/ Stars that died in 2023

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Roderick Anthony Burton II AKA Dolla died he was 21

Roderick Anthony Burton II better known by his stage name Dolla, died he was 21, Dolla was an American model and rapper. Burton began his music career in 2000 with rap group Da Razkalz Cru under the stage name Bucklyte. The group quickly disbanded, so Burton worked as a model for the Sean John clothing line. In 2007, Burton signed to Akon's Konvict Muzik label and used the stage name Dolla for his releases. Dolla released three singles from 2007 to 2009. One of them, "Who the Fuck is That?" (featuring T-Pain), charted on the Billboard Hot 100. On May 18, 2009, Dolla was shot to death in Beverly Hills, and Aubrey Louis Berry was arrested for his murder.


(November 25, 1987 – May 18, 2009)

Burton was born 11/25/87 in Chicago and grew up in Los Angeles and Atlanta.[1] He was a member of the rap group, Da Razkalz Cru, going by the name Bucklyte who signed with Elektra Records in 2003 and released the single "So Fly".[2] "So Fly" did not bring the success that was desired and the group was dropped from the label soon after. That same year, he met Akon and P. Diddy, the latter of whom hired Burton as a model for his Sean John line of clothes; Burton appeared on billboards for the clothing line and modeled across the United States.[2] Under the stage name Dolla, Burton signed to Akon's Konvict Muzik label in May 2007.[3]
He made his debut with the single "Who the Fuck Is That?",
Who the Fuck is That Dolla Ft T.pain - More amazing video clips are a click awaywhich was his biggest hit, reaching #42 on the Billboard Hot 100; the edited version substituted the profanity with "heck".[2] His song, "Feelin' Myself", is featured on the Step Up soundtrack and was a "bite" of the Mac Dre song of the same name.[4] He followed his debut single up with a second single "I'm Fucked Up" in the summer of 2008. A third single, entitled "Make a Toast", produced by General Geezy and featuring T-Pain and Tay Dizm, was then officially released on November 4, 2008. It has peaked at #42 on the Billboard R&B chart.[5]


Dolla flew to Los Angeles to record the rest of his debut album, and he was shot to death on May 18, 2009 at approximately 3:10 pm. Along with his friend DJ Shabbazz, he was waiting in the Beverly Center's VIP valet parking and auto detailing lounge area behind P. F. Chang's China Bistro.[6] Later that evening, an armed 23-year-old male, Aubrey Louis Berry, was detained at the Los Angeles International Airport. Witnesses say he surrendered without a struggle. His bail was set at $5 million dollars because he was determined to be a flight risk.[7] Berry claimed self-defense, but Dolla's family disputed that; Burton family spokesman Dennis Byron stated that Berry traveled from Atlanta to Los Angeles with a firearm that was not licensed for use in California.[8] On May 22, Berry was charged with murder and assault, although he pleaded not guilty.[9]
Dolla's funeral was held May 23 in the Word of Faith Love Center in the East Point neighborhood of Atlanta.[10] The funeral was held in a Muslim style, known as Janazah.[11] He was buried in Atlanta's Westview Cemetery.[12] Singer T-Pain recently paid homage to the slain rapper by having a mural of Dolla painted on the hood of his vintage car.[13] Additionally, a YouTube video using unreleased Dolla song "Georgia Nights" has been made as a tribute to him.[14]

