Step into the glitzy and scandalous world of “The Playboy Murders” as it returns for Season 2 with a gripping episode titled “Double Trouble,” airing on Investigation Discovery at 10:01 Pm this Monday, January 22, 2024. This true crime series delves into the darker side of fame, unraveling the twisted tale of Playboy twins Sandy and Mandy Bentley.
The late ’90s saw the Bentley twins skyrocket to fame, but their glamorous lives take a dark turn as a forbidden affair with a Vegas High Roller leads to a dramatic fall. “Double Trouble” promises a rollercoaster of emotions with stolen jewels, a mysterious buyer, and a shocking double murder in the glitzy Hollywood hills. As the twins navigate the highs and lows of their fame, viewers can expect a riveting story of betrayal, crime, and the high cost of living life in the fast lane. Tune in for a night of true crime drama...
The late ’90s saw the Bentley twins skyrocket to fame, but their glamorous lives take a dark turn as a forbidden affair with a Vegas High Roller leads to a dramatic fall. “Double Trouble” promises a rollercoaster of emotions with stolen jewels, a mysterious buyer, and a shocking double murder in the glitzy Hollywood hills. As the twins navigate the highs and lows of their fame, viewers can expect a riveting story of betrayal, crime, and the high cost of living life in the fast lane. Tune in for a night of true crime drama...
- 1/15/2024
- by Jules Byrd
- TV Everyday
Cincinnati — Advocates for U.S. atomic workers sickened by radiation exposure say they're stunned that a federal claims training manual uses fictional characters' names, including an apparent reference to the disfigured villain of the "Nightmare on Elm Street" horror movies.
Deborah Jerison of Yellow Springs, Ohio, said she recently received the Labor Department manual in response to a Freedom of Information request made months earlier. Her late father worked at a now-defunct nuclear weapons plant in Miamisburg, Ohio. She heads a group that helps former atomic workers and their families pursue federal occupational illness compensation claims.
The manual she says she received uses case names derived from TV and movies, such as claimant "Freddie Krueger," spelled slightly different than the Freddy in the "Nightmare" series. The Krueger in the manual is reported as dying on Oct. 31 – Halloween. The example suffered from "depression, dementia and skin cancer."
Jerison, whose physicist father...
Deborah Jerison of Yellow Springs, Ohio, said she recently received the Labor Department manual in response to a Freedom of Information request made months earlier. Her late father worked at a now-defunct nuclear weapons plant in Miamisburg, Ohio. She heads a group that helps former atomic workers and their families pursue federal occupational illness compensation claims.
The manual she says she received uses case names derived from TV and movies, such as claimant "Freddie Krueger," spelled slightly different than the Freddy in the "Nightmare" series. The Krueger in the manual is reported as dying on Oct. 31 – Halloween. The example suffered from "depression, dementia and skin cancer."
Jerison, whose physicist father...
- 9/27/2011
- by AP
- Huffington Post
Engaged to be married again, Hugh Hefner faced complaints from an ex-girlfriend. He talks to Lloyd Grove about his Viagra habits, his aversion to condoms-and his love for his bride-to-be.
"Self-serving semi-fiction!" Hugh Hefner tells me.
Related story on The Daily Beast: Vargas' Classic Pin-Up Girls
He's talking about a former girlfriend's tawdry memoir of life in the Playboy Mansion, splashed this past weekend in London's Daily Mail just as Hef, 84, was happily announcing plans to marry his current flame, a nubile 24-year-old named Crystal Harris.
Izabella St. James' Bunny Tales: Behind Closed Doors at the Playboy Mansion portrays the founder of Playboy, the once-dominant men's magazine in which naked ladies were strange bedfellows with serious journalism, as a jealous cheapskate who kept his blond harem on a tight leash even as he permitted his dogs to soil the carpets and drapes; who wolfed down Viagra and waited impatiently...
"Self-serving semi-fiction!" Hugh Hefner tells me.
Related story on The Daily Beast: Vargas' Classic Pin-Up Girls
He's talking about a former girlfriend's tawdry memoir of life in the Playboy Mansion, splashed this past weekend in London's Daily Mail just as Hef, 84, was happily announcing plans to marry his current flame, a nubile 24-year-old named Crystal Harris.
Izabella St. James' Bunny Tales: Behind Closed Doors at the Playboy Mansion portrays the founder of Playboy, the once-dominant men's magazine in which naked ladies were strange bedfellows with serious journalism, as a jealous cheapskate who kept his blond harem on a tight leash even as he permitted his dogs to soil the carpets and drapes; who wolfed down Viagra and waited impatiently...
- 1/4/2011
- by Lloyd Grove
- The Daily Beast
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