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Terence Stamp, who played Superman villain Zod, dies

Terence Stamp, who played Superman villain Zod, dies

The Advertiser2 days ago
Terence Stamp liked to recall how he was on the verge of becoming a tantric sex teacher at an ashram in India when, in 1977, he received a telegram from his London agent with news that he was being considered for the Superman film.
"I was on the night flight the next day," Stamp said in an interview with his publisher Watkins Books in 2015.
After eight years largely out of work, getting the role of the arch-villain General Zod in Superman and Superman II turned the full glare of Hollywood's limelight on the Londoner.
Buoyed by his new role, Stamp said he would respond to curious looks from passers-by with a command of: "Kneel before Zod, you bastards", which usually went down a storm.
He died on Sunday, aged 87, his family said in a statement. The cause was not immediately known.
"He leaves behind an extraordinary body of work, both as an actor and as a writer that will continue to touch and inspire people for years to come," the statement said.
Terence Henry Stamp was born in London's East End in 1938, the son of a tugboat coal stoker and a mother who Stamp said gave him his zest for life. As a child he endured the bombing of the city during World War Two and the deprivations that followed.
"The great blessing of my life is that I had the really hard bit at the beginning because we were really poor," he said.
He left school to work initially as a messenger boy for an advertising firm and quickly moved up the ranks before he won a scholarship to go to drama school. Until then he had kept his acting ambitions secret from his family for fear of disapproval.
"I couldn't tell anyone I wanted to be an actor because it was out of the question. I would have been laughed at," he said.
He shared a flat with another young London actor, Michael Caine, and landed the lead role in director Peter Ustinov's 1962 adaptation of Billy Budd, a story of brutality in the British navy in the 18th century. That role earned him an Academy Award nomination and filled him with pride.
"To be cast by somebody like Ustinov was something that gave me a great deal of self-confidence in my film career," Stamp told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in 2019. "During the shooting, I just thought, 'Wow! This is it'."
Famous for his good looks and impeccable dress sense, he formed one of Britain's most glamorous couples with Julie Christie, with whom he starred in Far From the Madding Crowd in 1967. But he said the love of his life was the model Jean Shrimpton.
"When I lost her, then that also coincided with my career taking a dip," he said.
After failing to land the role of James Bond to succeed Sean Connery, Stamp sought a change of scene. He appeared in Italian films and worked with Federico Fellini in the late 1960s.
"I view my life really as before and after Fellini," he said. "Being cast by him was the greatest compliment an actor like myself could get."
It was while working in Rome – where he appeared in Pier Paolo Pasolini's Theorem in 1968 and A Season in Hell in 1971 - that Stamp met Indian spiritual speaker and writer Jiddu Krishnamurti in 1968.
Krishnamurti taught the Englishman how to pause his thoughts and meditate, prompting Stamp to study yoga in India.
Mumbai was his base but he spent long periods at the ashram in Pune, dressed in orange robes and growing his hair long, while learning the teachings of his yogi, including tantric sex.
"There was a rumour around the ashram that he was preparing me to teach the tantric group," he said in the 2015 interview with Watkins Books. "There was a lot of action going on."
After landing the role of General Zod, the megalomaniacal leader of the Kryptonians, in Superman in 1978 and its sequel in 1980, both times opposite Christopher Reeves, he went on to appear in a string of other films, including as a transgender woman in The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert in 1994.
Other films included Valkyrie with Tom Cruise in 2008, The Adjustment Bureau with Matt Damon in 2011 and movies directed by Tim Burton.
He counted Princess Diana among his friends.
"It wasn't a formal thing, we'd just meet up for a cup of tea, or sometimes we'd have a long chat for an hour. Sometimes it would be very quick," he told the Daily Express newspaper in 2017.
"The time I spent with her was a good time."
In 2002, Stamp married for the first time at the age of 64 - to Elizabeth O'Rourke, a pharmacist, who was 35 years his junior. They divorced in 2008.
Asked by the Stage 32 website how he got film directors to believe in his talent, Stamp said: "I believed in myself.
