Author Topic: 2021 Deathpool thread  (Read 65890 times)

El Diablo Blanco

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #75 on: January 23, 2021, 05:49:42 AM »
Larry King

Damn, I called this one.

Larry King, the longtime CNN host who became an icon through his interviews with countless newsmakers and his sartorial sensibilities, has died. He was 87.

His son, Chance, confirmed King's death Saturday morning.
King hosted "Larry King Live" on CNN for over 25 years.
A statement was posted on his verified Facebook announcing his passing.

Humble Narcissist

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #76 on: January 23, 2021, 08:33:13 AM »
He looked dead 30 years ago.

When Larry found out his latest wife was cheating on him with his kids baseball coach, Larry told the coach "you think she's hot, you should see her younger sister."  8)

Gregzs

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #77 on: January 23, 2021, 10:35:53 AM »
Larry King Dead at 87


Larry King -- the legendary TV and radio host who conducted more than 30,000 interviews in a storied 60-year career -- has died.

King died at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center early Saturday ... this, according to Ora Media, the media company Larry co-founded.

Larry was diagnosed with COVID-19 over the holidays, and was hospitalized in the ICU at one point, but had recently been moved to a regular hospital room, and was breathing on his own. Things took a turn, and King died Saturday morning.

Larry -- who published more than 20 books and had a USA Today column for decades -- coped with various ailments throughout his life ... mostly heart problems. He suffered several heart attacks and, in 1987, had quintuple bypass surgery. In fact, Larry married his most recent wife, Shawn King, at UCLA Medical Center where he was being treated for chest pains.

He tied the knot just before undergoing cardiac surgery.

Larry had been in and out of the hospital in 2019 and was told by doctors he didn't have much longer to live.

Just this past July, Larry's son Andy King, 65, unexpectedly passed away of a heart attack in late July, while his daughter Chaia King, 52, died just weeks later from lung cancer.

Larry -- government name Lawrence Harvey Zeiger -- started his career in radio as a disc jockey at WAHR-AM in Miami ... after officially changing his last name to King.

His voice would ultimately land him jobs at radio stations across America before finding fame with "The Larry King Show." The nationally-syndicated late-night radio talk show debuted in 1978 across 28 cities ... and in just 5 short years the show was heard in 118 cities.

Larry's career catapulted to the big time when, in 1985, "Larry King Live" premiered on the fledgling CNN. He interviewed just about every iconic figure ... from Sir Paul McCartney, John F. Kennedy Jr. and Marlon Brando (they kissed on the lips in 1994) to Presidents Gerald Ford, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama. Larry also interviewed Vladimir Putin.

Larry was a unique talent and an incredible interview who made his craft look effortless.  He was completely absorbed in conversations with his guests, and he did something that escapes many other interviewers -- HE LISTENED.  Larry wasn't thinking about his next question -- he was always in the moment.  And something else ... he never asked long questions just to hear himself talk.  His questions were short, and almost always on point.

The popular late-night TV show aired its last episode on December 16, 2010 ... becoming CNN's most-watched and longest-running program. But, he didn't exactly go away quietly ... Larry's one-man comedy show "Larry King: Stand Up" debuted 4 months later. He also started "Larry King Now" ... an online series that later migrated to Russian-owned news channel, RT.

Larry loved getting married almost as much as doing interviews -- he did it 8 times ... to Freda Miller (1952), Annette Kaye (1961), Alene Akins (1961), Mickey Sutphin (1963), Alene again (1967), Sharon Lepore (1976), Julie Alexander (1989) and Shawn (1997). He filed for divorce from Shawn in 2019.

The last time we saw Larry was in February 2020, when he mused on the upcoming Dodgers season. The Brooklyn native and lifelong Dodgers fan watched them win their first World Series in 32 years after the COVID-shorted 2020 season.

Larry's survived by 5 children ... Cannon, Chance, Danny, Kelly and Larry Jr. He was 87, and what an accomplished and full 87 years they were.

RIP

https://www.tmz.com/2021/01/23/larry-king-dead-dies-87-covid/?fbclid=IwAR2eYXOYpnyXz9u_5Ae0aOBfVJrEfmJ28Smz2wLeKaXsyhxVWGNZPtWi7IQ

Gregzs

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #78 on: January 23, 2021, 03:27:45 PM »
'Barney Miller,' 'Sanford and Son' actor Gregory Sierra dies


Gregory Sierra, who had memorable roles in the 1970s sitcoms “Barney Miller" and “Sanford and Son," has died after battling cancer. He was 83.

