Reuters Killed George Soros
At 5:41 p.m. on Thursday afternoon, the 162-year-old news agency accidentally published a prewritten obituary for Soros, complete with dummy text for the place and time of his future death. And it was pretty harsh!
He created the special effects for films like 1963's Jason and the Argonauts, drawing inspiration from King Kong in a prophetic career long before the dawn of CGI — and it's obvious that his influence runs deep through the rise of digital cinema.
At 5:41 p.m. on Thursday afternoon, the 162-year-old news agency accidentally published a prewritten obituary for Soros, complete with dummy text for the place and time of his future death. And it was pretty harsh!
Comedian and lovable character actor Jonathan Winters died last night at the age of 87, according to family sources who said he passed away peacefully of natural causes.
Perhaps the English-speaking world's most influential contemporary philosopher of law, Dworkin will be remembered for upholding equality as the law's foremost guiding principle — and for being one of the most topical scholars of his time.
Former New York City Mayor Ed Koch died early this morning at the age of 88. Below are some highlights from the many glowing remembrances of the very memorable politician.
The woman who turned her advice column into a worldwide phenomenon was 94 years old.
The veteran reporter will be remembered for his award-winning work covering the 1988 presidential campaign and the Middle East.
Ada Louise Huxtable, the famed New York Times and Wall Street Journal architecture critic who won the first-ever Pulitzer Prize for Criticism in 1970, has died. She was 91.
When someone like Robert Bork dies, the inevitable barrage of obituaries becomes something of an art form. Here are the best attempts to describe the conservative legal icon so far.
Mother Jones noticed a discrepancy in the "notable deaths" lists assembled by major newspapers: the majority of the "notable" people listed were men.
Former Congressman and Senator George McGovern passed away Sunday morning. He was 90 years old.
It hasn't yet been confirmed, but all signs point to a suicide in the death of influential hip-hop manager Chris Lighty, who managed 50 Cent, LL Cool J, Missy Elliot, Mariah Carey, and Diddy.
Sad news today, TMZ is reporting that Phyllis Diller, the legendary comedian whose career spanned decades and entire evolution of modern comedy, has died. She was 95.
He did have sex with him; he called him a crypto-Nazi, not crypto-fascist; and he wasn't related to Al Gore. The corrections on the New York Times' Gore Vidal obituary are so perfectly Vidal.
Count Robert de La Rochefoucauld, who fought for France in World War II as an epically awesome secret agent with the British, died this spring at 88. Drawing from two recent obituaries, one in today's New York Times and the other in The Telegraph, we bring you highlights from the life of one of the world's most fascinating men.
Film and television actor Ernest Borgnine, who won an Oscar for his portrayal of a lonely, living-with-mom, butcher-from-the-Bronx in 1955's Marty -- and much later voiced the "Mermaidsman" character in Spongebob Squarepants -- died on Sunday is Los Angeles. He was 95, and never retired.
Artisanal, a word that fought early in his career to ensure recognition of craftsmen for their important contributions to society before later being drafted into the creation of a worldwide gourmet branding glut, died Wednesday.
Paul Fussell, author, cultural critic, and "public curmudgeon" in the words of his New York Times obituary, died Wednesday at 88.
Robin Gibb, one third of the legendary Bee Gees, died on Sunday due to complications from liver and colon cancer.
Can one even begin to count the contributions to kid lit, and later, to our adult lives, made by Maurice Sendak?
To a certain generation of people, the Beastie Boys were as monumental and important as the Beatles, as groundbreaking, as formative, as sweeping and meaningful in their celebrity but also in their music, always the music.
Levon Helm, singer and drummer for The Band, passed away at 71, after battling throat cancer.
Anthony Shadid, who spent two decades covering conflicts and change in the Middle East as a correspondent for The New York Times, The Washington Post, and others, died yesterday while on assignment in Syria.
Whitney Houston has died at age 48 at the Beverly Hilton Hotel. She was scheduled to appear at Clive Davis' annual pre-Grammy bash tonight.
Also: Former Ohio State football coach Jim Tressel is back on a campus in Ohio, Gordie Howe is sick, and Serena Williams is spending quality time in Paris with Grigor Dimitrov.
The man who ran Boston for 16 years has died after a ten-year battle with Alzheimer's.
The death of Christopher Hitchens last night, from complications from esophageal cancer at age 62, ended one of the great intellectual careers of the last 40 years.
The creator of two of television's most iconic shows died today at 94
Wrongly incarcerated for 27 years, the former Black Panther died at his Tanzania home
The X-Ray Spex frontwoman was one of the most prominent female voices in punk rock
He sought to examine our conscience in films like '12 Angry Men' and 'Network'
The Arts & Letters Daily founder dies at 66
For a classic American venue, a date with the wrecking ball
Internet mourns passing of tentacled soccer-prognosticator
The irascible comic book innovator died in his Cleveland home Monday
Obituaries split between extolling his literary influence and reflecting on his puzzling self-seclusion
Dead at 59, the '70s legend is remembered as a black icon and a ladies' man
Melinda Henneberger is fed up with scurrilous visitors to Politics Daily
The actor is remembered for playing nerdy characters alongside Frank Sinatra and Arnold Schwarzenegger
The Cincinnati Bengals' wide receiver had a trouble past, but fans and fellow players saw signs of improvement
Walt's influential nephew is credited with revitalizing Disney's animation division
Roberts leaves behind a multimillion dollar ministry and a university bearing his name
Remembering Washington's most beloved wordsmith
In the wake of Irving Kristol's death, columnists wax nostalgic for the intellectual conservatism he championed
First reactions to the "Godfather" of neoconservatism's death
He'll always be known as the man who fired Bobby Knight, but Myles Brand was a great reformer, too
The death of an iconic folk-rock singer prompts writers of all ages and political persuasions to celebrate her legacy
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