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  1. #576
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    Lucky nobody stuck a pin in him he would have flown around the room a dozen times.

  2. #577
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    Terry Jenner

    Spin doctor Terry Jenner dies

    AUSTRALIAN cricket has lost one of its finest servants, with former Test spinner Terry Jenner passing away at his Adelaide home.
    Jenner died at his Brighton home earlier today. His funeral will be held at Adelaide Oval on a date to be announced by the South Australian Cricket Association.
    The former Test leg spinner and mentor to Shane Warne suffered a serious heart-attack last April while coaching in England.
    The 66-year-old has suffered deteriorating health and his partner, Ann, today confirmed he had lost his life.
    "Terry passed away peacefully today just a month and a half after the anniversary of his heart attack," she wrote on his blogsite.

    "He wanted to be at home with his family and we were able to share the last few days with him.
    "Many people will miss him and the world will not be the same now he has gone but, in many ways, it will be a better thing for him."
    Jenner played nine Tests for Australia from 1970 to 1975 and one ODI. He also was the only Test cricketer to have been imprisoned.
    He was born in Mount Lawley, WA, and was first selected as an all-rounder in grade cricket in Perth at the age of 17.
    After two years of grade cricket, he was picked for Western Australia, as a bowling all-rounder.
    However, the notoriously quick WACA pitch did not suit him and Jenner rarely appeared in the XI, claiming only 34 wickets in four seasons.
    He moved to South Australia in 1967, playing at the more spin-friendly Adelaide Oval and became a regular member of the Redbacks
    Jenner made his Test debut in the 1970–71 Australian season in the First Test of the 1970-71 Ashes series at Brisbane. He scored 0 and 2 and took 2/95, seeing him dropped straight away.
    He was recalled for the Seventh and final Test of the series at the spin-friendly Sydney Cricket Ground, where he took 3/42 as England were dismissed on the first day for 184.
    The only Australian Test cricketer to be jailed – he spent two years inside for embezzlement – Jenner credited his time coaching Warne for turning his life around.
    Jenner started coaching Warne during the legspinner’s brief stint at the Academy in the early 1990s, and was on hand regularly during Warne’s record-breaking Test career to refine his action.
    “Working with Shane changed everything,” Jenner said late last year.
    “I was out there earning the respect of people and the good news is that I felt like I'd redeemed myself for the downs I had.”
    The success Jenner had with Warne opened up many avenues, including being an ABC commentator.

    TERRY JENNER TIME LINE
    Born Perth September 8, 1944 in Mt Lawley, Perth, WA
    First class debut for WA 1963
    Moved to Adelaide 1966
    Claimed 389 first class wickets at 32.18 in 131 matches
    Test debut 1970
    Took 24 wickets in nine Tests at 31.2
    Sentenced to six and a half years jail for embezzlement in 1988, the result of a gambling addiction. Released after 18 months.
    Became Shane Warne’s mentor at the national cricket academy in 1990.
    Travelled the cricket world as a renowned spin coach.
    Suffered a serious heart attack on April 7, 2010 coaching in England.
    Died in Adelaide May 25, 2011 aged 66.


  3. #578
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    Jeff Conaway


    Jeff Conaway (far left, with Olivia Newton-John, John Travolta and Stockard Channing) starred in the classic 1978 movie Grease


    Pic1: Fan favourite: Conaway (top left) starred in Taxi alongside Judd Hirch, Andy Kaufman, Marilu Henner, Danny Devitio and Tony Danza
    Pic 2: Banned: Conaway's on-again off-again girlfriend Vikki Lizzi was barred from being by the actor's side during his final moments

