We look back at their lives, careers, and the lasting memories they left behind
Here we pay tribute to stars of TV, film, music, sport, and politics who have left us during 2025. The year started with the news the Wales’ former deputy first minister Jenny Randerson had died aged 76.
There was also the shocking news that The Vivienne had died aged just 32 and fellow reality star Paul Danan, who had also starred in Hollyoaks, was found dead at a house in Bristol aged just 46.
Tributes also poured in for Nolan sister Linda after it was announced she had died following a battle with cancer aged 62. She had long been a campaigner and fundraiser for cancer awareness having been first diagnosed with breast cancer in 2005.
This year also saw the loss of Ozzy Osbourne, Jilly Cooper and Hollywood legend Robert Redford.
Here we look back at their lives and pay tribute.
January
Jenny Randerson
The former Liberal Democrat Assembly Member died aged 76. Her death was announced in a statement from her party who called her someone who “left an indelible mark on our politics and society”.
Mrs Randerson is credited with being the person who decided to build the Wales Millennium Centre and give free entry to Wales’ national museums. She was the first female Liberal Democrat minister anywhere in the UK as minister for culture, sport, and the Welsh language from 2000 to 2003 and was acting deputy first minister from July 2001 to June 2002. Read more here.
The Vivienne
The reality TV star who became famous thanks to RuPaul’s Drag Race died aged 32. Their real name was James Lee Williams and they were born and raised in Colwyn Bay, Conwy, before moving to Liverpool aged 16. Williams was given their name of The Vivienne because they were known for wearing Vivienne Westwood clothing.
The Vivienne shot to fame in 2019 when they won the first ever series of RuPaul’s Drag Race UK and had other TV roles including starring in Morning T&T on WOW Presents Plus, BBC Three series The Vivienne Takes on Hollywood, and the Netflix show I Like to Watch while they also took part in the 2020 Christmas special of The Great British Sewing Bee. They became the first drag act to take part in Dancing on Ice. You can read tributes here.
Tony Slattery
The comedian died aged 65 following a heart attack. Slattery appeared on the Channel 4 comedy improvisation show Whose Line Is It Anyway? and comedy shows Just A Minute and Have I Got News For You.
He was a contemporary of Dame Emma Thompson, Sir Stephen Fry, and Hugh Laurie at the University of Cambridge and was the former president of the improvisation group Cambridge Footlights. Outside of stand-up Slattery appeared in 1980s and 1990s films including crime thriller The Crying Game, Peter’s Friends with Laurie, Sir Stephen, and Dame Emma, and black comedy How To Get Ahead In Advertising with Richard E Grant.
Linda Nolan
Linda’s sister Maureen expressed how “heartbroken” and full of sadness she and her family were after the death of the Irish singer at the age of 65. Nolan, who rose to fame in family group The Nolans with sisters Coleen, Maureen, Bernie, Denise, and Anne died surrounded by family after being admitted to hospital in Blackpool with pneumonia.
She had long been a campaigner and fundraiser for cancer awareness having been diagnosed with breast cancer in 2005. The Dublin-born star was given the all-clear in 2011 but in 2017 was told she had secondary breast cancer which later spread to her brain.
Paul Danan
The Hollyoaks and reality TV star died at the age of 46, sending shockwaves through the showbiz community. The actor, who played bad boy Sol Patrick from 1997 to 2001 on the Channel 4 soap, was later known for his reality TV appearances including on Celebrity Big Brother and Celebrity Love Island.
Danan had been open about his struggles with addiction having entered rehab and tried to recover. He had appeared on ITV’s Celebrity Love Island as a contestant in 2005 and 2006 but did not win either series. He also appeared in the 2006 ITV2 reality show Calum, Fran, And Dangerous Danan, in which he, former Westlife bodyguard and Celebrity Love Island winner Fran Cosgrave, and Calum Best travelled across the US.
David Lynch
The US filmmaker, whose work included surrealist TV series Twin Peaks and films such as The Elephant Man, Mulholland Drive, and Blue Velvet, died at the age of 78. It came five months after Lynch revealed he had been diagnosed with emphysema, a chronic lung disease, after “many years of smoking”. Lynch’s back catalogue included Eraserhead, Wild At Heart, Lost Highway, The Straight Story, and Inland Empire.
