20.08.2019»»вторник

Badia Big Picture Serial Killer

20.08.2019
    11 - Comments

http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/ActuallyPrettyFunny

Go To

Non-Serial Books; Complete Title Index; Multimedia; Collections. This volume is dedicated to Pierre Marie who coined the term. Susanna Webb and Xavier Badia developed a disease-specific. Badia Big Picture Serial Numbers. Convert Badia Big Picture trail version to full software. Sapna Babul Ka Bidaai Forum - Check. Nov 29, 2017. Cori Foster, a former classmate of Donaldson, described him as “having a big smile, a nice guy, who was athletic and played basketball. Foster was shocked to hear that Donaldson had been charged as a serial killer. “People did expect him to do big things with his life, so it just doesn't make sense,” Foster.

'Have you ever wanted to punch someone but couldn't because you were laughing too hard?'
Advertisement:

Some lines are so good even the humorless can't help cracking up. Whether it be the Magnificent Bastard's witty comeback or the Heroic Comedic Sociopath's cutting insult, much to the insultee's chagrin, or the Naïve Newcomer's innocent (or the Deadpan Snarker's not-so-innocent) observation, though by all standards being really low hanging fruit, still makes for a surprisingly sharp and clever quip.

Occasionally, even the target of the insult can admire the sheer comedy value of the joke, in which case it can border on Insult Backfire. May go hand-in-hand with Self-Deprecation jokes. Compare Actually A Good Idea, The One Thing I Don't Hate About You, Touché, Not Bad, and Crosses the Line Twice. Contrast Tough Room; Dude, Not Funny!. See also Mexicans Love Speedy Gonzales.

Advertisement:

In-Universe Examples Only (though Real Life examples are allowed if the target of the joke thought it was funny):