    Jeff Conaway
    May 27, 2011

    Los Angeles (CNN) -- Actor Jeff Conaway, who was in the TV series "Taxi" and the movie "Grease," died Friday morning, his manager said.
    While pneumonia was the cause of death, the doctor who treated him for drug addiction for years says it was his dependence on prescription painkillers that eventually cost him his life.
    "Jeff was a severe, severe opiate addict with chronic pain, one of the most serious and dangerous combination of problems you could possibly interact with," Dr. Drew Pinsky said during a taping for Friday night's "Dr. Drew" on HLN.
    "The pain seemed to be motivating him back to the opiates, and I told him for years that it was going to kill him," Pinsky said.
    Conaway, 60, suffered from pneumonia and sepsis in recent weeks and had been in a medically-induced coma in an Encino, California, hospital for two weeks, manager Phil Brock said.
    His family surrounded Conaway in his hospital room Thursday afternoon when he was taken off life support, Brock said.
    "He was the consummate performer and entertainer," Brock said. "We're thankful his struggles are over, but we know he will be missed by legions of fans worldwide."
    On hearing about his death, "Grease" co-star John Travolta said: "Jeff Conaway was a wonderful and decent man and we will miss him. My heartfelt thoughts are with his family and loved ones at this very difficult time."
    Conaway's struggle with alcohol and drug addiction was chronicled in 2008 on the TV reality show "Celebrity Rehab With Dr. Drew."
    "What happens is, like with most opiate addicts, eventually they take a little too much, not much more than usual, and they aspirate, so what's in their mouth gets into their lungs," Pinsky said. "That causes a rapidly progressing and overwhelming pneumonia that they usually don't know that they have, because they're sort of too out of it because of the drugs and by the time they get to the hospital it's too late. That's what happened with Jeff."
    There was no evidence he ever intentionally overdosed, Pinsky said.

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    Gil Scott-Heron



    US musician and poet Gil Scott-Heron
    28 May 2011

    US musician and poet Gil Scott-Heron, often called the Godfather of Rap, has died in a New York hospital aged 62.

    The cause of his death is not clear, but he is believed to have become ill after returning from a visit to Europe.

    Scott-Heron's material spanned soul, jazz, blues and the spoken word. His 1970s work heavily influenced the US hip-hop and rap scenes.

    His work had a strong political element - one of his most famous pieces was The Revolution Will Not Be Televised.

    Scott-Heron's friend Doris Nolan said the musician had died at St Luke's Hospital on Friday afternoon.

    "We're all sort of shattered," she told the Associated Press.

    Scott-Heron was born in Chicago in 1949 - the son of former football player in Britain - and grew up in Tennessee before moving to New York.

    He had a long-running song-writing partnership with pianist and flautist Brian Jackson, who he met at Lincoln University.

    The pioneering style he developed while working with Jackson, mixing minimalist percussion with poetry, meant Scott-Heron was often described as the godfather of rap.

    But the artist himself rejected this title.

    "If there was any individual initiative that I was responsible for it might have been that there was music in certain poems of mine, with complete progression and repeating 'hooks', which made them more like songs than just recitations with percussion," Scott-Heron wrote in the introduction to his 1990 Now and Then collection of poems.

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  5. #580
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    Assisted Suicide Advocate Jack Kevorkian Reportedly Dies at Michigan Hospital
    Published June 03, 2011
    | FoxNews.com
    Print Email Share Comments (61)

    AP
    Assisted suicide advocate Jack Kevorkian died in a Detroit area hospital following a short illness at the age of 83, according to a close friend and prominent attorney.
    DEVELOPING: Dr. Jack Kevorkian, a Michigan pathologist who championed physician-assisted suicides, reportedly died early Friday after being hospitalized with kidney problems and pneumonia.
    The 83-year-old Kevorkian died at Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Mich., his lawyer, Mayer Morganroth, confirmed to the Detroit Free Press.
    Kevorkian died from a pulmonary thrombosis when a blood clot from his leg broke free and lodged in his heart, the newspaper reports.
    Kevorkian was released from a Michigan prison in 2007 after serving eight years for second-degree murder. He claims to have assisted in at least 130 suicides.
    Click here to read more on the reported death of Jack Kevorkian from the Detroit Free Press.
    The Associated Press contributed to this report


    Read more: Assisted Suicide Advocate Jack Kevorkian Reportedly Dies at Michigan Hospital - FoxNews.com

    Assisted Suicide Advocate Jack Kevorkian Reportedly Dies at Michigan Hospital - FoxNews.com

  6. #581
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    Rag Trade star Miriam Karlin dies aged 85



    Actress Miriam Karlin, known to many for her role as shop steward Paddy in TV sitcom The Rag Trade, has died in London aged 85.

