Classic American West Coast Boxing

Rick Farris
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

iskigoe wrote:Frank,

Charlie is like the rest of them. Does Not look so tough when inside.

Hope you Know Im kidding. At the Igoe house we take our pets serious,
and treat them like family. We have 3 ponies, 3 dogs, 1 cat, 1 turtle,
3 chickens [the only producers], and as of yesterday 1 rabbit. -Believe or not-
I have done a great job of getting my wife to keep the number down. My wife would
save the world --even if it killed me. When she found the kitten and promised
to find it a home ---asap--- [they all begin this way]. I said ok...but find it a home quick.

As the weeks passed and it grew attached to my daughter I started to soften.
I came home and slipped into my daughters room to tell her I decided to let her keep the kitten she now call princess skittles [being a great warm hearted dad].
She replied with excitement "MOM SAID YOU WOULD SAY THAT"

KI
Great story, Kevin. By the way, Hype's name is still up for consideration in the "expanded" catagory. In fact, I'm doing my best to get him on the ballot. Let me assure you, that if he does not make it this year, he will next year.

When it comes to pets . . .

In 1983, when I met my second wife (the mother of my two daughters) I was living in a two bedroom townhouse in Westlake Village. Recently divorced from wife #1, I was enjoying the life as a single man who worked around a lot of beautiful women, so I had no time for pets.

When my future wife moved in with me, she brought along her dog, a Golden Retriver, and a cat. No problem, I loved animals and as long as she was going to feed and clean after them, no problem. Well, after we married, I'd often do things that would get me in hot water. To diffuse the situation and take her mind off whatever I had done, I would come home with a new pet. Before she could unload on me, the sight of a new animal would bring tears of joy to her eyes. I would suddenly go from an "A-hole" to a "Hero".

That tactic worked just about everytime, however, after the first year my place was suddenly too small for us. In addition to a baby daughter, we had a dog, two cats, a ferret (illeagal in California), a desert tortoise, two parrots, a blue & gold mackaw, two love birds, a rabbit and pond full of koi karp. When my wife told me she was pregnant with our second, I immediatly called a realtor, we needed a bigger place. The townhouse was beginning to look like Noah's Arc.

In order to keep the animal count from growing, I changed my ways and focused my attention on the three most important women in my life. Our new home had a pool in the back yard. The kids loved it and my youngest became a helluva swimmer, today she is works as a "lifeguard" while attending post grad school to become a physical therapist. The Golden Retriever loved the pool, as well. During hot summers, the dog would lay on the top step leading into the pool, relaxing in the cool water. Have you ever tried digging dog hair out of a pool filter? :witzend:


-Rick
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by raylawpc »

For Charlie . . .

Image
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by iskigoe »

Rick,

Thanks for thinking about Hype. I know you are on the job.
Don't forget to take a break here and there and smell the roses.
Sounds like you are wide open.

I know the Noah's Ark feeling. My brother-inlaw [NYC fighter] and good pal
brought a dog home from the fire station. The dog lived at the station for days,
but it had to go, so he gave it to me. Like your self I was single and had no time
for pets. I worked crazy hours in the car businness so I had to find someone to
walk my new dog [who I named "Dog" after a dog in a John Wayne movie].
Luckly I lived on a horse where there was a pretty young girl, so I hired her to walk the dog.

One year later we married.

We were in Mountauk LI the night I asked her to marry me, sun setting in the back round, right near the bay. I got down on one knee and uttered those words " will you marry me". She replied "the dog will be so happy". Ive had the leash on ever since. Happy ending good wife and a good dog. What more can a man ask for.

KI
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by iskigoe »

This struck me funny. Hope you get it

Happyy ending good wife and a good dog. What more can a man ask for.

A happy ending, a good wife, and a good dog.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

Just back from visiting Charlie, posted bail, $223.50, I asked them "223.50, who did he killed? I thought he was in here for jay-walking."

We visited for a while, walked the yard, he was happy to be out of his cell,, his cellie said he was waiting for visitors, hoping to get some goodies from home.

Charlie will be "Tutored".. :lol: tomorrow morning, will be ready to come home between 4-6 P.M.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

Image

Two photos of "Charlie The Crook"

Image
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

iskigoe wrote:Frank,

Charlie is like the rest of them. Does Not look so tough when inside.

