Re: DEAD!! All right, who died now?
Hey, that's my line!
Zsa Zsa laughs at your idea![]()
Hey, that's my line!
Zsa Zsa laughs at your idea![]()
2016 hasn't just taken the famous - it's taken absolute titans or larger than life members from their respective milieu. Bowie, Prince, John Glenn Frey, George Martin, Safer, Ali, Arnie, Gordie, Summitt, Buddy, Cruyff (if you're a Euro football fan), Bud Collins with no disrespect meant to anyone I missed.
2016 is really piling up the famous people body count. We have 23 days left in the year, what's the over/under in these remaining days?
2.5what's the over/under in these remaining days?
Well, then what will happen is simple. Unless a really big start drops, eventually a lot of these "famous" deaths will start to be reacted to with increasingly higher levels of "meh". When Willie Mays goes, that's a big one. Same with Mick Jagger. Clint Eastwood and Robert Redford will get the same treatment. But when a B-level singer/movie star/ball player drops off, you're going to get more of a "meh" as time goes on.
Have we had a national hero since the end of the Apollo program and its predecessors?
I realized listening to Unger & Steele that I grew up without a true national hero.
This is a long reach, but General Schwarzkopf might be the closest thing to a national hero from my childhood. He was largely celebrated for his execution of Operation: Desert Storm. His planning led to far fewer casualties than anyone ever expected. He came onto the news and you understood the gravity of those things he said during his press briefings, but at the same time he had a friendly uncle sort of manner to how he handled himself.
What about Sully?
What about Sully?
Kirk Douglas is 100 years old today.
Once he and Betty White die I'll be convinced that immortality is an impossibility.
And Bill Murray.
And Keith Richards.
"We can't do any more drugs, Keith, because you already did em all!"
And Keith Richards.
"We can't do any more drugs, Keith, because you already did em all!"
Dennis Leary stole that entire album, and his entire career, from Bill Hicks.