    The actress, who became an OBE in 1975, had cancer and died in hospital.

    Born Miriam Samuels in 1925, Karlin was one of Malcolm McDowell's victims in A Clockwork Orange and also had roles in The Entertainer and Room at the Top.

    Sir Antony Sher, one of her former co-stars, paid tribute to her as "a great actress [and] a great lady".

    Working with Karlin on the play Torch Song Trilogy had been "one of the most enjoyable experiences of my career," he said.

    "She gave a tremendous performance as the Jewish mother, full of power and anger, but there was always a twinkle in her eye."

    Raised as an orthodox Jew in London, Karlin was a staunch political activist and an active member of actors' union Equity.

    She had been a patron of Dignity in Dying, a body that campaigns for a change to the laws on assisted dying.

    The Hampstead-born actress - who lost some family members in Auschwitz - trained at Rada and performed for troops with the Entertainments National Service Association (Ensa).

    Karlin played shop steward Paddy in both incarnations of The Rag Trade

    Her stage work included engagements with the Royal Shakespeare Company. She also became the first woman to play the traditionally male lead in Harold Pinter's The Caretaker.

    The actress frequently played formidable Jewish matriarchs, among them Golde in the original West End production of Fiddler on the Roof.

    Karlin appeared as Paddy - known for calling "Everybody out!" at regular intervals - in the original 1960s version of The Rag Trade.

    She would later reprise her role when the show was revived by ITV in the 1970s.
    It was her startling demise in A Clockwork Orange, though, for which some film fans will remember her best.

    As the so-called "Cat Lady", she was beaten to death with a phallic-looking sculpture in Stanley Kubrick's controversial take on Anthony Burgess's novel.

    West End theatre producer David Pugh was a friend of Karlin's and remembered her as "a wonderful woman."

    Equity spokesman Martin Brown has also paid tribute, remembering her in The Stage as "an absolutely indefatigable campaigner and a marvellous friend".

    In a statement, Lord and Baroness Kinnock said the actress had been "superbly talented in roles of every kind".

    "Mim was easy to love, an infectious friend, a true comrade and a sparkling spirit."

  7. #582
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  8. #583
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    'Gunsmoke' star James Arness dies at 88

    Men of a certain age remember James Arness as the template of masculinity during their youth. The character of Marshal Matt Dillon became one of those male archetypes that we all measured ourselves against. It’s why I had a cowboy hat, boots and six-shooter cap guns as a small boy. I even recall Johnny Cash talking about practicing his quick draw skills against TV’s Dodge City lawman. I think about that every time I hear Cash’s “Don’t Take Your Guns To Town”.



    James Arness, the 6-foot-6 actor who towered over the television landscape for two decades as righteous Dodge City lawman Matt Dillon in "Gunsmoke," died Friday. He was 88.

    The actor died in his sleep at his home in Brentwood, Calif., according to his business manager, Ginny Fazer

  9. #584
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    It Ain't Half Hot Mum's Donald Hewlett dies at 90



    Donald Hewlett, who was best known for his role in the 1970s BBC sitcom It Ain't Half Hot Mum, has died aged 90.

    The actor, who played Lieutenant-Colonel Charles Reynolds in the show, had been ill for some time, his wife told the BBC.

    He died at the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital in west London on Saturday, Therese McMurray-Hewlett said.

    Hewlett was also known for his role as master of the house, Lord Meldrum, in 1990s BBC sitcom You Rang M'Lord?

    The actor began his on-screen career with a small part in the 1954 comedy film Orders are Orders starring Peter Sellers, Donald Pleasence and Sid James.

    He went on to have roles in numerous TV shows including The Saint, The Avengers, Doctor Who and Coronation Street.

    But it was his turn as the commanding officer in It Ain't Half Hot Mum which made his name.

    The series, set in British India and Burma towards the end of World War II ran on BBC One from 1974-1981.

    Hewlett last appeared on TV in ITV sitcom The Upper Hand in 1995.

    He is survived by his wife, Therese, and five children including daughter Siobhan, who is also an actress.