open/close all folders
  • In Mai-Otome, Haruka is laughing uproariously over Nao getting Natsuki arrested for indecent exposure while trying to hitch a ride to Aries, prompting Yukino to tell her that she's being rude. When Haruka shows Yukino the photo, however, Yukino briefly cracks a smile before quickly clearing her throat, as Natsuki happens to be in the room with them.
  • Starmon's reaction to the Digimon Emperor (who he works for) being called an 'Earth reject' in an episode of Digimon Adventure 02.
  • In the fifth episode of Kotoura-san, Manabe gives Kotoura an embarrassing photo of Moritani, a girl that had recently befriended Kotoura after previously tormenting her. Kotoura tells Manabe off because giving that photo is a mean thing to do. Once alone though, she can't help but crack up and spends the whole of the next day trying not to around Moritani. She uses the photo as a pick-me-up at the episode's end after a failure in a relay race.
  • Kimi ni Todoke has an arc where someone is spreading rumors about Ayane and Chizuru. Most of them were rather unflattering, but there is one rumor that they both found hilarious where it is believed that Sawako is the mastermind of a gang and orders them around.
  • Kirby: Right Back at Ya!: King Dedede starts his own TV channel and all the residents of Capi Town are obsessed with it, including Meta Knight, much to Tiff's horror.
    'King Dedede may be a despicable dictator, but you got to admit he's got some funny schtick.'
  • Sailor Moon
    • At the start of Ami's introduction episode, Usagi is laughing her head off at a comic book. Her mother scolds her for the noise but then Usagi shows her the comic - and she bursts out laughing too.
    • Luna gets this a lot as well. Particularly when Artemis is having a bad day, she joins in with a good amount of the teasing too.
    • At the end of the radio episode, Usagi is writing a love letter to Tuxedo Mask - which Naru snatches off her. Miss Haruna comes into the room and - rather than scolding Usagi for doing it during class - chases the two around the room, just as excited to read the latter as Naru. The English dub changes this to Serena lying that it's homework - which Haruna is still excited to see as Serena's notoriously lazy.
  • In Cross Ange, Ange tells Hilda not to die, because the cell they're locked in will stink if she dies. Hilda laughs at the joke and asks how selfish Ange can be.
  • In Girls und Panzer, Yukari is caught infiltrating a rival school to spy on them right before their match. When she frantically identifies herself as Sgt Third Class Oddball, Kay, the leader of the school, doubles over giggling in response and compliments her again the next day.
  • After an intense battle in One Piece where Kaku has been extolling the virtues of his new giraffe transformation powers, he says that him being fired from the shipwright job of his cover identity is unfortunate, as it's hard for assassins to find other work. Zoro gets a chuckle out him by suggesting the zoo.
  • Snow White with the Red Hair has Izana requiring his brother Zen to go on a date with one of his potential suitors. Zen goes out with Kiki, who is a noblewoman. Izana concedes that it was clever, and technically his own fault for not taking Kiki's name off of the list.
  • During the Duelist Kingdom arc of Yu-Gi-Oh!, Bandit Keith and his thugs have kidnapped Joey and taken him to an underground crypt for a duel. Joey is understandably freaked out, and Bonz (Keith's smallest thug and dueling proxy) does his best to keep Joey scared. When Joey finally gets his wits together, what does he say? 'All right, I was afraid, but not 'cause of the graveyard or your ooga-booga rap. It's your creepy face that gave me the willies!' This prompts Keith and the others to start laughing at Bonz (who really does have a creepy face) while he looks like he just lost a lot of his bluster.
  • In Saint Seiya, Saga, Shura, and Camus barely survived their battle with Shaka in which they were hit with his sensory deprivation technique four times, leaving them a sense each (with the loss of taste also paralyzing the tongue and preventing the victim from talking). Then they noticed that one of them has only the sight, one has only hearing, and one has only taste, and Saga chuckles.
  • In Miss Kobayashi's Dragon Maid, Kobayashi tells Tohru and Kanna (who were using their dragon powers to have a Dragon Ball Z-esque battle) to play more on her level. They respond by hunching over and complaining that their backs hurt, imitating Kobayashi. She calls it mean, but then quietly admits that their impressions are spot-on.
  • In Dragon Ball Super, when Goku starts addressing Zen'O, the Top God of all creation, in a very casual and friendly manner, most other characters start freaking out at how inappropriate and rude he's being. On the other hand, Zen'O's retainer, the Grand Priest finds this all very amusing and is frequently seen trying to suppress a chuckle at Goku's antics. Even he has his limits though, as he tells Goku to cut it back and show a little decorum when Goku attends a gathering among the gods of all universes.
  • High School DXD: In one scene where Issei starts going on and on about how his ideal life would be a peaceful one in which he gets to have sex with Rias every day, another character finally points out that Rias's elder brother Sirzechs (who also happens to be one of the most powerful devils alive) is in the room. Issei freezes in sheer terror, expecting a My Sister Is Off-Limits! reaction, but the camera shows that Sirzechs (out of Issei's sight) is desperately trying not to burst out laughing at the whole scene.
  • One Calvin and Hobbesstrip has Calvin combing his hair, putting on his dad's glasses and marching up to his parents saying, 'Calvin! Go do something you hate! Being miserable builds character!' Calvin's mom literally falls off her chair laughing, and his Dad, while annoyed, admits that 'okay, the voice was a little funny'. They currently provide the page image.
  • In Bloom County, Oliver Wendel Jone's father is outside his room, telling him he got a call from the FBI that Oliver had programmed NASA's computers to have the Space Shuttle land in their neighbor's bean field. He breaks up in the Third Panel.
    Dad: Actually, that's a pretty good one son...
    Oliver:[peeking out of his room] Yeah!
    DAD: BUT YOU'RE STILL IN BIG TROUBLE!!
  • One comic from The Far Side has a chimpanzee find blonde hairs in her mate's fur and accusing him of 'conducting a little more 'research' with that Jane Goodall tramp.' The Jane Goodall Foundation went ballistic and there were even fears of a lawsuit, but shortly thereafter it was discovered that Dr. Goodall herself loved the cartoon, and was unaware of the ruckus. She even went on to write an introduction to one of the collections.
  • In-universe example in For Better or for Worse. April once uses Elizabeth's bra as a slingshot and shoots koosh balls at the dog. Elly is too busy laughing to scold April immediately.
    • In another strip, Michael and Lawrence pretend to be superheroes named Burpman and Tootman and they start making rude noises. Elly gives them a brief lecture about how jokes like this are stupid and not funny. Then she goes into the kitchen and starts laughing her head off.
  • Garfield Minus Garfield. When Davis got news of the strip, rather than send out the lawyers as one would expect, he actually thought it was VERY funny. He not only allowed them to continue, but contributed to the edits, and even wrote an introduction for their book.
  • From Wreck-It Ralph:
    King Candy:[pulls a pair of glasses out of nowhere and puts them on]You wouldn't hit a guy with glasses, would you?
    [Ralph takes off Candy's glasses and breaks them over Candy's head]
    King Candy: You hit a guy with glasses. That's... well-played.
  • The bloopers reel of The LEGO Movie has Emmet laughing at something, which annoys Batman. Emmet responds by saying that he laughs at everything, and Batman admits that the laugh was actually good.
    Batman: Man, your laugh is making me...actually, it's a pretty good laugh.
    Emmet: Well then, you're not gonna hear it anymore.
  • In the animated black comedy film Bébé's Kids during a confrontation in the woman's bathroom between Robin and Dorthea, they start cracking Yo Mama jokes and Robin fires off one that makes Dorthea's friend Vivian crack up.
    Dorthea: That's ok, yo mama so dumb she thought a quarterback was a refund!
    Robin: Well ain't that a little... yo mama so dumb, they told her it was chilly outside she went and got a bowl!
    Vivian:[cracks up]
  • In The Lion King, Zazu and Mufasa are discussing what should be done about Scar; Zazu suggests that he'd make a handsome throw rug. Mufasa chastises him, but he continues that you could take him outside and beat him when he got dirty. Mufasa can't help but laugh.
  • At the end of Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie, Mr. Krupp, now in a good mood gives George and Harold their comics back and admits that while they're juvenile he did find them funny.
  • 101 Dalmatians:
    • Roger and Anita laugh following the Meet Cute scene when Anita tries to wipe herself dry with a handkerchief, only to find it's sodden, and Roger's handkerchief is as well.
    • Pongo enjoys Roger's song and impression of 'Cruella de Ville' after she barges in and asks about Perdita's unborn puppies. Anita tries to put on an Dude, Not Funny! front since she's trying to be civil to Cruella but eventually she breaks down giggling offscreen when Roger waltzes with her to the melody.
  • Zootopia: When Judy turns Nick's 'It's called a hustle, sweetheart' back at him in an effort to enlist his help with a case, Nick's partner-in-embezzlement Finnick breaks down laughing and takes off to leave them to work.
Advertisement:
Jokes
  • An old Soviet joke uses this trope as the punchline:
    A man needed to travel to Moscow in order to take care of some government business. Having to stop at night at an inn, the man asks if there's any room available - the clerk replies that there is a free bed, but it's in a room with three other people. Seeing no other choice, the traveler takes the bed.
    As it turns out, the three other men in the room know each other very well and are traveling together, wanting to drink and carouse late into the night. The traveler wants nothing else but to get some sleep, but the men keep him awake, telling loudly ribald tales and joking disparagingly about the government. Having heard tales about microphones hidden in rooms, the traveler grows a bit concerned about people listening in, but nothing seems to stop the men from going on and on.
    Then, the man gets an idea. He sneaks out of his bed, unseen by the others, and goes to the front desk, asking if he can have some tea sent to the room. The clerk responds that yes, it will take about 20 minutes. 'Perfect,' says the man, and he asks for tea to be sent up. The traveler slips back into the room and makes to join the raucous group.
    After 10 minutes have passed, as well as a few more jokes about the government, the traveler asks the others if they'd like to see a trick. Quite inebriated and mirthful, the men agree. The traveler stands up, walks over to one of the lamps in the room and says to the lamp, 'Comrade Captain, would you have some tea sent up?' This gets a roar of laughter from the other men, and the traveler smiles as he comes back to the table, and listens to more stories.
    That is, until, right on cue, there is a knock on the door, and a woman comes in with tea, ready for drinking. This sobers the men right up, as they 'realize' the truth about how they were being listened to. All four of them drink tea in silence, only the traveler gently smiling, knowing what had happened. After the tea is consumed, all four men retire to bed.
    The next morning, the traveler wakes to discover that the three other men had disappeared. Their beds are slept in, but their things are gone. Wide awake at the realization, the traveler runs to the front desk and asks what happened to the three other men in his room. When the clerk stammers out, 'I know nothing about that!' - an obvious lie - the truth is confirmed to the traveler: While he slept, the other three men must have been taken by the secret police. As a chill runs down his spine, the traveler says to himself, 'But why not me?' This was loud enough for the clerk to overhear, and he responds helpfully: 'Well, Comrade Captain thought the bit with the tea was a riot.'
  • One time when John Mulaney and his three siblings were children, they were on a road trip to his grandparents’ house. As they got closer, the kids started getting rowdy because they were hungry. They wanted their dad to stop but he wouldn’t do it because they were almost there. They started chanting , “McDonald's!” to bug him. Mr. Mulaney, being a lawyer focused on people’s Exact Words did pull into a McDonald’s off the exit but ordered one black coffee (the only thing on the entire menu no child would like) for himself and drove off. John admits that it made him mad then but as an adult thinks it’s the funniest thing he’s ever seen.
  • Greek Mythology: Zeus was amused by Hermes' pranks and antics, but because they interfered with the duties of the other Gods he couldn't allow them to continue. Zeus made Hermes the messenger of the Gods to keep him out of trouble.
  • 'It's Not Funny' from Run–D.M.C.'s album King of Rock lists a lot of situations that aren't hilarious to the person whom they should happen too, but some of them are pretty amusing to the listener. Others are downright ridiculous.
  • 'Shia LaBeouf' by Rob Cantor is about evading, and ultimately defeating, 'actual cannibal Shia LaBeouf'.note A live video featuring special guest musicians and extended lyrics ends with LaBeouf himself, alone in the empty theater, delivering a Citizen Kane clap in appreciation before looking around uncomfortably and sitting back down.
  • 'Weird Al' Yankovic deliberately aims for this trope in his many, many parodies; he makes it a point to ask each artist he's mocking for permission to use their songs, even though it's not necessary (U.S. law protects parodies from copyright issues), as a sign that his work is all in good fun. Most musicians respond positively; Michael Jackson, in particular, was a huge fan of Yankovic, and loved his material so much that he even gave the comedian permission to recreate the music video for 'Bad'—right down to letting Yankovic use the same set—for the parody 'Fat.' 'Smells Like Nirvana' is another good example because the parody is actually aboutNirvana, about how you can't understand what they're singing and the song will bug your parents. 'Perform This Way,' a parody of Lady Gaga's 'Born This Way,' is another example. Despite Al viewing it as Old Shame, Billy Joel loved 'It's Still Billy Joel to Me' and has performed it live.
  • Alanis Morissette released this parody of Fergie's 'My Humps' in 2007, poking fun at the overly sexual nature of the song. The Other Wiki reports that Fergie absolutely loved the alt rocker's version, and sent Morissette a posterior-shaped cake to show her appreciation.
  • The Who's song 'My Wife' is about a husband who's spent the weekend in prison, and is now going to cartoonish lengths to escape his angry wife. When John Entwistle (who wrote the song)'s wife heard it, she thought it was hilarious.
  • One of the more memetic lines from Lulu is 'I am the Table', sung by James Hetfield, which has largely become a case of Never Live It Down. However, Hetfield actually finds jokes about it hilarious, and since he has no control over it, he might as well laugh at it.
  • Michael Jackson had a song called Dirty Diana, about a groupie called Diana who slept with members of music bands to get famous. A while after the song's release, Princess Diana happened to be present at one of his concerts. Being afraid that the Princess would be offended, he took it out of the performance. However, Diana's reaction when he told her that was to tell him that it was her favorite song and insisted that he played it. It was too late by that time to put the song back, though, so he couldn't sing it at that concert, but he performed it normally in later concerts.
  • Mojo Nixon released a song entitled 'Don Henley Must Die' - and Don Henley showed up at a concert to perform it with him.
  • The 2019 Super Bowl halftime performance of Maroon 5 was something of a Fountain of Memes, and among them was a comparison to Bleeding Through vocalist Brandan Schieppati, whose own heavily tattooed appearance was, all things considered, quite similar to Adam Levine's. Schieppati was amused by the memes and shared several of them.
  • Decoder Ring Theatre:
    • Black Jack Justice
      • Jack and Trixie are Vitriolic Best Buds to the point that no conversation between them can pass without some bickering and there is a Bottle Episode that consists exclusively of them arguing. One thing that can make it hard to separate the vitriol from good-natured ribbing is that one will often acknowledge a particularly good shot from the other with a 'Nice' or by noting 'It's probably true, but you still shouldn't say it.'
      • Trixie carries a small pistol strapped to her leg as a surprise weapon. Only in her Private Eye Monologue will Trixie admit that she thinks Jack's nickname for it, the Mousetrap, is funny.
    • Red Panda Adventures: Card-Carrying Villain the Mad Monkey genuinely likes it when the Red Panda and Flying Squirrel call him things like 'Sinister Simian' or 'Babbling Baboon'. His first encounter with the heroes in the episode 'Monkeyshines' has him complementing such lines while becoming furious when the Red Panda insists on using the Monkey's real name.
  • In The Fallen Gods, Delilah considers the party's plans to reunite her and her sister Missandere (such as stuffing them in a get-along shirt or disguising Delilah as Groucho Marx) rather amusing, though totally ineffectual.
  • Pokémon World Tour: United:
    • During Cobalt's gym battle with Kent, Rose gets fed up with the Hurricane of Puns everyone else is throwing around and flips off the camera broadcasting the fight. Right after, Rose's Togepi, Scramble, imitates the gesture. Kent states that, while he can not condone the act, it was adorable.
    • In episode 53, Jake describes Rose's outfit for the day as 'tough and cool', prompting the GM, Alan, to ask if that makes Rose a 'tool'. Jake admits Alan got him with that, as he walked right into it.
  • Mick Foleyfinally gets The Rock back for all the years of 'It doesn't matter!' During a promo in 2000, Foley tells Rock he's in the upper echelon of WWE Champions, and asks how it makes him feel. Rock barely gets a word out before Foley bellows 'IT DOESN'T MATTER HOW IT MAKES YOU FEEL!' Foley promptly runs around the ring celebrating, and Rock can't help but chuckle at that one.
  • John 'Bradshaw' Layfield, around WrestleMania 29, was defending Zeb Colter and Jack Swagger's views to anyone who would listen, but then Jerry Lawler commented on Colter: 'Somebody needs to tell him Yosemite Sam wants his mustache back!' prompting JBL to say, 'I gotta admit, that was pretty funny, King.'
  • Total Divas:
    • Nattie gets drunk and leaves several voicemails for Stephanie McMahon. When she goes to meet Stephanie, she replays the messages in front of Nattie. When it comes to 'I'm not wearing any underwear and I'm ready to ride' Stephanie clearly finds them funny.
    • In the season 2 premiere Nattie and Ariane get into a drunken argument outside a club. A cop comes up to them and tells them they'll be arrested if they get too rowdy. After he leaves, the two go inside and burst out laughing.
  • At the start of the Tessa Blanchard-Sonya Strong match at WWR Adios Aurora on September 9, 2017, Sonya noticed that the fans were cheering for Tessa and said that she knew Tessa had two daddiesnote , and that she was going to be her third. Tessa couldn't help but laugh at that.
  • Jim Neidhart faced Marty Jannetty at ECW's July 28, 1995 event in Middletown, NY, and laughed when the fans chanted 'WE WANT BRET!'
  • In Nebulous, Professor Nebulous reveals that at school, his nickname was 'Nobulous', which causes his assistant Rory to laugh and then say 'Ahem... kids can be so cruel'.
  • A slightly different version: In a production of Thoroughly Modern Millie, after Millie reads back Mrs. Meers's monologue and proving she has enough evidence to send Meersie to prison, Mrs. Meers looks at the audience and says 'You can clap, that was good.'
