Welcome to Millionaires, where we profile creators who have recently crossed the one million follower mark on platforms like YouTube, TikTok, and Twitch. There are creators crossing this threshold every week, and each of them has a story to tell about their success. Read previous installments here.
When Haley Price joined TikTok in 2020, she made her username @robandhaley. That’s because she thought the account would be cute videos from her and her husband as they prepared to start a family.
Now, four years later, Price is one of TikTok’s fastest-growing true crime creators, and while the @ doesn’t quite fit anymore, she can’t change it. Too many people know her now, she says.
Price, like many people, has cultivated an interest in true crime over the last few years. Pre-covid, she had a job that required a two-hour drive both to and from work, so she passed...
When Haley Price joined TikTok in 2020, she made her username @robandhaley. That’s because she thought the account would be cute videos from her and her husband as they prepared to start a family.
Now, four years later, Price is one of TikTok’s fastest-growing true crime creators, and while the @ doesn’t quite fit anymore, she can’t change it. Too many people know her now, she says.
Price, like many people, has cultivated an interest in true crime over the last few years. Pre-covid, she had a job that required a two-hour drive both to and from work, so she passed...
- 4/19/2024
- by James Hale
- Tubefilter.com
Lifetime has given the green light to three documentaries for its 2020 programming slate. They are From Darkness To Light, from three-time Olympic gold medalist Aly Raisman, Emmy winner Leah Remini and A+E Originals; Smart Justice: The Jayme Closs Case hosted by Elizabeth Smart, and documentary film series Hopelessly In Love, from eOne and Creature Films.
Raisman and Remini have joined forces on From Darkness To Light, a documentary event in which Raisman helps victims of sexual assault find their voice in order to start healing and turn from victim to survivor. It was on January 20, 2018, that Raisman stared down her abuser, Larry Nasser, in a Michigan courtroom, rallying other victims to step forward and demand justice and accountability. Nasser is currently serving a 60-year federal prison sentence following his conviction on multiple charges of sexual assault.
Produced by A+E Originals and Remini’s No Seriously Productions, From Darkness...
Raisman and Remini have joined forces on From Darkness To Light, a documentary event in which Raisman helps victims of sexual assault find their voice in order to start healing and turn from victim to survivor. It was on January 20, 2018, that Raisman stared down her abuser, Larry Nasser, in a Michigan courtroom, rallying other victims to step forward and demand justice and accountability. Nasser is currently serving a 60-year federal prison sentence following his conviction on multiple charges of sexual assault.
Produced by A+E Originals and Remini’s No Seriously Productions, From Darkness...
- 3/27/2019
- by Denise Petski
- Deadline Film + TV
For more than 50 years, the public has been haunted by the Zodiac Killer — a serial killer who murdered at least five people in the Northern California area in the early 1960s to the late 1970s. For years, the identity of the killer — who earned his moniker from the menacing letters and mysterious cryptograms he had sent to the local newspapers — has intrigued the public, who has never been any closer to identifying the killer despite decades dedicated to cracking the case. But now, law enforcement is hoping to finally get some answers thanks to DNA websites, where people often submit their own DNA to find relatives and determine their ancestry. Vallejo police detective Terry Poyser confirmed to the Sacramento Bee that they sent two envelopes from letters written by the killer to a lab for in-depth DNA analysis. They’re hoping to have similar success as they did in the...
- 5/10/2018
- by Carly Sitzer
- In Touch Weekly
Since 2013, Michelle Knight has been free from the chains and torture she endured for more than a decade with fellow kidnapping survivors Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus.
But navigating her freedom has been filled with multiple struggles, which she plans to recount in her new book: Life After Darkness: Finding Healing and Happiness After Tragedy: A Memoir of Life After the Cleveland Kidnappings.
Knight — who changed her name to Lillian Rose Lee — will discuss her battle with addiction, the truth about her relationship with Berry and DeJesus and how she has adjusted to life after escaping Ariel Castro’s house of horrors.
But navigating her freedom has been filled with multiple struggles, which she plans to recount in her new book: Life After Darkness: Finding Healing and Happiness After Tragedy: A Memoir of Life After the Cleveland Kidnappings.
Knight — who changed her name to Lillian Rose Lee — will discuss her battle with addiction, the truth about her relationship with Berry and DeJesus and how she has adjusted to life after escaping Ariel Castro’s house of horrors.
- 1/9/2018
- by Elaine Aradillas
- PEOPLE.com
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