The following contains references to sexual assault
Mr. McMahon delves briefly into the history of Rita Chatterton, the WWE's first female referee who was effectively erased from the history of the wrestling organization. Mr. McMahon is a damning documentary series about Vince McMahon's career in the world of wrestling. The documentary includes several accusations of wrongdoing throughout his career, ranging from financial crimes to more personal transgressions that led to Vince McMahon's retirement.
Several women have come forward over the years claiming Vince McMahon has sexually harassed or sexually assaulted them. This includes Rita Chatterton, who was the first female referee in WWE history. Her experiences with McMahon eventually led her to leave the world of wrestling, only for the accusations to resurface in recent years during the downfall of McMahon's control over the WWE. Here is the history of Rita Chatterton in the WWE and how her...
Mr. McMahon delves briefly into the history of Rita Chatterton, the WWE's first female referee who was effectively erased from the history of the wrestling organization. Mr. McMahon is a damning documentary series about Vince McMahon's career in the world of wrestling. The documentary includes several accusations of wrongdoing throughout his career, ranging from financial crimes to more personal transgressions that led to Vince McMahon's retirement.
Several women have come forward over the years claiming Vince McMahon has sexually harassed or sexually assaulted them. This includes Rita Chatterton, who was the first female referee in WWE history. Her experiences with McMahon eventually led her to leave the world of wrestling, only for the accusations to resurface in recent years during the downfall of McMahon's control over the WWE. Here is the history of Rita Chatterton in the WWE and how her...
- 9/28/2024
- by Brandon Zachary
- ScreenRant
5X Media, the film and television production and management company, is bringing Anthony Kimble on board as a producer and manager.
UK-native Kimble, who previously did stints as an executive with Cineflix Media and National Geographic, will continue to work under his Arrested Industries banner and bring more than 20 film, TV and documentary development projects to 5X.
He will also develop and produce new scripted TV and feature projects and scout and manage on- and off-screen talent in Africa and Europe, splitting his time between London, Los Angeles and Cape Town.
Among the development projects are a film based on JoJo: Finally Home,...
UK-native Kimble, who previously did stints as an executive with Cineflix Media and National Geographic, will continue to work under his Arrested Industries banner and bring more than 20 film, TV and documentary development projects to 5X.
He will also develop and produce new scripted TV and feature projects and scout and manage on- and off-screen talent in Africa and Europe, splitting his time between London, Los Angeles and Cape Town.
Among the development projects are a film based on JoJo: Finally Home,...
- 5/30/2024
- ScreenDaily
Quick Links Dirty & Deliberate Retro Graphics Accessible Puzzles & Persistent Pixel-Hunting The Story Never Sings, Or Gets in the Way Screen Rant's Review Score & Conclusion
It’s strange how gloomy escape rooms seem even more menacingly weird with limited polygons on display. Vertical Reach’s The Tartarus Key, published by Armor Games Studios, goes all-in on the low-fi horror aesthetic, delivering a puzzle-based adventure game which is at turns refreshingly simple and clumsily written. With barely a jump scare or sudden game-over screen to be found in its 5-hour runtime, The Tartarus Key’s straightforward puzzle solving and intentionally queasy PlayStation 1 aesthetic keeps things interesting.
Plucky protagonist Alex Young wakes up in a locked study, unaware of how she arrived there or why a walkie-talkie keeps squawking on the nearby desk. On the other end of the line is stiff-lipped Officer Torres, one of several NPCs trapped throughout The Tartarus Key...
It’s strange how gloomy escape rooms seem even more menacingly weird with limited polygons on display. Vertical Reach’s The Tartarus Key, published by Armor Games Studios, goes all-in on the low-fi horror aesthetic, delivering a puzzle-based adventure game which is at turns refreshingly simple and clumsily written. With barely a jump scare or sudden game-over screen to be found in its 5-hour runtime, The Tartarus Key’s straightforward puzzle solving and intentionally queasy PlayStation 1 aesthetic keeps things interesting.
Plucky protagonist Alex Young wakes up in a locked study, unaware of how she arrived there or why a walkie-talkie keeps squawking on the nearby desk. On the other end of the line is stiff-lipped Officer Torres, one of several NPCs trapped throughout The Tartarus Key...
- 5/31/2023
- by Leo Faierman
- ScreenRant
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