Friday, December 21, 2012

More Likely to Die Young?


Solo rock stars are twice as likely to meet an early death, according to a study that makes me wonder why I didn't pursue a more academic career analyzing weird popular culture statistics. 


BY CHRISTINE HSU | DEC 20, 2012 11:39 AM EST
Who wouldn't want to be a rock star? They get fame, money and all the chicks. However, scientists are warning people wanting to live the rock 'n' roll lifestyle that successful rock and pop stars are significantly more likely to die a premature death.
  • (Photo : Wikimedia Commons) While the finding is not exactly surprising as Michael Jackson, Janis Joplin, Amy Winehouse, and Kurt Cobain all met an early end, scientists have now quantified the increased risk of death associated with musical stardom.
In fact, new research published in the British Medical Journal, reveals that solo rock and pop stars are twice as likely to die an early death as stars in equally famous bands.
While the stereotype of stars living the fast life and dying young may have some truth to it, researcher Mark Bellis of Liverpool John Moores University in UK and his team found that musical celebrities who died of drug and alcohol problems were more likely to have had a difficult or abusive childhood compared to those who died of other causes.
The study found that nearly half of those who died because of drugs, alcohol, or violence had at least one unfavorable factor in their childhoods, compared to one in four of those who died of other causes. Furthermore, four out of five dead stars who had more than one unfavorable childhood factor eventually died from substance misuse or violence-related causes.
The latest study was based on publicly available biographical data of 1,489 pop stars reached the peak of their fame between 1956 and 2006. For their study, Bellis and his team included pop/rock, punk, rap, rhythm and blues, electronica, and new age musicians but left out those in country, blues, jazz, vocal, Celtic, folk, and bluegrass genres.
Each musician was matched by gender and age at the time they reached fame to a cohort in the general population.
In the 50-years the study examined, 9.2 percent or 137 of the stars died. However, researchers noted that North American music celebrities were significantly more likely to die, with 99 of the 832 North American stars meeting an early death compared to 38 of the 657 European stars included in the study.
Bellis and his team explained that famous North American stars appeared to start paying the price immediately after researchers compared their relative survival with their post-fame matched population and found that it dropped consistently from 99.3 percent the year after they achieved fame to 87.6 percent 40 years later.
However, the survival pattern of European stars was different. Researchers said that the first year of fame their relative survival fell from 99.6 percent of the matched population survival in the first year to 97.6 percent 24 years later, and reached the population levels 36 years later.
Researchers found that while gender and age at which fame was reached did not influence life expectancy, race did. The findings showed that stars from non-white backgrounds are more likely to die early.
Surprisingly, the study found that both North American and European solo performers were two times more likely to die a premature death compared to those in a band after showing that 9.8 percent of solo singers in Europe died in the 50-year study period compared to 5.4 percent stars in bands, and 22.8 percent versus 10.2 percent in North America.
Researchers note that while people may focus on the direct impact of substance abuse and celebrity death, they may not be aware of the long-term consequences of living a rock star lifestyle like cancer, heart disease and psychological problems.

Read more at http://www.medicaldaily.com/articles/13599/20121220/solo-rock-stars-twice-meet-early-death.htm#6Cib8mSlLvqpiDsl.99 

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

RIP Dave Brubeck

Dave Brubeck, jazz legend, dies at 91

Dave Brubeck, the jazz pianist, composer and bandleader behind the legendary Dave Brubeck Quartet, has died at age 91.
The death of Brubeck, whose composition “Take Five” became a jazz standard and the bestselling jazz song of all time, was confirmed Wednesday by the Associated Press. Brubeck would have turned 92 Thursday.
According to the AP, Brubeck died of heart failure after being stricken while on the way to a cardiologist's  appointment in Connecticut.
Brubeck, born Dec. 6, 1920, in Concord, Calif., was the son of a cattle rancher. His mother was a classically trained pianist. Although he studied zoology at the College of the Pacific in Stockton, he came to love the music department. While serving in the Army during World War II, Brubeck formed the band the Wolfpack.  After the war in the Bay Area he experimented with music groups and styles.
In 1951 he and alto saxophonist Paul Desmond created what would become one of the most popular acts of West Coast jazz, the Dave Brubeck Quartet. The quartet's most famous song was "Take Five," from the 1959 release "Time Out.
During his career, Brubeck also created standards such as "The Duke" and "In Your Own Sweet Way."
In a 2010 article on the occasion of Brubeck's 90th birthday, the Los Angeles Times interviewed the jazz legend and noted that although jazz may not occupy the center of the musical universe, even people who know little, if anything, about jazz know of Brubeck:
"Through more than 60 years of recordings and performances at colleges, concert halls, festivals and nightclubs all over the world, Brubeck put forth a body of work — as pianist, composer and bandleader — that is as accessible as it is ingenious, as stress-free as it is rhythmically emphatic, as open-hearted as it is wide-ranging."
Details of Brubeck's death coming soon at the Los Angeles Times.

