Topic: Farrah Fawcett
CleanBathroom's photo
Thu 06/25/09 09:40 PM
I love the angelic halo of light around your head Winxie ... It screams:

"KABLAM!"

auburngirl's photo
Thu 06/25/09 09:40 PM
Winx, I would never post my pic from h/s. We all had eyebrows that looked like two caterpillars mating! ala Brooke Shields

Queene123's photo
Thu 06/25/09 09:46 PM

died yesterday... she may not be considered as special as MJ but I'm sadder about her passing...


no she didnt die yesterday.. she died today thrusday 25th 3 hours before micheal died

IndnPrncs's photo
Thu 06/25/09 09:48 PM


died yesterday... she may not be considered as special as MJ but I'm sadder about her passing...


no she didnt die yesterday.. she died today thrusday 25th 3 hours before micheal died


You know what you're right, I was thinking today was Friday.. slaphead

CleanBathroom's photo
Thu 06/25/09 09:49 PM



died yesterday... she may not be considered as special as MJ but I'm sadder about her passing...


no she didnt die yesterday.. she died today thrusday 25th 3 hours before micheal died


You know what you're right, I was thinking today was Friday.. slaphead


I wonder if they died in the same hospital. I hadn't paid attention but all the elite types use Cedar's Sinai in LA, no?

Winx's photo
Thu 06/25/09 09:50 PM

I love the angelic halo of light around your head Winxie ... It screams:

"KABLAM!"


Does it blind you? It's just all the fumes from the hair spray.laugh

Winx's photo
Thu 06/25/09 09:51 PM

Winx, I would never post my pic from h/s. We all had eyebrows that looked like two caterpillars mating! ala Brooke Shields


I plucked mine. laugh


auburngirl's photo
Thu 06/25/09 09:52 PM
Nope Larry. He was taken to UCLA Med Ctr. Farrah was in Santa Monica, I believe.

IndnPrncs's photo
Thu 06/25/09 09:52 PM


Winx, I would never post my pic from h/s. We all had eyebrows that looked like two caterpillars mating! ala Brooke Shields


I plucked mine. laugh




Me too!

auburngirl's photo
Thu 06/25/09 09:53 PM
Here is a great article by Francesca Biller Safran from the Huffington Post.

With the deaths of Farrah Fawcett, Michael Jackson and David Carradine, it feels as though a large part of the 1970's has died right along with them, making those of us old enough to remember them feel as though a part of our culture and childhood is gone forever.

Barely old enough to be baby boomer, I can remember the golden girl of the 1970s gracing every boy's room in the form of a poster, dancing to every song Jackson ever sang with indefinable dance moves, and watching Kung Fu each week during dinner as if it were a religious experience.

Are we really so old that it is now time for our own childhood icons to begin passing away, or are these deaths and our shock simply a symbol that it was in the 70's that we began to take entertainers and celebrity-hood too seriously?

Either way, there is no argument that there was no era that has ever been like or will be like the seventies and eighties, as anyone who has lived, celebrated and survived through those years can attest to.

They were magical decades, a time when television characters, music, pop idols and commercialism became almost a part of our own families, and when many of us with dysfunctional, absent families turned to for comfort and identity.

It was a time for kicking back, partying, looking "marvelous" always, and putting on the glitz before "bling" ever became a lame modern term without any true meaning.

It was an era we "seriously" watched shows like Charlie's Angeles without laughing and because we thought these new powerful and beautiful women were cool and deserved to be idolized as the sexy, strong, modern woman. And we all either had a favorite angel to wither lust over or try to emulate.

It was a time when disco and rock and roll clashed, when "Disco Sucks" was chanted at Rolling Stone's concerts and yet Jagger used a lot of the rhythms and black sounds in his music.

We can remember too when Farrah Fawcett turned her famous hair in for a mop hairdo and a serious acting role in 'The Burning Bed' and other movies, something no one thought the beautiful blonde sex symbol could do.

We can remember Jackson crossing barriers of race, gender, age, and culture with his astounding talent with songs like Billie Jean, We are the World, The Thriller Album, and even Ebony and Ivory with Paul McCartney.

When Ed McMahon died this week, I was very sad to hear the news. I can remember watching the Tonight Show with my father as a teenager, one of the happier moments we often shared together. It seemed when Johnny's sidekick died, that a piece of that lighter side of childhood had now simply passed away. But at least with McMahon, he was elderly and it wasn't a shock to my system, or to my father's.

We also knew about Farrah. The seemingly-impossibly healthy, sunny-faced poster girl who defined Hollywood, California beauty--we tried not to think this iconic angel could be suffering from the dreaded C word, and I am still in shock over her death as well, even though it was expected.

David Carradine was a an iconic symbol of my generation too. Most of my elementary school male classmates had King Fu lunchboxes and thermoses. My brother even began martial arts because of the show and still practices today.

But Michael Jackson was only fifty. 50 year-olds and especially iconic cultural superstars aren't supposed to die. 50 is the age of one of my older siblings, not of my grandfather or great uncle.

We danced to his songs at my prom in Hawaii, watched street performers break dance to his songs with boom boxes New York, and I had a boyfriend who always donned a glove when attending parties.

Jackson looked up to James Brown, and some say his talent was equaled; he had the grace of Fred Astaire who once called to compliment him on his dancing; he made the moon walk the ultimate dance goal for both blacks and whites, and sadly because he was forced to act as an adult in childhood, he became like a frail child in adulthood.

This is truly sad day for all of us who are old enough to remember this special era that Michael, Farrah and David symbolized, and young enough to worry, panic and grieve.

Their deaths mean in part that we must actually be getting older, and forced to face our own mortality. It makes an entire generation mourn that a big part of our own youth, culture and childhood has truly been washed away, never to return.


