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Post by lucy on Aug 3, 2011 10:11:21 GMT -5
Fauxster had brought up somewhere about the ability to electronically duplicate the voice. If this is possible, they could take the actual vocals of Amy, or any other dead celebrity, and recreate music that sounds like the real person. If this is the case, many of those so called "unreleased" materials can be created and further make a living off these people.
I do have to be cautious, especially of material that is supposedly decades old suddenly being "discovered" or uncovered. These hidden treasures that nobody knew about suddenly appears for the masses....
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Post by goro on Aug 3, 2011 11:31:02 GMT -5
Fauxster had brought up somewhere about the ability to electronically duplicate the voice. If this is possible, they could take the actual vocals of Amy, or any other dead celebrity, and recreate music that sounds like the real person. If this is the case, many of those so called "unreleased" materials can be created and further make a living off these people. I do have to be cautious, especially of material that is supposedly decades old suddenly being "discovered" or uncovered. These hidden treasures that nobody knew about suddenly appears for the masses.... Excellent points! Plus, with the creation of any album, there will always be loads of unused songs that didn't make it to the final album. I remember seeing video of a performance Michael Jackson/Fichael did within a few years of his "death" in which he talked about how for his last album he had literally created something like 50 songs but they only used 12 of them on the album. Imagine what a wealth of unused material is out there that already exists - not to mention how with autotune and so much electronic voice technology, you can probably "create" new vocals - whether the person is alive or not.
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Post by artemis on Aug 4, 2011 4:03:48 GMT -5
"Alex Rodriguez To Appear Before Investigators Over Illegal Poker Game That Included Cocaine, Prostitutes, & Violence
Major League Baseball commissioner Bud Selig has ordered New York Yankees star Alex Rodriguez to appear before investigators over allegations -- first published in Star magazine -- that he played an illegal poker game where cocaine was openly used and another which turned violent.
"We take this very seriously and have been investigating this matter since the initial allegation," an MLB spokesperson told Star, in an exclusive statement.
"As part of the investigation, the Commissioner's Office will interview Mr. Rodriguez."
As Star reported, former players in the top secret Texas Hold 'Em ring have rejected Rodriguez's earlier denial that he never played in the ring.
The insiders told Star exclusively that A-Rod gambled on at least two occasions, in games organized by stunning brunette Molly Bloom, who coordinated the sophisticated A-List poker operation that included Tobey Maguire, Ben Affleck, Leonardo DiCaprio and Matt Damon.
None of the stars played in the same game as A-Rod, Star has learned.
Another MLB official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said A-Rod could be suspended.
"We're talking to people involved in the investigation and we're taking this very seriously," the executive reportedly told ESPNNewYork.com.
"Because he had been warned about this before, I would say a possible suspension would be very much in play."
As Star reported, league officials are said to be concerned about one of the game's biggest stars being associated with an illegal gambling operation.
Even worse for the Yankees' all-star, it's not the first time he has been in hot water over his gambling habit; in 2006, Selig reportedly warned Rodriguez to stay out of New York's illegal poker dens.
"Bud's totally fed up with him," a baseball insider reportedly told ESPNNewYork.com. "It's like there's something new with him every day and it's impossible to keep up with it."
Rodriguez is currently inactive for the Yankees after undergoing surgery on July 11 to repair a slightly torn meniscus in his right knee.
He has been spotted in Miami with girlfriend Cameron Diaz, in the meantime.
While he was expected to begin baseball activities Thursday in Tampa, the new controversy appeared to leave the Yankees blindsided, with general manager Brian Cashman telling reporters: "I don't know anything about it."
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Post by artemis on Aug 6, 2011 10:17:49 GMT -5
"Lady Gaga Death Report: Totally Bogus
With the recent death of Amy Winehouse, the music world is still reeling. So when a report surfaced that claimed Lady Gaga had passed away, it seemed to be too much to take.
Thankfully, the Facebook spam from last night (August 4) turned out to be totally false and Gaga is alive and well.
The report was made to look like it was from the BBC and stated that Gaga had been found dead in her hotel room.
This isn’t the first time the “Born This Way” songstress was reported to be dead, but it’s definitely one of the most disturbing."
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Post by artemis on Aug 7, 2011 6:10:54 GMT -5
"The son of Hollywood legend Anthony Quinn dead at 48 after sudden heart attack in Malibu
Francesco Quinn, the son of Oscar winner Anthony is reported to have passed away at his Malibu home today, he was just 48.
