i'm sitting here watching a rebroadcast of the 1992 NBA Draft on TV and I see all the players receiving their new team ballcaps... they're those old Starter caps with the team name written in cursive format... whatever happened to that style? i loved those hats! that got me thinking to: "whatever happened to..." McDonald's Arch Deluxe sandwich and its special sauce, ya know the sandwich made for adults only? Bob Kemp and his holier than thou attitude on late night TSN radio? the girl with whom i shared my first kiss? harold miner? (i thought of this b/c the 1992 draft is where we selected bobby horry over baby jordan, and i admit i was one of the VERY upset people... but i know some of you were too, especially considering the massive boos that reigned down after this selection!) baby jessica? what is her life like now? ok, i'm done. edit: i had to add this one last bit... during the 1992 draft, jim jackson was drafted by the Mavs and Craig Seager (sp?) just compared him to Oscar Robertson... LMFAO!! now i'm really done.
You could look as early as 1998. And wonder where all those players went? Many of which were high lottery picks. Only the greatest, live the longest (as in staying in the nba the longest, keeping their jobs). Just think there's 29 new players guranteed contracts each draft, and there are 29 players with 1 year contracts(est.) running out. As well as the Free Agents, It's a Very Very tough world out there for future NBA players. So you figure at least 50 players leaving the NBA each year, and 29 new guys coming in for a year.
Kemp left TSN around the first part of the year to pursue another career. I miss his highly organized show with great information. But I don't miss his ass one bit.
Baby Jessica and her whole family, plus a bunch of the rescuers, are all messed up. I sorta halfwatched a show on it (my wife was watching, I was playing with pup) and from what I can remember, a couple of rescuers killed themselves and the family is a wreck.
um i seem to have hit a blank...im not sure what exactly your talking about with the 'baby jessica' thing?
she was the 18 month old baby that fell in a well in Midland. It was followed internationally by news coverage as rescuers attempted to save her. She was stuck in there for over 2 days.
The Arch Deluxe was removed from the McDonald's menu due to lackluster sales . . . it was replaced a year or so later by the Big N' Tasty (which, with a simple misspelling, is the Big Nasty which is a name more befitting itself). I loved the Arch Deluxe, but it never gained popularity Too bad, but <a href="http://www.topsecretrecipes.com/recipes/archdelx.htm">you can make your own</a>. I watched that program about Baby Jessica too, but as I recall she was totally cool. Ah, just found an article about it: <i><blockquote><a href="http://www.reporter-news.com/texas97/jess101497.html">Baby Jessica's family stays low-key 10 years after water well drama</a> By MARK BABINECK Associated Press Writer MIDLAND, Texas (AP) - Ten years ago this week, little Jessica McClure was rescued from an abandoned well in a drama that brought out some of the best and the worst in human nature. Today, she is an 11-year-old who makes A's and B's at school, plays the piano and French horn and whizzes through her neighborhood on skates. The sixth-grader is said to have no memory at all of the 58-hour ordeal. "More than anything, I want her to have a normal childhood," said Cissy Porter, who was 18 when her daughter plunged down the 22-foot hole. "We want everyone to know that she's fine, that she's a healthy, active, loving girl. But we don't want people recognizing her everywhere she goes." The girl's divorced parents, Mrs. Porter and Chip McClure, seem eager to let the anniversary pass quietly, granting just one interview, to Ladies Home Journal. Shunning attention, too, are many of the rescuers in this oilfield city who have been linked ever since to the wide-eyed toddler. Jessica told the magazine she likes Beanie Babies and animals, and has nine dogs and cats. She's bored by talk of the incident, which claimed her right little toe and left some minor scars from skin grafts. "I'm proud of them," she said of the scars. "I have them because I survived." The nightmares that plagued her early childhood are long gone. "She doesn't remember any of it," said Midland police Sgt. Andy Glasscock, who was a fixture at the scene. "About the only thing she remembers is what people tell her and what she sees on the news." A poll taken by The Pew Research Center for the People and the Press measuring coverage of Princess Diana's death found that in the last decade, only Jessica's rescue rivaled the Paris car accident in worldwide