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FIFA President Gianni Infantino presented Trump with the inaugural prize on Friday
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Paramount's all-cash tender offer sets up a potentially monthslong battle between it and Netflix to influence WBD shareholders about which bid is best.
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Netflix won a bidding war for the Warner Bros. film studio and HBO Max streaming service, but it doesn't plan to buy WBD's TV networks.
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Turns out, Turner Classic Movies is included in Netflix's deal with Warner Bros.
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The biggest and best films and stars are on the shortlists as Hollywood award season gets under way.
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The planned deal would cement Netflix in its position as the world's biggest subscription streaming service.
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FIFA's award, which was reportedly created for Trump after he didn't win the Nobel Peace Prize, was "equally prestigious," Colin Jost says sarcastically
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A California woman reportedly faces the possibility of life in prison after jurors convicted her last week of murdering a homeless man in 2016 when she drunkenly struck him with her car — then continued down the road for more than a mile with his dead body in the seat next to her.
Esteysi "Stacy" Sanchez, 31, will be sentenced on May 31 to 15 years to life behind bars in the death of 69-year-old Jack Ray Tenhulzen, the San Diego Tribune reports.
Sanchez was found guilty on Friday of second-degree murder as well as gross vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated and hit and run.
Tenhulzen was mowed down along Mission Avenue in San Diego County early on June 27, 2016, as he walked on the sidewalk, according to the Tribune.
While Tenhulzen died immediately in the collision — his body smashed through the passenger side of the windshield — Sanchez did not stop driving.
Little more than a mile later, she parked her vehicle a block from her home and walked the rest of the way, according to the Tribune.
Jurors reportedly took a day to reach their verdict.
While Sanchez had no prior drunk-driving infractions, according to local TV station KSWB, prosecutors argued she committed murder given that evidence showed friends warned her not to drive home, according to the Tribune.
San Diego Deputy District Attorney Robert Bruce was happy jurors agreed.
"I think this sends a
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