Hope you Know Im kidding. At the Igoe house we take our pets serious,
and treat them like family. We have 3 ponies, 3 dogs, 1 cat, 1 turtle,
3 chickens [the only producers], and as of yesterday 1 rabbit. -Believe or not-
I have done a great job of getting my wife to keep the number down. My wife would
save the world --even if it killed me. When she found the kitten and promised
to find it a home ---asap--- [they all begin this way]. I said ok...but find it a home quick.

As the weeks passed and it grew attached to my daughter I started to soften.
I came home and slipped into my daughters room to tell her I decided to let her keep the kitten she now call princess skittles [being a great warm hearted dad].
She replied with excitement "MOM SAID YOU WOULD SAY THAT"

KI
Kevin...My house is the same way, all kinds of animals running around, my granddaughters call my house "The Farm" or "The Ranch"
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

I hope this is not true

Juan Manuel Marquez vs. Erik Morales
April 13, 2009 by Edgar Gonzalez

Just as Felipe Leon predicted in his last In the Squared Circle, current WBA/WBO lightweight champion Juan Manuel Marquez more than likely will face three divisional champion Erik “Terrible” Morales of Tijuana, MX, in the fall according to Esto.com.mx.

Marquez’s manager Nacho Beristain felt compelled to squash the rumors coming out of Venezuela that said newly crowned WBC lightweight champion Edwin Valero was the next opponent for Marquez. Beristain stated that Marquez would reappear in September and that his next opponent will be Morales.

Beristain explained that Marquez is not interested in Valero since the Venezuelan is not in the plans of his promoter, Golden Boy Promotions.

According to Beristain, Juan Manuel is ready to face Floyd Mayweather Jr. but the negotiations for that bout have hit a stalemate because Mayweather was asking for Marquez to go up to welterweight which would be impossible for the Mexico City fighter. Juan Manuel was willing to go up to the junior welterweight limit of 140 lbs. but not more.

Since both parties can not come to terms, Marquez’s promoter Oscar De La Hoya has another option: to face Erik Morales, one of the biggest ticket sellers in recent years.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

iskigoe wrote:This struck me funny. Hope you get it

Happyy ending good wife and a good dog. What more can a man ask for.

A happy ending, a good wife, and a good dog.
Kevin, that is funny. My 2nd wife told me before she moved in, "This is a package deal, the dog, the cat and me."
It was a good deal. I posted a photo of my oldest daughter with the dog on this thread last year.
We had to put him down about twenty years ago. The best dog I ever had.


-Rick
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

Rick Farris wrote:
iskigoe wrote:This struck me funny. Hope you get it

Happyy ending good wife and a good dog. What more can a man ask for.

A happy ending, a good wife, and a good dog.
Kevin, that is funny. My 2nd wife told me before she moved in, "This is a package deal, the dog, the cat and me."
It was a good deal. I posted a photo of my oldest daughter with the dog on this thread last year.
We had to put him down about twenty years ago. The best dog I ever had.


-Rick
Image
Here it is, Rick.... :TU:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

HOLLYWOOD
Plan to close nursing home for film workers stirs emotions

Image
Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times
Kay Meyer, 93, and daughter Melody Sherwood are fighting to keep a nursing home for film workers open. But Lew Wasserman’s widow and grandson strongly back the closure because it’s losing money.

The longtime assistant to the late Lew Wasserman says the studio mogul would be furious if he knew the facility he championed was closing. Wasserman's heirs defend the decision.

By Richard Verrier
April 13, 2009

The longtime secretary to the most powerful man in Hollywood said he "would roll over in his grave."

Melody Sherwood, who served as Lew Wasserman's executive assistant for nearly three decades, said that the legendary studio mogul who died in 2002 would have strenuously opposed the decision to shut down the long-term-care facility known as the "motion picture home," a fixture of the entertainment industry for more than a half a century.

"He would have been absolutely furious over this decision," said Sherwood, whose 93-year-old mother is a resident of the home where Sherwood herself one day hoped to retire.

The head of Universal Pictures' former parent company, MCA, Wasserman was not just any Hollywood chieftain. Regarded as the most influential executive in the movie and TV industry, he and his wife, Edie, were tireless fundraisers on behalf of the place that cares for industry workers in their senior years. The 44-acre retirement community in Woodland Hills was named the Wasserman Campus in a 1998 dedication that drew the likes of Steven Spielberg and Kirk Douglas.

