thewayne: (Default)
At the end of September, Typepad goes dark. And with it, all of the blogs that have been accumulated over the last 22 years.

Interestingly, their front page has buttons for Start Now and Pricing & Sign Up, but they stopped taking new accounts several years ago while reassuring then-current users that the service would continue on. At least until the end of September.

Their Need Help? page has info about the shutdown, including refunds for people who have paid beyond the shutdown date and information on exporting your blog.

https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2025/08/one-time-wordpress-competitor-typepad-ends-its-slide-into-obscurity-by-shutting-down/
thewayne: (Default)
Terence Stamp was a notable actor who made his mark in many, many films. The first two Superman movies with Christopher Reeves, Star Wars Episode 1, Priscilla Queen of the Desert, His Dark Materials. Other work included a Federico Fellini film of an Edgar Allen Poe story, various voice work, Modesty Blaise, Young Guns, Bowfinger, Wanted, the Tom Cruise film Valkyrie, The Adjustment Bureau, Miss Peregrin's Home For Peculiar Children, and more. His final film was Last Night In Soho (2021).

THREE volumes of memoirs, a novel, and a cookbook were also amongst his accomplishments. His voiceover work included Elder Scrolls IV, Halo 3, documentary voiceover work, and music video appearances. He shared a house with Michael Caine before they both made it big! His brother, Chris, was a rock music producer and manager and was largely responsible for bring The Who to prominence! That's more of an interesting footnote since Terence probably didn't directly have an effect on that event. OR DID HE?

Among his awards and nominations were a Golden Globe Award, a Cannes Film Festival Award, and a Silver Bear (German) as well as nominations for an Academy Award and two BAFTA Awards.

He was a busy man.

https://gizmodo.com/superman-and-star-wars-actor-terence-stamp-dies-at-age-87-2000644162
thewayne: (Default)
Chuck was 84 and passed away in his sleep. The Grammy-winning jazz-man was best known for two numbers, Feels So Good and Bellavia, the latter named after his mother. Feels So Good spent 25 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 and peaked at #4! Mangione also "composed and performed “Give it All You Got,” which was the theme song for the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, New York."

An excellent career. He passed away in his sleep on July 22 at the age of 84. While it may have happened, I never heard of him having any problems with drugs or the law.

https://www.cnn.com/2025/07/24/entertainment/chuck-mangione-death


Tom Lerher had an amazing life. He was a math prodigy and entered Harvard at the age of 15, completing his Masters at 18. He did not complete his doctorate, preferring to remain a grad student. He taught at various universities throughout his career, mainly settling in Santa Cruz, CA. But he was also an amazing musical political satirist with a very sharp POV. His music career was fairly short, lasting from the '50s through the early '70s, his music remains tremendously popular even though he wrote only 37 songs over 20 years and made only 109 public performances.

He also composed music for The Electric Company and for This Was The Week That Was.

He passed away Saturday at the age of 97. His friend who announced his death 'did not disclose the cause'. I find this an utterly ridiculous statement - LERHER WAS NINTEY-SEVEN! HE WAS BLOODY OLD AND HIS BODY WAS KIND OF TIRED OF KEEPING HIM ALIVE!

One brilliant thing that Lehrer did a few years ago, and I posted about it here, was that he released all of his music to the public domain! Recordings, lyrics, everything! All of it released for the enjoyment of all, forever. I thought it was a truly magnanimous gesture.

I had heard that he said that he stopped making music when Kissinger was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, saying 'There's nothing left to parody.' I don't know if that's true.

https://www.cnn.com/2025/07/27/entertainment/tom-lehrer-death

https://entertainment.slashdot.org/story/25/07/27/2347205/tom-lehrer-satirical-songwriter-and-mathematician-dies-at-age-97
thewayne: (Default)
Literally just a couple of weeks after his farewell blowout in London, Ozzy passed away last night, cause of death not disclosed, possibly not yet known. He suffered from Parkinson's, not to mention injuries from a late-night fall suffered not long ago and compounded from an extensive history of drug and alcohol use. He was 76.


https://www.huffpost.com/entry/ozzy-osbourne-dead_n_58d28a9fe4b0f838c62e57fd

The RS article may be behind a paywall:
www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/ozzy-osbourne-black-sabbath-dead-obituary-1227265/
thewayne: (Default)
Brian was the last of the three Wilson brothers, Brian played bass, Carl lead guitar and Dennis drums. The other two members of the Beach Boys, Mike Love - a cousin - and Al Jardine, are still alive.

