Ozzy Osborne Crashes His Ferrari | FerrariChat

Ozzy Osborne Crashes His Ferrari

Discussion in 'Ferrari Discussion (not model specific)' started by Vettman 1, Dec 15, 2010.

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  1. Vettman 1

    Vettman 1 Rookie

    Jun 20, 2004
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    Ca. Sierra Foothills
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    Rich
  2. GuyIncognito

    GuyIncognito Nine Time F1 World Champ
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    Jun 30, 2007
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    #2 GuyIncognito, Dec 15, 2010
    Last edited by a moderator: Sep 7, 2017
  3. PV Dirk

    PV Dirk F1 Veteran

    Jul 26, 2009
    5,401
    Ahwatukee, AZ
    I say better than a Bentley for this fellow.
     
  4. SrfCity

    SrfCity F1 World Champ

    Chick car? It has to belong to his wife or daughter :D
     
  5. PA Wolfpacker

    PA Wolfpacker Formula Junior

    Aug 19, 2007
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    Neil
    So I guess you were expecting a Nero California
     
  6. NeuroBeaker

    NeuroBeaker Advising Moderator
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    Oct 1, 2008
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    Andrew
    Poor Ozzy. :eek:

    All the best,
    Andrew.
     
  7. AMA328

    AMA328 F1 Rookie

    Nov 12, 2002
    2,518
    ABQ-67me68-OKC :)
    Well, at least no one's gonna start another cam belt thread based on this little incident...
     
  8. GrayTA

    GrayTA F1 World Champ
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    Jun 25, 2006
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    PDG

    Were his cambelts changed properly?? If not, then you know he could have lost control of the vehicle and that could have caused his crash....


    j/k



    PDG
     
  9. robbie

    robbie F1 Rookie

    Aug 26, 2005
    3,015
    Los Gatos, CA
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    Robert
    Let's see .. licensed for only 2 weeks .. 62 years old .. driving a Ferrari he's just gotten (20 miles on it) .. been known to indulge in recreational chemicals .. GEE, COULDN'T SEE THAT COMING.
     
  10. UroTrash

    UroTrash Four Time F1 World Champ
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    Jan 20, 2004
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    Clifford Gunboat
    What the hell is actually wrong with him? Parkinson's? Drug induced brain damage? Anyone know?
     
  11. ApexOversteer

    ApexOversteer F1 Veteran

    Feb 15, 2007
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    Smoky Mountains, TN
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    T.A. Bell
    +1

    It's got to be Kelly's car.
     
  12. TexasF355F1

    TexasF355F1 Seven Time F1 World Champ
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    Feb 2, 2004
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    Jason
    Drug abuse for starters.

    Not sure what other issues he may have. But all the drugs have had their impact on his body.
     
  13. BigTex

    BigTex Seven Time F1 World Champ
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    Bubba
    He was lost.....that's pretty distracting........come one guys, it sounds like it was just a bump at a light and the guy he hit was a real piece of work.....didn't even recognize his name.

    I would have had him autograph my bumper and call it "good".....

    Then jumped in to drive him home, and called a cab back.....
     
  14. tundraphile

    tundraphile F1 Veteran

    May 16, 2007
    5,083
    Missouri
    I am surprised he ever got a driver's license, and amazed he was able to keep it.
     
  15. BigTex

    BigTex Seven Time F1 World Champ
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    Bubba
    No, it says he went straight out and bought it upon regaining his license......he was just cold on his maD skiLlZ.......
     
  16. BigTex

    BigTex Seven Time F1 World Champ
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    Dec 6, 2002
    79,380
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    Bubba
    He hid behind Lindsey Lohan in line at the DMV.....slid right thru.......
     
  17. theq

    theq Karting

    May 7, 2008
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    continuim
    Full Name:
    Joel
    (distracted) Looking for the crazy train station?
     
  18. bert308

    bert308 Formula 3

    Nov 30, 2002
    1,776
    Roermond Netherlands
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    Bert Kanters
    Legendary heavy metal singer Ozzy Osbourne rear-ended another car Monday morning (December 13) while driving around Los Angeles. Law enforcement sources said Ozzy's Ferrari hit a Mercedes from behind right before entering an L.A. highway. Both parties reportedly waited for police to arrive and then traded information before departing without incident. There were no injuries and damage was minor.

