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Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Patrick Muldoon Said He Was 'Excited' About Next Project in Final Instagram Post 2 Days Before His Sudden Death

April 22, 2026
Patrick Muldoon Said He Was 'Excited' About Next Project in Final Instagram Post 2 Days Before His Sudden Death

Patrick Muldoon died suddenly on Sunday, April 19, after a heart attack

People Patrick Muldoon attends the 53rd annual Saturn AwardsCredit: Michael Tullberg/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • The actor, 57, had recently been posting on Instagram about his excitement for an upcoming project

  • Muldoon was best known for his roles on Days of Our Lives and Starship Troopers

Patrick Muldoonwas busy with work in the days before his sudden death.

TheDays of Our Livesstar died on Sunday, April 19, after a heart attack,Deadlinereported. He was 57.

Just two days earlier, Muldoon had shared aposton Instagram about a new project he had lined up, a crime thriller film calledKockroachstarringChris HemsworthandTaron Egerton.

"So excited to be a part of this amazing project KOCKROACH directed by Matt Ross starring Chris Hemsworth, Taron Edgerton, Zazzie Beetz and Alec Baldwin," Muldoon wrote in the caption of the post.

Muldoon was credited as an executive producer on the film, which he wrote is "filming now in Australia 🇦🇺."

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Patrick Muldoon attends the 2025 Best Buddies Celebrity Bowling Event at Pinz Bowling Center on December 7, 2025Credit: Rodin Eckenroth/Getty

Muldoon's death also came days before the release of another project of his. He starred in a new thriller film,Dirty Hands, which is slated for a digital release on April 24.

The film sees Muldoon and Kevin Interdonato play brothers who get caught in a dangerous drug war, and it reunites Muldoon with hisStarship TrooperscostarDenise Richards, who plays his girlfriend in the new film, according to the outlet.

Muldoon rose to fame playing Austin Reed onDays of Our Livesfrom 1992 to 1995. He later reprised his role after a 16-year hiatus in 2011.

After his initial exit fromDaysin 1995, he went on to play the villainous Richard Hart in another iconic show,Melrose Place, for three seasons.

He also starred in three episodes ofSaved by the Bellin the early 1990s, as well as playing Zander Barcalow in the 1997 cult classicStarship Troopersalongside Richards,Casper Van Dien, Michael Ironside and Dina Meyer.

Patrick Muldoon speaks during 2025 Los Angeles Comic-Con at Los Angeles Convention Center on September 28, 2025Credit: Jody Cortes/Getty

Muldoon is survived by his partner, Miriam Rothbart, along with his parents, Deanna and Patrick Muldoon Sr., his sister and brother-in-law Shana and Ahmet Zappa, his niece Halo and nephew Arrow Zappa.

Read the original article onPeople

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47 Savage Comebacks That Are Basically Well-Constructed Art

April 22, 2026
47 Savage Comebacks That Are Basically Well-Constructed Art

Someone saying “you smell nice today” may sound like a cute little compliment at first. But once you pause and think about it, you realize it’s actually quite a subtle but savage roast.

Bored Panda

People onTikTokhave been sharing some of the best and wittiestinsultslike these... that don’t hit immediately, but land quite strongly a few seconds later. And that’s exactly what makes them so effective, and hilarious.

If anything, they’re a reminder that when you’re dealing with rude people or awkward moments, you don’t always need to react loudly. Sometimes, saying less — but saying it smarter — does the job better.

“As an outside observer, what’s your opinion on intelligence?”

© Photo:cass_tilly

i love that you don't let facts get in the way of your opinions.

© Photo:lillywhite402

I once heard someone say " Beauty and knowledge is chasing you with all its might but God blessed you with speed"

© Photo:jeandrevdb

Roast comedy goes way back… long before memes, social media, or even TV.

The idea originated at theFriars’Club in New York in the early 1900s. It started as casual get-togethers between friends, but slowly shifted into more organized events built around humor and playful insults.

Over time, these informal moments turned into the structured roast format we know today.

If you were getting roasted at this club, it meant you were important enough to be the center of attention.

The roastee was subjected to good-natured insults, and mocking jokes, usually by friends, family, or professional comedians. While the jokes could be quite harsh, the key idea wasn’t cruelty.

I would explain it slower, but I don't believe speed is the problem.

