Friday, March 7, 2014

How long will Taylor Lautner be filming in Pittsburgh?




Aye


And is he still there????


Answer
http://www.taylorlautnerupdate.com is a Taylor Lautner fansite updated 24/7 with the latest Taylor news, pictures, videos & more. They are always updating about Taylor Lautner filming in Pittsburgh..and filming locations etc.

They will be filming thorugh September. Make sure to continue checking the site for further updates.

Hope you like the site as much as I do :) its so helpful

Who was that news anchor who shot himself in the head on the air?




hot carl s


I think it was back in the 70s.


Answer
Christine Chubbuck (August 24, 1944 - July 15, 1974) was an American television news reporter who committed suicide during a live television broadcast on July 15, 1974.

Born in Hudson, Ohio, Christine Chubbuck attended the Laurel School for Girls in nearby Shaker Heights. During her years at Laurel, she started a small tongue-in-cheek group called the "Dateless Wonder Club." She attended Miami University of Ohio for one year, majoring in theatre arts, then attended Endicott Junior College in Beverly, Mass. She earned a degree in broadcasting at Boston University in 1965. She worked for WVIZ in Cleveland, Ohio for a year in 1966-67. She attended a summer workshop in radio and television at New York University in 1967.

Also in 1967, she worked for a few months for public television stations in Pittsburgh and Canton, Ohio. Chubbuck spent four years as a hospital computer operator in Sarasota and two years with a cable television firm in Sarasota. Immediately prior to joining WXLT, she worked in the traffic department of WTOG in St. Petersburg, Florida.

Several years before her death, Chubbuck had moved into the family's summer cottage on Siesta Key, Florida - the Washington Post would later report that her painted bedroom and canopy bed looked like a young teenager's. After the divorce of Christine's parents, her mother Peg and younger brother Greg came to live in the Florida home. When Greg left, her elder brother Timothy moved in. She had a close relationship with her family, describing her mother and Greg as her closest friends.

Chubbuck volunteered at Sarasota Memorial Hospital, giving puppet shows to developmentally disabled children, and occasionally incorporated the homemade puppets into her WXLT-TV talk show. WXLT-TV owner Bob Nelson had initially hired Chubbuck as a reporter, but later gave her a community affairs talk show, "Suncoast Digest," which ran in the morning after the national feed of The PTL Club. Production Manager Gordon J. Acker described Chubbuck's new show to a local paper: "It will feature local people and local activities. It will give attention, for instance, to the storefront organizations that are concerned with alcoholics, drug users, and other 'lost' segments of the community." Page five of the article showed a smiling Chubbuck posed with an ABC camera.

Chubbuck took her position seriously, inviting local Sarasota-Bradenton officials to discuss matters of interest to the growing beach community. After her death, the Sarasota Herald-Tribune reported that Chubbuck had been nominated for a Forestry and Conservation Recognition Award by the Bradenton district office of the Florida Division of Forestry. She was considered a "strong contender" by Mike Keel, district forester, who had been scheduled to appear as a guest on Ms. Chubbuck's show the morning of her suicide, but had cancelled due to the birth of his son.

Chubbuck spoke to her family at length about her struggles with depression and suicide, though did not inform them of her specific intent beforehand. She had attempted to overdose on medication in 1970, and frequently made reference to the event. She had also been seeing a psychiatrist up until several weeks before her death. Chubbuck's mother chose not to tell station management of her daughter's suicidal tendencies because she feared that she would be fired as a result.

Her lack of relationships was generally considered to be the impetus for her depression; her mother later summarized that "her suicide was simply because her personal life was not enough". She lamented to co-workers that her 30th birthday was approaching and she was still a virgin who had never been on more than two dates with a man. Her brother Greg remembers several boyfriends she had before her move to Sarasota, though agrees she had had trouble connecting socially in the beach resort town. He ascribed her presenting herself as "dateless" to her ongoing depressive self-deprecation.

Chubbuck had had her right ovary removed in an operation the year before, and had been told that if she wasn't pregnant within a year, it was unlikely she would ever be able to conceive. Chubbuck had an unrequited crush on co-worker George Peter Ryan, baked him a cake for his birthday, and sought his romantic attention, only to find out that he was already involved with sports reporter Andrea Kirby. Kirby had been the co-worker closest to Chubbuck, but was offered a new job in Baltimore, which had further depressed Chubbuck.

Chubbuck's lack of a romantic partner was considered a tangent of her desperate need to have close friends, though co-workers said that she tended to be brusque and defensive whenever they made friendly gestures towards her. She was self-deprecating, criticizing herself constantly and rejecting any compliments she was given. She was fond of word play and puns
Three weeks before her suicide she had asked the station's news director if she could do a news piece on suicide. After getting her pitch approved she visited the local sheriff's department to discuss with an officer methods of suicide. In the interview, an officer told her that one of the most efficient ways was to use a .38 caliber revolver with wadcutter target bullets to shoot oneself in the back of the head rather than in the temple.

A week before her suicide she told Rob Smith, the night news editor, that she had bought a gun and joked about killing herself on air. Smith later told the Washington Post that he had chided her for the comment.

On July 12th, she had an argument with news director Mike Simmons after he cut one of her stories to cover a shoot-out instead. Robert Nelson, the station owner, had tried to convince staff to concentrate on "blood and guts".

The morning of July 15, Chubbuck confused co-workers by claiming that she had to read a newscast to open her program Suncoast Digest, something she had never done before. That morning's talk show guest waited across the studio while she sat at the news anchor's desk. Her news copy actually contained a speculative report of her impending suicide, wherein she conjectured she would be declared dead eleven hours later. She placed a .38 revolver in her bag of puppets and put it beneath her desk.

During the first eight minutes of her program, Chubbuck covered three national news stories and then a local restaurant shooting from the day before. The restaurant was the Beef and Bottle Restaurant at the Sarasota-Bradenton Airport on U.S. 41. The filmreel of the restaurant shooting had jammed and wouldn't run, so Christine shrugged it off and said:

"In keeping with Channel 40's policy of bringing you the latest in blood and guts, and in living color, you are going to see another first: an attempted suicide."

She drew out the revolver and shot herself behind her right ear. Christine fell forward violently and the technical director faded slowly to black. Camerawoman Jean Reed later recalled that she thought it had been an elaborate prank, and it wasn't until she saw Chubbuck's twitching body that she realized it was genuine.

The station quickly ran a standard Public Service tape and then a movie. Some television viewers had phoned 9-1-1, while others phoned the station to enquire if the shooting was faked.

Chubbuck was taken to Sarasota Memorial Hospital and was pronounced dead 14 hours later. Upon receiving the news, a WXLT staffer released the information to other stations using Chubbuck's copy, as she left it for just that purpose. For a time, WXLT aired reruns of the TV series Gentle Ben in place of Chubbuck's program.

Chubbuck was cremated. The funeral ceremony was held on the beach where her ashes were scattered into the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 120 people attended, including local officials who had appeared on her show, and one attendee in a bikini. Three songs by Christine's favorite singer, Roberta Flack, were played. Presbyterian minister Thomas Beason delivered the eulogy, stating that "We suffer at our sense of loss, we are frightened by her rage, we are guilty in the face of her rejection, we are hurt by her choice of isolation and we are confused by her message."

All three national television networks reported her death.

Christine's family brought an injunction against WXLT to prevent the release of the 2" quad videotape of her suicide. The Sarasota Sheriff's Department file lists a copy of the tape seized as evidence and later released to Christine's family along with her possessions.




Powered by Yahoo! Answers

No comments:

Post a Comment