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Post by hotman637 on Nov 6, 2014 12:43:14 GMT -5
Tara brown looks a lot like the current Keith Richards.
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Post by LOVELYRITA on Nov 6, 2014 20:15:01 GMT -5
Tara brown looks a lot like the current Keith Richards. I don't see it....
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Post by B on Nov 12, 2014 19:27:19 GMT -5
Paulumbo, LB and I were discussing a verse from "You Can't Always Get What You Want" not too long ago, but here it is again: (lyrics commentary from Letter B)"I went down to the Chelsea drugstore To get your prescription filled I was standing in line with Mr. Jimmy (JAMES Paul McCartney)And man, did he look pretty ill We decided that we would have a soda My favorite flavor, cherry red I sung my song to Mr. JimmyYeah, and he said one word to me, and that was "dead" I said to him..." You're sort of right, though, in that I don't think there are too many Stones songs that address PID/PWR. I think that is down to Jagger being uptight, and shrewd enough to not give too much away. Jimmy Hutmaker en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jimmy_Hutmaker"Jimmy Hutmaker (April 18, 1932 – October 3, 2007), also known as " Mister Jimmy", was a celebrity in Excelsior, Minnesota until his death on October 3, 2007. Life Hutmaker was born April 18,in 1932 in New Germany, Minnesota and moved with his family to Excelsior, Minnesota as a teenager. Despite unspecified developmental disabilities, Hutmaker had an outgoing demeanor and an engaging personality and was given the honorary title of "roving ambassador" for the city of Excelsior. It was in this capacity that Hutmaker spent his days and nights wandering the streets of the city, chewing on a cigar, mumbling to himself, and greeting locals by name. Someone paid for business cards with this title for Mister Jimmy, and he carried them for the rest of his life. It is reported that he knew most Excelsior natives and their children by name, and also knew what churches they attended and their family history. Local businesspeople provided for Hutmaker's needs, providing free meals and welcoming him in from the elements year round. However he was not a vagrant; he lived in his family home for most of his life, and until 2004 was cared for by his brother Ralph. After Ralph's death the burden of Jimmy's care was picked up by unrelated townspeople. He needed an escort to get out of the Excelsior nursing home he lived in, and residents of Excelsior stepped in and took him out daily. Stones legend According to legend, it was in his capacity as town ambassador that Hutmaker attended a concert by the Rolling Stones at the Danceland Ballroom at Excelsior Amusement Park in 1964. The next day Mick Jagger was having a prescription filled at Bacon's Drugstore when he encountered Jimmy again. Jimmy complained to Jagger that he had ordered a Cherry Coke but received a regular Coca Cola instead, then dismissed his own complaint, saying "You can't always get what you want." Five years later, on their 1969 album Let It Bleed, the Stones released a song titled "You Can't Always Get What You Want" - and references to a drugstore, a cherry soda, a prescription, and "Mr Jimmy" (Hutmaker's nickname around town) all appear in the song. It is also told that Mr. Jimmy just so happened to be ill, as it is said in the song. A shorter version of the song was released as the "B" side of "Honky Tonk Women" in 1969, and it was named as the 100th greatest song of all time by Rolling Stone magazine in its 2004 "500 Greatest Songs of All Time." Mister Jimmy's business cards had the lyrics to the song printed on their back sides. "
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Post by astro4 on Dec 29, 2014 14:28:50 GMT -5
