People are always looking for the next scariest thing possible but what’s scarier then something that a creator thinks of is something that can actually happen to you.
03.05.2020 - 02:39 / nypost.com
After an al Qaeda truck bomb ripped through United Nations headquarters at the Canal Hotel in Baghdad in the summer of 2003, Carolina Larriera tried to dig through piles of rubble with her bare hands to save the man she loved.
Dazed from the powerful blast, her clothes covered in dust and splattered with blood from the horribly wounded colleagues she had tried to bring to safety, Larriera was only able to exchange a few words with Sergio Vieira de Mello before he died.
Their love story is
People are always looking for the next scariest thing possible but what’s scarier then something that a creator thinks of is something that can actually happen to you.
Chrissy Teigen‘s feud with Alison Roman took a new turn on Tuesday when it was reported that the New York Times had placed the cook and contributor’s column on “temporary leave.”
Ken Osmond, who died Monday at the age of 76, never escaped the indelible character of Eddie Haskell, the trouble-making, smooth-talking teenager he played on the 1950s and ‘60s hit television sitcom “Leave it to Beaver.” In fact, Osmond was so synonymously linked to the portrayal of the schmoozer suck-up that he decided to leave television and forge a new identity, signing on with the Los Angeles Police Department in 1970.
While watching the thrilling Killing Eve series it is difficult to imagine someone as psychotic as Villanelle actually exists, but apparently the character is inspired by a real-life assassin.
The tracks didn't make it onto 'Future Nostalgia'
By Will Thorne
Like the rest of us, it's shaping up to be an interesting year for Gal Gadot. The Israeli superstar who catapulted to fame when she landed the iconic role of Wonder Woman was meant to have a massive 2020.
In addition to scripted projects that Ryan Murphy has created for Netflix, he’s also producing compelling documentaries, like, that shine a light on untold histories. The heartfelt and emotional film tells the lifelong love story between Pat Henschel and former baseball player Terry Donahue, who died in March 2019 at the age of 93 after suffering from Parkinson’s disease.