Dead Celebrity (Part 1)

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Ok, breather.

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That’s right up there with charging someone with assault for bleeding on you.

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My daughter learned on Burton boards. She’ll be sad to hear this.

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I was just coming to post this…

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The scene in Bonnie & Clyde, where Pollard’s C.W. Moss (outside and in his grimy skivvies) is introduced to Estelle Parsons’s Blanche Barrow, never fails to crack me up.
Picture1

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An EPA official with integrity:

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/william-d-ruckelshaus-who-refused-to-join-in-nixons-saturday-night-massacre-dies-at-87/ar-BBXqVPy?ocid=spartanntp

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If we’re not listening closely, radio obits may lead us to believe Harry Belafonte has died

That would not be surprising either, since he’s also over 90, but actually it was his songwriter

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A man of many parts, Miller was also an author, a photographer, a sculptor, a broadcaster and a qualified doctor.

Born in London in 1934, Miller studied medicine at Cambridge before embarking on a career in the arts.

The catalyst was Beyond the Fringe, in which he appeared with Peter Cook, Dudley Moore and Alan Bennett.

In a way it’s a shame that he’ll be largely remembered (by people of his generation) just for being in comedy with Dudley Moore. I have a book by him on consciousness, and saw him speak once on another work, which was a broad overview of the patient-doctor relationship throughout history and across cultures.

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