We first met Theo Huxtable, then portrayed by a 14-year-old Malcolm-Jamal Warner, during the 1984 pilot episode of "The Cosby Show," when Theo declared he didn’t want to go to college. Eight years later, in the 1992 series finale and the last time we saw Theo, he was achieving that very milestone as he graduated college. It was a powerful full-circle moment!
Over those years, we didn’t just watch Theo grow up, we also witnessed Malcolm-Jamal's maturation. We grew up with him. We watched him transform from a bright, talented teenager into a remarkable young man before our eyes. That is the admiration and love we have for him that has stayed with us for decades... and THAT is why this loss hurts so very deeply. He was and will always be our on screen and off the screen brother and he will be honored forever.
The saddest part about Malcolm-Jamal Warner’s passing is that there’s a whole generation that will never see his early acting brilliance on the Cosby Show because of what that terrible man did. They won’t be able to watch reruns or watch it on streaming to truly appreciate him 🥺
@NFLRedZones@NFL you guys are being bias by not showing the Seahawks Vikings game you guys keep showing the Buffalo and Patriots game the Miami and San Fran game what about Seattle and Minnesota?
@JudgeJudyTV is a racist scumbag B!itch 🖕🏾🖕🏾🖕🏾🖕🏾🖕🏾 you purposely didn’t let me speak you cunt. Rude ass B!tch every time i would speak you would shut me up. hurry up and die already do us all a favor dirty white B!tch 🖕🏾