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RIP 2018

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RIP 2018
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  • MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnow
    wrote on last edited by
    #134

    RIP Sir Roger

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious Crumb
    wrote on last edited by
    #135

    Robert Buchel, the reality TV star who weighed 842 pounds at the start of TLC’s “My 600-lb Life,” did not survive filming. Dead at 41.

    alt text

    http://kdvr.com/2018/03/03/star-of-my-600-lb-life-dies-during-filming-of-reality-show/

    RIP.

    MN5M jeggaJ 2 Replies Last reply
    0
  • V Do not disturb
    V Do not disturb
    Virgil
    replied to booboo on last edited by
    #136

    @booboo said in RIP 2018:

    Charles Emerson Winchester III retires to The Swamp in the sky. RIP

    http://www.nzherald.co.nz/entertainment/news/article.cfm?c_id=1501119&objectid=12006240

    Just a few of the main cast left now..
    Hawkeye
    Hot lips
    BJ
    Radar
    Klinger

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • MN5M Offline
    MN5M Offline
    MN5
    replied to Salacious Crumb on last edited by
    #137

    @salacious-crumb said in RIP 2018:

    Robert Buchel, the reality TV star who weighed 842 pounds at the start of TLC’s “My 600-lb Life,” did not survive filming. Dead at 41.

    alt text

    http://kdvr.com/2018/03/03/star-of-my-600-lb-life-dies-during-filming-of-reality-show/

    RIP.

    Gosh, that one is a surprise.

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious Crumb
    wrote on last edited by
    #138

    A very strange kind of obesity. HIs neck/face and arms look big, certainly. But it’s that gut that defies imagination.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • jeggaJ Offline
    jeggaJ Offline
    jegga
    replied to Salacious Crumb on last edited by
    #139

    @salacious-crumb said in RIP 2018:

    Robert Buchel, the reality TV star who weighed 842 pounds at the start of TLC’s “My 600-lb Life,” did not survive filming. Dead at 41.

    alt text

    http://kdvr.com/2018/03/03/star-of-my-600-lb-life-dies-during-filming-of-reality-show/

    RIP.

    Two things. First off , leading the article with the words “ heartbreaking news” when the landwhale died of a heart attack is perhaps inappropriate. Secondly he had a fiancée?

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious Crumb
    wrote on last edited by
    #140

    NME ends print edition after 65 years as magazine "no longer financially viable"

    Mar 7, 2018  /  Celebrity News

    NME ends print edition after 65 years as magazine "no longer financially viable" - The Mirror

    NME ends print edition after 65 years as magazine "no longer financially viable" - The Mirror

    The music magazine is no longer 'financially viable'

    R.I.P.

    CrucialC 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • CrucialC Offline
    CrucialC Offline
    Crucial
    replied to Salacious Crumb on last edited by
    #141

    @salacious-crumb said in RIP 2018:

    NME ends print edition after 65 years as magazine "no longer financially viable"

    Mar 7, 2018  /  Celebrity News

    NME ends print edition after 65 years as magazine "no longer financially viable" - The Mirror

    NME ends print edition after 65 years as magazine "no longer financially viable" - The Mirror

    The music magazine is no longer 'financially viable'

    R.I.P.

    Used to be my must read mag when a teenager (even if the copies we got in NZ were about 6 weeks old)

    Nowadays it is just one of many free handout mags to commuters and I flick through it in a couple of minutes.

    Will pick up the last one though.

    dogmeatD 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • dogmeatD Offline
    dogmeatD Offline
    dogmeat
    replied to Crucial on last edited by
    #142

    @crucial One of the reasons I took off to London in my teens was reading the Gig Guide in the NME each week.

    great read in the days of Burchill, parsons, kent and Charles shaar murray

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • CrucialC Offline
    CrucialC Offline
    Crucial
    wrote on last edited by
    #143

    Rugby related one now.

    Rugby Communities in the Counties Manukau region, New Zealand and off shore today mourn the passing of Mac McCallion. Rest in Peace Mac.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • CrucialC Offline
    CrucialC Offline
    Crucial
    wrote on last edited by
    #144

    New Zealand rugby lost an unsung hero today with the passing of Mac McCallion.

    The 67-year-old fashioned a particularly successful record as coach of Counties Manukau and as an assistant coach to Sir Graham Henry's Blues teams in the 1990s.

    He also coached the Fijian national side.

    McCallion had a reputation as a hard bugger fashioned from a career in the New Zealand Army. He coached that way and immediately had a big impact on an under-rated Steelers team in the mid-1990s that saw them become a major force in the provincial game.

    The Steelers went to back-to-back division one finals under McCallion, who presided over the side during the emergence of star wingers Jonah Lomu and Joeli Vidiri.

    While those two players had a massive role in the success of the side, McCallion came up with a style of play that got the best out of the try-scoring superstars on each wing.