Monday, November 26, 2012

RIP Deborah Raffin, audiobooks won't be the same without you


Actress Deborah Raffin dies at age 59

The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — 
Deborah Raffin, an actress who ran a successful audiobook company with the help of her celebrity friends, has died. She was 59.
Raffin died Wednesday of leukemia at the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, her brother, William, told the Los Angeles Times (http://lat.ms/R0q9NM ). She was diagnosed with the blood cancer about a year ago.
Raffin, the daughter of 20th Century Fox contract player Trudy Marshall, had roles in movies such as "Forty Carats" and "Once Is Not Enough." She also starred in television miniseries, most notably playing actress Brooke Hayward in "Haywire" and a businesswoman in "Noble House," based on the James Clavell saga set in Hong Kong.
She and her then-husband, music producer Michael Viner, launched Dove Books-on-Tape in the mid-1980s, which blossomed into a multimillion-dollar business. The company's first best-seller was Stephen Hawking's opus on the cosmos entitled "A Brief History of Time."
Raffin's job was getting celebrities to provide voices for some of the books. Among them were the nonfiction bestsellers "Anatomy of an Illness" and "The Healing Heart," both by Norman Cousins and read by Jason Robards Jr. and William Conrad, respectively.
Raffin also compiled celebrities' Christmas anecdotes for a 1990 book, "Sharing Christmas," which raised money for groups serving the homeless. It included stories from Margaret Thatcher, Kermit the Frog and Mother Teresa.
Raffin and Viner sold the company in 1997 and the couple divorced eight years later. Viner died of cancer in 2009.
Raffin is survived by her two siblings, William and Judy Holston; and a daughter, Taylor Rose Viner.
Services are set for Sunday in Culver City.

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

RIP Arlen Specter


Friends memorialize ex-Sen. Arlen Specter in Pa.

POSTED:   10/16/2012 12:23:07 AM MDT
UPDATED:   10/16/2012 01:46:36 PM MDT
ByMARYCLAIRE DALE Associated Press
The flag-draped coffin of former U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter is taken from... ((AP Photo/Matt Rourke))
NARBERTH, Pa.—Former U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter was an "irreplaceable" force who approached politics—and life—with grit and determination, a who's who of politicians and others said Tuesday at the longtime senator's funeral.
"I've never seen as much undaunted courage as Arlen had—both physically and politically. He believed he could change the world, if he just worked hard enough at it," Vice President Joe Biden told mourners, including three Pennsylvania governors, federal judges and hundreds of friends, at Har Zion Temple in Narberth, a Philadelphia suburb.
Specter died at his suburban home on Sunday at 82 after battling non-Hodgkin lymphoma. He had spent 30 years in the Senate before losing his seat in 2010, after crossing party lines to vote for President Barack Obama's stimulus package and later switching parties.
"In a dark time for our nation, he was willing to lose his seat to cast a decisive vote," said Specter's son Shanin, whose remarks capped about 90 minutes of tributes.
U.S. District Judge Jan DuBois recalled how his friend approached everything in life "with intensity, determination and grit," managing to teach one last law class on Oct. 4 at the University of Pennsylvania, even as he was losing his third fight with cancer.
Specter's influence on law, medicine, politics, Judaism and other walks of life was clear from the diverse, bipartisan and powerful crowd of mourners, including Democratic U.S. Sen. Bob Casey, Republican Gov. Tom Corbett and rows dotted with current and former members of Congress, along with federal judges whose careers Specter backed.
Specter, a political moderate, switched parties twice but mostly served as a Republican. Speakers said he honed his respect for opposing viewpoints as a child, growing up in the only Jewish family in Russell, Kan.
"He really set the standard for working across party lines and we're going to miss that," said Casey, who said Specter had helped smooth his transition when he arrived in Washington.
Anthony J. Scirica, the chief judge on the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, called Specter "irreplaceable."
"He touched so many lives," Scirica said. "He had some tough times, but he always thought that he was working for the public good."
Two of Specter's granddaughters also spoke, including Silvi Specter, a freshman at Penn who drew applause when she said she hopes to follow her grandfather into law and the U.S. Senate—before becoming president.
Shanin Specter, a prominent Philadelphia lawyer, compared his father to the fictional character Forrest Gump, given Specter's proximity to so many seminal events in modern American history.
Joan Specter, left, hugs a woman as she and others leave Har Zion Temple after her husband, former U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter's funeral, Tuesday, Oct. 16, 2012, in Penn Valley, Pa. Family members say Specter died Sunday of complications from non-Hodgkin lymphoma. He was 82. ((AP Photo/Matt Rourke))
Specter served as counsel to the Warren Commission investigating President John F Kennedy's death. He won his Senate seat in the Reagan landslide of 1980 and, as one of the Senate's sharpest legal minds, took part in 14 Supreme Court confirmation hearings.
He grilled Anita Hill when the law professor raised sexual harassment complaints against then-Supreme Court nominee Anita Hill. That cost him some of the support he enjoyed from female voters, but, much like the stimulus vote, he felt it was the right thing to do, former Democratic Gov. Ed Rendell recalled.
All the while, Specter fought two earlier bouts with Hodgkin lymphoma, and overcame a brain tumor and cardiac arrest following bypass surgery.
His greatest legacy, his friends said, may be the $10 million in federal money he steered into cancer research.
"There are some things that even the most robust human spirit can't conquer," said Rendell, choking up.
Specter is also survived by his wife, Joan, son Steve and three other granddaughters.