"Originally, when I didn't get cast I told myself there was a lack of discernment in them. This could be considered conceit. I look at it differently. Cherishing that divine spark in myself."
Terence Stamp liked to recall how he was on the verge of becoming a tantric sex teacher at an ashram in India when, in 1977, he received a telegram from his London agent with news that he was being considered for the Superman film.
"I was on the night flight the next day," Stamp said in an interview with his publisher Watkins Books in 2015.
After eight years largely out of work, getting the role of the arch-villain General Zod in Superman and Superman II turned the full glare of Hollywood's limelight on the Londoner.
Buoyed by his new role, Stamp said he would respond to curious looks from passers-by with a command of: "Kneel before Zod, you bastards", which usually went down a storm.
He died on Sunday, aged 87, his family said in a statement. The cause was not immediately known.
"He leaves behind an extraordinary body of work, both as an actor and as a writer that will continue to touch and inspire people for years to come," the statement said.
Terence Henry Stamp was born in London's East End in 1938, the son of a tugboat coal stoker and a mother who Stamp said gave him his zest for life. As a child he endured the bombing of the city during World War Two and the deprivations that followed.
"The great blessing of my life is that I had the really hard bit at the beginning because we were really poor," he said.
He left school to work initially as a messenger boy for an advertising firm and quickly moved up the ranks before he won a scholarship to go to drama school. Until then he had kept his acting ambitions secret from his family for fear of disapproval.
"I couldn't tell anyone I wanted to be an actor because it was out of the question. I would have been laughed at," he said.
He shared a flat with another young London actor, Michael Caine, and landed the lead role in director Peter Ustinov's 1962 adaptation of Billy Budd, a story of brutality in the British navy in the 18th century. That role earned him an Academy Award nomination and filled him with pride.
"To be cast by somebody like Ustinov was something that gave me a great deal of self-confidence in my film career," Stamp told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in 2019. "During the shooting, I just thought, 'Wow! This is it'."
Famous for his good looks and impeccable dress sense, he formed one of Britain's most glamorous couples with Julie Christie, with whom he starred in Far From the Madding Crowd in 1967. But he said the love of his life was the model Jean Shrimpton.
"When I lost her, then that also coincided with my career taking a dip," he said.
After failing to land the role of James Bond to succeed Sean Connery, Stamp sought a change of scene. He appeared in Italian films and worked with Federico Fellini in the late 1960s.
"I view my life really as before and after Fellini," he said. "Being cast by him was the greatest compliment an actor like myself could get."
It was while working in Rome – where he appeared in Pier Paolo Pasolini's Theorem in 1968 and A Season in Hell in 1971 - that Stamp met Indian spiritual speaker and writer Jiddu Krishnamurti in 1968.
Krishnamurti taught the Englishman how to pause his thoughts and meditate, prompting Stamp to study yoga in India.
Mumbai was his base but he spent long periods at the ashram in Pune, dressed in orange robes and growing his hair long, while learning the teachings of his yogi, including tantric sex.
"There was a rumour around the ashram that he was preparing me to teach the tantric group," he said in the 2015 interview with Watkins Books. "There was a lot of action going on."
After landing the role of General Zod, the megalomaniacal leader of the Kryptonians, in Superman in 1978 and its sequel in 1980, both times opposite Christopher Reeves, he went on to appear in a string of other films, including as a transgender woman in The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert in 1994.
Other films included Valkyrie with Tom Cruise in 2008, The Adjustment Bureau with Matt Damon in 2011 and movies directed by Tim Burton.
He counted Princess Diana among his friends.
"It wasn't a formal thing, we'd just meet up for a cup of tea, or sometimes we'd have a long chat for an hour. Sometimes it would be very quick," he told the Daily Express newspaper in 2017.
"The time I spent with her was a good time."
In 2002, Stamp married for the first time at the age of 64 - to Elizabeth O'Rourke, a pharmacist, who was 35 years his junior. They divorced in 2008.
Asked by the Stage 32 website how he got film directors to believe in his talent, Stamp said: "I believed in myself.
"Originally, when I didn't get cast I told myself there was a lack of discernment in them. This could be considered conceit. I look at it differently. Cherishing that divine spark in myself."
