There were several cast changes though, so people who only appeared in the 70s like Arthur Brough (died 1978), James Hayter (died 1983), Larry Martyn (died 1994) and Alfie Bass (died 1983) can be excluded.
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1980s TV Series with high rates of persons now deceased
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- Mar 2008
- 29883
- An oasis in the middle of Somerset
- Bath City FC; Porthcawl RFC;Wales in most things.
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Originally posted by Gerontophile View PostFor fuck sake? Really?
A thread utterly about how many dead people once appeared in a TV programme?
I thought Hill Street Blues but have just checked and most of them appear to be healthily into their 70s now.
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- Mar 2008
- 18786
- Revelling In The Hole
- England, Chelsea and Tooting and Mitcham. And Surrey CCC. And Wimbledon Dons Speedway (RIP)
- Nairn's Cheese Oatcake
I loved Hill Street Blues and there are a few scenes, some dramatic, some humourous, that I quite frequently think about. But I don't hear it mentioned very much these days, which is a shame.
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- Mar 2008
- 18786
- Revelling In The Hole
- England, Chelsea and Tooting and Mitcham. And Surrey CCC. And Wimbledon Dons Speedway (RIP)
- Nairn's Cheese Oatcake
Originally posted by Nefertiti2 View PostHIll Street blues was great- and was one of the shows that changed TV - Today is the 20th anniversary of the Sopranos by the way
At the start of the episode a police officer goes to an apartment to investigate an incident. When he enters he sees someone pointing a pistol at him from behind a sofa and shoots at the person holding the firearm. Upon investigation he discovers a dying child holding a toy gun.
Throughout the programme Furillo receives updates into the investigation of the shooting - the policeman involved evenually has a breakdown and is transferred to a psychiatric hospital. The last scene has Furillo and Joyce visiting the hospital. Their initial trepidation is eased when they meet the officer, who is coming to terms with what has happened and seems to be on the road the recovery. Encouraged, they are about to leave when the policeman says something like: "There's just one thing captain. It's weird. When the kid was dying he grabbed hold of my leg and, you know what, I can still feel his hands holding on to me. Still feel them." And the camera pans down and you see him rubbing and scratching his leg, which is a bloody mess.
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It would seem that Are You Being Served? cast reunions would now consist of Mike Berry and the various "dolly birds" who played the nurses/secretaries/crumpet. There have been a few (Wendy Richard, John Inman, Larry Martyn who passed in their sixties/early seventies who might have been expected to boost the numbers a bit, the rest were all 50+ when it aired.
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It's TV and 1980s-adjacent but the card of the WWF Survivor Series from 1990 - just over 28 years ago - makes for grim reading:
The Ultimate Warrior (died 2014) vs Rick Rude (died 1999)
Hulk Hogan vs Earthquake (died 2006)
Randy Savage (died 2011) vs Dusty Rhodes (died 2015)
Jim Duggan & Nikolai Volkoff (died 2018) vs Sato & Tanaka
Jake Roberts vs Bad News Brown (died 2007) [special referee: Big Boss Man (died 2004)]
Bret Hart & Jim Neidhart (died 2018) vs Ax & Smash
The Warlord vs Tito Santana
Sensational Sherri (died 2007) vs Sapphire (died 1996)
The Texas Tornado (died 1993) vs Mr Perfect (died 2003)
Hercules (died 2004) & Paul Roma vs Marty Jannetty & Shawn Michaels
For context, if you compared it to the same year's FA Cup Final, it would be like the whole Manchester United team, two subs AND the referee having died!
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Originally posted by Snake Plissken View PostThat’s not the 1990 Survivor Series Card. The Undertaker debuted in that PPV. (Also around that time Demolition featured Ax, Smash and Crush, the latter died in 2007.)
And, yeah, the vast majority of those deaths are drug-related in some way. These guys were all taking massive amounts of steroids to get the body Vince McMahon wanted to push. And their schedule was insane, so they were taking all kinds of uppers and downers to try and get some rest and then liven up again. And we've also come to see a lot of brain damage (CTE) in recent years, with almost every former wrestler whose brain has been tested after death showing signs of it. The business is a little better today - 150 shows a year rather than 300, drug testing for obvious PED use, and less of a party scene - so hopefully in 2047 this year's SummerSlam will still have most of its roster watching from home.
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The wrestler I continue to be amazed by is Mick Foley. How he is still alive is a miracle given the punishment inflicted on his body down the years. Obviously he wasn't a PED guy, but the massive bumps he took throughout his career should have completely done for him.
He's in no great shape these days, but the fact he's still limping about is ridiculous. When the commentator legitimately says, "That's it, he's dead." after you get thrown through the roof of a steel cage down to the ring and incidentally a metal chair lands on your head as it fell through with you, and the guy who threw you through the cage also thinks you're dead, you have to wonder what on earth the man is made of. And then you go on to wrestle for years afterward.
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- Jul 2016
- 9278
- Dublin
- Bohemian FC Manchester United Mansfield town Torino Berwick rangers
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Originally posted by Squarewheelbike View PostFlicking through the channels, came across first ever episode of Allo Allo, guessing a few of them are long gone.
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