Norman E. Brinker died he was 78




Norman E. Brinker has died he was 78. Brinker was the founder of Brinker International, one of the largest restaurant holding companies in North America. A prominent restaurateur, Brinker has also led such companies as Jack in the Box, Steak and Ale, Bennigan's, Burger King, and Chili's.
(1931-2009)
After Brinker had graduated from college, he took a job with a small chain of diners in San Diego, California named Oscar's. At the time, Oscars' owner Bob Peterson had also opened a second chain in the area called Jack-in-the-Box; while Brinker succeed in his position, he was eventually drawn to Peterson's growing fast food business. It was at Jack-in-the-Box that Brinker flourished, helping the business expand across the Southwestern United States. Within two years of moving over to the company, he had been elevated to the position of President of the company and amassed a 20% stake in the company. Brinker developed a close professional relationship with Peterson, taking many of his business philosophies to heart and developing the food service philosophy that he attempted to follow throughout his career. Brinker said of Peterson that "Bob Peterson was really my mentor. Everything we do here today started back then. Letting ideas rise from below, treating people right -- all of that."[1]
When Jack-in-the-Box went public in the early 1960's, Brinker sold his interest in the company and moved to Dallas, Texas with the intent to open a new business. His first endeavor was a coffee shop he named after himself, Brinks. The concept was to create a restaurant that catered to the 25-44 year-old demographic, a group that was still in the early stages of developing a taste for inexpensive fast food. The shop proved successful, and he sold it two years later. Using the proceeds from the sale, he opened a new chain in 1966 with the intent to provide an affordable steak dinner to the middle class. He called his new concept Steak & Ale.[1]
With the Steak & Ale chain, Brinker originated the concept of the modern casual dinning restaurant that is now ubiquitous in the marketplace. One of the innovations that Brinker introduced with Steak & Ale was the salad bar. Besides the novel concept of having customers leave their tables to serve themselves from a salad buffet, the Dallas-based chain also created the now common stock introduction of "Hi, my name is Dirk, and I'll be your waiter tonight."[2] These ideas were part of an over all plan to establish a restaurant that was more relaxed with a more casual atmosphere. Over the next ten years, he went on to establish a niche industry that was situated between the fast food and higher priced gourmet segments of the restaurant field. By 1976 he had taken the chain had to 109 restaurants, and had successfully introduced the American consumer to the concept of the chain restaurant. He sold then his company to Pillsbury and assumed a position in the company's restaurant division.[3]
As a part of the acquisition, Brinker was given the position executive vice president of Pillsbury's restaurant operations as well as a seat on the company's board of directors.[4] During his tenure as executive VP, Brinker over saw the creation of the company's Bennigan's chain. Bennigan's was the first in a new concept of restaurants intended to attract single people, an idea that became known by the term "fern bar".[3] As his status in Pillsbury grew, Brinker was asked to take over the operations of its main fast food chain, Burger King.
By the early 1980s, Burger King's sales had begun to fade. Brinker was tasked with turning the brand around and strengthening its position aagainst its main rival, McDonald's. One of his first acts was to innate advertising plan emphasizing that claimed Burger Kings flame broiled burgers were better and larger than its rival's. The program, arguably the first attack ads on a food chain by a competitor, was controversial in that prior to it fast food ads only made allusions to the competition in a vague manner, never mentioning them by name. McDonald's sued Burger King, their ad agency at the time the J. Walter Thompson Company and Ms. Gellar. The suit was settled the following year on undisclosed terms.[5] Despite the controversy, the ad plan boosted same store-sales when sales took off. The whole situation at the time became known as the Burger Wars.[1]
He worked for the company in this capacity until 1982 when he was promoted to president of Pillsbury's foodservice division. His new role expanded his oversight to include the company's other chains including Burger King, Quik-Wok and Poppin Fresh.[4] However his new position was short lived, in 1984 he left the company to take over a small, Dallas-based gourmet burger chain called Chili's.


Norman Brinker was born on June 3, 1931 in Denver, Colorado, as an only child. His parents, Kathryn and Eugene Brinker, later moved to a 10-acre (40,000 m2) farm in Roswell, New Mexico. As a child Norman took on odd jobs to supplement the family's modest income, creating a rabbit farm at the age of 10, managing a "120-mile-long" paper route and buying and selling horses to make ends meet for the family. In high school he attended the New Mexico Military Institute. He later served in the Navy, which brought him to San Diego, California. He later attended San Diego State University (SDSU) and graduated in 1957 at the age of 26. An avid and talented polo enthusiast, in 1952 Brinker was a member of the Olympic Equestrian team, competing in the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki, Finland and later competed in the 1954 pentathlon competition at the world championships in Budapest[6][7]
In June 1955 Norman married tennis player Maureen Connolly, also known as "Little Mo". The couple shared a passion for horses. Her career ended due to a freak accident on a horse at the age of 18. The couple had two daughters, Cindy Brinker (Simmons), who was born in 1957, and Brenda Brinker (Bottum), who was born in 1959. Maureen died at the age of 34 on June 21, 1969, after a 3-year-long battle with ovarian cancer.[8] The relationship between Norman and Maureen was depicted in a 1978 telefilm, Little Mo, which starred Glynnis O'Connor as Maureen, Mark Harmon as Norman, and Anne Baxter as Maureen's mother.[9]
Brinker had a brief second marriage to a woman named Margaret, whom he divorced in 1976. They had 2 children together Christina and Mark.
On 14 February 1981 Norman married a third time, to Nancy Brinker (nee Nancy Goodman). The marriage provided Nancy with funding and an immediate network of financial and political support for the foundation dedicated to the memory of Nancy's sister Susan G. Komen, which became the Susan G. Komen for the Cure and related Komen Race for the Cure. They have one son, Eric Brinker.[10] The couple were active Bush Pioneers, wealthy donors who provided $100,000 or more of financial support for George W. Bush's presidential ambitions.[11]
On January 22, 1993, Norman was seriously injured during a polo match in a high speed collision with another rider at the West Palm Beach Polo and Hunt Club in West Palm Beach, Florida.[11] Suffering serious head injuries and in what was anticipated to be a prolonged coma, three days after the accident Norman was succeeded by Ron A. McDougall as chief executive officer of Brinker International; despite his retirement,Brinker retained the title of Chairman Emeritus.[4] Norman and Nancy subsequently divorced some years after the accident, and Nancy moved on to serve as the U.S. ambassador to Hungary early in the George W. Bush administration from 2001 to 2003.
In March 2003 Norman married his fourth wife, Toni Chapman.
He died on June 9, 2009 from aspiration pneumonia while on vacation in Colorado.[3]