    Commenting on the incident on her U.S. talk show "The Talk", Ozzy's wife/manager Sharon Osbourne said, "Ozzy just recently passed his driving test and you know, every guy's dream from being a kid to 62, they've wanted to have a Ferrari. So he goes and gets himself one. It had 20 miles on the clock, he goes, 'I'm going driving.' He goes out, gets lost, doesn't know where he is and he hits another car. But the guy he hits is a lawyer. So then Ozzy has a wicked panic on, he says sorry, he gets out the car and the guy goes, 'I'm calling the police.' Ozzy goes, 'You don't have to, it's only a minor thing.' The guy goes, 'I'm a lawyer.' And Ozzy says, 'Jeez, it's just my luck, I hit Perry Mason.' It's like, of all the people in the world! This guy was being really lawyer-like, asking questions, being really strict. He was like, 'Don't you leave!' Ozzy was like, 'I'm not going anywhere.'"

    Ozzy revealed in a recent interview that it took him 19 attempts to obtain his driver's license because he was always "drunk or something." He admitted that he was so nervous during one of the tests that he asked his doctor to prescribe tranquilizers. "So when I had to turn the car, I was simply asleep," he said. "When I woke up, the examiner had simply disappeared, but left a message on a paper on the dashboard: 'Unfortunately, Mr. Osbourne has not passed the exam and would suggest that he never again try to drive this car.'" Ozzy also said that instructors and testers have told him, "I'm not even ****ing getting in the car with you."
     
  19. ryalex

    ryalex Two Time F1 World Champ
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    Aug 6, 2003
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    Harsh Reality of 'Osbournes' No Laughing Matter
    The hit show's star says he was 'wiped out' on drugs ordered by a physician
    investigated for overprescribing for others.
    By Chuck Philips
    Times Staff Writer

    December 7, 2003

    Week after week, viewers tuning in to the hit reality series "The Osbournes" saw
    the star of the show in a perpetual stupor.

    With cameras rolling, Ozzy Osbourne fell on his backside into the surf off
    Malibu. He passed out during a party at the Beverly Hills Hotel. He struggled to
    swat a fly in his dining room - only to slap himself in the face.

    The sight of the aging rocker staggering around his Beverly Hills mansion,
    glassy-eyed and mumbling, became a staple of the MTV series last season.

    The cause of Osbourne's disorientation was never explained. It turns out he was
    on Valium - and Dexedrine, Mysoline, Adderall and a host of other powerful
    medications. They were all prescribed by a Beverly Hills physician who, unknown
    to Osbourne, was under investigation for overprescribing drugs to other
    celebrity patients.

    Prescription records show that Dr. David A. Kipper had Osbourne on an array of
    potent drugs - opiates, tranquilizers, amphetamines, antidepressants, even an
    antipsychotic.

    The singer said he swallowed as many as 42 pills a day.

    "I was wiped out on pills," said Osbourne, who fired Kipper in September, more
    than a year after becoming his patient. "I couldn't talk. I couldn't walk. I
    could barely stand up. I was lumbering about like the Hunchback of Notre Dame.
    It got to the point where I was scared to close my eyes at night - afraid I
    might not wake up."

    The state medical board last week moved to revoke Kipper's license, accusing him
    of gross negligence in his treatment of other patients.

    Osbourne, who has battled substance abuse for decades, sought Kipper's help last
    year in kicking a dependence on prescription narcotics. Kipper administered a
    10-day detoxification treatment. Osbourne was grateful. Then his wife, Sharon,
    was diagnosed with cancer, and the rocker's relationship with Kipper took a new
    turn.

    Kipper began writing prescriptions for a broad range of medications he said
    would alleviate Osbourne's anxiety and depression over his wife's illness. The
    number and potency of the drugs grew steadily, records show. At one point,
    Osbourne was on 13 different medications.