"The idea of caring for those who were not big names in Hollywood -- that meant a lot to him," said Sherwood, 65, daughter of the late songwriter George W. Meyer, a founder of the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers. "This was his legacy."

Sherwood's mother, Kay Howard Meyer, a vaudeville tap dancer, has been a resident for five years. Like others with whom she shares the dormitory-style building, Meyer is bewildered and confused about where she will live.

"I thought I would be here till I died," Meyer said. "I don't want to leave. This is my home."

Meyer's flamingo pink second-floor room is named the Judy Garland Room, fitting given that Garland starred in the musical "For Me and My Gal," whose score was written by Meyer's late husband. The shelf next to her bed is lined with stuffed bears she won playing bingo and pictures of her with stars including George Burns. Meyer also keeps a photo of Lew Wasserman hugging her daughter on his 65th birthday, when Sherwood gave him a surprise birthday party.

Sherwood's comments mark the most pointed rejoinder yet to the decision by the board of the Motion Picture & Television Fund to shut down the nursing home and adjoining hospital, a move that unleashed an uproar among many of the 100 residents and their families.

The stance also places her squarely at odds with Wasserman's widow, Edie, and grandson, Casey, both of whom strongly back the decision. Both serve on the board that heads up fundraising for the Motion Picture fund.

Her former boss "never would have allowed this to happen," Sherwood said, holding up the picture of Wasserman hugging her. "He would have been hands on, sitting down and saying, 'How do we fix this?' "

But those sentiments aren't shared by Edie Wasserman, as Sherwood learned during a recent visit to her secluded home in Beverly Hills. The house has been a venue for fundraising events, business meetings and presidential dinners.

"I always call [Edie] when I'm in town," said Sherwood, who lives in New Mexico. "I said I didn't want to talk about the motion picture home because I didn't want it to come between us."

But as she drove past the security guard and up the long driveway to the modern, glass-walled house, Sherwood said, she was uncertain what to expect. A maid answered the door and invited her into the den overlooking the gardens that slope down into a koi pond on the estate. Wasserman, who was resting in a chair, asked if she wanted something to drink. Sherwood politely declined.

The two usually chatted about her grandchildren and Wasserman's fundraising activities. But this time the conversation began on a more somber note when Wasserman asked how Sherwood's mother was doing. That inevitably led to a topic Sherwood had hoped to avoid.

"She said no subject was out of bounds and that if I didn't want to talk about the motion picture home, I could leave," Sherwood said. So Sherwood shared her frustrations, explaining that her mother didn't want to be forced out and was having a difficult time finding another nursing home. Sherwood called the closure a "betrayal of the promise" by the fund to provide lifetime care.

"She told me that I was wrong, that nobody came there expecting to be cared for life," Sherwood said.

When Sherwood interjected she was hearing only one side of the story, Wasserman grew agitated.

"We're out of money, we have no choice and we have to close," Sherwood quoted Wasserman as saying in a raised voice. "I could tell her mind was made up."

A representative for the Wasserman family said neither Casey nor Edie Wasserman would comment.

But in an earlier interview, Casey Wasserman said the decision would keep thefundviable. "What we're doing will allow us to thrive for generations," he said.

Board members and hospital administrators say shutting down the facilities was unavoidable in order to enable the charity to support other programs, including healthcare centers that serve more than 65,000 entertainment industry workers annually.

The small hospital and nursing home, they said, have been losing almost $10 million annually over the last five years because government reimbursements have not kept pace with rising medical and labor costs. Additionally, the recession had eroded investment income and philanthropic contributions that had been used to cover losses. Without drastic cutbacks, the fund's reserves would fall an estimated 80% to $16 million by 2013, according to a study by Camden Group, a consulting firm retained by the Motion Picture fund.

Those explanations, however, have been met with skepticism by families of the residents, who questioned why the board authorized hefty pay raises for administrators and allocated millions toward construction projects and consulting fees when a financial crisis was looming.

Sherwood has emerged as one of the most public critics of the fund's board and management. During a meeting with residents and families in January, she drew loud applause when she confronted the fund's chief executive, David Tillman. Sherwood called him "delusional" for thinking that closing the nursing home would not discourage others from moving into the assisted and independent living facilities on the Wasserman campus, which will remain in operation after the nursing facility closes.

