Do Famous People Really Die In Groups Of Three?
I was thinking of this just now as I read that Farah Fawcett died and Ed McMahon died recently. Just now, I got a CNN bulletin that Michael Jackson has been rushed to the hospital and paramedics performed CPR on him. No word on his condition right now but it makes me wonder about that myth that famous people die in threes. I’m adding a blurb from www.associatedcontent.com; if Michael Jackson dies it really gets spooky:
By Anthony Caroto
When the first famous person dies, we immediately grab for the quick talking point-
“You know…. famous people die in three’s.”
“Yeah, I’ve heard that before.”
And so begins your thought process for information regarding the most recent string of deaths. It’s standard water-cooler subject matter.
We’ve been conditioned to assume that famous people die in three’s. It’s just one of those things that we force into being fact. If the triptych isn’t obvious, then we search for a third. A-list, B-list… this coincidence has all-access.
We’re obsessed with knowing little factoids about famous people. Any basic cable subscription can confirm this. Check your local listings.
Leni Reifenstahl, John Ritter, Johnny Cash
I wonder if that third person knew the other two people had died? Was Johnny Cash like “Oh man, poor John Ritter. He was awesome on Three’s Company.”
Dudley Moore, Milton Berle, Billy Wilder
Don Knotts, Darren McGavin, Dennis Weaver
Reggie White, Susan Sontag, Jerry Orbach
Ronald Reagan, Ray Charles, Robert Quine
Johnny Cochran, Terry Schiavo, Pope John Paul II
Saddam Hussein, Gerald Ford, James Brown
>>>>>
My end to this post is that CNN just sent another bulletin saying Michael Jackson is in a coma after suffering a heart attack… I guess I shouldn’t jump the gun, but….. I’ll leave it at that.
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