Rockie Gardiner

Rochelle "Rockie" Gardiner was an American astrologer. Her syndicated astrology column, The Rockie Horoscope, appeared in a variety of publications (mostly alternative weekly newspapers), on her own website, and she also gave custom astrological readings for individuals.

Background

She was born in 1938 in Brooklyn, New York and raised in Lawrence, New York on Long Island. Ms. Gardiner was a Sagittarius. She attended Syracuse University and graduated from Barnard College. Following graduation she worked as an editor of children's books at Doubleday Publishing where she worked with such well-known established writers such as Arthur Miller and Shirley Jackson.

In 1958 she married Peter Gardiner, a pioneering film director of psychedelic "pop films" that were predecessors to music videos. Peter and Rockie had a son, Jeremy, born in 1963 and in 1966 the small Gardiner family moved to Los Angeles, California where Rockie discovered an interest in astrology. Peter died in 1968 and Rockie remained single the rest of her life.

Rockie Horoscope Astrology Column

Rockie's astrology column, The Rockie Horoscope, first appeared in the L.A. Weekly in 1983. Rockie typically wrote a general forecast for each weekday telling about the overall astrological influences and how they would affect a given day. She would also write a general forecast for the week ahead. These would be followed by weekly sign readings for the individual sun signs.

Her columns were known for their humor and wit. She frequently included pop-culture references to celebrities, politics, professional sports and pop music. Rockie famously predicted that U.S. President Ronald Reagan would die in office and that George H. W. Bush would assume the position, as well as that Jesse Jackson would be a Vice-Presidential candidate.

Sometimes, when she had not gotten around to updating her website, she would take down the old information and post the following message: "Rockie is soaking up atmosphere and astrological insight."

Newspapers that carried her column included: The Improper Bostonian, The L.A. Weekly, The Las Vegas Weekly, The O.C. Weekly, The Philadelphia Weekly and The Village Voice. It was even carried in Vogue magazine. In addition to her newspaper column and website, she also sold customized sign readings to individuals.

Rockie died unexpectedly following a brief illness on October 31, 2008, Halloween Day, at 11:11 a.m.

References

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