attention. Not everyone understands the fuss. "This was just a one-child disaster," said former Midland Fire Chief James Roberts. "As we speak, somewhere in the United States an 18-month-old baby is in trouble, and the fire department is on the scene trying to save her life." Ten years ago, Chip and Cissy McClure were poor teen-agers struggling to make ends meet during the depths of the oil bust. While visiting her sister, Mrs. McClure left Jessica in the yard while she went to answer the phone. Moments later, Jessica happened upon an 8-inch hole and innocently touched off a global event. Rescue crews and citizen volunteers united to dig a shaft parallel to the one that trapped Jessica. A layer of super-hard rock complicated the operation. "I don't think I ever drilled through anything harder than that," said driller Charles Boler. "You could hear her crying as we got closer. That's what kept me going because I had a 2-year-old child at the time and I could identify with the family." On Oct. 16, 1987, paramedics Steve Forbes and Robert O'Donnell wriggled into the passageway, slathered a frightened Jessica in petroleum jelly and slid her out into the bright television lights. Afterward, sympathetic strangers from around the world who had watched Jessica's drama inundated her with teddy bears, homemade gifts, cards and cash. The money, estimated at $1 million or more, sits in a trust fund waiting for her to turn 25. Her family has asked that photos not show her full face because they fear she will be kidnapped. Once the cameras left Midland behind, Jessica recovered quickly. The same could not be said of everyone around her. "Everybody got the big head. Everybody was somebody," Glasscock said. "We were just little country guys doing our jobs. Then the movie contract divided us up." At issue was how the rescuers were to be portrayed in a TV movie of the week. Municipal workers wanted one producer; volunteers wanted another. It escalated into two months of bickering that had divided a community Jessica was supposed to have united. Then-Mayor Carroll Thomas finally had to appoint a five-member committee to settle things. In the end, most were satisfied with how the rescue was recreated in "Jessica: Everyone's Baby," even though many residents still grumble that Midland was made to look like a backwater town. The McClures were also criticized for quickly spending at least $80,000 of the money sent to them. Much of it went toward a failed business. They divorced in 1990. The couple told Ladies' Home Journal they battled persistent whispers, including stories that their young marriage already was on the rocks when Jessica fell. "The most ridiculous rumors circulated," McClure said. "Some said I was in jail or on drugs." In 1995, rescuer O'Donnell shot and killed himself at his parents' ranch outside Midland. His brother, Ricky, said O'Donnell's life "fell apart" because of the stress of the rescue, the attention it created and the anticlimactic return to everyday life. "There's no doubt it was related to the rescue," Glasscock said of the suicide. "It was a combination of things. A lot had to do with the news media." Now that the oilfields are bustling again, Midland has reclaimed its status in Texas as a petroleum hotbed. Outside the state, though, Jessica still represents this city of nearly 100,000. "No matter where I go, someone asks me if that's where the little girl was in the well," said retired Police Chief Richard Czech. "We had a very successful operation. The little girl came out of the well in good shape."</i></blockquote>
great info, thanks everyone! man, this board just continues to amaze me... i get semi-nostalgic and throw out some questions i suddenly pondered while watching the draft on TV and they all get answered... but no one has told me about my first kiss... now go find her!
by the way, in case i forgot to clarify... NBA TV is showing actual rebroadcasts of the lottery portions of past NBA drafts... today they are gonna show the infamous 1984 draft with jordan, barkley, and dream... yesterday i saw the 1992 and 1995 ones. get your keisters to a TV to see this, its good TV... or maybe i'm just that bored and have no life!
She has long, blonde hair, her measurments are 37-24-35, and she is a top executive in a Fortune 500 company, pulling in eight figures...She enjoys watching football, baseball, and basketball, and she doesn't want a husband that works all day, because he'll be tired during the hour long love making sessions that she'll want to have every day. Also, her bathroom has a urinal built into the wall, so she'll never badger you about keeping the toilet seat up... Now, don't you wish you had kept in touch?