Kenny Rankin died he was 69

Kenny Rankin died he was an American pop and jazz singer and songwriter from the Washington Heights neighborhood of New York City, New York.
(Los Angeles, February 10, 1940 - June 7, 2009)
Rankin appeared on The Tonight Show more than twenty times. Host Johnny Carson was so impressed by him that he wrote the liner notes to Rankin's 1967 debut album Mind Dusters, which featured the single "Peaceful." Helen Reddy would reach #2 Adult Contemporary and #12 Pop in 1973 with a cover of it, released as her follow-up single to "I Am Woman". Georgie Fame also had a hit with this song in 1969, his only songwriting credit to hit the British charts reaching number sixteen and spending 9 weeks on the chart.[1]
Rankin was raised in New York and was introduced to music by his mother who sang at home and for friends. Early in his career he worked as a singer-songwriter, and developed a considerable following during the 70s with a steady flow of albums, three of which broke into the Top 100 of the Billboard Album Chart. His liking for jazz was evident from an early age but the times were such that in order to survive his career had to take a more pop-oriented course. By the 90s, however, he was able to angle his repertoire to accommodate his own musical preferences and to please a new audience while still keeping faith with the faithful. Rankin's warm singing style and his soft, nylon-stringed guitar sound might suggest an artist more attuned to the supper-club circuit than the jazz arena, but his work contains many touches that appeal to the jazz audience.
His accompanists might include Alan Broadbent, Mike Wofford and Bill Watrous, and on such occasions the mood slips easily into a jazz groove. His compositions have been performed by artists such as Mel Tormé and Carmen McRae, while Stan Getz said of him that he was "a horn with a heartbeat". Stephen Bishop had a major hit in 1977 with his song "On and On", which was a #11 hit in the U.S. Rankin is deeply interested in Brazilian music and his Here In My Heart, on which he used jazz guests including Michael Brecker and Ernie Watts, was recorded mostly in Rio De Janeiro. More contemporary songs were given an airing following his move to Verve Records, including the Beatles' "I've Just Seen A Face" and Leon Russell's magnificent "A Song For You".
Rankin's own unique gift for reworking classic songs such as The Beatles' "Blackbird," which he recorded for his Silver Morning album, so impressed Paul McCartney that he asked Rankin to perform his interpretation of the song when McCartney and John Lennon were inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame.
Rankin died in Los Angeles from lung cancer on June 7, 2009. He was 69 years old.[2]

Kenny Rankin: Haven't We Met


Kenny Rankin-Catfish


Blackbird - Kenny Rankin


Kenny Rankin - Why Do Fools Fall In Love?

Jeff Hanson died he was 31

Jeff Hanson died he was 31. Hanson was a singer-songwriter, guitarist, and multi-instrumentalist whose voice was described in a 2005 Paste review as an "angelic falsetto, a cross between Alison Krauss and Art Garfunkel that's often (understandably) mistaken for a female contralto."
(1978 – June 5, 2009)
Hanson was born Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He started learning guitar at four years old and by the age of 13 formed the emo/indie rock band M.I.J. Seven years later the band released a 7", an EP and a full album on Caulfield Records.
He began a solo career in 2003 and was signed to Kill Rock Stars Records after sending in an unsolicited demo tape. He has since released three albums for the label, Son in 2003 and Jeff Hanson in 2005. His third album for Kill Rock Stars titled Madam Owl was released on August 19 2008. Hanson's solo albums were recorded at Presto! Recording Studios.
Since 1996 Hanson resided in Minneapolis-St. Paul.
Hanson was found dead on June 5, 2009 in his St. Paul apartment into which he had recently moved. The cause was a possible fall or other accident.[1]