I'd like to agree with the foregoing in-depth analyis, especialy by Cherilyn and Voodooguru, and am inspired to examine this topic by Tina's excellent new thread on Plastic Macca plasticmacca.blogspot.co.uk/ - where her main argument is that the one picture of the car that appears in British newspapers does not look as if it had crashed into anything, but rather looks 'hammered' in its middle part to smash it up. My account starts with the Evening Standard from that same day December 18th. I have not yet come across a report saying the lights had changed or that he drove though a red light. If some sort of conspiracy is going on - a potential upper-crust millionaire latching onto the English Underground scene in Swinging London , a livid wife claiming her children have been captured, yes we can all think of motives - then we expect to be able to recognise it by an incoherent narrative, one which keeps changing. Evening Standard 18 December 1966 The death happened at the Junction of Redcliffe Gds and Redcliffe Sq. Suki Poitier says Tara was 'forced to swerve to miss a white Volvo..so that he caught the main force of the impact rather than her.' - no car is mentioned coming out from a side road, although that could be the white Volvo. The car 'swerved suddenly,' in order to rescue Ms Poitier. We'd all like to see the front of the car, with its right-hand side smashed in to kill the driver but its left hand side unharmed, because Ms Poitier suffered only from shock. But, the public are not shown this. Only one picture appears in the papers, which means that no journalist was there, they were just given the picture. The initial story is hardly credible. He's driving on the left-hand side of the road, then suddenly a Volvo is in front of him, such that his left-hand side is in danger of a crash impact, so he would have to swerve to the right to avoid that. Mail 19th December The car leaves Earl's Court shortly before 1 am and seven minutes later crashed into 'a stationary van.' Ms Potier 'told her father that Mr. Browne swerved so that the impact would come on his side of the car,' because 'a Volkswagen pulled out of a side-street but did not stop.' Now its looking as if that VW (a 'Beetle' maybe?) caused him to swerve right across the road and impact the parked van on the other side of the road. The police take away a diary from the car, and court papers. A huge court case is going on, due to be heard on that day the 18th, with family having arrived from Dublin the night before, over Tara's wife Noreen's claim that her children had been taken from her. She had been searching in Ireland for them in vain. So after the car-crash his diary is obtained giving their whereabouts, i.e she can now get her kids back. Motive ... The Guardian 5 January 1967At the Inquest, Ms Poitier told how they had been driving 'not very fast' when 'a large low car had come quickly across the road'. It has now changed from a VW to a 'large low car,' and it caused him to 'hit something.' This is incredibly vague. If he had hit the 'large, low, car' which suddenly emerged we would understand - but no, that is not impacted, and it vanishes from the scene. The pathologist said Mr Browne had died from 'head injuries.' That seems unusual for a car-crash. The Irish Times had a bit more on the Inquest - A Mr James Murray was there, and testified: 'When I reached the car I was surprised to find anyone in it, but I saw Tara Browne, lying in the driver's seat severely injured' - which doesn't sound as if Ms Potier was present. Fictional Wikipedia StoryThe Wiki story differs from these news reports in 3 respects: 1. It claims he 'failed to see traffic lights' - no hint of this in papers. 2. He hit a 'parked lorry' - never mentioned. 3. He was travelling 'up to 170 km/h' - whereas Ms Potier testified that they were going 'not very fast.' Wiki cites 'Daily Mail' for reference but gives no date! Position of the CrashThe story here does not stack up. A couple of pages back, 'Beacon''s photos seem to indicate that the crashed car pic was in Redcliffe Square, not on Redcliffe Road, but I may be confused here... I may have to visit the place: the railings behind the crashed car he said show it facing the wrong way. Tara Browne had to have been driving South-East away from Earl's Court towards the Thames, i.e. the name of the road he was driving on changes from Earl's Court Road to Redcliffe Gardens.
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Post by hotman637 on Dec 29, 2014 17:15:44 GMT -5
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Post by hotman637 on Dec 30, 2014 13:19:55 GMT -5
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Post by beacon on Jul 1, 2015 3:42:24 GMT -5
just a quick signpost to my blog piece where I have tried to assemble a potted history of Tara Browne's life from the printed media.