  • In 1776, Ben Franklin compares being called an Englishman to 'calling an ox a bull—he's grateful for the honor, but he'd rather have back what's rightfully his.' Dickinson comes back with 'When did you first notice they were missing, sir?' to which Franklin laughs the loudest.note
  • In The Complete History Of America Abridged, one of the actors explains in brief why the fifty years between The American Civil War and World War I just wasn't a very funny time:
    Reed: Here it is. There was labor unrest...
    All: Not funny.
    Reed: There was land-grabbing on an unprecedented scale...
    All: Not funny.
    Reed: There were seven-year-olds working themselves to death in workshops...
    All: ...well, that's pretty funny, actually...
  • West Side Story: When Detective Schrank finishes giving the Jets and Sharks an earful over their latest fight and Bernardo asks him if he could translate his tirade into Spanish, even Riff cracks up.
  • From Skies of Arcadia:
    Vigoro: I believe the worth of a man can be measured by his popularity with women.
    Gilder: Hm, I kind of like that. I should remember that for later.
  • In the Sam & Max: Freelance Police game Abe Lincoln Must Die!, Sam is being put down by Chuckles, the President's bodyguard:
    Sam: What do you do around here?
    Chuckles: I give out free T-shirts to the visitor who asks the dumbest question of the day. Please accept my apologies, but we're all out of husky boys' sizes.
    Max: Oooo! Double-burn!
    Sam: I thought you were on my side, Max.
    Max: I just call 'em like I see 'em, Sam.
  • Dragon Age, being home to a lot of Deadpan Snarker characters, is abundant with this trope.
    • From Dragon Age: Origins, when Morrigan happens to ask Alistair about his training:
      Morrigan: So I take it you did not enjoy your Templar training?
      Alistair: That's directed at me, I take it?
      Morrigan: Do you see any others about who have failed at their religious instruction?
      Alistair: I didn't fail - I was recruited into the Grey Wardens.
      Morrigan: And if you had not been recruited? What would have happened, instead?
      Alistair: [completely deadpan] I would have turned into a drooling lunatic, slaughtered the grand cleric and run through the streets of Denerim in my small clothes, I guess.
      Morrigan: [amused] Your self-awareness does you credit.
      Alistair: I thought you'd like that.
    • In Dragon Age: Origins – Awakening, most of Sigrun and Oghren's conversations involve her being repulsed by his attempts at 'flirting'. When she learns he half-convinced Velanna (an elf) that dwarves hatch from rocks, however...
      Oghren: Velanna takes herself too seriously. And besides, it was funny!
      Sigrun: All right, it was funny. You should have seen her afterward; she was huffing like a constipated brontonote .
    • Dragon Age: Inquisition:
      • A female Inquisitor who's dating Sera will at one point get a quest where they go around asking other party members what kind of gift Sera might like, as she places no value in material possessions. Vivienne, who despises Sera and sees her as crass and uncultured, sarcastically suggests the Inquisitor shave an inappropriate word into her pubic hair. If you actually do it, Sera finds it absolutely hilarious and is even more amused when she learns it was Vivienne's idea.
      • If the Inquisitor romances the Iron Bull, there will be a scene where Cullen, Josephine, and Cassandra walk in on Bull naked in that order. Cullen is naturally mortified, but snickers when Bull makes a joke about the Inquisitor being the one 'taking it' in response to Cassandra's fumbling.
      • When Varric tries to needle the Iron Bull for getting winded in a fight, he has to laugh and concede to Iron Bull's retort:
      'Hey, some of us have to swing a giant hunk of metal instead of pulling our girlfriend's trigger from the back ranks.'
      • The credits sequence of the Trespasser DLC includes a voiceover of Cassandra reading excerpts of the book Varric wrote about the game's events, providing commentary, and doing hilariously bad impressions of the other characters. Near the end, she gets quite upset at not seeing herself anywhere, until she finds herself in the story... begging Varric for forgiveness for her behavior in the previous game's framing device. Instead of being offended (since that obviously did not happen), Cassandra is delighted to see herself in the book and declares that she is 'going to read the shit out of this!'
  • From Psychonauts, upon defeating the boss character Kochamara, you're treated to a cutscene with this exchange of dialogue:
    Kochamara: I have the brain of a little girl back in my lab that'll power a whole army of psychic death tanks!
    Raz: (starts laughing uncontrollably)
    Kochamara: What?
    Raz: You have the brain of a little girl?
    Kochamara: I said, 'in my lab!'
    Raz: I think you've got the muscles of a little girl too!
    Kochamara: (groan) ...Good one.
  • Knights of the Old Republic:
    • One of the ways you can defuse a confrontation with some young Sith is to tell them a Mandalorian joke. If Zaalbar is in your party, The Big Guy will actually get a good laugh out of it.
    • In the same confrontation, Jolee Bindo manages to get a chuckle out of the otherwise stoic Canderous Ordo.
      Lashowe: Do you know how many Sith there are here in Dreshdae?
      Jolee: Twelve! No, wait, Thirteen!
      Canderous: Nice one, old man.
      Jolee: Thank you, it takes effort to be properly irreverent at my age.
  • Occurs in Lufia: Curse of the Sinistrals, except that it wasn't really funny, or even a joke. Damsel in Distress Jessie just can't help laughing when her captor calls her boyfriend Guy an idiot.
  • In Strong Badia the Free, when Strong Bad asks about the incomplete effigy the protesters have set up:
    Strong Bad: Why'd you bring that ugly, misshapen stick?
    Homestar: She organized the protest rally!
    Strong Bad: Not Marzipan! {softly} Though that's a pretty good one, gotta remember that.
  • A rather tragic example in Batman: Arkham City. The Joker is dying, having accidentally knocked the only cure for the after-effects of Titan serum out of Batman's hands. As he lies on the floor wasting away, Batman tells him:
    Batman: Do you want to know something funny? Even after everything you've done... I would have saved you.
    Joker: (laughing) That actually is... pretty funny!
  • Every now and then, a Griefer in a video game does something that even the moderators admit is this trope, but have to ban them anyway. Second Life is a good example.
  • The Last of Us: Joel finds most of Ellie's jokes groan-worthy, but one does get him to laugh and admit he's never heard it before:
    Ellie: I used to be addicted to soap, but I'm clean now.
    • Also this banter between Bill and Ellie:
      Bill:(To Joel) What are ya deliverin', the little brat?
      Ellie: Ha ha. Fuck you too!
      Bill:(Suddenly cracks up)
  • In Devil May Cry 3, Dante and Arkham's meeting in the bowels of hell has Dante remark that Arkham needs some hobbies over messing with the Sparda family's issues. Arkham starts laughing at this with Dante joining him shortly after, but both for different reasons: Dante at his own joke and Arkham over how much power that meddling has given him (and how he plans on making Dante eat those words in a second).
  • In Life Is Strange, Victoria tells protagonist Max, whose signature photograph is an instant selfie, to 'fuck yourselfie'. Max is annoyed but comments that the joke is funny in her journal, as will tell Victoria as much if you decide to make peace with her.
  • Undertale:
    • Early in Snowdin, the brothers Papyrus and Sans (both of whom are skeletons) have an exchange where Sans keeps blowing off Papyrus and making smart ass remarks, which causes Papyrus to smile, despite his best efforts.
    Sans: hey, take it easy. i've gotten a ton of work done today. a skele-ton. [zoom in on Sans winking at the camera complete with rimshot]
    Papyrus: SANS!!!
    Sans: come on. you're smiling.
    Papyrus: I AM AND I HATE IT!
    • Later, in Hotlands, during Mettaton's quiz show, he decides to troll Alphys by asking you who she has a crush on. If you guess yourself, he tells you that you're totally wrong, but he respects the sheer audacity of saying it and laughs at the reason why you could come to the conclusion (Alphys watching your every move on cameras) and gives you the point anyway.
    • If you're enough of a sucker to try to spare Sans at the end of a No Mercy run, you immediately get killed by him, leading to a unique ending screen where he tells you to 'geeeeeeeeeeet dunked on!'. Given that this forces you to restart the unbelievably difficult fight, this would normally be a Rage Quit moment, but the game plays its 'humour' tune, 'Dogsong', at this ending screen, which instead makes it absolutely hilarious. You do still have the redo the fight, though.
    • If you talk to Gerson (the turtle shopkeeper in Waterfall) when you first see him, he'll call Asgore 'King Fluffybuns', but won't remember why if you ask him. Talking to him in the Playable Epilogue of a True Pacifist run will reveal it to have been an example of this trope: Asgore and Toriel were giving an address to the citizens, and when Toriel went to hand the mic to Asgore, she told him 'Your turn, Fluffybuns', which was picked up by the microphone. As the audience laughed, Asgore took the mic and sternly raised his hands to silence everyone, before beginning his segment with 'I, King Fluffybuns...'
  • While most of the attempts at humor in Injustice 2 are shot down or repartee'd, this one actually sticks the landing:
    Green Arrow: Seems only sporting I give you a chance.
  • Mass Effect: Andromeda: Drack often responds to people's quips about him or the krogan in this way. For example, after criticizing the team for being proud of 'not dying' on a mission, Cora asks what right a krogan whose ancestors nuked their own homeworld into a radioactive rock has to say that. Drack laughs and replies 'Fair point.'
    Drack: The rest of the crew doesn't seem to know a lot about you, Peebee.
    Peebee: Way I like it.
    Drack: Then why are you telling me all this stuff?
    Peebee: Eh, you're almost dead anyway.
    Drack: [laughs uproariously]
  • Home Run Solitaire features a sports announcer duo, one of whom spends the entire game making bad puns and tortured analogies. The other one asks for a score prediction when the home team is up against the Nevada Aliens.
    Frank: I'm going to call it 5-1 for the Strikers. Somewhere in that area.
    Sam: Hah. Area 5-1. That's actually a pretty good one.
  • In the skirmish battles with Tyran in Ni no Kuni II: Revenant Kingdom, Lofty is annoyed with the excuses Tyran keeps making for why he keeps running off. After a particularly cheeky one, however, he admits he's starting to become entertained by them.
  • Of all the gods in Pillars of Eternity II: Deadfire, it's surprising that Rymrgand, god of entropy and destruction is prone to this. You can go to their realm and mock them to their face, and they'll respond with only languid amusement. But only because you're the Herald of Berath. They're quite open about the fact that you'd be Deader Than Dead for simply entering their realm were you any other mortal. And there are still a few things you can say that will get you killed.
    • Back in the first game, cracking a Your Mom joke to Hiravias makes him laugh his ass off, though he also adds that, for future reference, only he’s allowed to insult his mother. He lets it slide because he appreciates your dedication to banter.
  • One mission in The Secret World features the player sending an agent to gatecrash a party arranged by the Kingdom in order to learn what debaucheries the undead crime lords get up to in their spare time. Among other things, it requires your agent of choice to be carefully disguised with prosthetic makeup in order to look like a mummy, and have enough charisma to outfox the millennia-old party guests. Should you succeed, the Kingdom are genuinely amused by the trick and actually offer your agent additional work for keeping them entertained.
  • In Fate/Grand Order, Archer of Shinjuku (James Moriarty) has the moniker 'The Napoleon of Crime'...much to the amusement of the actual Napoleon, who is a fellow Archer-class servant in the game.
  • In Divinity: Original Sin 2, there's a Pro-Royalist song about Beast, a disgraced noble-turned-pirate, falling out with his cousin Queen Justinia and being kicked out of her court. When Beast hears the song himself, he thinks it has some clever lyrics and that overall it's too funny to get mad at.
  • In God of War (PS4), after one sidequest turns sour, Atreus tells his father to go ahead and say 'I Told You So', briefly imitating Kratos' voice as he says 'You are naive, foolish boy.' Kratos is clearly trying to hold back laughter as he tells his son to just consider it a lesson.
Big
  • In case 5 of Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney: Trials and Tribulations, Phoenix has to present Larry's sketch; either you point out 'A major contradiction' (the right answer), 'Absolutely nothing' (the wrong answer), or explain 'Exactly what happened.' Phoenix explains 'Exactly what happened' as 'Of course the victim was flying through the air! You can see it right in the sketch! Woooooooosh!' accompanied with fitting sound effects. Godot is so amused/baffled by Phoenix's explanation that he waives the penalty.
  • In Akatsuki no Goei's fandisk during Aya's epilogue, she convinces Kaito to play an online game. Not really interested, he names his character Nikaido Reika after Aya's sister, offending both Aya and Reika's new guard Tominori. However, he then proceeds to customize the character's appearance to give make her tiny, flat chested and with long pink twintails, at which point they both start giggling at how it looks exactly like her.
  • In Long Live the Queen, Elodie happens upon an unflattering poem involving her and a squid. You have the option to choose whether or not she can find the humour in it, and her emotional state will alter accordingly.
  • In the epilogue of RE: Prince of Nigeria, a visual novel about a 419 Scam, talking with Rich Hastley about his scambot, Horai Owen comments that the bit on the Prince's ID about the Nigerian Football Federation and the portrait of Right Imagay were the last straw, but 'The communism was a nice touch, though.'
  • Happened more than once on Homestar Runner. Strong Bad has to respect it when normally Dumb Muscle Strong Mad gets a witty retort:
    Strong Mad: (holding up a grease-stained Blubb-O's bag) YOU'RE NOT ON THE LIST!
    Strong Bad: The list? You're looking at a greasy bag of fast food!
    Strong Mad: DON'T BE SO HARD ON YOURSELF!
    Strong Bad: Wait, what? Strong Mad, did you just make a joke?! That was pretty good!
  • In the Double Dragon episode of Sonic for Hire.
    Sonic: Consider it done, A.C. Slater.
    Mario: Okay, wait, hold on, what?
    Sonic: No, because Mario Lopez.
    Mario: ...Okay, that actually wasn't bad.
  • If the Emperor Had a Text-to-Speech Device: The Emperor, despite being the (barely) living incarnation of grumpiness, will occasionally acknowledge a good quip at his expense.
    Rogal Dorn: Father, are you familiar with the saying 'You are what you eat'? Considering you increasingly resemble a pile of screaming psychic children.
    Emperor: [beat]Wow, Rogal. Way to bring down the fucking hammer!
  • ThisThe Adventures of Dr. McNinja strip features everyone except the titular doctor (including the editor) admit that the woman's diss was good.
  • Tycho and Gabe of Penny Arcade are friendly rivals rather than enemies, but they still mock each other mercilessly. They have very different tastes, but occasionally, one will admit 'That was actually pretty clever.'
    Gabe:(smugly holding up the book Tycho suggested for him to read) Dune? It sounds dry.
    Tycho:(with a strained expression) I'm trying not to be amused by that.
  • Sluggy Freelance has an interesting one when a man is torturing Torg for information.
    Torturer: Just tell us what we want to know, and we'll stop.
    Torg:YOU HAVEN'T ASKED ME ANYTHING YET!
    [torturer starts laughing]
    Torg: Hey!
    Torturer: Sorry, I couldn't help myself. Anyway, we want to know where Doctor Steve's lab is.
    Torg: I don't know that! I couldn't tell you if my life depended on it!
    [torturer starts laughing; after a moment, Torg starts laughing too]
  • Ben's father has to laugh about 'dingle-choad' in this strip of Loserz.
  • In Schlock Mercenary, Xinchub laughs at Tagon saying 'innocent Marines'. Tagon agrees that that's actually funny.
  • Black Mage has a moment of this near the end of 8-Bit Theater where, after having become a super-powerful, super-evil version of himself, he stops in the middle of slaughtering his former allies to admit thata prank they pulled on himjust shy of 700 strips earlier actually was pretty funny in hindsight.
    Black Mage: I'm going to look back on this one day and think it's hilarious. I'll kill them all anyway, but at least we can laugh about it.
  • A Brick Joke in Exiern has this effect. An imprisoned barbarian is wondering if she can get freed after accidentally punching the king in the face if she argues it was meant as a show of respect. The king enters at this point and explains that it won't work, before Recruiting the Criminal. At the end of the scene, now allies and with no hostility between them, the king finally punches the barbarian in the face 'out of respect' - those present are terrified only to realise, once the king has left, that she's actually laughing.
  • Shows up in thisExterminatus Now strip.
  • Dragon Ball Multiverse: One of the Kais finds Zen Buu's impression of South Kai pretty funny, though he claims that it's just nervous laughter.
  • In The Order of the Stick, despite being Evil, Loki opposes his daughter Hel's plan to bring about the end of the world, in order to become Top God of the Norse pantheon in the new world which will be created. After Hel declares her first act will be to take the soul of Thor's High Priestess and give it as a chew toy for her hellhound, Loki responds, 'Humiliating Thor is not enough reason to do this, Hel. It's a pretty funny reason, sure, but not enough of one.'
  • Girl Genius has this exchange between a young student, and Klaus Wulfenbach, ruler of a large chunk of Europe:
    Itto: I heard the story of how you fought the dragon from Mars- and how it captured Lucrezia Mongfish - and then she turned into Von Pinn and I wanted to see what could do that!
    Klaus:[concealing a smile] Snort. I'd have given a lot to see that myself.
    • In the novelizations of the comic, it's mentioned that Klaus also allows the traveling 'Heterodyne Shows' to continue their increasingly unflattering portrayals of him because he finds them funny.
  • In this strip of Grrl Power, Ariana cannot bring herself to chew out Maxima for making snide remarks because, in her own words, 'That was a pretty good one though.' The remark in question: in response to a comment about succubus glamour being impenetrable, Max said, 'That's the only thing about a succubus that's designed to be impenetrable.'
  • In Gunnerkrigg Court, most people are too scared of Coyote's power and unpredictability to tell him off. Annie makes a point of ignoring this at first, even going so far as to spank Coyote when he pokes his nose up her skirt. Coyote usually finds Annie's refusal to take shit from him highly amusing, but eventually, she has to be reminded that Coyote is a Physical God, and not a benevolent one, and he will kill her (or worse) if she angers him too much.
  • This video featuring iJustine and a terrible date.
  • Even though most of the movies reviewed by The Nostalgia Critic are bad, he admits that there are occasionally one or two funny jokes.
    • For example, this in Street Fighter: The Movie. QUICK! CHANGE THE CHANNEL!!
    • Despite the Batman & Robin movie being labeled the worst film ever and driving the Nostalgia Critic to homicidal rage over a Bat Credit Card, 'the Riddler suit here is kinda clever.'
    • From Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers: The Movie, when the villain was talking about how he missed all the evils of the world and included The Brady Bunch Reunion tour amongst the Black Death and Spanish Inquisition, he said '...I gotta admit that's kinda funny.'
    • He also liked one scene in Jingle All the Way, when Myron the mailman threatened some police officers with what he thought was a fake bomb in a package, only for it to go off after he leaves the room. However, an unfortunate case of Mood Whiplash ensues when the officer from the bomb squad is shown comically charred but still alive.