Monday, June 8, 2009

Rajeev Motwani died he was 47


Rajeev Motwani died he was 47. Motwani was a professor of Computer Science at Stanford University whose research focused on theoretical computer science. He was an early advisor and supporter of companies including Google and PayPal, and a special advisor to Sequoia Capital. He was a winner of the Gödel Prize in 2001.
Rajeev Motwani was born in Jammu & Kashmir. His father was in the Indian Army. He has two brothers. As a child, inspired by luminaries like Gauss, he wanted to become a mathematician.
(March 26, 1962 – June 5, 2009)

He went to St Columba's School, New Delhi. He completed his B.Tech in Computer Science from IIT Kanpur in 1983 and got his Ph.D. in Computer Science from U.C. Berkeley in 1988.

Motwani joined Stanford soon after U.C. Berkeley. Motwani was one of the co-authors (with Larry Page and Sergey Brin, and Terry Winograd) of an influential early paper on the PageRank algorithm, the basis for Google's search techniques. He also co-authored another seminal search paper What Can You Do With A Web In Your Pocket with those same authors.[1]
He was also an author of two widely-used theoretical computer science textbooks, Randomized Algorithms (Cambridge University Press 1995, ISBN 978-0521474658, with Prabhakar Raghavan) and Introduction to Automata Theory, Languages, and Computation (2nd ed., Addison-Wesley, 2000, with John Hopcroft and Jeffrey Ullman).
Prior to his involvement with Google, Motwani founded the Mining Data at Stanford project (MIDAS), an umbrella organization for several groups looking into new and innovative data management concepts. His research included data privacy, web search, robotics, and computational drug design.
He was an avid angel investor and had funded a number of successful startups to emerge from Stanford, including Google. He sat on the boards of Google, Kaboodle, Mimosa Systems, Adchemy, Baynote, Vuclip, NeoPath Networks (acquired by Cisco Systems in 2007), Tapulous and Stanford Student Enterprises among others. He was also active in the Business Association of Stanford Entrepeneurial Students (BASES).[2][3][4]
He was a winner of the Gödel Prize in 2001 for his work on the PCP theorem and its applications to hardness of approximation.[5][6]
He served on the editorial boards of SIAM Journal on Computing, Journal of Computer and System Sciences, ACM Transactions on Knowledge Discovery from Data, and IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering.


Motwani, and his wife Asha Jadeja, had two daughters named Naitri and Anya.[7]
Motwani was found dead in his pool in the backyard in his Atherton home on June 5, 2009, after apparently falling in, but the cause of death is not certain. He could not swim, but was planning on taking lessons, according to his friends.[8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18]

Shih Kien died he was 96






Shih Kien was a veteran Chinese actor from Hong Kong. He is sometimes credited as Shek Kin (Cantonese pronunciation) or Kien Shih (in the Western order).
Shih starred in many of the early Hong Kong Cantonese Wuxia films. His name has become synonymous with "villainy" as he played the roles of villains most of the time. In Hong Kong, there is a slang expression for comparing one's evil deeds with Shih Kien's, despite the fact that those deeds were committed by the villains he played. Shih was well-respected within the Hong Kong motion picture industry and recognised as a kind and passionate person.



(January 1913 - 3 June 2009)
Shih's works dated back to the black and white Wuxia era. He played the roles of villains in almost all of the Wuxia classic films of that time, such as Yu Lai Shan Jeung (1964) and Luk Ji Kam Mo (1965). Later in his career, he took on a comedic role with Jackie Chan in The Young Master. Shih Kien also played dramatic roles in non-Wuxia films as well, such as Hong Kong 1941.
Shih Kien is probably best known to Western audiences for his role as the villain Han in Bruce Lee's 1973 martial arts epic Enter the Dragon. Shih was trained at the Shanghai Chin Woo Association in martial arts. He received instructor certification in a number of styles, including Eagle Claw and Choy Lay Fut. His students included Lee Koon Hung, grandmaster of Choy Lay Fut.
Shih Kien appeared in the 2003 documentary Chop Socky: Cinema Hong Kong at the age of 90.
Kien died of kidney failure on June 3, 2009 at the age of 96.[1][2] At the time of his death, Shih was believed to be one of the oldest living successful actors in China. [

