and-now-theyre-dead

Singer Loleatta Holloway Reportedly Dead at 64

Max Read · 03/22/11 02:05AM

Music site Spinning Soul reports that R&B/disco legend Loleatta Holloway died "following a brief illness." Holloway, who started her career as a gospel and R&B singer, found success as a disco act in the late 1970s—but she might be most famous for providing the hook for Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch's "Good Vibrations" (a sample from her "Love Sensation.") Above, Holloway performing "Hit & Run."

And Now They're Dead: People We Lost in 2010

Max Read · 12/31/10 02:15PM

Saying goodbye sucks, and 2010 was a sucky year. Here's a gallery of some of the people who died this year—from Elizabeth Edwards to J.D. Salinger to Alexander McQueen.

Term Limits Are For Suckers

Foster Kamer · 06/07/09 04:33PM

Africa's longest serving head-of-state, President Omar Bongo Ondimba of Gabon, died today at 73. [AFP]

She Probably Hated Celine Dion, To Be Honest

Foster Kamer · 05/31/09 04:28PM

The last living survivor from the Titanic died today at 97. Millvina Dean was eight weeks-old when the boat went down. Her mother and brother made it off, her father died trying to rescue more passengers off the boat. Her obit's truly a great read. [LA Times]

Eartha Kitt, Seductress

Sheila · 12/26/08 10:26AM

Catlike singer Earth Kitt has died at 81, of cancer. Born on a Southern cotton plantation, she got her break when she auditioned for a dance company on a dare.

Why These Rockstar Deaths Are Depressing

Sheila · 09/15/08 01:04PM

Pink Floyd's keyboardist, Richard Wright, died at 65 of cancer yesterday. Which reminded us—well, not us, but the boomers who grew up getting stoned to the 'Floyd in the 60s and 70s—that someday, we are all going to die. Maybe sooner than we think. The baby boomer's rock and punk heroes from the sixties and seventies are starting to die off—and not in the blaze of drug mystique and tragedy that befell Hendrix and Lennon and the rest. Why is this more depressing than usual?1. "Doctor, there's something wrong with me/My health is not all that it used to be." -The Who They're dying relatively young, in early middle age-either as a result of a hard lifestyle or simply the unfairness of not getting to choose when you go. They're also dying of realistic and unfortunately common diseases: heart disease, cancer. Just like the rest of us! (Being like the rest of us sucks and is totally why you say, "Fuck that" and become a rock star in the first place.) Joey, Dee Dee, and Johnny Ramone died in their late 40s and early fifties. Beatles guitarist George Harrison kicked it at only 58. The Clash's Joe Strummer? 50. 2. "It's better to burn out/than to fade away." -Neil Young Yet, they're not dying so young that they're leaving a beautiful corpse, which totally breaks the Rule of Jim Morrison. Boomers aren't so old that their friends are dying, but their heroes are already checking out. Memo: there's less time than you think. What will this mean for the economy? The national savings rate? 3. "Time is on my side." -the Rolling Stones Yet, of all the rockers that are dead or about to die, at least we can rest assured that the Stones will never, ever go. Especially not Keith Richards. Dude is immortal.

Randy Pausch, "Last Lecture" Prof

Sheila · 07/25/08 12:31PM

Randy Pausch, the Carnegie Mellon University professor whose last lecture after being diagnosed with terminal cancer became a YouTube hit last year, has died at 47. (That turned into the bestselling book The Last Lecture.) Pausch, an award-winning computer science professor, had pancreatic cancer. After the jump, his famed lecture, "Really Achieving Your Childhood Dreams."