Brian has been in a medical conservatorship for the last year. Trouble with alcohol and drugs probably accelerated things. He met his last wife at a car dealership where she was working, which began a chapter where it was found that Wilson's psychiatrist was exploiting him and his finances, eventually resulting in a restraining order. When his wife died, Wilson entered into a decline, finally culminating in the conservatorship.

There's so much that can be said about The Beach Boys and their influence on music and various groups and musicians, and their being a core for surf/beach music in the '60s. I spent a few hours tonight revising a bunch of my Beach Boys music for my band in Lord of the Rings Online and adding some more songs to my catalog, I think I'll be performing them tomorrow night in an impromptu concert as I need to do some testing on my band as I've been having some system problems.

https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/brian-wilson-beach-boys-dead-1234810073/

https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/articles/brian-wilson-beach-boys-visionary-165711806.html
thewayne: (Default)
Aged 65. He had been diagnosed with throat cancer a decade ago, but had reportedly recovered from that. Pneumonia did him in, which is normally fairly treatable, says the man who is immune-compromised and had it five times in seven months in his late 40s.

He did a lot of very good work, definitely a career cut short.

This obit is rather short as a Rolling Stone Breaking News arrived in my email only half an hour ago.

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/val-kilmer-dead-obit_n_67ecb4d4e4b0923ef8b48f70
thewayne: (Default)
National Novel Writing Month, held in November, has thrown in the towel and is no more. They put forth the challenge of writing 50,000 words in that month and offered a word count tool to measure your progress and awarded badges for the accomplishment.

However, the last few years have been turbulent, a questionable sponsor came on-board and then a flirtation with AI with a very dubious endorsement by the organization caused a large boycott last year. A general downturn in arts sponsorship over the years, and now no NaNo.

It's possible someone else will come up with a new name and organization, if so, we can only hope they adhere to a stronger code of ethics.

https://gizmodo.com/longtime-writing-community-nanowrimo-shuts-down-after-ai-drama-2000583619
thewayne: (Default)
The Santa Fe county coroner released the report today revealing what happened, and it's pretty sad.

Both deaths were from natural causes. The first death, his wife, Betty Arakawa, died on February 11 of Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome. Hantavirus is not very common outside of northern New Mexico and Arizona, it's spread by Eastern Deer Mice feces and saliva and can cause an asymptomatic infection. Gene passed away on the 18th from heart disease and advanced Alzheimer's. Reportedly his pacemaker logged his heart stopping. Could be the heart disease, could be Broken Heart Syndrome from his wife dying, or perhaps malnutrition of not feeding himself after she died? The advanced Alzheimers could account for him not calling for help.

No foul play is suspected but the investigation is continuing.

Very tragic.

https://www.rollingstone.com/tv-movies/tv-movie-news/gene-hackman-cause-of-death-revealed-1235281821/

EDIT to add non-paywalled source:
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/gene-hackman-betsy-arakawa-cause-of-death_n_67c9ea6ce4b0404dff30062e

To read Rolling Stone articles and avoid paywalls, open a private browsing window. Normally on PCs this will be a Ctrl-Shift-N. You can also install the Epic browser which focuses on user privacy and does not maintain cookies.
thewayne: (Default)
Wow. Now, 95 is an extremely respectable age, but this is a weird one, and I'm just going to quote the Rolling Stone article:

"The actor, his wife of 34 years, Betsy Arakawa, and their dog were found dead in their home in Santa Fe, New Mexico, Wednesday, according to Santa Fe County Sheriff Adan Mendoza. A cause of death was not immediately available, though authorities confirmed there was no indication of foul play.

So I'm guessing either suicide(s) or probably gas leak, the latter being the cause of death of Weird Al Yankovic's parents a few years ago. Pretty tragic, it happened while he was on tour - and he kept the tour going and completed it, but stopped all press interviews after the shows.

