Barbara Rush, who won a Golden Globe for most promising newcomer in “It Came From Outer Space” and went on to appear in “Peyton Place” and many other movies and TV shows, died Sunday. Her daughter, Fox News Channel correspondent Claudia Cowan, confirmed her death to Fox News Digital.
“My wonderful mother passed away peacefully at 5:28 this evening. I was with her this morning and know she was waiting for me to return home safely to transition,” Cowan told Fox. “It’s fitting she chose to leave on Easter as it was one of her favorite holidays and now, of course, Easter will have a deeper significance for me and my family.”
Rush appeared in soap operas including “All My Children” and on “7th Heaven,” and appeared in films such as “The Young Philadelphians,” “Robin and the 7 Hoods,” “Hombre” and “The Young Lions.” Her co-stars included Rock Hudson,...
“My wonderful mother passed away peacefully at 5:28 this evening. I was with her this morning and know she was waiting for me to return home safely to transition,” Cowan told Fox. “It’s fitting she chose to leave on Easter as it was one of her favorite holidays and now, of course, Easter will have a deeper significance for me and my family.”
Rush appeared in soap operas including “All My Children” and on “7th Heaven,” and appeared in films such as “The Young Philadelphians,” “Robin and the 7 Hoods,” “Hombre” and “The Young Lions.” Her co-stars included Rock Hudson,...
- 4/1/2024
- by Pat Saperstein
- Variety Film + TV
Barbara Rush, the classy yet largely unheralded leading lady who sparkled in the 1950s melodramas Magnificent Obsession, Bigger Than Life and The Young Philadelphians, has died. She was 97.
Rush, a regular on the fifth and final season of ABC’s Peyton Place and a favorite of sci-fi fans thanks to her work in When Worlds Collide (1951) and It Came From Outer Space (1953), died Sunday in Westlake Village, her daughter, Fox News senior correspondent Claudia Cowan, announced.
“My wonderful mother passed away peacefully at 5:28 this evening. I was with her this morning and know she was waiting for me to return home safely to transition,” Cowan said. “It’s fitting she chose to leave on Easter as it was one of her favorite holidays and now, of course, Easter will have a deeper significance for me and my family.”
A starlet at Paramount, Universal and Fox whose career blossomed at...
Rush, a regular on the fifth and final season of ABC’s Peyton Place and a favorite of sci-fi fans thanks to her work in When Worlds Collide (1951) and It Came From Outer Space (1953), died Sunday in Westlake Village, her daughter, Fox News senior correspondent Claudia Cowan, announced.
“My wonderful mother passed away peacefully at 5:28 this evening. I was with her this morning and know she was waiting for me to return home safely to transition,” Cowan said. “It’s fitting she chose to leave on Easter as it was one of her favorite holidays and now, of course, Easter will have a deeper significance for me and my family.”
A starlet at Paramount, Universal and Fox whose career blossomed at...
- 4/1/2024
- by Mike Barnes and Duane Byrge
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Marlene Clark, best known for her portrayals of Lamont’s girlfriend Janet in the 1970s NBC sitcom Sanford & Son and as Ganja Meda in the 1973 horror film Ganja & Hess, has died.
Demond Wilson, who played Lamont on Sanford & Son, paid tribute to Clark on Twitter, writing “Rip beautiful actress Marlene Clark. . . It was a delight to work with you…,” noting she died on May 18. Wilson listed her age as 73, but that has not been confirmed.
Clark joined Sanford & Son in the comedy’s fifth season in 1976 as a recurring opposite Wilson, remaining through the series’ final season the following year.
Raised in the Harlem section of New York City, Clark was a fashion model before her transition to acting.
Her earliest work began in films in the 1960s including For Love of Ivy opposite Sidney Poitier and Putney Swope in 1969, directed by Robert Downey Sr. She went...
Demond Wilson, who played Lamont on Sanford & Son, paid tribute to Clark on Twitter, writing “Rip beautiful actress Marlene Clark. . . It was a delight to work with you…,” noting she died on May 18. Wilson listed her age as 73, but that has not been confirmed.
Clark joined Sanford & Son in the comedy’s fifth season in 1976 as a recurring opposite Wilson, remaining through the series’ final season the following year.
Raised in the Harlem section of New York City, Clark was a fashion model before her transition to acting.
Her earliest work began in films in the 1960s including For Love of Ivy opposite Sidney Poitier and Putney Swope in 1969, directed by Robert Downey Sr. She went...