Thursday, June 4, 2009

David Carradine died he was 73

David Carradine died he was 73. Carradine, 2][3] was an American actor, best known for his work in the 1970s television series Kung Fu and more recently in the movie Kill Bill. He appeared in more than 100 feature films[4] and was nominated four times for a Golden Globe Award.[5]
December 8, 1936 – June 3, 2009



Carradine was born in Hollywood, California, the son of Ardanelle Abigail (née McCool) (25 January 1911 - 26 January 1989)[6] and noted American actor John Carradine.[7] He was the brother of Bruce Carradine and half-brother of Keith and Robert Carradine, as well as the uncle of Ever Carradine and Martha Plimpton. Carradine had Irish, English, Scottish, Welsh, German, Spanish, Italian, Ukrainian and Cherokee ancestry.[8] Carradine attended Oakland Junior College[1] and later studied drama at San Francisco State College[1] before working as an actor on stage and in television and cinema. He changed his given name to David after starting his career.

Carradine was known for his role as Kwai Chang Caine in the 1970s television series Kung Fu; he starred in the 1990s spinoff Kung Fu: The Legend Continues as the grandson of his original character.

In movies, he starred as 'Big' Bill Shelly in Martin Scorsese's Boxcar Bertha (1972), folksinger Woody Guthrie in Bound for Glory (1976), Abel Rosenberg in Ingmar Bergman's The Serpent's Egg (1977), and as Bill in Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill, Vols. 1 & 2 (2003, 2004, respectively).
Other notable roles included the lead in Shane (the 1966 television series based upon the 1949 novel of the same name) and a gunslinger in Taggart, a 1964 western film based on a novel by Louis L'Amour. He also starred in the Broadway version of the play The Royal Hunt of the Sun in 1965. More recently, he portrayed Tempus, a powerful demon with the ability to manipulate time, on the popular television series Charmed, as well as Conrad in the television series Alias. Carradine twice played a supernatural being with the power to control time: "Tempus" on Charmed and "Clockwork" on Danny Phantom.
Carradine appeared in an episode of the Disney Channel series Lizzie McGuire (in which his half-brother Robert was a series regular), and also provided his voice for the King of the Hill episode, Returning Japanese, in which he voiced the character of Hank's Japanese half-brother. He provided the voice for Lo Pei, the ancient warrior who was responsible for Shendu's petrification in the animated series Jackie Chan Adventures.
Carradine produced and starred in several exercise videos teaching the martial arts of Tai chi and Qi Gong. Carradine actually had no knowledge of martial arts prior to starring in the series Kung Fu, but developed an interest in it after this experience and became an avid practitioner.
Carradine appeared as the host of Wild West Tech on the History Channel, taking over the duties from his brother Keith. He narrated the PBS anthropology series "Faces of Culture". In 2006, he became the spokesman for Yellowbook, a publisher of independent telephone directories in the United States. He was also the TV spokesperson for Lipton[9] ("This ain't no sippin' tea"), in a memorable commercial where he paid homage not only to Kung Fu, but also to the Three Stooges.
Carradine also appeared in the music video for "Minus You" by the southern California band Chapel of Thieves, which was co-directed by the YouTube personality Boh3m3. He also worked with the Jonas Brothers in their video Burnin' Up, playing a Kung Fu Master, and planned to work with Miley Cyrus. In 2009, he played a 100 year-old Chinese gangster in Crank: High Voltage.

Carradine was married five times and had two daughters, Calista Miranda and Kansas.[1] Each of his first four marriages ended in divorce. On December 26, 2004, he married Annie[1] at the seaside Malibu home of his friend, Michael Madsen. The ceremony was performed by his attorney and his wife's longtime friend, Vicki Roberts. The marriage lasted until Carradine died.

On June 4, 2009, Carradine was found dead in his room at the Swissotel Nai Lert Park Hotel on Wireless Road, near Sukhumwit, in central Bangkok, Thailand.[2][3] The initial police report indicated that Carradine had committed suicide by hanging himself; he was found by a hotel maid sitting in a wardrobe with a cord around his neck and body.[3][4] Carradine was in Bangkok to shoot his latest movie, Stretch, but the film crew were aware of his absence when they went to dine out at a restaurant on June 3.[2]

Dickey Betts died he was 80

Early Career Forrest Richard Betts was also known as Dickey Betts Betts collaborated with  Duane Allman , introducing melodic twin guitar ha...