  10. #585
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    "We think the time period for that has passed"

    Water-skiing Asian elephant dies
    ATLANTA | Fri Jun 3, 2011


    Queenie, an Asian elephant, and Liz Dane water-ski at a park in Florida in 1958. Dane’s parents once owned the elephant, who was euthanized Monday at age 58.


    Queenie, a water-skiing Asian elephant who delighted fans in the 1950s, has been euthanized at the Georgia wildlife park where she lived her final years in retirement.

    "She had a declining quality of life and declining health," said Micha Hogan, public relations director of the Wild Adventures Water and Theme Park in Valdosta, where Queenie had lived out of the spotlight since 2003.

    The 58-year-old elephant was the star of a water-skiing show in the late 1950s at De Leon Springs, a private roadside park near DeLand, Florida that at the time was located on a major thoroughfare for tourists.

    Queenie, standing atop two pontoons, was pulled around a lake by a boat as fans watched in bleachers, said Brian Polk, manager of what is now the De Leon Springs State Park.

    Liz Dane said her parents purchased the young elephant in 1953 from a New York City pet store, and the following year the family took her to their private zoo in Fairlee, Vermont.

    Over the years, Queenie learned a number of tricks, including water skiing and playing the harmonica, Dane told Reuters on Friday.

    Queenie performed with Dane on television shows and at circuses, county fairs and De Leon Springs.

    "Elephants can swim," she said. "That particular area, the water wasn't that deep. And even if she did spill over, they can swim. There was no danger."

    Dane, whose parents sold Queenie to a circus in 1967, last saw the elephant in January. Queenie was euthanized on Monday.

    "Obviously I was extremely sad when she died, I cried," Dane said. "But then I reflected on how she had been going downhill, her health had been declining. I'm sad, but I'm happy for Queenie. She's in a better place now."

    At De Leon Springs State Park, visitors still can watch a video of Queenie performing. Polk said a live elephant water-skiing show would probably be considered unacceptable by today's standards.

    "We think the time period for that has passed," he said. "People are more sensitive to animals."



    *****************

    and an obit from PETA

    Queenie, Water-Skiing Elephant, Dies at Florida Water Park
    Opinion by PETA
    (4 Days Ago) in Society / Animal Rights

    Queenie, an Asian elephant who spent her entire life in captivity, has died at Georgia's Wild Adventures Water and Theme Park at age 59.

    Queenie was only 6 months old when her owner began training her to water ski—yes, water ski—at a Florida theme park. For 15 years in the '50s and '60s, Queenie performed three or four times a day, accompanied by blasting music.

    She was then sold to a traveling elephant act and then sold and resold over and over again before ending her sad days at Wild Adventures.

    While water-skiing elephants may be a thing of the past, elephants in circuses today lead lives equally as bereft as Queenie's. Baby elephants used by Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus are torn away from their frantic mothers to be broken and trained for a life of servitude.

    They spend decades in chains, trying to avoid being hit with bullhooks.

  11. #586
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    Andrew Gold, Lonely Boy singer-songwriter, dies aged 59




    Andrew Gold performing Heartaches in Heartaches at the Victoria Theatre in London as shown on The Old Grey Whistle Test in 1977


    US singer-songwriter Andrew Gold, who enjoyed hits in the 1970s with Lonely Boy and Never Let Her Slip Away, has died in Los Angeles at the age of 59.

    Another of his songs, Thank You for Being a Friend, was known to millions after being used as the theme for long-running sitcom The Golden Girls.

    During the 1980s, Gold formed Wax UK with ex-10cc member Graham Gouldman.
    His UK label, Dome Records, remembered him as "a hugely talented musician" with "a brilliant sense of humour".

    Gold, who died on Friday of a heart attack, was the son of Ernest Gold, Oscar-winning composer of films like Exodus and It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World.

    His mother, Marni Nixon, is a singer and actress best known for dubbing the stars of such Hollywood musicals as My Fair Lady and West Side Story.

    Gold performed with Linda Ronstadt before his breakthrough as a solo artist with Asylum Records.

    He went on to work with Art Garfunkel, Celine Dion, James Taylor, Sir Paul McCartney and numerous other artists.