    Medical experts who reviewed Osbourne's prescription records at The Times'
    request described the drug regimen as extreme.

    Although they said they could not make definitive judgments without examining
    Osbourne and knowing his medical history, the doctors said the battery of
    medications prescribed by Kipper appeared excessive for any patient.

    "The amount and potency of drugs being prescribed to this patient was
    outrageous," said Dr. Greg Thompson, an associate professor of clinical pharmacy
    at USC Medical School and director of the Drug Information Center at County USC
    Medical Center.

    Dr. Drew Pinsky, medical director of the chemical dependency program at Las
    Encinas Hospital in Pasadena, said the regimen was especially risky for someone
    like Osbourne.

    "This was an extreme amount of medication for a doctor to prescribe to a patient
    with an addiction history," Pinsky said. "On my chemical unit, patients like
    this are not allowed to be exposed to any of these kinds of addictive drugs."

    Kipper, 55, declined to be interviewed. In a statement, he said that "ethical
    and medical privacy laws" barred him from discussing patient care.

    "I have only good wishes for Mr. Osbourne and for his family and for their good
    health," the statement said.

    The doctor's attorney, John D. Harwell, declined to comment beyond saying: "I
    can tell you that virtually every allegation you are reporting is inaccurate,
    incomplete, or . false."

    Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne described their dealings with Kipper in a series of
    interviews by phone and at their six-bedroom, Spanish-style mansion above Sunset
    Boulevard. They made available prescription records and the doctor's invoices,\0
    along with credit card receipts and photocopied checks documenting their
    payments.

    The Osbournes said Kipper had won their confidence and had become a regular
    presence at their home. He accompanied Ozzy on tour and appeared in several
    episodes of "The Osbournes."

    After Sharon was diagnosed with colon cancer last year, Kipper prescribed
    anti-anxiety medications for her and installed a team of nurses at the couple's
    home to care for her.

    "It's like we let him just take over our lives," Sharon Osbourne said. "We
    didn't do anything without telling him."

    Kipper charged the couple $650,000 for his services from June 2002 until they
    fired him three months ago, records show. The medications he prescribed cost
    them an additional $58,000.

    Rapid Rehab Treatment

    Kipper, a UCLA-trained internist, is not certified as a specialist in addiction
    medicine or psychiatry. He practices from an office on Lasky Drive in Beverly
    Hills, next to the posh Peninsula Hotel, and owns an estate above Beverly Glen.

    He often socializes with his clients, who include entertainment executives,
    actors, producers and musicians. Kipper carries a Screen Actors Guild card and
    has had bit parts in several films, including "As Good As It Gets," "Jackass -
    the Movie" and "Shallow Hal."

    In Hollywood circles, he is known for offering speedy and painless addiction
    therapy in luxury hotel suites or in patients' homes. Kipper has used a
    combination of drugs to wean addicts off narcotics. Key to the treatment is
    buprenorphine, a powerful synthetic opiate that spares patients the agony of
    withdrawal.

    Some celebrities have preferred Kipper's method to conventional drug rehab at
    licensed facilities, which can take months and requires years of follow-up
    therapy.

    But addiction experts say treatments such as Kipper's offer only temporary
    relief because they do not address the underlying causes of addiction or provide
    the sustained psychological support needed to overcome a drug habit.

    State authorities began investigating Kipper in 1998 after The Times reported
    that he was detoxifying celebrity addicts in luxury bungalows at the Peninsula.

    The medical board complaint issued last week accuses him of operating an
    unlicensed detox program, improperly using buprenorphine for addiction
    treatment, and overprescribing habit-forming drugs to eight patients from 1999
    to 2002.

    Harwell, the doctor's lawyer, said Kipper could not comment on the complaint
    without violating patients' privacy. Harwell said he hoped to reach a settlement
    with the board that would allow Kipper to keep his license.

    Osbourne became Kipper's patient in June 2002. The singer was overwhelmed by the
    success of his new TV series and, by his own account, was "strung out on
    narcos."

    Osbourne, 55, rose to fame in the late 1960s when he formed Black Sabbath, a
    British rock quartet often cited as a pioneer in the heavy metal genre. He
    launched a solo career in 1979 and went on to sell more than 40 million albums.