- 5/26/2023
- by Denise Petski
- Deadline Film + TV
Rita Lakin, the boundary-pushing TV writer and showrunner who worked on Peyton Place, The Doctors and Mod Squad and created series including The Rookies and Flamingo Road, has died. She was 93.
Lakin died March 23 of natural causes at an assisted living facility in Novato, California, her son, writer-producer Howard Lakin, told The Hollywood Reporter. “Before her, they hadn’t thought about writing television from a woman’s point of view,” he noted.
Lakin also penned a groundbreaking 1975 episode of CBS’ Medical Center centered on a transgender character; served as a showrunner/executive producer on the 1976-77 CBS drama Executive Suite; and wrote such popular telefilms as 1971’s Death Takes a Holiday and 1973’s Message to My Daughter and A Summer Without Boys.
After she met some people from Texas whom she didn’t like, she rejected an offer in 1978 to create the pilot for a show about an oil family in the Lone Star State.
Lakin died March 23 of natural causes at an assisted living facility in Novato, California, her son, writer-producer Howard Lakin, told The Hollywood Reporter. “Before her, they hadn’t thought about writing television from a woman’s point of view,” he noted.
Lakin also penned a groundbreaking 1975 episode of CBS’ Medical Center centered on a transgender character; served as a showrunner/executive producer on the 1976-77 CBS drama Executive Suite; and wrote such popular telefilms as 1971’s Death Takes a Holiday and 1973’s Message to My Daughter and A Summer Without Boys.
After she met some people from Texas whom she didn’t like, she rejected an offer in 1978 to create the pilot for a show about an oil family in the Lone Star State.
- 4/21/2023
- by Mike Barnes
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
On the day a U.S. appeals court lifted an injunction that blocked a Mississippi “religious freedom” law – i.e., giving Christian extremists the right to discriminate against gays, lesbians, bisexuals, transgender people, etc. – not to mention the publication of a Republican-backed health care bill targeting the poor, the sick, the elderly, and those with “pre-existing conditions” – which would include HIV-infected people, a large chunk of whom are gay and bisexual men, so the wealthy in the U.S. can get a massive tax cut, Turner Classic Movies' 2017 Gay Pride or Lgbt Month celebration continues (into tomorrow morning, Thursday & Friday, June 22–23) with the presentation of movies by or featuring an eclectic – though seemingly all male – group: Montgomery Clift, Anthony Perkins, Tab Hunter, Dirk Bogarde, John Schlesinger, Tennessee Williams, Gore Vidal, Arthur Laurents, and Jerome Robbins. After all, one assumes that, rumors or no, the presence of Mercedes McCambridge in one...
- 6/23/2017
- by Andre Soares
- Alt Film Guide
The Metrograph is screening all ten of Rainer Werner Fassbinder's favorite films: Nicholas Ray's Johnny Guitar, Howard Hawks's Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, Charles Laughton's The Night of the Hunter, Vasily Shukshin's The Red Snowball Tree, Josef von Sternberg's Dishonored, Max Ophuls's Lola Montes, Michael Curtiz's Flamingo Road, Pier Paolo Pasolini's Salò, or The 120 Days of Sodom, Raoul Walsh's The Naked and the Dead and Luchino Visconti's The Damned. Also in New York: King Hu’s A Touch of Zen and work by Luis Ospina. Screening tonight in Chicago: Nathan Silver's Riot, Mike Ott's Lancaster, CA and William Greaves's In the Company of Men. And we have a few more goings on. » - David Hudson...
- 4/22/2016
- Keyframe
The Metrograph is screening all ten of Rainer Werner Fassbinder's favorite films: Nicholas Ray's Johnny Guitar, Howard Hawks's Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, Charles Laughton's The Night of the Hunter, Vasily Shukshin's The Red Snowball Tree, Josef von Sternberg's Dishonored, Max Ophuls's Lola Montes, Michael Curtiz's Flamingo Road, Pier Paolo Pasolini's Salò, or The 120 Days of Sodom, Raoul Walsh's The Naked and the Dead and Luchino Visconti's The Damned. Also in New York: King Hu’s A Touch of Zen and work by Luis Ospina. Screening tonight in Chicago: Nathan Silver's Riot, Mike Ott's Lancaster, CA and William Greaves's In the Company of Men. And we have a few more goings on. » - David Hudson...
