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Willie Garson's heartbroken son, Nathen Garson, paid a touching tribute to his father on the one-year anniversary of the beloved late actor's death.
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Willie Garson’s heartbroken son, Nathen Garson, paid a touching tribute to his father on the one-year anniversary of the beloved late actor’s death.
The “Sex and the City” star, who died from pancreatic cancer in Sept. 2021, adopted Nathen from the foster care system in 2009 when Nathen was 7 years old. The pair appeared extremely close.
Taking to Instagram on Wednesday, Nathen admitted that among the many things he missed about his dad was his infamous “dad jokes.”
“Wow. I can’t believe it’s already been a year since this beautiful bald man that I can proudly call my dad passed away,” Nathen wrote alongside a series of snaps of the father-son duo.
“Besides his head, I think I miss his laugh and smile the most. Because I knew that whenever he was laughing he wasn’t the only one laughing.”
Calling his father “my best friend,” Nathen proudly recalled how his famous dad would put others first before himself.
“He wasn’t just my father, he was my best friend and a mentor before I even knew what that was,” he wrote “He inspired me when I was younger to be better than I ever thought I could and because of that I try to always do better.
“I would not be where I am today if not for him. I wouldn’t be who I am if not for him. He taught me to care about others and showed me how to love when all I had ever know was to fight for myself and care only about myself.”
Nathen urged others to follow in his late father’s footsteps and “live life to its fullest.”
“Life comes and goes way too quick so cherish everyone and say hi to a stranger every once in a while because you never know when you could meet your next best friend. That’s how my dad met me,” he concluded his tear-jerking post.
The late “And Just Like That…” star previously raved about his love for his son in an interview with Page Six one year before his passing.
“He’s an adult and soon to be taking care of me which is really why I got him to be honest,” Garson told us in October 2020. “He’s lovely and a really special guy. He’s wonderful and he’s in college in Ohio.”
Willie added, “I very much always wanted to have a child. I had a long relationship, off and on, for like 20 years and she never wanted to have a child, which is fine. And it was like my mid-life crisis, I really wanted a child more than anything else and I got one. We’re partners, my kid and I.”
Prior to his death, Garson had returned to NYC to reprise his role of Stanford Blatch in “And Just Like That…”, the “SATC” revival .

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Willie Garson's heartbroken son, Nathen Garson, paid a touching tribute to his father on the one-year anniversary of the beloved late actor's death.
Getty Images

Thanks for contacting us. We've received your submission.
Willie Garson’s heartbroken son, Nathen Garson, paid a touching tribute to his father on the one-year anniversary of the beloved late actor’s death.
The “Sex and the City” star, who died from pancreatic cancer in Sept. 2021, adopted Nathen from the foster care system in 2009 when Nathen was 7 years old. The pair appeared extremely close.
Taking to Instagram on Wednesday, Nathen admitted that among the many things he missed about his dad was his infamous “dad jokes.”
“Wow. I can’t believe it’s already been a year since this beautiful bald man that I can proudly call my dad passed away,” Nathen wrote alongside a series of snaps of the father-son duo.
“Besides his head, I think I miss his laugh and smile the most. Because I knew that whenever he was laughing he wasn’t the only one laughing.”
Calling his father “my best friend,” Nathen proudly recalled how his famous dad would put others first before himself.
“He wasn’t just my father, he was my best friend and a mentor before I even knew what that was,” he wrote “He inspired me when I was younger to be better than I ever thought I could and because of that I try to always do better.
“I would not be where I am today if not for him. I wouldn’t be who I am if not for him. He taught me to care about others and showed me how to love when all I had ever know was to fight for myself and care only about myself.”
Nathen urged others to follow in his late father’s footsteps and “live life to its fullest.”
“Life comes and goes way too quick so cherish everyone and say hi to a stranger every once in a while because you never know when you could meet your next best friend. That’s how my dad met me,” he concluded his tear-jerking post.
The late “And Just Like That…” star previously raved about his love for his son in an interview with Page Six one year before his passing.
“He’s an adult and soon to be taking care of me which is really why I got him to be honest,” Garson told us in October 2020. “He’s lovely and a really special guy. He’s wonderful and he’s in college in Ohio.”
Willie added, “I very much always wanted to have a child. I had a long relationship, off and on, for like 20 years and she never wanted to have a child, which is fine. And it was like my mid-life crisis, I really wanted a child more than anything else and I got one. We’re partners, my kid and I.”
Prior to his death, Garson had returned to NYC to reprise his role of Stanford Blatch in “And Just Like That…”, the “SATC” revival .

