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Norm Clarke

Norm Clarke (July 8, 1942 – March 20, 2025) was an American sportswriter and reporter, later known for his gossip column in the Las Vegas Review-Journal, which ran from 1999 to 2016.

Clarke was born on July 8, 1942, in Terry, Montana. He had two brothers and a sister. Their father died of cancer when Clarke was about 10 years old. When Clarke was a young child, one of his suspenders snapped loose and struck his right eye as he was playing. There were no effects until several years later when the eye became discolored; this, along with the family's history of cancer, prompted their doctor to encourage the eye's removal, which occurred around the age of 10. Clarke used a prosthetic eye into adulthood before adopting what would become his trademark eyepatch.

In 1955, Clarke was working as a paperboy for the Miles City Star newspaper. He graduated from Terry High School in 1960. Clarke subsequently attended Northern Montana College, but later dropped out, briefly bagging groceries thereafter.

Clarke began his writing career in 1963, as a sportswriter for the Terry Tribune, a weekly newspaper. He moved on to newspaper jobs in Miles City, Helena and Billings, Montana.

In 1973 he went to work for the Associated Press (AP) in Cincinnati, Ohio, where he covered the Beverly Hills Supper Club fire in neighboring Southgate, Kentucky, in which 165 people perished. In 2014, Clarke revisited the incident and wrote his account of interviewing the 18-year-old bus boy, Walter Bailey, who interrupted the comedians on stage to try to warn the nearly 1,300 people in the room about the fire. As authorities were controlling the scene in the immediate aftermath, Clark was the first to be able to interview Bailey. Clarke's reporting on the Willow Island Disaster, a 1978 collapse of a power plant in West Virginia, garnered him and his colleagues a nomination for the Pulitzer Prize. He also covered the 1980 MGM Grand fire in Las Vegas. He eventually transferred to San Diego, California and then Los Angeles, where he helped coordinate the AP's coverage of the 1984 Summer Olympics.

Clarke next went to Denver's Rocky Mountain News to work as a sportswriter, eventually covering the Major League Baseball team the Colorado Rockies. During the 1989 World Series held in San Francisco, Clarke was in the stadium as the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake damaged the San Francisco Bay Area and the Stadium. In 1996, he switched to writing a lifestyle column for the paper.

In 1999, Clarke wound up meeting the publisher of the Las Vegas Review-Journal while visiting one of his brothers, who worked as a photographer for the newspaper. The discussion led to Clarke joining the newspaper as its celebrity gossip columnist. His column, eventually known as "Vegas Confidential," launched on September 17, 1999. The column ran until July 28, 2016, when health challenges required additional medication, producing side effects which interfered with his work. Within a year, he had come out of retirement and joined the Vegas Stats & Information Network as a contributing columnist.

Clarke wrote five books. The most recent, a memoir called Power of the Patch, was published in March 2025, just before his death.

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