Gender: Male
Status: Married
Age: 48
Sign: Leo
City: ELKINS PARK
State: Pennsylvania
Country: US
Signup Date: 11/29/2005
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Sunday, February 01, 2009
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The inspirational word on Inspire Me Thursday this week is "soup". The sea was angry that day, my friends. Like an old man trying to send back soup in a deli. YOU ARE ONE CLICK AWAY FROM THE OFFICIAL JOSH PINCUS IS CRYING BLOG!
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Wednesday, January 21, 2009
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The inspirational word this week on InspireMeThursday.com is "breakfast".
 I love breakfast. Growing up, breakfast at my house was usually a bowl of sugared cereal at the kitchen table or on a metal tray-table in front of the TV on Saturday mornings. The heavy marketing of cereal was at its peak in the 1960s. Cool prizes were packed inside boxes to entice children. Popular cartoon characters were emblazoned on cereal box fronts to evoke familiarity and trust. Cereal companies also created their own characters and commercials became mini cartoon adventures that kids eagerly waited to see as much as their regular animated luminaries. Among those were Quisp and Quake, breakfast mascots of the Quaker Oats Company. Both cereals were featured in a series of TV advertisements produced by Jay Ward, the genius behind Bullwinkle. Although shaped differently, Quisp and Quake both tasted like Cap'n Crunch. However, my brother liked Quisp and I liked Quake, so my mom had to buy both. THAT was marketing brilliance.As a child, I equated eating breakfast in a restaurant with vacations. On trips to Atlantic City and Williamsburg, Virginia, my family would eat breakfast in hotel coffee shops or a nearby diner. In 1955, breakfast titans The Quaker Oats Company opened the Aunt Jemima Pancake House in Walt Disney's new theme park in California. Aylene Lewis was hired to mingle with guests as the venerable Aunt Jemima. Based on the enormous popularity of the Disneyland location, Quaker opened a nationwide chain of these themed eateries, including a branch on Bustleton Avenue in Northeast Philadelphia. Every so often, usually on a Sunday morning, my family would head to this Aunt Jemima Pancake House. Eating breakfast in a restaurant was an ethereal experience, from the paper placemats printed with pre-meal activities to the array of exotic flavored syrups to a woman other than my mother delivering hot platters of pancakes to the table. Although it was fifteen minutes from our house, it felt as though we were on vacation. Our local Aunt Jemima Pancake House closed in the early 1970s, so for special breakfast outings, we were relegated to my father's usual weekday morning stop, The Heritage Diner. My dad loved to eat at the Heritage, which has changed names several times since he passed away. In his skewed sense of reality, this place was on par with Le Bec Fin, if Le Bec Fin served a cheeseburger deluxe with french fries and applesauce. My father's usual breakfast order, which the perennial waitstaff knew by heart, was two scrambled eggs, toast and coffee. His regular waitress — a woman of 80 with nearly-transparent white skin and pitch-black, teased hair, who referred to my dad as "Hon" or "Doll" — would be cautioned to leave the home fries off his plate. My father affirmed that the sight of potatoes in the morning made him ill.In the summers during and after high school, my friends and I would descend on Atlantic City for several days of drinking, debauchery and drinking. On the first day of our jaunts, breakfast would be a bagel and cream cheese or pancakes from one of a dozen small diners. By Day Two or Three, we were scarfing down Rice Krispies with beer substituting for milk.Those days gave way to more logical thinking when I got married. On our honeymoon, my new bride and I drove the 990 miles to Orlando, Florida. We stayed overnight in several hotels along the way. At the end of second day out on the road, we decided to stop for the night in St. Augustine, Florida. We thought it would be nice to wake up and tour the self-proclaimed oldest continuously occupied European-established city in the continental United States. St. Augustine is also the home of the elusive Fountain of Youth. We figured that a sip from the famed fountain wouldn't hurt, despite being 22. After a long day of driving, we pulled into a non-descript motel at 1 AM. The motel rooms had individual entrances accessible from the parking lot. The motel building itself was situated on both sides of a small road. Obviously, this set-up had been two motels at one time. Now, both buildings belonged to the same owner, as the pair were painted in the same faded turquoise and pink color scheme. We drove to the office to secure a room for the night. After paying, the night manager handed me a key and, with hand gestures, directed us to our room across the road in the other building. He also noted that our stay included a "free continental breakfast by the pool". Oooh, how swanky! We got back into the car and drove across the street to our accommodations. The next morning, we woke anxious to cover the remaining 100 miles to our Central Florida destination. We drove back across the street and found a parking space adjacent to the short cyclone fence surrounding the meager, standard-issue motel pool. The pool was surrounded by a smattering of rusty chaise-lounges and weather-worn web-back chairs. Off to one side was the morning's offering — the free "continental breakfast" spread that was included in our sojourn. A small folding table was draped with a