She has also faulted administrators over their handling of the relocation process.

"I have been to 15 homes all over town," she said. "Everyone has said to me, 'You better have a plan B, because we're full.' "

Susan Poprock, the fund's chief of nursing, says her staff has spent two months vetting surrounding nursing homes.

About a dozen have agreed to work with the fund in relocating residents and to allow care teams of social workers and medical staff to make follow-up visits, she said.

So far, only 15 of about 100 residents have moved to other homes, while nine have been moved into other facilities on the Woodland Hills campus.

"This is happening in an orderly and compassionate fashion," Poprock said. "We're not walking away from the residents."

[email protected]
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

Image
We had a barbecue yesterday (Easter Sunday) and James barbecue some ribs. they were good!!!
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

kikibalt wrote:I hope this is not true

Juan Manuel Marquez vs. Erik Morales
April 13, 2009 by Edgar Gonzalez

Just as Felipe Leon predicted in his last In the Squared Circle, current WBA/WBO lightweight champion Juan Manuel Marquez more than likely will face three divisional champion Erik “Terrible” Morales of Tijuana, MX, in the fall according to Esto.com.mx.

Marquez’s manager Nacho Beristain felt compelled to squash the rumors coming out of Venezuela that said newly crowned WBC lightweight champion Edwin Valero was the next opponent for Marquez. Beristain stated that Marquez would reappear in September and that his next opponent will be Morales.

Beristain explained that Marquez is not interested in Valero since the Venezuelan is not in the plans of his promoter, Golden Boy Promotions.

According to Beristain, Juan Manuel is ready to face Floyd Mayweather Jr. but the negotiations for that bout have hit a stalemate because Mayweather was asking for Marquez to go up to welterweight which would be impossible for the Mexico City fighter. Juan Manuel was willing to go up to the junior welterweight limit of 140 lbs. but not more.

Since both parties can not come to terms, Marquez’s promoter Oscar De La Hoya has another option: to face Erik Morales, one of the biggest ticket sellers in recent years.
How rare . . .

I like Marquez over Mayweather at 140. Seems to have crossed Floyd's mind.
Oscar came down for Pac. Pac will step up again to 147 to fight Floyd, but I hope he forces Floyd to take a deal at 140lbs.

Of course, Pac has to deal with Ricky Hatton first, and this is going to be a tough fight.

They say "Pretty Boy" is having financial challenges? How rare.
Mayweather is no Henry Armstrong, he wants all the edges. How rare.

I believe that Pac and Marquez will do it one more time before it's all is over.
Pac and Marquez deserve a third fight. Not a good fight for Pac, Marquez spells danger for him.

Erik Morales will take a beating in this one.
Once he's had enough, he'll bail.

Erik is about to enter the Twilight Zone, the Abyss.
He stands at the door to "Palookaville".
How rare.


-Rick Farris
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by raylawpc »

kikibalt wrote:Image

Two photos of "Charlie The Crook"

Image
He looks like a criminal mastermind . . .
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

raylawpc wrote:
kikibalt wrote:Image

Two photos of "Charlie The Crook"

Image
He looks like a criminal mastermind . . .
:lol: :lol:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by dagosd2000 »

kikibalt wrote:Just called my sister Rachel to say happy birthday to her, "74"

HAPPY BIRTHDAY RACHEL FROM ROGER AND HIS FAMILY!!! :TU: :TU:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by dagosd2000 »

kikibalt wrote:
Rick Farris wrote:
iskigoe wrote:This struck me funny. Hope you get it

Happyy ending good wife and a good dog. What more can a man ask for.

A happy ending, a good wife, and a good dog.
Kevin, that is funny. My 2nd wife told me before she moved in, "This is a package deal, the dog, the cat and me."
It was a good deal. I posted a photo of my oldest daughter with the dog on this thread last year.
We had to put him down about twenty years ago. The best dog I ever had.


-Rick
Image
Here it is, Rick.... :TU:

I've always been a "dog" person. Dogs and little kids like me. I don't know what they sense in me. Maybe I'm a guy they can trust? Love? Is Kind?

Too bad I've been a failure with adults and snakes.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by dagosd2000 »

kikibalt wrote:Image
We had a barbecue yesterday (Easter Sunday) and James barbecue some ribs. they were good!!!

