| MATTHEW LYNCH,
EXECUTIVE EDITOR |
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Today we return with the second installment of Rachel Dodes’s two-part story on William Noguera, a California death-row inmate who became a murder investigator himself. In a story already abounding in other shoes dropping, Noguera’s own fate becomes part of the story. Catch up on part one before diving in.
Elsewhere, David Canfield profiles actor turned documentary maker Shoshannah Stern, Adam Scott revisits his career, and Prince Harry pays a family tribute. More tomorrow… |
How William Noguera—the self-described “Jane Goodall of serial killers”—helped expose the cold-case murders linked to Joseph Naso while they were serving time on death row.
One day Naso gave Noguera a piece of his own “art”: a collage of 11 headshots of different women encircling Naso’s black-and-white self-portrait.
The collage sent a chill down Noguera’s spine. He asked Naso how many of the women pictured were still alive. Naso “took his index finger, hit his temple, and said, ‘They’re all alive right here,’ ” then erupted in laughter, Noguera recalls. “It was creepy as hell.” |
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Stern broke through as a deaf actor, starring in Weeds, Supernatural, and Grey’s Anatomy. Now, she’s proven herself as a major filmmaker, earning raves out of a Sundance premiere and set for an Oscar campaign this fall. |
After Charles III and Camilla left an official ceremony honoring the end of World War II, Prince Harry had a friend deliver a wreath with a heartfelt message. |
An exclusive first look at Tessa Thompson and Nia DaCosta’s take on the Ibsen classic, featuring a lesbian love triangle and a protagonist who “wants people’s animals to come out.” |
Lord Ivar Mountbatten, cousin of the Windsors, shares an amusing anecdote of when the late Queen Elizabeth II sought revenge for the former. |
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