Terence Stamp liked to recall how he was on the verge of becoming a tantric sex teacher at an ashram in India when, in 1977, he received a telegram from his London agent with news that he was being considered for the Superman film.
"I was on the night flight the next day," Stamp said in an interview with his publisher Watkins Books in 2015.
After eight years largely out of work, getting the role of the arch-villain General Zod in Superman and Superman II turned the full glare of Hollywood's limelight on the Londoner.
Buoyed by his new role, Stamp said he would respond to curious looks from passers-by with a command of: "Kneel before Zod, you bastards", which usually went down a storm.
He died on Sunday, aged 87, his family said in a statement. The cause was not immediately known.
"He leaves behind an extraordinary body of work, both as an actor and as a writer that will continue to touch and inspire people for years to come," the statement said.
Terence Henry Stamp was born in London's East End in 1938, the son of a tugboat coal stoker and a mother who Stamp said gave him his zest for life. As a child he endured the bombing of the city during World War Two and the deprivations that followed.
"The great blessing of my life is that I had the really hard bit at the beginning because we were really poor," he said.
He left school to work initially as a messenger boy for an advertising firm and quickly moved up the ranks before he won a scholarship to go to drama school. Until then he had kept his acting ambitions secret from his family for fear of disapproval.
"I couldn't tell anyone I wanted to be an actor because it was out of the question. I would have been laughed at," he said.
He shared a flat with another young London actor, Michael Caine, and landed the lead role in director Peter Ustinov's 1962 adaptation of Billy Budd, a story of brutality in the British navy in the 18th century. That role earned him an Academy Award nomination and filled him with pride.
"To be cast by somebody like Ustinov was something that gave me a great deal of self-confidence in my film career," Stamp told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in 2019. "During the shooting, I just thought, 'Wow! This is it'."
Famous for his good looks and impeccable dress sense, he formed one of Britain's most glamorous couples with Julie Christie, with whom he starred in Far From the Madding Crowd in 1967. But he said the love of his life was the model Jean Shrimpton.
"When I lost her, then that also coincided with my career taking a dip," he said.
After failing to land the role of James Bond to succeed Sean Connery, Stamp sought a change of scene. He appeared in Italian films and worked with Federico Fellini in the late 1960s.
"I view my life really as before and after Fellini," he said. "Being cast by him was the greatest compliment an actor like myself could get."
It was while working in Rome – where he appeared in Pier Paolo Pasolini's Theorem in 1968 and A Season in Hell in 1971 - that Stamp met Indian spiritual speaker and writer Jiddu Krishnamurti in 1968.
Krishnamurti taught the Englishman how to pause his thoughts and meditate, prompting Stamp to study yoga in India.
Mumbai was his base but he spent long periods at the ashram in Pune, dressed in orange robes and growing his hair long, while learning the teachings of his yogi, including tantric sex.
"There was a rumour around the ashram that he was preparing me to teach the tantric group," he said in the 2015 interview with Watkins Books. "There was a lot of action going on."
After landing the role of General Zod, the megalomaniacal leader of the Kryptonians, in Superman in 1978 and its sequel in 1980, both times opposite Christopher Reeves, he went on to appear in a string of other films, including as a transgender woman in The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert in 1994.
Other films included Valkyrie with Tom Cruise in 2008, The Adjustment Bureau with Matt Damon in 2011 and movies directed by Tim Burton.
He counted Princess Diana among his friends.
"It wasn't a formal thing, we'd just meet up for a cup of tea, or sometimes we'd have a long chat for an hour. Sometimes it would be very quick," he told the Daily Express newspaper in 2017.
"The time I spent with her was a good time."
In 2002, Stamp married for the first time at the age of 64 - to Elizabeth O'Rourke, a pharmacist, who was 35 years his junior. They divorced in 2008.
Asked by the Stage 32 website how he got film directors to believe in his talent, Stamp said: "I believed in myself.
"Originally, when I didn't get cast I told myself there was a lack of discernment in them. This could be considered conceit. I look at it differently. Cherishing that divine spark in myself."