An actor himself, Francesco was best remembered for his role as drug dealer Rhah in Oliver Stone's Academy Award winning war epic Platoon.
However he also starred in popular series such as The Young and the Restless, NCIS, ER and 24.
Early reports suggest that Quinn, who was divorced from his Irish American wife Julie McCann, the niece of late Belfast snooker champion Alex Higgins, was playing with his son Max when he had a heart attack.
Paramedics called to his California home attempted to resuscitate the actor but he was pronounced dead.
The third son of the Mexican-born great and costume designer Jolanda Addolori, Francesco was born in Rome in March 1963.
His parents enjoyed one of the strongest relationships in showbiz and their marriage lasted 31 years.
His father, who died in 2001, made over 200 films including classics such as Zorba the Greek, The Guns of Navarone and Lawrence of Arabia.
Anthony was born in Chihuahua, Mexico in 1915 and went on to have a huge influence upon the movie world during the 20th century.
He encouraged Francesco to follow in his hallowed footsteps.
Franceso appeared with his father in several films, including A Star For Two with Lauren Bacall.
The two men also had the opportunity to share the role of Santiago in The Old Man and the Sea, son and father playing the character as a young and old man."
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Post by lucy on Aug 8, 2011 22:17:45 GMT -5
Well, maybe there is some truth to the death of lady Gaga....perhaps the imposter died..and a new one had to be created.
I've seen a f*ga with a bump on her nose, and one with a straight nose. The bizarre costumes covers up the differences...so most people don't even notice the difference.
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Post by artemis on Aug 10, 2011 4:03:54 GMT -5
"E! staffer held in stabbing death of estranged wife
LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - A longtime facilities manager for the E! cable TV network is being held in an Alhambra, California, jail on $2.7 million bail, accused of fatally stabbing his estranged wife last week, while injuring her sister and himself in the attack.
Sherman Dion Dorsey, 40, of Los Angeles was booked into custody by Los Angeles County sheriffs' deputies from his San Gabriel Valley hospital bed.
He's accused of fatally stabbing Gina Reano, 45, a former editor for E!, in the early-morning hours on August 3, at the home she shared with her sister, Grace Reano, a production supervisor for E!, in an unincorporated county area near San Gabriel.
Grace Reano suffered minor wounds in the attack.
She told police that after the attack, Dorsey stabbed himself in the abdomen and cut his wrists -- injuries that required critical care and hospitalization.
On Tuesday, Dorsey had recovered enough to attend his arraignment hearing in nearby Alhambra. A Superior Court judge, citing the fact that Dorsey had no prior arrests for violent criminal activity, set the bail at $2.7 million. The arraignment proceedings were postponed until August 23, and Dorsey did not enter a plea.
Dorsey has worked for Comcast-owned E! since 1996, serving as director of facilities since 1999. His wife was an assistant editor and production coordinator for series including "E! Investigates" and "E! True Hollywood Story."
"We are deeply saddened by this tragic news and our hearts go out to their families," read an E! statement. "We can offer no comment in regards to the police investigation."
Disclosure: Story author Daniel Frankel is a former E! employee who knows the accused."
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Post by artemis on Aug 12, 2011 4:25:21 GMT -5
"Former Warrant lead singer Jani Lane dies at 47
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Jani Lane, the former lead singer of the metal rock band Warrant, has died in Los Angeles. He was 47.
Officer Sara Faden says Lane's body was found Thursday in a Woodland Hills hotel. She had no immediate information on the cause or circumstances of his death.
With his long blond hair and tight leather outfits, Lane embodied the excess of 1980s metal rock bands. He joined Warrant in 1984 and wrote such hits as "Heaven," ''Down Boys" and "Cherry Pie."
He had an on-and-off relationship with the band, leaving it in 1992 before returning and quitting again several times.
In recent years, he appeared in VH1's "Celebrity Fit Club" and made news for a drunken driving arrest.
He is survived by two daughters from two previous marriages."
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Post by artemis on Aug 12, 2011 4:27:40 GMT -5
Oh, yes, Im sure it was the thieves... It was all planned and intentional,
"Amy Winehouse home robbed: Unreleased songs as well as notebooks pilfered from property after she died, claims Mitch
Some of Amy Winehouse's most personal last remaining possessions were stolen from her home in the immediate aftermath of her death, it is being claimed.