- 4/22/2016
- Fandor: Keyframe
Each weekend we highlight the best repertory programming that New York City has to offer, and it’s about to get even better. Opening on February 19th at 7 Ludlow Street on the Lower East Side is Metrograph, the city’s newest indie movie theater. Sporting two screens, they’ve announced their first slate, which includes retrospectives for Fassbinder, Wiseman, Eustache, and more, special programs such as an ode to the moviegoing experience, and new independent features that we’ve admired on the festival circuit (including Afternoon, Office 3D, and Measure of a Man).
Artistic and Programming Director Jacob Perlin says in a press release, “Jean Eustache in a Rocky t-shirt. This is the image we had in mind while making this first calendar. Great cinema is there, wherever you can find it. The dismissed film now recognized as a classic, the forgotten box-office hit newly resurrected, the high and the low,...
Artistic and Programming Director Jacob Perlin says in a press release, “Jean Eustache in a Rocky t-shirt. This is the image we had in mind while making this first calendar. Great cinema is there, wherever you can find it. The dismissed film now recognized as a classic, the forgotten box-office hit newly resurrected, the high and the low,...
- 1/20/2016
- by Jordan Raup
- The Film Stage
Joan Crawford Movie Star Joan Crawford movies on TCM: Underrated actress, top star in several of her greatest roles If there was ever a professional who was utterly, completely, wholeheartedly dedicated to her work, Joan Crawford was it. Ambitious, driven, talented, smart, obsessive, calculating, she had whatever it took – and more – to reach the top and stay there. Nearly four decades after her death, Crawford, the star to end all stars, remains one of the iconic performers of the 20th century. Deservedly so, once you choose to bypass the Mommie Dearest inanity and focus on her film work. From the get-go, she was a capable actress; look for the hard-to-find silents The Understanding Heart (1927) and The Taxi Dancer (1927), and check her out in the more easily accessible The Unknown (1927) and Our Dancing Daughters (1928). By the early '30s, Joan Crawford had become a first-rate film actress, far more naturalistic than...
- 8/10/2015
- by Andre Soares
- Alt Film Guide
Joe Manganiello in this month’s Men’s Health.
Birthday shoutouts go to Idina Menzel, who is 42, and Wynonna Judd is 49.
Cheyenne Jackson has joined the cast of the upcoming film Love Is Strange, where he’ll play a gay police officer.
Prepare yourselves: Grumpy Cat, The Movie may be happening.
Matthew Morrison debuts the music video for “It Don’t Mean A Thing.”
Robbie Rogers cheered in his road debut as an openly gay player.
Below you can see Lady Gaga in the trailer for Machete Kills. Unfortunately, it also has Mel Gibson.
“Noah’s Gay Wedding Cruise” has been updated.
And here’s The Weekly ShoutOUT™. Each week we’re going to focus on one out athlete/performer and feature a daily pic and career timeline. We’ll be showcasing the big names, but also the lesser-known gay celebs who deserve more recognition. This week we give a ShoutOUT to … Adamo Ruggiero.
Birthday shoutouts go to Idina Menzel, who is 42, and Wynonna Judd is 49.
Cheyenne Jackson has joined the cast of the upcoming film Love Is Strange, where he’ll play a gay police officer.
Prepare yourselves: Grumpy Cat, The Movie may be happening.
Matthew Morrison debuts the music video for “It Don’t Mean A Thing.”
Robbie Rogers cheered in his road debut as an openly gay player.
Below you can see Lady Gaga in the trailer for Machete Kills. Unfortunately, it also has Mel Gibson.
“Noah’s Gay Wedding Cruise” has been updated.
And here’s The Weekly ShoutOUT™. Each week we’re going to focus on one out athlete/performer and feature a daily pic and career timeline. We’ll be showcasing the big names, but also the lesser-known gay celebs who deserve more recognition. This week we give a ShoutOUT to … Adamo Ruggiero.
- 5/30/2013
- by snicks
- The Backlot
Dale Robertson, best remembered for his roles in television and movie Westerns, has died. His niece Nancy Robertson tells the Associated Press her uncle died Tuesday at a hospital in La Jolla, CA following a brief illness. He was 89. Dale Robertson had small roles in films beginning in the late 1940s, including The Boy With The Green Hair and Flamingo Road. He went on to play Jesse James in Fighting Man Of The Plains before moving into television in the 1950s. His best remembered series were Tales Of Wells Fargo, Iron Horse, and Death Valley Days (1968-70). He also played the lead role in the first of A. C. Lyles’ second feature Westerns, Law Of The Lawless. He continued working in TV in the 1970s and 1980s, landing roles in the popular night-time soap operas Dallas and Dynasty. His final role was Zeke in TV’s Harts Of The West.
