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Thread: The 2012 Off Topic Celebrity Dead Pool

  1. #331
    Grandpa Troll
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    Boxing writer Bert Sugar dead at 75

    MOUNT KISCO, N.Y. (AP) -- Bert Sugar, an iconic boxing writer and sports historian who was known for his trademark fedora and ever-present cigar, died Sunday of cardiac arrest. He was 75.

    Jennifer Frawley, Sugar's daughter, said his wife, Suzanne, was by his side when he died at Northern Westchester Hospital. Sugar also had been battling lung cancer.

    "Just his intelligence and his wit and his sense of humor," Frawley said when asked what she will remember about her father. "He was always worried about people. He was always helping people."

    Sugar was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 2005. According to the hall's website, Sugar wrote more than 80 books, including "The 100 Greatest Boxers Of All Time." He also appeared in a handful of films, including "The Great White Hype" starring Samuel Jackson.

    "Around ringside, it's not going to be the same with Bert not there," said Jack Hirsch, the president of the Boxing Writers Association of America.

    Sugar was born in Washington, D.C., in 1936. He graduated from Maryland and went to law school at Michigan. He passed the bar in his hometown and worked in advertising in New York City before he got into writing in the 1970s.

    "Bert was obviously a showman in the way he did things outwardly, very flamboyant, but in quiet moments I found him to be an extremely modest individual," Hirsch said.

    Frawley said arrangements for a memorial service are still pending and anyone wishing to honor Sugar should make a donation to the boxing hall.

    "He was really a brilliant man," she said.



    Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/mma...#ixzz1qBRxyhox

    Did anyone have Ryan Dunn From Jackass FAME? He died in a fiery car crash speeding after being in a bar. And to think, everyone thought he would die doing something stupid-rah

  2. #332
    Wezil
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    Do we need to draw up new teams?
    "I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure." - Clarence Darrow
    "I didn't attend the funeral, but I sent a nice letter saying I approved of it." - Mark Twain

  3. #333
    Uncle Sparky
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    http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/...baS_story.html

    Abdullahi Yusuf, a former guerrilla warrior who became president of Somalia only to see his administration crumble under a ferocious Islamic insurgency, died March 23. He was 78.

    Abdirahman Omar Osman, a government spokesman, said Mr. Yusuf died at a hospital in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. The cause was complications from pneumonia, Mr. Yusuf’s family announced.

    Mr. Yusuf served as president of the Transitional Federal Government of Somalia from 2004 to 2008. He had battled chronic health problems for years and had a liver transplant in 1996. He survived several assassination attempts, including a suicide car bombing in 2006 that killed his brother and several bodyguards.

    Mr. Yusuf’s administration struggled to assert control in Somalia after assuming power in 2004, when the country’s first government in 13 years was formed with the help of the United Nations. At his inauguration — held in the Kenyan capital of Nairobi because of security concerns — Mr. Yusuf pronounced himself “a man of peace” and urged Somalis to begin to forgive one another.

    After an Islamic alliance took control of the Somali capital in 2006, Mr. Yusuf invited Ethiopian troops into the country. The Ethiopian advance quickly routed the Islamist forces, but the memories of previous Somali-Ethiopian wars and the presence of soldiers from a majority Christian nation in a mainly Muslim country made the Mr. Yusuf’s government unpopular.

    The situation also encouraged Ethiopia’s archenemy, Eritrea, to offer the Islamists assistance, making Somalia a proxy war zone. The Islamists quickly launched an Iraq-style insurgency.

    Mr. Yusuf’s government also was weakened by internal struggles. Mr. Yusuf was operating far from his power base in the semiautonomous northern region of Puntland. Clan squabbles and public disagreements with his prime minister over foreign aid led many Somalis to see the government as divided, corrupt and ineffective.

    Somalia has not had a fully functioning government since 1991, when dictator Mohamed Siad Barre was overthrown. Barre and Mr. Yusuf had been military colleagues, but Barre imprisoned Mr. Yusuf after he refused to take part in the coup that bought Barre to power in 1969.

    While in prison, he became friends with warlord Mohamed Farah Aideed, whose battle with U.S. soldiers in the early 1990s inspired the book and movie “Black Hawk Down.”

    Three years after his release in 1975, Mr. Yusuf tried to overthrow Barre but failed and fled to Kenya, where he recruited members for his guerrilla movement.

