You know, that’s something that caught my attention.
News.
News.
About Robert Wagner, the widower of the late Natalie Wood.
Just in case you didn’t know?
Wood was the Angelina Jolie of her day. A beautiful, successful and very in demand actress, and the first person a director would want to phone, if he needed a competent actress … who’d also generate interest in the film.
Famously, and after completing her last film, Brainstorm, Wood died: after a not much talked about incident on Wagner’s yacht.
No-one’s talked about it, checked what happened, investigated it …
Until recently.
When US police have named Wagner as a ‘person of interest’ in their investigation.
Personally? And having seen Brainstorm, knowing the set was closed down whilst the studio financing it tried to claim the insurance money? Having known about Wood’s death for a long time, knowing it was only ever lightly investigated?
Personally, I’de like to know what happened*.
~≈§≈~
Let’s move on, shall we?
Before earworms about seagulls catch up with us.
Yesterday’s Teaser saw Olga† and Debbi‡ putting in their answers: with both scoring five out of five.
† I’m with you there, Olga: new eyeballs, knees, possible liposuction! (I keep thinking about stem-cell research: a new pair of custom grown, tissue matched eyeballs would come in handy. Especially glow-in-the-dark ones. They’d save on electricityª …)
‡ I can only refer you to some of the comments I’ve made to Olga, Debbi. Vat-grown replacement knees would be handy! Some of the throw-away lines in William Gibson’s Sprawl trilogy^ would only be the start! (Oh, I saw this on the BBC’s news site. And keep wonder if something similar’s being investigated in relation to dystonia. We’ve talked about it, before, I know, but …)
^ I seem to recall that the Gibson mentioning one of the minor characters in Neuromancer had genetically modified teeth: done up to look like shark teeth. Something the central character wasn’t bothered about as he’d seen it before.
ª Google for Lupus Yonderboy, Olga.
º I’d call Brainstorm science fiction. Famously? One definition of science fiction is that it’s “whatever we happen to be pointing at, when we’re trying to define science fiction.”
Q1) George Washington Q2) Chief Justice Q3) samurai Q4) Basil Rathbone Q5) Kenya I love the idea of glow-in-the-dark eyes. So long as we aren't being chased by a monster in the dark...
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I’d appreciate you* leaving your name — with a link to your website or social-media profile†, for preference — before you post a comment.
Should you choose to use a pseudonym/name, I’d appreciate it if that name were to be polite and inoffensive. I’d rather you kept it clean, and relatively grown up. Comments left with a pseudonym will be posted at my discretion: I really prefer a link.
Contentious, actionable or abusive posts left anonymously will not be posted. Nor will comments using offensive pseudonyms or language, or that are abusive of other commenters.
Thank you.
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Q1) George Washington
ReplyDeleteQ2) Chief Justice
Q3) samurai
Q4) Basil Rathbone
Q5) Kenya
I love the idea of glow-in-the-dark eyes. So long as we aren't being chased by a monster in the dark...
Actually, they have deep brain stimulation for some forms of dystonia, but it's not recommended for mine.
ReplyDelete1. George Washington
2. Chief Justice
3. samurai
4. Basil Rathbone (I loved him as Holmes!)
5. Kenya