The tragic star's father Mitch Winehouse believes someone has unlawfully taken unreleased music, lyric books and letters belonging to the singer.
Only around 20 people - including family, friends, security and police - are said to have had access to the home in north London's Camden Square since Amy died on July 23.
However, to date, only two lyric books have been officially declared missing to police.
Ex-cabbie-turned-crooner Mitch, 60, is currently on a family holiday taken in an attempt to come to terms with losing his daughter, but he has vowed to find the cultprits on his return to London.
Other items Amy's management can't find include one of her favourite guitars and song lyrics penned for her third album.
A member of Amy's circle told today's Sun: 'This is such a sickening shock to the family. That someone would stoop so low. They can't get their heads around it.
'Mitch is livid. The family, record label and management are months away from deciding what to do with any unreleased music. For that to be taken out of their hands is horrible.
'Mitch is willing to give whoever has stolen the items a chance to do the right thing and put them back so it doesn't have to get messy.'
The troubled Rehab singer passed away aged just 27 last month and was apparently declared a crime scene immediately afterwards.
But despite Mitch giving away items such as clothing to fans paying their respects outside Amy's home, far more important items have gone missing.
He and Amy's on-off boyfriend Reg Traviss, 35, who was also on the family holiday, are apparently going to attempt to put some sort of inventory together when they return.
Meanwhile, it's been reported that Amy's ex husband Blake Fielder-Civil is planning on writing a tell-all book about his life with Amy.
The so-called former video runner, who is currently in prison serving time for burglary and a firearm offence, was banned from attending his ex-wife's funeral at the end of August.
But he is said to be attempting to heal his wounds by dedicating a revealing book based on Amy's life.
He's also believed to have hours of never-seen-before video footage of the star which is looking to release.
Police have so far only described Amy's death as ‘unexplained’ and toxicology test results are due later this month."
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Post by artemis on Aug 12, 2011 4:30:24 GMT -5
Could not adjust to the real world? How ridiculous... Of course they cant mentiona abuse and murder, can they?
"French Big Brother star kills himself 'because he could not adjust to life in outside world'
A reality TV show contestant evicted from a Big Brother-style house in France has killed himself because he 'could not re-adjust to life in the outside world'.
Francois-Xavier Leuridan walked in front of a car on a main road after suffering depression because he could not re-adjust to real life, it was reported.
Fellow house-mates said the 22-year-old had spent two years 'trying to cope with no longer being famous' after being voted off the Secret Story reality show, produced by TV production giant Endemol, in 2009.
Leuridan had released a pop single and launched a line of clothing over the past 18 months, but both ventures flopped and he vanished from the public eye.
His death has now sparked accusations that fame-hungry contestants do not receive sufficient psychological after-care following a spell in the reality TV spotlight.
Martin Medus, a contestant on the show with Leuridan, said: 'He lived for fame and spent two years after the show failing to accept that he was no longer a celebrity.
'They say you'll be looked after by a psychiatrist before and after your time in the house.
'But in fact I just received a letter three months after the series ended saying, "If you're unhappy, call this number".'
Contestant Cindy Lopes said: 'Fame is poisonous. One day it all disappears and you're alone. Even your close friends don't look at you in the same way.'
Deputy public prosecutor Sylvie Morin said there was 'no doubt' Leuridan's death on a main road in Bouee, near Nantes, western France, was a suicide.
She added: 'This was no accident. The young man committed suicide by throwing himself under the wheels of a car, just a few seconds after a first car had swerved around him as he tried to kill himself.'
But Angela Lorente, commissioning editor for France's TF1 Television, denied Leuridan's death was a suicide related to his time on the Secret Story reality show.
She said: 'We are thinking of his family. These were personal circumstances that had nothing to do with television. It would be wrong to mix up the two.'
And Endemol - which is also behind the UK version of Big Brother - said in a statement: 'We are very saddened by the news that Francois-Xavier has died.
'He was a candidate known for his good humour, energy and originality and he appealed to many people.' "
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Post by beatlies on Aug 13, 2011 22:43:47 GMT -5
Mary Tyler Moore imdb
Widely acknowledged as being much tougher and more high-strung than her iconic image would suggest, Moore has had a life with more than the normal share of ups and downs. Both of her siblings predeceased her, her sister Elizabeth of a drug overdose in 1978 and her brother of cancer after a failed attempt at assisted suicide, Moore having been the assistant. Moore's troubled son Richie shot and killed himself in what was officially ruled an accident in 1980.