    Mr. Yusuf, who had studied in Italy and the former Soviet Union, was backed by the socialist government of Ethi*o*pia. But Mr. Yusuf later quarreled with the Ethiopians over their claims to Somali territory. Ethiopian dictator Mengistu Haile Mariam imprisoned Mr. Yusuf in 1985, and he was released only when the Mengistu regime fell in 1991.

    Mr. Yusuf spent much of the 1990s in his native Puntland, where he sought semiautonomous status in an effort to save the region from the chaos engulfing the rest of the nation. Aides described his style as ruthless, and many of his opponents were jailed or killed. There also were sporadic clashes over territory with the neighboring region of Somaliland, and he was deposed for a year over his attempts to increase his term of office in 2001.

    Mr. Yusuf regained control of Puntland in 2002 with Ethiopian help, forging an alliance with the new Ethio*pian government. Mr. Yusuf was elected Somalia’s president in 2004, having systematically undermined several other attempts at forming a government.
    There's nothing wrong with the dream, my friend, the problem lies with the dreamer.

  4. #334
    molly bloom
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    Quote Originally Posted by SlowwHand View Post
    2) Prince Phillip, Duke of Edinburgh

    Ahem!
    We gots a whole bunch of aged aristos over here. Yoorops got plenty o' dukes, marquises and barons too. Even Japan still has some royalty. Get hunting those 90 yrs + royals and nobles now....
    Vive la liberte. Noor Inayat Khan, Dachau.

    ...patriotism is not enough. I must have no hatred or bitterness towards anyone. Edith Cavell, 1915

  5. #335
    Wezil
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    Can I hire you to do research next season Molly?

    My team (and everyone's apparently) needs serious help.
    "I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure." - Clarence Darrow
    "I didn't attend the funeral, but I sent a nice letter saying I approved of it." - Mark Twain

  6. #336
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    Another great pioneering musician has left us... RIP Earl Scruggs, age 88.

    http://www.usatoday.com/life/people/...ies/53841194/1

    Apolyton's Grim Reaper 2008, 2010 & 2011
    RIP lest we forget... SG (2) and LaFayette -- Civ2 Succession Games Brothers-in-Arms

  7. #337
    Wezil
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    Robin Gibb's recovery from health problems has encountered a setback as the Bee Gees singer underwent emergency intestinal surgery.

    "Robin underwent the operation successfully, he is awake and has been talking to his doctors," reads a statement on his website. "He is currently being monitored and resting in the hospital and his family are hoping for his full recovery."

    Gibb, 62, underwent the surgery Monday to remove a blood clot in his colon that had caused a perforation. This followed earlier surgery for a twisted intestine.

    Gibb canceled promotional appearances for the release of The Titanic Requiem album, a classical work marking the 100th anniversary of the ocean liner's sinking. But he does hope to attend the work's live premiere in London on April 10.
    "I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure." - Clarence Darrow
    "I didn't attend the funeral, but I sent a nice letter saying I approved of it." - Mark Twain

  8. #338
    Hauldren Collider
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    RIP scruggs
    If there is no sound in space, how come you can hear the lasers?
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  9. #339
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    This dry streak just won't end. No one on my list is dying.
    "Our scientific power has out run out spiritual power. We have guided missiles and misguided men." - Martin Luther King Jr.
    "A cynical, mercenary, demagogic press will produce in time a people as base as itself."
    - Joseph Pulitzer

  10. #340
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    Down, boy.
    Apolyton's Grim Reaper 2008, 2010 & 2011
    RIP lest we forget... SG (2) and LaFayette -- Civ2 Succession Games Brothers-in-Arms

  11. #341
    Wezil
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    Quote Originally Posted by Dinner View Post
    This dry streak just won't end. No one on my list is dying.
    43 days as of today. Still not close to the record dry spell of '08. [/old fogie]
    "I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure." - Clarence Darrow
    "I didn't attend the funeral, but I sent a nice letter saying I approved of it." - Mark Twain

  12. #342
    Ming
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    Quote Originally Posted by Wezil View Post
    43 days as of today. Still not close to the record dry spell of '08. [/old fogie]
    For me... it's over two years
    Keep on Civin'
    RIP Baron O

  13. #343
    Wezil
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ming View Post
    For me... it's over two years
    Way to make yourself look good.

