Docuseries Offers New Look at Satanic Cult Murders in Fall River kool1079.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from kool1079.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Supplied
Malcolm Black’s posthumous album Songs For The Family was recorded just two months before his death in 2019.
The last album from Malcolm Black, Neil Finn’s former manager and the ex-frontman of Netherworld Dancing Toys, was released on Monday, on the second anniversary of his death.
Songs For The Family has been released by Black’s family, after it was recorded over six days in Dunedin, just two months before the singer died from cancer in 2019. He was 58.
SUPPLIED “
Songs for the Family is such an incredible gift for our family, for the little girls in particular - to have their Dad sing just to them,” Black’s widow, Julia, wrote in the album’s additional liner notes.
Fall River.
The docuseries from director James Buddy Day and executive produced by Jason Blum’s Blumhouse Television premieres this Sunday, May 16, at 10 p.m. Eastern on cable network Epix.
It tells the story of the Fall River “cult murders” of 1979-80, in which three women were killed in supposed ritualistic fashion. Carl Drew, a known pimp operating in the city, was portrayed as the leader of a Satanic cult that was controlling all the young women on the streets, and Drew was convicted of the murder of one of women and sentenced to life in prison without parole.
Epix
Fall River.
The docuseries from director James Buddy Day and executive produced by Jason Blum’s Blumhouse Television premieres this Sunday, May 16, at 10 p.m. Eastern on cable network Epix.
It tells the story of the Fall River “cult murders” of 1979-80, in which three women were killed in supposed ritualistic fashion. Carl Drew, a known pimp operating in the city, was portrayed as the leader of a Satanic cult that was controlling all the young women on the streets, and Drew was convicted of the murder of one of women and sentenced to life in prison without parole.
Epix
Share this article
Thousands of people walked in the rain and wind at sunrise this morning to raise funds for Pieta House.
The suicide prevention charity described the weather for Darkness Into Light as challenging for a challenging year .
Participants walked, ran, swam or hiked on their own or in their social bubble.
More than 140,000 people signed up to take part in the campaign and over €6.4m has been raised for Pieta House in the process.
Last night, a further €1.1m was raised for the charity on the Late Late Show.
Pieta House Fundraising and Advocacy Manager, Tom McEvoy, was thrilled with the support, describing this year s Darkness into Light event today as amazing .