Dude, okay, so, this is wild. I’m just scrolling through my phone, you know, doing the usual doom-scroll, and the amount of celebrity deaths this year is just... a lot. But what’s really tripping me out is this specific cluster of legends who all passed away in 2024. It feels like a moment, like a whole era just packed up its bags and dipped. We lost Dr. Ruth Westheimer, Richard Simmons, and Shannen Doherty, all within the same year. And not just the same year, but like, in this concentrated period of time. It’s like, what in the actual F?
First off, let’s talk about Dr. Ruth. I mean, my parents watched her, my grandparents probably watched her, and honestly, even I remember her from late-night TV and snippets on YouTube. This tiny, badass lady with her thick German accent just, like, revolutionized how we talk about sex. Seriously, she broke so many taboos. Like, before her, it was all hushed tones and euphemisms, and then she came along and was like, “No, let's just talk about it, already!” It was insane how open and direct she was. She died on July 12, 2024, at the age of 96.
And then, on the very next day, July 13, 2024, we lost Richard Simmons. This one hits different, you know? Like, he's been out of the public eye for so long, and there were all these rumors and podcasts about where he was and what was going on. It was this whole mystery, and everyone was kinda just hoping he was okay, living his best life somewhere. And then, bam, he's gone. He was only 76. The reports say he died from blunt traumatic injuries from a fall he had a couple days before, with heart disease as a contributing factor. It’s so jarring. This guy, who was all about energy and movement and getting people to feel good about themselves, died from a fall. It just feels so... quiet for a guy who was so loud and colorful. His show, "Sweatin' to the Oldies," was iconic. My mom used to have the tapes, and sometimes I'd just walk in and he'd be there, on the screen, in his trademark sparkly tank top and Dolphin shorts, just bouncing around with this infectious energy, screaming "Come on, honey, you can do it!" He made fitness feel like a party, not a chore. He was so unapologetically himself, and that's just a vibe we don't see enough of. It’s a huge bummer.
And then, the trifecta. Also on July 13, 2024, we got the news that Shannen Doherty had passed away. This one just… it really got to me. She was so young, only 53. The cause of death was breast cancer, a battle she'd been fighting for years, so it wasn't a total shock, but it was still a gut punch. She was Brenda Walsh, dude. She was the original bad girl of our pop culture. Before the messy reality TV stars, before the Instagram drama, there was Shannen. She was the one you rooted for, even when she was acting out and getting into trouble on "Beverly Hills, 90210." And then she was Prue Halliwell in "Charmed," another show that just defined my childhood. Her characters were always so fierce and independent and sometimes a total train wreck, but you couldn't look away. It’s messed up how long she fought that disease and how public it all was. She was so brave, sharing her journey, the good days and the bad. It was a whole thing. She was a warrior, and it’s just so sad to see her go so early.
It’s just wild, man. Three cultural touchstones, all gone in the blink of an eye. It’s not just the individual losses, it's the feeling that a generation of icons is slowly fading. It makes you feel old, even though I'm only thirty. Like, these people shaped so much of the world I grew up in. Dr. Ruth, making sex and relationships okay to talk about. Richard Simmons, making fitness fun and approachable. And Shannen Doherty, giving us a complex, messy, and totally relatable female lead on TV. They were all pioneers in their own way. And to lose them all, almost at the same exact time, is just... it’s a lot to process. It makes you stop and think about the people who made your world a little brighter, a little more interesting. It's like, okay, so this is what it feels like when the history you lived through starts to become just history. And that’s a pretty weird and humbling feeling, honestly. Rest in peace, legends. You’re definitely missed.
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