pallid yellow tablecloth that had seen better days. On the table was a carton of Tropicana orange juice, a box of Krispy Kreme doughnuts with several gaps where doughnuts had been removed and a Mr. Coffee tendering a glass carafe containing less than two cups of brew. Amused by the sparse presentation, my wife and I laughed, shrugged our shoulders and reached for the small stack of Styrofoam cups. A man rushed out of the motel office and yelled to us, "Are you folks guests of the hotel? That stuff's just for guests." We replied that we were indeed guests and instead of walking over, we had driven from our digs across the street. Seemingly satisfied but unconvinced, the man slowly returned to the office, occasionally glancing back at us. I wondered if this sumptuously abundant buffet was so well publicized that the motel had ongoing difficulty shooing freeloaders.An hour or so later, we arrived at the Kissimmee hotel that would be our home for the next week. This hotel was a far cry from the shanty we left in St. Augustine. Equipped with a proper dining room, our stay at this hotel included a free breakfast buffet every morning. Upon check-in, it was explained that although the buffet was free, Florida law dictated that we were responsible for the restaurant tax. Interestingly, the posted price for the breakfast buffet remained the same every day, however, our daily tax invoice varied by several cents. Perhaps, Florida restaurant tax works on a "compounded-hourly" basis.Every morning during our visit, we would patronize the breakfast buffet before heading to Disney World. We'd load our plates with eggs and pancakes and waffles and potatoes and that Southern meal staple — grits. At the end of the buffet, we were greeted by an older man who looked not unlike Arsenio Hall's Reverend Brown in Coming to America. He held out a plate on which sat two slices of browned bread and uttered his morning salutation — "Gooooood mooooooooooooorning. Tooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooast?" — stretching each word into a muted, lethargic yet monotone yodel. We ate essentially the same thing every morning and we'd look forward to our encounter with the "tooooooooast" guy. One morning, my wife said she would try some "different eggs" (I suspect she meant "differently prepared", as I know of only one type of egg). Perhaps, the "different" eggs were the reason the tax was thrown off.When my son was old enough, my wife and I tried to guide him in the appropriate method in which to choose breakfast cereal. On supermarket calls, we would shepherd him to the boxes that promised the coolest trinket was contained inside. His choices were met with complete disappointment and a scolding of "What the hell? This doesn't have a prize!". He would counter with something about liking the way it tastes. "Taste?," I'd protest, "Who cares what cereal tastes like? It all tastes the same! The toy, my son! LOOK FOR THE TOY!" I still love cereal. I still get a special smile and consider it a treat when my wife makes "breakfast for dinner". I still crane my neck when I pass an IHOP, visualizing myself in a blue vinyl booth waiting for a syrup and whipped butter-covered short stack. And I still love breakfast. I've heard it's the most important meal of the day. My Quisp-loving brother, nocomm99, reminded me that in addition to the occasional breakfast at the Heritage Diner, my family ate way more than our normal allotments of Sunday dinners there. Jeez, my dad really loved that place.YOU ARE JUST ONE CLICK AWAY FROM THE JOSH PINCUS IS CRYING BLOG!
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Tuesday, December 16, 2008
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 Chung Ling Soo was the stage name of American magician William Robinson. He changed his name to Chung Ling Soo to add an air of foreign mysticism to his act. The name was a variation of a real Chinese magician's name - Ching Ling Foo - and he performed many of the tricks that Foo had made famous. Chung Ling Soo maintained his role as a Chinese man scrupulously, keeping in character even off-stage. He never spoke onstage and always used an interpreter when he spoke to journalists. Only his friends and a few other magicians knew the truth. (A similar character was briefly featured in the 2006 film "The Prestige".) Soo's most famous trick was known as "Condemned to Death by the Boxers" (as in The Boxer Rebellion ). In this trick Soo's assistants — sometimes dressed as Boxers — took two guns to the stage. Several members of the audience were called on the stage to mark a bullet that was loaded into one of the guns. When the gun was fired at Soo, he seemed to catch the bullets from the air and drop them on a plate he held before him. In some variations he pretended to be hit and spit the bullet onto the plate. Actually, Soo palmed the bullets, hiding them in his hand during their examination and marking. The muzzle-loaded guns were rigged such that the gunpowder charge fired in the chamber and the bullet would drop into a chamber below the barrel. The bullet in fact never left the gun. Soo was performing in London, on March 23, 1918. Soo had not cleaned the gun properly. Over time, the gap that allowed the bullet to drop out of the barrel into the chamber slowly built up a residue from the build-up of gunpowder. The bullet remained in the barrel and the gun was fired in the normal way. The bullet hit Soo in the chest. "Oh my God.", he said, "Something's happened. Lower the curtain." It was the first (and last) time in 19 years that William "Chung Ling Soo" Robinson had spoken English in public. THE OFFICIAL JOSH PINCUS IS CRYING BLOG IS ONE CLICK AWAY!
