Seriously, a football player from that era living to 90? That's more impressive then all the records he held.
Seriously, a football player from that era living to 90? That's more impressive then all the records he held.
2017 strikes again.
Grape-kun, our favorite weaboo penguin has passed.
Spoiler: show
First Harambe and now this
Spoiler: show
; ;
Roy Dotrice, 94. He played the pyromancer in season 2 of GOT and also was the voice actor for the ASOIAF audiobooks.
Well...book listeners now have their "voice" dead before all the books are out. Soon book readers will join their despair...
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John Dunsworth dead at 71. He cried shitwolf.
Shitwinds are brewing.
RIP
He’s takin’ the shit tornado right back to Oz
Nuuuu, not Mr. Lahey! It's a shit-world without you.
Gord Downey, singer for the Tragically Hip, as a Canadian this REALLY hits me hard, their music impacted my life greatly, he will be greatly missed
Office has been playing Hip all day. I've never been a huge fan but Gord was definitely a Canadian icon.
Never understood his music, but can respect his love for Canadiana in his music.
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Everyone knew it was coming but it is still a huge blow for Canada. I never enjoyed the Hip's music as a kid, but as an adult it finally dawned on me how poetic and truthful and meaningful each and every lyric was.
It might be hard for Americans to understand his importance to Canadians, the running joke up here is that the only reason why the Hip were never popular in the US was because even when they had concerts down south, Canadians bought out every show anyway lol. Here's an excerpt from his obituary in the NYT's to kind of explain how Canada views him
http://www.kare11.com/news/minneapol...dies/485207456
Stan "Krusher" Kowalski, 91, Professional Wrestler / WWII Vet, Natural Causes
dammit
I'm....
....krushed.
Robert Guillaume, 89. Cancer. Emmy award winning actor but most of us probably knew him best as the voice of Rafiki from The Lion King.
Benson =/
Fats Domino
By 1960, Domino's audience was overwhelmingly white. In South Carolina, the Ku Klux Klan gave his band directions — by the light of a burning cross. The late saxophone player Herbert Hardesty was driving the Domino bus on that occasion.
"So I had to make it tight," Hardesty recounted. "In about five minutes, I came to Ku Klux Klan. They said, 'Well, where's Fats Domino?' I said, 'He's not here.' They said, 'What are you guys doing?' I said, 'I'm lost, I'm trying to get back to the highway.' And they were very nice — the Ku Klux Klan treated us very nice!"