His career was just too long and storied to sum up. His first Oscar nomination was playing Clyde's older brother Buck in Bonnie and Clyde (1967), his first win was 1971's The French Connection. The Poseidon Adventure, Superman and Superman II as Lex Luthor, Reds, Mississippi Burning, Clint Eastwood's Unforgiven, the list goes on. For awards: five Oscar nominations (two wins), three Golden Globes (as well as a Cecil B. DeMille Award), and two BAFTAs.

https://www.rollingstone.com/tv-movies/tv-movie-news/gene-hackman-obituary-1234810413/
thewayne: (Default)
Michelle was found in her New York City apartment unresponsive. No cause of death has been announced. For a 39 year old, she has been an actor for 36 of those years! Perhaps most famously for Gossip Girl and Harriet The Spy, for me she will always be Dawn Summers, Buffy's kid sister in Buffy the Vampire Slayer. I remember the utter shock of the reveal that *BOOM* Buffy has a sister? It was an amazing twist in a great TV series, and she was fantastic in that show. It's additionally sad as it's entirely possible that Buffy may be seeing a relaunch with Sarah Michelle Geller coming up: talks are in progress with a good producer, not Joss Wheden.

https://www.rollingstone.com/tv-movies/tv-movie-news/michelle-trachtenberg-dead-obituary-1235280880/
thewayne: (Default)
David Lynch passed away today, no cause of death given but it was known he suffered from severe emphysema from years of smoking.

Lynch is best known for bringing us such iconic films as Eraserhead and Blue Velvet, and the Twin Peaks TV series. He also made the first film adaptation of Frank Herbert's Dune, which was quite the spectacle though a miserable box office flop.

The Rolling Stone obit is a very interesting read. He wasn't really my cup of chai, but he was a rather revolutionary film maker and I can respect that even if his films weren't my thing.

https://www.rollingstone.com/tv-movies/tv-movie-news/david-lynch-lynch-dead-obituary-1235238117/
thewayne: (Default)
His hospice stay has finally ended after over a year.

He had a rough time with his presidency, having an oil crisis and the Iranian hostage situation. The latter was further complicated with the incoming Reagan presidency meddling in that affair so that the hostages would not be released under his watch, which could have resulted in his re-election. Interesting thing to posit what situation the country would have been in subsequent years had Reagan/Reaganomics not come into power.

He was also one of three sitting Presidents to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, along with Teddy Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson, subsequently President Obama was awarded it.

Subsequent to his term in office, President Carter had a very successful post-election career with his non-profit Carter Foundation, doing election monitoring internationally and working to worked to eradicate the Guinea worm, which has been hugely successful. With his wife, they worked tireless building homes with Habitat For Humanity.

I would rate him as perhaps the most publicly vigorous and useful post-term presidency that we have yet seen. Interestingly, aside from a few books, he really didn't monetize his presidency and continued living a very modest life. A humble and modest man who has gone on to a very well-earned peaceful rest.

https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-features/jimmy-carter-dead-obituary-794884/
thewayne: (Default)
Hard to imagine what programming would be like without his contribution to programming languages!

"Kurtz began teaching at Dartmouth upon receiving his PhD. After a few years, he and fellow professor John Kemeny developed the original version of the Dartmouth Timesharing System (DTSS), a method of sharing computer access across a network and a requirement for allowing multiple students access to BASIC."

At the time, there were only professional programming languages, such as assembler, possibly Fortran and RPG, available. They wanted to open the world of computers to students who weren't mathematicians or computer scientists to see what they could learn.

And boy, did they ever!

https://computerhistory.org/blog/in-memoriam-thomas-e-kurtz-1928-2024/

https://developers.slashdot.org/story/24/11/20/0528224/thomas-e-kurtz-co-inventor-of-basic-dies-at-96
thewayne: (Default)
Elwood was a camera operator and jack of all trades at WKYC TV channel 3 in Cleveland, Ohio and a fanatic at catching typos.

A pretty anonymous guy. Except for one thing.

Years ago, he was paid $200 to record a few phrases.

"You've got mail!"

He was the voice of AOL's recorded phrases.

A little piece of computer trivia and history has left the planet.

If you scroll down the page, he appeared on The Tonight Show With Jimmy Fallon and did several phrases for them.

https://www.wkyc.com/article/life/people/elwood-edwards-wkyc-employee-voice-aol-youve-got-mail-greeting-dies-74/95-940b6ed4-b90b-4c4c-b0d5-6c57fddb6546
thewayne: (Default)
Melanie, also known as Melanie Safka, was a singer/song writer/musician in the folk, pop, and country genres.