Dame Joan Plowright
The Oscar nominee died at the age of 95. The British actress, who was married to Lord Laurence Olivier, was known for her Golden Globe award-winning performances in TV biopic Stalin and Enchanted April for which she was also nominated for an Academy Award.
Dame Joan also starred in Love You To Death with River Phoenix and was a star of the West End and Broadway before her international movie success. Her wedding to Lord Olivier in 1961 was the sensation of the year and their marriage was an enduring one until the theatre great’s death in 1989 at the age of 82. Her role in the 1991 British comedy Enchanted April won her a Golden Globe for her waspish widow character and she was also known for 101 Dalmatians in 1996 and Tea With Mussolini in 1999. She won a second Golden Globe for the TV biopic Stalin in 1993.
Denis Law
He was described as “one of football’s giants” as tributes poured in for the former Manchester United and Scotland great following his death at the age of 84. The Aberdeen-born striker won two league titles with United and was a member of their European Cup-winning side under Sir Matt Busby in 1968 when they became the first English club to lift the trophy.
Law, known as The King, was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease and vascular dementia in 2021. The ex-Manchester City and Huddersfield striker is Scotland’s joint all-time leading scorer with 30 goals in 55 appearances and is third on United’s all-time scoring list behind Wayne Rooney and former team-mate Sir Bobby Charlton.
Marianne Faithfull
The Grammy-nominated singer and actress known for hits like As Tears Go By and Come and Stay With Me died aged 78.
Faithfull rose to prominence as a singer at the height of the Swinging Sixties with her single As Tears Go By, which was written by Rolling Stones members Keith Richards and Mick Jagger. Her relationship with Jagger dominated the tabloids from 1965 until 1970 during which time she penned her own albums and starred in several films.
After their break-up Faithfull struggled for years with drug abuse and homelessness before having a career resurgence following the release of her Grammy-nominated 1979 album Broken English. She continued to sing, write, and act over the course of the next 40 years.
February
Rick Buckler
The drummer of the British rock band The Jam died aged 69.
His former bandmate Paul Weller confirmed the news on Instagram, saying: “I’m shocked and saddened by Rick’s passing. I’m thinking back to us all rehearsing in my bedroom in Stanley Road, Woking.”
Buckler, who died after a short illness, was a founding member of the three-piece mod-punk band in 1972 and featured on six studio albums.
Roberta Flack
The R&B singer, best known for the hits The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face and Killing Me Softly With His Song, died at the age of 88.
Flack had announced in 2022 that she had motor neurone disease and could no longer sing.
Born in North Carolina and raised in Arlington, Virginia, the musician started out as a classical pianist. She gained a full school scholarship to Howard University aged just 15. Her classical training led her into teaching but at night she’d accompany opera singers on piano, singing pop standards during the breaks.
Henry Kelly
The journalist and TV presenter died aged 78. Kelly was a journalist who later pivoted to light entertainment, hosting TV gameshow Game For A Laugh and Going For Gold in the 1980s and 90s.
He also presented programmes on BBC Radio 4, LBC, and Classic FM.
Born in Dublin in 1946 Kelly started his journalistic career in newspapers. He worked for The Irish Times in the 1970s during civil unrest and the Troubles in Northern Ireland.
He left the newspaper and moved to London to join the BBC in 1976, working as a reporter and presenter for Radio 4’s The World Tonight. But in 1980, aged 34, he left journalism to become a light entertainment presenter.
Michelle Trachtenberg
The actress, who rose to fame as a child star in the 1990s and 2000s, died aged 39.
The American actress was best known for playing Buffy the Vampire Slayer’s younger sister Dawn Summers and later took on the role of manipulative socialite Georgina Sparks in Gossip Girl, which ran from 2007 to 2012, as an adult.
Trachtenberg made her film debut in Harriet the Spy in 1996, and she appeared in several Nickelodeon productions.
Jack Vettriano
The Scottish painter best known for his painting The Singing Butler died at the age of 73.
His publicist said the artist was found dead at his apartment in Nice in the south of France. It is understood there were no suspicious circumstances surrounding his death.
Vettriano was a self-taught artist whose most famous work became the UK’s best-selling art print and set a Scottish record when it was auctioned in 2004.