CleanBathroom's photo
Thu 06/25/09 09:53 PM

Nope Larry. He was taken to UCLA Med Ctr. Farrah was in Santa Monica, I believe.



Thanks ...

Tough day for the PR people in those places.

Winx's photo
Thu 06/25/09 09:54 PM
Yes, the 70's. They died too young too.flowerforyou

CleanBathroom's photo
Thu 06/25/09 09:55 PM

Here is a great article by Francesca Biller Safran from the Huffington Post.

With the deaths of Farrah Fawcett, Michael Jackson and David Carradine, it feels as though a large part of the 1970's has died right along with them, making those of us old enough to remember them feel as though a part of our culture and childhood is gone forever.

Barely old enough to be baby boomer, I can remember the golden girl of the 1970s gracing every boy's room in the form of a poster, dancing to every song Jackson ever sang with indefinable dance moves, and watching Kung Fu each week during dinner as if it were a religious experience.

Are we really so old that it is now time for our own childhood icons to begin passing away, or are these deaths and our shock simply a symbol that it was in the 70's that we began to take entertainers and celebrity-hood too seriously?

Either way, there is no argument that there was no era that has ever been like or will be like the seventies and eighties, as anyone who has lived, celebrated and survived through those years can attest to.

They were magical decades, a time when television characters, music, pop idols and commercialism became almost a part of our own families, and when many of us with dysfunctional, absent families turned to for comfort and identity.

It was a time for kicking back, partying, looking "marvelous" always, and putting on the glitz before "bling" ever became a lame modern term without any true meaning.

It was an era we "seriously" watched shows like Charlie's Angeles without laughing and because we thought these new powerful and beautiful women were cool and deserved to be idolized as the sexy, strong, modern woman. And we all either had a favorite angel to wither lust over or try to emulate.

It was a time when disco and rock and roll clashed, when "Disco Sucks" was chanted at Rolling Stone's concerts and yet Jagger used a lot of the rhythms and black sounds in his music.

We can remember too when Farrah Fawcett turned her famous hair in for a mop hairdo and a serious acting role in 'The Burning Bed' and other movies, something no one thought the beautiful blonde sex symbol could do.

We can remember Jackson crossing barriers of race, gender, age, and culture with his astounding talent with songs like Billie Jean, We are the World, The Thriller Album, and even Ebony and Ivory with Paul McCartney.

When Ed McMahon died this week, I was very sad to hear the news. I can remember watching the Tonight Show with my father as a teenager, one of the happier moments we often shared together. It seemed when Johnny's sidekick died, that a piece of that lighter side of childhood had now simply passed away. But at least with McMahon, he was elderly and it wasn't a shock to my system, or to my father's.

We also knew about Farrah. The seemingly-impossibly healthy, sunny-faced poster girl who defined Hollywood, California beauty--we tried not to think this iconic angel could be suffering from the dreaded C word, and I am still in shock over her death as well, even though it was expected.

David Carradine was a an iconic symbol of my generation too. Most of my elementary school male classmates had King Fu lunchboxes and thermoses. My brother even began martial arts because of the show and still practices today.

But Michael Jackson was only fifty. 50 year-olds and especially iconic cultural superstars aren't supposed to die. 50 is the age of one of my older siblings, not of my grandfather or great uncle.

We danced to his songs at my prom in Hawaii, watched street performers break dance to his songs with boom boxes New York, and I had a boyfriend who always donned a glove when attending parties.

Jackson looked up to James Brown, and some say his talent was equaled; he had the grace of Fred Astaire who once called to compliment him on his dancing; he made the moon walk the ultimate dance goal for both blacks and whites, and sadly because he was forced to act as an adult in childhood, he became like a frail child in adulthood.

This is truly sad day for all of us who are old enough to remember this special era that Michael, Farrah and David symbolized, and young enough to worry, panic and grieve.

Their deaths mean in part that we must actually be getting older, and forced to face our own mortality. It makes an entire generation mourn that a big part of our own youth, culture and childhood has truly been washed away, never to return.




OH Lord ... I'd better not drink the Kool Aid after that. :cry:

CleanBathroom's photo
Thu 06/25/09 09:56 PM

Yes, the 70's. They died too young too.flowerforyou


And to think more of them didn't pass away from syphillis after the 70s. explode

PacificStar48's photo
Thu 06/25/09 09:57 PM
I think the burning bead did more for bringing domestic violence forward than many things and millions of family should be grateful.

I have to wonder how the fame wrecked her family life. True each person makes their own choices but it seems that this son has had problems for many years.

auburngirl's photo
Thu 06/25/09 09:59 PM
Well, ya know, Ryan O isn't the model parent. His other two kids have had drug problems too.

IndnPrncs's photo
Thu 06/25/09 09:59 PM
I don't think he has anymore than any other "O'Neal" or than other other kid that got caught up in drugs..

CleanBathroom's photo
Thu 06/25/09 10:01 PM

I think the burning bead did more for bringing domestic violence forward than many things and millions of family should be grateful.

I have to wonder how the fame wrecked her family life. True each person makes their own choices but it seems that this son has had problems for many years.


Him and has dad fought it out while he was in a drug-induced rage at one point. I'm sure if he had lived a clean life, he'd be fine. Nonetheless, hopefully his tough days are behind now. Sometimes jail is necessary to shake people out of their stupor.

auburngirl's photo
Thu 06/25/09 10:05 PM
Another sweet little film she did is "The Substitute Wife". She was good in that with a twist of humor. It's worth the watch.

Jtevans's photo
Thu 06/25/09 10:08 PM
Farrah was hot


the weird thing is,i've always heard celebrities die in 3's and that does seem to be true