    • Although he absolutely hated Baby Geniuses 2 (though not quite as much as the original), he still begrudgingly admitted that the twist was pretty good, in that he didn't see it coming and it made perfect sense in hindsight.
    • During How the Grinch Stole Christmas!, he does it in rhyme:
      Critic: So the Grinch goes crazy and starts attacking the folks.
      Grinch:[to a car spinning out of control] Taxi!...It's because I'm green, isn't it?!
      Critic: ...okay, that's a good joke.
    • Despite finding The Master of Disguise one of the worst comedies ever, he chuckles the first time the villain's Evil Laugh is interrupted by his farting. However, he grows to dislike many of the subsequent uses of it.
    • His review of Water World has him find the death of the old oil technician who lives a miserable, tortured life on the Smokers' ship pretty funny.
    • In his review for Space Jam, he gets a kick out of the Mon-Stars dogpiling Granny and replays the clip several times.
    • In Richie Rich when the villain breaks into the vault only to find it's loaded with sentimental (but financially worthless) items, the Critic admits the entire Reality Ensues moment provides two very good jokes in a row:
    Lawrence Van Dough: Where are the negotiable bearer bonds? The gold bullion? Where's THE MONEY?!
    Richard Rich: In banks. Where else? Oh, and the stock market.
    (GOOD JOKE 1 dings on the screen.)
    Lawrence Van Dough:Shoot them. Shoot them now, please.
    (GOOD JOKE 2 dings on the screen.)
    • He also admits that the joke about the President calling to ask for a loan is pretty much timeless
    • Despite otherwise thinking Ernest Scared Stupid is a complete waste of time, he admits the 'I'm not one to quit' joke is pretty funny.
    • After finding the entirety of Good Burger to be cheesy and thoroughly unfunny, this happens during the review's Post Credits Scene. The shock of it is enough to make the Critic dive for cover.
    Dexter: Listen. What do you say we just tear up this contract?
    Ed: You don't want to be partners?
    Dexter:Well, no... I...
    Ed:...Is it because I'm black?
    Critic: AAAAGH! A FUNNY JOKE!!!
  • The Cinema Snob had a couple moments of these:
    • During his Video Violence 2 review where he's seen snickering at the following joke 'What's black and white and red all over, and can't get through a revolving door? A nun with a spear through her head!', but tries to cover it up.
    • In Midnight Screenings, they can still find a good joke in some bad movies, but not always. When Jake and Irving saw The Smurfs, they even thought the one funny joke could have only been funny because they thought the rest of the movie was such dreck.
    • The 'I'll miss you most of all, Scarecrow,' joke from Playmate of the Apes got this reaction.
  • The Music Video Show has the host admitting this in Episode 52, with the nerds dancing and saying it may be the only Chris Brown video (the Kiss Kiss video) he'd watch again.
  • Filthy Frank: When Mr. Magic Man says 'I wish I was Stevie Wonder so I'd never have to see you again!', Frank calls it 'pretty clever'.
  • The Nostalgia Chick utterly panned Spice World, until Meat Loaf's character reacts to being asked to unplug the multiple toilets on the Spice Girls' tour bus by saying 'Look, I love these girls. And I would do anything for them. But I won't do that.' In the Chick's words: 'Can it be that this movie has redeemed itself with a mere one joke?!'
  • Despite his extreme hatred for the so-called 'great' films he reviews, Confused Matthew does make his best effort to point out the good things about them he sees.
    • In his The Lion King review, he admitted 'Circle of Life' was a good song and that the scene with Timon dancing the hula made him laugh hard.
    • He also made note of Samantha Morton's excellent performance in the epilogue of his Minority Report review.
    • He said the end of Titanic (1997) was well done.
  • Spoony:
    • In a review of Highlander II: The Quickening. Spoony admitted that MacLeod and Ramirez simply getting into a car and ramming an armed barricade relying on their immortality to protect them from all the times they'll be shot is actually pretty clever. However, he also points out all the Fridge Logic that undermines this, the biggest ones include the fact that they put the (mortal) Love Interest in the trunk of said car, and that the Big Bad didn't simply tell the Corrupt Corporate Executive he's working with about the immortals and to cut their heads off.
    • Similarly, he said the protective collar worn by The Guardian in Highlander: The Source was an ingenious idea for the series. Sure, they never use it again, but still. He also praised the Guardian's 'There can be only ME!' line and a scene (which he didn't include in the review itself and only mentioned in the commentary) in which Methos kills a biker by throwing his sword against a tree blade first right in front of the biker, decapitating him.
    • And more literally, during his Phantasmagoria 2: A Puzzle of Flesh LP.
      Trevor: I've got a date for dinner.
      Curtis: Tell me about him.
      Trevor: Nooo...okay.
      Spoony: Okay, that was good.
    • In one of his Counter Monkey videos, Spoony describes a Dungeons & Dragons game where he played a half-orc thief. The party's wizard mocked him by asking how someone that big and hard-to-miss could possibly pick anyone's pocket. Spoony responded by clubbing the wizard over the head and then taking the coin purse from his unconscious body. The wizard's player laughed and gladly admitted to losing the debate.
  • ProtonJon of Let's PlayhatesInvisible Coin Blocks. Yet, in thisROM Hack (at 5:30), he encounters an inventive use of them that's Actually Pretty Funny.
    YOU SON OF A BITCH!!![chuckles] Okay, that was kinda funny.
  • From a Sonic Unleashed playthrough by Hellfire Commentaries:
    NTom: What's a moray?
    FTA: When the moon hits your eye, like a big pizza pie, that's a moray.
    NTom:[clapping] Well done, that is actually well deserved.
  • From the Rifftrax of 300, the guys let out a barrage of Punctuated! For! Emphasis! jokes with Bill ending thus:
    Bill: When he sits down to meal of juice, toast, milk, and Trix cereal—
    Mike: Uh oh, where's he going with this?
    Bill: And he looks at his bowl of Trix and he says 'THIS! IS! SPART OF A BALANCED BREAKFAST!'
    Kevin: Wow!
    Mike: Wow, you pulled it out! Nicely done.
  • At the end of the first season of commodoreHUSTLE, the villain Geoff, who's determined to ruin LoadingReadyRun because of their comedy's reliance on the Groin Attack, is kicked in the balls by Paul's ball-kicking robot, Mr. Ballsmotron. As he collapses, he says 'That... was actually pretty funny.'
  • Dragon Ball Z Abridged:
    • Subverted when Frieza makes a Double Entendre pun while handing out a No-Holds-Barred Beatdown to Nail. Nail starts to chuckle, and Frieza assumes this trope is in effect. Then Nail tells him the real reason he's laughing: because Nail suckered Frieza into wasting time while a plan by the good guys to use the dragonballs and thwart Frieza was being played out.
    • Nail is good with this trope. Such as the time he and Piccolo are trying to think up a better attack name than 'Special Beam Cannon'.
      Piccolo: 'Rail Beam'!
      Nail:'Nail Gun'?
      Beat
      Piccolo: Shit, that's good...
    • In the second version of Dead Zone Abridged, Evil Overlord Garlic Jr. has this reaction crossed with Dumbass Has a Point twice to things that his mook Ginger says.
      Garlic Jr.: Got to say I'm sort of impressed. How'd you find them [the dragon balls] so fast?
      Ginger: Prize in a high stakes poker game.
      Garlic Jr.: Wow. Never thought you had a poker face.
      Ginger:Never saidI played!
      Garlic Jr.: Once again, fair enough.
    • Goes into downright meta levels when the voice actors from the original dub of DBZ met with Team Four Star and outright thanked them for what they did. Apparently, they had wanted to rip the cheesy dub apart for years, but never could due to their contracts.
    • Then there's semi-perfect Cell's response to Vegeta's understandable confusion when he literally speaks out of his ass.
      Vegeta: Did...did you just talk out of your ass?
      Cell: Well, to be fair, Vegeta, you are part of my DNA.
      Vegeta: Oh, that is the closest thing to damage you've done since I got here.
    • Vegeta again in response to a quip by Future Trunks:
    Vegeta: Boy, do not make me come up there and be a parent!
    Trunks: First time for everything!
    Vegeta: Oh-ho-ho!
  • This exchange during the confrontation between Alucard and the Dandy Man in Hellsing Abridged:
    Alhambra: I may or may not have fed a lie to the local policia that in return for your capture, I would give them immortality.
    Alhambra: Like discount peixe.
    Alucard: (legitimately amused) You cheeky dick-waffle!
  • Nash of What the Fuck Is Wrong with You? occasionally has this reaction to a particularly clever pun in the news articles he reads, despite hating them in principle.
    • Tara once told a story about her father's wake where her niece asked why only the top of the casket was open. Her response was 'Oh, because Grandpa's not wearing any pants.' Her mother found this hilarious.
    • In Nash's review of Castrovalva, he has this reaction to Tegan's snark comparing the Zero Room, 'an isolated space cut off from the rest of the universe', to Brisbane. He then asks what a 'Brisbane' is.
    • In his review of Robot his reaction to the scene where the Doctor gets the Brigadier to admit that he doesn't think foreigners can be trusted.
  • Blogger Beware: In the 'Night of the Living Dummy' review, Troy admitted the joke about Russian and Yugoslavian songs was pretty funny.
  • While Todd in the Shadows spends around a quarter of an hour reiterating that LMFAO's 'Sexy And I Know It' is not funny, but does admit during the end credits that the gag where the lead singer tears off his speedo to reveal another speedo underneath it was funny.
  • Not Always Learning:
    • This student doodled cartoons making fun of his super-serious professor all semester, throwing them out after each class. At the end of the semester, the professor took the student aside and showed him that he'd salvaged all the cartoons.
    • A precocious kindergartener got bored reading 'Dick and Jane', and convinced his classmates that Spot had rabies. The teacher and the principal both thought it was hilarious.
    • 'I guess that is technically correct. Full credit for that answer.'
  • In The Blockbuster Buster, ERod has admitted several jokes in the films he's reviewed are pretty funny. In The Shaggy Dog, it was when David knocks the grandmother into the tree; in The Country Bears, it was the 'am I adpoted?' joke; and in Josie and the Pussycats, it was the 'CD cover' gag.
  • On Death Battle during The Joker's fight against Needles Kane, Joker has his own car blown up, jumps into and gets knocked out of Needles... and then the Sweet Tooth turns into a mecha!
    Joker: Okay, that's... funny.
  • There are actually a few people who have looked at pages in Encyclopedia Dramatica and actually thought they were kind of funny, despite the other 90% of the site being flame bait. Their page on Madagascar is often considered rather humorous, mostly because it avoids racism (for the most part) and plays off of the SHUT DOWN EVERYTHING meme.
  • In the Musical Hell review of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, Diva admits that having the Dirty Old Man villain singing 'When I'm Sixty-Four' is a rather clever twist on the song.
  • Kyle Kallgren of Brows Held High had this reaction to a joke in Shortbus about one of the characters claiming to use menstrual blood in her avant garde performances after the punchline was revealed: 'It's a period piece.' Likewise, he admitted that Tromeo and Juliet's twist on the 'see how she rest her cheek upon her hand' (specifically, the cheek in question was her butt) was clever. Brad, however, wasn't amused.
  • In a Last Week Tonight video with John Oliver, John made fun of Pom Wonderful juice and said it should be used for 'pomegranate enemas.' The Pom Wonderful company thought this was funny and sent him a cooler of juice and a letter that said: 'What you do with it is your own business.' John in return thought their reply was quite funny as well and corpsed reading on the show.
  • Jayuzumi runs into this a lot. Some of the players he runs into while getting annoyed at the soundboards, in general, will acknowledge if he does a good joke, even if they're the butt of it.
    • During 'Homer Simpson Plays COD Ghosts', viewable here:
      Other player: You might possibly have too much time on your hands. You might want to get a girlfriend.
      Homer Simpson:Yes, master!
      Other player: (starts laughing)
    • In 'Jay from Inbetweeners Plays Modern Warfare 3', viewable here, a player calls in a care package and goes into a corner to make sure he doesn't get crushed by it. Jay immediately rams him in and gets joined by another player, causing all three to be crushed. The player who loses his care package and dies is laughing like a hyena, as opposed to raging as you'd expect.
  • In 2014, CollegeHumor put out this video, which parodies the Furry Fandom with an over-the-top cartoon show called 'Furry Force.' Many genuine furries posted comments on the video about how funny and accurate it was, with a few offering suggestions about how to make it even truer to their fandom. The best part? The writers listened and produced this sequel which incorporates those suggestions. In that case, several more furries posted about their love for the parody.
  • Atop the Fourth Wall:
    • One of Linkara's 'Top 15 Worst Moments of Countdown' entries was when evilMary Marvel used Kyle Raynerto beatDonna Troy. He admits that this scene did make him laugh, but in context, it's too silly, harming one's ability to see Mary as either a credible threat or a sympathetic character in need of redemption.
    • During his review of Ultimatum #1-2:
    Thing: 'Hey, can you tell me what the Hell is going on in twenty-five words or less?'
    Mr. Fantastic: 'I don't know!'
    Thing: 'Ya did it in three. Didn't think ya had it in ya.'
    Linkara: 'Hey, another legitimately funny line. It almost distracted me from the widespread death and destruction.'
    • In his review of Spider-Man and the Fantastic Four: Brain Drain, while the comic is bad enough for him to have a literalHeroic BSoD, there's one line that he did like.
    Teacher: Oh Doomsie, gaze upon my radiant beauty and despair!
    Linkara: [hysterical laughter] Okay, that just made this whole thing worth it!
  • Arby 'n' the Chief's infamous 'Wedding' episode ends with Arbiter and Master Chief crashing an online wedding between two Xbox-Live Players. The Calm, Mature Arbiter's dialogue with the Juvenile Master Chief after doing so goes like:
    Arbiter: What the hell was that?!
    Master Chief: ONE KICKASS WEDDING
    Arbiter: I can't believe you.
    Master Chief: THAT WAZ SUM FUNNY ASS SHIT
    beat
    Arbiter: You know, that actually WAS kinda funny.
    beat
    Arbiter: ...You wanna do it again?
    Master Chief: DAYUM RITE SOOON
    Arbiter and Chief high-five.
  • In one of Team Four Star's Dragon Ball Xenoverse videos, Lanipator and Kirran try to prank KaiserNeko by telling him 'If your hand is bigger than your face, you have cancer'note . Kaiser refuses to fall for it, quipping 'How about you check me for prostate cancer?'; Kirran responds 'Fuck you! That was a good one.'
  • In Anna Akana's 'Over my dead body', after she learns that the expression dates back to at least the 1800s, she decides to look up what passed as a joke back then. She finds one amusing Pun-centric anecdote, which she acts out for the viewers.
    Boy: 'Mother, it strikes me that you are very lazy just now.'
    Mother:(gasps) 'How dare you say so! Why? Don't you see I'm making bread?'
    Boy: 'True, but that is neither more nor less than loafing!'
    Narrator: 'The juvenile prankster got no hotcakes several days thereafter. The mother is slowly recovering.'
    (cut back to modern day)
    Anna Akanas: 'That was pretty good.' 'Yeah, for 200 years old, that's not that bad. I'm sure that's, like, comedy gold back in the day.'
  • It's not uncommon for CinemaSins to remove sins for genuinely good or funny moments, but the GIRL scene from Inside Out gets nothing but near hysterical laughter followed by one sin removed. The scene of Miles on the ledge of the building with triumphant music cutting to him silently walking down the stairs in Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse got similar treatment.
  • In Movie Rehab Sag admits that he found the line 'Mom it's Mars.' from Mars Needs Moms to be kind of amusing.
  • Doug Walker (done As Himself rather than as the Nostalgia Critic)
    • In his review of Beauty and the Beast: Belle's Magical World, he struggles to find any redeeming qualities in the video. Eventually, he admits that two of Lumiere's lines during his and Fifi's runaway sleigh ride sounded witty.
      Fifi: What shall we do?
      Lumiere: There is only one thing to do. We must scream like bloodless cowards.
      (They do.)
      (Later, the couple and their sleigh fall off a ledge, but get caught on a branch above a pit)
      Belle: Hold on, Lumiere!
      Lumiere: Considering the options, I have no intention of doing otherwise.
    • Doug's Disneycember 2017 series of Disney Channel Original Movie reviews also have several examples. Among others, his Twitches reviews admit that stars Tia and Tamera Mowry have good comedic timing if one can get past their overdone attempts to act cute. (He also applied this compliment to the twins' TV show, Sister, Sister.)
  • Whenever BlastphamousHD watches a 'BlastphamousHD Roast' video, at least one joke will have him cracking up.
  • This video of a prankster, posing as a FedEx employee, convincing a Saudi Arabian man that his iPhone's shipment was stolen by looters. note First comes a long runaround meant to annoy the victim, including transferring him back to the same person when he asks to speak to a manager and calling him 'habibi,' the Arabic equivalent of 'honey/sweetheart.' Finally:
    Victim: Put yourself in my place, you spend almost $2,000 to ship an iPhone as a gift... and it's late. What would you do?
    Prankster: Yeah, I would be upset, but then I would realize, oh shit! I'm from Saudi Arabia! I can buy another one.
    Victim: Heh heh heh.
  • During The World Cup in 2014, U.S. goalkeeper Tim Howard had a record-breaking 15 saves, leading a Wiki Vandal to make him United States Secretary of Defense on Wikipedia. The Other Wiki's founder was amused.
  • Episode 15 of Critical Role Season 2 has Beauregard describe her staff as a simple tool, prompting Mollymauk to ask if 'simple tool' is her new nickname.
    Beau: You know what? I'll take that, that's fair, that was a good one.
  • In The Simpsons:
    • In 'Cape Feare', Marge scolds Bart for somehow tattooing 'Wide load' on Homer's rear but then chuckles at it behind his back.
    • She's also done this when Flanders poured his heart out in a letter to Homer. She insisted they take the letter seriously and then left the room to snicker.
    • During a parole hearing, Chief Wiggum is forced to admit this about one of Sideshow Bob's remarks, after finally getting the joke.
      Wiggum: Sideshow Bob has no decency! He called me 'Chief Piggum!'
      [entire courtroom laughs]
      Wiggum: Ha ha, oh, now I get it. Ha, that's good.
    • In 'Deep Space Homer', Marge chastises Bart for writing on the back of Homer's head, but when Homer turns and inadvertently shows her the message ('Insert Brain Here'), she has to hold back her laughter, and actually does laugh when Homer frantically tries to see it, resulting in him spinning on the floor Curly-style.
    • In the 'Treehouse of Horror IX' segment 'Hell Toupee', Chief Wiggum 'kills' Homer's homicidal toupee:
      Chief Wiggum:Now, that's what I call a bad hair day!
      [general laughter]
      Marge: May I remind you that two people are dead? Oh, wait, I just got it! [laughs]
    • In 'Sideshow Bob Roberts', during Sideshow Bob's campaign for Mayor, Bart has this reaction to Bob's suggestion that 'Councilman Les Whinen should do more thinking and less whinin'!' despite knowing that Les Whinen doesn't exist.
    • Happens at the end of 'Itchy & Scratchy Land', Lisa lobs her shoe at Bart's head to prove to Marge that violence is funny when it's not happening to you. Marge does find it funny but sends Lisa to her room.
