Christopher Reeve.. dead.

[quote name='dafoomie']Yeah but in the context of having a template made up for your death, it seems a little premature. Which was my original point, that they probably have most of the really old people covered so they've moved to people who are less likely to die soon, but maybe 5 years down the road.

My wording there doesn't make much sense btw. Oh look, its 6am.[/quote]

By small coincidence, I'm currently reading a Carl Hiaasen novel, Basket Case, whose main character and narrator is a reporter who has been subjected to internal exile at his paper, writing obituaries. A lot of newspaper writers have to do this early on as part of paying their dues in the grunt work trenches. I had a friend who spent the better part of a year at the LA Times writing obituary boilerplate for virtually any recognizable name, not just those regarded as being at risk. All it takes is one car running a stop light and a young healthy celebrity can be killed as readily as any of us.

This material can come in handy for other situations where a quick biographical background may be needed. If the person is embroiled in a breaking scandal, for instance. Databases are easily maintained and hard drive space is cheap so it's of value to major papers, especially those in big assemblages like Gannett or Times Mirror, to have all of this at hand. More recently Google has given this power to everyone but that is fairly recent compared to how long the newsmedia industry has been at the task.

The task is easiest with elderly celebrities, of course, especially those who haven't done anything of note recently. The downside is they also tend to be in the, "I thought that guy died a long time ago," category. So the younger and more active celebrities require more work to keep their bios current but the payoff is also greater when that data comes into use.
 
[quote name='dafoomie']I love Castro's.

Must suck for Cheney though, I wouldn't want to be remembered as "loyal point-man".[/quote]

There are worse things. People who know what they are good at and do it rather than aspiring to the top position for its own sake are usually better off and happier than those who feel they have to become #1 or all was for naught. Cheney is a lifelong policy wonk who knows he isn't strong in public speaking as is required for the lead position. It's the people who cannot perceive their own liits who embody the Peter Principle.
 
Well, this was surprising....kinda makes things look a little dimmer overall.

A few points though.

"Why is Reeve an asshole?

Simple: because he's selfish. Reeve didn't give a shit about paralysis before his accident, but now that he's paralyzed, suddenly he opens up a paralysis foundation and cares about the plight of cripples? Where was his foundation in '95 when he played the role of a man with spinal cord injury? Sure, some of you might argue that he's doing a good thing by bringing attention to paralysis, but the underlying message being sent here is that nobody gives a shit about cripples until a celebrity becomes one."

...and nobody gives a shit about the rainforest until its thier house thats in the way of the dozers.
...and nobody gives a shit about the middle east until they raise prices on oil/smash plans into buildings.
...and nobody gives a shit about me until they know i exist (well, thats debateable).

Why do people mourn when a celebrity dies? Because we knew them. Why dont more people get visually upset when a random army man in Iraq dies? Only his family/friends knew him, we do not.

I feel saddend about CR because i grew up watching him be superman in the movies, and then watched him get wheeled around talking about what happened. He was a different kind of hero to different people.
Is he more important than a random person who shops at my store? In the overall eqation of things, no. In the real world, yes. I know more about CR than that person, and have more than likely spent more of my life viewing/haering CR than that person.
 
I am surprised he did as well as he did. He was in really bad shape after his accident. Then he seemed to improve some. I am just glad his wife stayed by him all these years. RIP.
 
Gasp! Some guy died! Quick, run to your houses and lock the doors, THE WORLD IS GOING TO END!
Meh, how boring is it to see another "famous" person die... People die all the time, you don't see them in the news. I'm not saying this guy wasn't important, just not more important than anyone else.
 
[quote name='crystalklear64']Gasp! Some guy died! Quick, run to your houses and lock the doors, THE WORLD IS GOING TO END!
Meh, how boring is it to see another "famous" person die... People die all the time, you don't see them in the news. I'm not saying this guy wasn't important, just not more important than anyone else.[/quote]

And when you die, you will have just as much fanfare...
 
Seriously folks. The fact that C. Reeve died might be considered a good thing. He did suffer alot in the last few years of his life with the paralysis.

This is yet another reason why we should consider Stem Cell Research. It was horrible the way he (and so many others) suffered. George Bush's religious dogma is no alleviation for the millions of people who suffer terrible diseases like Reeves.
 
[quote name='johnnyoski']I would not want to be cast as the next Superman since both of the previous actors met tragic ends.[/quote]

The majority of film and television Superman portrayers didn't come to tragic ends. It's a silly myth.

Bud Collyer
http://imdb.com/name/nm0172872/

Kirk Alyn
http://imdb.com/name/nm0001906/

Timothy Daly
http://imdb.com/name/nm0172872/

Johnny Rockwell (probably)
http://imdb.com/name/nm0734344/

Gerard Christopher
http://imdb.com/name/nm0160569/

Dean Cain
http://us.imdb.com/name/nm0001002/

Danny Dark
http://us.imdb.com/name/nm0201282/

Tom Welling
http://us.imdb.com/name/nm0919991/

David Wilson
http://us.imdb.com/name/nm0933264/

Beau Weaver
http://us.imdb.com/name/nm0915812/

Aaron Smolinski
http://us.imdb.com/name/nm0810597/

John Haymes Newton
http://us.imdb.com/name/nm0628542/

Jason Marsden
http://us.imdb.com/name/nm0005189/

Bob Hastings
http://us.imdb.com/name/nm0368561/

Ralph Hodges
http://us.imdb.com/name/nm0388205/

George Newbern
http://us.imdb.com/name/nm0627624/

There are others, especially if you count the several productions in India and Turkey. By and large, it's the ones who die under bizarre circumstances or have have highly public tragedies that stand out in memory. It's like the Poltergeist movies. Everyone remembers the names from the lead credits who died but little thought is given to the hundreds of others in the end credits roll who by statistical happenstance must have a few mishaps among their number, too.
 
[quote name='Xevious']Seriously folks. The fact that C. Reeve died might be considered a good thing. He did suffer alot in the last few years of his life with the paralysis.

This is yet another reason why we should consider Stem Cell Research. It was horrible the way he (and so many others) suffered. George Bush's religious dogma is no alleviation for the millions of people who suffer terrible diseases like Reeves.[/quote]

Stem cell research is proceeding just fine. The issue at contention is government funding. The argument is that those in favor don't have the right to pick the pockets of those who have a problem with the derivation of embryonic cells. Those who favor embryonic cell extraction are completely free to invest in the appropriate biotech companies and perhaps make some serious money in the process.
 
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