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______ Passed Away Today, RIP (2 Viewers)

otb_lifer said:
his debut role as Ray Sinclair in Jonathan Demme's "Something Wild" absolutely killed, moreso than any other part he had - the menace and edge he gave that character crushes all.  

such an underrated flick - top 10 of the 80s ... treat yourself if you haven't ever. 

R.I.P. 🙏
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I watched this last night for the first time since I saw it in the theater in the 80's.  Probably didn't even realize back then that I was watching a legend blossom before me.  Jeff Daniels was great, Melanie Griffith was hot as hell.....what a good, underrated little movie.


That was one of 13-year old me's favorite movies.  Watched it again back in December, still great.

 
My BIL passed this morning, aged 76. 

Long story short, he was beloved by family and friends alike; I felt otherwise because of how he treated me and then my daughter. I got over the former treatment over the years but due to his lack of remorse for the latter, I never had any use for him after that. 

I feel for his children, grandchildren and friends (including my uncle that he grew up with), but at this point I'm more interested in putting my feelings and memories relating to him in the grave. 

Bye, Bob. Hope the person you killed drunk driving met you at the Pearly Gates.

(having posted that last line, I feel I'm almost guaranteed to be asked to be a pall bearer at the funeral)

 
@IJasonAlexander

A wonderful man named George Shapiro passed yesterday at age 91. He was a key producer of SEINFELD. But more, his kindness and joyful optimism was a constant reminder to live life fully, gratefully and with as big a smile as possible. Thanks, George. #RIPGeorgeShapiro

5:10 AM · May 29, 2022

 
My best friend Fred Scheffler died on Saturday driving back from the Oregon Coast.  Nasty rain storm, he hydroplaned into another vehicle.  Both drivers died.  Fred was my fraternity brother back in Mississippi.  Blessedly, we both ended up in the Portland area and kept our friendship alive.  He was a great friend.  He was a father of 3.  And at 49, he's gone.  I haven't stopped crying since I found out on Saturday.  I've lost many friends - I lost my mom.  For some reason, this one just hurts so so so so so much.  

 
"Fred Scheffler" even sounds like a good name for a great friend.....RIP.  We grieve for you and, though strangers, those who've depended on him. Trust is right behind love in this life and a smart person doesnt let just anyone keep his.

When the good ones are stolen from us, we are marooned. I'm sure you will be dutiful at this time but, if you can look to reach out to one of those adrift that you may especially help thru this time, you'll both reach shore more quickly and keep Fred more alive. My condolences.

 
My best friend Fred Scheffler died on Saturday driving back from the Oregon Coast.  Nasty rain storm, he hydroplaned into another vehicle.  Both drivers died.  Fred was my fraternity brother back in Mississippi.  Blessedly, we both ended up in the Portland area and kept our friendship alive.  He was a great friend.  He was a father of 3.  And at 49, he's gone.  I haven't stopped crying since I found out on Saturday.  I've lost many friends - I lost my mom.  For some reason, this one just hurts so so so so so much.  
Damn dude, so sorry.  

 
My best friend Fred Scheffler died on Saturday driving back from the Oregon Coast.  Nasty rain storm, he hydroplaned into another vehicle.  Both drivers died.  Fred was my fraternity brother back in Mississippi.  Blessedly, we both ended up in the Portland area and kept our friendship alive.  He was a great friend.  He was a father of 3.  And at 49, he's gone.  I haven't stopped crying since I found out on Saturday.  I've lost many friends - I lost my mom.  For some reason, this one just hurts so so so so so much.  
So sorry for your loss GM. Life long friends are a life blood, even more so than family in many instances.

 
"Fred Scheffler" even sounds like a good name for a great friend.....RIP.  We grieve for you and, though strangers, those who've depended on him. Trust is right behind love in this life and a smart person doesnt let just anyone keep his.

When the good ones are stolen from us, we are marooned. I'm sure you will be dutiful at this time but, if you can look to reach out to one of those adrift that you may especially help thru this time, you'll both reach shore more quickly and keep Fred more alive. My condolences.


Thanks GB.  I always find comfort in your words.  

 
"Fred Scheffler" even sounds like a good name for a great friend.....RIP.  We grieve for you and, though strangers, those who've depended on him. Trust is right behind love in this life and a smart person doesnt let just anyone keep his.

When the good ones are stolen from us, we are marooned. I'm sure you will be dutiful at this time but, if you can look to reach out to one of those adrift that you may especially help thru this time, you'll both reach shore more quickly and keep Fred more alive. My condolences.


Thanks GB.  I always find comfort in your words.  


What he said.  Much better than what I said.

GM, I look forward to meeting you at a tailgate this Fall and hearing more about Fred over a beer or three.

 
General Malaise said:
Thanks GB.  I always find comfort in your words.  


well, looking at it, i may have overreached a li'l, but i was at such a loss to imagine what y'all must ge going thru that i had to express something. i'm just so sure that using what one gets from loved ones to give to others is the best way thru even the worst times and keeps life moving forward. we live more in each other than we do within ourselves. may you and yours find strength from that in this difficult time.

 
My best friend Fred Scheffler died on Saturday driving back from the Oregon Coast.  Nasty rain storm, he hydroplaned into another vehicle.  Both drivers died.  Fred was my fraternity brother back in Mississippi.  Blessedly, we both ended up in the Portland area and kept our friendship alive.  He was a great friend.  He was a father of 3.  And at 49, he's gone.  I haven't stopped crying since I found out on Saturday.  I've lost many friends - I lost my mom.  For some reason, this one just hurts so so so so so much.  
GM, sorry for your loss. I can't even fathom. My sincere condolences. 

 
Bears fans will never forgive Barber for  running out of bounds in the Denver game.  It ended up leading to a Tebow miracle win.