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Post by hotman637 on Jul 2, 2015 12:16:32 GMT -5
just a quick signpost to my blog piece where I have tried to assemble a potted history of Tara Browne's life from the printed media. There have been many posts trying to connect Tara Browne to Faul and Fingo but none of them matched that I could see. But someone posted pictures that matched and that was comparing Tara Browne to Keith Richards (the one that is Feith Richards NOW!). In other words Tara faked his death and then replaced Keith and is the guy playing Keith now! It is the ONLY time I have seen pictures of someone replaced by someone else that "died". I don't know where those pics went but look at pics of Tara then and Keith now and see if they look the same!
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Post by silverbeatle on Nov 9, 2015 21:25:58 GMT -5
From Miles Mathis:
We find other things on Sgt. Pepper's that have been misinterpreted even by the conspiracy theorists, although they aren't well hidden. For one, we can study “A Day in the Life,” the last song on the album. The first part is said to be about Tara Browne, allegedly killed in 1966 in a car crash.
Browne was known to be a friend of McCartney, the Stones, and many other people we now know were working for MI6 in one capacity or another. So was Browne also an agent? Consider the lines,
And although the news was rather sad I just had to laugh
McCartney (and/or Lennon) wouldn't be laughing if Browne were really a friend, or were really dead. So why is he laughing?
Consider the line:
I read the news today oh boy about a lucky man who'd made the grade
What do they mean by “made the grade”? Remember that agents are “graded,” meaning they are given a classification depending on how high they are in the hierarchy. Do we have any evidence that Tara was an agent? We do. Although he was a young millionaire set to inherit many more millions, he had two jobs at the time of his death. Millionaire playboys don't normally have even one job. One was working for Len Street Engineering, a Lotus dealership; the other was working at Dandie Fashions on Kings Road. He co-owned Dandie Fashions, so it is unlikely he spent much time behind the counter selling clothes, but the point is either one or both of these places could have been and probably were fronts.
After Browne's “death”, Dandie Fashions was turned into Apple Tailoring by the Beatles. That's curious in itself. It leads us—via meandering channels—to the very pertinent question how Apple Computers was able to use the Apple name and trademark after Apple Corp had already been using both for years. The Beatles' company was established in 1968, while Steve Jobs' company didn't arrive until 1976. In the real business world, Apple Corp would have won the first lawsuit in a slamdunk, with Apple Computers having to change their name. Since that didn't happen, and since later lawsuits also didn't make any sense, we must assume both companies are fronts for Intelligence. Intelligence wants them both to keep the name, so they do. It's that simple. Almost everything is a front for the MATRIX, and this is just one more example. This means that the trademark Apple isn't the trademark of a record company or computer company, it is the trademark of Western Intelligence. It is easy to see why Intelligence chose the apple as its trademark. Just ask yourself what the apple refers to in historical literature. In Genesis, the apple is on the tree of knowledge, right? It therefore signifies forbidden or secret knowledge. Knowledge≡ Intelligence.
But back to Tara Browne. Just following the pretty clear wording of the lyrics printed on the cover of the album, we can conclude Browne made the grade, was inducted into MI6 as an undercover agent, and was given an assignment that required he change identities completely. McCartney (and/or Lennon) saw Browne as a “lucky man,” because he had impressed his masters enough to be given a top assignment. Browne was no longer just going to jack around as the co-owner of a Bayswater car shop or a King's Road clothing front, he was now on the path to becoming a top agent in the secret hierarchy. The Beatles were laughing because 1) they knew the death was fake, 2) they knew their friend was now on the fast track. While Browne had “made the grade,” Lennon, McCartney and the rest were just hired musicians, ones who would likely never rise above their current role.
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Post by hotman637 on Nov 10, 2015 12:46:14 GMT -5
Great post silverbeatle! I still think Tara looks like the Feith Richards that we see now so he went undercover and resurfaced as Fieth.
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Post by Jai Guru Deva on May 14, 2016 16:46:20 GMT -5
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bunyan
Hard Day's Night
Posts: 12
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Post by bunyan on May 22, 2016 10:11:39 GMT -5
I don't know if this will work but I think this is where the picture of the car was taken.
www.google.co.uk/maps/@51.4874545,-0.1883466,3a,59.1y,101.83h,82.21t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1sRjQ4QB802D5xxTInH4uilw!2e0!7i13312!8i6656
(The link doesn't work but just copy the whole string and paste it into your browser.)