Sierra's widow, Helene, said Saturday in a phone interview with The Associated Press that the actor died on Jan. 4 in Laguna Woods, California.

Sierra's breakthrough came in 1972 when he played the role of Fred G. Sanford's neighbor, Julio Fuentes, on “Sanford and Son." He also earned major attention for playing Sgt. Miguel “Chano” Amanguale on “Barney Miller," which launched in 1975.

“He was an amazing human being, different than any other person, male or female, that I have ever known," Helene told the AP. “He just was extremely intelligent and a brilliant actor. He had a heart (of gold). Anytime that somebody needed something, he would be there for them and he defended the underdog anytime. And he was a very charming man. He was truly a man’s man and women fell in love with him all the time."

Sierra, who is of Puerto Rican descent, was born on Jan. 25, 1937 in New York City. His TV credits include “All in the Family," “Soap," “Miami Vice," “Zorro and Son," “Hawaii Five-O," “Hill Street Blues" and more. He also appeared in films such as “Beneath the Planet of the Apes," “Papillon," “The Towering Inferno," “Honey I Blew Up the Kid" and “The Other Side of the Wind," which was released in 2018 after more than 40 years in development.

In addition to Helene, Sierra is survived by his daughters, Kelly and Jill, and his granddaughter, Emma.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/movies/news/barney-miller-sanford-and-son-actor-gregory-sierra-dies/ar-BB1d1Y69

Gregzs

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #79 on: January 23, 2021, 03:36:35 PM »
‘Lost’ actor Mira Furlan dies at 65


Mira Furlan, best known for her roles as Delenn on “Babylon 5” and Danielle Rousseau on “Lost,” died on Wednesday. She was 65.

Her Twitter account announced the news on Thursday, and “Babylon 5” creator J. Michael Straczynski posted a tribute to the actor later that night.

While a cause of death has yet not been revealed, Straczynski said the cast and crew of “Babylon 5” had “known for some time now that Mira’s health was fading.” “We kept hoping that she would improve,” he wrote. “In a group email sent to the cast a while back, I heard that she might be improving.”

However, Straczynski said he later got the call from “Babylon 5” co-star Peter Jurasik that Furlan’s husband, director Goran Gajić, was “bringing her home.”

“Mira was a good and kind woman, a stunningly talented performer, and a friend to everyone in the cast and crew of ‘Babylon 5,’ and we are all devastated by the news,” he wrote. “The cast members with whom she was especially close since the show’s end will need room to process this moment, so please be gentle if they are unresponsive for a time. We have been down this road too often, and it only gets harder.”

Furlan was born in the former Yugoslavia, where she had a number of stage roles and was part of the Croatian National Theatre, and emigrated to the U.S. in 1991. She joined space opera “Babylon 5” as Delenn, the Minbari ambassador to the titular space station, in 1993, and would go on to star in the series for its full five seasons. In 2004, she made her debut in ABC’s megahit “Lost” as Danielle Rousseau, a scientist who’d been shipwrecked on the show’s mysterious island 16 years before the crash of the Oceanic Flight 815. She recurred throughout the series over its next few seasons.

Furlan continued to act through last year, and racked up dozens of credits across film and TV throughout her life. Her film credits include Emir Kusturica’s Oscar-nominated “When Father Was Away on Business,” “Beauty of Vice,” “Three For Happiness” and “In the Jaws of Life.”

She is survived by Gajić and their son, Marko Lav Gajić.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/tv/news/lost-actor-mira-furlan-dies-at-65/ar-BB1cZKYj


Humble Narcissist

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #80 on: January 24, 2021, 02:25:20 AM »
Famous people are dropping like flies.

denarii

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #81 on: January 24, 2021, 08:25:31 AM »
corona is clearing out the lingering

Matt

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #82 on: January 24, 2021, 08:30:02 AM »
Famous people are dropping like flies.

Mathematically, you need to compare it to previous years.

To begin: do your senses notice a difference since previous years? If yes, there may be something to be said about celebrity deaths going up.

I personally do not notice anything different this year.

Humble Narcissist

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #83 on: January 24, 2021, 09:27:21 AM »
Mathematically, you need to compare it to previous years.

To begin: do your senses notice a difference since previous years? If yes, there may be something to be said about celebrity deaths going up.

