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The Silver Fern

RIP 2018

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RIP 2018
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  • boobooB Offline
    boobooB Offline
    booboo
    wrote on last edited by booboo
    #201

    Avicii

    Shit! only 28

    No word on how.

    Quite like some of his stuff.

    http://www.nzherald.co.nz/entertainment/news/article.cfm?c_id=1501119&objectid=12036915

    JCJ 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • JCJ Offline
    JCJ Offline
    JC
    replied to booboo on last edited by
    #202

    @booboo said in RIP 2018:

    Avicii

    Shit! only 28

    No word on how.

    Quite like some of his stuff.

    http://www.nzherald.co.nz/entertainment/news/article.cfm?c_id=1501119&objectid=12036915

    Pancreatitis apparently.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious Crumb
    wrote on last edited by
    #203

    The NYT obit:

    Bruno Sammartino, Durable Champ in WWE Hall of Fame, Dies at 82

    [...]

    Unlike many heavies on the pro wrestling circuits, he was a soft-spoken, gentlemanly connoisseur of grand opera, especially Verdi. And for one who had bench-pressed 565 pounds as an amateur, he was relatively small: under 6 feet tall and a trim 260 or 270 pounds, with bulging pectorals and biceps and a big head. He looked tiny beside giant rivals like Haystacks Calhoun, who topped 600 pounds.

    [...]

    In February 1961, Sammartino body-slammed Chick Garibaldi to the canvas at Sunnyside Gardens in Queens. Garibaldi did not get up. The referee stopped the match and determined that Garibaldi was dead. A medical examiner later said he had suffered a heart attack. Sammartino was stricken with remorse for months.

    Sammartino himself almost died, of a broken neck, when Stan Hansen, in a match in New York in 1976, dropped him on his head. Sammartino spent weeks in a hospital.

    Sammartino did not dispute that professional wrestling matches were fixed. But he bristled at suggestions that he had ever taken a fall and said his injuries were proofs of his honesty.

    “I would be a fool to tell you that there was no fixing,” he told The Washington Post in 1980 as his career wound down. “You ask if wrestling is for real? Well, I think my own body answers that question. I have broken more bones than any of the others — my neck, my collarbone, both arms, wrists, knuckles, all of my ribs, my back. A hairline fracture of the kneecap. My jaw has been wired and rewired. It’s incredible to think people would fake that.”

    [...]

    MN5M 1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • V Offline
    V Offline
    Virgil
    wrote on last edited by
    #204

    http://www.nzherald.co.nz/entertainment/news/article.cfm?c_id=1501119&objectid=12037304

    MN5M 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • MN5M Offline
    MN5M Offline
    MN5
    replied to Salacious Crumb on last edited by
    #205

    @salacious-crumb said in RIP 2018:

    The NYT obit:

    Bruno Sammartino, Durable Champ in WWE Hall of Fame, Dies at 82

    [...]

    Unlike many heavies on the pro wrestling circuits, he was a soft-spoken, gentlemanly connoisseur of grand opera, especially Verdi. And for one who had bench-pressed 565 pounds as an amateur, he was relatively small: under 6 feet tall and a trim 260 or 270 pounds, with bulging pectorals and biceps and a big head. He looked tiny beside giant rivals like Haystacks Calhoun, who topped 600 pounds.

    [...]

    In February 1961, Sammartino body-slammed Chick Garibaldi to the canvas at Sunnyside Gardens in Queens. Garibaldi did not get up. The referee stopped the match and determined that Garibaldi was dead. A medical examiner later said he had suffered a heart attack. Sammartino was stricken with remorse for months.

    Sammartino himself almost died, of a broken neck, when Stan Hansen, in a match in New York in 1976, dropped him on his head. Sammartino spent weeks in a hospital.

    Sammartino did not dispute that professional wrestling matches were fixed. But he bristled at suggestions that he had ever taken a fall and said his injuries were proofs of his honesty.

    “I would be a fool to tell you that there was no fixing,” he told The Washington Post in 1980 as his career wound down. “You ask if wrestling is for real? Well, I think my own body answers that question. I have broken more bones than any of the others — my neck, my collarbone, both arms, wrists, knuckles, all of my ribs, my back. A hairline fracture of the kneecap. My jaw has been wired and rewired. It’s incredible to think people would fake that.”