© Photo:jpcomparri

It is impossible to underestimate you

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I envy those who haven’t met you yet

© Photo:mexicancowboy47

The format really blew up in modern pop culture with television. In 1998, the Friars Club partnered withComedy Central, and a few years later, the network launched its own version called the Comedy Central Roasts.

It gradually turned into a recurring TV event featuring actors, comedians, musicians, and reality TV stars.

These roasts were much sharper and more public than the old club dinners. The audience wasn’t just a room full of insiders anymore, it was millions of viewers watching at home.

unlike the stomach,the head doesn't notify the owner when it's empty

you never make anyone feel dumb when you're around

© Photo:misanthropeshark

When you speak you have a special way of making people appreciate your silence

© Photo:tyler_does_sh1t

Roasting has become so mainstream now that it even shows up in formal spaces like the White House Correspondents’ Dinner.

The dinner itself has long been known for mixing journalism, politics, and comedy, with a tradition of light, but pointed, roasting of public figures, including the sitting president.

You’re very committed to your limitations

© Photo:nicholetteee1

I’d agree with you but then we’d both be wrong

© Photo:meirthecreator

"I admire your simplicity when it comes to critical thinking"

© Photo:kage818

In the last decade, roasting has evolved even more. It used to be exclusive to clubs and TV, but is now everywhere online. Social media, short-form videos, and meme culture have turned roasting into a daily language style, especially among younger audiences.

TikTok and Instagram reels are full of quick-fire“roast battles”where the format is more about speed and wit and less about structure.

Roasting works the same way though — smart humor, timing, and a shared understanding are all still the basic elements.

But the word has now expanded into everyday language. It’s being used to describe quick and sharp one-liners or witty comebacks in regular conversations.

In a way, roasting has become a communication style on the internet, something people do in comment sections and group chats.

You’re proof that confidence really is a mindset.

© Photo:meaganmcsheffery

And the wild thing is, you’re not a bad person. You’re just a collection of almosts. 🤷🏻‍♀️

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You have a mind so serene not even thoughts intrude.

A strong roast usually works by taking a noticeable habit or personality trait and exaggerating it in a way that feels recognizable to everyone around.

For example, someone who is always late might be described in a roast as living in a different time zone. The humor comes from turning a simple habit into something exaggerated but still believable.

Roasting, when it works the way it’s meant to, tends to land best with people who are thick-skinned. It’s usually for those who can separate humor from harm and don’t take playful criticism as a personal attack.

You brighten every room you walk out of

You have a great face for radio.

Don’t let my knowledge interfere with your confidence

These posts and comebacks from people also work because they are funny and witty, not merely because they’re insulting or putting someone down.

Expertssuggest the key to coming up with a winning retort is to sharpen your listening skills so that you can respond at lightning speed.

There's a ton of research that shows punchlines work because they arrive at the exact moment the brain expects closure, and this is exactly what these one-liners do.

While an insult attempts to hurt the other person, a witty roast disarms them by highlighting the absurdity of their behavior. It turns the tables without stepping down to their level of malice.

Just because you don't understand it, doesn't mean it's complicated

“I can see why that makes sense to you”.

You smell nice today

© Photo:my_olivehairplace

Our everyday interactions are often filled with rudeness or misunderstandings. But it’s how we react to these little heated situations that counts.

Not every situation needs to be matched with equal intensity. Sometimes, just a quick one-liner can shut someone up, and best of all — make people laugh.

"You're prettier than Aphrodite"It doesn't sound like a roast at first, but it will eventually when you learn about it.

© Photo:taikunakamura

Ooooo this is my lane! Ok number 1: “You have a very… consistent way of misunderstanding things.” Number 2: “There’s a certain simplicity to your perspective that must be peaceful.” Number 3: “You’re very committed to your version of reality.” Number 4: “You’re presenting opinions as conclusions without doing the thinking in between.” Number 5: “Correlation seems to be doing a lot of heavy lifting for you.” Number 6: “You explain things the way someone does when they’ve only heard about them secondhand.” Number 7: “It’s impressive how you reach conclusions without the burden of logic.” Number 8: “You mistake proximity to intelligence for possession of it.” Number 9: “That sounds like something that would make sense to you.” Number 10: “I admire your confidence—it’s not easy to be that sure and still be wrong.”

You’re very consistent. Not everyone can repeat the same mistake with that level of commitment.

“You don’t overthink. In fact, you stop just in time.”

You look like a scientifically perfect human

Your absence is noticed but not felt.

