by Beth E; 05/27/11 02:09 PM.
How about a little less questions and a lot more shut the hell up - Brian Griffin
When there's a will...put me in it.
|
|
|
Re: 2011 Dead Pool
[Re: J Geoff]
#604308
05/27/11 02:23 PM
05/27/11 02:23 PM
|
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 31,311 New Jersey, USA
J Geoff
OP
The Don
|
OP
The Don
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 31,311
New Jersey, USA
|
RIP Kenickie
...and that takes Mig to a tie for First Place
I studied Italian for 2 semesters. Not once was a "C" pronounced as a "G", and never was a trailing "I" ignored! And I'm from Jersey! lol Whaddaya want me to do? Whack a guy? Off a guy? Whack off a guy? --Peter Griffin My DVDs | Facebook | Godfather Filming Locations
|
|
|
Re: 2011 Dead Pool
[Re: J Geoff]
#604310
05/27/11 02:56 PM
05/27/11 02:56 PM
|
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 22,902 New York
SC
Consigliere
|
Consigliere
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 22,902
New York
|
...and that takes Mig to a tie for First Place Not so fast, Geoff. I didn't get credit for Harmon Killebrew.
.
|
|
|
Re: 2011 Dead Pool
[Re: SC]
#604313
05/27/11 03:56 PM
05/27/11 03:56 PM
|
Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 25,984 California
The Italian Stallionette
|
Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 25,984
California
|
I'm so sorry to hear about Jeff Conaway. I know was kind of expected but still. I know him from Grease but I'll remember him mostly for Bobby in Taxi. TIS
Last edited by The Italian Stallionette; 05/27/11 03:58 PM.
"Mankind must put an end to war before war puts an end to mankind. War will exist until that distant day when the conscientious objector enjoys the same reputation and prestige that the warrior does today." JFK
"War is over, if you want it" - John Lennon
|
|
|
Re: 2011 Dead Pool
[Re: SC]
#604332
05/27/11 10:51 PM
05/27/11 10:51 PM
|
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 31,311 New Jersey, USA
J Geoff
OP
The Don
|
OP
The Don
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 31,311
New Jersey, USA
|
...and that takes Mig to a tie for First Place Not so fast, Geoff. I didn't get credit for Harmon Killebrew. Missed that one, sorry...
I studied Italian for 2 semesters. Not once was a "C" pronounced as a "G", and never was a trailing "I" ignored! And I'm from Jersey! lol Whaddaya want me to do? Whack a guy? Off a guy? Whack off a guy? --Peter Griffin My DVDs | Facebook | Godfather Filming Locations
|
|
|
Re: 2011 Dead Pool
[Re: J Geoff]
#604334
05/27/11 11:12 PM
05/27/11 11:12 PM
|
Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 3,746
BAM_233
Underboss
|
Underboss
Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 3,746
|
...and that takes Mig to a tie for First Place Not so fast, Geoff. I didn't get credit for Harmon Killebrew. Missed that one, sorry... can mark off zsa zsa...i mean yea i know she is still alive at the moment, but sooner or later she will pass away
|
|
|
Re: 2011 Dead Pool
[Re: Mignon]
#604394
05/29/11 12:40 AM
05/29/11 12:40 AM
|
Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 2,419 Bar Vitelli, Queens, NY
Signor Vitelli
Underboss
|
Underboss
Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 2,419
Bar Vitelli, Queens, NY
|
Musician Gil Scott-Heron died Friday at age 62.
NY Times obituary:
By Ben Sisario New York Times, 28 May 2011
Gil Scott-Heron, the poet and recording artist whose syncopated spoken style and mordant critiques of politics, racism and mass media in pieces like "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised" made him a notable voice of black protest culture in the 1970s and an important early influence on hip-hop, died on Friday at a hospital in Manhattan. He was 62 and had been a longtime resident of Harlem.
His death was announced in a Twitter message on Friday night by his British publisher, Jamie Byng, and confirmed early Saturday by an American representative of his record label, XL. The cause was not immediately known, although The Associated Press reported that he was admitted to St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center after becoming ill upon his return from a trip to Europe.
Mr. Scott-Heron often bristled at the suggestion that his work had prefigured rap. "I don't know if I can take the blame for it," he said in an interview last year with the music Web site The Daily Swarm. He preferred to call himself a "bluesologist," drawing on the traditions of blues, jazz and Harlem renaissance poetics.
