To populate this murderer’s row of, well, murderers, Davidson races against the clock to court talent and get them to New York in time for filming.
—
Hunter Ingram,
Variety,
28 May 2025
The public believed this story of intentionality so completely that every shark bite was essentially a murder, and every shark a potential murderer, and the beach was the scene of a crime by a deviant monster against innocent beachgoers.
—
Chris Pepin-Neff,
Scientific American,
26 May 2025
The executor of Humphrey’s estate sued on his behalf, claiming that the termination was unlawful and that $3,043.06 in unpaid wages plus interest was owed to the estate.
—
Ruth Marcus,
New Yorker,
29 May 2025
Under the terms of the legislation, the digital replication right does not expire at a person’s death, and can be transferred and licensed by heirs, executors and others.
King Shrewd secretly trains young Fitz as an assassin, harnessing his ancestral magic.
—
Clare Mulroy,
USA Today,
25 May 2025
Those were the final words uttered by Emperor Uriel Septum—played by none other than Star Trek's Patrick Stewart—before an assassin leaped out of the shadows to cut him down.
Several other leading figures of the period ended their days on the executioner’s block, including the unhappy Comte de Chalais, whose headsman bungled the job and ended up frantically chopping away at his screaming victim with a small hatchet.
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