    Players like Tony and Glenn Marsh, George Leaupepe, Blair Feeney and Danny Lee thrived under McCallion's tutelage but it was McCallion's ability to get the most out of a little-known forward pack that led to much of the side's success. Players like John Akurangi, Chris Rose and Lee Lidgard matched seasoned professionals while being coached by McCallion.

    The Steelers forwards epitomised everything McCallion stood for – they were tough, uncompromising and they weren't after headlines – they simply got the job done without any fuss.

    As the game became professional his old school ways perhaps became out-dated and he drifted away from the top level less than a decade into professionalism. It might be fair to say the game left him behind but I'm not sure that was actually a good thing for rugby.

    McCallion got results and a number of stars in the early days of professional rugby owe their success to his grounding.

    His passing will have a massive impact on a huge number of people, especially those that he coached and the people of Counties Manukau.

    Rest in peace Mac.

    MN5M 1 Reply Last reply
    6
  • MN5M Offline
    MN5M Offline
    MN5
    replied to Crucial on last edited by
    #145

    @crucial said in RIP 2018:

    New Zealand rugby lost an unsung hero today with the passing of Mac McCallion.

    The 67-year-old fashioned a particularly successful record as coach of Counties Manukau and as an assistant coach to Sir Graham Henry's Blues teams in the 1990s.

    He also coached the Fijian national side.

    McCallion had a reputation as a hard bugger fashioned from a career in the New Zealand Army. He coached that way and immediately had a big impact on an under-rated Steelers team in the mid-1990s that saw them become a major force in the provincial game.

    The Steelers went to back-to-back division one finals under McCallion, who presided over the side during the emergence of star wingers Jonah Lomu and Joeli Vidiri.

    While those two players had a massive role in the success of the side, McCallion came up with a style of play that got the best out of the try-scoring superstars on each wing.

    Players like Tony and Glenn Marsh, George Leaupepe, Blair Feeney and Danny Lee thrived under McCallion's tutelage but it was McCallion's ability to get the most out of a little-known forward pack that led to much of the side's success. Players like John Akurangi, Chris Rose and Lee Lidgard matched seasoned professionals while being coached by McCallion.

    The Steelers forwards epitomised everything McCallion stood for – they were tough, uncompromising and they weren't after headlines – they simply got the job done without any fuss.

    As the game became professional his old school ways perhaps became out-dated and he drifted away from the top level less than a decade into professionalism. It might be fair to say the game left him behind but I'm not sure that was actually a good thing for rugby.

    McCallion got results and a number of stars in the early days of professional rugby owe their success to his grounding.

    His passing will have a massive impact on a huge number of people, especially those that he coached and the people of Counties Manukau.

    Rest in peace Mac.

    Probably THE last guy to pick a fight with on the pitch. RIP

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • jeggaJ Offline
    jeggaJ Offline
    jegga
    wrote on last edited by
    #146

    Stephen Hawkings just died, he did well to live with that bastard of a disease as long as he did let alone contribute as much as he did.

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • MN5M Offline
    MN5M Offline
    MN5
    wrote on last edited by
    #147

    0_1521000575986_images-27.jpg

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • antipodeanA Online
    antipodeanA Online
    antipodean
    wrote on last edited by
    #148

    Everyone is all "oh, look at the great work he did for mankind progressing the body of knowledge in physics and working towards a unified field theory". Like what else was he going to spend his time doing, triathlons?

    dogmeatD 1 Reply Last reply
    7
  • dogmeatD Offline
    dogmeatD Offline
    dogmeat
    replied to antipodean on last edited by
    #149

    @antipodean Getting pissed, feeling sorry for himself and posting shit on the web.

    It's what I would have done do....

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • CrucialC Offline
    CrucialC Offline
    Crucial
    wrote on last edited by
    #150

    At least his voice will live on.

    In that funny vocoder thingy.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • MN5M Offline
    MN5M Offline
    MN5
    wrote on last edited by
    #151

    Judging from emotional Facebook posts it would appear lots of people have become experts in his field overnight.

    taniwharugbyT 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugby
    replied to MN5 on last edited by
    #152

    @mn5 I watch Big Bang Theory, I know my physics and shit!

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • RoninWCR Offline
    RoninWCR Offline
    RoninWC
    wrote on last edited by
    #153

    Whilst I understand the sentimentality behind morning the actors, singers, rugby legends (and near legends) and one total fuck off asshole - Billy Graham...

    But then there are true greats who should be recognized and who's loss should be mourned appropriately and Stephen Hawking is one of those. A truly great man who's work has stretched the bounds of science, particularly theoretical physics, which will leave a mark on mankind for a long time.

    Lived way longer than expected, much to humanities benefit.

    This is a true loss.

    jeggaJ antipodeanA 2 Replies Last reply
    2

RIP 2018
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