    According to the official records you have now gone 1192 days without a hit (Harold Pinter - 24Dec08).

    You're pushing 3.5 years.
    "I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure." - Clarence Darrow
    "I didn't attend the funeral, but I sent a nice letter saying I approved of it." - Mark Twain

  14. #344
    SlowwHand
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    DAMN!
    Life is not measured by the number of breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.
    "Hating America is something best left to Mobius. He is an expert Yank hater.
    He also hates Texans and Australians, he does diversify." ~ Braindead

  15. #345
    Ming
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    Quote Originally Posted by Wezil View Post
    Way to make yourself look good.

    According to the official records you have now gone 1192 days without a hit (Harold Pinter - 24Dec08).

    You're pushing 3.5 years.
    Yep... over two years, just like I said
    Keep on Civin'
    RIP Baron O

  16. #346
    Wezil
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    You must be in advertising.
    "I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure." - Clarence Darrow
    "I didn't attend the funeral, but I sent a nice letter saying I approved of it." - Mark Twain

  17. #347
    molly bloom
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    For everyone who was (and like me still is) a fan of Vincent Price and some of his camper/darker horror films more sad news:

    Robert Fuest:

    Director who blended sophistication and sickness in the horror film The Abominable Dr Phibes

    With its mix of pop art, sophisticated humour, pulp science fiction and English eccentricity, the television series The Avengers was among the most influential and significant products of "swinging London" in the 1960s. Robert Fuest, who has died aged 84, cut his teeth on the series under the aegis of the writer-producer Brian Clemens, initially as a production designer when the show was produced "as live" in the studio in black and white and co-starred Honor Blackman with Patrick MacNee, then as director when the series had moved on to colour, film and Linda Thorson.

    As designer and director, Fuest learned how to achieve style on a budget – making a great deal of the show's famously minimalist aesthetic – and he carried this over into his best-known works as a film director, the two Dr Phibes horror movies of the early 1970s, starring Vincent Price, and the Michael Moorcock adaptation The Final Programme (1973). In 1970, he made a commercially successful literary adaptation of Wuthering Heights, with Timothy Dalton as a pin-up Heathcliff, and the highly regarded, recently remade suspense picture And Soon the Darkness.

    Fuest was born in Croydon, south London. He graduated from Wimbledon School of Art with a national diploma in design, then went on to Hornsey College of Art to study for his art teacher diploma. He did his national service in the RAF and was involved, in a tiny way, in the Berlin airlift of 1948.

    After a decade teaching illustration and lithography at Southampton School of Art, he entered the TV industry as a production designer in 1961, first working at Thames Television on The Avengers. He worked for ITV and the BBC throughout the 1960s, mostly as an art director/production designer on prestige shows including Out of This World, Armchair Theatre and the BBC Sunday Night Play. He also contributed material to the Peter Cook-Dudley Moore sketch show Not Only … But Also, as a comedy writer, and seemed drawn towards the pop art/satire world epitomised in the British cinema by the films of Richard Lester.

    In 1967, Fuest wrote, directed and provided songs for his first feature, the marriage-in-crisis comedy Just Like a Woman, starring Wendy Craig and Francis Matthews. The film ventures into freewheeling, surreal territory thanks to a Peter Sellers-esque performance from Clive Dunn as a modern architect who creates a stylish but hideous new home for the heroine. Seldom revived yet fresh and memorable, Just Like a Woman might well have been Fuest's most personal film, though his subsequent work found him gravitating towards mainstream success and a lasting cult reputation.

    Fuest then directed eight episodes of The Avengers and continued his collaboration with Clemens on And Soon the Darkness, a sunstruck thriller about two girls (Pamela Franklin and Michele Dotrice) stalked by a murderer while on a cycling holiday in France. Wuthering Heights, one of several literary classics reimagined as 1960s-style youth romances in the wake of Franco Zeffirelli's Romeo and Juliet, and John Schlesinger's Far from the Madding Crowd – was made for American International Pictures, which was at that time best known for beach-party musicals and Roger Corman's Edgar Allan Poe adaptations starring Price.