Pamela Bach
The former Baywatch actress and ex-wife of David Hasselhoff died aged 62.
Bach was found at home in the Hollywood Hills after she died by suicide, said the Los Angeles medical examiner’s office.
She met Hasselhoff while acting with him on the set of TV series Knight Rider and the two married in 1989. She went on to star alongside him on lifeguard TV drama Baywatch before their divorce in 2006.
“Our family is deeply saddened by the recent passing of Pamela Hasselhoff,” Hasselhoff said in a statement.
Stedman Pearson
The Five Star member died at the age of 60, his sister Deniece Pearson announced in March.
The singer – who was most known for performing alongside his siblings Deniece, Lorraine, Doris, and Delroy Pearson in the British pop group – died on March 10 and had been on dialysis.
“He was a gentleman to the very end – in every way and an amazing son/brother and uncle,” a statement from his family to the PA news agency said.
“May the memories and love he gave to us and the world be our greatest comfort. He will be deeply missed.”
George Foreman
The boxing heavyweight died aged 76. Known as Big George in the ring the American built one of the most remarkable and enduring careers in the sport, winning Olympic gold in 1968 and claiming the world heavyweight title twice, 21 years apart.
The second made him the oldest champion in history aged 45. He lost his first title to Muhammad Ali in their famous Rumble in the Jungle fight in 1974. But overall he boasted an astonishing total of 76 wins including 68 knockouts – almost double that of Ali.
Foreman retired in 1997 but not before he agreed to put his name to a best-selling grill – a decision that went on to bring him fortunes that dwarfed his boxing earnings.
April
Virginia Giuffre
The woman who accused Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and Jeffrey Epstein of sexual abuse died by suicide aged 41, her family said.
Ms Giuffre was one of the most outspoken accusers of convicted sex offenders Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, his former girlfriend. She alleged they trafficked her to the then-Duke of York when she was 17, which Mountbatten-Windsor has strenuously denied.
Relatives said in a statement that she had been a “fierce warrior in the fight against sexual abuse” and the “toll of abuse… became unbearable”.
Mike Peters
The front man of Welsh rockers The Alarm and a long-standing cancer campaigner and fundraiser died aged 66.
His band was formed in 1981 in Rhyl, Denbighshire, out of the punk era and had a top 20 hit, Sixty Eight Guns, two years later.
It typified an anthemic style of song but their unpretentious and down-to-earth approach earned loyal followings on both sides of the Atlantic.
Peters lived with blood cancer for 30 years, following his diagnosis of lymphoma in 1995, and later having chronic lymphocytic leukaemia twice.
May
Mark Jones
The former Wales dual-code rugby international died at the age of 59.
Wales Rugby League said Jones died of a heart attack while at a gym in the Middle East.
Jones began his senior rugby career in union with local side Tredegar Ironsides before joining Tredegar RFC then moved to Neath in 1985 – at the time one of the powerhouses of Welsh rugby.
Neath said news of the death of their former player had left the club “heartbroken” and paid tribute to “a real force of nature”.
Alan Yentob
The long-serving BBC arts broadcaster and documentary-maker died aged 78.
Yentob profiled and interviewed a wide range of important cultural and creative figures over the years including David Bowie, Charles Saatchi, Maya Angelou, and Grayson Perry for TV series such as Omnibus, Arena, and Imagine.
He also served as controller of BBC One and Two and the organisation’s creative director and head of music and arts during a long and varied career.
June
Frederick Forsyth
The best-selling author, known for thriller novels including The Day Of The Jackal, died at the age of 86.
Forsyth published more than 25 books, also including The Odessa File and The Dogs of War, and sold 75m books around the world.
His publisher Bill Scott-Kerr said: “Still read by millions across the world, Freddie’s thrillers define the genre and are still the benchmark to which contemporary writers aspire. He leaves behind a peerless legacy which will continue to excite and entertain for years to come.”
Brian Wilson
The lead singer, composer, and front man of the Beach Boys, died aged 82.
Tributes from fans and musicians, including Sir Paul McCartney, saw him described as an icon, a genius, and a pioneer.
Born and raised in California the musician brought surf-rock to the world with songs like I Get Around, Surfin’ USA, and Good Vibrations.