You can see the London Transport sign for the bus stop in the photo. The tree is in the right place - as is the one on the pavement on the other side of the road, where the smashed up car was parked. The policeman is standing in front of the white pillar between the two that today are labelled 79 and 77. There's a missing or broken railing visible between the two 77 pillars, and the same railing is broken in the '66 photo.
Incidentally, I don't think any British newspaper would ever have intentionally referred to a "large low car". The Guardian used to be so famous for its typos that it is still commonly affectionately known as the Grauniad. They would have meant a large slow car.
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Post by lookingthroughyou on Oct 19, 2016 19:09:16 GMT -5
The problem with this line of thinking is that Tara Browne looked more like Lennon and Harrison than McCartney. [a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch? "]http://www.youtube.com/watch? [/a] Spencer Davis looks more like McCartney here than Browne does.[/quote] Excellent find! What we are looking for isn't someone who looks like Paul McCartney (Keith Allison looks a lot like him, and maybe he stood in for Paul on occasion for photo ops or whatever). No, what we are looking for is someone who looks like Faul (with the potential to look like JPM). IMHO, Tara Browne doesn't look too dissimilar from Faul. We can see was tall and lanky. He has a little freckle or mole on his chin that I'm looking at, very carefully, to see if there's anything like it on a photo of Faul. Most males that age tend to fill out a little more as they get into their twenties (and beyond)-- I wonder if I should put Doc on the spot here... . Pics of Faul in 1967www.art247.com/images/large/MIRRORPIX/WA/WA1703954.jpgimg.photobucket.com/albums/v281/JGD/MGB/JPSP3.jpgI'm listening to his voice and Tara's sounds soft, low to mid-range. Faul sometimes will speak in that same tone, and sometime's it'll be higher in pitch (it may be as a result of trying to immitate a Scouse accent). [/quote]
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Post by lookingthroughyou on Oct 19, 2016 19:20:37 GMT -5
The problem with this line of thinking is that Tara Browne looked more like Lennon and Harrison than McCartney. [a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch? "]http://www.youtube.com/watch? [/a] Spencer Davis looks more like McCartney here than Browne does.[/quote] Excellent find! What we are looking for isn't someone who looks like Paul McCartney (Keith Allison looks a lot like him, and maybe he stood in for Paul on occasion for photo ops or whatever). No, what we are looking for is someone who looks like Faul (with the potential to look like JPM). IMHO, Tara Browne doesn't look too dissimilar from Faul. We can see was tall and lanky. He has a little freckle or mole on his chin that I'm looking at, very carefully, to see if there's anything like it on a photo of Faul. Most males that age tend to fill out a little more as they get into their twenties (and beyond)-- I wonder if I should put Doc on the spot here... . Pics of Faul in 1967www.art247.com/images/large/MIRRORPIX/WA/WA1703954.jpgimg.photobucket.com/albums/v281/JGD/MGB/JPSP3.jpgI'm listening to his voice and Tara's sounds soft, low to mid-range. Faul sometimes will speak in that same tone, and sometime's it'll be higher in pitch (it may be as a result of trying to immitate a Scouse accent). www.youtube.com/watch?www.youtube.com/watch?[/quote] Hi, I just noticed something in the Changing Paul Video. 00:26 Paul refers to John Lennon as Ville then suddenly realises and swithches the name to John, Anybody find this strange ?. Please let me know your thoughts. Thank you.
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Post by delysid on Oct 30, 2016 8:48:47 GMT -5
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Post by beatlas231 on Oct 30, 2016 9:42:33 GMT -5
Oh hey, I didn't know the Left Wing'd media had a username on here. CNN, is that you?! Covering the more important story by diverting to Mainstream Media tactics.