    • In 'Itchy and Scratchy and Marge', Marge is watching one of the kids' cartoons after it supposedly leads Maggie to attack Homer with a hammer. She is left in disgust by the violence, while Homer, despite still suffering from head injuries, is tittering quietly to himself. After she issues a complaint to the studios, they respond by making a squirrel caricature of her being killed by the stars, leaving Homer in hysterics.
    • In 'Lisa the Vegetarian', Homer declares 'You don't win friends with salad!', which Bart turns into a Conga Line. They leave the screen and return with Marge on the end of the line; Lisa gets upset, and Marge apologizes, saying it was catchy. Unfortunately, this gag is usually cut in syndication.
    • In 'Two Dozen and One Greyhounds', an obvious 101 Dalmatians parody, Mr. Burns sings a song about how he wants to kill the Simpsons' puppies to make into a coat. Afterward, Bart is humming the tune loudly.
    Lisa:Bart!
    Bart: Sorry. You gotta admit, it's catchy.
    • In 'Lisa's Date With Destiny', after the 'H' on Superintendent Chalmers' new Honda is stolen, the students are gathered in the hallway; Nelson, Jimbo, Dolph, and Kearney are snickering to each other:
    Skinner: Oh, I suppose you think this stolen 'H' business is funny, do you? I'll tell you something that's not so funny. Right now Superintendent Chalmers is at home crying like a little girl!
    Skinner: Well, (chuckles slightly) I guess it's a little funny... Nonetheless, I will get to the bottom of this!
    • In the intro to 'Treehouse of Horror VIII', the Fox Censor is seen hard at work on a script for The Simpsons, episode 5F02 (that very episode). As he comes to each line that he decides to remove, he says 'No' and crosses the offending line out. Then he reads part of it that he seems to find very funny - it makes him laugh out loud for a few seconds - but then he quickly regains his composure and crosses it out too, saying 'No' again.
  • House of Mouse: Pete seems to have developed this regarding his and Mickey's interactions. After watching an episode of himself and Mickey racing up a mountain that involved him constantly getting hurt (including being repeatedly mauled by a polar bear) he is seen laughing at it and calling it 'delightfully entertaining'.
  • South Park:
    • In one exchange:
      Stan: Come on, fatass, we have to go!
      Cartman: Ay! Don't call me fat!
      [Cartman's mom laughs]
      Cartman:Mom, don't laugh!
      Cartman's Mom: I'm sorry, hun'.
      Cartman: I can't go with you guys now.
      Stan: Yes you can, Porky.
      [Cartman's mom laughs harder]
      Cartman: Mom, seriously!
      Cartman's Mom: That's not funny, boys. Eric's not fat, he's big-boned.
      Kyle:He must have a huge bone in his ass then!
      [Cartman's mom laughs hysterically]
      Cartman:GOD DAMN IT, MOM!
    • From 'Imaginationland Part 1': 'Say what you want about Mel Gibson, but the son-of-a-bitch knows story structure!' (After their previous portrayal of Mel, very sporting indeed.)
  • Gaz from Invader Zim is usually disdainful of her brother's obsession with Zim, but in one episode when Zim is sent into absolute hysterics after Dib hits him with a muffin (which she had initially dubbed 'horrible') she snickers and comments that 'Actually, that was kind of funny.'
  • On an episode of Mission Hill, Kevin French is brought to the principal's office for using the word 'douchebag' in class, which is such awful profanity that the principal is too polite to say it out loud and instead writes it down on a piece of paper. Kevin and his older brother, Andy both crack up immediately when they see how the word's written all neatly and in cursive. Cursive, people. This fits as a written version of Sophisticated as Hell: profanity written in a formal, polite style. And yes, it was actually very funny.
    I'm sorry, I've just never seen it written so neatly.
  • Futurama:
    • Leo Wong tells the story of how the Native Martians were 'scammed' out of most of the planet by trading it for a single bead. Leela chastises the group for laughing at the story, despite admitting that it is funny.
    • In the revival episode 'Saturday Morning Fun Pit', Richard Nixon's head plays censorship-happy Media Watchdog to a G.I. Joe parody, but comments that their Nebulous Evil Organisation 'ACRONYM', 'A Criminal Regiment Of Nasty Young Men', is 'clever' and doesn't change anything about it.
  • On Jimmy Two-Shoes, when Mrs. Gerkin launches into an Evil Laugh over her Zombie Apocalypse, Jimmy asks what's so funny. She points to two of the zombies who keep running into each other. Jimmy admits he's amused.
  • Archer:
    • The mainframe is infected with a virus that shuts down all the computers. And displays an animation of a cartoon pirate with a catchy tune.
      Archer: (bursts out laughing)
      Malory: You think this is funny?
      Archer: Do you not?
    • And in 'White Nights':
      Malory: Go see Krieger this instant!
      Archer: I don't need a doctor, mother. Katya doesn't have VD.
      Malory: You haven't had sex with her?
      Archer: (sarcastically) Oh, ha ha. For your— (beat) That was pretty good.
    • When Cyril shows up to rescue everyone in a tank, Pam calls him 'Michael Du-cockless.' Cyril laughs, as did everyone else but Archer, who was furious that Pam said it before he could—though that might have been what Cyril was laughing at.
    • Pam gives Archer a pretty aggravated tirade for basically stowing her in a space cargo hold for sex purposes, but can't help laughing and saying 'Nice!' when he refers to Katya as 'R-2-Double-D-2'.
    • In 'The Papal Chase,' Archer finds himself riding on top of a speeding car and shouting commands while holding a lit lighter:
      Archer: Lana, head toward Swiss Guard HQ!
      Lana: What, while you request 'Free Bird?'
      Archer: (laughs sarcastically) Actually, that was pretty good — for you, at least…
    • Pam does it to herself, oddly enough, in 'A Going Concern.' Freshly returned from a Noodle Incident that got her deported from Jamaica, she spends the episode immersing herself in Rasta culture. When Archer tries and fails to think of a clever insult, she sportingly supplies one, chuckling at it as Archer walks away.
      Archer: God, would you give it a rest, uh...damn, I had something for this.
      Pam: Blob Marley. [beat] Heh.
  • In My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic:
    • The Big Bad Discord makes Pinkie Pie laugh by doing a little dance on the head of an image of Twilight Sparkle. The fans certainly found that animation amusing.
    • In the episode 'Baby Cakes', Pinkie Pie becomes the victim of a running gag. The only way the foals she's babysitting will quiet down is if flour gets dumped on her (in one case while she was soaking wet). At the episode's end, the foals do the flour gag to themselves to cheer up Pinkie. She admits they were right, that is funny.
    • In an earlier episode, 'Griffon the Brush Off', Pinkie applies this to her love of pranks by pranking ponies in such a way that it evokes this reaction. She won't pull a prank on someone who's sensitive enough to take even a harmless prank seriously, which is why she aborts a prank when Fluttershy winds up the one it would have hit.
    • In 'Twilight's Kingdom Part 2', Tirek admits Discord's stained glass window of the two of them is quite amusing.
    • When Discord attempts stand-up comedy at the Grand Galloping Gala, he bombs spectacularly. Except with one joke he makes about Twilight's bad flying. No one laughs and Twilight gives an angry 'hey!' - but Celestia giggles at the joke.
  • In an episode of Sabrina: The Animated Series, Sabrina gets her wisdom teeth removed by magic with the result that she starts being brutally honest to everyone around her. In one scene, Sabrina responds to one of Gem's insults with 'Oh, real funny, Gem! ...Actually, it was pretty funny.'
  • Bob's Burgers:
    • In 'Crawlspace', Bob has been complaining about Linda's nagging by calling her 'Nagatha Christie'. He later apologizes... saying he should have thought of something more clever, like 'Secretary of Nagriculture', which gets a laugh out of Linda and her father and makes Linda admit 'that was a good one.'
    • In 'The Belchies', when Bob and Linda discover Tina's diary entry that details how she, Gene and Louise snuck off to the abandoned taffy factory, there's an unrelated aside that states, 'Also, if boys had uteruses, they'd be called 'duderuses', which, despite their worries about their kids, Bob gets a chuckle out of.
  • On one episode of Family Guy, two mob thugs come to beat up Joe Swanson, bringing a message from their boss that if he doesn't pay his debt to them, he'll make Joe into a 'Swanson frozen dinner.' Joe can't help chuckling a little at that.
  • In one episode of American Dad!, there's a running gag with a busboy who says 'It was kinda funny' after someone says Dude, Not Funny!
    • In another episode, after Steve takes the last cookie, Roger prnaks him by making him think that he's adopted and that he was really a child who went missing at a boat show years ago. He destroys all the baby photos of Steve and get him to put on a blonde wig and a sailor suit to go and meet his 'birth parents.' Upon realizing the truth, Steve admits that he legitimately thinks that it was a totally hilarious prank.
  • An episode of Hey Arnold! had Gerald get his tonsils removed. Before, he had an amazing tenor singing voice, given a role to sing the ending lyric of 'Moonlight Bay'. After his voice is so raspy and baritone that, during rehearsal, it distracts the other kids and gets them all hysterical. Mr. Simmons tries to calm them down saying 'It wasn't that funny,' but then admitted, 'OK, it was.... pretty funny.' To his credit, he tried to look serious and understanding the whole time.
  • SpongeBob SquarePants:
    • One episode has Karen show Plankton a montage of all his humiliating defeats by Krabs. The last one, where Plankton is left a blubbering wreck after Krabs can't even be bothered with him, always cracks her up.
    • In the episode 'April Fools', this is how each customer, in turn, reacts to SpongeBob's harmless japes, culminating in one of the show's most memorable scenes:
      Customer: *angrily grabbing SpongeBob's shirt* WHAT DID YOU DO TO MY DRINK?!!
      Customer: YOU WHAT?!!
      SpongeBob: You asked for acoupleof ice cubes in your drink, and I only put in one!
      Customer: I guess that is pretty funny. *chuckles and walks away*
  • Thomas the Tank Engine
    • In 'Dirty Work', Diesel spreads insulting stories about the other engines to try and frame Duck. When Gordon, James, and Henry confront Duck about calling them 'a galloping sausage', 'rusty red scrap iron', and 'old square wheels', respectively, Duck simply tells The Fat Controller that the names are so fitting he only wishes he could take the credit. The Fat Controller himself almost chokes, trying not to laugh.
    • 'Donald's Duck': a tiff between Duck and Donald starts a playful prank war between the railwaymen. First Duck's crew leaves a duckling in Donald's tender - and the amused crew keeps her around as a sort of pet. Then Donald's crew leaves an egg under Duck's bunker at night, and Donald insists he laid it. This is enough to make Duck laugh and tell Donald he's won.
  • From Codename: Kids Next Door:
    • In the climax of 'Operation: T.H.E.S.H.O.G.U.N.', Numbuh Four bursts into Shogun Roquefort's throne room, only to find the villain sprawled out on the floor, Numbuh Two having defeated him already. Numbuh Two apparently has made a Face–Heel Turn, and starts to threaten Numbuh Four. Numbuh Four nervously starts to plead with his friend, saying he'll fight him if he has to... And then Numbuh Two bursts out laughing, saying he couldn't believe Numbuh Four actually believed him. Then Roquefort chuckles, and says, 'You gotta admit, that was kinda funny...'. Numbuh Four is not amused, as he crowns Roquefort on the head with a loose chunk of cheese, knocking him out.
    • In 'Operation: B.U.T.T.' after Numbuh One quits the team (for no apparent reason) his teammates are upset, confused, and in Numbuh Three's case, crying. Then they find out that the reason was that the Delightful Children from Down the Lane had blackmailed him, threatening to put a photograph of his bare behind in the school paper. All of a sudden, they started to get the giggles, and Numbuh Two started making all sorts of jokes about a big butt, until Numbuh Five (who was usually the first one to call him out for his bad jokes) burst out laughing. (They got over it in time to help him fight the villains later, however.)
  • The Powerpuff Girls:
    • In 'The Mane Event,' Blossom goes into seclusion after Buttercup and Bubbles butcher her hair just as a multi-eyed monster is rampaging Townsville. The Professor convinces Blossom to laugh along with everyone, and it works for her, as the Monster is laughing so hard that its eyes are all shut, giving the girls the chance to knock it into space. And Blossom gets the last laugh on her sisters at the end.
    • Similarly in 'A Made Up Story,' Blossom is the only denizen of Townsville who had not fallen victim to Mask-Scara's reign of defacing people and signs with cosmetics...up until the end, when she falls victim to a Humiliation Conga and now everyone is laughing at her.
  • In Littlest Pet Shop (2012), episode 'Frenemies', Zoe and Pepper get competitive each planning a different party for Penny Ling. When Pepper explains her clown rodeo party plan, she includes a moment where Zoe would get hit with pies, then she admits she's just kidding (or is she?). Then Zoe explains her tea party plan, and has her comeback:
    Zoe: And last but not least, there'll be a dunked skunk dunking booth with Pepper at the dunking tank.
    Pepper: WHAT?! What does a dunking booth have to do with a tea party?
    Zoe: Nothing. I just want to see you get dunked.
    Pepper: Well, that is— heh, it's kinda funny, actually.
  • Motorcity: When Chuck is hanging around his crush Claire, who won't give him the time of day, he refers to his cyborg story as 'cyboring.' Claire manages a chuckle then tries to hide it sheepishly.
  • Inverted and then invoked in one Tom and Jerry cartoon, where Jerry writes a humorous book about his experiences with Tom. Tom is at first incredibly angry about it and the jokes the book makes at his expense... Until he learns that Jerry requested to share the rather large check from the publisher with him. Then he suddenly finds the book hilarious.
    • One episode has Jerry using an invisibility potion to terrorize Tom, culminating in shaving off much of his fur... just in time for the invisibility to run out, at which point Tom vengefully returns the favor. Then they look at themselves. The episode ends with both of them rolling in laughter.
    • Inversely invoked and then inverted in Jerry's Diary, where Tom laughs off the first incident described in the titular diary, but then becomes steamed as he reads about Jerry's other slights against him.
  • Recess:
    • Spinelli accidentally calls Ms. Grotke 'Mama' in the middle of the playground. The other kids immediately burst out laughing. Her friends try to hold back for a few seconds but they burst out laughing with everyone else. Next up is Ms. Finster who orders everyone to stop laughing on the megaphone - but she cracks within seconds too.
    • In another episode, Miss Grotke assigns the kids a project on Ancient Civilizations.
      TJ: Ancient Civilizations? You mean like back when Finster was a kid?
      Miss Grotke: We're talking about thousands of years ago, TJ...not hundreds (chuckles).
  • Zigzagged in the Looney Tunes episode 'Robin Hood Daffy'. After getting angry at Porky for laughing at his expense, Daffy starts laughing too for a few seconds... But then he gets angry again and says, 'Aw, knock it off! How jolly can you get?'
  • Rocket Power had one episode wherein Sammy made a game that made him into The Ace and made his friends look like total dorks (Aside from Reggie). While the kids get offended at their portrayals, they giggle at a game over being 'You have been trapped in one of Rumando's boring sixties flashbacks', and laugh at a Tito expy giving some vague 'Ancient Hawaiian saying' (Even Ray laughed at that one). Tito thought it was funny (aside from that one part), and by the end, the characters learn to laugh at their hilarious portrayals.
  • Steven Universe:
    • In 'Island Adventure', after Steven's first time activating a Warp Pad, shapeshifter Amethyst screams, having transformed into a giant fly, much to Steven's horror. Afterward, the following exchange occurs:
      Pearl: Amethyst, that wasn't funny!
      Garnet:Eh, it was a little funny.
      Pearl: Regardless...
    • In 'Gem Harvest', the Gems are trying to butter up to Greg's cousin Andy. In the interest of 'combining as many celebrations in the human lifespan' as possible, the Gems bring a wedding cake, a balloon for a baby shower, and a tombstone with Andy's name on it to the family dinner. Andy looks annoyed and baffled at all this before busting out laughing.
  • Used on Quack Pack in the episode 'Shrunken Heroes'. Donald Duck plays a prank on his and Daisy's egotistical boss Kent Powers by replacing his bug spray with maple syrup, causing Kent to attract bugs instead of making them go away. Daisy's response is to say 'You didn't' in a somewhat disapproving tone before bursting into laughter.
  • On the PBS version of The Berenstain Bears, once they get over the initial shock, this is Mama and Papa's reaction to the 'Trouble with Grownups' play. With the idea that turnabout is fair play when Mama and Papa dress up as the cubs.
  • The Twisted Tales of Felix the Cat had an episode called 'The Punderground', where Felix ends up on an island called Mirthless. The king of Mirthless has outlawed puns, but is eventually tricked by Felix into making a pun on the phrase 'cat got your tongue'. When the king realizes that he just made a pun, he laughs hysterically and decides to repeal his law against puns.
  • M.A.S.K.:
    • At the end of the episode 'Mystery of the Rings', after Scott Trakker is chewed out by his father Matt for disobeying him and is told that he'll be grounded, Scott's robot friend T-Bob asks to take Scott's picture because it may be the last time they see Scott smile for a while. T-Bob's statement gets a chuckle out of Matt.
    • In 'Bad Vibrations', Gloria Baker asks Scott how he cleaned the ice cream off of T-Bob after he got covered in it while M.A.S.K. was looking for the last of Julian Long's vibration bombs. Scott hesitates before sheepishly answering that he didn't like seeing all the ice cream on T-Bob go to waste, so he ate it. After Matt Trakker and the other members of M.A.S.K. laugh, Scott eventually starts laughing with them.
  • On Arthur, in 'Pageant Problems' D.W. tricks Arthur into performing as the chimp for a two-person poem she wrote for her preschool's pageant by pretending that none of her friends or classmates would agree to perform the poem for her. Afterward, Arthur talks with her classmates, who loved his performance and says that he bets they wished they hadn't refused her offer and nobody has any idea what he's talking about. His friends rib him for being tricked by D.W. He says he's going to get her back, but Francine says that D.W. is just too smart. He admits the whole thing was pretty funny and they crack each other up acting like chimps.
  • Young Justice:
    • Batman shows Ollie and Dinah (who are dating) a video from the Cave's security footage. It shows Dinah having a sparring session with Superboy...and then suddenly making out with him. The two act horrified, and Dinah quickly says that that never happened, before the tape reveals that 'Dinah' was actually Superboy's Shapeshifter girlfriend, M'gann, engaging in some kind of roleplaying game. Dinah is still understandably pissed, but Ollie finds it hilarious.
    • Season 2 has Sportsmaster and Cheshire go on a Roaring Rampage of Revenge to kill Black Manta and Aqualad as payback for killing Artemis. When Sportsmaster learns that the entire thing is a con meant to slip a pair of moles into Manta's organization which he also fell for, he finds it hilarious and even helps out:
    Sportsmaster: So you and Aqualad are playing Manta and The Light for chumps. Hah! I can live with that, Babygirl!
  • In one episode, Doug finds himself in hot water with Assistant Principal, Mr. Bone, when the school paper runs a cartoon that he drew making fun of the Mystery Meat in the school cafeteria, and he actually bans the paper. The whole thing ends up getting defused in the end when the principal calls Mr. Bone saying he saw the cartoon and thought it was really funny.