    [...]

    82 is an incredible innings for a pro wrestler

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • MN5M Offline
    MN5M Offline
    MN5
    replied to Virgil on last edited by
    #206

    @virgil said in RIP 2018:

    http://www.nzherald.co.nz/entertainment/news/article.cfm?c_id=1501119&objectid=12037304

    He lived a pretty short life

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • V Offline
    V Offline
    Virgil
    wrote on last edited by
    #207

    I heard he had trouble putting money aside for his funeral, he was a little short.

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • BovidaeB Offline
    BovidaeB Offline
    Bovidae
    wrote on last edited by
    #208

    Someone has to say it - poor little bugger

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • BovidaeB Offline
    BovidaeB Offline
    Bovidae
    wrote on last edited by
    #209

    RIP Tony Steel, former AB winger and NZ sprint champion. He was the principal of Hamilton BHS when I was there.

    NepiaN 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • NepiaN Offline
    NepiaN Offline
    Nepia
    replied to Bovidae on last edited by
    #210

    @bovidae said in RIP 2018:

    RIP Tony Steel, former AB winger and NZ sprint champion. He was the principal of Hamilton BHS when I was there.

    Also a National MP in Hamilton East for a few terms.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • No QuarterN Offline
    No QuarterN Offline
    No Quarter
    wrote on last edited by
    #211

    Would have been 43 today. Wasn't sure where to put this but I enjoyed the highlights reel.

    What. A. Player. GOAT winger.

    1 Reply Last reply
    8
  • MN5M Offline
    MN5M Offline
    MN5
    wrote on last edited by MN5
    #212
    Stuff

    No great loss. Pretty amusing for all the comments on facebook as expected. True to form good old Stuff.co.nz were quick to point out he was a convicted sex offender in the first sentence.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • boobooB Offline
    boobooB Offline
    booboo
    wrote on last edited by
    #213

    Lois Lane aka Margot Kidder

    https://www.nzherald.co.nz/entertainment/news/article.cfm?c_id=1501119&objectid=12051515

    TimT 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • TimT Away
    TimT Away
    Tim
    replied to booboo on last edited by
    #214

    @booboo Strangely enough, she ended her life working as a journalist for the left-wing magazine Counterpunch. She landed one of the big scoops of the 2016 Democratic presidential primaries.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • CrucialC Offline
    CrucialC Offline
    Crucial
    wrote on last edited by
    #215

    A couple of obscure departures in the last week, but interesting in musical history.

    Glenn Snoddy - Pioneering Nashville recording engineer and the inventor of the ‘fuzz box’. Changed the sound of R&R guitar for good.
    Roger Clark - FAME and Muscle Shoals session drummer from age 16. Played on probably 50 odd major hit albums.

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious Crumb
    wrote on last edited by
    #216

    I have read several books over the years about Hollywood and rock n’ roll during the free-love cocaine-fuelled era of Los Angeles during the 1970s that frequently mention Margot’s pad as Party Central.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • BovidaeB Offline
    BovidaeB Offline
    Bovidae
    wrote on last edited by
    #217

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/other-sports/104258283/new-zealand-running-great-dick-quax-dies-aged-70-after-long-battle-with-cancer

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • jeggaJ Offline
    jeggaJ Offline
    jegga
    wrote on last edited by
    #218

    Damn. Awful , only 61

    Redirect Notice
    canefanC 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • canefanC Offline
    canefanC Offline
    canefan
    replied to jegga on last edited by
    #219

    @jegga said in RIP 2018:

    Damn. Awful , only 61

    Redirect Notice

    I am a big fan, I can't believe it. He was quite an edgy personality though, not totally unsurprising.

    alt text

    MN5M 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • jeggaJ Offline
    jeggaJ Offline
    jegga
    wrote on last edited by
    #220
    Anthony Bourdain  /  Apr 12, 1999  /  tags

    “Don’t Eat Before Reading This,” by Anthony Bourdain

    “Don’t Eat Before Reading This,” by Anthony Bourdain

    The late chef’s 1999 essay about working in Manhattan restaurants. “Gastronomy is the science of pain,” he writes. “It was the unsavory side of professional cooking that attracted me to it in the first place.”

    CrucialC 1 Reply Last reply
    1

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