I personally do not notice anything different this year.
This time of year gets a lot of old people with the flu, Covid, pneumonia, etc.  A lot of people probably have weakened immune systems from depression post holidays, the weather, plus some people with diseases were probably hanging on till after holidays and new year.

Gregzs

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #84 on: January 25, 2021, 08:45:15 PM »
J.D. “Dave” Power, Who Made Quality Count in the Car Industry, Has Died


J.D. Power and his wife, Julie, established J.D. Power and Associates in 1968, funding it with a second mortgage on the house.

The “Associates” in the company name were Julie and the kids, who helped send out and tabulate surveys.

Power sold the company to McGraw Hill in 2005. He continued working in a supporting role until 2009.

It might be a vast oversimplification to say that before J.D. Power and Associates came along there was absolutely no incentive for carmakers to make quality cars, but you could say it anyway. Anyone who remembers the quality products foisted on an unwitting public in the ‘60s, ‘70s, and ‘80s remembers.

It was J.D. Power and Associates that took it upon themselves to introduce quality to the auto industry or, in many cases, force it on them. And once they did, everyone benefitted.

“There was no interest in finding out what customers really thought,” Power once said of the pre-JDP era. “Instead, we were constantly asked to ‘torture the data until it confessed,’ giving up the answers that the executives wanted to hear.”

It was that “closed-minded thinking,” as Power once said, along with the cold Midwest winters, that got Power and his family to move west in 1965. He had been a financial analyst for Ford, then represented General Motors as a marketing research consultant for Marplan and then headed up marketing at Case tractors before heading west. Once out in sunny California, he did some consulting, took a position at McCulloch chainsaws, then got the itch to break out on his own after he heard that three of his fellow Wharton MBA grads had already started their own companies.

So, three years after Power, his wife and co-founder Julie, and their three kids (soon to be four) moved to Calabasas, Calif., they started J.D. Power and Associates on the family’s kitchen table, funding it with a second mortgage on the house. The “Associates” in the company name were Julie and the kids. Julie tabulated survey returns while the kids took turns stuffing envelopes with more customer surveys and scotch-taping a quarter onto each one as an incentive to fill them out and return them.

From those humble beginnings, J.D. Power and Associates would change the auto industry forever.

But it took some hard work first.

Toyota was one of his first clients. Remember that in 1968 Toyota was far from the industry juggernaut it is today. It needed an ace in the hole, and that ace would turn out to be quality, eventually. In June of 1968, Power offered Toyota his “California Import Car Buyers” study, which included comparisons with domestic brands, too. Toyota signed a contract for $8,000 and became a regular client from then on.

The Big 3 domestic manufacturers in Detroit proved a little harder sell, since Detroit, at that time anyway, didn’t want to be told it could use any quality improvement at all.

Although his research methodology now is almost universally embraced, for years Detroit automakers disparaged his findings, privately grumbling the data favored Japanese brands, likely because they were his first predominant clients and typically finished high in the standings.

The trade magazine Ward’s Auto said in a 2012 article on J.D. Power, “When told that General Motors’ nameplates finished as bottom feeders in a JDP survey during the 1980s, the late mild-mannered Jim McDonald, then GM president, snapped: ‘To hell with J.D. Power!’”

“To criticism that he has ever been biased, Power simply says, ‘That’s a bunch of baloney.’ He argues that the U.S automakers came out of their World War II manufacturing triumph a tad cocky. ‘The stronger they got after the war, the more they fought change,’ he says. ‘They were hidebound. They were not aware of what was going on around them and they lost sight of the consumer.”

Now, J.D. Power is considered a necessary and highly objective source of consumer thought on cars.

Ward’s quoted John Casesa, a longtime auto analyst, “Detroit was in denial, but (Power’s) surveys measured the real truth in the marketplace. He produced products with integrity. He’s had a profound impact on manufacturers and consumers.”

Today there are over 1,000 licensed J.D. Power awards, cited in everything from Super Bowl commercials to stickers on dashboards. Julie passed away in 2002, and Power sold the company he founded to McGraw Hill in 2005. He continued working in a supporting role until 2009.

Throughout his career, Power maintained a grace and warmth not often found in high-power industry leaders. A friend who worked at J.D. Power for 10 years remembered his very first day on the job at J.D. Power and Associates.

“Dave (everyone called him that, which is what he preferred) took the time to come by my office, introduce himself and learn about me,” recalled JDP communications man Jeff Perlman. “A fellow New Englander, we connected immediately, with talk about his beloved Red Sox and, of course, his views of the auto industry.