Terence Stamp liked to recall how he was on the verge of becoming a tantric sex teacher at an ashram in India when, in 1977, he received a telegram from his London agent with news that he was being considered for the Superman film.
"I was on the night flight the next day," Stamp said in an interview with his publisher Watkins Books in 2015.
After eight years largely out of work, getting the role of the arch-villain General Zod in Superman and Superman II turned the full glare of Hollywood's limelight on the Londoner.
Buoyed by his new role, Stamp said he would respond to curious looks from passers-by with a command of: "Kneel before Zod, you bastards", which usually went down a storm.
He died on Sunday, aged 87, his family said in a statement. The cause was not immediately known.
"He leaves behind an extraordinary body of work, both as an actor and as a writer that will continue to touch and inspire people for years to come," the statement said.
Terence Henry Stamp was born in London's East End in 1938, the son of a tugboat coal stoker and a mother who Stamp said gave him his zest for life. As a child he endured the bombing of the city during World War Two and the deprivations that followed.
"The great blessing of my life is that I had the really hard bit at the beginning because we were really poor," he said.
He left school to work initially as a messenger boy for an advertising firm and quickly moved up the ranks before he won a scholarship to go to drama school. Until then he had kept his acting ambitions secret from his family for fear of disapproval.
"I couldn't tell anyone I wanted to be an actor because it was out of the question. I would have been laughed at," he said.
He shared a flat with another young London actor, Michael Caine, and landed the lead role in director Peter Ustinov's 1962 adaptation of Billy Budd, a story of brutality in the British navy in the 18th century. That role earned him an Academy Award nomination and filled him with pride.
"To be cast by somebody like Ustinov was something that gave me a great deal of self-confidence in my film career," Stamp told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in 2019. "During the shooting, I just thought, 'Wow! This is it'."
Famous for his good looks and impeccable dress sense, he formed one of Britain's most glamorous couples with Julie Christie, with whom he starred in Far From the Madding Crowd in 1967. But he said the love of his life was the model Jean Shrimpton.
"When I lost her, then that also coincided with my career taking a dip," he said.
After failing to land the role of James Bond to succeed Sean Connery, Stamp sought a change of scene. He appeared in Italian films and worked with Federico Fellini in the late 1960s.
"I view my life really as before and after Fellini," he said. "Being cast by him was the greatest compliment an actor like myself could get."
It was while working in Rome – where he appeared in Pier Paolo Pasolini's Theorem in 1968 and A Season in Hell in 1971 - that Stamp met Indian spiritual speaker and writer Jiddu Krishnamurti in 1968.
Krishnamurti taught the Englishman how to pause his thoughts and meditate, prompting Stamp to study yoga in India.
Mumbai was his base but he spent long periods at the ashram in Pune, dressed in orange robes and growing his hair long, while learning the teachings of his yogi, including tantric sex.
"There was a rumour around the ashram that he was preparing me to teach the tantric group," he said in the 2015 interview with Watkins Books. "There was a lot of action going on."
After landing the role of General Zod, the megalomaniacal leader of the Kryptonians, in Superman in 1978 and its sequel in 1980, both times opposite Christopher Reeves, he went on to appear in a string of other films, including as a transgender woman in The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert in 1994.
Other films included Valkyrie with Tom Cruise in 2008, The Adjustment Bureau with Matt Damon in 2011 and movies directed by Tim Burton.
He counted Princess Diana among his friends.
"It wasn't a formal thing, we'd just meet up for a cup of tea, or sometimes we'd have a long chat for an hour. Sometimes it would be very quick," he told the Daily Express newspaper in 2017.
"The time I spent with her was a good time."
In 2002, Stamp married for the first time at the age of 64 - to Elizabeth O'Rourke, a pharmacist, who was 35 years his junior. They divorced in 2008.
Asked by the Stage 32 website how he got film directors to believe in his talent, Stamp said: "I believed in myself.
"Originally, when I didn't get cast I told myself there was a lack of discernment in them. This could be considered conceit. I look at it differently. Cherishing that divine spark in myself."
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Hayley has been in an AI relationship for four years. It's improved her life dramatically but are there also risks?