 
Marion Barber found dead in his apartment. 38 years old. 


F'in A, man.  I just read about this on Facebook.  Another guy just dying way too young.  Cause of death not revealed yet, but ugh.... Demaryius Thomas, now Barber.  Gladney too.  I'm sure I'm missin' folks, and not just football players.  

Barber was fun to watch.  God rest his soul.

 
He died in February. His death was not a secret (see here and here), and neither was his COVID status (see here), so I cannot figure out why this was not widely reported at the time, except to postulate that news organizations aren't going to report the death of a semi-retired actor unless someone goes out of their way to tell them about it -- which, apparently, nobody did until his former agent called "The Hollywood Reporter" yesterday.

Anyway, "Flight Of The Intruder" was an underrated movie.

 
Alec John Such, core Bon Jovi sideman

Bassist Alec John Such, a founding member of Bon Jovi, has died at the age of 70, Jon Bon Jovi announced on social media today (June 5). A cause of death is as yet unknown.

“We are heartbroken to hear the news of the passing of our dear friend Alec John Such,” Bon Jovi posted. “He was an original. As a founding member of Bon Jovi, Alec was integral to the formation of the band. … To be honest, we found our way to each other thru him — He was a childhood friend of Tico [Torres] and brought Richie [Sambora] to see us perform. Alec was always wild and full of life. Today these special memories bring a smile to my face and a tear to my eye. We will miss him dearly.”

Born in Yonkers, New York on November 14, 1951, John Such played in an earlier band with Sambora, The Message, before ultimately joining Bon Jovi. In the early 1980s, John Such was the manager of what was then the Hunka Bunka Ballroom in Sayreville, New Jersey. It was there where he booked Jon Bon Jovi & The Wild Ones, seeing the potential of a young musician with a mission.

John Such brought Torres and Sambora into the band, while Bon Jovi brought in his childhood friend David Bryan, who had been a part of an earlier band, Atlantic City Expressway. The band’s third album, “Slippery When Wet,” would end up selling 12 million copies and its follow-up, 1988’s “New Jersey,” scored even more hit songs.

“The record company used to lie about my age,” John Such told The Asbury Park Press in 2000. “I was 31 when I joined. I was a good 10 years older than the rest of the band. My sister eventually got really mad because the papers would describe her as my older sister when really she was younger.”

John Such remained in the band before his departure in 1994. He was replaced by bassist Hugh McDonald, who became an official member of the band in 2016.

“When I was 43, I started to get burned out,” he said in that interview. “It felt like work, and I didn’t want to work. The reason I got into a band to begin with is because I didn’t want to work.”

At the time in 1994, Bon Jovi compared Such’s departure to that of Bill Wyman from The Rolling Stones.

“They just grew in different directions. It’s understandable … just because I want to continue making records doesn’t mean everyone else has to,” Bon Jovi said.

When the band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2018, John Such was reunited with the group and gave an eloquent speech.

“When Jon Bon Jovi called me up and asked me to be in his band many years ago, I soon realized how serious he was and he had a vision that he wanted to bring us to, and I am too happy to have been a part of that vision,” he said.

He continued: “These guys are the best. We had so many great times together and we wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for those guys. Love them to death and always will.”

The band shared the clip of his speech along with a montage of John Such set to his signature song, “Blood on Blood,” a song on which he would occasionally take the lead vocal role at live shows.

 
no more flashes for we joyboys... :kicksrock: ...life's a Hard Eight for us from here on out, without PBH to keep us str8. Rest in past-due.
Floyd Gondolli : I'm not a complicated man. I like cinema. In particular, I like to see people ####### on film. But, I don't want to win an Oscar and I don't want to re-invent the wheel. I like simple pleasures, like butter in my ### and lollipops in my mouth. That's just me. That's just something that I enjoy. 

 
Actor Philip Baker Hall died at the age of 90.  He was good in everything.


Bookman >>>>> Soup Nazi, AIAEC for me. 

matter of fact, i think the Mohel & the Doorman were also wayyyyyy better one-off Seinfeld characters than the overrated Soup Nazi. 

but, i digress ...

----- Floyd Gondolli : I'm not a complicated man. I like cinema. In particular, I like to see people ####### on film. But, I don't want to win an Oscar and I don't want to re-invent the wheel. I like simple pleasures, like butter in my ### and lollipops in my mouth. That's just me. That's just something that I enjoy ----

thank you, @dickey moe, for reminding me of one of my top 5 quotes of all-time ... Floyd Gondolli was the chizz. 

also loved him as Larry's drooling doc on CYE - guy had chops. 

✌️🙏🤘

 
Philip Baker Hall was the impliedly molesting father in the oft-derided Magnolia by Paul Thomas Anderson. That's the role I'll remember him in, for better or for worse. RIP. 

 
Actor Philip Baker Hall died at the age of 90.  He was good in everything.
RIP

When I first saw the name, I admittedly thought that Tubbs from Miami Vice (the original TV series, that is) had passed. :bag:

Definitely one of "that guys" - never a huge role, but an enormous number of acting credits. 

 
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ahhhhh, ok ... got my diddlers mixed up - i was thinking of Dylan Baker in the nauseatingly ridic "Happiness" 

muh bad 👎 
Ah, okay. So that was literal, then. I thought you were busting out some sort of reference or something.

I have never seen Happiness nor do I have the desire. Sounds like a nauseating one hundred and twenty minutes. 

 
Joe Friday would have been proud of Lt. Bookman.

Sure, we're too old to change the world, but what about that kid, sitting down, opening a book, right now, in a branch at the local library and finding drawings of pee-pees and wee-wees on the Cat in the Hat and the Five Chinese Brothers? Doesn't he deserve better?

 

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