This story has been shared 84,862 times.
84,862


This story has been shared 60,511 times.
60,511


This story has been shared 38,690 times.
38,690


This story has been shared 37,162 times.
37,162


© 2022 NYP Holdings, Inc. All Rights Reserved

Terms of Use

Privacy Notice

Your Ad Choices

Sitemap

Your California Privacy Rights

Do Not Sell My Personal Information




Your California Privacy Rights

Do Not Sell My Personal Information


A memorial for Melanie Ramos, the 15-year-old who died of a suspected fentanyl overdose at Bernstein High School in Hollywood on Sept. 13.
At least seven teenagers, including the 15-year-old Bernstein High School girl who died last week, have overdosed in the last month from pills possibly containing fentanyl, according to the Los Angeles Police Department.
The latest overdose occurred Saturday morning, when a 15-year-old student from STEM Academy of Hollywood, one of three schools located on the Bernstein campus, was found unconscious by his mother in their Hollywood residence, said LAPD Chief Michel Moore.
Police said they are investigating whether the most recent overdose was connected to the drugs that killed 15-year-old Melanie Ramos, a student at Bernstein High School, on Sept. 13.
Officers responded to a report of a hospitalization of a minor and discovered that the boy ingested a quarter of a pill that he believed to be Percocet but that police said possibly contained fentanyl, Moore said. The boy was treated Saturday at a hospital for an overdose and is expected to survive, police said.
Moore confirmed that the 10 pills that police took into custody last week during the arrest of a 15-year-old boy on suspicion of manslaughter tested positive for fentanyl. He described them as “crude blue M30 pills” believed to be counterfeit pills containing fentanyl and are produced by illicit labs as a substitute for Percocet.
L.A. schools Supt. Carvalho and Police Chief Moore reach for strategies to prevent more overdose deaths on and off school grounds.
Two high school boys, both students at Apex Academy, were arrested Thursday, including the 15-year-old who allegedly sold the fentanyl-laced pill that led to the overdose death of Melanie. Apex Academy is an independent charter school that is also located on the Bernstein campus.
Melanie and her 15-year-old friend both overdosed last week at the Hollywood school, police said. Melanie was found unconscious in the girl’s bathroom and was pronounced dead at the scene by paramedics. Her friend overdosed and was hospitalized.
A 16-year-old boy was also arrested on his way to school last week and booked on suspicion of narcotics sales for allegedly selling pills to a Hollywood High School boy at Lexington Park, located a few blocks from Bernstein High, Moore said. Police didn’t identify the boys because they are juveniles.
Police said there was a fourth person, also likely a student, who overdosed at the park last week, but her identity is not known, because she left the park after being treated before police could interview her.
“It speaks to the impurities of street narcotics,” Moore said. “Fentanyl is a very dangerous drug, and this dosage can range from being a painkiller to a depressant to death.”
Sparked by a TikTok challenge that urged users to douse chicken with NyQuil and heat it up, the FDA issued a warning about cooking with over-the-counter medicine.
Moore said L.A. Unified School District officials were notified about the latest student overdose sometime over the weekend. The school district deferred to LAPD for updated details on the investigation.
L.A. schools Supt. Alberto Carvalho said last week that at least six LAUSD students, including three from Sept. 13, have been involved in the use of narcotics, “some resulting in overdose, some resulting in students being transported to a medical facility, some being immediately released to the parents.”
Moore said the exact number of students who ingested the pills is unknown because police believe that others took the drug, survived and may not have sought medical attention.
“This is not an exact science — we’re just reporting what comes up with hospitalizations,” he said. “It’s possible that others were impacted by these illicit street drugs and we’re just unaware of them.”
Fentanyl is often mixed with other drugs (including heroin, methamphetamine and cocaine) to increase potency, but it can be deadly. Test kits can help.
Melanie’s family has called for those responsible for distributing the drugs to Melanie to be held accountable and for enhanced security measures at the schools, especially during after-school activities.
“I’m angry that these kids had got ahold of these pills and decided to distribute them at school knowing what this can do to somebody. ... There’s somebody connected to them and somebody who hired them,” said Gladys Manriques, a relative who spoke on the family’s behalf.
“We want [the district] to take us into consideration. Don’t leave us just reading whatever we see on the news,” she said. “I think we deserve to be informed. I think they can do better on that. We have a million questions that haven’t been answered.”
Moore said the department’s high-intensity drug task force has been assigned to investigate the case and that it is hopeful that other victims of the overdoses will come forward and cooperate with law enforcement.
“We’re not pursuing any type of charge against the people who’ve taken illicit drugs and are suffering from their effects,” he said. “We want to identify the purveyor. If there’s a student, then there’s an adult and a drug trade organization that’s engaged in the marketing and distribution.”
Moore urged anyone with more information to contact Crime Stoppers at (800) 222-TIPS to report crimes anonymously.
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Summer Lin is a reporter on the Fast Break Desk, the Los Angeles Times’ breaking news team. Before coming to The Times, she covered breaking news for the Mercury News and national politics and California courts for McClatchy’s publications, including the Sacramento Bee. An East Coast native, Lin moved to California after graduating from Boston College and Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism. In her free time, she enjoys hikes, skiing and a good Brooklyn bagel.
Howard Blume covers education for the Los Angeles Times. He’s won the top investigative reporting prize from the L.A. Press Club and print Journalist of the Year from the L.A. Society of Professional Journalists chapter. He co-hosts “Deadline L.A.” on KPFK, which the press club named best radio public affairs show in 2010. He teaches tap dancing and has two superior daughters.