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Tuesday, September 23, 2008
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The illustrationfriday.com challenge word this week is "clique". no clique would have them, so they made their own.. THE OFFICIAL JOSH PINCUS IS CRYING BLOG IS JUST ONE CLICK AWAY!
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Tuesday, September 16, 2008
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The illustrationfriday.com challange word this week is "island".The song "Zombie Jamboree" began life as "Jumbie Jamberee", a calypso song written by Winston O'Conner. Winston performed under the name Lord Intruder in the early 1950s. In 1953, Lord Intruder released the song as the B-side to his recording of "Disaster With Police". The Kingston Trio recorded it for their 1959 album "Hungry i". Since then, it has been recorded and performed by Harry Belafonte (on four different albums), Bob Marley and The Wailers , Harry Nilsson and many others. In the early 1980s, a new, a capella version of the song was arranged by Rockapella's Sean Altman — an arrangement that has since been used by virtually every a capella group on the planet.  In Rockapella's live performances, bass singer Barry Carl would introduce the song this way... "This next song is about an island — yesssssss...Not one of those little islands where you take your winter vacation or spring break — no, no no...This song is about a big cold smelly brokeisland This island called... MANHATTAN! THE OFFICIAL JOSH PINCUS IS CRYING BLOG IS JUST ONE CLICK AWAY!
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Sunday, September 14, 2008
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The challenge this week on Monday Artday is illustrate a story from "The Brothers Grimm".Through talks with peasants and visits to small villages, Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm collected some of the most gruesome, frightening and disturbing stories and published them in several volumes for children. Originally published in the early nineteenth century, these stories were watered down and homogenized over years of retelling. But in their original form, these tales of fairies and princesses and elves and animals included episodes of cannibalism, incest, murder, torture, arson, marital infidelity and racism.  The story of "The Juniper Tree" tells of a man whose wife gives gives birth to a boy, then she promptly dies of happiness. After a brief grieving period, the man remarries and wife number two gives birth to a girl. The new wife loves her daughter, but fears the family's fortune will go to her stepson when her husband dies. She wishes her daughter will get the inheritance and she develops a hatred for the boy. Stepmom gets an idea. One day, the daughter comes home from school and asks Mom for an apple. Mom says "You may have one after your brother has one" and she sends the daughter out of the house. The stepson come home and Mom offers him an apple from a large wooden chest. She opens the heavy wooden lid and, when the boy reaches in to take an apple, she drops the lid and cuts the boy's head off. She doesn't want to get caught, so she sits the boy's body in a chair, sets an apple in his hand. Then, she ties a white scarf around his neck and sets the severed head on top, concealing the wound. Mom goes into another and the daughter comes running in screaming that her brother is sitting in a chair with an apple. When she asked for the apple he said nothing. Mom suggests that she ask again and if she still gets no response, she should smack him on the head. The daughter goes back, asks her brother about the apple and smacks him — and knocks his head to the floor. She screams in horror. Mom blames the daughter for killing her brother. Mom then tells her she has a plan to cover up the murder. I'd like to pause for a moment to remind you that this is a story intended for children.Mom cuts the boy's corpse up into little pieces and cooks him in a stew. The daughter cries during the entire process, even crying over the stewpot. Her tears fall into the stew, so it needs no salt. (I am NOT making this up!) When Dad get home from a hard day of whatever Dad does, they feed him the stew. Dad loves the stew, saying it is the best he's ever tasted. As he's eating, he picks out the bones and tosses them under the table. The daughter gathers the bones in a scarf and carries them outside, all the while crying tears of blood. She digs a hole and buries the bones under the juniper tree in the front yard. Suddenly, flames burst from the hole and a beautiful bird flies out. The bird flies around town, gathering specific items — a gold chain, a pair of shoes and a heavy millstone. The bird flies back and drops the gold chain around the father's neck. Dad is pleased with his gift. The bird drops the shoes to the daughter. Then the bird drops the stone on the stepmom's head and kills her. The bird turns back into the boy. Dad, Sis and boy all live happily ever after. The end. Pleasant dreams, kids.
