Birmingham Mourns Death of Native Son Ozzy Osbourne
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PRIMETIMER on MSNOzzy Osbourne fans launch petition to rename Birmingham airport after rockerAccording to a report by Billboard, Dan Hudson, the A Gay And A Nongay podcaster, radio host, BBC TV doc Sashay To Hell host, and stand-up comedian, launched the much-talked-about petition titled "RIP Ozzy Osbourne — petitions honour 'The Prince of Darkness" to rename the Birmingham Airport to Ozzy Osbourne International.
Black Sabbath guitarist Tony Iommi said he thinks bandmate Ozzy Osbourne was "determined" to play the group's farewell show and "really just held out" to do so weeks before his death.
5hon MSN
If you polled the public about Ozzy Osbourne in the 1970s and ’80s, you were likely to hear he was a self-destructive rock-and-roll hedonist, a literal emissary of Satan, or a first-ballot contender for coolest and craziest human alive.
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LouderSound on MSNWatch the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra perform an epic public tribute to Ozzy OsbourneOzzy Osbourne died on July 22, less than three weeks after his emotional Black Sabbath farewell show at Villa Park in Birmingham, England, his wife and kids announced on Instagram. As tributes poured in, Osbourne’s fans and famous friends remembered his music and other big moments from his life. ...
Legendary singer Ozzy Osbourne, frontman of the band Black Sabbath, died this week at the age of 76. The world mourned his loss, but also remembered all the good times he had, such
The heavy-metal nearly bought a La Jolla estate. “Mind you, my wife finds another house she wants to buy every other week,” he said. “How many do we have? Seven.”
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LouderSound on MSNWatch fans gather in Birmingham with flowers, speakers and a big screen to pay respects and celebrate the life of Ozzy OsbourneOzzy fans have gathered in Birmingham across the night to pay tribute to the Prince Of Darkness, who has died aged 76
Fans have been gathering at the Black Sabbath bench on Broad Street and at the mural in Navigation Street to pay tribute to the late Birmingham legend