Bick
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Post by Bick on Jan 26, 2020 20:25:28 GMT -8
We often spend a lot of time here discussing the various celebrities about their political takes in a typically negative fashion.
Even though Kobe Bryant wasn't a fan of Trump (generally the litmus test for liking or disliking a celebrity recently) , I'm feeling a pretty significant sense of loss at his passing today. Some writer called it our JFK moment, and that's about as accurate as I think this is for me.
So what is it that ties us so emotionally to celebrities?
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davidsf
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Post by davidsf on Jan 26, 2020 20:43:52 GMT -8
I’m more broken up that his daughter died with him.
He didn’t impress me OTHER than he played great basketball: it was his purpose and ge did it well. Other than that, I wasn’t impressed, but I am sorry for the loss others feel.
“Our JFK moment?”
No. I had the real JFK moment and this doesn’t come close (for me)
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Credo
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Post by Credo on Jan 26, 2020 22:52:29 GMT -8
I think this comment by Matt Walsh captures some sense of our shock, which is then magnified by our awareness that much of society is simultaneously feeling the same thing by virtue of the celebrity status of the person. This is compounded in Kobe's case by the fact that many--including myself--felt he was just beginning a second act in life that would be nearly as amazing as the first act.
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MDDad
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Post by MDDad on Jan 27, 2020 8:55:08 GMT -8
I’m more broken up that his daughter died with him. He didn’t impress me OTHER than he played great basketball: it was his purpose and ge did it well. Other than that, I wasn’t impressed, but I am sorry for the loss others feel. “Our JFK moment?” No. I had the real JFK moment and this doesn’t come close (for me) Dave, I agree. I still remember exactly where I was sitting and in which classroom at Fremont Junior High when the principal announced over the P.A. system that JFK had been shot. Within a week, I probably will have forgotten what I was doing yesterday when I heard about Kobe Bryant. It's horrible and tragic that Kobe and his daughter were killed at such a young age, and I can't imagine the grief his wife and three remaining daughters must be feeling. But JFK was the hope of a generation. Kobe was really good at throwing a piece of rubber through a piece of iron. It says something about where we are as a society to compare the two. Unfortunately, if Paris Hilton had died in that helicopter, there are some who would compare it to the death of Martin Luther King.
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Post by Zebra on Jan 27, 2020 10:26:18 GMT -8
I don't get tied emotionally to celebrities, music icons and/or sports stars. I save that for what family I have left and our military service men and women. Although it's tragic, I'm lifted it wasn't drugs and/or alcohol like so many "idols" die from. So sad for everyone involved so mad the pilot flew into IMC. Nothing good happens in fog.
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Post by captaintrips on Jan 27, 2020 15:11:54 GMT -8
I’m more broken up that his daughter died with him. He didn’t impress me OTHER than he played great basketball: it was his purpose and ge did it well. Other than that, I wasn’t impressed, but I am sorry for the loss others feel. I agree. I mean it's not something I'm happy about, but I don't follow sports " hero's" - generally think they're useless rich people that generally haven't enough sense to pour piss out of a boot before putting it on. Many OTHER great people all over the country, and the world, were killed in unfortunate ways over the last few days. We hear nothing of them. Yes, it's sad these people snuffed out in a helicopter accident/malfunction ? .... people die in all kinds of dumb accidents all the time. We ALL need to thank God for every day we have on earth. As we were just shown, our life can end in the most unexpected even dumb way. Count your blessings, your time here is a gift... that's something to take from it.
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duke
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Post by duke on Jan 27, 2020 16:36:39 GMT -8
My take on this is that I was really upset that Kobe tragically died, while I was watching and hoping that Tiger would win the Golf Tournament. It suddenly hit me that for a country which is constantly accusing white folks of racism everywhere you turn, how would they explain this?
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Luca
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Post by Luca on Jan 27, 2020 18:24:22 GMT -8
We often spend a lot of time here discussing the various celebrities about their political takes in a typically negative fashion. Even though Kobe Bryant wasn't a fan of Trump (generally the litmus test for liking or disliking a celebrity recently) , I'm feeling a pretty significant sense of loss at his passing today. Some writer called it our JFK moment, and that's about as accurate as I think this is for me. So what is it that ties us so emotionally to celebrities? I've been thinking about that too, Bick. I was pretty saddened when I heard the news yesterday, more than I would have expected. But my 22-year-old son seems to have been much affected. He told me that he was at an Indiana University basketball game when he heard and was distraught enough that he just left. He told me that growing up Kobe Bryant had been his idol and inspiration for him. And my son is far from an emotional or sentimental kid So why is it, I also wondered. I think sometimes when you see these people's picture so much and are so aware of them that they almost become like friends even though they're strangers. Their loss affects us almost to the degree that it would with the loss of an actual friend. Psychologically, maybe they're not really strangers at all.. It's like losing a distant friend. It affects me a lot when one of my high school acquaintances dies even if I haven't seen them in 40+ years. Or maybe it's because we identify with a celebrity and certain personality characteristics we like, and then have a sense of loss ourselves when they pass away. Or maybe it's because it reminds us our own mortality. A perfectly healthy 41-year-old guy whom you have followed for 15 years is suddenly gone and it strikes you that there's nothing special about you that guarantees you're going to keep going. Maybe subconsciously it reminds you of the ugly truth that life is nothing more than a crap shoot...................................Luca
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RSM789
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Post by RSM789 on Jan 27, 2020 19:29:18 GMT -8
Celebrities cause a connection between people that might not other be there. We do invite them into our homes and spend time cheering or booing them, so when they die, especially suddenly, it is an abrupt change.