“That day—my first—a legend took the time to introduce himself to his newest employee. Dave Power ‘connected’ with everyone immediately. Beyond his brilliance, savvy, and seemingly endless accomplishments was the humble core of a boy from Worcester who built an empire, but never lost track of where he came from.”

https://www.msn.com/en-us/autos/news/j-d-dave-power-who-made-quality-count-in-the-car-industry-has-died/ar-BB1d4IQ2

Gregzs

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #85 on: January 26, 2021, 04:03:38 PM »
Bruce Kirby, ‘Columbo,’ ‘Kojak’ star and dad of ‘When Harry Met Sally’ actor Bruno Kirby, dead at 95

Bruce Kirby, the versatile character actor whose career spanned more than 50 years on TV and film, has died at the age of 95.

He passed away Sunday at a Los Angeles hospital, according to his son John Kirby.

No cause of death was revealed.

“My heart is heavy but grateful for all the extra blessed years together,” wrote Kirby on a Monday Facebook post. “My father loved acting and aside from his extraordinary professional career in television, film and theater, he never stopped working on it from his early years in New York on scholarship with Lee Strasberg for nine years, L.A.’s Theatre East and The Actors Studio.”



Born in New York City in 1925, Kirby began his career in the mid-1950s with guest appearances on “The Phil Silvers Show” and “Goodyear Playhouse” before landing a recurring role as Officer Kissel on the Fred Gwynne comedy “Car 54, Where Are You?”

Throughout the 1960s, he landed one-time roles on the likes of “Adam-12,” “I Dream of Jeannie” and “Night Gallery,” according to IMDb.

In the mid-1970s, Kirby played Sgt. Al Vine on a half-dozen episodes of “Kojak” and appeared in the first of nine episodes of “Columbo,” originating the role of Sgt. George Kramer, Peter Falk’s naive assistant.

And from 1986 to 1991, he played the recurring role of District Attorney Bruce Rogoff on “L.A. Law.”

In 1984, he appeared as Uncle Ben in the Broadway revival of “Death of a Salesman,” starring Dustin Hoffman, noted The Hollywood Reporter.

Two decades earlier, he debuted on the Great White Way in the doomed production of “Diamond Orchid,” according to the Internet Broadway Database.

Kirby also appeared in many memorable film roles, notably as the market owner in “Stand By Me,” a detective in “Throw Momma From the Train” and as racist cop Matt Dillon’s father in “Crash.”

He was still working into his 80s, appearing on episodes of “Numbers” and “Scrubs,” before retiring from the entertainment business in 2009, reported Variety.

Kirby was also the father of actor Bruno Kirby, co-star of “When Harry Met Sally” and “City Slickers,” who died from leukemia in 2006.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/entertainment/news/bruce-kirby-columbo-kojak-star-and-dad-of-when-harry-met-sally-actor-bruno-kirby-dead-at-95/ar-BB1d7lYT?ocid=msedgdhp

Gregzs

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #86 on: January 26, 2021, 05:10:03 PM »
Rutgers Scientist Who Invented COVID Spit Test Dies At 51

NEW BRUNSWICK, NJ — The man who helped invent the coronavirus saliva test, developed right here in a lab on the Rutgers University campus, has unexpectedly passed away.




The death of Andrew Brooks, 51, was announced by Gov. Phil Murphy in his coronavirus press conference on Monday.

"With a heavy heart, I want to acknowledge the tragic passing over the weekend of one of our state's unsung heroes, Dr. Andrew Brooks," said Gov. Murphy in a somber tone. "Born and raised in New Jersey, Dr. Brooks was a Rutgers University research professor in the department of genetics, and for the past decade he served the director of RUCDR Infinite Biologics.

Now, you may remember that name. Why? Because last year, in the frenetic early days of the pandemic, he led the development of the so-called spit or saliva test."

"The Rutgers University community is deeply saddened by the unexpected loss of Dr. Andrew Brooks," said Rutgers Chancellor Christopher Molloy in a statement.

That Rutgers spit test helped revolutionize COVID testing and is now being used at testing sites across New Jersey. Because of Brooks' work, it became no longer necessary for testers to put a nasal swab high into one's nasal cavity, a painful and invasive experience. Instead, you could simply spit into a test tube and the saliva was then tested in a lab for the SARS-CoV-2 virus.

At the time, New Jersey Health Commissioner Judith Persichilli told NJ.com Brooks' test was "a game changer."