I expected nothing, yet u still disappointed me

In terms of academic luggage you’re traveling very lightly

Your food for thought leaves everyone hungry .

You should have become an anesthesiologist

© Photo:theblackswordsman14

Is your learning curve a horizontal line?

as sharp as a marble you are

I appreciate your confidence to speak in the absence of knowledge.

if beauty was a crime you would be innocent

I like your mindset: talk first, think later.

Well. I should hire you as a contractor since my expectations were on the floor and you somehow excavated a three story basement

It hurts to see you lower my expectations of you when I haven’t even set the bar yet

“If I’m minding my business and you’re minding my business who’s minding yours?”

work smarter not harder, that said your the hardest worker I know

Oh bless your heart

you've mastered the art of adding without increasing

You really look like a Picasso painting

“You have such a rare ability to consistently arrive at conclusions that are both confidently held and refreshingly orthogonal to the available evidence.”

it must be so exciting to live within your thought process

Wow bro you say your fast I’ve seen glaciers move quicker than him

"come on smile, you know i like the colour yellow".

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Climate change extends hay fever season for weeks

April 22, 2026
Climate change extends hay fever season for weeks

Pollen seasonsacross Europe are now one to two weeks longer than they were in the 1990s andheat-related deathshave risen across almost the entire continent, according to a major report.

The Independent US

Thelonger pollen seasonsare increasing exposure for tens of millions ofpeople with hay fever and other allergies, a team of global researchers have found. At the same time,extreme heat warningshave also risen 318 per cent over the same period.

Out of all European regions monitored by researchers, around 99.6 per centsaw heat-related deathsrise between 2015 and 2024 compared with 1991-2000, with an average increase of 52 extra deaths per million people each year.

The hours each year when outdoor physical activity carries a risk of heat illness have grown by 88 per cent compared with the 1990s,and heat exposureamong infants and people over 65 has risen by 254 per cent in terms of person-days.

Across the workforce, heat is estimated to be cutting labour supply by around 24 hours per worker per year compared with historical baselines, with outdoor workers in construction and agriculture among those most exposed.

The potential fordengue transmissionin Europe has also increased by 297 per cent since 1981-2010, contributing to a rise in local outbreaks of the mosquito-borne virus, which was once almost entirely confined to travellers returning from tropical regions. Thetiger mosquito that carries ithas been expanding its range northward as European summers grow warmer.

The findings were published in the 2026 Europe report of the Lancet Countdown on health andclimate change –a collaboration of 65 experts from research institutions and United Nations organisations published in theLancet Public Healthjournal.

(AFP/Getty)

The health burden falls unevenly across income groups, researchers warned.Low-income householdsare 10.9 percentage points more likely than middle-income households to experience food insecurity driven by heatwaves and droughts, and more than one million additional people were affected by moderate or severe food insecurity in 2023 compared with the annual average for 1981-2010. People in the most deprived areas face higher wildfire risks and have less access to green space.

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Deaths linked to air pollutionfrom burning wood and other biomass at home were 4 per cent higher in 2022 than in 2000, a rise the researchers attribute partly to growing use of wood as a heating source as energy prices have climbed.

"Climate change health impactsare already apparent in Europe, and these will accelerate without proper scaling up of adaptation measures and global mitigation efforts,” the authors wrote.

The report, however, acknowledges some progress.

Coal use and carbon intensity both fell in 2023, and renewables supplied 21.5 per cent of Europe's electricity, up from 8.4 per cent in 2016. Clean energy investment reached €427 billion in 2023, 86 per cent higher than in 2015.

Butfossil fuel subsidieshit a record €444bn the same year, driven by government responses to the energy price crisis that followedRussia's invasion of Ukraine.

Despite committing to phase out such subsidies by 2025 in several international agreements, only Denmark has adopted a comprehensive national plan to do so. The report warns that unless others follow, progress toward2030 net zero targetswill be compromised.

"Unless the rest of Europe follows Denmark's example, this setback will likely compromise reaching 2030 net zero goals,” the authors wrote.

Without stronger global action to cut emissions and better protect communities, the health harms documented will accelerate, the authors conclude.

"Redirecting financial flows to climate action is essential to reinforce Europe's strategic direction and commitment to climate leadership. Part of these flows should finance the adaptation of low-income countries' health-care systems, which currently receive very little funding for this purpose,” the authors wrote.

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