And then you had a "medicinal" whiskey after all that? Good boy. :TU:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

kikibalt wrote:HOLLYWOOD
Plan to close nursing home for film workers stirs emotions

Image
Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times
Kay Meyer, 93, and daughter Melody Sherwood are fighting to keep a nursing home for film workers open. But Lew Wasserman’s widow and grandson strongly back the closure because it’s losing money.

The longtime assistant to the late Lew Wasserman says the studio mogul would be furious if he knew the facility he championed was closing. Wasserman's heirs defend the decision.

By Richard Verrier
April 13, 2009

The longtime secretary to the most powerful man in Hollywood said he "would roll over in his grave."

Melody Sherwood, who served as Lew Wasserman's executive assistant for nearly three decades, said that the legendary studio mogul who died in 2002 would have strenuously opposed the decision to shut down the long-term-care facility known as the "motion picture home," a fixture of the entertainment industry for more than a half a century.

"He would have been absolutely furious over this decision," said Sherwood, whose 93-year-old mother is a resident of the home where Sherwood herself one day hoped to retire.

The head of Universal Pictures' former parent company, MCA, Wasserman was not just any Hollywood chieftain. Regarded as the most influential executive in the movie and TV industry, he and his wife, Edie, were tireless fundraisers on behalf of the place that cares for industry workers in their senior years. The 44-acre retirement community in Woodland Hills was named the Wasserman Campus in a 1998 dedication that drew the likes of Steven Spielberg and Kirk Douglas.

"The idea of caring for those who were not big names in Hollywood -- that meant a lot to him," said Sherwood, 65, daughter of the late songwriter George W. Meyer, a founder of the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers. "This was his legacy."

Sherwood's mother, Kay Howard Meyer, a vaudeville tap dancer, has been a resident for five years. Like others with whom she shares the dormitory-style building, Meyer is bewildered and confused about where she will live.

"I thought I would be here till I died," Meyer said. "I don't want to leave. This is my home."

Meyer's flamingo pink second-floor room is named the Judy Garland Room, fitting given that Garland starred in the musical "For Me and My Gal," whose score was written by Meyer's late husband. The shelf next to her bed is lined with stuffed bears she won playing bingo and pictures of her with stars including George Burns. Meyer also keeps a photo of Lew Wasserman hugging her daughter on his 65th birthday, when Sherwood gave him a surprise birthday party.

Sherwood's comments mark the most pointed rejoinder yet to the decision by the board of the Motion Picture & Television Fund to shut down the nursing home and adjoining hospital, a move that unleashed an uproar among many of the 100 residents and their families.

The stance also places her squarely at odds with Wasserman's widow, Edie, and grandson, Casey, both of whom strongly back the decision. Both serve on the board that heads up fundraising for the Motion Picture fund.

Her former boss "never would have allowed this to happen," Sherwood said, holding up the picture of Wasserman hugging her. "He would have been hands on, sitting down and saying, 'How do we fix this?' "

But those sentiments aren't shared by Edie Wasserman, as Sherwood learned during a recent visit to her secluded home in Beverly Hills. The house has been a venue for fundraising events, business meetings and presidential dinners.

"I always call [Edie] when I'm in town," said Sherwood, who lives in New Mexico. "I said I didn't want to talk about the motion picture home because I didn't want it to come between us."

But as she drove past the security guard and up the long driveway to the modern, glass-walled house, Sherwood said, she was uncertain what to expect. A maid answered the door and invited her into the den overlooking the gardens that slope down into a koi pond on the estate. Wasserman, who was resting in a chair, asked if she wanted something to drink. Sherwood politely declined.

The two usually chatted about her grandchildren and Wasserman's fundraising activities. But this time the conversation began on a more somber note when Wasserman asked how Sherwood's mother was doing. That inevitably led to a topic Sherwood had hoped to avoid.

"She said no subject was out of bounds and that if I didn't want to talk about the motion picture home, I could leave," Sherwood said. So Sherwood shared her frustrations, explaining that her mother didn't want to be forced out and was having a difficult time finding another nursing home. Sherwood called the closure a "betrayal of the promise" by the fund to provide lifetime care.

"She told me that I was wrong, that nobody came there expecting to be cared for life," Sherwood said.

When Sherwood interjected she was hearing only one side of the story, Wasserman grew agitated.

