In Memoriam

AngieNikodinovLove (ANL)

Get it Amber 😝
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15,552
Mike Rinder, who was well-known as a former Scientology executive who because a critic and cohost on the A&E series “Leah Remini: Scientology and The Aftermath”, has passed away from cancer.

Here’s the Instagram post.
Here’s the blog post.

I think that he was a true warrior in showing the horrors that can happen with religion. I’m currently listening to his audiobook, “A Billion Years”, right now. It’s an incredible story.

Wow
 

Amy L

Well-Known Member
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10,502
I used to follow a lot of the people in the ex-scientology community. They had kind of a YouTube "TV network" going on but it fell apart due to in-fighting. I knew Mike Rinder had cancer but I didn't watch much of his stuff for the past few months. I saw a video of him a week or so ago and he looked strikingly different, I knew his time must be coming. RIP to Mike Rinder. He was a Scientology "enforcer" who spent the last few decades or his life trying to repair the damage he caused. He was a very brave man.
 

Sylvia

Recovering from Wichita Nationals
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84,262
The Vivienne appeared on ITV's Dancing on Ice with Colin Grafton in 2023: https://www.instagram.com/reel/CpiQMX3IvT-/
...
"I wanna be Mary forever! By far my favourite performance of ours, just loved it from start to finish."
Colin Grafton's tribute yesterday: : https://www.instagram.com/p/DEfIbQKIxeV/
I can’t believe I’m writing these words.
It is with an extraordinarily heavy heart that I say goodbye to my beautiful friend and skating partner, The Vivienne. Viv was and is a true icon in every sense of the word, and inspired thousands of people far and wide with everything they did and accomplished. They truly brought light into every room they entered, and gave so many people hope where there was none. I am truly heartbroken. What we were able to accomplish together on Dancing On Ice was truly remarkable and I know your bravery and our partnership inspired many people. I will always be so proud of what we accomplished. Viv, your spirit, strength, and kindness will always stay with me and with everyone you touched. I will forever cherish our time together on and off the ice, you will forever be my Mary Poppins. I promise to carry your memory with me in everything I do. You taught me so much about so many things, and I am eternally grateful. Your legacy lives on ❤️
 

Aceon6

Wrangling the duvet into the cover
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31,448
Paul Stookey lives on at age 87. I never realized how much older PP&M were until Mary passed.
 

Sylvia

Recovering from Wichita Nationals
Messages
84,262
SI Photographer Heinz Kluetmeier’s Eye for the Iconic Made Him One of a Kind
Kluetmeier, who shot over 100 covers for Sports Illustrated, died Tuesday morning at age 82, leaving behind a catalog of renowned images that still resonate. Tribute by Jon Wertheim (Sept. 14):
More happily, in 1980, Heinz was both at the side of the rink and in the rafters—this was not someone who was ever satisfied sticking to one position—shooting the “Miracle On Ice,” the Americans’ dramatic upset of the Soviets in that Lake Placid hockey game. The cover of Sports Illustrated featured Heinz’s handiwork, but no headline or caption, because as he put it, “it didn’t need any window dressing, everyone in America knew what had happened.”
Heinz took photos that no one even thought to take—much less were able to execute. He would find an angle no one had conceived. He would seize on a detail no one else would notice. Writers loved to work with him, yes for his companionability and his dexterity. But also because Heinz would develop a rapport with the athlete and uncover a detail that would make its way into the written story. And the Legend of Kluetmeier extended to the way he transferred his images. Today it’s a few keystrokes. In the 1970s and ’80s, Heinz would sometimes transport his film back to the office himself, a pilot license another of his achievements.
ETA - includes 2 photos of Sasha Cohen at the 2006 Olympics:

He also photographed for the Stars on Ice tours in the 1990s, IIRC.
 
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Cachoo

Well-Known Member
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11,803
I just ran into this today--an excellent interview with Linda Lavin from 2020:

 

Cachoo

Well-Known Member
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11,803

Cachoo

Well-Known Member
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11,803
The original Dune was more interesting than it gets credit for. And Mulholland Drive was one of the most puzzling movies I’ve ever seen. RIP.
Mulholland Drive was strange...I read one interpretation by Naomi Watts and it made more sense then. I'm sure every bit of it had meaning for Lynch but he wouldn't be specific about it.
 

Garden Kitty

Tranquillo
Messages
30,064
RIP Bob Uecker! 90 years is a good long run. Great baseball player and announcer, and a funny man.

Back in its day Mr Belvedere was sort of a family joke just because it was so silly. When my sister came to visit me in LA, we went to see the show being taped which is one of the few times I did that when I lived there. I'm not a big baseball fan but I've always liked Bob Uecker
 

vgerdes

Well-Known Member
Messages
855
The original Dune was more interesting than it gets credit for. And Mulholland Drive was one of the most puzzling movies I’ve ever seen. RIP.
I still have a fondness for Lynch's Dune, even though its SFX are pretty dated. To me Twin Peaks was his tour de force. It was magnificent in its weirdness, lol.

I loved Joan Plowright. She was one of the last true grand dames of cinema. Just saw her recently in an old Vanessa Williams movie, Dance with Me. Though small, her role was memorable.
 

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