Alex Jones would not be impressed.
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Post by chica on Nov 4, 2016 11:42:43 GMT -5
Paulumbo, LB and I were discussing a verse from "You Can't Always Get What You Want" not too long ago, but here it is again: (lyrics commentary from Letter B)"I went down to the Chelsea drugstore To get your prescription filled I was standing in line with Mr. Jimmy (JAMES Paul McCartney)And man, did he look pretty ill We decided that we would have a soda My favorite flavor, cherry red I sung my song to Mr. JimmyYeah, and he said one word to me, and that was "dead" I said to him..." You're sort of right, though, in that I don't think there are too many Stones songs that address PID/PWR. I think that is down to Jagger being uptight, and shrewd enough to not give too much away. Jimmy Hutmaker en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jimmy_Hutmaker"Jimmy Hutmaker (April 18, 1932 – October 3, 2007), also known as " Mister Jimmy", was a celebrity in Excelsior, Minnesota until his death on October 3, 2007. Life Hutmaker was born April 18,in 1932 in New Germany, Minnesota and moved with his family to Excelsior, Minnesota as a teenager. Despite unspecified developmental disabilities, Hutmaker had an outgoing demeanor and an engaging personality and was given the honorary title of "roving ambassador" for the city of Excelsior. It was in this capacity that Hutmaker spent his days and nights wandering the streets of the city, chewing on a cigar, mumbling to himself, and greeting locals by name. Someone paid for business cards with this title for Mister Jimmy, and he carried them for the rest of his life. It is reported that he knew most Excelsior natives and their children by name, and also knew what churches they attended and their family history. Local businesspeople provided for Hutmaker's needs, providing free meals and welcoming him in from the elements year round. However he was not a vagrant; he lived in his family home for most of his life, and until 2004 was cared for by his brother Ralph. After Ralph's death the burden of Jimmy's care was picked up by unrelated townspeople. He needed an escort to get out of the Excelsior nursing home he lived in, and residents of Excelsior stepped in and took him out daily. Stones legend According to legend, it was in his capacity as town ambassador that Hutmaker attended a concert by the Rolling Stones at the Danceland Ballroom at Excelsior Amusement Park in 1964. The next day Mick Jagger was having a prescription filled at Bacon's Drugstore when he encountered Jimmy again. Jimmy complained to Jagger that he had ordered a Cherry Coke but received a regular Coca Cola instead, then dismissed his own complaint, saying "You can't always get what you want." Five years later, on their 1969 album Let It Bleed, the Stones released a song titled "You Can't Always Get What You Want" - and references to a drugstore, a cherry soda, a prescription, and "Mr Jimmy" (Hutmaker's nickname around town) all appear in the song. It is also told that Mr. Jimmy just so happened to be ill, as it is said in the song. A shorter version of the song was released as the "B" side of "Honky Tonk Women" in 1969, and it was named as the 100th greatest song of all time by Rolling Stone magazine in its 2004 "500 Greatest Songs of All Time." Mister Jimmy's business cards had the lyrics to the song printed on their back sides. "Excellent post!
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Post by premanand on Nov 6, 2016 10:08:24 GMT -5
I don't know if this will work but I think this is where the picture of the car was taken.
www.google.co.uk/maps/@51.4874545,-0.1883466,3a,59.1y,101.83h,82.21t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1sRjQ4QB802D5xxTInH4uilw!2e0!7i13312!8i6656
(The link doesn't work but just copy the whole string and paste it into your browser.)
You can see the London Transport sign for the bus stop in the photo. The tree is in the right place - as is the one on the pavement on the other side of the road, where the smashed up car was parked. The policeman is standing in front of the white pillar between the two that today are labelled 79 and 77. There's a missing or broken railing visible between the two 77 pillars, and the same railing is broken in the '66 photo.