- 2/28/2013
- by THE DEADLINE TEAM
- Deadline TV
Oklahoma City — Dale Robertson, an Oklahoma native who became a star of television and movie Westerns during the genre's heyday, died Tuesday. He was 89.
Robertson's niece, Nancy Robertson, said her uncle died at Scripps Memorial Hospital in La Jolla, Calif., following a brief illness.
Dale Robertson had bit parts in films including "The Boy with the Green Hair" and the Joan Crawford vehicle "Flamingo Road" before landing more high-profile roles such as Jesse James in "Fighting Man of the Plains."
In the 1950s, he moved into television, starring in series such as "Tales of Wells Fargo" (1957-62), "Iron Horse" (1966) and "Death Valley Days" (1968-70).
Robertson continued to work in TV in the 1970s, and in the 1980s he landed roles in the popular night-time soap operas "Dallas" and "Dynasty."
In 1993, he took what would be his final role, as Zeke in the show "Harts of the West," before retiring from...
Robertson's niece, Nancy Robertson, said her uncle died at Scripps Memorial Hospital in La Jolla, Calif., following a brief illness.
Dale Robertson had bit parts in films including "The Boy with the Green Hair" and the Joan Crawford vehicle "Flamingo Road" before landing more high-profile roles such as Jesse James in "Fighting Man of the Plains."
In the 1950s, he moved into television, starring in series such as "Tales of Wells Fargo" (1957-62), "Iron Horse" (1966) and "Death Valley Days" (1968-70).
Robertson continued to work in TV in the 1970s, and in the 1980s he landed roles in the popular night-time soap operas "Dallas" and "Dynasty."
In 1993, he took what would be his final role, as Zeke in the show "Harts of the West," before retiring from...
- 2/28/2013
- by AP
- Huffington Post
A 27-year-old aspiring rapper from California has been identified as one of the victims killed during a Las Vegas shooting this week.
The family of Kenneth Cherry Jr., aka "Kenny Clutch," have identified him as one of the three left dead after the Vegas shooting, according to Las Vegas Fox station Kvvu.
Clutch's family confirmed that the Oakland, Calif., rapper was driving the Maserati that was fired on by the occupants of a black Range Rover Thursday morning around 4:20 a.m., Kvvu reports. Clutch was shot while behind the wheel, ran his Maserati through a red light on Las Vegas Boulevard and hit a cab at the intersection of Flamingo Road.
The Vegas shooting led to a fiery crash that onlookers described as something out of an action film, the Associated Press notes. The two individuals in the taxi were also killed. The shooting followed a reported argument that...
The family of Kenneth Cherry Jr., aka "Kenny Clutch," have identified him as one of the three left dead after the Vegas shooting, according to Las Vegas Fox station Kvvu.
Clutch's family confirmed that the Oakland, Calif., rapper was driving the Maserati that was fired on by the occupants of a black Range Rover Thursday morning around 4:20 a.m., Kvvu reports. Clutch was shot while behind the wheel, ran his Maserati through a red light on Las Vegas Boulevard and hit a cab at the intersection of Flamingo Road.
The Vegas shooting led to a fiery crash that onlookers described as something out of an action film, the Associated Press notes. The two individuals in the taxi were also killed. The shooting followed a reported argument that...
- 2/22/2013
- by The Huffington Post
- Huffington Post
The fate of Gcb, one of our favorite new shows, will be decided in the next few weeks, and right now, there's a 50/50 chance it'll survive. If it does get canceled, at least it'll instantly become a member of what we'll call the Arrested Development/Freaks & Geeks/Firefly club. Shows that were canceled before their time, and have gained cult status since they left the airwaves.
All of those programs have rabid enthusiastic followers, and in the case of Firefly and Arrested Development, that fan enthusiasm has directly led to big screen resurrections.
We're hoping Gcb gets a renewal, but while we wait, let's take a look at a few other shows throughout the years that were unfairly snuffed out, and picture ... what might have been.
Pushing Daisies
ABC (October 3, 2007 – June 13, 2009)
Featuring a stellar cast, including Lee Pace, the incomparable Kristin Chenoweth, and Anna Friel as Dead Zooey Deschanel, Pushing Daisies...
All of those programs have rabid enthusiastic followers, and in the case of Firefly and Arrested Development, that fan enthusiasm has directly led to big screen resurrections.