Sandy Gall
The veteran broadcaster and journalist died aged 97.
Gall became one of the most familiar faces in the country, firstly as a foreign correspondent for ITN, before becoming co-presenter of News at Ten.
Gall’s career in journalism spanned more than 50 years starting in 1952 when he joined the Aberdeen Press and Journal.
July
Norman Tebbit
The politician who served as a cabinet minister in Margaret Thatcher’s government died aged 94.
Throughout the 1980s he worked as the chairman of the Conservative Party and led the departments of trade and industry and employment.
A loyal ally of Thatcher, Lord Tebbit backed her agenda, bringing in laws designed to curb union power – including making them liable for damages if they did illegal acts.
Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch described Lord Tebbit as “the leading exponent of the philosophy known as Thatcherism” and praised his “stoicism and courage” after he and his wife were severely injured by an IRA bomb in 1984.
The explosion at the Grand Hotel in Brighton during the Tory party’s annual conference killed five people and seriously injured 31. Lord Tebbit suffered a broken shoulder blade, fractured vertebrae, and a cracked collarbone while Margaret Tebbit was left permanently disabled.
Iris Williams
The renowned Welsh singer died at the age of 79. Born in Pontypridd, Rhondda Cynon Taf, in 1946, Williams performed around the world including in the US, where she was living at the time of her death.
She was awarded a scholarship to the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama while working in a glove factory in Llantrisant.
She would eventually go on to perform for Queen Elizabeth II at the Royal Albert Hall in London and for US President Gerald Ford on a number of occasions.
The daughter of an American GI, Williams was raised in a children’s home and with a foster family in Tonyrefail. Her hits included He Was Beautiful and Pererin Wyf, a Welsh-language version of Amazing Grace.
Ozzy Osbourne
The influential rock musician died at the age of 76 just weeks after a farewell concert.
As frontman of Black Sabbath the Birmingham-born musician was credited with inventing heavy metal thanks to songs like Iron Man and Paranoid.
The self-styled Prince of Darkness performed a farewell concert in his hometown supported by many of the musicians he had inspired including Metallica and Guns n’ Roses.
In a statement his family said: “It is with more sadness than mere words can convey that we have to report that our beloved Ozzy Osbourne has passed away this morning. He was with his family and surrounded by love.”
Hulk Hogan
The Wrestling legend died aged 71. First responders received a call from his Florida home with report of “cardiac arrest”. He was pronounced dead at hospital later
Hogan, whose real name was Terry Bollea, was the biggest professional wrestler of the 80s and 90s and went on to achieve crossover fame.
Tributes from the wrestling world, political sphere, and Hollywood poured in with many remembering him as as “American pop culture fixture”.
Known for red and yellow outfits, Real American entrance music, and army of “Hulkamaniac” fans he continued wrestling well into his 50s.
August
Sylvia Young
The founder of the London theatre school which launched countless entertainment careers died aged 85.
Amy Winehouse, Rita Ora, Billie Piper, Dua Lipa, and McFly’s Tom Fletcher are among the stars who trained at the school early in their careers before going on to mainstream success.
Young founded her eponymous school in 1972, beginning with part-time classes in the east end of London.
Biddy Baxter
The long-serving Blue Peter editor, who turned the children’s show into a television institution, died at the age of 92.
During her tenure, which lasted from 1965 to 1988, she introduced generations of children to the pleasures of sticky-backed plastic, on-screen pets, presenters’ adventures, and charity appeals – a recipe that stood the test of time.
She was also passionate about getting her viewers involved in the programme long before audience participation became an industry mantra.
But she also gained a reputation as a formidable figure – a tyrant who fell out with presenters and jealously guarded the Blue Peter brand.
Hefin David
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer led tributes to Welsh Labour politician Hefin David who died suddenly at his home aged 47.
Mr David had been Member of the Senedd (MS) for Caerphilly since 2016.
Labour leader Sir Keir called him a “powerful voice for the people of Wales” who “dedicated his life to making sure every person and community in Wales had the opportunities and support they deserve”. Heartfelt tributes from across the politicsl divide can be found here.
Terence Stamp
The English actor who played the arch-villain General Zod in the original Superman films died at the age of 87.
In a career that spanned six decades the Oscar-nominated actor starred in films including The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert, Far From the Madding Crowd, and Valkyrie.
