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______ Passed Away Today, RIP (10 Viewers)

Tom Sizemore. RIP.
Amazing he lasted as long as he did. Here's to you, Tom! :suds:

Yeah, the guy battled some hardcore addiction(s).

Always enjoyed his characters. RIP
"We're in business"


 
Joe Pepitone, at 82

in the long line of Italian tradition for the Yankees - Lazzeri, Rizzuto, Dimaggio, Berra, Raschi, Crosetti, Billy ...

those players meant an awful lot to the Italian community - a great sense of pride and accomplishment 🇮🇹

R.I.P., Joe ✌️
Damn.

yeah ... he were supposed to be the next big superstar, alongside the waning Mick, to lead them thru the mid-late 60s - and it never panned out.

star-crossed cat, a ton of promise from his great start, but he definitely chased the life off the field up here waayyy too hard.

one of the franchises greatest "coulda beens"
 
Joe Pepitone, at 82

in the long line of Italian tradition for the Yankees - Lazzeri, Rizzuto, Dimaggio, Berra, Raschi, Crosetti, Billy ...

those players meant an awful lot to the Italian community - a great sense of pride and accomplishment 🇮🇹

R.I.P., Joe ✌️
Damn.

yeah ... he were supposed to be the next big superstar, alongside the waning Mick, to lead them thru the mid-late 60s - and it never panned out.

star-crossed cat, a ton of promise from his great start, but he definitely chased the life off the field up here waayyy too hard.

one of the franchises greatest "coulda beens"
I know. I met him (I think. I have a signature that was a live one but i was little so i could be mixing him up with all the other yankees i met over the years) when I was a kid and he was a favorite of my family in those hazy small kid years when all baseball players my uncles told me were great were our guys.
 
Joe Pepitone, at 82

in the long line of Italian tradition for the Yankees - Lazzeri, Rizzuto, Dimaggio, Berra, Raschi, Crosetti, Billy ...

those players meant an awful lot to the Italian community - a great sense of pride and accomplishment 🇮🇹

R.I.P., Joe ✌️
Damn.

yeah ... he were supposed to be the next big superstar, alongside the waning Mick, to lead them thru the mid-late 60s - and it never panned out.

star-crossed cat, a ton of promise from his great start, but he definitely chased the life off the field up here waayyy too hard.

one of the franchises greatest "coulda beens"
I know. I met him (I think. I have a signature that was a live one but i was little so i could be mixing him up with all the other yankees i met over the years) when I was a kid and he was a favorite of my family in those hazy small kid years when all baseball players my uncles told me were great were our guys.

just noticed your username 😁

man, did they go off the rails quickly ... those Celerino Sanchez, Horace Clark, Gene Michael, etc era teams were hot garbage - then George stepped in ... '73, iirc.

say what ya will, but things changed :shrug:


PS- speaking of those horrid squads, this is the 50 yr ann'y of the Fritz Peterson/Mike Kekich switcherooooo
 
Joe Pepitone, at 82

in the long line of Italian tradition for the Yankees - Lazzeri, Rizzuto, Dimaggio, Berra, Raschi, Crosetti, Billy ...

those players meant an awful lot to the Italian community - a great sense of pride and accomplishment 🇮🇹

R.I.P., Joe ✌️

I have mentioned this book before - but in Joe's honor, I want to bring it up again.

I loved "Ball Four" and all of the inside info of pro baseball at the time. I found his biography, "Joe, You Coulda Made Us Proud" a couple years later.

At age 17 Joe Pepitone signed a $25,000 bonus contract with the Yankees, and soon experts were saying he would be the team's next superstar. He could run, throw, field and he had a sweet swing. But during his twelve years in the major leagues, Pepi devoted most of his energy to swinging off the field. He blew his career, he destroyed two marriages, he lost three children and he came very close to a nervous breakdown. At age 33 he gave up a $70,000 contract in Japan and quit baseball for good. He finally admitted that most of his life he had been living a lie, acting the carefree clown to cover up his inner pain. It was time to close the act. In Joe, You Coulda Made Us Proud, Pepitone attempts to show what was behind his berserk behavior. He does so in the most devastatingly honest terms, holding back none of the embarrassment, the anguish, the guilt he kept accumulating. He tells of the father he loved so much, "Willie Pep" Pepitone, the toughest man in a tough Brooklyn neighborhood. Obsessed with making his son a baseball star, Willie constantly beat hell out of Joe. One night, enraged at his father, Joe said,"Mom- I wish he'd die!" The next day Willie died. He tells how he demolished two marriages by trying to ball American, of how he was haunted by the words of his first child - "Daddy, don't leave me" - and of the nights when the guilt left him impotent. Despite the travail, though, there is much humor in Joe's story. Such as the time he was staying at Frank Sinatra's home, and Joe has a $350 pool shot line up. Just as he shot, Sinatra knocked the ball away. "All right, Frank... I won the money." Sinatra, grinning, said, "Joe, this is my game, this is my table - and we are playing my rules." Usually Joe Pepitone played only by his rules, and those rules maimed him. Yet his regrets are not for what he did to himself... "You do what you have to do, and you pay the price - but you pay it double when you see how it has hurt others you love." - from book's dustjacket
 
I’ll tell you a story …

It was the year 1991 and I was fresh out of college had no idea what I wanted to do for a career. As can happen some times, an opportunity arose when a neighbour told the my mother that the federal government was hiring and applied for the job. I went to the interview, nervous as could be, when this ‘older’ man, Larry, appeared – feathered hair (that was still the style at the time), big moustache, sports coat – he definitely looked the part. I wasn’t intimated … it was more like a was in awe.

