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ChronoGrl 02-27-2009 05:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by neverending (Post 791532)
Thanks Newb- I'm used to being ignored though.

Awww, schnooky wookums... I never ignore you... In fact I'm watching you right now... :p

_____V_____ 02-27-2009 07:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ChronoGrl (Post 791536)
Awww, schnooky wookums... I never ignore you... In fact I'm watching you right now... :p

Ahem...

read your b-day thread yet?

newb 02-28-2009 08:32 PM

The Rest Of The STORY...R.I.P.


Paul Harvey, once known as the most listened to man in radio, has died at the age of 90 at a hospital near his winter home in Phoenix.

Harvey's career in radio spanned more than 70 years, and his shows "News & Comment" and "Rest of the Story" made him a familiar voice in Americans' homes across the country.

His death comes nine months after that of his wife, Lynne Cooper Harvey, whom he often called "Angel" on air, and who was also his business partner and the first producer ever inducted in the the Radio Hall of Fame.

"My father and mother created from thin air what one day became radio and television news," Paul Harvey Jr. said. "So, in the past year, an industry has lost its godparents. And, today millions have lost a friend."

From his humble beginnings as a teenager helping out cleaning up at a local radio station, Harvey went on to have his broadcasts carried by 1,350 commercial radio stations, as well as 400 stations of the Armed Forces Radio Service, and was inducted into the Radio Hall of Fame in 1990.

zwoti 03-16-2009 12:30 AM

http://www.newsday.com/media/photo/2009-03/45594760.jpg

Elvis_Christ 03-16-2009 01:00 AM

no way! i didn't hear about that :(

newb 03-16-2009 02:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by zwoti (Post 794377)

Award-winning actor and activist Ron Silver, who was Emmy-nominated for his role on the hit U.S. television drama "The West Wing," died on Sunday of cancer. He was 62.

"Ron Silver died peacefully in his sleep with his family around him early Sunday morning," said Robin Bronk, executive director of the Creative Coalition, which Silver helped found.

Bronk said Silver was with his family in New York City and he had been fighting esophageal cancer for two years.

Bronk called Silver not only a very talented actor, but a champion of free speech and artists' rights.


He reminded me of Al Pacino.

scouse mac 03-16-2009 03:07 AM

62 is no age at all but at least he went surrounded by family at home.

For some reason the role I will always remember him for is The Entity, probably one the first things I ever saw him in.

urgeok2 03-16-2009 04:32 AM

fuck cancer all to hell.

sorry to hear this - i always like the guy.

time cop
silent rage

a friend of the genre....

newb 03-18-2009 07:32 AM

Natasha Richardson faced a tragic final curtain Tuesday night as her heartbroken family gathered in New York to say farewell to the Tony Award-winning actress.

Felled by a skiing accident, Richardson had "been on life support since this morning," a source close to the family said yesterday. "She is brain-dead."

Her husband, actor Liam Neeson, and their two sons, Michael, 13, and Daniel, 12, were with her.

So was Richardson's mother, legendary actress Vanessa Redgrave. Richardson's sister, actress Joely Richardson, was also helping them deal with this "absolutely dire and terrible" situation, the source said.

Late last night, Joely fought back tears and declined to comment as she took her stricken sister's sons into Lenox Hill Hospital, where Natasha was on a ventilator.

It was a sudden, tragic finale for the 45-year-old actress, whose late father was Oscar-winning director Tony Richardson.

What made the loss even harder to accept was that Richardson didn't appear to be badly hurt when she wiped out while skiing on a bunny slope at a Canadian resort Monday afternoon.

Her sons were with her at the time. Richardson, laughing at her own clumsiness, refused at first to go to a doctor, witnesses said.

Tuesday night, there were tears as Richardson's family prepared to follow the heart-crushing choreography that goes with making the decision to let a loved one go.

"The rule of thumb is: You have two neurological exams, 12 hours apart, to show that there is no evidence of higher brain activity," said Dr. Philip Stieg, chairman of New York-Presbyterian Hospital Weill Cornell's department of neurological surgery.

"If that is so, the patient is brain-dead; they are clinically dead."

At that point, he said, "The family has two options:

"You turn off the ventilator, the heart will stop beating, and that is it," he said. Or, the family can keep her alive a bit longer "and allow them time to say goodbye."

The tragedy sent shock waves down Broadway.

Richardson won her Tony in 1998 for playing Sally Bowles in "Cabaret." She is "theater royalty," said William Ivey Long, who designed her costumes.

"Natasha is strong, but when you hear about something so horrible you think about those vulnerable characters" she has played, Long said.

"Natasha is one of the greatest actresses of her generation," added Todd Haimes, artistic director of the Roundabout Theatre Company. "Incredibly sweet, gracious."

Richardson has another strong tie to Broadway - she met her husband when they starred together in "Anna Christie."

hammerfan 03-18-2009 08:10 AM

Newb, where'd you get this? I just checked all the news websites, and they all say she's still alive. And, the article's wrong, she met Liam Neeson when they filmed "Nell".


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