View Full Version : So farewell then...
Wolfie
06/02/2008, 12:26 PM
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi
The Maharishi became well-known in the 1960s
The most flamboyant of the self-styled Indian gurus to emerge from the Woodstock era, the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi was a man of charisma, energy and untold riches, credited with setting the Beatles and other stars on the path to spiritual enlightenment.
He only died now Owls Fan? :eek:
He looked old in 1968!!
The man who inspired the Beatles "Sexy Sadie".
OwlsFan
06/02/2008, 12:49 PM
He only died now Owls Fan? :eek:
He looked old in 1968!!
The man who inspired the Beatles "Sexy Sadie".
He was 52 in 1968 and that I suspect would have looked very old to you at the time ;)
kingdom hoop
06/02/2008, 12:55 PM
Anyone here inspired by him to get into a bit of old Transcendental Meditation?
That sh!t fascinates me to be honest. We can all find our own Gods! :)
Wolfie
06/02/2008, 12:58 PM
He was 52 in 1968 and that I suspect would have looked very old to you at the time ;)
He would have alright. I was -7 at the time :D
OwlsFan
11/02/2008, 10:28 AM
Roy Scheider, his French Connection cut, his Marathon Man days run, grabbed by the Jaws of death !!
Block G Raptor
11/02/2008, 10:42 AM
Jesus thats a bit of a shock. Thought he was great as Heywood Floyd in 2010, as well as his more readily recognizable role's above, Blue thunder was one of my favorite films as a nipper
OwlsFan
11/02/2008, 11:33 AM
Jesus thats a bit of a shock. Thought he was great as Heywood Floyd in 2010, as well as his more readily recognizable role's above, Blue thunder was one of my favorite films as a nipper
I loved JAWS. Must have watched it 20+ times many years ago. A classic. "Smile you son of a bit*h!"
www.youtube.com/watch?v=awYjqZKLBqg&feature=related - 69k
Lionel Ritchie
11/02/2008, 11:56 AM
Sad to hear that. Incidently I prefered the "We're gonna need a bigger boat" line.:cool:
RIP Roy
superfrank
11/02/2008, 12:28 PM
Not a Jaws fan but I thought he was great in the French Connection, pity he was playing second fiddle to Popeye in that one.
OwlsFan
13/02/2008, 2:10 PM
Paul Goldin, hypnotist. I suppose spending your life saying "go to sleep...." must eventually come back to haunt you.
Bondvillain
21/02/2008, 4:20 PM
Lost in the Heath Ledger media Frenzy;
Newcastle Curry Mentallist and Viz Comic icon Abdul Latif, Lord Of Harpole (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/tyne/7199691.stm) passed away at the end of January.
A gifted self-promoter, the Bangladeshi headbanger frequently appeared in the pages of Viz magazine, hawking his "curry Hell" dish from his Restaurant, The Rupali, allegedly the Hottest curry known to man. (Or Geordie men anyway) in exchange for free nosh for the Viz editors.
He will also be remembered for achieving the world record for longest distance fast food delivery (Newcastle to Sydney) and for publicly offering free curries for life to ex Toon Manager Graeme Souness, his favourite player Shay Given, and Geordie entertainer Jimmy Nail, on condition that he signed a sworn statement that he would not make anymore episodes of Toon based "crime" "drama" 'Crocodile Shoes'.
Genius.
gustavo
28/02/2008, 10:59 PM
RIP Dermot Morgan died 10 years ago today (just about:))
Sligo Hornet
29/02/2008, 6:17 AM
RIP Mike Smith, lead singer of 60's band Dave Clark Five, died aged just 64......"Bits and Pieces" and "Glad all over" two of their biggest hits.
Newryrep
03/03/2008, 3:55 PM
Jeff Healy - blind guitarist
Paul Raymond - porn baron (his son of the same name plays keyboards for rock band UFO- thats how i know about him honest)*
*incidententally seen UFO in Belfast a few months ago, seen Michael Schenker a couple of weeks ago in the same venue.
OwlsFan
04/03/2008, 10:08 AM
Paul Raymond - porn baron (his son of the same name plays keyboards for rock band UFO- thats how i know about him honest)
He leaves an estate of £650 million. Not bad for the owner of a strip joint and some porno mags.
NeilMcD
04/03/2008, 1:33 PM
I own a few porno mags but I would do well to buy a house never mind an estate.
Newryrep
04/03/2008, 4:27 PM
I own a few porno mags but I would do well to buy a house never mind an estate.