  • In the Netflix series Castlevania (2017), Trevor (who is born from a long lineage of Vampire Hunters) and Alucard (being Dracula's son) frequently trade barbs and threats with one another, but do have their moments when they make one another laugh.
    Alucard: I'm disturbed to find that I had more of a childhood than you did.
    Trevor: And your dad's fucking Dracula!
    [both laugh]
  • In an episode of The Real Ghostbusters, Peter is captured by the ghost of Casey Jones and forced to stoke a train's furnace with coal. The only thing the ghost ever says to Peter is 'More coal!'. Peter finally decides to make the most of the experience and starts singing 'Sixteen Tons' as he shovels coal. The ghost looks back at him and smiles. (This is also clever foreshadowing that the ghost isn't evil.)
  • In 'Franklin and the Mooseratops' from Franklin and Friends, Mr. Fox can't help but chuckle at one point at Franklin and Bear's antics as mooseratops (wearing branches on their heads as antlers), even though everyone's getting a bit annoyed with him and neither he nor Mr. Owl really want to encourage them.
  • The entire concept of roasts is based around this. If you're a witty enough comedian, you should be able to make even the target of your jokes laugh.
  • Likewise, jokers are said to have been the only people who could get away with insulting the king or queen. Even today it's considered bad form for a political leader to be unable to take a joke at their expense.
  • One of the police forces of Italy, the Carabinieri, is the butt of many jokes. Turns out, the Carabinieri have invented many of them, and have published an anthology of Carabinieri jokes. That said, telling them Carabinieri jokes when they're on duty still counts as offense.
  • During the 2016 occupation of an Oregon wildlife preservation facility by a pro-Second Amendment militia, the occupiers repeatedly asked for snacks and supplies from those who supported them. Instead, they were mailed sex toys, glitter, penis-shaped candles, and other such paraphernalia. John Ritzheimer filmed a video of him unboxing the 'supplies' and while he did throw everything off of the table, he did remark that he found the Bag of Dicks (a bag of gummy penis-shaped candies) pretty hilarious.
  • This was George W. Bush's response when Vladimir Putin brushed off allegations of human rights abuses in Russia by referencing the fact that at least they didn't have Dick Cheney shooting people in their forests. Cheney himself said this more or less verbatim regarding Putin's comment, shortly after the infamous hunting accident that critical statements Cheney had made were 'like a misaimed hunting shot.'
  • This former white supremacist tells the story of a defiant black reverend who makes a joke that gets even the Ku Klux Klan to laugh, of all people. (Also counts as a Moment of Awesome and Badass Pacifist.) This happened when he and several KKK members surrounded the reverend to intimidate him while he was eating in a restaurant.
    I said 'I promise you we're gonna do the same thing to you that you do to that chicken [dinner]. So you think real hard before you touch that chicken.' So he looked at me and looked at the Klan, then he picked up the chicken and he kissed it... Even the Klan was laughin'! 'You gotta admit, that was funny!'
  • Bill O'Reilly made a joke that the cover of Earth (The Book) features a picture of Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert. The cover actually features Jon and a chimpanzee. Colbert liked it.
  • In the middle of the Enron debacle, which created power outages in California, Jeff Skilling, the CEO of the company, made a joke at a meeting: 'What's the difference between California and the Titanic? At least when the Titanic went down, the lights were on.'
  • During a monologue about his artificial right foot, Adam Hills talked about how his family would constantly crack jokes about it. The best came from his brother who broke up an argument between Adam and a (much shorter) friend by saying 'You two are both the same - because you both need to grow a foot!' Adam commented, 'Have you ever wanted to punch someone but couldn't because you were laughing too hard?'
  • Comedian/motivational speaker John Bytheway has a bit where he laments the lame jokes people make about his last name. He then tells a story where an airport security guy asked him if he was going to name his son 'Owen', which actually got a chuckle out of him.
  • A man in Texas receives a $137 traffic ticket, and decides to pay it... with 137 single dollar bills, all of which are folded up into origami pigs and placed into two separate doughnut boxes. While the clerk at the police station was (initially) unamused, one of the officers there actually did find it rather amusing.
  • During the filming of Dr. Strangelove, Stanley Kubrick tricked George C. Scott, who intended to take a more subtle approach to his role of General Turgidson, into overplaying his character by assuring him that the cameras were off, and that only Kubrick and the rest of the cast and crew are the only people watching his over-the-top performances. Kubrick used those takes, leading to Scott swearing that he would not work with Kubrick again. Scott eventually saw this as one of his favorite performances and admired Kubrick for his genius behind the deception.
  • One group of German prisoners in an internment camp during World War II. They weren't allowed to have radios, but wanting to know how the war was going, they built a radio into the seat of a chair. The camp commander suspected they had a radio and had their rooms searched repeatedly. Each time, the commander came along to see that the search was done properly. Each time, the prisoners offered him a chair — the one with the radio in it. Each time, the chair wasn't searched, because the commander was sitting on it. After the war, one of the ex-prisoners told the commander how it was done; the commander apparently thought it was pretty funny.
  • Similarly to the John Bytheway example above, Tim Allen copped a lot of jokes when he was a kid resulting from his real full name - Timothy Allan Dick. Yes, you read that right. In Don't Stand Too Close To A Naked Man, he commented that most of the resultant jokes were terrible, except one time when he was telling a woman about it, and she came back with 'Too bad you don't have a sister named Anita.'
  • The general reaction to John McCain's quip during the 2013 government shutdown, in regard to Congress's approval rating, 'We’re down to blood relatives and paid staffers now.' During a 2014 Letterman appearance, he said 'After I made that comment, my mother called. Now it's just paid staffers'. Even the biggest Democrats laughed.
  • During the 2013 NBA Draft, David Stern was booed mercilessly by the crowd. Being that it was his last draft, he encouraged the response and a couple times outright trolled the crowd. When he came up to announce Utah's pick, he said, 'We've had to explain to our international audience that the boo is an American sign of respect.' The crowd laughed and applauded in response to that joke.
  • Drew Droege is an actor who is known for making videos mocking Chloë Sevigny on the Internet. When Sevigny saw the videos she laughed hysterically.
  • If you browse the Twitter sites of current (or former) child stars from Disney Channel or NickelodeonKidComs, you find that many of them, if the joke isn't too disrespectful or inappropriate and they're in the mood, love to watch, share, riff on or even participate in many satires and Affectionate Parodies on their personas or their series that comedy shows like Family Guy, The Simpsons or Saturday Night Live make. The ultimate example may be the real Miley Cyrus participating in an installment of SNL's 'Miley Cyrus Show' sketch the first time she hosted. This ability to laugh at themselves even extends into the kidcoms sometimes.
  • The Saga of the Liberal Vikings was a long-running series of political cartoons in the Danish newspaper Politiken, which depicted the MPs from the Liberal Party as a clan of goofy and not very efficient Vikings, led by the grouchy, cigar-chomping Chief Erik of Ringe (Erik Eriksen, prime minister 1950-53). The cartoons became immensely popular among the politicians depicted, who would frequently get the good ones framed and keep them on the walls in their offices.
  • Charlie Brooker once wrote a column about a documentary on the case of Jonathan King (a British pop singer who was serving a sentence for committing sexual offenses against underage boys) and ended the column with asking the readers to send in drawings of other acts of depravity involving celebrities. The only reply came from the imprisoned Jonathan King, who sent a drawing of Charlie Brooker writing a column. Brooker thought it was hilarious.
  • In World of Warcraft, one server had a guild named 'Razorfen Down Syndrome', which was Bowdlerised by Blizzard due to people being offended. (It was changed to 'Razorfen Downsized'. On the same server, when Saddam Hussein was executed by hanging, someone made a character named 'Saddam', then a guild named 'Hanging with Saddam'. According to a Blizzard employee who saw the report, they actually thought it was really amusing and didn't order the name to be changed.
  • Some of the reactions on 'Celebrities Read Mean Tweets' on Jimmy Kimmel Live! end this way.
    Bill Murray: 'I find Bill Murray not funny. I was glad he got shot in Zombieland.' *begins cracking up* That's pretty good.
    • In another instance, Lisa Kudrowlost it and was practically howling with laughter when she read a Tweet that simply said, 'Hope everyone has a great weekend. Except you, Lisa Kudrow. Fuck you.'
    • In their Avengers: Infinity War edition, Benedict Cumberbatch cracks up when he's described as 'always looking like he's having an allergic reaction to bad shrimp', Samuel L. Jackson tries (and fails) to keep from laughing at being described as 'looking like a snapping turtle', and Chris Evans absolutely loses it when a tweet says he plays Captain America 'like he's a big dumb hunk of shit'.
  • At the 1998 Academy Awards, when host Billy Crystal showed a clip from Titanic (1997), quipping 'That clip cost $4 million.', the camera cut to James Cameron, clearly saying 'Yeah, that's about right.'
  • Andrew Hussie, author of (and sometimes a character in) Homestuck at one point showed up wearing an outfit themed after Jade's title of 'The Witch of Space'. Hussie's Hate Dom began calling him the 'Waste of Space' as a result. The comic's fans (and Hussie) found this to be highly amusing, and ran with it, to the point that 'Waste of Space' is one of Hussie's numerous nicknames among the fans.
  • As any parent or anyone who worked with kids can tell you, occasionally they'll break the rules and do something that's this trope.
    • One parent submitted a story to a magazine where they had two kids with rooms on the other side of the hall from each other. They thought that when they were fighting with each other, they should send them into each other's rooms instead of their own, hoping that they would mess their rooms up. Instead, they yelled at each other through the air vents. They were actually quite amused at how it backfired.
  • Similarly, animals. One episode of Rescue 911 featured a dog who got his head stuck in a vent. The kids who went to check up on the dog thought it was actually quite funny before calling 911 to get the dog free.
  • These outtakes from Ricky Gervais' interview on Sesame Street. Asking Elmo if he knows what necrophilia is? Would get him kicked off the set, except the crew is laughing themselves silly upon hearing it.
  • Even some people who outright hate some shows (Family Guy is a common target) might find a few moments to be this funny.
  • When Ronald Reagan watched Back to the Future, he got so amused with the scene where the 1955 Doc Brown balks at the idea of Reagan becoming President by 1985 that he told the projectionist to stop the film and replay the scene.
  • A story taken from Reddit about how a High School principal who transferred from a reform school really laid down the rule about how hats were not allowed in the school. A technologically savvy student photoshopped a picture of him to resemble Hitler, because students called him the 'Hat Nazi', and distributed it around the school. Eventually, the teachers and even the principal got ahold of the image and thought it was actually really funny.
  • South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut famously features 'Blame Canada,' a song about how Canada is the cause of all of America's children's problems. When the number was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Song in 1999, the press asked Kim Campbell, the Consul General and first (and, as of August 2014, only) female Prime Minister of Canada, about her thoughts on the piece. She said that it was clearly meant to be funny, and wasn't offended in the slightest. Similarly, one of the lines in the song targets Anne Murray, a famous Canadian singer. Murray reportedly thought this hilarious and was willing to sing 'Blame Canada' at the Oscars after Trey Parker and Matt Stone invited her, but couldn't due to a prior commitment.
  • General Sir Garnet Wolesley was immortalised by Gilbert and Sullivan as Major General Stanley in The Pirates of Penzance (the Trope Namer for Modern Major General). However, unlike W.H. Smith (who was the model for another incompetent high-ranking official, namely Sir Joseph in H.M.S. Pinafore), Sir Garnet took the spoof in good humor and would often sing the associated song to amuse his friends at parties.
  • A rather humorous exchange happened about a DotA 2 team named Starladder, where someone said 'Darn Russians', and they were corrected with 'They are Ukranian, not Russian'. However, they were then countered by 'Well, soon-to-be-Russians doesn't really flow off the tongue as much, does it?' Someone else then said, '...I should not have laughed as hard at that as I did.'
  • Eliot Chang is a stand-up comedian who was once heckled by a drunk bride-to-be. He assured the audience that he had the situation under control since he began his career in Harlem, NY and knew that he wasn't in trouble unless he heard someone say, 'Fuck you! *Click Click*'. The drunk woman then shouted, 'Fuck you! Click! Click!' Chang began to laugh and said, 'Okay, that was actually pretty funny'.
  • British comedy show The Real McCoy which starred British Black and Asian comedians, parodied the British Army's equal opportunities recruitment campaign by producing a spoof advert with a black soldier insisting he had 'the same opportunity to get shot as anyone else.' - the Army's recruiters went on to borrow this argument for future adverts.
  • In Bavaria, there is a tradition called 'Derblecken', most famously celebrated at the annual 'Nockherberg' beer festival, where major politicians (usually Bavarian or federal) are mocked. It's considered an honor to be mocked and politicians in attendance are often scrutinized for their reaction. Finding a joke not funny is the surest way to ruin a political career, but some politicians are clearly shown enjoying being taken down a peg or two.
  • The legendary insult comic Don Rickles was famous for this—in fact, it made his career. While still a young comedian struggling to find his niche, he noticed Frank Sinatra in the audience of a show one night and decided to start mocking the singer. Sinatra loved the jokes, and Rickles realized he had found his gimmick: insults. In this montage from Jimmy Kimmel Live!, Rickles relates a specific incident in which he, his wife, and Sinatra, along with the singer's whole entourage, went for dinner in an expensive restaurant decorated completely in white. Sinatra, notorious for his Hair-Trigger Temper, became oddly annoyed when a ketchup bottle was brought to the table, and abruptly picked it up and threw it against a wall, creating a massive mess. The entire restaurant went completely silent...except for Rickles, who, without missing a beat, asked: 'Frank, can you pass the ketchup?' Sinatra burst out laughing, and the tense situation was defused.
  • SNL frequently makes fun of its guest hosts. Jon Heder takes it like a champ. Political candidates have to learn to take a joke to be relate-able ... Most times, that is.
  • Overlapping with Meme Acknowledgement, Hajime Tabata, director of Final Fantasy XV, saw memes of people photoshopping an image of the game's main characters in the car looking out the left, with something behind them. He thought it was hilarious - and then released high-quality images for people to make memes out of.
  • Kathy Griffin admitted in her autobiography that her appearance in Seinfeld was based on a real-life experience. On few rarely seen stand up shows she told the experience of meeting Jerry and asking him to record something he was being busy and she was annoying. Larry David was financing a stand-up show, and after guaranteeing that his friend Jerry would never see it, he immediately showed it to him, and he begged Larry to incorporate it into his show.
  • At a Lana Del Rey concert, one guy in the audience YELLS at the top of his lungs 'Lana, SIT ON MY FAAAAAAAAACE!' Lana proceeds to absolutely lose it and crack up laughing on stage, along with the rest of the audience.
  • Gone Girl features, as a supporting character, a jerkass tabloid hack named Ellen Abbott who relentlessly hounds Nick over his wife Amy's disappearance, and refuses to apologize for leading a media crusade against him even after it turns out that Amy faked her disappearance in order to ruin Nick's life. In the film adaptation, she was played by Missi Pyle as a very thinly-veiled, unflattering parody of former prosecutor turned talk show host Nancy Grace... and reportedly, the real Grace loved the character and thought it was hilarious, saying that she felt 'flattered' by the portrayal and even remarking that the scene of Abbott's on-air grilling of Nick seemed to based on her own on-air analysis of the Scott Peterson case. The only point she criticized was that she thought Abbott's necklaces were 'way too tasteful'.
  • James Milner's reputation for being controversy-free has undergone Memetic Mutation via the 'Boring James Milner' spoof Twitter account. He's not above poking fun at himself by reading some of these tweets out loud.
  • The Furry Fandomactually likedCollegeHumor's Furry Force series, which was intended to make fun of the sexual parts of the Furry Fandom. The second and third parts came about from suggestions they made for it, even.
  • In 2012, a middle school class decided to take advantage of the alleged apocalypse and prank their teacher. On the fated day, one student signaled to the others by coughing loudly in the middle of class, prompting everyone to collapse to the floor in unison, much to their teacher's bewilderment. Once he got over his initial shock, his response was uproarious laughter, having to practically force himself to order his students to, 'Stop being dead right now!' Here's the video if you're curious.
  • When Stephen Colbert infamously appeared at the 2006 White House Correspondent's Dinner and more-or-less lit the entire room on fire, most of his targets were so quiet you could barely hear a pin drop... except for the late Justice Antonin Scalia, who visibly had a humongous grin on his face when he came under Colbert's crosshairs.
  • It's generally agreed that the cleverest bit about the hacked racist Gengar infamously distributed to Pokémon Diamond and Pearl cartridges by a bearded Team Rocket grunt was the 'Truant' ability.
  • A throwaway line in Scream (1996) was about who would play Sidney in a movie. She says 'with my luck they'd cast Tori Spelling'. Tori Spelling found the gag funny and sure enough in Scream 2 the Film Within a Film (based on the first's events) she plays Sidney.
  • At the 2008 Golden Globes, Ricky Gervais took the time to roast Kate Winslet for starring in The Reader - as she had appeared on Extras playing herself trying to get an Oscar for starring in a Holocaust movie. He said 'what did I tell you, Winslet? Do a Holocaust movie, the awards come' - to which she howled with laughter.
  • Mel Brooks recounted an experience where he played on a celebrity week of the game show Eye Guess in 1966. Unaware that host Bill Cullen survived a childhood bout with polio and was in a motorcycle accident in his teenage years, Brooks decided to imitate his jerky walk. Though Brooks was dismayed when he found out, Cullen liked it, telling him he wished more people wouldn't have pity on him for the way he walked.

