The legendary Liccy of the Incredible String Band has been traced down. Therein lies a tale…
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Musings on the byways of popular culture
The legendary Liccy of the Incredible String Band has been traced down. Therein lies a tale…
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It seems donuts and coffee are the key.
Yeah, I saw that and it’s pretty clear she didn’t want to be. I read the whole piece, but didn’t like myself for being so intrusive.
Daily Mail? No thanks
I’m glad she’s still alive I’m curious as to why the dm wanted to find her, hardly seems to be of interest to their clientèle.
She obviously doesn’t want to be found so respect her privacy and leave her be…
Agreed
Someone at work who is responsible for data protection used the phrase “right to be forgotten.” It’s a legal term meaning that an organisation can’t keep your personal data longer than necessary.
I think it should have a broader use for someone like this who just doesn’t want to be in the public eye any more.
That article leaves a nasty taste, and doesn’t really tell us anything that we need to know either. It’s not a detective story, but a simple invasion of privacy.
Glad to hear she’s not dead.
Now lets leave her alone.
I won’t be looking at the article, because encouraging the Daily Mail in any of it’s endeavours would be a bad thing.
In a perfect world, the DM would be a distant memory of a dark period in UK journalism.
I’m with you on this. Why do they think any of their ghastly readers need to know?
Not so much a thin line between what’s of interest to the public
and what’s in the public interest as a yawning chasm
Yep, I ain’t reading this.
The Daily Mail and the 60s = two completely incompatible bedfellows.
If it was a Venn Diagram there would just be two round circles next to each other.
Or on completely different sheets of paper.