Yet, along with the work of the Last Poets, a group of black nationalist performance poets who emerged alongside him in the late 1960s and early '70s, Mr. Scott-Heron established much of the attitude and stylistic vocabulary that would characterize the socially conscious work of early rap groups like Public Enemy and Boogie Down Productions and has remained part of the DNA of hip-hop by being sampled by stars like Kanye West.
"You can go into Ginsberg and the Beat poets and Dylan, but Gil Scott-Heron is the manifestation of the modern word," Chuck D, the leader of Public Enemy, told The New Yorker in 2010. "He and the Last Poets set the stage for everyone else."
Mr. Scott-Heron's career began with a literary rather than a musical bent. He was born in Chicago on April 1, 1949, and was reared in Tennessee and New York, and his precocious work as a writer won him a scholarship to the Fieldston School in the Bronx. Following in the footsteps of Langston Hughes, he went to the historically black Lincoln University in Pennsylvania, and he wrote his first novel at 19, a murder mystery called "The Vulture." Shortly thereafter, he published a book of verse, "Small Talk at 125th and Lenox," and a second novel, "The ni**er Factory."
Mr. Scott-Heron turned to music to reach a wider audience, working at first with a college friend, Brian Jackson. Their first album, "Small Talk at 125th and Lenox," was released in 1970 on Flying Dutchman, a small label, and included a live recitation of "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised" accompanied by conga and bongo drums. A second version of that piece, recorded with a full band including the jazz bassist Ron Carter, was released on Mr. Scott-Heron's second album, "Pieces of a Man," in 1971.
"The Revolution" established Mr. Scott-Heron as a rising star of the black cultural left, and its cool, biting ridicule of a nation anesthetized by mass media has resonated with the socially disaffected of various stripes — campus activists, media theorists, coffeehouse poets — for four decades. Using a barrage of pop-culture references, Mr. Scott-Heron derided society's dominating forces as well as the gullibly dominated:
The revolution will not be brought to you by the Schaefer Award Theater and will not star Natalie Wood and Steve McQueen or Bullwinkle and Julia.
The revolution will not give your mouth sex appeal.
The revolution will not get rid of the nubs.
The revolution will not make you look five pounds thinner, because the revolution will not be televised, brother.
Other pieces, like "New York Is Killing Me," "Home Is Where the Hatred Is," "Angel Dust" and "We Almost Lost Detroit" dealt bluntly with poverty, drug addiction, racism and the lurking catastrophes in industrialized civilization.
During the 1970s, Mr. Scott-Heron was seen as a prodigy with significant potential, although he never achieved wide popularity. He recorded 13 albums between 1970 and 1982, and was one of the first acts that the music executive Clive Davis signed after starting Arista Records in 1974. In 1979, Mr. Scott-Heron performed at the antinuclear MUSE benefit concerts at Madison Square Garden, and in 1985 he appeared on the anti-apartheid album "Sun City," which also featured Bono, Keith Richards, Miles Davis and Steven Van Zandt.
By the mid-1980s, Mr. Scott-Heron had begun to fade, and in later years he struggled publicly with addiction. Since 2001, he had been convicted twice for cocaine possession, and he served a sentence at Rikers Island in New York for parole violation. The writer of the New Yorker profile in 2010 reported witnessing Mr. Scott-Heron smoking crack, and referred to him living in a cavelike apartment in Harlem and being so dismayed by his physical appearance that he avoided mirrors.
Information on survivors was not immediately available.
Despite Mr. Scott-Heron's public problems, he remained an admired cult figure who made occasional concert appearances and was sought after as a collaborator. Last year, XL released "I'm New Here," his first album of new material in 16 years, which was produced by Richard Russell, a producer of electronic dance music who had written a letter to Mr. Scott-Heron and met him at Rikers Island in 2006.
Reviews for the album inevitably referred to Mr. Scott-Heron as the "godfather of rap," but he made it clear he had different tastes.
"It's something that's aimed at the kids," he once said. "I have kids, so I listen to it. But I would not say it's aimed at me. I listen to the jazz station."
********************
RIP
Signor V.
"For me, there's only my wife..."
"Sure I cook with wine - sometimes I even add it to the food!"
"When life itself seems lunatic, who knows where madness lies?"
"It was a grass harp... And we listened."
"Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it? Every, every minute?"