Read more:Friends memorialize ex-Sen. Arlen Specter in Pa. - The Denver Posthttp://www.denverpost.com/recent/ci_21781634/biden-due-at-funeral-tuesday-ex-sen-specter?source=jBar#ixzz29UkKNbco
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Friday, September 7, 2012

RIP Terry Nutkins...


"Animal lover and thoroughly nice chap": Celebrities pay Twitter tributes to Terry Nutkins

The TV wildlife expert who shared his passion for nature with Animal Magic and Really Wild Show viewers has died of leukemia aged 66

Wildlife lover: Terry Nutkins in 1995
Wildlife lover: Terry Nutkins in 1995

Rex
Within minutes of the sad news of the death of former The Really Wild Show presenter,Terry Nutkins' name was trending on Twitter.
The former TV expert, who was being treated in hospital for leukemia, passed away at home in Scotland yesterday, his agent John Miles said.
"He had fought for about nine months or so with acute leukemia," Mr Miles said.
The 66-year-old Londoner, who is survived by his wife, eight children and eight grandchildren, made his home in Glenelg on the west coast of Scotland, near the Isle of Skye.
Mr Miles said: "He was an absolutely lovely guy and just loved animals, and he was never happier than when he was with animals. We will all miss him very, very much."

source:
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/terry-nutkins-dead-read-twitter-1310606

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Noooo!!!!!


from The Superficial :


Michael Clarke Duncan Died (1957 – 2012)

September 4th, 2012 // 50 Comments
Michael Clarke Duncan
Michael Clarke Duncan died yesterday from complications of a heart attack he suffered in July and apparently never fully recovered from. He was 54. The Huffington Post reports:
“I am terribly saddened at the loss of Big Mike. He was the treasure we all discovered on the set of `The Green Mile.’ He was magic. He was a big love of man and his passing leaves us stunned.” – Tom Hanks.
“I’m devastated at the loss of Michael Clarke Duncan, one of the finest people I’ve ever had the privilege to work with or know. Michael was the gentlest of souls – an exemplar of decency, integrity, and kindness. The sadness I feel is inexpressible.” – Frank Darabont, director of “The Green Mile.”
In honor of Michael Clarke Duncan’s memory, I’ll now tell anyone that tries to say he was in Green Lanternand/or Daredevil to shut their mouth, that was Ving Rhames, but I guess they all look the same to you, don’t they? You make me sick.
Rest In Peace, Big Mike.

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

RIP Blinky the Clown

I'm not entirely sure whether my fear of clowns is naturally occurring or whether I should blame the media for making me think that everybody is afraid of clowns. Think of that show on Cartoon Network called Johnny Bravo - he was totally terrified of clowns. Now, every time I see a clown, I also see Johnny Bravo. But I'm not afraid of him. yet.


Anyway, before I was afraid of clowns, I'm pretty sure that I watched the Blinky the Clown Show on PBS.

This is like our own personal Mr. Rodgers.