We're hoping Gcb gets a renewal, but while we wait, let's take a look at a few other shows throughout the years that were unfairly snuffed out, and picture ... what might have been.
Pushing Daisies
ABC (October 3, 2007 – June 13, 2009)
Featuring a stellar cast, including Lee Pace, the incomparable Kristin Chenoweth, and Anna Friel as Dead Zooey Deschanel, Pushing Daisies...
- 5/3/2012
- by snicks
- The Backlot
Robert Montgomery, Joan Crawford, Clark Gable, Forsaking All Others Joan Crawford on TCM: Mildred Pierce, Flamingo Road, When Ladies Meet Schedule (Et) and synopses from the TCM website: 6:00 Am Forsaking All Others (1934) A woman pursues the wrong man for almost twenty years. Dir: W. S. Van Dyke. Cast: Robert Montgomery, Joan Crawford, Clark Gable. Bw-83 mins. 7:30 Am I Live My Life (1935) A flighty society girl tries to make a go of her marriage to an archaeologist. Dir: W. S. Van Dyke. Cast: Joan Crawford, Brian Aherne, Frank Morgan. Bw-97 mins. 9:15 Am Love On The Run (1936) Rival newsmen get mixed up with a runaway heiress and a ring of spies. Dir: W. S. Van Dyke. Cast: Joan Crawford, Clark Gable, Franchot Tone. Bw-80 mins. 10:45 Am When Ladies Meet (1941) A female novelist doesn't realize her new friend is the wife whose husband she's trying to steal. Dir: Robert Z. Leonard.
- 8/22/2011
- by Andre Soares
- Alt Film Guide
Joan Crawford (right, in Daisy Kenyon) is Turner Classic Movies' next "Summer Under the Stars" star. On Monday, August 22, TCM will be showing 13 Joan Crawford movies, in addition to Peter Fitzgerald's documentary Joan Crawford: The Ultimate Movie Star, narrated by Anjelica Huston. (Curiously, Crawford is nowhere to be found in any of the 40+ films directed by Anjelica Huston's father, John Huston.) [Joan Crawford Movie Schedule.] As an MGM and WB star, Crawford is one of TCM's most visible stars. Every week, there's some Joan Crawford movie or other on TCM — at times, a number of them. Even so, there's plenty of room for variety, as Crawford made about 60 films between 1930 and 1950, roughly her (talkie) time at MGM (1930s and early '40s) and WB (late '40s). There would be even more room for variety if TCM bothered showing more of Crawford's silents. She appeared in about 25 of those, precious few of which have surfaced so far.
- 8/22/2011
- by Andre Soares
- Alt Film Guide
While Britain's TV dramas wallow in working-class life (see: Shameless, EastEnders, Coronation Street, The Royle Family), American soaps have always tended to be glittering and glamorous.
Who can forget the sheer escapism of classics like Dallas, Dynasty, Falcon Crest and Flamingo Road with their spotlight on the rich and beautiful?
Well, after airing for 14 seasons from 1978 to 1991, plus several TV specials, Dallas is hoping to strike oil with viewers once again.
Us network TNT has confirmed it has ordered a new 10-episode series of the show, which will be a continuation rather than a remake. A preview is to be broadcast tonight.
Original Dallas actors Larry Hagman, 79, Patrick Duffy, 62, and Linda Gray, 70, will reprise their respective roles as Jr Ewing, his brother Bobby Ewing and Jr's wife Sue Ellen Ewing. Charlene Tilton and Steve Kanaly are also back as Lucy Ewing and Ray Krebbs.
Josh Henderson, who played Jr and...
Who can forget the sheer escapism of classics like Dallas, Dynasty, Falcon Crest and Flamingo Road with their spotlight on the rich and beautiful?
Well, after airing for 14 seasons from 1978 to 1991, plus several TV specials, Dallas is hoping to strike oil with viewers once again.
Us network TNT has confirmed it has ordered a new 10-episode series of the show, which will be a continuation rather than a remake. A preview is to be broadcast tonight.
Original Dallas actors Larry Hagman, 79, Patrick Duffy, 62, and Linda Gray, 70, will reprise their respective roles as Jr Ewing, his brother Bobby Ewing and Jr's wife Sue Ellen Ewing. Charlene Tilton and Steve Kanaly are also back as Lucy Ewing and Ray Krebbs.
Josh Henderson, who played Jr and...
