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From E Online: Bill McKinney, Deliverance’s Mountain Man and Eastwood Sidekick, Dead at 80

Bill McKinney, who played some of the most wicked big-screen villains of all time, among them the Mountain Man in the 1972 drama Deliverance, has died.

He was 80.

McKinney’s family took to his Facebook page late Thursday to let fans know the sad news that the veteran character actor had succumbed after a battle with lung cancer.

“Today our dear Bill McKinney passed away at Valley Presbyterian Hospice. An avid smoker for 25 years of his younger life, he died of cancer of the esophagus,” read the statement. “He was 80 and still strong enough to have filmed a Dorito’s commercial 2 weeks prior to his passing, and he continued to work on his biography with his writing partner. Hopefully 2012 will bring a publisher for the wild ride his life was.”

Indeed.

Born on Sept. 12, 1931, following a four-year stint in the Navy during the Korean War, McKinney took acting classes with the likes of Dustin Hoffman at the famed Pasadena Playhouse followed by a stint at Lee Strasberg’s Actors Studio before going on to a successful Hollywood career essaying some pretty notorious baddies.

It all started with John Boorman’s Deliverance in which the thesp uttered the now classic line as he’s about to rape Ned Beatty’s character: “I bet you can squeal like a pig.”

McKinney also played the assassin opposite Warren Beatty in 1974’s The Parallax View.

Bill McKinney, Outlaw Josey Wales Warner Bros.

But it was his long association with Clint Eastwood after the two costarred together in 1974’s Thunderbolt and Lightfoot that landed him yet another in a long line of great cinematic sickos. McKinney earned critical plaudits two years later playing Captain Terrell, commander of the Red Legs in the film legend’s acclaimed Western The Outlaw Josey Wales, which Eastwood also directed.

McKinney then went on to join the latter’s stock company, dubbed the Malpaso Players, and appeared in four more of Clint’s movies: The Gauntlet, Bronco Billy, Any Which Way You Can and Pink Cadillac.

McKinney’s other film credits include Don Siegel’s The Shootist starring John Wayne, First Blood, Against All Odds, Back to the Future Part III, and The Green Mile.

He also spent decades acting on TV, from his debut in 1968’s The Monkees, I Dream of Jeannie, Colombo and Starsky and Hutch to The Fall Guy, The A Team, Murder She Wrote and Baywatch.

McKinney is survived by his son, Clinton, along with several ex-wives. No word yet on funeral plans.

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Doug Dannger, gay man and gay journalist, came on to talk about an investigative piece he’s done on tracking software for cell phones…Show Log For Friday December 2, 2011

Doug Dannger, gay man and gay journalist, came on to talk about an investigative piece he’s done on tracking software for cell phones. Sprint and AT&T are being sued by consumers for placing this kind of software on phones in what they believe is a violation of federal law. Doug says, “as a gay man and a gay journalist,” that they’re just a bunch of crybabies who don’t want to admit they lose their phones alot and need this software. Doug says most people are paranoid that “there’s a camera somewhere watching their wives going to the bathroom.”

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NY Post: Half of German city to be evacuated as massive World War II bomb defused

Last Updated: 10:15 AM, December 1, 2011

Posted: 10:14 AM, December 1, 2011

KOBLENZ, Germany — Bomb experts in the German city of Koblenz are working out how to defuse a massive World War II-era bomb that surfaced in the Rhine River due to low water levels. Almost half of all the residents in the western city — about 45,000 residents — will be evacuated from their homes while the bomb is made safe Sunday, Der Spiegel reported. Two hospitals, seven retirement homes and a local jail will also be emptied.

The bomb measures ten feet long (three meters) and weighs 1.8 tons (1.6 tonnes). Unexploded bombs from World War II often turn up in German cities, forcing authorities to evacuate areas while the bombs are defused or destroyed. But they rarely involve such a large number of local people having to leave their homes.

German authorities said further bomb discoveries along the riverbed were likely due to the unexpectedly low water levels caused by an unseasonably dry November.