Bernie Mac died

Jokerman

Well-Known Member
#21
There isn't the same emotional impact when you say 100 000 dead, than 1.

One death is a tragedy. A million deaths is a statistic.
No, it's just that if it's 1 or a few deaths, the media will print names and details of that life, and that will personalize it for people. And that's what happened with that baby brought to London. It wasn't the number that made the difference, it was being able to identify with it. Believe me, people cared more that some 3,000 ppl died on 9/11 than if only 1 had died. But, naturally Americans wouldn't care so much if 3,000 ppl from another country died from terrorist attacks. Because it's not as significant or personalized to them.

One American man was kiiled today at the China Olympics. If 1000 or 10,000 were killed, it wouldn't be a statistic. If 1,000 Chinese were killed. it would be...to Americans.
 

Rukas

Capo Dei Capi
Staff member
#22
Bernie was one of my favorite comedians ever. He made me laugh so many times. I even loved his cameo in Transformers which I was just watching the other day. I'm really going to miss his work, like really. He made me laugh and cheered me up so many times I feel like I lost a friend. I'm sad. Rest in peace.
 
#25
Last night I was reading about his condition and remembered another celebrity dying (now that name escapes me) and hoped the same wouldn't happen to him.

and Jesus Christ, it happened.

R.I.P.
 

Preach

Well-Known Member
#29
i was never a huge fan, but normally the cameo roles i've seen him in made me laugh a little. now i guess i have a reason to watch the bernie mac show. i remember i downloaded it and watched one episode and i didn't really dig it.
 

Synful*Luv

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#31
Terrible, i was fortunate enough to meet him in person before, didn't actually know him on a personal level but it feels like I did, I think most people feel like they're related to Bernie Mac or he's an old family friend... Terrible.

RIP
 

ArtsyGirl

Well-Known Member
#32
So messed up, I heard that some celebrity had died but I wasn't really paying attention, then I saw it on an update and my heart just dropped. He was so funny I loved The Bernie Mac show, was so funny. Its so sad, he was so young really.. RIP Mac

"I dont know nothing about no Nato.."
 

Snowman

Well-Known Member
#33
People.com : The #1 Celebrity Site on the Web

When Bernie Mac was admitted last month into a Chicago hospital with a fever and trouble breathing, his wife, Rhonda, thought he'd get treatment and would be home in a week. But after no signs of improvement, she faced her biggest fear.

"He didn't look good to me and I knew this could be it," Rhonda, his wife of 30 years, tells PEOPLE in this week's issue.

The 50-year-old comedian – who suffered from sarcoidosis, an immune system disorder that can affect the lungs – died Aug. 9 of complications due to pneumonia.

The couple had their last exchange a day before his death, as Rhonda stood vigil by his bedside. "I said, 'Hey Bernard. How are you?' and I kissed his forehead," she recalls. "He shrugged his shoulders, like 'I'm tired' and I said, 'I know you're tired.' Later on that night, it took a turn for the worse."

Rhonda and the couple's daughter, Je'Niece, 30, were ushered into a waiting room, where they received the grim news. "[The doctor] came in and I said, 'He's gone, isn't he?' and she said 'yes,' " Rhonda recalls.

The family now prepares for Mac's memorial service, to be held at noon Saturday, Aug. 16 at the 10,000-seat House of Hope in Chicago. His wife says she's comforted by the support of her family and memories of the man she met when she was a 16-year-old junior and he was a 17-year-old senior at Chicago Vocational High School. She was immediately charmed by his humor.


Memories of Courtship
"He said, 'You never seen a black man as pretty as me.' And I said, 'No, I sure haven't.' And he said, 'Girl, you know I'm so beautiful,'" she remembers.

A few months later, on Valentine's Day, he asked her to come to his shop class so he could give her something. When she got there, "I said, 'What do you have for me?' And he kissed me. That was our first kiss." The couple wed in 1977 when both were 19-years-old. Daughter Je'Niece was born the following year.

Now facing her life without Mac, Rhonda says her devastation "comes in waves," adding she still feels her husband's presence. The day after his death, she listened to the song "Thoughts and Wishes" by Hamilton Bohannon, a tune the couple considered "our song," Rhonda says.

"I was singing it and a chill just came over me and I knew it was him," she said. "I get through because I know he's in a better place now."
 
#35
Since I was in Chicago at the time, I shoulda tried to visit him. He's a cool dude, and he was at Northwestern, but I doubt they would've let us in. And I don't think I would've gone anyways. I've never seen a person dying before.
 

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