    Guided by wife Sharon, who is also his manager, he reinvented himself during the
    '90s as an elder statesman of heavy metal. His annual "Ozzfest" tours, featuring
    Osbourne alongside hot young bands, attract huge audiences.

    In March 2002, MTV launched its unscripted series about Osbourne's home life,
    portraying him as the doting patriarch of a dysfunctional family. "The
    Osbournes" was an immediate sensation, attracting record audiences for a cable
    show and spawning books, DVDs, a clothing line, playing cards and other
    merchandising spinoffs.

    In May and June of that year, Osbourne signed a $10-million renewal deal with
    MTV. He met President Bush at a Washington dinner. He performed at Buckingham
    Palace and shook hands with Queen Elizabeth II.

    It was more than Osbourne could handle, and he suffered a relapse, abusing
    prescription narcotics. He declined to say what narcotics he was taking or how
    he obtained them. Sharon, who had heard about Kipper from a friend, contacted
    him to arrange an intervention.

    The doctor showed up at the Osbourne mansion with a team of nurses on June 27, 2
    002, and began his detox program. The treatment took 10 days. Kipper charged
    $30,500 - nearly triple the rate at traditional rehab centers.

    By early July, Osbourne was ready to start his next "Ozzfest" tour. Then he
    learned that Sharon had cancer. He postponed the first two concerts while she
    had surgery. By July 10, Osbourne was on the road, performing in Scranton, Pa.
    But his emotional state was fragile.

    Kipper accompanied him for the first week of the tour to monitor his recovery.
    The doctor charged $32,200 for his services and those of a nurse, records show.
    The Osbournes said they also paid for Kipper's air travel, meals and hotel
    accommodations.

    Episodes of "The Osbournes" filmed around this time show the star staring sadly
    out the window of his tour bus, crying on stage and leaving distraught phone
    messages for his wife from hotel rooms around the country.

    "Ozzy couldn't cope," Sharon said. "He was worried I might die. He fell apart."

    According to the Osbournes, Kipper said he could help.

    More and More Drugs

    The doctor diagnosed Osbourne as suffering from anxiety and depression and began
    treating him for those conditions and for a tremor that had become more
    pronounced during the family crisis.

    In August 2002, Kipper put Osbourne on Abien, a sedative often used for
    insomnia, and Adderall, an amphetamine mixture. Kipper also provided nurses to
    watch over Osbourne at home.

    The drug regimen quickly expanded to include anti-anxiety pills, antipsychotic
    tablets and antidepressants, as well as stimulants and tranquilizers.

    In September, Kipper added Mysoline, a barbiturate typically used to prevent
    seizures. Its side effects include dizziness and lack of muscle coordination.

    Soon Osbourne was also swallowing Zyprexa, an antipsychotic drug developed to
    control schizophrenia and other severe mental disorders.

    By November 2002, the rock star was taking 13 different medications, including
    Valium, an anti-anxiety drug whose side effects can include clumsiness,
    grogginess and loss of balance.

    Medical literature on Valium cautions that it is habit-forming and can magnify
    the effects of sedatives, antidepressants, anti-seizure medicines and other
    drugs.

    In May 2003, Kipper added the amphetamine Dexedrine to Osbourne's roster of
    medications.

    Osbourne said he did not question what Kipper was doing because he liked and
    trusted him.

    In all, Kipper prescribed more than 13,000 doses of 32 different pharmaceuticals
    between August 2002 and August 2003, records show.

    "The doctor was stimulating him with uppers at the same time he was knocking him
    down with tranquilizers and barbiturates," said Thompson, the USC drug expert.

    "On top of that, he was giving him Zyprexa, a drug that should only be
    prescribed to extremely psychotic people. These are very powerful
    psychotherapeutic drugs that shouldn't just be passed out by an internist at
    this potency and frequency," Thompson said.

    The experts consulted by The Times said it appeared that Kipper prescribed some
    drugs to counteract side effects caused by other medications Osbourne was taking
    at his direction.