    Wuthering Heights was AIP's biggest success to that date – rather to the surprise of studio chief Samuel Z Arkoff, who tried in vain to persuade Fuest to deliver a sequel – and Fuest was then teamed with Price, who had at that time grown weary of his horror stardom and become prickly to work with. Rewriting without credit a simple parade-of-deaths film initially called The Curse of Dr Pibe, Fuest delivered The Abominable Dr Phibes (1971), in which a disfigured vaudeville organist-theologist kills off, in gruesome manners derived from the Plagues of Egypt ("Aaargh, locusts!"), the doctors who failed to save his wife's life.

    Aside from the relentless black humour of the premise, Fuest and Price worked hard on an unusual blend of sophistication and sickness, playing up the art deco sets and befuddled succession of mostly doomed British character actors. The film was a big enough hit to re-enthuse Price and AIP and led to an even more stylish and acid-dipped follow-up, Dr Phibes Rises Again (1972), which did well, but not well enough to ensure further instalments.

    The Final Programme, with Jon Finch as Moorcock's futuristic dandy Jerry Cornelius and an absurdist take on the end of the world, is a remarkable achievement, though the author did not care for it and audiences did not initially take to its odd qualities. After directing an entertaining American horror movie, The Devil's Rain (1975) – with Ernest Borgnine and William Shatner – Fuest mostly worked in television in the US and UK, inevitably directing episodes of The New Avengers but also odd projects such as Revenge of the Stepford Wives; an hour-long version of Poe's The Gold-Bug; and children's programs in the US and the UK.

    From the mid-80s, he returned to teaching, as senior professor at the London International Film School, and then became a full-time painter, specialising in seascapes and maritime subjects. He was also a well-liked guest at film festivals and cult movie events.

    He is survived by his wife, Jane, and their daughter Rebecca, and his former wife, Gillian, and their sons Adam, Ben and Aaron.

    • Robert Fuest, director, production designer and artist, born 30 September 1927; died 21 March 2012
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2012/mar/26/robert-fuest

    I recommend quite highly both 'Dr. Phibes' films and the France-set thriller 'And Soon The Darkness'- which shows just how unsettling beautiful countryside and bright sunshine can be. 'The Devil's Rain' is great fun- I used to own a copy on video. It has Ernest Borgnine & William Shatner, so it's an American ham and Canadian bacon double treat (no, I really do like it).

    Gettin' the Phibes vibes:

    9ED3039E9E.jpg
    Vive la liberte. Noor Inayat Khan, Dachau.

    ...patriotism is not enough. I must have no hatred or bitterness towards anyone. Edith Cavell, 1915

  18. #348
    molly bloom
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    Ex- angry young playwright dies:

    John Arden, who has died aged 81, was among the first of the so-called Angry Young Men to be drawn to the Royal Court theatre as a dramatist in the 1950s.

    Arden first came to public attention in 1957 when George Devine chose his The Waters of Babylon — a tragicomedy of London low-life starring Robert Stephens and Phyllida Law — for one of his Sunday night “productions without decor”. The play is punctuated with songs and abrupt changes of theatrical tone.

    He was best-known, though, for Serjeant Musgrave’s Dance (1959), written in the wake of an atrocity committed by British troops serving in Cyprus. Set in the 19th century, it concerns four Army deserters, sickened by the colonial war in which they have been fighting, who descend on a northern English town with the intention of somehow “bringing home” the brutality they have witnessed overseas.

    Though the work won praise in some quarters for its theatrical power and its use of verse and incidental ballad (Sean O’Casey called it “far and away the finest play of the present day”), it left audiences baffled about the playwright’s intentions and unsure whether the underlying message, if there was one, was about pacifism. The Sunday Times’s critic Harold Hobson described it as a “frightful ordeal”. It ran for only 28 performances and was a financial disaster.

    However, the play was soon reassessed: Hobson publicly changed his mind; it won the Evening Standard award for best play in 1960; and it became a standard on the school English curriculum. When, during the Iraq war in 2003, the Oxford Theatre Company staged a revival, audiences were reminded of a neglected talent.

    The initial mixed reaction to the piece owed much to the fact that Arden sought to bypass the convention of heroes and villains, believing that audiences with their wits about them should enjoy the absence of moral nudging from the playwright.

    In this, he not only stood apart from conventional West End plays, but also from other members of the “Angry Young Men” brigade, who rose to fame at the Royal Court under George Devine with plays clearly designed to make the audience question the state of British society.

