Anna Nicole Smith is Dead.
Just last night I watched Anna and Howard on some news show as they interviewed the both of them about Daniel’s death. At one point they even questioned Howard if he had anything directly to do with her son’s death.
Now, I turn on CNN today and what do I see?
“Anna Nicole Smith, dead at 39.”
There is a lot of speculation on whether or not Howard K. Stern (not to be confused with the shock jock radio icon) had anything to do with these deaths. He definitely has a lot to profit by their deaths. I would not be surprised if in the coming months we see him on trial and possibly found guilty.
Anyway… I will definitely miss her gigantic breasts, gorgeously full-framed figure, and slightly eccentric, nay, wacko personality.
R.I.P. Anna.
LateBlt said,
February 11, 2007 @ 5:01 am
About 10 years ago, when Diana died in France, it was a shock, and many people–myself included–were a little saddened by the event. It was not so much that she held a special place in my heart; despite her charity work, the woman was, by all accounts, rather bonkers, and seemed to deserve little more acclaim than anyone else doing the same work but without the same publicity. The shock was simply that she was so young; that such a famous person, not suffering from any serious ilness, could suddenly be taken away at such a young, vibrant age is a brutal reminder to all of us just how easily life’s fragile flame may be extinguished.
So it is too with ANS. I honestly have never seen this woman in any actual production; I know she had some program which could be viewed on teh teevee bawx, but I saw it exactly 0 times. I know she was in a handful of movies, but I saw none of them. (Actually, IMDB claims she was in Naked Gun 33.3, so I guess I have seen her in something, but I honestly cannot remember her role in that movie, as I saw it approximately 4,000 years ago.) I suspect the same is true of many others. However, I had a certain fondness for her, simply because she was charming. She had an almost absurdly brash style; there is something to be said for people who live their lives without normal concern for whether the things they do will be seen as “proper” or not. Yet she was not obnoxious or catty; in public, she always seemed cheerful and polite. And, yes, the fact that she had uncommonly large breastseses helped.
But most of all, her death is a shock simply because it was so unexpected. That a woman still in the prime of her life could die so quickly, for reasons which have STILL not been determined even after days of medical examinations, is jarring no matter how you look at it. And this not long after the ridiculously accidental death of her son due to an unfortunate mixture of antidepressants. Truly, ANS’ life was one marked by tragedy, trial, and drama, yet through it all she always seemed to find joy in simply being alive. I wouldn’t count myself among her die-hard fans, but I think I speak for all of America when I say that she was, at times, quite entertaining. She’ll be missed.