"No. Saints and poets, maybe... they do some."
|
|
|
Re: 2011 Dead Pool
[Re: J Geoff]
#604401
05/29/11 07:09 AM
05/29/11 07:09 AM
|
Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 5,325 MI
Lilo
|
Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 5,325
MI
|
I really liked his work, Signor V. 62 is too young to go but we don't really get a choice about that. Other people that were in that sort of proto-rap, spoken word genre that I liked were The Last Poets, The Watts Prophets, Wanda Robinson, and Eugene McDaniels.
"When the snows fall and the white winds blow, the lone wolf dies but the pack survives." Winter is Coming
Now this is the Law of the Jungle—as old and as true as the sky; And the wolf that shall keep it may prosper, but the wolf that shall break it must die. As the creeper that girdles the tree-trunk, the Law runneth forward and back; For the strength of the Pack is the Wolf, and the strength of the Wolf is the Pack.
|
|
|
Re: 2011 Dead Pool
[Re: J Geoff]
#604674
06/03/11 08:02 AM
06/03/11 08:02 AM
|
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 14,900
Beth E
Crabby
|
Crabby
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 14,900
|
Suicide doc, Jack Kevorkian has died. No one assisted him...just a blood clot. http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2011/06/03/report-dr-jack-kevorkian-dead/
Last edited by Beth E; 06/03/11 08:02 AM.
How about a little less questions and a lot more shut the hell up - Brian Griffin
When there's a will...put me in it.
|
|
|
Re: 2011 Dead Pool
[Re: Beth E]
#604682
06/03/11 09:29 AM
06/03/11 09:29 AM
|
Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 2,419 Bar Vitelli, Queens, NY
Signor Vitelli
Underboss
|
Underboss
Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 2,419
Bar Vitelli, Queens, NY
|
I'm tellin' ya: Invasion of the Body SnatchersPod people. We're next. Signor V.
"For me, there's only my wife..."
"Sure I cook with wine - sometimes I even add it to the food!"
"When life itself seems lunatic, who knows where madness lies?"
"It was a grass harp... And we listened."
"Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it? Every, every minute?"
"No. Saints and poets, maybe... they do some."
|
|
|
Re: 2011 Dead Pool
[Re: SC]
#604706
06/03/11 01:21 PM
06/03/11 01:21 PM
|
Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 25,984 California
The Italian Stallionette
|
Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 25,984
California
|
James Arness, the actor best known for playing Matt Dillon on "Gunsmoke" died at age 88.
The giant Dillon (6'6") played in two of my favorite sci-fi movies in the '50s. He was the alien in "The Thing" and he portrayed an FBI agent in "Them" (a thriller about giant ants).
R.I.P. Marshal Dillon Oh no! Not Marshall Dillon! Sorry to hear that. My family watched Gunsmoke every week. I knew he was tall but didn't know 6'6". Gee, I have tv on. I wonder why I haven't heard it. Btw, didn't he brother Peter Graves pass as well????? TIS
"Mankind must put an end to war before war puts an end to mankind. War will exist until that distant day when the conscientious objector enjoys the same reputation and prestige that the warrior does today." JFK
"War is over, if you want it" - John Lennon
|
|
|
Re: 2011 Dead Pool
[Re: The Italian Stallionette]
#604707
06/03/11 01:25 PM
06/03/11 01:25 PM
|
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 22,902 New York
SC
Consigliere
|
Consigliere
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 22,902
New York
|
Btw, didn't he brother Peter Graves pass as well????? Yeah, Graves died last year. If you had your tv on but couldn't see it, you would not be able to tell if it was Graves or Arness who was talking (they sounded virtually identical).
.
|
|
|
Re: 2011 Dead Pool
[Re: SC]
#604709
06/03/11 02:00 PM
06/03/11 02:00 PM
|
Joined: Sep 2001
Posts: 1,619 NJ
Don Marco
Underboss
|
Underboss
Joined: Sep 2001
Posts: 1,619
NJ
|
Btw, didn't he brother Peter Graves pass as well????? Yeah, Graves died last year. If you had your tv on but couldn't see it, you would not be able to tell if it was Graves or Arness who was talking (they sounded virtually identical). I would have to hear Matt Dillon say "have you ever been in a Turkish prison?" or “You ever seen a grown man naked?” to know if that is true.
"After all, we are not communists" Christopher Moltisanti: You ever think what a coincidence it is that Lou Gehrig died of Lou Gehrig's disease?
Tony Soprano: Yeah well, when you're married, you'll understand the importance of fresh produce.
|
|
|
|