Larry saw something in me and offered me the job a couple of weeks later. During the first week on the job, Larry asked me out to lunch and shared numerous stories … stories about the job … stories of the company baseball team … stories of his family.

Two years later I moved on to another position, but the we continued our friendship. Fast forward 30 of years of life, marriage, children, loss and more fun than anyone deserves, we remained friends ever since.

We are 20 years apart in age, with very different histories and life experiences … but we quickly became friends, both in our professional and personal lives. Two people, despite being very different, took the time to get to know each as individuals, accepted our differences and appreciated each other for the goodness that they brought to the world.

I am writing this to help me with the loss of a great friend … my friend, Larry. My first real boss, my first ‘adult’, friend, best friend a person could ever ask for and one hell of a guy. Larry was my personal, real life wikkid. He lived an amazing life and taught me so much … I will miss you dearly
 
Thanks all … I can’t say this pain/sadness is something you want to get used to. It is so hard to imagine him not being around any more …
 
I am writing this to help me with the loss of a great friend … my friend, Larry. My first real boss, my first ‘adult’, friend, best friend a person could ever ask for and one hell of a guy. Larry was my personal, real life wikkid. He lived an amazing life and taught me so much … I will miss you dearly

you're a lucky guy AP - and so sorry he passed away.

I have been fortunate enough to still keep in touch with several older guys that were an important part of my career development as well as close friends. Several are also gone now too, and I think about them a lot.

I was at the local phone company and most all of these guys learned the business from being in the Vietnam war. I would sit in the bar booth with them as they told wild story and story - not just the war, but company/work stories. My "in" was golf, they all loved golf. I played quite a bit of college golf and they loved that.

they took me into their weekend golf group, dancer bar visits after weekly golf league rounds, and even brought me into the local Moose lodge with them.

this Spring my wife and I are meeting up them (2 of the 4 main guys) and their wives in Nashville - really looking forward to it.
 
I am writing this to help me with the loss of a great friend … my friend, Larry. My first real boss, my first ‘adult’, friend, best friend a person could ever ask for and one hell of a guy. Larry was my personal, real life wikkid. He lived an amazing life and taught me so much … I will miss you dearly
I'm sorry your loss, AP. People are lucky if they have a "Larry" in their life. I bet Larry felt lucky to have an AP in his. Cheers to your dear friend Larry. RIP 🍻
 
Thanks @New Binky the Doormat, great positive story. That very much sounds like Larry. He had so many ridiculously, hilarious stories from the 70’s and 80’s, most of which would get me banned from here if I wrote them, and then I was fortunate to live many more with him ever since. I do consider myself a very lucky man because of that.

absolutely AP ...like they were still of the time where the management guys would go out to "lingerie show" for buffet lunches and come back a couple hours later just hammered (think Mad Men)

or the management Christmas party at the VP's house where there was a fist fight and one guy went through the sliding glass door - same party ...someone accidentally drove their car into the pond that was in front of the house :lmao:

I won't get into the "no spouses allowed" other parties that occurred well before I was there ...literal key parties
 
The first two parties Larry invited to me at his house were a ”Screw the Summer of ‘92” (it rained all summer) and the infamous “Priest and Prostitute” (costumes, not real live priests or prostitutes). Every party ever since has had a theme ... pyjama parties, toga parties, when he got a hot tub installed at his cottage, there were weekly hot tub parties. Larry was “that guy” … like @simey said, people are lucky to have a Larry in their lives.

The stories told these next few weeks will be epic … man, I love that guy!
 
Caldwell's appearance on CBS's Early Morning Show, I think in 2007. A little interview and and performance of you know what:


EDIT: Can't listen at work, but thought fans might be interested in this video -- supposed to be from Caldwell's first concert in 1978:

 
Session drummer extraordinaire Jim Gordon, 77.

And such a horrific tragic path right in the midst of his success.

Great drummer, but drugs and mental illness led him to kill his mother. Was credited with writing the coda from Layla but he actually stole it from Rita Coolidge
 
Session drummer extraordinaire Jim Gordon, 77.

And such a horrific tragic path right in the midst of his success.

Great drummer, but drugs and mental illness led him to kill his mother. Was credited with writing the coda from Layla but he actually stole it from Rita Coolidge
Yup - written by Rita, sang by her sister Priscilla and Priscilla's husband Booker T. Jones.
 

Lance Reddick, famous for his work on HBO's "The Wire" and the "John Wick" movie franchise has died ... TMZ has learned.

Law enforcement sources tell TMZ ... Lance's body was discovered at his Studio City home Friday morning around 9:30 AM. His cause of death is currently unclear, but our law enforcement sources say it appears to be natural.

Really liked this guy.
 

Lance Reddick, famous for his work on HBO's "The Wire" and the "John Wick" movie franchise has died ... TMZ has learned.

Law enforcement sources tell TMZ ... Lance's body was discovered at his Studio City home Friday morning around 9:30 AM. His cause of death is currently unclear, but our law enforcement sources say it appears to be natural.

Really liked this guy.

this blows, he had this mysterious character thing going and i loved him in fringe. he’s been a side player in john wick, but has added gloominess.
 
Terrible news. I always think of him first as Cedric Daniels on "The Wire". I had forgotten that the first time he stood out to me was as Detective Johnny Basil on "Oz". If you love "The Wire", check out his work on Season 4 of "Oz".
Actually I would suggest checking out the entire run of "Oz". I don't see it mentioned in here when the best ever TV series are mentioned and it belong on the list imo.
Lots of actors with "The Wire" on their resume were also on "Oz".
 

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