Moore has long been diagnosed an insulin-dependent diabetic, and had a bout with alcoholism in the mid-70s. Divorced from Tinker since 1981, she has been married to physician Robert Levine since 1983. Despite the opening credits of "Mary Tyler Moore" (1970), in which she throws a package of meat into her shopping cart, Moore is a vegetarian and a proponent of animal rights. She is an active spokesperson for both diabetes issues and animal rights. She and Levine live in Upstate New York and Manhattan.
IMDb Mini Biography By: Larry-115
Spouse Robert Levine (23 November 1983 - present) Grant Tinker (1 June 1962 - 11 June 1982) (divorced) Richard Meeker (25 August 1955 - February 1962) (divorced) 1 child
Trade Mark
Her smile
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Post by artemis on Aug 14, 2011 3:10:13 GMT -5
Her replacement has nothing to do with this thread.
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Post by artemis on Aug 14, 2011 3:47:11 GMT -5
Sounds like severe MK to me...
"'I was drugged up to the eyeballs with men who thought they were Jesus': Gail Porter gives haunted account of her three weeks sectioned
Just after 8am on a spring morning in April, television presenter Gail Porter crouched under a tree on London’s Hampstead Heath and sent a text message to her boyfriend that read: ‘I can’t carry on. I feel suicidal.’
Hours later, the former pin-up girl – whose image was once famously projected on to the side of the House of Commons – was being bundled into the back of a police van and taken to a psychiatric unit where she would be sectioned and forcibly held for nearly a month.
The 40-year-old star’s personal troubles – which have included a battle with the eating disorder anorexia, post-natal depression, being diagnosed bipolar, an acrimonious divorce from her musician husband in 2004 and being left bald by the hair loss condition alopecia – have been well-documented.
But in a searingly honest interview, Gail, a single mother who rose to fame on Saturday-morning children’s television in the Nineties and who was at one time among the highest-paid women on television, today tells how she hit rock bottom four months ago.
It’s a fall from grace almost unimaginable when compared with the fame she once enjoyed.
After being taken to the Royal Free Hospital in North London, Gail’s mental welfare was deemed so unstable she was placed under a 28-day section order which forced her to remain as an in-patient at the Grove Clinic, the hospital’s psychiatric wing, alongside paranoid schizophrenics and violent patients on suicide watch.
Three months after her release, and talking about her ordeal for the first time, the star is still shaken and emotional. She says she has turned a corner in her recovery after leaving hospital and embarking on an intensive counselling programme at The Cabin, a private rehabilitation centre in northern Thailand, which she completed last weekend.
But despite her positivity, her darkest moments still haunt her as she recalls the heavily medicated weeks in hospital with nothing to pass the time except a single television shared between the unit’s 50 patients and cups of instant coffee.
‘The worst part about being sectioned was the lack of structure,’ says Gail. ‘There was no treatment programme – we were just locked in the unit and basically forgotten about.
‘When you are suffering from depression as badly as I was, you genuinely believe you will never come out of a place like that.
‘It felt as if I was in the film One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest. I had been forced into this place with some very, very ill people and we were left to our own devices and to fend for ourselves.
‘I had no idea how long I had been in there because each day followed exactly the same pattern as the last.
‘In the morning I was woken at 7am. We would have cereal for breakfast in the common room then the nurses came round with our medication. I was given 5mg of diazepam in a little pot to swallow to keep me calm. I didn’t even know what it was but there was no point complaining because you had to take what you were prescribed.
‘That was followed at lunchtime by clorazepate, an anti-anxiety drug, and in the evening another 5mg of diazepam and 7.5mg of zopiclone for insomnia.
‘It seemed to me that the nurses didn’t really know what to do with us so it was easier to give us lots of drugs so we were calm and quiet.
‘In three weeks I saw three doctors for ten minutes each. Each time all I was asked was, “How are you feeling?” I told them I felt depressed, they wrote it down and a week later another one came back.
‘There was no treatment programme and nothing to do. It meant patients just focused on their problems instead of getting better. My ex-husband came to visit me and said recently, “You got madder every day you were in there. You were dosed up to your eyes with nothing to do.”