    For example, Zyprexa, the antipsychotic that Osbourne began taking in October
    2002, causes shaking and a ponderous, stiff gait in some patients. In January,
    Kipper started the singer on carbidopa-levodopa, a drug used to relieve such
    symptoms.

    Dr. Wayne Sandler, a Century City psychiatrist who reviewed Osbourne's
    prescription records for The Times, said it was safer to discontinue a drug that
    was causing troublesome side effects than to prescribe additional medications.

    "You just end up chasing one symptom with another," he said. "It's much more
    aggressive than you need to be.. What you would normally do is say, 'Gee, you're
    having side effects. Why don't we back off on you taking these medications?' "

    In addition to the oral medications, Kipper periodically gave Osbourne shots of
    buprenorphine mixed with Valium.

    Buprenorphine, a chemical cousin of morphine and heroin, is often used to treat
    severe, chronic pain. Kipper administered the drug as part of Osbourne's detox
    treatment in June 2002. At that time, it was illegal to use buprenorphine for
    that purpose in this country.

    The Food and Drug Administration has since approved its use for detoxification,
    under strict conditions. A physician must take a state-approved class and obtain
    certification from the state medical board. Kipper did not have the
    certification during the time he was treating Osbourne.

    Records indicate that the doctor gave Osbourne five buprenorphine-Valium
    injections in July 2002, four the next month, six in September and six in
    October. This year, Kipper gave him two injections in March, seven in April and
    eight in May.

    Kipper charged about $500 each for the shots, which he described on invoices as
    "pain injections."

    Osbourne described the injections as "cocktails" and said he looked forward to
    them.

    "He brought it to the house. Sometimes I went to get it at his office over there
    by the Peninsula - or up at his house on the hill," Osbourne said. "I quite
    liked it."

    Captured on MTV

    Osbourne's lumbering gait, lack of coordination and garbled speech became a
    central theme of "The Osbournes" during the show's second season, which aired
    beginning in November 2002.

    MTV crews followed Osbourne to Las Vegas for a performance at the Palm Hotel. In
    the episode, titled "Viva Ozz Vegas," Osbourne is seen mumbling incoherently to
    fans as he wanders the marble halls of the Venetian hotel-casino.

    Kipper, who accompanied Osbourne on a private jet, is seen hanging out with the
    singer as he plays slot machines at the Venetian. The Osbournes paid Kipper
    $15,000 for his services on the three-day trip, records show. The couple say
    they also paid for his airfare, hotel room and meals.

    In another episode of "The Osbournes," the star walks around in circles in the
    middle of his kitchen in Beverly Hills, staring blankly into space. In a dinner
    table scene, he smacks himself in the face while trying to swat a fly.

    On camera, everybody in the room laughs. Behind the scenes, friends and family
    members were growing increasingly concerned.

    "My pharmacist warned me that I was starting to look like death," Osbourne said.

    As her husband was stumbling through episodes of the MTV series, Sharon was
    undergoing chemotherapy under the supervision of a cancer specialist. Kipper,
    meanwhile, was caring for her at home.

    She said she had grown fond of Kipper when he began treating her husband. "When
    I was going through my chemotherapy and cancer treatment, he just kind of came
    in and took over," she said.

    Kipper prescribed anti-anxiety drugs for her and provided nurses to watch over
    her at home. These were in addition to the nurses Kipper had supplied to tend to
    Ozzy.

    Working 12-hour shifts, the pool of nurses provided coverage seven days a week.
    They became part of the backdrop of "The Osbournes."

    A review of state records shows that none of the women was a licensed registered
    nurse or a licensed vocational nurse.

    Yet Kipper charged the couple about $65 an hour for their services - $25 above
    the going hourly rate for registered nurses in Los Angeles.

    Nursing services accounted for more than $400,000 of the total fees the
    Osbournes paid Kipper, records show.

    Harwell, the doctor's attorney, said Kipper could not comment on his nurses'
    credentials because "revealing such information would violate patient
    confidences."

    In December 2002, Kipper tried to interest the Osbournes in upgrading their
    medical care. In a letter, he invited them to sign up for his new "Personal
    Physician Program" featuring "round-the-clock availability, cell-phone access,
    same-day appointments and no waiting."

