True
It was broadcast live on cable and network TV the day she died, and portions of it can still be seen on YouTube.
I Will Always Love You which was recorded in 1992 is considered to be the Whitney Houston video which is the most viewed. It was one of her personal favorites as well.
For me this lady has always been the one and only, so I think even today on her worst day she is able to out-sing most of them contemporary artist! She is the legend alive!
Dinosaurs can be viewed in Houston at the Houston Museum of Natural Science, in their Morian Hall of Paleontology.
George Jones was a talent musician and songwriter he passed away April 2013. There are numerous video clips and film documentation of his funeral services. The service aired on Country Music Television station CMT. Clips of the service can be viewed online.
Yes it was . He laid in state for three days at Graceland
John F Kennedy's body was not viewed by the public because of the fact that his head was lost during the autopsy.
Soldier who has been determined to be viewed in an open casket by the funeral director
The Diplodocus, as well as several other dinosaurs, can be viewed at the Houston Museum of Natural Science in their Morian Hall of Paleontology.
LDS general conference can be viewed online, at your local meetinghouse, or on BYU-tv (if you have satellite).
Yes... Otis's funeral was held at the Macon City Auditorium. His body lay in state at 6:30 am, where 25,000 people viewed his body and 6,500 attended the services. The list attendance included a who's who in soul music and politicians alike. Entertainers and condolences pour in from all over the world. The Beatles were slated to leave and attend the funeral but didn't. Vice-president Hubert H. Humphrey who wrote the liner notes in Otis' 'Stay In School' LP, would send his condolences.
It is not a wake. the wake is at the funeral home where the body is viewed. what you are describing is an after-funeral Supper, possibly this practice ( which is not religious- not a mass or anything like that) might correlate to the Last Supper of Christ and the Apostles- or the related Lutheran term-Lord"s Supper- usually applied to Communion. Not a wake! Come alive!