LOCAL NEWS

Blinky the Clown, Denver TV icon for more than 40 years, dead at 91

POSTED:   08/27/2012 03:12:40 PM MDT
UPDATED:   08/28/2012 09:26:45 AM MDT
By Claire Martin
The Denver Post
Russell Scott better known as Blinky the Clown on the local kids TV program "Blinky's Fun Club," at his room at the Bear Creek Nursing Center in Morrison with portraits of him as Blinky on Thursday, July 28, 2011. (Cyrus McCrimmon, Denver Post file photo)
The Emmy award-winning television clown who wished Colorado children a"Happy Birf Day"every day for more than 40 years died with Russell "Blinky The Clown" Scott, who passed away Monday at age 91. His daughter said he died from complications of pneumonia.
Scott created a Coloradolegend and legacyasBlinky, a red-nosed, plaid-jacketed, pouty-mouthed goof whose gentle humor made awould-be thief temporarily reform his waysand whose safety tips prompted generations of children to look both ways before crossing the street.
From 1958 to 1998, countless children began their days as Blinky greeted them with his"Good morning/Glad to see you!"song. Scott's career as a clown grew from sketches he performed for children who came to see the elaborate miniature circus he maintained at his home.
"Dad was incredibly artistic," said daughter Linda Scott Ballas, who with her husband Steve, owns Steve's Snappin' Dogs in Denver.
"Everything was to scale, like one of those model train layouts. He hand-carved the elephants, a gorilla, put little motors under the plywood table that would move the animals in a circle, move the trapeze act and the barkers. It started out for me and my sister, but the more involved Dad got, we weren't actually allowed to touch it."
Scott's employer at a Colorado Springs Sears store heard about the circus layout and invited him to put it on display at the appliance department where he worked. Scott put together a clown he called Sears-O, who became the prototype forBlinky.
Children loved Sears-O. Local television producers, looking for stars for a new medium, invited Scott to host a children's show, but Scott didn't agree until Colorado Springs' KKTV offered to let him write and produce the show — asBlinky, not Sears-O. (A photo display at Steve's Snappin' Dogs shows the progression of clown faces that Scott developed in the transition from Sears-O toBlinky.)
Scott, who sewed his own puppets forthe show, went on to produce and host nearly 10,000 shows over four decades, moving from Colorado Springs to Denver's KWGN-TV in 1966. From the moment he walked into the TV studio, he wasBlinky, not Scott, handing out the Blinky's Fun Club Safety Tips cards that became one of his trademarks.
"He gave me one of his safety tips cards when I first went into his antiques shop," said Andrew Novick, who still emails an MP3 of Blinky's birthday song each year to a friend.
When the Denver County Fair made its debut in 2011, promoter Dana Cain brought Blinky from Bear Creek nursing home in Morrison to host a Blinky's Fun Club Reunion.
By then, the earliest members of Blinky's Fun Club had children, and sometimes grandchildren, of their own. Some parents,fortunate enough to be among the handful of childrenfeatured on stage during the daily birthday song, were even luckier to escort their own children to those special stage seats. (At that point, the elder Blinky veterans found new meaning in his safety tip to "Mind Mom and Dad.")
"Blinky's Fun Club"went off the airin 1998, silencing Blinky's staccato voice. He continued to run his South Broadway shop, which drew some celebrities, including a member of ZZ Top — "Dad didn't have a clue which one he was, and they all look alike" Ballas said — and Michael Jackson, who he did recognize, securing an autograph.
Among his favorite stories was one about a man who talked him into staying open until midnight "for a very special person."
"That evening, I made some coffee and waited until about 12 o'clock," he recounted in a2011 Denver Post interview.
"Pretty soon, this car pulled up. Not a fancy car. But Liberace stepped out," Scott said. "He came into my store and bought a few things for his own antiques store in California."
Scott operated his store until 2008, when hesold itand auctioned off its merchandise.
Another one of his favorite stories from that period was about a note he discovered when he came to work one summer morning.
"I opened it up," Scott recounted in the same Denver Post interview, "and it said, 'Dear Blinky, I was in your store a few days ago. I was coming in with the intentions of robbing you at gunpoint. But when I heard you were the real Blinky, I said to myself, 'I can't rob this person. I sat onBlinky'slap when I was 5 years old.' "
Services are pending. Survivors include daughter Linda Scott Ballas of Denver and son Larry Scott of Littleton; three grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. Daughter Susan Scott Besaw preceded him in death.
Claire Martin: 303-954-1477, cmartin@denverpost.com or twitter.com/byclairemartin
Blinky The Clown,, who won Colorado children's hearts and celebrated their birthdays for nearly 40 years, died Aug. 27 with his creator, Russell Scott, who passed away at age 91.