    The cost: $35,000 a year for the Osbournes and their three children.

    "I am offering this program to a limited number of my devoted patients," Kipper

    "I have enjoyed a valued friendship and I'm honored to be your doctor," the
    letter said. "I look forward to providing the kind of care you deserve and
    need."

    Enough Is Enough

    The Osbournes were too distracted to respond.

    On Dec. 31, 2002, during taping of the season finale of "The Osbournes," Ozzy
    got drunk and passed out during a party at the Beverly Hills Hotel. Although he
    was taking 10 different medications at the time, he can be seen drinking wine,
    whiskey and beer.

    Kipper attended the event. At one point, Osbourne hugs him on camera and gives
    him a kiss on the cheek. His assistants say Osbourne was so inebriated that he
    had to be carried to bed that night.

    By summer, Osbourne said, he was swallowing 42 pills a day. Prescription records
    provide a breakdown: Osbourne was taking eight doses of amphetamines per day,
    nine doses of tranquilizers, 16 of two different barbiturates, two anti-seizure
    tablets, two anticonvulsant pills, two painkillers and three sleeping pills.

    In August, Osbourne was invited to sing "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" during
    the seventh-inning stretch at Wrigley Field in Chicago. He slurred his way
    through the song, mangling the familiar lyrics.

    The scene was replayed repeatedly on national TV.

    "Ozzy was overmedicated," Sharon Osbourne said. "He couldn't speak. He couldn't
    walk. He was falling over. Ozzy would call Kipper and tell him how bad he was
    feeling, and Kipper would say: 'Take five more of those and 10 more of these.'
    It was insane."

    After the Wrigley Field fiasco, Sharon said, she had had enough. She said she
    called Kipper and told him to stay away from her husband.

    Then, on the advice of a friend, she scheduled an appointment for Ozzy with Dr.
    Allan H. Ropper, chief of neurology at Caritas St. Elizabeth's Medical Center in
    Boston.

    Osbourne flew to Boston in September and met with Ropper.

    "He was absolutely flabbergasted about the kinds and amounts of medication that
    I was on," Ozzy said. "He asked me, 'Where are you getting all these pills
    from?' Then he just threw everything in the trash."

    Osbourne said the doctor weaned him off Kipper's medications and wrote him
    prescriptions for three drugs, primarily to treat what the singer described as a
    hereditary tremor. Ropper declined to comment.

    Interviewed at his mansion in October, Osbourne spoke and walked normally,
    showing none of the hesitation and confusion he had displayed on "The
    Osbournes."

    "Looking back on it now, I see Dr. Kipper as sort of a friendly villain,"
    Osbourne said. "He befriended me. I liked him. He comes off as a really nice
    guy - that is, until you get the bill."
     
  20. gurslo

    gurslo Formula 3

    Feb 25, 2008
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    Peter
  21. WILLIAM H

    WILLIAM H Three Time F1 World Champ

    Nov 1, 2003
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    HUBBSTER
    Shameful, The Prince of Darkness in a Ferrari Celica
     
  22. Mr. V

    Mr. V Formula 3

    Oct 23, 2004
    1,247
    Portland, Oregon
    "Finished with my woman 'cause she couldn't help me with my mind..."

    So, in a fit of pique you took her car?
     
  23. BigTex

    BigTex Seven Time F1 World Champ
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    Dec 6, 2002
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    Bubba
    That article explained it......man, that was a LOT of Rx drugs......

    Of course if your doctor says you need 42 pills a day, any sane person would ask "why".....

    If you don't, look forward to joining Micheal Jackson.
     
  24. junglistluder

    junglistluder F1 Rookie
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    I'm pretty sure that article is from 2003..... so not quite new news.
     
  25. BigTex

    BigTex Seven Time F1 World Champ
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    Bubba
    No, I think he posted it in response to Ozzie's apperances on MTV during that period.....sounds like he's escaped from all that now......

    Adderall can do permanent liver damage, they don't highlight when giving it to kids......
     

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