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In 1985, Walters set up a sports management agency with Franzese as a silent partner. At a meeting he agreed to hand over $50,000 in return for a 25 percent interest from the sports agency. [37] Franzese was the president of Miami Gold, a film production company that produced the 1986 film Knights of the City. [25] [27]
Franzese was married to a woman with whom he had three children. [34] While married, John had gotten Cristina Capobianco, a 16-year-old cigarette girl at the Stork Club in Manhattan, pregnant with his son Michael Franzese. Capobianco then married Frank Grillo, to avoid having a scandal surrounding having a child out of wedlock. [34]
WAGS Miami is an American reality documentary television series that premiered on October 2, 2016, on E! television network, making it the first spin-off of WAGS.The reality show chronicles both the professional and personal lives of several WAGs (an acronym for wives and girlfriends of sportspersons).
Michael Franzese was a high ranking member of the Italian-American Colombo crime family before he walked away from his life in the mafia nearly 30 years ago. Since then, Franzese has sought to ...
Sports. Weather. Counting down the top 25 hottest wives and girlfriends in sports. Brian Fitzsimmons. Updated July 14, 2016 at 10:45 PM. It looks like many of your favorite sports stars know how ...
April – Sports agent Norby Walters, reportedly an associate of Michael Franzese, is convicted of fraud and racketeering after signing college players to professional teams before their eligibility expired. April 17 – Gambino Captain Anthony Gaggi dies of natural causes while being housed at New York's Metropolitan Correctional Center.
The 'Better Call Saul' alum and the 'Virgin River' star, who tied the knot in March 1999, held hands on the red carpet on Oct. 28
Joseph E. "Joe Bikini" Brocchini (1933 – May 20, 1976) was a soldier under Joseph "Joe Brown" Lucchese in the Corona crew. Born and raised in Corona, Queens, he was arrested as a 17-year-old along with four other youths for carrying out a series of burglaries that robbed eight businesses in north Queens of $26,000 during a week-long spree in 1950.