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Monday, September 01, 2008
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As mentioned previously (and indicated regularly in my illustrations), I am a bit death-obsessed. Last year, my family and I visited Southern California for an innocent trip to Disneyland. Aside from our love of Disney theme parks, our main reason for going was to participate in the annual Bats Day in the Fun Park, a yearly event that gathers the goth community from the Los Angeles area (and beyond) in the "happiest place on earth". It has to be seen to be believed. Unfortunately, the Bats Day celebration has been moved to a date in early November. Due to vacation availability, we made our yearly pilgrimage during the same week that we have gone in the past. Just like last year, we made time to visit several cemeteries that are the final resting places of some of Hollywood's biggest (and not-so biggest) stars. Our 2007 vacation brought us to Westwood Village Memorial Park and Hollywood Forever cemeteries. This year, we travelled to Holy Cross Cemetery (one of the largest Catholic cemeteries in the LA area) and Hillside Memorial Park (one of the largest Jewish cemeteries in the LA area), both in Culver City. We arrived at Hillside, our first stop. It is huge, with rolling green lawns surrounded by walls of crypts. The graves are all identified with flat grave markers, as apposed to above-ground monuments. The crypts are mostly labeled with plaques. In the center of the grounds stands a large building that houses more crypts of varying sizes. (I should note that in many of these photographs, there are stones or trinkets on the grave markers. It is Jewish tradition when visiting grave of someone that the visitor never knew, he or she may place a small stone at the graveside. This shows that someone visited the grave, and represents permanence. Leaving flowers is not a traditional Jewish practice. Another reason for leaving stones is tending the grave. In Biblical times, gravestones were not used; graves were marked with mounds of stones, so by placing them, one perpetuated the existence of the site.) Armed with a map of the grounds and ready to hop out of the passenger's seat, I instructed my wife to drive around to the far wall of crypts to see the first celebrity on my list - Susan Cabot. Although the other crypts surrounding Susan's cremated remains are marked with plaques, Susan' eternal home is identified by a nameplate that one would find on an office door. We drove back and parked near one of the entrances to the large building. Immediately upon walking thorough the doors, we were greeted by - Aaron Spelling. My son commented "Jeez! Aaron died as he lived!" (In keeping with tradition, note the small stones. Someone had also left a music box and a note [which I did not read]. Perhaps Tori?) As we wound our way through the mausoleum, we saw- David Janssen, TV's The Fugitive and Harry O George Jessel and Dick Shawn Allan Sherman, of "Hello Muddah, Hello Faddah" fame and Eddie Cantor Jack Benny and Mary Livingstone BennyJust past Jack Benny's crypt, a door led to an outdoor garden with more graves, wall crypts and individual mausoleums. Here we saw the grave of- Michael Landon. Michael's earthly remains are housed in what looks like "The Michael Landon Store", a small enclosed area guarded by a locked glass door. On the rear wall is displayed the name "Landon" in large shiny gold letters. Inside, on the floor and on a bench, are various pieces of memorabilia from "Bonanza" and "Little House on the Prairie".Continuing on, we came to-  Legendary Hollywood make-up man Max Factor (and many members of the Factor family) and author Irving Wallace Hal of Famer Hammerin' Hank Greenberg and singer Dinah Shore Lorne Greene (buried not too far from Michael Landon) and Sheldon Leonard (under his real last name "Bershad"). In addition to being a producer of many TV sitcoms, he played "Nick the Bartender" in "It's A Wonderful Life". ("Look at me! I'm givin' out wings!")On the plot outside the large building, we found the graves of- Tom Poston and Suzanne Pleshette, who were married at the time of Poston's death. Although buried at Hillside, Poston was not Jewish. Suzanne died a year after Poston. She does not have a permanent grave marker yet. Suzanne is buried next to her parents, in the row in front of Poston. Just behind Poston and Pleshette is-  Game show producer, Mark Goodson. His crypt in emblazoned with his production company's logo. Hillside Memorial Park's centerpiece and crowning glory is The Al Jolson Memorial Monument and Waterfall.  