From her Wikipedia page: "Melanie is widely known for the 1971–72 global hit "Brand New Key"; her 1970 version of the Rolling Stones' "Ruby Tuesday"; her composition "What Have They Done to My Song Ma"; and her 1970 international breakthrough hit "Lay Down (Candles in the Rain)", which was inspired by her experience of performing at the 1969 Woodstock music festival.[3][4]"

She passed away early this year on January 23 of an unspecified illness.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melanie_(singer)
thewayne: (Default)
Phil was an eclectic one, classically trained. Jerry Garcia handed him a bass and invited him to play with the band that would become the Dead. He'd never played a bass before, but jumped in, playing it like a low guitar.

After Jerry Garcia passed away in 1995 and the dissolving of the Grateful Dead, Lesh continued performing and recording, sometimes with former Dead members.

In 2015 it was reported that he'd contracted bladder cancer after having survived a liver transplant in 1998 from an old Hep-C infection. He and his wife of 40 years Jill opened a restaurant in California where their sons performed as the house band, Phil would join them for Grateful Dead song nights.

https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/phil-lesh-grateful-dead-dead-1234809976/
thewayne: (Default)
Ron was 86 and passed at his daughter's house in California. Aside from his run as Tarzan, he was a bit player appearing in many dramas of the '70s and '80s. But my role for him has been and always will be the film Doc Savage: Man of Bronze. While it is solidly a B movie, it is so over the top that it will always have a soft spot in my heart.

Great job, Ron, you certainly earned your rest and lots of respect.

https://nypost.com/2024/10/23/entertainment/ron-ely-star-of-tarzan-tv-series-dead-at-86/
thewayne: (Default)
And everybody is asking who the heck is Ward Christensen?

Ward invented, or co-invented, two little computer programs, or systems. They were kind of foundational to a lot of pre-internet culture. XModem in 1977 and the BBS system in 1978.

What would social media have been without them? Would there have been social media without BBSes?

Ward and his collaborator wrote the original CBBS code in TWO WEEKS. Then they told people it took them four so they wouldn't think it was rushed!

I remember in the early '80s dialing in to boards with my TRS-80 Model 100 (built-in 300 baud modem, runs off of 4xAA batteries and I still have it and it still works) and screaming in fury inside whenever someone picked up the phone and disconnected me.

https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2024/10/ward-christensen-bbs-inventor-and-architect-of-our-online-age-dies-at-age-78/

https://tech.slashdot.org/story/24/10/15/002203/ward-christensen-bbs-inventor-and-architect-of-our-online-age-dies-at-age-78
thewayne: (Default)
What a career and life. His father was a Swedish army veteran and a USAF Major General, Kris himself served in the Army and was a Golden Gloves boxer among a great number of other things. One thing that I found out about him earlier this month was that he was a Rhodes Scholar! THAT is quite an achievement.

He wrote such his as Help Me Make It Through The Night, Sunday Mornin' Coming Down, Me and Bobby McGee, and, of course, The Gambler. He recorded with many other musicians, and worked at Columbia Recording Studios - as a janitor - while continuing his army profession as a helicopter pilot (he left the service as a Captain after a few years in Germany). From the article, "in addition to working as a part-time helicopter pilot flying back and forth between offshore oil rigs in the Gulf of Mexico. A story about how he once landed his helicopter in Johnny Cash’s yard to give the country star his demo tape would become country-music apocrypha."

That's pretty cool!

Early in his music career, he was most successful as a song writer, not as a recording artist. That success came much later in life. He also made over 50 films in his career. He finally retired in early 2021, suffering memory problems that he attributed to Lyme disease.

He passed away at his home in Hawaii.

https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-country/kris-kristofferson-dead-1107074/
thewayne: (Default)
Jones won his first award for stage work: a Tony in 1970 in The Great White Hope. His first movie role was a smallish part in Stanley Kubrick's Dr. Strangelove as one of the airmen on the ill-fated bomber. He was tagged as the voice of Darth Vader by George Lucas when it was quickly apparent that David Prowse's accent was entirely inappropriate to be used in the film and had to be re-recorded: he was being called Darth Farmer during production. Apparently Orson Welles was also considered for the voice role, good choice made by Lucas considering the relative lifespans of the two actors.

James Earl Jones went on to do quite a number of memorable roles, including the Eddie Murphy comedy Coming To America, and, of course, Mufasa in The Lion King.

He created some amazing roles and earned his rest.

https://www.rollingstone.com/tv-movies/tv-movie-news/james-earl-jones-dead-obituary-1234768096

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