Read more:Blinky the Clown, Denver TV icon for more than 40 years, dead at 91 - The Denver Posthttp://www.denverpost.com/breakingnews/ci_21411432/blinky-clown-denver-tv-icon-more-than-40#ixzz24reZ3epW
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Monday, August 13, 2012

RIP Helen Gurley Brown

It's a very sad day for all women out there. Helen Gurley Brown has died at the age of 90.
Ms. Brown wrote "Sex and the Single Girl" - which I haven't read but will add to my list - and also edited Cosmopolitan for over thirty years. Ms. Brown taught women quite a bit about sexual empowerment through her book and the magazine, an education that surely benefited members of both sexes.

Helen Gurley Brown, Who Gave Cosmopolitan Its Purr, Is Dead at 90

Helen Gurley Brown in 1997.Marty Lederhandler/Associated PressHelen Gurley Brown in 1997.
Helen Gurley Brown, the former editor of Cosmopolitan who transformed the magazine in the 1960s into a source of sexual empowerment for women, died Monday morning.
A spokesman for the Hearst Corporation, which publishes Cosmopolitan, said that Ms. Brown, 90, died after being hospitalized briefly at NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia hospital.
Ms. Brown, who wrote “Sex and the Single Girl,” took over at the magazine in 1965, giving it its sexually frank tone. She remained editor until 1997 and is still listed as editor in chief for Cosmopolitan International on all mastheads. Until her death, Ms. Brown was known for coming into her pink corner office nearly every day.
The Hearst statement reads: “It would be hard to overstate the importance to Hearst of her success with Cosmopolitan, or the value of the friendship many of us enjoyed with her. Helen was one of the world’s most recognized magazine editors and book authors, and a true pioneer for women in journalism — and beyond.”

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

RIP Baby Beluga

Normally I don't really read the Google alerts that come through my inbox every day. (I know, what's the point of having them then?)

Today, I got really sad to hear that the whale who inspired the song currently stuck in my head as a result of reading the words, "Baby Beluga", has died of cancer at the age of 46 (46?!).

This is sad. Very sad. Like Free Willy sad. (Was that movie sad, or was I just an over-emotional child who, as an adult, doesn't remember the plot?)


Singer Raffi Says Goodbye To His ‘Baby Beluga’

(WHALE NEWS) The beluga whale named Kavna that inspired singer Raffi to create the great children’s song “Baby Beluga” passed away at the Vancouver Aquarium on Monday. The 46-year-old whale is thought to have suffered from cancer in her last years. Although Kavna did not swim so wild and swim so free like the song’s memorable lyrics, she touched a generation through one brief yet powerful encounter with the children’s singer and advocate. Read on for the profound impact this beautiful whale had on the world. — Global Animal
Photo credit: The Huffington Post
The Huffington Post, Allie Compton
Kavna, the beluga whale that inspired the beloved children’s song “Baby Beluga” by Raffi, passed away from a possible cancer-related illness on Monday afternoon at the Vancouver Aquarium.
The 46-year-old whale spent her life in captivity, according to the Vancouver Sun, but lived well beyond the life expectancy of her species. Aquarium workers told The Canadian Press that belugas typically live 25 to 30 years, and that Kavna may have been even older than her estimated age.
After conducting a preliminary autopsy, aquarium veterinarian Dr. Martin Haulena told reporters that he uncovered a series of cancerous lesions that indicated a recent and quickly spreading cancer.
“Right now, the lesions are most consistent with a cancer, and that is unfortunately a disease we associated with age,” said Haulena, “So we’re looking at a great life for a great whale who had almost nothing wrong with her.”
Kavna had been with the aquarium since 1975. Four years after her arrival, prolific children’s singer/songwriter Raffi Cavoukian visited the aquarium. His interaction with Kavna inspired him to write “Baby Beluga,” a song about a baby whale who swims and plays at sea: 
Baby beluga in the deep blue sea,
Swim so wild and you swim so free.
Heaven above and the sea below,
And a little white whale on the go.

Raffi recalled his first interaction with Kavna in an interview with News 1130 in Vancouver.
“The folks at the aquarium brought me to poolside and the trainer helped me to play with Kavna. Kavna even came out of the water and placed a gentle, graceful kiss on my cheek and I couldn’t stop talking about it for a couple of weeks!”
Raffi took to Twitter Monday to express his condolences, posting this picture of Kavna and him from 1980:
“She was just so beautiful,” Raffi told the Sun, “She was so playful and she had a very pure spirit and you could swear she smiled at you.”
“On a day like this, I’m mostly thinking about the joy of knowing Kavna and the profound impact of the close encounter that would not have been possible in any other way,” he told News 1130.