Horn+swoggled: Caretaker Discovers James Cameron's Grave
A classic parity of the current "Jesus Tomb" non-story. Horn+swoggled: Caretaker Discovers James Cameron's Grave
A cemetery caretaker in Montpelier, Vermont, has uncovered "compelling evidence" that movie director James Cameron died in 1837. William Frostmore said he was clearing old leaves from among the tombstones at the First Presbyterian Cemetery when he came across a weathered marker that caught his eye."I'm a big movie buff," Frostmore said. "I love 'The Terminator' movies. So I noticed the name 'James Cameron' on that stone right away. I didn't think anything of it, until I went home to do a little research." Frostmore said when he looked up Cameron's entry on Wikipedia, he was shocked to find that Cameron's parents were named Phillip and Shirley -- just like the man buried in the cemetery in 1837.Frostmore called his buddy, middle school math teacher Mark Yancey, to run some calculations. "Mark told me he figures the chances of that gravestone having the same name as James Cameron's family are about 'a million to one.' That's just what he told me -- 'a million to one,' he said." Frostmore said he's not going public with the revelation of Cameron's death to make money, or to destroy people's faith in the movie business. "Regardless of whether James Cameron really contributed to great movies like 'Rambo: First Blood Part II,' or 'The Abyss,' the fact is that people are free to draw meaning from those films in their own personal way.