Born in Stepney, east London, to working-class parents in 1938 Stamp attended grammar school before pursuing a career in advertising.
After securing a scholarship for drama school he shot to fame in the 1960s, making his debut playing the titular role in Billy Budd, a 1962 film about a naive young seaman in the 18th century.
September
Joe Bugner
The former heavyweight boxer died at the age of 75.
Bugner twice held the British and Commonwealth heavyweight titles and was a three-time European heavyweight champion.
He faced Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier in back-to-back bouts in 1973 before facing Ali again – for the world title – in 1975.
Bugner was consistently ranked among the world’s top 10 heavyweights throughout the 1970s and was known for technical ability, toughness, durability, and willingness to take on the best.
During his 83-fight career he also shared the ring with other notable heavyweights such as Earnie Shavers, Henry Cooper. and Frank Bruno.
Katharine, Duchess of Kent
The Duchess was the oldest member of the Royal Family when she died aged 92.
The Prince and Princess of Wales said the duchess would be a “much-missed member of the family” who had “worked tirelessly to help others and supported many causes, including through her love of music”.
The duchess, Katharine, was the oldest member of the Royal Family, married to Prince Edward, the Duke of Kent, a first cousin of the late Queen Elizabeth II.
She will be remembered as a familiar figure at the Wimbledon tennis championships where she handed over trophies and consoled those who had lost, famously including a tearful Jana Novotna in 1993.
Ricky Hatton
The former world boxing champion died at the age of 46.
Nicknamed The Hitman he won world titles at light-welterweight and welterweight and was one of Britain’s most popular fighters.
Hatton, who won 45 of his 48 professional bouts across an esteemed 15-year career, last fought professionally in 2012.
Robert Redford
The US acting legend, best known for roles in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid and The Sting died at the age of 89.
Tributes were paid to the Oscar-winning star by actors including Meryl Streep and Jane Fonda.
Redford, also famous for founding Utah’s Sundance Film Festival, won a best director Oscar in 1980 for Ordinary People. He announced his retirement from performing in 2018 having said in 2016 that he was “tired of acting”.
It was 1969’s Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, a Western film about two bank robbers co-starring Paul Newman, that made Redford an overnight star.
But despite his success Redford was never comfortable with his tag as a good-looking heartthrob.
John Stapleton
The broadcaster died in hospital at the age of 79. He had Parkinson’s disease which was complicated by pneumonia.
Stapleton was a fixture of broadcast news and presented on programmes including TV-am, Daybreak, GMTV, Newsnight, and Panorama.
He held a distinguished career spanning more than 50 years, becoming one of the most recognisable figures in UK television news.
Stapleton began his career in journalism in the 1960s, working for local newspapers before moving into broadcasting with the BBC in the 1970s.
He became a reporter for the flagship current affairs programme Newsnight when it launched in 1980.
In 1983 he joined TV-am. Stapleton then moved to BBC’s Watchdog in the late 1980s where he co-presented the consumer affairs programme alongside his wife, the late Lynn Faulds Wood.
Dickie Bird
The former cricket umpire died at the age of 92.
Bird, whose first-class playing career was cut short by injury, became one of the most famous faces in the game.
He officiated in 66 Tests and 76 one-day internationals, including three World Cup finals, between 1973 and 1996.
Bird’s home county side Yorkshire, for whom he played and served as president, described him as a “national treasure, known not only for his umpiring excellence but also for his eccentricities and warmth”.
Lord Menzies Campbell
The former Liberal Democrat leader died at the age of 84.
Ming as he was widely known, led the Liberal Democrats from 2006 to 2007 and was the MP for North East Fife at Westminster for 28 years.
In his first career as a sprinter he held the UK 100m record from 1967 to 1974 and ran in the 1964 Tokyo Olympics – being dubbed The Flying Scotsman.
Lib Dem leader Ed Davey described Campbell as “a dedicated public servant and a true Liberal giant”.
October
Dame Jane Goodall
The British animal rights campaigner and primatologist died aged 91.
She died of natural causes in California where she was staying as part of her speaking tour in the US. In tribute her institute called her a “tireless advocate” for the natural world as the United Nations said she left “an extraordinary legacy”.