  12. #587
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    Martin Rushent. Top UK record producer of such diverse talents as the Buzzcocks, Generation X, The Stranglers, Human League; etc. RIP.

    Martin Rushent - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  13. #588
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    Matt Dillon eh.

    They dont make them like that anymore.

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    League legend Rex Mossop dies, aged 83

    Manly rugby league legend and former commentator Rex Mossop has died, aged 83.
    Mossop, who played rugby league and rugby union for Australia, died early today.
    The former Manly-Warringah star forward, who suffered from Alzheimer's disease, was admitted to Royal North Shore Hospital this year and his condition is understood to have deteriorated in the past week.

    Mossop played rugby union for the Manly club and played Tests for the Wallabies between 1948 and 1951.
    He switched codes in 1951, joining English club Leigh before returning to Australia.
    He played for Manly-Warringah from 1956 as the cornerstone of their forward pack before retiring in 1963 at the age of 35.
    He was rugby league's premier television commentator on Channels Seven and Ten from the 1970s until 1990.


    League legend Rex Mossop dies, aged 83

  15. #590
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    youtube.com

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    Quote Originally Posted by genghis61
    (CNN) -- The man who composed the pop hit "You Light Up My Life" ended his own life Sunday, New York police said.
    I never knew of the song composer guy or the singers name, but just listening to that, its a real classic and that Debbie Boone carresses it so wonderfully.

  17. #592
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    With the promise of a State funeral you would think Thatcher would jump at the chance.

    Off a tall building, a cliff....

  18. #593
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    Clarence Clemons, Springsteen saxophone player, dies



    Clarence Clemons, the saxophone player in Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band, has died, aged 69, a spokeswoman for the band has said.

    Clemons was taken to hospital about a week ago after suffering a stroke at his home in Singer Island, in the US state of Florida.

    Known as the Big Man for his 6ft 5in frame, Clemons was credited with shaping the early sound of The Boss.

    His solos powered Springsteen hits such as Born to Run and Jungleland.
    Springsteen spokeswoman Marilyn Laverty confirmed the death on Saturday.

    Clemons (left) and Springsteen worked together for nearly 40 years

    , Springsteen said the loss of Clemons was "immeasurable" and that he and his bandmates were honoured to have stood beside him for nearly four decades.
    The statement said: "Clarence lived a wonderful life. He carried within him a love of people that made them love him."

    It added: "He loved the saxophone, loved our fans and gave everything he had every night he stepped on stage."

    Clemons had suffered from poor health in recent years, including major spinal surgery in January 2010.

    At the 2009 Super Bowl, following double knee replacement surgery, he rose from a wheelchair to perform with Springsteen.

    In May this year Clemons, a former youth councillor, was well enough to perform with Lady Gaga on the finale of the television show American Idol.

    Born in Norfolk, Virginia, Clemons began playing saxophone at the age of nine after receiving one unexpectedly from his father for Christmas.

    "I wanted an electric train for Christmas, but he got me a saxophone. I flipped out," he told the Associated Press news agency in a 1989 interview.

    After his dreams of being a football player were dashed by a car accident, he turned to music.

    Clemons hit it off immediately with Springsteen, then a singer-songwriter from New Jersey, when they first met in 1971, and the saxophonist became an original member of the E Street Band

  19. #594
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    Funny how I aint heard of most of these famous people who have popped their clogs on here

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    ^That's ok...
    This thread is to help remember some of the good ones...
    Or learn about them...


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    Quote Originally Posted by TizMe
    League legend Rex Mossop dies, aged 83
    The Moose, i grew up listening to him call the footy.

  22. #597
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    Vale John David Brockhoff, one of rugby union’s finest