    In his autobiography, John Osborne wrote that “Arden became an in-house joke for box office disaster”. Between 1956 and 1961 the Royal Court made about Ł50,000 from Osborne’s plays, but lost nearly Ł15,000 on Arden’s.

    Arden sought to reinstate poetic tradition, not in the elegant and self-consciously literary style of Christopher Fry but with heightened, theatrical prose and ballads, and making extensive use of song, dance, masks and puppetry. He tried for a stronger, grittier, more muscular style which mixed the formal with the natural, the concrete with fantasy. But audiences tended to find his earnestness off-putting. His writing sometimes struck a portentous note, and his refusal to make it clear where the playwright stood could be a challenge too far.

    Although he never won a wide following, Arden’s influence on other writers eventually became obvious; and the faith shown in him by the English Stage Company at the Royal Court in the 1950s helped to put him, for a short time, in the front rank of British dramatists, alongside Osborne, Wesker, Simpson and Pinter.

    The son of a glass factory manager, John Arden was born at Barnsley on October 26 1930. After Sedbergh School, where he played Hamlet, and National Service in the Intelligence Corps, he read Architecture at King’s College, Cambridge. He qualified as an architect at Edinburgh College of Art, where his first play, All Fall Down, was performed by a student group.

    He continued to write while working in an architects’ office until George Devine accepted The Waters of Babylon. Live Like Pigs, which premiered at the Court in 1958 and was directed by George Devine himself, was a welfare state comedy about a gipsy family being forced into council accommodation.

    If Arden’s writing was never “commercial”, it was sufficiently interesting artistically to attract the attention of the subsidised companies. Plays such as The Workhouse Donkey, about town hall corruption and the appointment of a fanatical chief constable, and Armstrong’s Last Goodnight (with Albert Finney as a 16th-century Scottish chieftain) were staged at Chichester in the 1960s. Both were epic in style, mixing verse and prose with ballads and enough political and moral ambiguity to keep audiences confused.

    Left-Handed Liberty (1965) was the result of a commission to celebrate the 750th anniversary of Magna Carta, and was staged at Bernard Miles’s Mermaid Theatre. In 1968 Arden’s The Hero Rises Up, a musical about Admiral Lord Nelson, earned polite reviews.

    From the mid-Sixties, Arden’s wife, the Irish actress, writer and political activist Margaretta D’Arcy, collaborated with him on his plays, and it was probably their quarrel with the Royal Shakespeare Company about the staging of The Island of the Mighty in 1972, at the Aldwych, which ended his links with the London theatre.

    A four-hour verse saga about King Arthur, derived from a television series, The Island of the Mighty was received with derision by the critics. The Ardens, who felt that the production had been slanted in favour of imperialism, ended up picketing the audience at their own play.

    Thereafter the Ardens, who lived in Galway, devoted themselves to Irish theatre and (largely) Irish themes, founding the Corrandulla Arts Centre in Co Galway and contributing frequently to community drama.

    In later life, Arden turned to writing novels and short stories. His first novel, Silence Among the Weapons, was shortlisted for the Booker prize in 1982. His Books of Bale (1988), about the English Protestant writer and churchman John Bale, appointed to the Irish see of Ossory in 1552, was seen by some as a metaphor for Arden’s own life.

    John Arden, who was a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, is survived by his wife and four sons. Another son predeceased him.

    John Arden, born October 26 1930, died March 28 2012
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obit...ohn-Arden.html

    Should you ever have the chance to see a production of 'Serjeant Musgrave's Dance' don't miss it.


    69mag_p16c.jpg
    Vive la liberte. Noor Inayat Khan, Dachau.

    ...patriotism is not enough. I must have no hatred or bitterness towards anyone. Edith Cavell, 1915

  19. #349
    Wezil
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    Quote Originally Posted by molly bloom View Post
    It has Ernest Borgnine & William Shatner...
    Borgnine we have. Shatner somehow escaped our attention.
    "I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure." - Clarence Darrow
    "I didn't attend the funeral, but I sent a nice letter saying I approved of it." - Mark Twain

  20. #350
    Uncle Sparky
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    Quote Originally Posted by Wezil View Post
    Borgnine we have. Shatner somehow escaped our attention.
    I saw Shatner in person a couple of months ago. He definately has a few more years in him.
    There's nothing wrong with the dream, my friend, the problem lies with the dreamer.