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ABC News

time4 hours ago

  • ABC News

Hayley has been in an AI relationship for four years. It's improved her life dramatically but are there also risks?

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Paul Weller sues after being dropped by accountants
Paul Weller sues after being dropped by accountants

The Advertiser

time7 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Paul Weller sues after being dropped by accountants

Paul Weller is suing his former accountants after they stopped working with the British singer because they were offended by comments he made alleging Israel was committing genocide in Gaza. The former frontman of The Jam has filed a discrimination claim against Harris and Trotter after the firm ended their professional relationship after more than 30 years. In a pre-action letter seen by the PA news agency, lawyers for Weller say the singer-songwriter was told in March that the accountants and tax advisers would no longer work with the 67-year-old or his companies. Weller is also performing a sold out "Gig For Gaza" in London with other musicians in October. According to the letter, a WhatsApp message from a partner at the firm included the reason for severing the relationship. "It's well known what your political views are in relation to Israel, the Palestinians and Gaza, but we as a firm are offended at the assertions that Israel is committing any type of genocide," it said. "Everyone is entitled to their own views, but you are alleging such anti-Israel views that we as a firm with Jewish roots and many Jewish partners are not prepared to work with someone who holds these views." Lawyers for Weller say that by ending their services, the firm unlawfully discriminated against the singer's protected philosophical beliefs, including that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza and that Palestine should be recognised as a nation state. Weller said he had 'always spoken out against injustice, whether it's apartheid, ethnic cleansing, or genocide". "What's happening to the Palestinian people in Gaza is a humanitarian catastrophe," he said. "I believe they have the right to self-determination, dignity, and protection under international law, and I believe Israel is committing genocide against them. That must be called out. "Silencing those who speak this truth is not just censorship - it's complicity. "I'm taking legal action not just for myself, but to help ensure that others are not similarly punished for expressing their beliefs about the rights of the Palestinian people." Weller will donate any damages he receives to humanitarian relief efforts in Gaza, the legal letter says. Weller's lawyer Cormac McDonough, says the case "reflects a wider pattern of attempts to silence artists and public figures who speak out in support of Palestinian rights". "Within the music industry especially, we are seeing increasing efforts to marginalise those who express solidarity with the people of Gaza," he said. Paul Weller is suing his former accountants after they stopped working with the British singer because they were offended by comments he made alleging Israel was committing genocide in Gaza. The former frontman of The Jam has filed a discrimination claim against Harris and Trotter after the firm ended their professional relationship after more than 30 years. In a pre-action letter seen by the PA news agency, lawyers for Weller say the singer-songwriter was told in March that the accountants and tax advisers would no longer work with the 67-year-old or his companies. Weller is also performing a sold out "Gig For Gaza" in London with other musicians in October. According to the letter, a WhatsApp message from a partner at the firm included the reason for severing the relationship. "It's well known what your political views are in relation to Israel, the Palestinians and Gaza, but we as a firm are offended at the assertions that Israel is committing any type of genocide," it said. "Everyone is entitled to their own views, but you are alleging such anti-Israel views that we as a firm with Jewish roots and many Jewish partners are not prepared to work with someone who holds these views." Lawyers for Weller say that by ending their services, the firm unlawfully discriminated against the singer's protected philosophical beliefs, including that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza and that Palestine should be recognised as a nation state. Weller said he had 'always spoken out against injustice, whether it's apartheid, ethnic cleansing, or genocide". "What's happening to the Palestinian people in Gaza is a humanitarian catastrophe," he said. "I believe they have the right to self-determination, dignity, and protection under international law, and I believe Israel is committing genocide against them. That must be called out. "Silencing those who speak this truth is not just censorship - it's complicity. "I'm taking legal action not just for myself, but to help ensure that others are not similarly punished for expressing their beliefs about the rights of the Palestinian people." Weller will donate any damages he receives to humanitarian relief efforts in Gaza, the legal letter says. Weller's lawyer Cormac McDonough, says the case "reflects a wider pattern