This giant, gaudy, overblown tribute is breathtaking. It features a four-foot tall statue of Jolson, in his famous "down-on-one-knee-Mammy" pose. Behind the statue is an immense marble crypt. The crypt rests at the top of a long waterfall and under a six-pillar marble structure that is topped by a dome. The inside of the dome features a huge mosaic of Moses holding the tablets containing the Ten Commandments, and identifies Jolson, in carved Roman letters, as "The Sweet Singer of Israel" and "The Man Raised Up High." Upon viewing, my son shook his head and muttered " My People..." We returned to the car and drove around to the rear section of the cemetery to find-  comedian Jan Murray and beloved animator Friz Freleng. Freleng's crypt is decorated with a bronze plaque depicting several Looney Tunes characters. Two more residents at Hillside are Combat's Vic Morrow and Stooge Moe Howard An actor in his own right, Vic was the father of actress Jennifer Jason Leigh. When Jennifer was twenty years old, her father was accidentally killed, when a helicopter stunt went wrong while shooting Twilight Zone: The Movie. Jennifer and her sister filed suit against Warner Brothers, John Landis, and Steven Spielberg. They settled out of court a year later. At the time of her father's death, Jennifer had not seen her father in three years or talked to him in two, having been estranged from him after her parents' divorce. Vic's will left a hundred dollars to Jennifer and everything else to her sister Carrie. (We wondered if all of Vic was buried here.) We visited Hillside on my birthday. During our visit, my cell phone rang and it was my brother. He called to wish me a "Happy Birthday". He knew we were going on vacation, but was unsure of the dates. I thanked him for the birthday wish, and he asked "Where are you?" I replied, "I am standing in front of Moe Howard's grave." He answered, "I knew you were going to say that." I mentioned earlier about the Jewish tradition of leaving stones at a grave. We noticed several plaques decorated like this throughout the large indoor mausoleum.  Gamblers to the end. We headed to Holy Cross Cemetery. When we drove through the entrance gate, we stopped. This cemetery was easily five times the size of the enormous Hillside Memorial Park. We drove around for approximately twenty minutes, and although I had a detailed map of the place, I couldn't locate a single, goddamn grave I was looking for. This cemetery was vast and sprawling and poorly marked. We saw plenty of statues of Jesus and his friends, but no graves of famous people. Oh, I know they were there. I just couldn't find them. Exhausted, we left and went to Santa Monica Pier. Although not a grave, we also saw The Beach Boys Historic Landmark commemorating the site of the childhood home of The Wilson Brothers of the Beach Boys - Carl (dead), Dennis (dead), and Brian (inexplicably alive).  The monument, located at 3701 W. 119th Street in Hawthorne, California, stands on the site of their childhood home, which was demolished in the mid-1980s during construction of the Century Freeway. Ironically, we took the Century Freeway to get to the monument. Within a month of unveiling the landmark, it was targeted by graffiti vandals.
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Monday, August 18, 2008
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The challenge word this week on illustrationfriday.com is "sail".
 In Greek mythology, Charon is the ferryman of the dead. The souls of the deceased are brought to him by Hermes, and Charon ferries them across the river Styx, to Hades. The fee for his service was a single obolos coin which was placed in the mouth of a corpse at burial. Those who cannot afford the passage, or are not admitted to Hades by Charon, are doomed to wander on the banks of the Styx for a hundred years.
And then the ferryman said, "There is trouble ahead, So you must pay me now," - "Don't do it!" "You must pay me now," - "Don't do it!" And still that voice came from beyond, "Whatever you do,
Don't pay the ferryman, Don't even fix a price, Don't pay the ferryman, Until he gets you to the other side;
YOU ARE JUST ONE CLICK AWAY FROM THE OFFICIAL JOSH PINCUS IS CRYING BLOG!
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Wednesday, July 23, 2008
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The illustrationfriday.com challenge word this week is "foggy".Let me start off by stating that although this story ultimately ends with THIS, it is not the same type of celebrity story found elsewhere on this blog.