Goodall was awarded the Medal of Freedom by outgoing President Joe Biden earlier in 2025 and received a damehood in 20004.
Dame Patricia Routledge
The actress best known for playing Hyacinth Bucket in classic TV sitcom Keeping Up Appearances died at the age of 96.
She also starred in Alan Bennett’s TV monologues and played BBC One’s amateur sleuth Hetty Wainthropp while also enjoying an acclaimed stage career.
The BBC’s director of comedy was among those paying tribute, saying she “made millions laugh and left a legacy that will always be remembered with gratitude and admiration”.
Dame Jilly Cooper
The novelist known for her best-selling romps including Rivals and Riders died at the age of 88.
Dame Jilly’s most successful works were The Rutshire Chronicles, beginning with Riders in 1985, which portrayed the scandals, sex lives, and social circles of the wealthy horse-loving country set.
Follow-up Rivals was published in 1988 and reached a new generation of fans more recently when it was turned into a hit Disney+ TV series. She sold more than 11m books in total in the UK alone.
Queen Camilla led the tributes, describing Dame Jilly as a legend and a “wonderfully witty and compassionate friend”, adding: “May her hereafter be filled with impossibly handsome men and devoted dogs.”
Tony Adams
The Crossroads star, also known for roles in General Hospital and Doctor Who, died at the age of 84.
The Welsh actor, from Anglesey, was best known for playing accountant Adam Chance in Crossroads from 1978 until 1988.
He soon became a major character but in September 1987 he decided it was time to leave the programme. Following this the announcement was made that the series would end in April 1988 and Adams stayed to the end.
He did return in the 2001 revival of the series but his character was killed off in a fire.
November
Pauline Collins
The star of the film Shirley Valentine, for which she was Oscar-nominated in 1990, died at the age of 85.
She died “peacefully” in her London care home surrounded by her family having had Parkinson’s disease for several years, her family said.
Collins will be best remembered for her portrayal of disgruntled housewife Shirley in Lewis Gilbert’s award-winning film based on the acclaimed stage play by Willy Russell.
Her critically-acclaimed performance also won her the Golden Globe Award for best actress along with a Bafta.
Mani
Musicians and fans paid tribute to Gary “Mani” Mounfield, bassist with legendary Manchester band the Stone Roses following his death at the age of 63.
Oasis singer Liam Gallagher led the tributes saying: “In total shock and absolutely devastated on hearing the news about Mani. My hero, RIP R Kid.”
Mounfield’s bass playing was an integral part of the Stone Roses’ “baggy” sound and he later reunited with his bandmates for their comeback tour in 2012.
He joined another seminal group, Primal Scream, in 1996 and played with them for 15 years.
December
Sophie Kinsella
The author of the bestselling Shopaholic series of novels was remembered as a “wonderful, warm woman” following her death at the age of 55.
The writer, whose real name is Madeleine Sophie Wickham, was diagnosed with an aggressive form of brain cancer in 2022.
Me Before You author Jojo Moyes, who had known Kinsella for 20 years, told BBC News she had “never met anybody who carried more grace”.
Stanley Baxter
The Scottish actor and comedian died at the age of 99.
Born in Glasgow in 1926 he was one of the biggest stars on British television for several decades.
Baxter starred in a number of hit series between the 1960s and the 1980s and was also known for his acting roles and as a pantomime regular.
His friend and biographer Brian Beacom said Baxter died in Denville Hall, a north London care home for entertainment figures where he had lived since late 2023.
Joanna Trollope
The best-selling author died aged 82. The writer was known as the “queen of the Aga saga” because her novels often focused on romance and intrigue in middle England although she rejected the tag as “patronising”.
Trollope’s novels include The Rector’s Wife, Marrying The Mistress, Second Honeymoon, and Daughters in Law.
Trollope was a writer for more than five decades and one of the best known novelists in the UK.
She authored more than 20 contemporary novels including 2013’s Sense & Sensibility, the lead title in HarperCollins’ Austen Project.
Rob Reiner
The legendary Hollywood film-maker and actor Rob Reiner and his wife Michele were found dead in their Los Angeles home.
Reiner was known for directing classic films in a variety of genres including When Harry Met Sally, This is Spinal Tap, Stand By Me, Misery, and A Few Good Men.