‘I kept myself to myself but there were some very ill people in there. The woman in the room next to mine would get up at 3am every morning and flush the toilet in her room for three hours and talk into the cistern. She said it was her contact to God.
‘Two patients believed they were Jesus and on another occasion a male patient burst into the common room naked because he said he was better.
‘I was desperate to get out but because I had been sectioned it was illegal for me to leave the hospital. I honestly believed I would never leave.’
It’s an incredible story and one that is all the more shocking given the success Gail once enjoyed.
At the height of her fame she hosted some of the most popular shows on television, including Top Of The Pops, Channel 4’s The Big Breakfast and the BBC’s flagship Saturday-morning series Live & Kicking.
Her success led to a relationship with musician Dan Hipgrave, guitarist with indie band Toploader, whom she married in 2001. The couple had a daughter Honey, now eight, a year later.
But despite having a seemingly settled home life – the couple lived in a £500,000 two-bedroom flat in trendy Belsize Park, North London – and a successful career, all was not well.
In 2003 Gail, suffering from post-natal depression, tried to commit suicide for the first time. It was the first of many cries for help in the intervening years that reached a dramatic climax earlier this year.
After a week of sleepless nights and increasingly erratic behaviour, which saw the star lock herself in her house and cut off all her phones, Gail says she suffered a complete nervous breakdown on April 22.
Gail’s mother died of lung cancer in 2009, and two close friends and her grandparents have also died in the past two years.
She says: ‘I hadn’t slept for seven nights, except for a few hours here and there.
‘I was drinking a bottle of wine every evening and then spending the night on Twitter, messaging people on the other side of the world, and other insomniacs.
‘In the morning, if I had slept at all, I would get up, go downstairs and lock the front door and take the phone off the hook so no one could contact me. I would change my pyjamas three or four times a day and go from eating nothing one day to gorging on junk food the next.
‘After a week I couldn’t cope any more so I went out for a walk early one morning. I walked up to Hampstead Heath and that was when I texted my partner Johnny. I was sobbing under a tree for an hour-and-a-half but I was hidden by the branches so no one could see me.
‘He was so worried he called the police who later found me in a pub on Hampstead High Street. They asked me to go with them and I was put in the back of a police van which panicked me and I was kicking and screaming to get out.
Gail says she was taken to hospital for assessment when it was decided she would be sectioned for her own safety. An initial section order, which has to be signed by two medical experts, or a doctor and a family member, allows a patient to be detained for up to 72 hours for emergency treatment.
If doctors believe further treatment is necessary they can detain a patient for up to 28 days to undergo a full psychiatric assessment. It was this option the doctors chose for Gail.
Ironically, Gail’s breakdown came as the star had begun to turn a corner in her personal life. She was in a settled relationship with Johnny Davies, 25, a guitarist with band New Vinyl, and her hair had started to grow back.
‘On the surface I was telling everyone I was fine but underneath I felt as if I was struggling to keep my head above water.
‘There was little work and no job offers. The only work I had was as a panellist on Channel 5’s The Wright Stuff, but that was only once every two months and not enough to cover my outgoings. Credit-card bills were mounting up and I had no way to pay them.’
In March Gail, who now lives in a rented two-bedroom flat in Swiss Cottage, North London, says she was encouraged to seek help by Johnny and visited her local GP.
But she claims she was told she wouldn’t be able to see a psychiatrist for up to five months.
It was too little too late and on April 22 she was admitted to the Royal Free Hospital. ‘At the hospital I was in my own room and there was a police officer guarding the door. I was there for about eight hours but only one consultant came to speak to me. He asked if I was depressed and I said yes. I asked what was happening and he said, “It’s nothing for you to concern yourself with. We will come back when we have finished discussing your case.”
‘Then he came back 20 minutes later and said, “We are taking you to The Grove Clinic. It is the psychiatric wing of this hospital.” I said, “Well, I’m not going.”
‘Then the doctor became quite serious and said, “You have to go. You have been sectioned under the Mental Health Act. We have the signatures we need and it is illegal for you not to go.”
‘Being told I couldn’t leave the hospital was like a nightmare. I’d heard of people being sectioned and I thought I knew what it meant, but I thought it was what happened to crazy people, not people such as me.’