Brooks and his team developed the test in a lab at Rutgers' RUCDR Infinite Biologics, part of Rutgers' Human Genetics Institute of New Jersey. Their test was also unique in that results could be obtained within three days. At the time, it took up to 10 days to get coronavirus test results. (As testing technology progressed, results can now be obtained with 24 hours for the saliva test, and within minutes with rapid nasal cavity testing.)

Their work was based on a Nobel Prize-winning laboratory technique that used the virus' nucleic acid, in this case RNA.

After Brooks' test showed positive results, it received FDA emergency-use authorization in March and, as Patch reported, that weekend Brooks and his team got an overnight call from the Trump White House, asking how quickly the test could go nationwide.

A month later, the spit test was the first of any test approved for home use.

"Since March, more than two million of these clinical tests have been performed, undoubtedly saving many lives and providing a practical tool for pandemic control," said Rutgers Chancellor Molloy. "(Brooks') university career was distinguished by outstanding scholarship, service to the field of biomedicine, and business activities designed to improve human health."

The Rutgers COVID spit test was first piloted at the Edison Motor Vehicle drive-through testing site. It was then picked up by the Visiting Nurse Association of Central Jersey Community Health Centers, and used in locations including Asbury Park, Freehold, Keyport and Red Bank and other state-run testing sites across New Jersey.

"They've worked quite well!" said Christopher Rinn, CEO of the Visiting Nurse Association of Central Jersey, said in this Patch interview in May. "Very easy to administer, great turnaround time, and effective in the sense they will increase access to testing. Saliva tests are less intrusive than the deep nasal swab, and are safer for healthcare workers administering the procedure. They require less personal protective equipment."

"When I realized I didn't have to have the swab jammed into my brain, I figured I'd give it a try," Edison resident Katrina Duggan, 41, told Patch in the same article, of why she preferred the spit test when she thought she had the virus.

"We at Rutgers offer our heartfelt condolences to Dr. Brooks’ family and we take pride in his achievements, which have contributed significantly to the effort to overcome this global pandemic," said Molloy.

"His test has undoubtedly saved lives, " said Murphy on Monday.

Brooks authored more than 70 scientific papers and served as an advisor to the Food & Drug Administration.

"He leaves behind a tremendous legacy at RUDCR, which over the summer he helped take private and is now known as Infinity Biologics LLC, with more than 550 employees," said the governor. "We cannot thank Andy enough for all he did. He was only 51 years old."

Brooks is survived by his mother, his sister, and his wife and his three daughters.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/medical/rutgers-scientist-who-invented-covid-spit-test-dies-at-51/ar-BB1d73oh?ocid=msedgdhp

Matt

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #87 on: January 26, 2021, 05:15:43 PM »
So both the PCR test creator, and the COVID spit test creator are dead?

Humble Narcissist

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #88 on: January 27, 2021, 03:21:33 AM »
So both the PCR test creator, and the COVID spit test creator are dead?
Nothing to see here.

Sissysquats

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #89 on: January 27, 2021, 05:22:24 AM »
So both the PCR test creator, and the COVID spit test creator are dead?

 I guess the moral of the story is....don’t work developing virus tests

Matt

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #90 on: January 27, 2021, 09:26:51 AM »
I guess the moral of the story is....don’t work developing virus tests

Andrew Brooks dying at only 51... that's just so young, it jumps out at me. Maybe he had to work with live viruses, and the exposure harmed his health. It's even weirder that Kary Mullis died just before the pandemic started. Although Kary was 74 - so definitely up in age a little, making his death less noteworthy in a conspiratorial way.

I think someone said that with conspiracies..."they're in the air."

Maybe it's just this confluence of events that make them happen.

Example - Kary Mullis dying was the perfect time to use his PCR test inappropriately, to yield a bunch of false positives, producing a case-demic, without him still alive to explain that the PCR test is not intended to be a diagnostic tool - but to merely amplify something small.

I believe he developed the PCR test with a co-creator... I'm going to go see if he's still alive, to see if he has been talking about the PCR test at all.

Gregzs

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #91 on: January 27, 2021, 06:11:11 PM »
Cloris Leachman Made Gene Wilder Break Character Repeatedly in One Particular ‘Young Frankenstein’ Scene




Gene Wilder never stood a chance.

The only people who love Young Frankenstein more than the fans is the cast, many of whom noted in previous interviews they had such a wonderful time making the 1974 Mel Brooks film that they shot footage they didn’t need.