I rooted for Kobe his entire career, didn't necessarily think he was the greatest guy in the world, but respected his talent, perseverance and toughness. However, at the risk of sounding like a psychopath, I didn't feel any emotions upon hearing that he died. I thought it was tragic that his daughter was killed and I can't imagine what his wife & kids are going through, but I had no real feelings of sorrow or sadness. For me, I think I have to have actual interactions with another person to have an emotional reaction to their passing.
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Bick
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Post by Bick on Jan 28, 2020 5:48:44 GMT -8
RSM - I think I can top your psychopathic claim. My first sense of loss was more about ME, and not all the families that closely impacted, or the helplessness those fathers must have felt trying to protect their little girls moments before impact.
But to Luca's point, these celebrities do become part of our lives. Not so much in an idol worshipping way, but how they connect us. In Kobe's case, being a key part of winning championships meant WE were vicariously champions too. The more engaged as a Laker fan, the more deeply you felt the joy of his passion. Getting to watch his entire career as "our guy", drove it home like very few others.
I'm not really much of a basketball fan any more, but I think there is a greater connection to athletes you can clearly see the emotion on their faces.
I also believe that when you get a glimpse of the private life of the celebrities, it enhances or detracts from the entertainment value they provide. In his case, watching him be humiliated with the rape charge, and then seemingly get on the other side of it to become a good husband and father, was a big plus for me.
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Credo
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Post by Credo on Jan 28, 2020 20:10:47 GMT -8
I think this comment captures well the popularity of some of the "elite of the elite" athletes--like Kobe, Derek Jeter, and Tom Brady.
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Post by ProfessorFate on Feb 1, 2020 22:56:56 GMT -8
I didn't see a notable deaths thread, so I thought I'd use this one. Bob Shane, co-founder and last surviving original member of the influential folk group the Kingston Trio, died Sunday at the age of 85. The Kingston Trio was a huge influence on me. I (and a few of my friends), performed many of their songs. The members of the Kingston Trio — Shane, Nick Reynolds, and Dave Guard — formed the singing group as college students in the Bay Area in the first half of the Fifties; by the end of the decade, the Kingston Trio would become one of the nation’s most popular bands, releasing five Number One albums, including a span in 1959 when four of the albums in the Top 10 belonged to the Kingston Trio. Shane served as vocalist and guitarist on their biggest hits, including “Scotch and Soda,” “M.T.A.,” a rendition of the murder ballad “Tom Dooley,” and the traditional song “The Wreck of the John B.,” the latter of which directly inspired the Beach Boys’ “Sloop John B.” The trio also helped popularize Pete Seeger’s “Where Have All the Flowers Gone?” and recorded “It Was a Very Good Year” before that song became a Frank Sinatra staple. www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/bob-shane-kingston-trio-obit-945134/
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SK80
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Post by SK80 on Feb 2, 2020 7:34:52 GMT -8
I think this comment captures well the popularity of some of the "elite of the elite" athletes--like Kobe, Derek Jeter, and Tom Brady. That virtue, striving for "GREATNESS" or magnanimity..., think TRUMP took this play out of a "political playbook"...? "MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN"? Maybe a higher book of mind or faith?
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MDDad
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Post by MDDad on Feb 2, 2020 9:28:52 GMT -8
If Trump took greatness out of a political playbook, it's too bad he didn't take the magnanimity part as well.
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davidsf
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Post by davidsf on Feb 2, 2020 9:35:04 GMT -8
If Trump took greatness out of a political playbook, it's too bad he didn't take the magnanimity part as well. So long as he is doing the job, and, every once in awhile, making fools of the Democrat politicians and their complicit media, I really don’t care if he is magnanimous. I don’t care if he is so childish he cannot put away his twitter account. I don’t care if he did or did not (and, honestly, I believe the latter) actually grab a girl by the [anatomy]... the electoral college did not make him president because he’s a fine fellow. They made him president to do a job, AND he is doing the job, despite all the crap those haters throw at him daily. don't get me wrong, I would love to have a president who really is above reproach, one who is really a Christian with all the Christian values. But we have one that is doing the job, so that is sufficient for now.
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