"We're out of money, we have no choice and we have to close," Sherwood quoted Wasserman as saying in a raised voice. "I could tell her mind was made up."

A representative for the Wasserman family said neither Casey nor Edie Wasserman would comment.

But in an earlier interview, Casey Wasserman said the decision would keep thefundviable. "What we're doing will allow us to thrive for generations," he said.

Board members and hospital administrators say shutting down the facilities was unavoidable in order to enable the charity to support other programs, including healthcare centers that serve more than 65,000 entertainment industry workers annually.

The small hospital and nursing home, they said, have been losing almost $10 million annually over the last five years because government reimbursements have not kept pace with rising medical and labor costs. Additionally, the recession had eroded investment income and philanthropic contributions that had been used to cover losses. Without drastic cutbacks, the fund's reserves would fall an estimated 80% to $16 million by 2013, according to a study by Camden Group, a consulting firm retained by the Motion Picture fund.

Those explanations, however, have been met with skepticism by families of the residents, who questioned why the board authorized hefty pay raises for administrators and allocated millions toward construction projects and consulting fees when a financial crisis was looming.

Sherwood has emerged as one of the most public critics of the fund's board and management. During a meeting with residents and families in January, she drew loud applause when she confronted the fund's chief executive, David Tillman. Sherwood called him "delusional" for thinking that closing the nursing home would not discourage others from moving into the assisted and independent living facilities on the Wasserman campus, which will remain in operation after the nursing facility closes.

She has also faulted administrators over their handling of the relocation process.

"I have been to 15 homes all over town," she said. "Everyone has said to me, 'You better have a plan B, because we're full.' "

Susan Poprock, the fund's chief of nursing, says her staff has spent two months vetting surrounding nursing homes.

About a dozen have agreed to work with the fund in relocating residents and to allow care teams of social workers and medical staff to make follow-up visits, she said.

So far, only 15 of about 100 residents have moved to other homes, while nine have been moved into other facilities on the Woodland Hills campus.

"This is happening in an orderly and compassionate fashion," Poprock said. "We're not walking away from the residents."

[email protected]

The Film Industry Takes Care of it's Own . . .

I have to say that Film Industry health and insurance benefits, pensions, etc. are second to none. This closure is sad, but does not effect the half dozen industry health care centers located thruout the southland. Top doctors, referrals to the finest specialists.

A para-spinal tumor threatened my life in the late 90's. It was a delicate operation to remove a huge tumor lodged by my spine. The Motion Picture Industry paid one of the world's finest cancer surgeons, the Chief of Oncology at UCLA Med. Center to remove the tumor. I recovered quickly, didn't pay a cent.

This Motion Picture Home was a great place. Lots of old time actors and film crew vets.
I would visit an old camera legend from the 40's-70's when I was new in the business, late 70's early 80's.
He was an Academy Award winner whom my grandfather had worked with decades earlier.
I wanted to talk to somebody about my grandfather's days in the business, and my uncle suggested I visit this legend.
He said he knew that the old Cinematographer had been living out at the Motion Pic. Home in Calabasas, right off the 101 Freeway.

I phoned the Camera legend and he was happy to have me visit and talk about my grandfather.
We talked for three hours. Not just about my grandfather, but about the "Five C's of Cinematography" . . .
Composition, Camera Angles, Close-ups, Cutting and Continuity.

We talked light & shadow. Color, the physics of light.
Hard light, soft light, direct & reflected light, color temperature, sunlight i.e. ultra-violet and infrared rays.
We talked a lot about the illusion of depth, the creation of depth.
He talked of artists, the great painters. How they "lit" their paintings. The light source of a painting.
We talked of directors . . . Nicolas Ray. He and my grandad had worked with him on "Rebel Without a Cause".

This took me thru my early days as a lighting gaffer. I would pick the brain of my dear friend.
He and I would watch boxing on a TV in his room, then we'd sit on the patio and he'd pick my brain.
He had become one of my best friends. I valued him, not just for what he taught me, which was PRICELESS, but for the kindness.
We just hit it off. We talked the same language. He taught me something that few directors understand today.
He taught me about stage direction, blocking, this guy was known for educating great directors.

He held Blake Edwards hand thru the production of "The Great Race", my grandfather had told us that when they were filming the feature in the mid 60's.