Among the iconic ensemble was the hilarious, impeccable Cloris Leachman, who played fan-favorite caretaker Frau Blücher. The legendary Leachman died Wednesday. She was 94.

Of all her classic scenes in the black-and-white monster comedy, there was one moment in particular that broke co-star Wilder through several takes; the actor laughing before she even delivered the line at times.

The moment in question is when Frau advises Wilder’s Dr. Frankenstein to stay close to the light while they are on the steep staircase — the gag is the candelabra she is holding is not lit, which the actress talked about in a previous interview.

In one take, Leachman said she raised her voice on “can be treacherous” to infer others had fallen — and that is all it took.

“As I turned to Gene, he’d be laughing, his face was in two pieces laughing,” she said in the interview. “We did about 15 takes. I hear him laughing, and I have not said anything. I just tickled him to pieces.”

She added, “Everything I did in the movie ticked Gene to pieces. And it was so much fun to work with him.”

Brooks on Wednesday said of Leachman’s passing, “Such sad news—Cloris was insanely talented. She could make you laugh or cry at the drop of a hat. Always such a pleasure to have on set. Every time I hear a horse whinny I will forever think of Cloris’ unforgettable Frau Blücher. She is irreplaceable, and will be greatly missed.”



https://www.msn.com/en-us/entertainment/news/cloris-leachman-made-gene-wilder-break-character-repeatedly-in-one-particular-young-frankenstein-scene/ar-BB1d9uX1?ocid=msedgdhp

Matt

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #92 on: January 27, 2021, 06:46:04 PM »
This time of year gets a lot of old people with the flu, Covid, pneumonia, etc.  A lot of people probably have weakened immune systems from depression post holidays, the weather, plus some people with diseases were probably hanging on till after holidays and new year.

Ah...so you meant the time of year. I thought you meant celebrity deaths were worse than previous years. I have found them to be roughly the same.

I hadn't thought about people holding off to die.

On that note - check out this obituary of the third oldest woman in my city's history [I'm pretty sure], who died one week ago today. Notice how she held out in the same way you described:

https://www.tbnewswatch.com/obituaries/alma-maria-prssinen-kuisma-3297756

Fascinating stuff. I wonder if there is a scientific basis to what you are saying.

Matt

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #93 on: January 27, 2021, 06:53:06 PM »
He looked dead 30 years ago.

When Larry found out his latest wife was cheating on him with his kids baseball coach, Larry told the coach "you think she's hot, you should see her younger sister."  8)

Funny you said that...I found that Larry looked old at 55, but didn't age much more from that age on, lol.

I always remember him looking old when I first saw him as a kid, and he didn't seem to ever look much older, as the years went by. I seem to recall he had major heart surgery at around 55 - maybe a quadroople bypass, if that's even possible - and that his heart held up well until...well, I guess until he passed away. I'm glad he got a new lease on life. I remember he wanted to be cryogenically frozen.

This is sad...as a father, I find it especially sad:


Gregzs

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #94 on: January 28, 2021, 06:18:24 PM »
Cicely Tyson, Iconic 'Sounder' and 'The Help' Actress, Dies at 96


Cicely Tyson, the iconic and incomparable screen and stage actress and Black American trailblazer, died on Thursday. She was 96.

Tyson, whose acting career spanned more than six decades, broke ground as a Black actress who resolved only to portray strong, positive and realistic images of Black women on screen. Her convictions resulted in astonishing performances in projects such as the films "Sounder" and "The Help," the TV movie "The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman," and the 2013 Broadway production of "The Trip to Bountiful," for which she won the Tony.

Tyson earned an Academy Award best actress nomination for "Sounder" in 1973. The following year she won a best lead actress and a special outstanding actress of the year Emmy for "The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman." She later one an Emmy for the 1994 miniseries "Oldest Living Confederate Widow Tells All," and five more nominations, including one just last year for playing the mother of Viola Davis' character in the ABC drama "How to Get Away With Murder."

And for all of her life's accomplishments, Tyson's been recognized with a Kennedy Center honor, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, an honorary Oscar and in 2018 was inducted into the American Theater Hall of Fame, among many other awards and accomplishments.

"In her long and extraordinary career, Cicely Tyson has not only exceeded as an actor, she has shaped the course of history," President Barack Obama said during the 2016 ceremony for the Presidential Medal of Freedom. "Cicely made a conscious decision not just to say lines, but to speak out. Cicely's convictions and grace have helped for us to see the dignity of every beautiful member of the American family — and, she's just gorgeous."