of attempts to silence artists and public figures who speak out in support of Palestinian rights". "Within the music industry especially, we are seeing increasing efforts to marginalise those who express solidarity with the people of Gaza," he said. Paul Weller is suing his former accountants after they stopped working with the British singer because they were offended by comments he made alleging Israel was committing genocide in Gaza. The former frontman of The Jam has filed a discrimination claim against Harris and Trotter after the firm ended their professional relationship after more than 30 years. In a pre-action letter seen by the PA news agency, lawyers for Weller say the singer-songwriter was told in March that the accountants and tax advisers would no longer work with the 67-year-old or his companies. Weller is also performing a sold out "Gig For Gaza" in London with other musicians in October. According to the letter, a WhatsApp message from a partner at the firm included the reason for severing the relationship. "It's well known what your political views are in relation to Israel, the Palestinians and Gaza, but we as a firm are offended at the assertions that Israel is committing any type of genocide," it said. "Everyone is entitled to their own views, but you are alleging such anti-Israel views that we as a firm with Jewish roots and many Jewish partners are not prepared to work with someone who holds these views." Lawyers for Weller say that by ending their services, the firm unlawfully discriminated against the singer's protected philosophical beliefs, including that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza and that Palestine should be recognised as a nation state. Weller said he had 'always spoken out against injustice, whether it's apartheid, ethnic cleansing, or genocide". "What's happening to the Palestinian people in Gaza is a humanitarian catastrophe," he said. "I believe they have the right to self-determination, dignity, and protection under international law, and I believe Israel is committing genocide against them. That must be called out. "Silencing those who speak this truth is not just censorship - it's complicity. "I'm taking legal action not just for myself, but to help ensure that others are not similarly punished for expressing their beliefs about the rights of the Palestinian people." Weller will donate any damages he receives to humanitarian relief efforts in Gaza, the legal letter says. Weller's lawyer Cormac McDonough, says the case "reflects a wider pattern of attempts to silence artists and public figures who speak out in support of Palestinian rights". "Within the music industry especially, we are seeing increasing efforts to marginalise those who express solidarity with the people of Gaza," he said. Paul Weller is suing his former accountants after they stopped working with the British singer because they were offended by comments he made alleging Israel was committing genocide in Gaza. The former frontman of The Jam has filed a discrimination claim against Harris and Trotter after the firm ended their professional relationship after more than 30 years. In a pre-action letter seen by the PA news agency, lawyers for Weller say the singer-songwriter was told in March that the accountants and tax advisers would no longer work with the 67-year-old or his companies. Weller is also performing a sold out "Gig For Gaza" in London with other musicians in October. According to the letter, a WhatsApp message from a partner at the firm included the reason for severing the relationship. "It's well known what your political views are in relation to Israel, the Palestinians and Gaza, but we as a firm are offended at the assertions that Israel is committing any type of genocide," it said. "Everyone is entitled to their own views, but you are alleging such anti-Israel views that we as a firm with Jewish roots and many Jewish partners are not prepared to work with someone who holds these views." Lawyers for Weller say that by ending their services, the firm unlawfully discriminated against the singer's protected philosophical beliefs, including that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza and that Palestine should be recognised as a nation state. Weller said he had 'always spoken out against injustice, whether it's apartheid, ethnic cleansing, or genocide". "What's happening to the Palestinian people in Gaza is a humanitarian catastrophe," he said. "I believe they have the right to self-determination, dignity, and protection under international law, and I believe Israel is committing genocide against them. That must be called out. "Silencing those who speak this truth is not just censorship - it's complicity. "I'm taking legal action not just for myself, but to help ensure that others are not similarly punished for expressing their beliefs about the rights of the Palestinian people." Weller will donate any damages he receives to humanitarian relief efforts in Gaza, the legal letter says. Weller's lawyer Cormac McDonough, says the case "reflects a wider pattern of attempts to silence artists and public figures who speak out in support of Palestinian rights". "Within the music industry especially, we are seeing increasing efforts to marginalise those who express solidarity with the people of Gaza," he said.