    “Brock” was passionate about his rugby – and rugby revered him. David Brockhoff died yesterday, aged 83, having given a lifetime to the 15 man code that kickstarted with three years in The Scots College first XV. A rare feat.
    A Life Member of the Australian and NSW Rugby Unions, he was an eight-capped Wallaby, with 26 games in the then coveted green jersey with gold, 14 caps for NSW, and 95 games for Sydney Uni, as a very loose breakaway – a “sea-guller’.
    But when he became a 10 man war-of-attrition rugby coach, centres and wingers suffered pneumonia through lack of possession. They became experienced chasers.
    That was the “Brock” way, and it worked a treat.
    He’s rightfully been given the credit for turning Wallaby fortunes as coach.
    “Brock” took over in 1974 at a time when the Wallabies had lost 26 of their last 33 internationals, with two drawn.
    They were the easybeats of Test rugby.
    And the renaissance started with the two-Test home series against England in 1975.
    The first was at the SCG, winning 16-9 playing superb rugby. And it’s as vivid as if it happened yesterday, with “Brock”, ARU delegate Peter Falk, and myself with arms around each other’s shoulders in the shed, crying our eyes out.
    The Wallabies had actually beaten England for the first time on home soil, and emotions were running high.
    “The Battle of Ballymore” second Test is cemented in international rugby folklore.

  23. #598
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    Sad about Clarence. RIP

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    Jackass member Ryan Dunn died in a car crash at 34, RIP

    'Jackass' stuntman Ryan Dunn dead at 34






    US comedy stunt television show "Jackass" lost one of its stars when Ryan Dunn, known for his death-defying and often car-related pranks, died in a car accident early Monday, MTV said.
    Police said the accident took place around 2:30 am (0630 GMT) in West Goshen Township, Pennsylvania, and that Dunn was probably speeding at the time. An unidentified passenger was also killed.
    Dunn's 2007 Porsche 911 GT3 burst into flames after the crash. It was found off the road and in the woods.
    "Speed may have been a contributing factor to the accident," the West Goshen Township Police Department's report read.
    "Upon arrival, police located one vehicle off the road and in the woods that was fully engulfed in flames."
    A photograph posted to Dunn's Twitter account about two hours before the accident showed him drinking what appeared to be alcoholic beverages with two male friends.
    "We are devastated by the tragic loss of Ryan Dunn -- a beloved member of the MTV family for more than a decade," said Van Toffler, president of MTV Networks Music/Film Group that broadcast the "Jackass" series that ran from 2000-2002 before spinning off into a successful film franchise.
    "He made us all laugh and had the tireless enthusiastic approach to life of your favorite middle school friend. Our thoughts and deepest condolences are with Ryan's family and friends. The Jackass brotherhood will never be the same."
    The red-bearded Dunn, 34, appeared in the "Jackass" television series and the franchise's three films. He was also a cast member of reality television series "Viva La Bam," in which most of the "Jackass" original cast appeared.
    "Jackass 3D" debuted with a whopping $50 million in ticket sales in October.
    More recently, Dunn and "Jackass" co-star Steve-O teamed up for a June 8 episode of the NBC TV game show "Minute to Win It," and hosted the shows "Homewrecker" (MTV) and "Proving Ground" (G4 television).
    One of his most famous stunts involved inserting a toy car in his rectum and then going to the doctor for an X-ray as part of his "Butt X-Ray" prank.
    Well, luckily I didn't have any tortoises on me at the time...

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    Bob Pease (Robert A. Pease) was an analog integrated circuit design expert and technical author. He designed several very successful "best-seller" integrated circuits, many of them in continuous production for multiple decades. These include the LM331 voltage to frequency converter, and the LM337 adjustable voltage regulator.

    Pease obtained a Bachelors of Science in Electrical Engineering (BSEE) degree from MIT in 1961. He started work in the early 1960s at George A. Philbrick Researches (GAP-R). GAP-R pioneered the first reasonable-cost, mass-produced op amp: the K2-W. At GAP-R, Pease developed many high-performance op amps, built with discrete solid-state components.

    In 1976, Pease moved to National Semiconductor Corporation (NSC) as a designer and applications engineer, where he began designing analog monolithic integrated circuits, as well as design reference circuits using these devices. He had advanced to staff scientist by the time of his departure in 2009.[3] During his tenure at NSC, he began writing a popular continuing monthly column entitled "Pease Porridge" in Electronic Design Magazine about his experiences in the world of electronic design and application.

    Pease was the author of eight books, including Troubleshooting Analog Circuits, and held 21 patents
    Departure of chip-design legend Bob Pease prompts outpouring in Silicon Valley
    Bob Pease Remembered For Pease Porridge And A Whole Lot More

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