I got very busy. Back-to-back locations. Didn't see him for months. Next time I visited, he was under medical watch, having suffered a recent heart attack. He was being well cared for, among his friends, but his health was failing. "Too much Scotch!" he'd bellow. "Too many women!" he'd laugh. "I take that back, never enough women!" We'd laugh hard.

I said "good bye", promised to return in a couple weeks. The following week he passed away.

That home was a good place. He spent his last days with his piers, his friends. He was still a legend within those walls, and he'll always remain a legend within my heart.

Yeah . . . we take care of each other. We take care of our own.


-Rick Farris
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by dagosd2000 »

kikibalt wrote:
raylawpc wrote:
kikibalt wrote:Image

Two photos of "Charlie The Crook"

Image
He looks like a criminal mastermind . . .
:lol: :lol:
I'm going to tune in to "Americas Most Wanted" this week. I assume Charlie will be profiled. Now I'm sure the populace is glad he's off the streets,so don't be surprised if there are conditions upon his release.20 foot high security fence trimmed with razor wire. Machine gun towers at the corners of your property. Marine Corps security guard shack upon entering your property. Maybe you'll have to dig a moat around your house. Can't take any chances. Of course your property insurance will sky rocket causing you to refinance your home.Remember, dog lovers go the extra mile. :D
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by dagosd2000 »

Rick Farris wrote:
kikibalt wrote:I hope this is not true

Juan Manuel Marquez vs. Erik Morales
April 13, 2009 by Edgar Gonzalez

Just as Felipe Leon predicted in his last In the Squared Circle, current WBA/WBO lightweight champion Juan Manuel Marquez more than likely will face three divisional champion Erik “Terrible” Morales of Tijuana, MX, in the fall according to Esto.com.mx.

Marquez’s manager Nacho Beristain felt compelled to squash the rumors coming out of Venezuela that said newly crowned WBC lightweight champion Edwin Valero was the next opponent for Marquez. Beristain stated that Marquez would reappear in September and that his next opponent will be Morales.

Beristain explained that Marquez is not interested in Valero since the Venezuelan is not in the plans of his promoter, Golden Boy Promotions.

According to Beristain, Juan Manuel is ready to face Floyd Mayweather Jr. but the negotiations for that bout have hit a stalemate because Mayweather was asking for Marquez to go up to welterweight which would be impossible for the Mexico City fighter. Juan Manuel was willing to go up to the junior welterweight limit of 140 lbs. but not more.

Since both parties can not come to terms, Marquez’s promoter Oscar De La Hoya has another option: to face Erik Morales, one of the biggest ticket sellers in recent years.
How rare . . .

I like Marquez over Mayweather at 140. Seems to have crossed Floyd's mind.
Oscar came down for Pac. Pac will step up again to 147 to fight Floyd, but I hope he forces Floyd to take a deal at 140lbs.

Of course, Pac has to deal with Ricky Hatton first, and this is going to be a tough fight.

They say "Pretty Boy" is having financial challenges? How rare.
Mayweather is no Henry Armstrong, he wants all the edges. How rare.

I believe that Pac and Marquez will do it one more time before it's all is over.
Pac and Marquez deserve a third fight. Not a good fight for Pac, Marquez spells danger for him.

Erik Morales will take a beating in this one.
Once he's had enough, he'll bail.

Erik is about to enter the Twilight Zone, the Abyss.
He stands at the door to "Palookaville".
How rare.


-Rick Farris
Rick
I saw Erik outside his gym in Tijuana about six months ago. He must have weighed 170 pounds. I don't even know how'd they hype this fight up. Him and Margarito live near each other. Right now it sounds like misery likes company. Rog
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

dagosd2000 wrote:
kikibalt wrote:Just called my sister Rachel to say happy birthday to her, "74"

HAPPY BIRTHDAY RACHEL FROM ROGER AND HIS FAMILY!!! :TU: :TU:
Thanks, Rog, very much appreciated, I'll tell her for you.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

dagosd2000 wrote:
kikibalt wrote:Image
We had a barbecue yesterday (Easter Sunday) and James barbecue some ribs. they were good!!!

And then you had a "medicinal" whiskey after all that? Good boy. :TU:
Yes I did, and then! I passed out.... :lol:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

Image
Felipe Torres
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

Image
Chris Arriola's next opponent, C. C. R. Fernendez
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