Amanda Knox: The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox tells true story behind 2007 Italy murder
Amanda Knox: The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox tells true story behind 2007 Italy murder

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Amanda Knox: The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox tells true story behind 2007 Italy murder

We've sifted through the latest offerings from TV and streaming platforms to find the best shows you should be watching this week. Grace Van Patten as Amanda Knox in The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox. THE TWISTED TALE OF AMANDA KNOX NEW EPISODES WEDNESDAYS, DISNEY+ It's understandable why Amanda Knox would want to make this eight-part retelling of her arrest, trial, conviction, demonisation and eventual exoneration for the 2007 murder of her British flatmate, Meredith Kercher, while studying in picturesque Perugia. The salacious story with sex, drugs and even Satanism that saw her dubbed Foxy Knoxy and spend four years in an Italian jail is absolutely hers to tell after all the indignities and injustices she suffered. Knox herself is on board as an executive producer for this well told dramatisation that draws from her books Waiting To Be Heard and Free and it's presented as her chance to correct her 'often mistold and madly twisted tale'. By the same token, the producers are at pains to point out that liberties have been taken with characters and timelines and that knowledge – after movies inspired by the case and a 2016 Netflix documentary – can make it sometimes uneasy viewing. Kercher's sister last year said it was 'difficult to understand' the purpose of series that puts the awfulness front and centre and again – and she has a point. JAMES WIGNEY Grace Van Patten and Giuseppe De Domenico in The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox. Imagine coming home to find your apartment has been broken into and your housemate brutally slain. Now imagine your confusion and frustration as you are interrogated for hours – in a foreign language – by police who seem hell bent on proving you are a cold-blooded, sex-crazed killer. This new true crime drama offers almost visceral insights into the bewilderment of American student Amanda Knox as she finds herself wrongly accused of murdering her British friend Meredith Kercher in 2007. The trial, imprisonment and subsequent exoneration of Knox, which made headlines around the globe, are all detailed in this new series starring Grace Van Patten as Knox and Bad Sisters' creator Sharon Horgan as her devoted mum. Certainly, Knox is an imperfect victim. Her response to the tragedy – canoodling with her boyfriend at the crime scene, doing cartwheels in the police station and pointing the finger of blame at her boss during a 'confession' – is far from textbook. And that's partly what makes this series so compelling. SIOBHAN DUCK Monica Lewinsky (who is a producer on the series) with Grace Van Patten and the real Amanda Knox at the premiere of The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox. Picture: AP US celebrity chef Adam Richman in Adam Richman Eats Football. ADAM RICHMAN EATS FOOTBALL WEDNESDAY, 9PM, SBS FOOD It's not often you hear fine dining and football mentioned in the same sentence, but American celebrity chef and world game enthusiast Adam Richman is out to change that in this series that travels around the UK finding ways to combine the two. His first stop is East London, home to West Ham United, a traditionally working class area that's been gentrified and now has the culinary choices to prove it. From scoffing a pie and mash made from an 80-year-old recipe to sampling fancy wood pigeon on an up-market barge – and of course a match day curry – Richman looks like he's having an absolute ball. Coming episodes will take him to Nottingham, Birmingham, Glasgow, Manchester and Newcastle. Erling Haland is back in action for Manchester City. Picture:TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR V MANCHESTER CITY SATURDAY, 9.30PM, CHANNEL 9, 9NOW What a joy to see the English Premier League back on free-to-air television with a game each week (the rest is on Stan, live or on demand). London club Tottenham Hotspur began its post Ange Postecoglou era in style last week with a convincing win over 3-0 win over Burnley, while the Manchester City machine also fired up early with 4-0 belting of Wolverhampton Wolves that sent them straight to the top of the table. Having won six of the last eight titles, City underperformed by their own lofty standards last season, so fans will be expecting a better showing to wrest the top dog status back from arch rivals Liverpool. The Colosseum is getting a new station in Rome Underground. ROME UNDERGROUND SUNDAY, 7.30PM, SBS If you think any of the recent underground rail projects in Australia have been complicated, try digging holes in a city where hidden, ancient