Tyson's death comes just two days after the publication of her memoir, "Just as I Am."

Born in Harlem, New York in 1924 to hardworking religious immigrants from the West Indies, Tyson wasn't even allowed to go to the movies growing up.

Tyson began her storied career as a model in New York City, gracing the covers of magazines such as Ebony, Jet, Harper Bazaar and Vogue. Tyson said during an appearance on Oprah's Master Class that her mother not only didn't approve of her career path, but told Tyson she wouldn't be allowed to live under her house if she continued. The two didn't speak for nearly three years, until Tyson invited her mother to her stage debut in "Dark of the Moon" at a Harlem YMCA.

When asked in 2018 whether she would ever retire, Tyson told Time Magazine: "And do what? The reason why I have been in this universe as long as I have been is because he's not ready for me. When I've completed my job, he'll take me away."

https://www.msn.com/en-us/entertainment/news/cicely-tyson-iconic-sounder-and-the-help-actress-dies-at-96/ar-BB1dbACU?ocid=msedgdhp

denarii

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #95 on: January 30, 2021, 12:36:20 PM »
sentenced on 5th jan for corruption, dead by the end of the month.


https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9204601/Former-head-Chinese-state-asset-firm-Lai-Xiaomin-executed.html

Top Chinese banker is EXECUTED for soliciting $300m in bribes and starting a secret second family while married to 'loyal wife'

    Lai Xiaomin, 58, a former Communist Party member, was executed on Friday
    He was sentenced to death on January 5 for bribery, corruption and bigamy
    Lai met with close relatives before execution carried out by the Tianjin court
    He gave detailed televised confession on state broadcaster CCTV last January

 
The former head of a Chinese state asset firm was executed on Friday for soliciting $300million in bribes and starting a secret second family while married to his 'loyal wife', the official People's Daily reported.

In one of China's highest-profile corruption cases, Lai Xiaomin, an ex-Communist Party member, 58, was found guilty of receiving or seeking bribes totalling 1.79billion yuan ($278million) from 2008-18, when he was also a senior banking regulator.

Gregzs

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #96 on: February 01, 2021, 12:35:24 PM »
‘Saved by the Bell' Star Dustin Diamond Dead at 44


Dustin Diamond, best known for playing Screech on the hit ’90s sitcom "Saved by the Bell," has died at 44 from stage four lung cancer.

Roger Paul, the actor's spokesman, told NBC News he died Monday morning of carcinoma after a 3-week battle with the disease.

"He was diagnosed with this brutal, relentless form of malignant cancer only three weeks ago. In that time, it managed to spread rapidly throughout his system; the only mercy it exhibited was its sharp and swift execution. Dustin did not suffer. He did not have to lie submerged in pain. For that, we are grateful," Paul said.

“Saved by the Bell” aired from 1989 to 1993, and its spinoffs included “Saved by the Bell: The College Years,” “Good Morning, Miss Bell” and “Saved by the Bell: The New Class,” which Diamond starred in. A sequel was launched on Peacock last fall featuring many from the original cast, including Elizabeth Berkley, Mario Lopez, Tiffani Thiessen and Mark-Paul Gosselaar. Diamond was not included.

He starred in a handful of reality television series including the 5th season of "Celebrity Fit Club," "The Weakest Link" and "Celebrity Boxing 2." In December 2013, Diamond appeared on an episode of OWN’s “Where Are They Now?” and became a house member in the 12th season of "Celebrity Big Brother."

Diamond was sued several times for delinquent taxes and in foreclosure proceedings for missing mortgage payments. He has appeared on reality TV shows, made a sex tape and produced a tell-all documentary on Lifetime TV called “The Unauthorized Saved by the Bell Story.” In 2015, he was sentenced to serve four months in jail for his part in a Wisconsin barroom stabbing.

“Dustin was a humorous and high-spirited individual whose greatest passion was to make others laugh. He was able to sense and feel other peoples’ emotions to such a length that he was able to feel them too — a strength and a flaw, all in one,” wrote Paul.



https://www.msn.com/en-us/tv/news/saved-by-the-bell-star-dustin-diamond-dead-at-44/ar-BB1diaw0

Gregzs

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #97 on: February 01, 2021, 12:40:03 PM »
Double K of People Under the Stairs Dead at 43


Double K, one-half of Los Angeles rap duo People Under the Stairs, has died. According to the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner-Coroner, Double K died at home yesterday (January 30). DJ Mark Luv, a friend, claimed he died in his sleep. A cause of death has not yet been revealed. Double K was 43 years old.