Define a few ;)
OwlsFan
05/03/2008, 7:02 AM
Define a few ;)
Why, are you thinking of making an offer to Neil? Make sure they are not stained ;)
OwlsFan
05/03/2008, 1:22 PM
Gary Gygax, best known for co-creating the pioneering role-playing game Dungeons & Dragons (D&D).
I spent a lot of my teenage years and twenties playing that game with a group of similar nerds.
OwlsFan
07/03/2008, 12:10 PM
Derek Dooley, Sheffield Wednesday legend. He's the reason I follow the Owls. It was in the paper about him losing his leg and my oldest brother started to follow them. He then passed on that heavy burden to me.
OwlsFan
07/03/2008, 1:59 PM
Nice obituary in the Daily Telegraph:
"Derek Dooley, who died on Wednesday aged 78, was a fearless Sheffield Wednesday centre-forward who overcame the trauma of having a leg amputated to become the club's manager, and was later chairman of their rivals Sheffield United.
The way Dooley triumphed over adversity made him the most respected icon of his football-mad home city, and his administrative skills earned him an MBE in 2003. Aggressive on the field, he became renowned off it for his modesty and integrity; the United manager Dave Bassett reckoned him "a man you could trust your life with".
Deprived of his livelihood at 23, Dooley displayed a complete lack of bitterness or self-pity. Indeed, the only time he showed resentment was when Wednesday sacked him as manager on Christmas Eve 1973. He would not watch a game at Hillsborough for 19 years; when eventually he returned, for a Sheffield derby, the entire crowd rose to give him a standing ovation.
Red-haired, 6ft 3in tall and taking a size 12 boot, the ungainly Dooley embodied the English centre-forward in the days when they were free to intimidate goalkeepers, bundling them over the line if necessary. He was regularly booed at away matches, and the odd goalkeeper got even when the referee was not looking. In 61 matches for Wednesday before his injury, Dooley scored no fewer than 62 goals, and an England call-up seemed only a matter of time.
It was on February 14 1953, at Deepdale, that Dooley broke his right leg in two places in a collision with Preston North End's goalkeeper George Thompson. The break seemed to be healing, and after nine weeks Dooley was ready to leave Preston Royal Infirmary. Then a nurse whom he asked to sign his plaster cast tickled his toes - and was horrified to discover that he could feel nothing.
Gas gangrene from an earlier cut had set in - a million-to-one chance, said the hospital. Surgeons tried for 24 hours to save his leg, anti-toxin being rushed by police car from Manchester, but it had to be amputated above the knee to save Dooley's life.
With £10,000 raised by local newspapers and a 55,000-strong crowd at a testimonial match (the first floodlit fixture at Hillsborough), Dooley bought the house where he lived for the rest of his life; meanwhile, a generous pools winner gave him £3,000. He wanted to remain involved with Wednesday "even if they use me as the corner flag", and returned in 1962 as development manager, helping to raise the funds to make Hillsborough one of England's best stadiums in time to host matches in the 1966 World Cup.
Dooley enjoyed less success as Wednesday's manager. A surprise appointment at the start of 1971, he boosted the fans' morale by bringing back the blue and white stripes in which he had played, but the team struggled in the Second Division. He was not helped by a virus outbreak that sidelined 16 players and left part of the ground in quarantine, and after several embarrassing defeats a new chairman dismissed him. Dooley had no warning, and the fans were aghast at the timing. Under his successor, Steve Burtenshaw, Wednesday were relegated.
He had been out of the game for almost a year when, in November 1974, Sheffield United invited him to be their commercial manager. Dooley was flabbergasted - many Wednesdayites will not eat bacon on match days because of United's red and white stripes. But he took the job, and stayed with the club as it plunged from the First Division to the Fourth, then returned to the First under Bassett to become a founder member of the Premier League.
Dooley's time at United had its difficult moments. In 1993, for example, he threatened to resign when the club's chairman sold Brian Deane to Leeds for £2.9 million. He retired as United's chief executive in 1996, but returned three years later as chairman. He was instrumental in the appointment as manager of Neil Warnock, who took United to three Cup semi-finals and, in 2006, back to the Premiership, though they survived only one season. Dooley stood down with promotion secured, becoming United's life vice-president.
Derek Dooley was born at Pitsmoor, Sheffield, on December 13 1929, the son of two factory workers; his father was offered a trial by Bradford City but could not get time off work. Although he passed the 11-plus, Derek left school at 14 to work for a firm making hearing aids, playing football for the YMCA, at first as a centre-half. At 18 he signed as an amateur for Lincoln City, but made only two appearances before joining Wednesday.