- 7/12/2011
- by David Bentley
- The Geek Files
Oh yes she did.
When the finger-wagging begins, you know there is gonna be some crazy drama on The Real Housewives of Atlanta. NeNe Leakes saw to it that this rule was reinforced last night.
NeNe's first on-air celebrity interview (with Jermaine Dupri) aired in "Flamingo Road Block," leading to a much-anticipated all-out blow-out between Nene and Kim Zolciak.
Oh It's So On: When the finger comes out, you best Look out.
Meanwhile, Cynthia and Peter's wedding is in jeopardy now that Peter had to shut down his supper club due to financial problems. It's hard being 50-year-old Peter sometimes.
Phaedra keeps on trying to balance her hectic life as a mom and lawyer, while Kandi finally reached her breaking point with Kim and Sweetie riding on the bus tour from hell.
That's only the beginning ... where do we even start with all this?
In what can only be called the "Unmagical Unmysterious" bus tour,...
When the finger-wagging begins, you know there is gonna be some crazy drama on The Real Housewives of Atlanta. NeNe Leakes saw to it that this rule was reinforced last night.
NeNe's first on-air celebrity interview (with Jermaine Dupri) aired in "Flamingo Road Block," leading to a much-anticipated all-out blow-out between Nene and Kim Zolciak.
Oh It's So On: When the finger comes out, you best Look out.
Meanwhile, Cynthia and Peter's wedding is in jeopardy now that Peter had to shut down his supper club due to financial problems. It's hard being 50-year-old Peter sometimes.
Phaedra keeps on trying to balance her hectic life as a mom and lawyer, while Kandi finally reached her breaking point with Kim and Sweetie riding on the bus tour from hell.
That's only the beginning ... where do we even start with all this?
In what can only be called the "Unmagical Unmysterious" bus tour,...
- 1/17/2011
- by meankittykat333@aol.com (Arlene G.)
- TVfanatic
Trying to come up with which side was wrong in the two main arguments on this week’s Real Housewives of Atlanta shouldn’t have taken much brain power on my part. However, the parties in both clashes had a few valid points, some more prominent than others. So in an attempt to give everyone the benefit of a doubt, let’s take a look at who was wrong and how, while also giving props were they were deserved.
Who Was Wrong and How
Kim
Offense #1: The Entire Sweetie Debacle
Where Was She Wrong: Okay from a black person’s perspective, the “Auntie Mame” treatment of Sweetie was noticed by almost everyone since the girl was introduced on the show. People didn’t like it, whether they were black or white, and it was high time for someone to allude to it, because it’s gotten simply out of hand.
Who Was Wrong and How
Kim
Offense #1: The Entire Sweetie Debacle
Where Was She Wrong: Okay from a black person’s perspective, the “Auntie Mame” treatment of Sweetie was noticed by almost everyone since the girl was introduced on the show. People didn’t like it, whether they were black or white, and it was high time for someone to allude to it, because it’s gotten simply out of hand.
- 1/17/2011
- by Mark O. Estes
- TVovermind.com
If I could, I'd like to take this opportunity to address the beggars of the world: Muthafucka, I ain't givin' you Shit, you hear me? Not a motherfucking thing.
Apparently, I'm Tyrone the Friendly Negro because everywhere I go - Las Vegas, Chicago, D.C., San Francisco - some broke-ass is trying to hit me up for spare change. I ain't got no spare change. I don't even believe in spare change.
Oh, and it doesn't matter who's trying to get in my pocket. Black, white, young, old, male, female. I once had a dude in Chicago who was wearing a Sean John sweatsuit for "bus fair." Man, if your opening line is, "I know I don't look it, but I'm homeless," You Are A Bad Beggar.
I was on South Street and a young white kid asked me for money. Ok, first? If you're young and healthy, you don't...
Apparently, I'm Tyrone the Friendly Negro because everywhere I go - Las Vegas, Chicago, D.C., San Francisco - some broke-ass is trying to hit me up for spare change. I ain't got no spare change. I don't even believe in spare change.
Oh, and it doesn't matter who's trying to get in my pocket. Black, white, young, old, male, female. I once had a dude in Chicago who was wearing a Sean John sweatsuit for "bus fair." Man, if your opening line is, "I know I don't look it, but I'm homeless," You Are A Bad Beggar.
I was on South Street and a young white kid asked me for money. Ok, first? If you're young and healthy, you don't...
- 11/10/2010
- by Dustin Rowles
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