Double K and Thes One formed People Under the Stairs in 1997. Their long-running partnership was founded on DIY principles—as producers and MCs, they sampled, produced, and deejayed all of their music. In 1998, the duo released their debut full-length The Next Step, followed by Question in the Form of an Answer in 2000. O.S.T., their most beloved LP, arrived in 2002.

People Under the Stairs continued to release records and tour frequently throughout their 22 year career. In 2011, Mac Miller brought them on tour as openers. The duo also released a steady stream of records until its disbandment in 2019—the duo’s 12th and final album was titled Sincereley, The P. Prior to releasing their farewell record, the duo played its last show at London’s Jazz Cafe in 2018.

In 2019, Double K and Thes One spoke to The Los Angeles Times about their legacy and the decision to make Sincereley, The P their last record. Thes One referred to the article as the duo’s “exit interview,” and the two artists reflected on the two-plus decades they created music together. “Where I grew up, there was the negative, and I had the positive, which was my music,” Double K said. “I was surrounded by the negativity, the things going on in the streets, the stuff that I thought that I wanted to be a part of. I decided that this was more important. I just holed up in my room, listening to music, and then I met this dude and I had somebody else to listen to music with.”



https://www.msn.com/en-us/music/news/double-k-of-people-under-the-stairs-dead-at-43/ar-BB1dgDBZ

Gregzs

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #98 on: February 01, 2021, 12:47:17 PM »
‘Simpsons’ writer Marc Wilmore dies at 57 amid battle with COVID, other health conditions


Award-winning TV writer and producer Marc Wilmore, best known for his work on “The Simpsons,” has died from complications of a recent coronavirus diagnosis and other health issues, his family announced Sunday. He was 57.

“My sweet sweet brother, Marc Edward Wilmore, passed away last night while battling COVID and other conditions that have had him in pain for many years,” his brother and fellow comedian Larry Wilmore said in a tweet.

“My brother was the kindest, gentlest, funniest, lion of an angel I’ve ever known. I love you little brother,” the former Comedy Central host said.

Marc Wilmore’s work for “The Simpsons” spanned over a decade, writing about a dozen episodes and sharing producing credits on more than 300 until as recently as 2015, according to IMDb. He also wrote for the Netflix animated series “F Is for Family,” the 1990s comedy show “In Living Color” and “The Tonight Show Starring Jay Leno.”

The California native was nominated for 10 Primetime Emmy awards, winning the prize for outstanding animated program in 2008 for a “Simpsons” episode titled “”Eternal Moonshine of the Simpson Mind.”

Michael Price, another writer for the long-running animated series, said he was honored to work with Marc Wilmore on multiple projects over the years.

“Another giant talent taken too soon,” Price tweeted. “I had the privilege to work alongside Marc Wilmore on 3 shows (PJs, Simpsons, FIFF) for the better part of the last 23 years and he was THE funniest person in every room. And a wonderful man. He is irreplaceable.”

Comedian Matt Oswalt said he worked with Marc Wilmore on the “Tonight Show.”

“He was such a nice guy and will miss him,” Oswalt wrote.

Writer Henry Gammill, of “F Is for Family,” said it was “a joy” to be his friend.

“I’m devastated by the loss of Marc Wilmore,” Gammill said in a tweet. “Marc was my favorite - I hung onto his every word. He was empathetic beyond measure, not to mention the funniest one in the room every damn time. Warm, genuine, uniquely funny - that was Marc. I love him.”

https://www.msn.com/en-us/tv/news/simpsons-writer-marc-wilmore-dies-at-57-amid-battle-with-covid-other-health-conditions/ar-BB1dhXnT?ocid=msedgdhp


Gregzs

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Re: 2021 Deathpool thread
« Reply #99 on: February 01, 2021, 01:00:28 PM »
Assassination in Ecuador: TV host Efraín Ruales dies at age 36


Death of a young Ecuadorian actor and TV host

Shock at the death of Ecuadorian actor and TV presenter Efrain Ruales of 36. According to ‘BBC News’, Ruales was killed on Wednesday, January 27 while driving his vehicle on an avenue in the north of Guayaquil (Ecuador).

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/assassination-in-ecuador-tv-host-efra%C3%ADn-ruales-dies-at-age-36/ss-BB1daS3e