  21. #351
    molly bloom
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    Quote Originally Posted by Uncle Sparky View Post
    I saw Shatner in person a couple of months ago. He definately has a few more years in him.
    But let us hope no more albums.
    Vive la liberte. Noor Inayat Khan, Dachau.

    ...patriotism is not enough. I must have no hatred or bitterness towards anyone. Edith Cavell, 1915

  22. #352
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    Actually, his concept album, Seeking Major Tom, came out last year. Themed to the Bowie hit and replete with guest appearances from real musicians. He's also got a one-man show he's taking to Broadway.



    Not bad for an 81-year old Canuck, eh.
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  23. #353
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    I almost posted that ^ . I saw a preview of his one man show - very little singing...
    There's nothing wrong with the dream, my friend, the problem lies with the dreamer.

  24. #354
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    He hosted the Juno Awards last night. Gotta give him credit: he keeps working.
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  25. #355
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    Not one single Star Trek reference.
    "I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure." - Clarence Darrow
    "I didn't attend the funeral, but I sent a nice letter saying I approved of it." - Mark Twain

  26. #356
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    Nothing? Not even a "where no artist has gone before"?
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  27. #357
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    The opening medley also sucked. Worse air guitar ever (4:00 min mark). No, the video isn't out of sync with the audio.... Capt. Kirk is.




    On topic, I have to agree with the earlier comments - He does appear to be in pretty good health so probably not a good pick.
    "I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure." - Clarence Darrow
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  28. #358
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    With only 3 hits we're falling behind the pros.

    Derby leader now has 6/20 hits
    Lee Atwater leader has 5/10 hits

    We're beating the DeathList (as usual) with 2/50
    "I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure." - Clarence Darrow
    "I didn't attend the funeral, but I sent a nice letter saying I approved of it." - Mark Twain

  29. #359
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    Speaking of electric guitar, Jim Marshall, creator of the Mashall Amp and known as the "Lord of Loud," has passed away at age 88.

    RIP, and thanks for all the tone...

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  30. #360
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    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-0...s-aged-76.html

    Ferdinand Porsche, Creator of 911 Sportscar Icon, Dies at 76

    “As creator of the Porsche 911, he established a design culture that molds our sportscars still today,” Matthias Mueller, chief executive officer of Porsche AG, said in an e- mailed statement. “His philosophy of good design is for us a legacy that we will also honor in the future.”
    Ferdinand Alexander Porsche, the inventor of the 911 sportscar, has died, at 76, Porsche AG said in an e-mailed statement today. Source: Porsche Design via Bloomberg
    A Porsche 911 Turbo sits on display at the Frankfurt Motor Show on Sept. 16, 2009. Photographer: Adam Berry/Bloomberg
    Ferdinand Alexander Porsche, the grandson of Ferdinand Porsche, who created the original Volkswagen (VOW3) Beetle, designed the first 911 in 1962. He went on to develop racecars for the German automaker until leaving the Stuttgart-based company in 1972 with other family members when Porsche was transformed into a joint stock company.
    The 911 remains the epitome of the Porsche brand, even as the carmaker, which is jointly owned by the Porsche SE holding company and Volkswagen AG (VOW3), expands beyond sports cars. The Cayenne sport-utility vehicle was the brand’s top seller last year, with triple the deliveries of the 911. The Macan, a compact SUV, is scheduled to start production next year.
    Porsche unveiled the seventh generation of the $82,100 911 in September. The 350-horsepower sportscar has a top speed of 289 kilometers per hour (179 miles per hour) and surges to 100 kilometers in 4.6 seconds.
    “He was a very special man, and the company Porsche was his life and what he stood for,” said Guenther Molter, who co- authored his father’s Ferry Porsche autobiography. “He carried on the work of his father in his own way. He realized the Porsche 911, which was his idea.”
    After leaving Porsche, Ferdinand Alexander Porsche founded the Porsche Design Studio, where he devoted himself to developing watches, eyeglasses, writing utensils and other design projects. He was a proponent of clear, austere lines.
    His credo was “design must be functional and the functionality must be visually implemented without gags that need to be explained,” according to the Porsche statement.
    Ferdinand Alexander Porsche will be interred among close family members at a ceremony at Zell am See in Austria. A public ceremony will take place at a later date, Porsche said.
    RIP
    I come from the land of the ice and snow
    From the rust belt where industry won't go

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