He made his League debut for the club on March 11 1950, at home to Preston, but at first his National Service with the RAF, and his rawness as a player, limited his appearances. But in October 1951, with Wednesday struggling in the Second Division, the manager Eric Taylor put him in the side against Barnsley and he scored twice. He went on to score a then post-war record of 46 goals in 30 games (including five in one match against Notts County) as Wednesday won promotion.
There were those who reckoned that Dooley was short on skill for the First Division, and Taylor complained of a "vendetta" by defenders which referees did not penalise. He was even dropped for one match, against Charlton, but in September 1952 his touch returned, and by the time of the fateful game at Preston he had scored 16 times.
After the amputation, Dooley recalled, "in my heart and mind I was still chasing the ball down the middle". Newly married, he had no job and no qualifications. First he worked as sports adviser to the Daily Mirror, scouting for Wednesday at the weekends.
Then a Wednesday director offered him a job at his bakery; in eight years he rose from switchboard operator to assistant sales manager. He was even playing cricket, scoring 26 for Sheffield Wednesday against Gainsborough. He began coaching Wednesday's juniors, and in 1962 Taylor secured his return to the club when it launched its lottery.
Derek Dooley was made a Freeman of the City of Sheffield in 1993, when United and Wednesday met in an FA Cup semi-final at Wembley, and held an honorary doctorate from Sheffield Hallam University. He was recently nominated by Sheffield citizens as one of 11 "legends" from the city; the others include Joe Cocker, Sebastian Coe, Michael Palin and the astronaut Helen Sharman.
He married his wife Sylvia in 1952. She survives him, with their son and daughter."
Block G Raptor
08/03/2008, 1:46 AM
Brendan Hughes Irish Republican and one of the orignal H-Block Hunger strikers (1980) died recently
obit here (http://www.anphoblacht.com/news/detail/24622)
Lionel Ritchie
09/03/2008, 9:26 AM
Carol Barnes (http://www.breakingnews.ie/world/mhojcwcwsnmh/rss2/), the former ITN Newsreader has died aged 63 following a stroke.
OwlsFan
09/03/2008, 10:15 AM
Carol Barnes (http://www.breakingnews.ie/world/mhojcwcwsnmh/rss2/), the former ITN Newsreader has died aged 63 following a stroke.
Was amazed the amount of coverage she got on the news. No. 2 item on the BBC even though she was never a news reader with them and worked for Sky and ITV. It's a "celebrity" driven culture we live in no doubt. Sad of course but No. 2 item on the news!!
DaveyCakes
12/03/2008, 3:10 PM
The last French WWI veteran:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7292109.stm
OwlsFan
12/03/2008, 4:34 PM
With a name like Lazarus I wouldn't count him out just yet ;)
Réiteoir
18/03/2008, 11:55 PM
Arthur C Clarke: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7304004.stm
and Anthony Minghella: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7302841.stm
Pauro 76
19/03/2008, 12:54 PM
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7302554.stm
Poor auld Captain Birds Eye. Ha harrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr!!! He was replaced in the mid 90s by some 'rugged' actors to appeal to the ladies. He failed. They brought him back. He's gone. God bless you Captain Birds Eye.
OwlsFan
20/03/2008, 7:07 AM
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7302554.stm
Poor auld Captain Birds Eye. Ha harrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr!!! He was replaced in the mid 90s by some 'rugged' actors to appeal to the ladies. He failed. They brought him back. He's gone. God bless you Captain Birds Eye.
Says a lot about the mentality of the Brits and the power of advertising for in a poll in 1993, people were asked to name a famous captain and Captain Birds Eye was voted as the most recognised captain after Captain Cook. I would have said Captain & Tennille :D
OwlsFan
20/03/2008, 10:54 AM
Actually my most famous Captains would be:
A) Captain Kirk
B) Captain Americas
C) Captain Pugwash
jebus
20/03/2008, 10:55 AM
Actually my most famous Captains would be:
A) Captain Kirk
B) Captain Americas
C) Captain Pugwash
What about Captain Planet!? :D
Oddly enough we where talking about that episode of Captain Planet where they save Belfast from being nuked by a disgruntled Republican baker this morning at work :)
OwlsFan
20/03/2008, 10:59 AM
...Paul Scofield (Oscar winning actor)
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/7306378.stm
Kingdom
20/03/2008, 11:00 AM
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7302554.stm
Poor auld Captain Birds Eye. Ha harrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr!!! He was replaced in the mid 90s by some 'rugged' actors to appeal to the ladies. He failed. They brought him back. He's gone. God bless you Captain Birds Eye.
While this is a sombre thread, I can't stop laughing at the thought of all these actors living together under one roof in a retirement home. There's nothing actually funny about it, I've just this image of a continuous shakespeare play going on. I'd say its good craic for the staff.