treasures lurk underneath just about every street. That's the dilemma facing the engineers and archaeologists tasked with constructing a much needed extension to a rail line in the Eternal City, where nearly 3000 years of history are stacked on top of each other and only 10 per cent has been excavated. While trying to improve access to tourist hotspots such as the Colosseum and Piazza Venezia, they discover huge barracks with delicate mosaics and frescoes, and never-before-seen auditoriums and private houses, and have to figure out a way to balance the lessons of the past with progress. Quarterback Troy Aikman helped make the Dallas Cowboys a powerhouse in the 1990s. AMERICA'S TEAM: THE GAMBLER AND HIS COWBOYS NETFLIX With the new NFL season just over two weeks away, American football lovers can kick off a little early with this seven-part series on the rollercoaster ride that was Dallas Cowboys in the 1990s. Renegade owner Jerry Jones took over the popular Texas franchise known as 'America's Team' in 1989 and sacked its beloved two-time Super Bowl winning coach Tom Landry in favour of his firebrand friend Jimmy Johnson. Together they assembled a team of superstars that would dominate the decade with three championships – despite a string of scandals – and help turn it into a $9 billion juggernaut. Key players including Troy Aikman, Michael Irvin and Emmitt Smith – aka the Triplets – are interviewed along with high-profile guests such as former President George W. Bush and Nike co-founder Phil Knight. Harry Lloyd as DCI Hector Morgan in I, Jack Wright. I, JACK WRIGHT SUNDAY, 8.55PM, ABC There are mysteries and mayhem aplenty in this pulpy six-part UK drama about an already volatile family thrown into further turmoil after the apparent suicide of its patriarch. The title character is a thrice-married hard man, who has pulled himself up by the bootstraps to preside over a 100 million pound brick business. But when he's found dead on his country estate, seemingly with a self-inflicted gunshot wound, his wives, children, in-laws, colleagues and staff are all left wondering what will happen to his fortune. After gathering to see the old boy off at a boozy wake, the will reading that follows is nothing short of explosive, setting the stage for a family battle royal, while the cops investigate whether everything is as it seems. Trucker Sludge with his wife on Outback Truckers. OUTBACK TRUCKERS TUESDAY, 8PM, 7MATE Driving an enormous beast of a vehicle through the parched Aussie interior sounds like my idea of a nightmare, but there's something strangely compelling about watching these resourceful and resilient pros performing an essential service in the toughest of conditions and weighing up the cost of time away from family. There's veteran Steve, who is dragging an excavator through 1000km of blistering heat and rutted roads to an amethyst mine. Mike is delivering much needed firefighting equipment to a remote community, and performing emergency surgery on his malfunctioning rig. And Sludge is on the comeback trail after an accident and feeling the pressure to turn up on time for a very short shutdown window of the only rail line between the east and west sides of the country. The wonders of orcas are revealed in a new ABC documentary. KILLER WHALE: AUSTRALIA'S MEGAPOD TUESDAY, 8.30PM, ABC Killer whales are all too often painted as the villains of nature docos – the bullies of the sea who bump adorable seals off slabs of ice or gang up to hunt down playful dolphins. And yes, they are absolutely partial to a sea lion snack or a cetacean canape, but they are also extraordinary and fascinating creatures with complex social structures and methods of communication. This outstanding documentary, narrated by Richard Roxburgh, follows a couple of orca experts operating out of Bremer Bay in Western Australia as they track, tag and study a community of the ocean's apex predators and make some extraordinary discoveries about an animal that developed a complex brain 30 million years before we did. Prince Andrew is back in the news again. Picture: AFP TENDING – PRINCES OF THE PALACE STREAMING, TUBI Whether it's the revelation a jealous Prince Andrew made snarky comments about Kate Middleton or cringey home videos of Harry and Meghan Markle bumping and grinding in the delivery suite, the spare heirs keep making headlines for all the wrong reasons. Having weathered Andrew's car crash interview with Emily Maitlis and Harry's biography Spare, the Palace is now dealing with the fallout of Andrew Lownie's biography Entitled: The Rise and Fall of the House of York which digs up more dirt on Randy Andy. Some of the lesser known the antics of Andrew, Harry and the House of Windsor's other menfolk are also detailed in this salacious 2016 documentary. Originally published as Sex, drugs, murder and injustice: Amanda Knox tells the real story behind THAT 2007 murder

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