This is the effort fighting Democrats’ power grab. Please follow and share their info … help us get the truth in front of Virginians, especially rural Virginians who stand to lose so much.
Matt Yang King (the voice actor for Liu Kang) recently lost his partner to cancer after a five-year battle.
If you’re able to help, please consider donating through the link below. If not, sharing it would also mean a lot❤
@MarkBullockNFL I feel like after Rivera you gotta let someone stew a bit after they were first fired as a HC or they don’t seem to learn their lessons from why they got fired
definitely bring him as OC and see how it goes
I’m glad I was able to capture the memories….Lamarr was a great person who I wish I could’ve spoken with more while he was here. It’s very sad to see someone with so much genuine integrity leave us so soon. We weren’t the closest of friends but we would check in with eachother
I ate at restaurants with Lamarr Wilson, just the two of us, hundreds of times.
We were, in many ways, opposites. We were unlikely best friends.
Lamarr loved to eat maximum spice. I loved what he teasingly called “sweet meat,” such as orange chicken and sugary barbecue.
Lamarr liked eating variety. I would order the same dish fifty times.
Lamarr was built like a linebacker. I was built like a string bean.
Lamarr radiated charisma and “read people” well, one reason he was a great showcaser and host. I’m a real-life Mr. Bean unless I work hard to be otherwise.
Some of us have family of birth and family of choice. I was honored to be among Lamarr’s family of choice. He stayed at my home when he first moved to Los Angeles, joking about the sounds of Southern California’s coyotes and its treacherous mountain streets. I later helped him move six times that I can remember.
We were both from Chicago, both extremely private, and both finding our way in a fast-changing world. We were “tell each other like it was” friends in a city that often tells you what you want to hear. We were each other’s “reserve belief” when we had exhausted belief in ourselves.
It was a pleasure to see Lamarr’s dreams come true and the professional success that enabled it.
Lamarr was a quietly charitable person. Not for fanfare nor a tax deduction, but because he knew struggle. He thrilled at being for others what he himself had once needed.
This photo is the last time that Lamarr and I ate out together, just the two of us. He was hosting me at his beautiful home as a Los Angeles out-of-towner, as I once did for him.
There are questions I am not qualified to answer. Lamarr and I spoke at length on his 48th birthday this past October. I can only speak for my experience. I was very lucky to call Lamarr my friend. I will miss him.