Gail describes the 52-bed ward, which has since been closed as part of the Coalition’s NHS cost- cutting measures, as cold and clinical, with patients locked in to prevent their escape.
‘The doors to the ward were locked and visitors had to be swiped in and out. You couldn’t just leave,’ says Gail.
‘The nurses were based in an office at the centre of the unit surrounded by floor-to-ceiling Perspex. All the staff were behind it and if you wanted to speak to someone you had to get their attention and they would come out and speak to you, then go back into the office.
‘Patients’ rooms were either side of the office, with the men on one side of the ward and the women on the other.
‘I was taken to my room which had pale blue walls and one small window which overlooked another building. There were no bars on the windows but they were all locked.
‘A nurse came in, handed me a pair of plain white pyjamas and said, “Put these on.” It was the only conversation I had. After that I decided not to speak.
‘A nurse sat outside my room all night because I was deemed at risk of harming myself.
‘Inside, the room was spartan and bare. Each room had its own toilet and shower. There were no decorations in the clinic except a painting of a tree hung on the wall which a female patient ripped off and hid under her bed because she told me it was a bad picture.
‘I laid down in bed the first evening and rocked back and forth, sobbing all night long.’
She adds: ‘People were constantly coming in and out of the clinic at all times of day and night, so it was difficult to keep track of how many were in there. It was chaotic and frightening and there was no one to ask what was going on.
‘Patients would be brought in late at night, some covered in blood, by the police. They ranged from the seriously mentally ill to those similar to me with depression, but we were all lumped in together.
‘One patient tried to kill himself by slashing his wrists. Another man would sit in front of the television in the common room and put on MTV and rock backwards and forwards for hours. When you hear about mental health patients and what they do it can sound funny, but when you’re in somewhere such as that you are surrounded by that behaviour 24 hours a day and it’s very frightening. It’s not a joke and you feel very vulnerable.
‘You have no idea who these people are or what they’ve done but you are expected to share a small space with them 24 hours a day.’
On May 17, three weeks into her sectioning, Gail was told she would be allowed to go home after a third doctor assessed her and decided she could continue her treatment as a day patient at the Tavistock Centre, her local mental health centre.
This she did until the end of July when she felt her condition hadn’t improved enough and she decided to fly to Thailand for a two-week rehabilitation programme at the £285-a-night Chiang Mai clinic.
The clinic, which specialises in the treatment of addiction, offers counselling for 27 patients at a time and is set inside a luxury resort.
Gail said it was the process there that allowed her to see the light at the end of the tunnel.
After returning to the UK from the clinic last Monday, she now feels better than at any time over the past two years. ‘The treatment was focused on talking through our problems and looking towards the future. There was exercise every day and a programme of activities,’ Gail says.
‘But it seems ridiculous that I had to go to Thailand to get better treatment than I received in a hospital ten minutes from my house.’
Gail says she decided to give such an honest interview to help highlight the treatment of depression in Britain. ‘I want to break down some of the stigma associated with mental illness. I’m not ashamed about what happened to me and I think I have a responsibility to talk about my experience in an open way.’
Three months on from her breakdown, she is looking to the future with daughter Honey and plans to train as a counsellor to help other mental illness sufferers.
Indeed, life couldn’t be further from the showbiz world she once inhabited. ‘My life is so far from that world but I wouldn’t swap it for anything,’ says Gail. ‘I’d always wanted to try something different to being a television presenter but I was worried people would say, “Look at her, she’s not on TV any more.”
‘Now I think that I can do whatever I put my mind to. I’ve had a difficult time over the past few years but it finally feels as if my life is getting better.’
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Post by beatlies on Aug 14, 2011 15:40:57 GMT -5
Her replacement has nothing to do with this thread. If you're referring to MTM, I'm not even sure that she was replaced. I brought her up as an example of a miserable, problem-filled Hollywood life, made more striking in her case by her outward image of very-put-together, ordered, happy-face "America's sweetheart"-type woman. One thing I've been wondering about is how celebrities who do not get replaced (and their spouses, family, friends etc. "in the know") deal psychologically with the gothic horror show of their fellow actors getting imposter-replaced right and left around them continually for decades.
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Post by The Mask on Aug 14, 2011 16:45:38 GMT -5
Sorry I didn't answer your post on the other thread, beatlies, but I think Mary Tyler Moore was replaced many times, as are all celebrities, especially ones that have been in the business as long as she has.
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