 Mel Tormé was most famous for his beautifully mellow voice, but he accomplished so much in his career. He was an actor in radio serials. He wrote over 250 songs. He was an accomplished drummer, playing drums in a big band led by Chico Marx. Mel befriended drummer Buddy Rich and eventually wrote a book about him. Mel also owned a drumset that drummer Gene Krupa had used for many years and he played this drumset at the 1979 Chicago Jazz Festival with Benny Goodman on the classic "Sing, Sing, Sing". He helped pioneer cool jazz. He wrote songs and musical arrangements for the The Judy Garland Show. He later had a falling out with Garland and wrote a very unflattering book about her and his experiences with her show. He was a licensed pilot. He appeared in nine episodes of Night Court and one episode of Seinfeld.He disliked rock and roll music, calling it "three-chord manure", although he recorded a guest vocal with Was (Not Was) in 1983. And Mel hated the nickname "The Velvet Fog". Mel Tormé's career spanned seven decades and there was no denying his diverse talent. However, the inspiration for this illustration was a beautiful and touching story that I came across on povonline.com, the website of Mark Evanier (a very talented guy in his own right!). Mark wrote about his "almost encounter" with Mel at a Los Angeles Farmer's Market. I urge you to read Mark's story HERE. It is perfect. This drawing was created entirely onsite at the 2008 WXPN XPoNential Music Festival.
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Thursday, July 03, 2008
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 By the time she was six, Anissa (pronounced "ah-NEESE-ah") Jones was hawking cereal in her first television commercial. A couple of years later, in 1966, Anissa's acting talents caught the attention of two television producers who were preparing a new television sitcom called Family Affair. They felt Anissa would be perfect in the role of Elizabeth "Buffy" Patterson-Davis. Originally to be an older sister to Johnny Whitaker's character Jody, upon Brian Keith's ( Uncle Bill) insistence, the role was rewritten to be Jody's twin sister. Anissa played Buffy for the show's entire 138-episode run. Her schedule was grueling, often requiring her to either work on the show or for show publicity all year round and sometimes seven days a week. But in June of 1969, Anissa's hard work payed off. The show was number one in the ratings turning Buffy and Jody into household names. Buffy's doll, Mrs. Beasley, became the best-selling doll in America during the show's run. Anissa's fame continued to grow. She appeared in several television productions including guest roles in Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In and To Rome With Love. She, along with Jimmy Durante, presented the 1967 Emmy Award to The Monkees, for Best Comedy Series. She also starred alongside Elvis in her only movie, The Trouble with Girls. Numerous merchandising deals came her way. There were Buffy paper dolls, Family Affair coloring books and lunch boxes, a Buffy line of children's clothes, and a Buffy Cookbook in 1971, all prominently featuring Anissa. Anissa's younger brother, Paul almost always accompanied her to the studio. Anissa was very fond of her brother. As the star of a hit TV series, Anissa would quite often receive gifts. She demanded that an identical one for her brother accompany any gift she received and if two gifts were not received, she would give hers away. Family Affair was canceled in 1971, after five seasons. Anissa was thrilled that the show's run was over, as it meant she could go to school and hang out with her friends. In 1972, Brian Keith contacted Anissa, offering her a role in his new TV sitcom. He assured her she could have the part without an audition. She graciously turned him down. Later in 1972, she auditioned for the part of "Regan MacNeil" in The Exorcist, a role she lost to Linda Blair. Anissa did not want to continue her show business career. With a deteriorating mother-daughter relationship, Anissa, along with her brother Paul, moved in with their father. After their father's death, Anissa and Paul were forced to move back with their mother, but Anissa often spent much of her time at a friend's house. This infuriated her mother so much, that she reported Anissa as a runaway. Anissa was picked up and spent some time in juvenile detention. Upon her release, she began drinking and using drugs. Hoping to make ends meet until her eighteenth birthday when she would receive royalties from Family Affair, Anissa took a job at Winchell's Donut Shop in Playa Del Rey, California. At eighteen, Anissa received her $70,000 trust fund and $107,800 in US Savings Bonds from her Family Affair earnings. She and Paul got an apartment together. Anissa bought herself a new Ford Pinto and her brother a loaded Camaro that cost twice as much as her own car. With her newfound freedom, her new wealth and more drugs than she knew what to do with, Anissa began partying hard. On August 28th, 1976, while attending a party at a friend's house, Anissa ingested huge doses of the barbiturate Seconal (the drug of choice for Jimi Hendrix, Judy Garland, Charles Boyer and Marilyn Monroe), phencyclidine (PCP), cocaine and methaquaalone (Quaaludes). During the night, her boyfriend checked on her and she was fine. In the morning, her friends found an unresponsive Anissa and called the paramedics. Anissa was declared dead from what the San Diego County coroner called one of the most massive drug overdoses he'd ever seen. Anissa was eighteen years old. Eight years later, her brother, Paul, also died from a drug overdose. THE OFFICIAL JOSH PINCUS IS CRYING BLOG IS JUST ONE CLICK AWAY!
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