Pauro 76
20/03/2008, 11:31 AM
My top 3 Captains:
Captain Caveman
Captain Birds Eye
Captain Chaos
Wolfie
20/03/2008, 11:34 AM
Captain Sensible
Pauro 76
20/03/2008, 11:37 AM
i forgot Captain Pugwash.
Sligo Hornet
20/03/2008, 12:34 PM
Actor Brian Wilde died early today......I was never a fan of Last of The Summer Wine, but thought he was great in Porridge
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/7306954.stm
Jerry The Saint
20/03/2008, 4:27 PM
Actor Brian Wilde died early today......I was never a fan of Last of The Summer Wine, but thought he was great in Porridge
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/7306954.stm
Bad time to be a celeb of a certain age - dropping like flies they are.
Shocked to see that this guy - http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/527777.stm - died nearly 9 years ago. For all I knew, he was still acting in that show :eek: I hope the guy from Wallace and Gromit is feeling OK.
Pauro 76
21/03/2008, 3:53 PM
As a footnote to Captain Bird's Eye.
Cod rest his sole. He's gone to a better plaice.
strangeirish
21/03/2008, 4:30 PM
As a footnote to Captain Bird's Eye.
Cod rest his sole. He's gone to a better plaice.Didn't he play for Pike Rovers at one point? I know, I'm floundering and I took the bait.
Bondvillain
24/03/2008, 11:58 AM
Anthony Minghella (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2008/03/19/db1901.xml) , Director of Cold Mountain, The Talented Mr Ripley & The English Patient, as well as several sucessful Television dramas (including his final Duty , directing the Richard Curtis' scripted The No 1 Ladies' Detective Agency (http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2007/12_december/04/detective.shtml) ), passed away Tuesday from complications arising from surgery .
Arthur C Clarke (http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/24/arts/24arts-ARTHURCCLARK_BRF.html?ref=arts) Former Airman, acknowledged designer of the common weather satellite, Legendary Science fiction Titan , and prolific author (http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/c/arthur-c-clarke/), passed away in his Sri Lankan home Wednesday 19th.
Lionel Ritchie
24/03/2008, 12:26 PM
Says a lot about the mentality of the Brits and the power of advertising for in a poll in 1993, people were asked to name a famous captain and Captain Birds Eye was voted as the most recognised captain after Captain Cook. I would have said Captain & Tennille :D
It might say a lot about the Irish that when Larry Gogan asked a Just a Minute Quiz contestant to name a dangerous race the answer she popped up with was not the Dakar Rally or the Grand National but "The Arabs".
:eek:
:D
...so long Captain Birdseye. We Aaardly knew ye.
thischarmingman
24/03/2008, 1:05 PM
If only...
http://www.hostdump.com/images/17547lional.bmp (http://www.hostdump.com/v.php?id=17547lional.bmp)]
OwlsFan
24/03/2008, 3:38 PM
Anthony Minghella (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2008/03/19/db1901.xml) , Director of Cold Mountain, The Talented Mr Ripley & The English Patient, as well as several sucessful Television dramas (including his final Duty , directing the Richard Curtis' scripted The No 1 Ladies' Detective Agency (http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2007/12_december/04/detective.shtml) ), passed away Tuesday from complications arising from surgery .
We're way ahead of you ;)
Arthur C Clarke: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7304004.stm
and Anthony Minghella: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7302841.stm
Bondvillain
24/03/2008, 9:22 PM
Im sorry. I have a stammer.
OwlsFan
27/03/2008, 10:09 AM
actor Richard Widmark
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001847/
Wolfie
27/03/2008, 11:02 AM
"5th Beatle" Neil Aspinall.
http://www.independent.ie/entertainment/music/fifth-beatle-neil-aspinall-dies-aged-66-1326573.html
Newryrep
27/03/2008, 11:33 AM
"5th Beatle" Neil Aspinall.
http://www.independent.ie/entertainment/music/fifth-beatle-neil-aspinall-dies-aged-66-1326573.html
How many Beatles were there ? George Best, Yoko Ono and of course Sonia
Wolfie
27/03/2008, 12:19 PM
How many Beatles were there ? George Best, Yoko Ono and of course Sonia
Yoko Ono was the Anti-Beatle.
jebus
27/03/2008, 12:23 PM
How many Beatles were there ? George Best, Yoko Ono and of course Sonia
Apu from the Simsons, Pete Best, me and Oasis are a few other names I've heard.
To be honest I've heard each of them refer to George Martin as the 5th Beatle in various interviews, so I'd give it to him
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