Everskyward
Experimenter
- Joined
- Mar 19, 2005
- Messages
- 33,453
- Display Name
Display name:
Everskyward
Guessing that they know without anyone telling them.It’s what we do. Can’t tell people they’re broken. Not PC enough.
Guessing that they know without anyone telling them.It’s what we do. Can’t tell people they’re broken. Not PC enough.
Yeah they did. Not sure either one was all that and a bag of chips, but whatever. I’m usually more interested in what Alton Brown has to say about cooking’s finer points.
As it stands, Brown said he liked “Tony” as he called him, and said he was an “interesting guy”. Being that Alton is a careful man in his words, it’s notable he said nothing about Anthony’s cooking skill.
One of the most interesting Brown interviews is a session he did at Google HQ a number of years ago where that quote comes from and also a fairly long description of the difference between early Food Network and modern Food Network and how it has changed from cooking enthusiasts to a generalized audience that mostly doesn’t cook but wants to be entertained by cooking.
Plus Alton’s a pilot. So there’s that. He owned a 206 for a while.
In that interview at Google he lamented that he can’t get any TV execs interested in an airport restaurant (or nearby) travel / food show, even with the demographic changes in food TV over to an entertainment bent.
And of course, Alton is restarting Good Eats this year too. Yay!
He actually had his 206 in at least one episode where I think he was flying some seafood from maybe New Orleans. He lives here in Atlanta. I Googled to see if he still had the plane and the only thing I could come up with was, "he has owned two planes: a Cessna 206 and a Cessna 414." Maybe he upgraded to the 414.
That’s assuming that was the actual message....That's not the way I read it Brian. I interpret her message as affirming her love for her daughter and urged her to confirm this fact with her father: "Bea — I have always loved you. This is not your fault. Ask Daddy!" Sad for all involved regardless of fame and wealth.
Guessing that they know without anyone telling them.
A couple people I have known seemed as normal as anyone can seem normal, at least to me. But they were only casual acquaintances.I think most of our society also knows when someone is broken mentally. Not always when they try to hide it, but those closest to them usually aren’t too surprised when they have an episode of crazy or even suicide.
Personally, I doubt Bourdain or any of those chefs can cook worth a damn.
There is still a stigma, though. Many times the family doesn't want to reveal it. I've gotten so that when someone dies and no one mentions a cause; accident, illness, old age, I start to wonder.
It is a disease. It consumes people. It may be hard to understand, but people with depression lose the ability to care about others. A friend of mine who's ex- recently killed herself relayed a post about depression... comparing it to a snow storm. The gist was that most days it's clear or just a few flakes that can be ignored, other times it becomes like being snowed in until that builds a snowbank so high that there is no way out.
True, I was going off something that was also reported by the media, but that doesn't invalidate my interpretation any more than his.That’s assuming that was the actual message....
The media f’s so much up. Why should we expect this to be any more accurate?
All I know is I can't imagine the state a person's mind has to be in to actually commit suicide. In my present state of mind I can't imagine how anyone could actually do it. So that lets me know how far a mind must deteriorate and what a horrible state of anguish, etc, it must be in to make someone actually kill themselves to alleviate the 'pain'.
Part of the mental health stigma is the same reason I avoid the doctor for physical ailments unless I have to...they can rarely treat the condition...or know what is causing the condition...so they just pump you up with meds to treat the symptoms but you will still likely have the underlying problems.
Well, it's always tragic when someone commits suicide. But your memes bring up one reason I didn't like him. He was a real snob about food and would criticize those like Guy Fieri and Rachel Ray and other Food Network chefs and others like them. Basically he became famous for writing a 'tell all' book about being a chef and never really was that well known although he was an executive chef at a known restaurant. He just became known for the books and other things. He and Fieri had an ongoing feud because he criticized Fieri all the time. Just that kind of guy because he had to berate other chefs to lift himself up. That's why I didn't like him.
Twp high-profile celebrities. Folks that people pay attention to. Most suicide victims cause a lot of pain to people that know them or are close to them. A very few reach the global consciousness. Those very few create power to start to be a force for change. Robin Williams, RIP, was another.
No, we don't know what demons Tony faced. We are starting to learn about Kate Spade. Until people - both in the US and abroad - recognize mental illness for what it is, bad things will keep happening. We can recognize cancer, heart disease, and dementia as being illnesses.... but at the same time we shame and hide from depression and mental illness. Unless it's high profile, it gets little attention.
Personally, I doubt Bourdain or any of those chefs can cook worth a damn. Most of them smoke, which destroys the taste buds. So all they really know how to do is drown everything in salt and fat. When I go out that’s mostly what I taste, which is why I don’t go out often. And believe me, none of them know the first thing about cooking vegetarian, which happens to be my forte. Vegetarian food is far more difficult to do well, and very few chefs have the knack.
Sounds like something my dad would say!As dad would have said, “At least he made a decision.”
Rest In Peace, Mr. Bourdain.
An articulate and interesting guy, and I pull up his shows "on demand" - his politics weren't mine, but he had a "live and let live" attitude you don't often see in the very intolerant modern liberals. Sorry to hear this, but it's not uncommon (or new) in humans. . .
I dunno, maybe so. . .it's awful strident on the left now, and in the current media stew, my unscientific estimate is the rad libs outnumber the rad rights about 4 to 1.He actually attacked the Hollywood left during the Weinstein thing and confirmed the stories of it had been around for a long time. He went directly after Hilary during that tirade, too.
Don’t think he was much of a “status quo” kind of guy. Makes one wonder if he was starting to get backlash in the TV industry from what he said and knew his shows were about to be cancelled. But nobody’s talking on that one. Any sort of food guy on CNN would always an “on the bubble” kind of job, anyway.
I dunno, maybe so. . .it's awful strident on the left now, and in the current media stew, my unscientific estimate is the rad libs outnumber the rad rights about 4 to 1.
Well, yes. His girlfriend stated that she was raped by Weinstein. That certainly was cause for response. Note that if hasn't been proven in a court.He actually attacked the Hollywood left during the Weinstein thing and confirmed the stories of it had been around for a long time. He went directly after Hilary during that tirade, too.
Don’t think he was much of a “status quo” kind of guy. Makes one wonder if he was starting to get backlash in the TV industry from what he said and knew his shows were about to be cancelled. But nobody’s talking on that one. Any sort of food guy on CNN would always an “on the bubble” kind of job, anyway.
Amen
There is such a thing as a good death and a bad death, and there is something to be said for making that decision yourself if god forbid you find yourself there.
I'm sorry, but I don't consider strangling with your bathrobe belt in a hotel bathroom to be "a good death." Deadfalls and large knots to break the neck were developed for a reason. He had neither . . . . All he did was choose the time and place, but it's not a manner he probably would have chosen in retrospect.