Steven Universe

Pearl's reaction to Garnet's joke in 'Steven's Lion.'

Index

Suicide
  • Crisis hotline (list)
  • Bullying and suicide (list)

The following are lists of notable people who died by suicide. Suicides effected under duress are included. Deaths by accident or misadventure are excluded. People who might or might not have died by their own hand, or whose intention to die is in dispute, but who are widely believed to have deliberately killed themselves, may be listed under 'possible suicides'.

See also List of suicides in the 21st century, List of political self-immolations and List of suicides which have been attributed to bullying.

  • 1Confirmed suicides

Confirmed suicides[edit]

A[edit]

  • Chris Acland (1996), English drummer for the band Lush, hanging[1]
  • Art Acord (1931), American actor and rodeo champion, ingestion of poison[2][3]
  • Manuel Acuña (1873), Mexican poet, ingestion of potassium cyanide[4][5]
  • Marian 'Clover' Hooper Adams (1885), American socialite and photographer, potassium cyanide[6]
  • George Washington Adams (1829), American politician, lawyer and eldest son of John Quincy Adams, drowning in the Long Island Sound[7]
  • Robert Adams, Jr. (1906), Congressman from Pennsylvania, gunshot[8]
  • Stephanie Adams (2018), American former glamour model, known as the November 1992 Playboy Playmate, jump from a 25th floor window with her 7-year-old son[9][10]
  • Stuart Adamson (2001), Scottish guitarist and singer (Big Country, Skids), hanging after alcohol ingestion[11]
  • Vibulenus Agrippa (36 AD), Roman equestrian, poison[12]
  • Ahn Jae-hwan (2008), South Korean actor, carbon monoxide poisoning[13][14]
  • Aizong of Jin (1234), Chinese emperor of the Jin dynasty[15]
  • Chantal Akerman (2015), Belgian film director[16]
  • Sergey Akhromeyev (1991), Marshal of the Soviet Union, hanging[17]
  • Stephen Akinmurele (1999), British suspected serial killer, hanging[18]
  • Ryūnosuke Akutagawa (1927), Japanese writer, overdose of barbital[19]
  • Marwan al-Shehhi (2001), United Arab Emirate member of Al-Qaeda, and one of the 9/11 hijackers, plane crash[20][21]
  • Alcetas (320 BC), Hellenic general of Alexander the Great[22]
  • Leandro Alem (1896), Argentine politician, founder of the Radical Civic Union, gunshot to the head[23]
  • Alexander (220 BC), Seleucidsatrap of Persis[24]
  • Ross Alexander (1937), American actor, gunshot to the head[25]
  • Prince Alfred of Edinburgh (1899), member of the British Royal Family, gunshot[26]
  • Leelah Alcorn (2014), American transgender teenager, walked in front of a truck[27]
  • Gia Allemand (2013), American actress and model, hanging[28]
  • Nadezhda Alliluyeva (1932), Russian wife of Joseph Stalin, gunshot[29]
  • Jeff Alm (1993), American football player, gunshot[30]
  • Jason Altom (1998), American Ph.D student, potassium cyanide[31]
  • August Ames (2017), Canadian pornographic actress, hanging[32][33]
  • Jean Améry (1978), Austrian writer, overdose of sleeping pills[34]
  • Amphicrates of Athens (86 BC), Greek sophist and rhetorician, starved himself[35]
  • Desmond Amofah (2019), American YouTuber and video game streamer known under his pseudonymEtika, jump from Manhattan Bridge[36]
  • Korechika Anami (1945), Japanese War Minister, stabbed himself as part of seppuku[37][38]
  • Adna Anderson (1889), General, U.S. Military Railroads during the American Civil War, railroad civil engineer/manager, gunshot[39][40]
  • Forrest Howard Anderson (1989), Governor of Montana, gunshot[41]
  • Keith Andes (2005), American actor, asphyxiation[42]
  • Andragathius (388 AD), Roman general and Magister equitum who assassinated emperor Gratian, drowned in the sea[43]
  • Andromachus (364 BC). Eleian cavalry general[44]
  • Roger Angleton (1998), American murderer, cut himself over 50 times with a razor[45][46]
  • Publius Rufus Anteius (67 AD), Roman politician, drank poison and cut his veins[47]
  • Mark Antony (30 BC), Roman politician and general, stabbed with sword[48]
  • Marcus Gavius Apicius (before 40 AD), Roman socialite, gourmet and man of great wealth, poison[49]
  • Marshall Applewhite (1997), American leader of the Heaven's Gate religious cult, poisoned himself as part of the cult's mass suicide that year[50]
  • Araki Yukio (1945), Japanese kamikaze pilot[51]
  • Arbogast (394 AD), Roman general[52]
  • Diane Arbus (1971), American photographer, overdosed on pills and slashed wrists[53][54]
  • Archias of Cyprus (between 158 and 154 BC), Ptolemaic governor of Cyprus, hanging[55]
  • Reinaldo Arenas (1990), Cuban-American artist and writer, drug and alcohol overdose[56]
  • José María Arguedas (1969), Peruvian novelist and poet, gunshot[57]
  • Pedro Armendáriz (1963), Mexican actor, gunshot[58]
  • Edwin Armstrong (1954), American inventor of FM radio, jumped from a 13th floor window[59][60]
  • Arria (42 AD), Roman wife of Caecina Paetus an alleged conspirator against Emperor Claudius, stabbed herself[61]
  • John Atchison (2007), American federal prosecutor and alleged child sex offender, hanging[62][63]
  • Mohamed Atta (2001), Egyptian member of Al-Qaeda, and leader of the 9/11 hijackers, plane crash[20][64][65]
  • Pekka-Eric Auvinen (2007), Finnish Jokela High School shooter, gunshot to head[66][67]
  • Avicii (2018), Swedish DJ and music producer, self-inflicted cuts resulting in blood loss[68]
  • Mike Awesome (2007), American professional wrestler, hanging[69]
  • Marion Aye (1951), American actress, ingestion of bi-chloride of mercury tablets[70]
  • May Ayim (1996), German author, jumped from 13th floor of a Berlin building[71]
  • Albert Ayler (1970), American jazz saxophonist, jumped into New York City's East River[72][73]

B[edit]

  • Andreas Baader (1977), German RAFterrorist, gunshot[74]
  • Nikki Bacharach (2007), American daughter of Burt Bacharach and Angie Dickinson, suffocation using plastic bag and helium[75][76]
  • Josef Bachmann (1970), German anti-communist, who made an assassination attempt on the German student movement-leader Rudi Dutschke, asphyxiation with plastic bag[77]
  • Faith Bacon (1956), American burlesque dancer and actress, jumped from hotel window[78]
  • Bai Qi (257 BC), Chinese general and commander of the Qin army, cut his throat with a sword[79]
  • David Bairstow (1998), English cricketer, hanging[80]
  • James Robert Baker (1997), American writer, asphyxiation[81]
  • Mark Balelo (2013), American cast member on the reality TV series Storage Wars, carbon monoxide asphyxiation[82][83][84]
  • Joe Ball (1938), American serial killer, gunshot[85]
  • José Manuel Balmaceda (1891), President of Chile, gunshot[86]
  • Lou Bandy (1959), Dutch singer and comedian[87]
  • Pratyusha Banerjee (2016), Indian actress, hanging[88]
  • Herculine Barbin (1868), French intersex memoirist, gas[89]
  • Erich Bärenfänger (1945), German general[90]
  • Robert Hayward Barlow (1951), American writer and anthropologist, barbiturate overdose[91]
  • Boris Barnet (1965), Russian film director, hanging[92][93]
  • Ralph Barton (1931), American artist, gunshot[94]
  • Pierre Batcheff (1932), French actor, overdose of barbital[95]
  • Simone Battle (2014), American pop singer and member of the band G.R.L., hanging[96]
  • Herb Baumeister (1996), American serial killer, gunshot[97]
  • J. Clifford Baxter (2002), American Enron Corporation executive, gunshot[98]
  • Amelie 'Melli' Beese (1925), German pioneer aviator, gunshot[99]
  • Jovan Belcher (2012), American football player, gunshot[100]
  • Peter Bellamy (1991), English folk musician and member of the band The Young Tradition[101]
  • Helena Belmonte (2014), Filipina model, jumped off building[102]
  • Malik Bendjelloul (2014), Swedish documentary filmmaker, jumped in front of moving train[103][104][105][106]
  • Walter Benjamin (1940), German-Jewish literary critic and culture theorist, morphine overdose[107]
  • Jill Bennett (1990), English actress, secobarbital overdose[108]
  • Chester Bennington (2017), American lead singer of Linkin Park, hanging[109]
  • Louis Bennison (1929), American actor, gunshot[110]
  • Chris Benoit (2007), Canadian professional wrestler, hanging[111]
  • Pierre Bérégovoy (1993), French politician and Prime Minister (1992–93), gunshot[112]
  • Mary Kay Bergman (1999), American voice actress, gunshot[113]
  • John Berryman (1972), American poet, jumped off the Washington Avenue Bridge in Minneapolis, Minnesota[114]
  • Bruno Bettelheim (1990). Austrian-born U.S. psychologist and writer, asphyxiation with plastic bag[115]
  • Paul Bhattacharjee (2013), British actor, jumped from a clifftop[116]
  • Brian Bianchini (2004), American model, hanging[117]
  • Bob Birch (2012), American musician, gunshot[118]
  • David Birnie (2005), Australian serial killer and rapist, hanging[119]
  • Eli M. Black (1975), CEO of United Fruit Co., jumped out of a building[120]
  • Junius Blaesus (31 AD), Roman consul, general and governor of Africa, fell on a sword[121]
  • Jeremy Blake (2007), American artist, drowning[122]
  • Clara Blandick (1962), American stage and screen actress[123]
  • Miguel Blesa (2017), Spanish banker and businessman, involved in various corruption scandals, gunshot to chest[124]
  • Adele Blood (1936), American actress, gunshot[125]
  • Clara Bloodgood (1907), American Broadway actress, gunshot[126]
  • Isabella Blow (2007), English magazine editor, and muse to fashion designer Alexander McQueen, poisoning[127]
  • Ludwig Boltzmann (1906), Austrian physicist, known for thermodynamics and atomic theory, hanging[128]
  • Bonosus (280 AD), Roman usurper, hanging[129]
  • Eduardo Bonvallet (2015), Chilean World Cup footballer and pundit, hanging[130]
  • Jeremy Michael Boorda (1996), US Chief of Naval Operations, gunshot to the chest[131]
  • Adrian Borland (1999), English singer-songwriter (The Outsiders, The Sound), jumped in front of a moving train[132]
  • Martin Bormann (1945), German head of the Nazi Party Chancellery, cyanide poisoning[133]
  • Jean-Louis Bory (1979), French writer, gunshot to the chest[134]
  • Yevgenia Bosch (1925), Soviet Bolshevik revolutionary and politician, gunshot[135][136]
  • Novak Bošković (2019), Serbian handball player, gunshot[137]
  • Mohamed Bouazizi (2011), Tunisian street vendor, self-immolation[138]
  • Boudica (61 AD), Queen of the Iceni, poison[139]
  • Georges Ernest Boulanger (1891), French general and politician, gunshot[140]
  • Anthony Bourdain (2018), American chef, author, and television personality, hanging[141][142]
  • Tommy Boyce (1994), American songwriter, gunshot[143]
  • Karin Boye (1941), Swedish writer[144]
  • Charles Boyer (1978), French actor, secobarbital overdose[145]
  • Jonathan Brandis (2003), American actor, hanging[146]
  • Cheyenne Brando (1995), Tahitian model/actress, hanging[147][148]
  • Mike Brant (1975), Israeli pop star,[149] jumped from his Paris apartment building[150]
  • Eva Braun (1945), German wife of Adolf Hitler, cyanide poisoning[151][152]
  • Richard Brautigan (1984), American writer, gunshot[153]
  • Brennus (279 BC), Gallic tribal leader and general, stabbed himself[154]
  • James E. Brewton (1967), American painter and printmaker, gunshot[155]
  • Herman Brood (2001), Dutch rock musician and painter, jumped from hotel roof[156][157]
  • Joseph Brooks (2011), American screenwriter, director, producer, and composer, asphyxiation[158]
  • May Brookyn (1894) British stage actress, overdose of carbolic acid[159][160]
  • Jürgen Brümmer (2014), German Olympic gymnast, jumped from the Koersch Viaduct[161]
  • Marcus Junius Brutus the Younger (42 BC), Roman politician and conspirator to assassinate Julius Caesar, ran into his sword[162]
  • David Buckel (2018), American LGBT rights lawyer and environmental activist, self-immolation in Prospect Park, Brooklyn[163]
  • Eustace Budgell (1737), English writer and politician, drowning in the Thames[164]
  • Brad Bufanda (2017), American actor, jumped from building[165]
  • Wilhelm Burgdorf (1945), German general, Chief of the Heerespersonalamt and Chief Adjutant to Adolf Hitler, gunshot[166]
  • Dan Burros (1965), Jewish American neo-Nazi activist and member of the Ku Klux Klan, gunshot to the head[167]
  • August Anheuser Busch Sr. (1934), American CEO of Anheuser-Busch, gunshot[168]
  • Germán Busch (1939), Bolivian military officer and 41st and 43rd President of Bolivia, gunshot[169][170]

C[edit]

  • Novius Calavius (314 BC), Campanian nobleman, leader of an anti-Roman insurrection[171]
  • Ovius Calavius (314 BC), Campanian nobleman, leader of an anti-Roman insurrection[171]
  • Lucius Arruntius Camillus Scribonianus (42 AD), Roman politician, consul and rebel against Emperor Claudius[172]
  • Donald Cammell (1996), Scottish film director, gunshot[173]
  • Homaro Cantu (2015), American chef, hanging[174]
  • Capital Steez (2012), American hip-hop artist, jumped off the rooftop of the Cinematic Music Group headquarters in Manhattan[175][176]
  • Capucine (1990), French actress and model, jumped from an eighth-floor apartment[177]
  • George Caragonne (1995), American comic book writer, jumped from the 45th floor of the Marriott Marquis Hotel in Manhattan[178]
  • Wallace Carothers (1937), American inventor of nylon, cyanide poisoning[179]
  • Dora Carrington (1932), English artist, gunshot[180]
  • Kevin Carter (1994), South African photojournalist, carbon monoxide poisoning[181]
  • Tim Carter (2008), English footballer, hanging[182][183]
  • Justina Casagli (1841), Swedish opera singer, jumped out a window[184][185]
  • Finn M. W. Caspersen (2009), American financier and philanthropist, gunshot[186][187]
  • Ariel Castro (2013), Puerto Rican-American kidnapper, rapist and murderer, hanging[188]
  • Fidel Castro Diaz-Balart (2018), Cuban nuclear physicist, son of Fidel Castro[189]
  • Kelly Catlin (2019), American cycling champion[190]
  • Cato the Younger (46 BC), Roman statesman and politician, stabbed with sword[191]
  • Paul Celan (1970), Romanian poet, drowning in the Seine[192]
  • Censorinus (53 BC), Roman cavalryman and friend of Publius Licinius Crassus, ordered shieldbearer to stab him[193]
  • Joseph Newton Chandler III (2002), formerly[194] unidentified identity thief, gunshot[195]
  • Iris Chang (2004), American historian and author of The Rape of Nanking, gunshot to head[196]
  • Charmion (30 BC), servant and advisor of Cleopatra[197]
  • Richard Chase (1980), American serial killer, anti-depressant overdose[198]
  • Gilles Châtelet (1999), French philosopher and mathematician[199]
  • Thomas Chatterton (1753), English poet and forger, arsenic poisoning[200][201]
  • Gu Cheng (1993), Chinese poet, hanging[202]
  • Danny Chen (2011), Chinese-American U.S. Army Private, gunshot[203]
  • Vic Chesnutt (2009), American singer-songwriter, muscle relaxant overdose[204][205]
  • Leslie Cheung (2003), Hong Kong singer and actor, leapt from the 24th floor of the Mandarin Oriental hotel[206][207]
  • Chimalpopoca (1428), Emperor of Tenochtitlan, hanging[208]
  • Seung-Hui Cho (2007), American university student who perpetrated the Virginia Tech massacre, gunshot[209]
  • Choi Jin-sil (2008), South Korean actress, hanging[210]
  • Choi Jin-young (2010), South Korean actor and singer, hanging[211]
  • Chongzhen (1644), Chinese emperor of the Ming dynasty[212]
  • David Christie (1997), French singer[213]
  • Brian Christopher (2018), American professional wrestler, hanging[214][215]
  • Christine Chubbuck (1974), American television reporter, gunshot[216]
  • Chung Doo-un (2019), South Korean politician[217]
  • Diana Churchill (1963), Eldest daughter of British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, barbiturate overdose[218]
  • Jeremiah Clarke (1707), English baroque composer and organist, gunshot[219][220]
  • Paul Clayton (1967) American folksinger and folklorist, electrocution[221]
  • Tyler Clementi (2010), Rutgers University student, jumped off the George Washington Bridge[222]
  • Robert George Clements (1947), Irish physician and suspected murderer, morphine overdose[223]
  • Cleomenes I (c. 489 BC), King of Sparta, slashed himself from shins to belly[224]
  • Cleomenes III (219 BC), King of Sparta[225]
  • Cleombrotus of Ambracia (after 399 BC), Greek philosopher, acquaintance of Socrates and Plato[226]
  • Cleopatra (30 BC), Queen of Egypt, inducing a snake to bite her[48]
  • Kurt Cobain (1994), American musician for the band Nirvana, gunshot[227]
  • Jack Cole (1958), American cartoonist known as the creator of Plastic Man, gunshot to the head[228] with a rifle[229]
  • Ray Combs (1996), American comedian, actor, and television game show host, hanging[230][231]
  • Adolfo Constanzo (1989), American serial killer, drug dealer, warlock and cult leader, ordered a follower to shoot him[232]
  • Tarka Cordell (2008) British musician, hanging[233]
  • Don Cornelius (2012), American television producer, best known as the creator and host of Soul Train, gunshot[234]
  • Chris Cornell (2017), American singer (Soundgarden, Audioslave, Temple of the Dog), hanging[235]
  • John Coughlin (2019), American figure skater,[236] hanging[237]
  • Hart Crane (1932), American poet, jumped off ship[238]
  • Darby Crash (1980), American singer (Germs), heroin overdose[239]
  • Publius Licinius Crassus (53 BC), Roman general, ordered shieldbearer to stab him[240]
  • Robert W. Criswell (1905), American humorist and newspaperman, jumped in front of subway train[241]
  • Andrew Cunanan (1997), American serial killer, gunshot[242]
  • Lester Cuneo (1925), American actor, gunshot[243]
  • Will Cuppy (1949), American humorist, sleeping pill overdose[244]
  • Ian Curtis (1980), English singer-songwriter (Joy Division), hanging[245]
  • Patricia Cutts (1974), English film and television actress, barbiturate overdose[246]
  • Adam Czerniaków (1942), Polish-Jewish senator and head of the Warsaw GhettoJudenrat, cyanide poisoning[247]