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Gov. Kathy Hochul received $300,000 in donations tied to Charlie Tebele and his family.
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Charlie Tebele is CEO and founder of Digital Gadgets.
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The Hochul administration paid Digital Gadgets roughly twice the going rate for rapid tests bought by other states like California.
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Political donor Charle Tebele hosted a campaign fundraiser for Gov. Kathy Hochul last November — just four days before she declared a state of emergency that paved the way for his company to receive $637 million in no-bid state contracts.
The stunning revelation — uncovered by the Times Union on Tuesday — has sparked renewed calls for state or federal officials to investigate the alleged pay-to-play scheme involving New Jersey-based distributor Digital Gadgets, which was inked just weeks after the Nov. 22 fundraiser.
The state bought 52 million tests from Digital Gadgets at roughly twice the price paid by places like California that bought directly from a manufacturer — all while Tebele and family members funneled $300,000 to Hochul’s campaign.
“Kathy Hochul gave a no-bid $600M+ contract to a top campaign supporter after she unilaterally suspended NY’s competitive bidding law. The same day the donor offered to be the middle man for the COVID tests, Hochul agreed to pay twice the price,” her Republican challenger, US Rep. Lee Zeldin (R-NY) of Suffolk County, tweeted Tuesday.
“Where’s the AG, DA, & Comptroller?” he added.
State records show Tebele gave $2,000 to Hochul in May 2021 while she was still lieutenant governor under Andrew Cuomo while he was battling for his political life amid a litany of scandals that led him to resign in August 2021.
He gave $25,000 more on Nov. 9 before holding the Nov. 22 fundraiser where his wife Nancy Tebele – a sales executive at Digital Gadgets, according to her LinkedIn – gave Hochul $18,000 while Charlie Tebele chipped in $5,150 more, public records show.
Right around that time, the couple’s son began working for Hochul’s campaign as an intern before landing a paid gig as a “finance associate” for her campaign in May 2022, according to his LinkedIn.
Hochul declared a state of emergency four days later on Nov. 26, suspending procurement rules that might have blocked or held up the deal with Digital Gadgets, which the Times Union reported began receiving payments the following month.
Charlie Tebele dropped $25,000 more on her campaign in February, and $4,700 in April when he hosted another fundraiser for the governor about two weeks before the state made a final installment on the $637 million deal, according to the paper.
Records show he gave another $7,850 in May, and $20,000 to her running mate, Lt. Gov. Antonio Delgado on June 20.
Nancy Tebele similarly dumped $94,300 on Hochul, Delgado and ex-Lt. Gov. Brian Benjamin, who Delgado replaced this spring following her first LG’s federal indictment in relation to alleged campaign finance.
Tebele and his family have given Hochul,
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