Incidentally, I don't think any British newspaper would ever have intentionally referred to a "large low car". The Guardian used to be so famous for its typos that it is still commonly affectionately known as the Grauniad. They would have meant a large slow car. [/a] Spencer Davis looks more like McCartney here than Browne does.[/quote] Excellent find! What we are looking for isn't someone who looks like Paul McCartney (Keith Allison looks a lot like him, and maybe he stood in for Paul on occasion for photo ops or whatever). No, what we are looking for is someone who looks like Faul (with the potential to look like JPM). IMHO, Tara Browne doesn't look too dissimilar from Faul. We can see was tall and lanky. He has a little freckle or mole on his chin that I'm looking at, very carefully, to see if there's anything like it on a photo of Faul. Most males that age tend to fill out a little more as they get into their twenties (and beyond)-- I wonder if I should put Doc on the spot here... . Pics of Faul in 1967www.art247.com/images/large/MIRRORPIX/WA/WA1703954.jpgimg.photobucket.com/albums/v281/JGD/MGB/JPSP3.jpgI'm listening to his voice and Tara's sounds soft, low to mid-range. Faul sometimes will speak in that same tone, and sometime's it'll be higher in pitch (it may be as a result of trying to immitate a Scouse accent). [/quote] [/quote]
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Post by Paul Bearer on Nov 7, 2016 8:33:35 GMT -5
Tara replaced Ringo, along with an actor. They have both been playing Ringo since he died soon after Paul.
"What would you do if I sang out of tune..." is sung by a Ringo impersonator. This is why the contents of "A Day In The Life" is so significant to Beatles, it is about one of Ringo's replacements.
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Post by bandi on Nov 7, 2016 21:04:48 GMT -5
lookingthroughyou--'Paul' calling John 'Ville' may actually be him calling him vile, as in vile ie: morally despicable or abhorrent; or wicked. If I remember correctly those hip English chaps in the 60's all had nicknames for everything. In one of Bowie's songs--The Spiders From Mars--he mentions 'weird & gilly (John and George). To me it sounds like Paul is saying vile, can you hear it ?
Then again, in one of the Anthology videos on YT, the 'Paul' that is interviewed for that film says of Ringo--"he was the first one of us to change his name" ...which made me loop the statement 20 times ! I wonder if he meant when Richie changed his name from Richard to 'Ringo', or, if the Ringo/Richard Starkey name was completely made up from the start ?! Who knows ? Not me. All I can do is try to get to the bottom of this dilemma without going crazy in the process !
Paul Bearer--how do you know that info on Ringo ? I'm not doubting what you said, it may be 100% right on. Just wondering if it's a hunch or something that you feel or something you know..
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Post by Red Lion on Nov 8, 2016 11:45:17 GMT -5
Tara replaced Ringo, along with an actor. They have both been playing Ringo since he died soon after Paul. That actor surely must have been Don Knotts!......Wait Knotts is dead....so is Tara.....who the heck is playing Ringo now???
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Post by ramone on Nov 8, 2016 20:15:59 GMT -5
Tara replaced Ringo, along with an actor. They have both been playing Ringo since he died soon after Paul. That actor surely must have been Don Knotts!......Wait Knotts is dead....so is Tara.....who the heck is playing Ringo now??? Well, I've boiled it down to Floyd the barber or Goober. Even though Ringo did mention opening hair salons, I'm leaning heavily towards Goober. A tuck here some makeup there. Close to a slam dunk. AND, Ringo's not too tall - the word goober is derived from the Bantu word for peanut. Pretty much seals it.
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Post by Red Lion on Nov 10, 2016 15:17:22 GMT -5
I have to admit, the "goober" connection may hold some water. Someone should let Ringo know he is dead though.
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Post by ramone on Nov 10, 2016 15:33:16 GMT -5
details, details....
Opie said he would tell him.
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Post by Red Lion on Nov 11, 2016 0:04:51 GMT -5
Opie was replaced by Danny Bonaduce......Dang!! ..... I just started a rumour..... an English rumoUr!
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