D[edit]

  • Dalida (1987), French-Italian singer, barbiturate overdose[248][249]
  • Karl Dane (1934), Danish-American silent film actor, gunshot[250][251][252][253]
  • Monika Dannemann (1996), German skater and painter, exhaust fumes[254]
  • Brad Davis (1991), American actor, assisted barbiturate overdose[255]
  • Charlotte Dawson (2014), Australian TV presenter, hanging[256][257]
  • Osamu Dazai (1948), Japanese author, drowning in the Tamagawa Aqueduct[258]
  • Alice de Janzé (1941), American heiress, gunshot[259]
  • Decentius (353 AD), Roman usurper[260]
  • Guy Debord (1994), French philosopher and founder of the Situationists International, gunshot[261]
  • Jeanine Deckers (1985), Belgian musician known as the Singing Nun, overdose of sedatives[262]
  • Gilles Deleuze (1995), French philosopher, jumped out of window[263]
  • Peter Delmé (1770), English politician, gunshot[264]
  • Brad Delp (2007), American singer-songwriter for the bands Boston and RTZ, carbon monoxide poisoning[265]
  • Penelope Delta (1941), Greek writer, poison[266][267][268]
  • Demonax (c. 170), Greek CypriotCynic philosopher, starved himself to death[269]
  • Demosthenes (322 BC), Greek statesman, poison[270]
  • Karl Denke (1924), German serial killer, hanging[271]
  • Jerry Desmonde (1967), English actor[272]
  • Patrick Dewaere (1982), French actor, gunshot[273]
  • Ding Ruchang (1895), Chinese admiral, opium overdose[274]
  • Dioxippus (after 336 BC), ancient Greekpankratiast and Olympic champion, fell upon his sword[275]
  • Tove Ditlevsen (1976), Danish poet and author[276]
  • Thomas M. Disch (2008), American writer, gunshot[277]
  • Adriaan Ditvoorst (1987), Dutch film director and screenwriter, drowning[278]
  • Julia Domna (217 AD), Roman empress, second wife of Emperor Septimius Severus[279]
  • Christopher Dorner (2013), American police officer, gunshot[280]
  • Michael Dorris (1997), American novelist, overdose of sleeping pills with vodka and asphyxiation[281]
  • Jon Dough (2006), American pornographic actor, hanging[282]
  • Scott Dozier (2019), American murderer, hanging[283]
  • Charmaine Dragun (2007), Australian television newsreader, jumped off The Gap[284]
  • Nick Drake (1974), English singer-songwriter, overdose of amitriptyline tablets[285]
  • Marcus Livius Drusus Claudianus (42 BC), Roman senator[286]
  • Dave Duerson (2011), American footballsafety for the Chicago Bears, New York Giants, and Phoenix Cardinals, gunshot to the chest[287]
  • R. Budd Dwyer (1987), American politician, gunshot[288][289]

E[edit]

  • George Eastman (1932), American inventor and philanthropist, gunshot to heart[290]
  • Volker Eckert (2007), German serial killer, hanging[291]
  • Edward I. Edwards (1931), American politician, gunshot to head[292]
  • Keith Emerson (2016), English rock musician, keyboardist, and composer for the bands The Nice and Emerson, Lake & Palmer, gunshot to the head[293]
  • Empedocles (c. 430 BC), Greek philosopher, leapt into Mount Etna[294][295]
  • Robert Enke (2009), German footballer, struck by train[296]
  • Gudrun Ensslin (1977), German RAF terrorist, hanging[74]
  • Peg Entwistle (1932), Welsh-born American actress, leapt from the 'H' in the Hollywood Sign[297]
  • Epicharis (65 AD), Roman leading member of the Pisonian conspiracy, strangled herself with a band of cloth[298]
  • Eratosthenes (194 BC), Greek polymath and chief librarian at the Library of Alexandria, voluntary starvation[299]
  • Euphrates the Stoic (118 AD), Roman Stoic philosopher, hemlock poisoning[300]
  • Eurydice II of Macedon (317 BC), Queen of Macedon, hanging[301]
  • Tom Evans (1983), English musician and songwriter for the group Badfinger, hanging[302]
  • Richard Evonitz (2002), American serial killer and kidnapper[303]

F[edit]

  • Enevold de Falsen (1808), Norwegian Supreme Court Justice, drowning[304]
  • Moni Fanan (2009), Israeli basketball executive Maccabi Tel-Aviv, hanging[305]
  • Gaius Fuficius Fango (40 BC), Roman general and politician[306]
  • Richard Farnsworth (2000), American actor, gunshot[307]
  • Justin Fashanu (1998), British footballer, hanging[308]
  • René Favaloro (2000), Argentine cardiac surgeon (created technique for coronary bypass surgery), gunshot to the heart[309]
  • José Feghali (2014), Brazilian pianist, winner of the 1985 Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, gunshot to head[310]
  • Hans Fischer (1945), German organic chemist and recipient of the 1930 Nobel Prize in Chemistry[311]
  • Hermann Emil Fischer (1919), German chemist and recipient of the 1902 Nobel Prize in Chemistry[312]
  • Robert FitzRoy (1865), English meteorologist, surveyor, hydrographer, and captain of HMS Beagle during Charles Darwin's famous voyage, slit throat with razor[313]
  • Quintus Fulvius Flaccus (172 BC), Roman consul, hanging[314]
  • Ed Flanders (1995), American actor, gunshot[315]
  • John Bernard Flannagan (1942), American sculptor[316]
  • Frederick Fleet (1965), British sailor and lookout on the RMS Titanic who first spotted the iceberg that struck the vessel, hanging[317]
  • Keith Flint (2019), British singer and dancer for The Prodigy,[318] hanging[319]
  • Charley Ford (1884), American outlaw, gunshot after a period of deep depression, terminal illness from tuberculosis, and a morphine addiction.[320][321][322]
  • Tom Forman (1926), American actor, director and producer, gunshot[323]
  • André 'Dédé' Fortin (2000), Canadian songwriter, singer and guitarist (Les Colocs), stabbing[324]
  • Vince Foster (1993), American attorney and Deputy White House Counsel to Bill Clinton, gunshot to mouth[325][326]
  • Wade Frankum (1991), Australian mass murderer who perpetrated the Strathfield massacre, gunshot[327]
  • Ryan Freel (2012), American professional baseball player, gunshot[328]
  • Emil Fuchs (1929), Austrian-American sculptor, gunshot[329][330]
  • Fujimura Misao (1902), Japanese philosophy student and poet, jumped from the Kegon Falls[331]
  • Anton Furst (1991), English production designer (Batman (1989), Planet Hollywood), jumped from an eighth story parking garage[332]

G[edit]

  • Alan García (2019), Peruvian politician who served as President of Peru from 1985 to 1990 and again from 2006 to 2011, gunshot[333]
  • Helen Palmer Geisel (1967), author and actress who was the first wife of famed children's author Theodor 'Dr. Seuss' Geisel, barbiturate overdose[334]
  • Karl Giese (1938), German archivist, museum curator and life partner of Magnus Hirschfeld[335]
  • Gildo (398 AD), Roman Berber general and rebel leader, hanging[336]
  • Sam Gillespie (2003), philosopher whose writings and translations were crucial to the initial reception of Alain Badiou's work in the English-speaking world[337]
  • Claude Gillingwater (1939), American actor, gunshot.[338]
  • Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1935), American writer, chloroform overdose[339]
  • Kurt Gloor (1997), Swiss film director, screenwriter and producer[340]
  • John Wayne Glover (2005), Australian serial killer, hanging.[341]
  • Holly Glynn (1987), a formerly unidentified young woman found in Dana Point, California, who had jumped off a cliff. Her body was not identified until 2015[342][343]
  • Joseph Goebbels (1945), Nazi politician and Propaganda Minister, gunshot or cyanide poisoning[344][345]
  • Magda Goebbels (1945), German wife of Joseph Goebbels, assisted suicide by gunshot or cyanide poisoning[344][345]
  • Gongsun Zan (199 AD), Chinese general and warlord, setting himself and his family on fire[346]
  • David Goodall (2018), English-born Australian botanist and ecologist, physician-assisted suicide[347]
  • Gordian I (238 AD), Roman emperor, hanging[348]
  • Lucy Gordon (2009), English actress and model, hanging[349]
  • Gōri Daisuke (2010), Japanese voice actor, narrator and actor, cut his wrist[350]
  • Hermann Göring (1946), German politician, military leader, major figure in Nazi Party, potassium cyanide[351]
  • Arshile Gorky (1948), Armenian American painter; hanging[352]
  • Joachim Gottschalk (1941), German stage and film actor, gas inhalation[353]
  • Gaius Gracchus (121 BC), Roman politician, reformer and tribune, ordered a slave to kill him[354]
  • Frank Graham (1950), American voice actor and radio announcer, carbon monoxide poisoning[355]
  • Phil Graham (1963), American newspaper publisher, shotgun blast[356]
  • Wolfgang Grams (1993), German RAF terrorist, gunshot[357]
  • Bob Grant (2003), English actor, carbon monoxide poisoning[358]
  • Shauna Grant (1984), American porn actress, gunshot[359]
  • Spalding Gray (2004), American actor, playwright, screenwriter, performance artist, and monologuist, jumped off the Staten Island Ferry[360]
  • Mark Green (2004), American record-setting minor league hockey star, hanging[361][362]
  • Carl Großmann (1922), German serial killer, hanging[363]
  • Paul Gruchow (2004), American writer, drug overdose[364]

H[edit]

  • Jason Hairston (2018), American football player[365]
  • Lillian Hall-Davis (1933), English actress, carbon monoxide poisoning and cut throat[366]
  • Ryan Halligan (2003), bullied American middle school student, hanging[367]
  • Pete Ham (1975), Welsh singer-songwriter and guitarist for the band Badfinger, hanging[302]
  • Bernardine Hamaekers (1912), Belgian opera singer, cut throat with shattered drinking glass[368]
  • Rusty Hamer (1990), American actor, gunshot[369]
  • David Hamilton (2016), British photographer and filmmaker known for his nudes of pubescent girls, asphyxiation via plastic bag after several of his models accused him of rape[370][371]
  • Hampsicora (215 BC), Sardo-Punic political leader, landowner and anti-Roman rebel leader[372]
  • Tony Hancock (1968), English comedian, overdose by vodka and amphetamines[373]
  • Hannibal Barca (ca 182 BC), Carthaginian commander during the Second Punic War, poison[374]
  • James Harden-Hickey (1898), Franco-American author, newspaper editor, duellist, adventurer and self-proclaimed Prince of Trinidad, overdose of morphine[375]
  • Marlia Hardi (1984), Indonesian actress, hanging[376]
  • Eric Harris (1999), one of the two American high school seniors who committed the Columbine High School massacre, gunshot[377][378]
  • Brynn Hartman (1998), wife of comedian and actor Phil Hartman, shot herself after murdering her husband[379]
  • Elizabeth Hartman (1987), American actress, leapt out of fifth floor window[380]
  • Donny Hathaway (1979), American musician, jumped from the 15th floor window of his hotel room[381]
  • Phyllis Haver (1960), American silent film actress, barbiturate overdose[382]
  • Marvin Heemeyer (2004), American welder who went on a rampage with a modified bulldozer, gunshot[383]
  • Ernest Hemingway (1961), American writer and journalist, gunshot to head[384]
  • Margaux Hemingway (1996), American fashion model, actress; overdose of phenobarbital[385]
  • Benjamin Hendrickson (2006), American actor, gunshot[386]
  • Aaron Hernandez (2017), American football player and convicted murderer, hanging in prison cell, five days after his acquittal from a separate murder charge[387]
  • Rudolf Hess (1987), German Nazi leader, hanging[388]
  • Paul Hester (2005), Australian drummer for Split Enz and Crowded House, hanging[389]
  • hide (1998), Japanese heavy metal singer, songwriter and record producer for the metal band X Japan, hanging[390]
  • Himilco (396 BC), Carthaginian general, starving himself[391]
  • Heinrich Himmler (1945), German Nazi leader, cyanide[392]
  • Adolf Hitler (1945), Austrian-born Nazi Germany dictator, gunshot[393][394] (possibly while biting down on a cyanide capsule at the same time)[395]
  • Abbie Hoffman (1989), American political and social activist; phenobarbital overdose[396]
  • Libby Holman (1971), American singer and actress, carbon monoxide poisoning[397][398]
  • Tyler Honeycutt (2018), American basketball player (Sacramento Kings, Khimki), gunshot.[399][400]
  • Doug Hopkins (1993), American songwriter and lead guitarist for the band Gin Blossoms, gunshot[401][402]
  • Brita Horn (1791), Swedish countess and courtier, drowning[403]
  • Robert E. Howard (1936), American author probably best known for his character Conan the Barbarian, gunshot to the head[404]
  • Quentin Hubbard (1976), son of L. Ron Hubbard, gas[405]
  • Nicholas Hughes (2009), fisheries biologist, son of renowned poet Sylvia Plath, hanging[406]
  • Rodney Hulin (1996), American prison inmate who had been raped, hanging[407]
  • Lester Hunt (1954), United States Senator, gunshot[408]
  • Michael Hutchence (1997), Australian singer and songwriter (INXS), hanging[409]
  • Phyllis Hyman (1995), American singer-songwriter and actress, overdose of phenobarbital[410]

I[edit]

  • Imai Kanehira (1184), Japanese general, jumping from his horse onto a sword he placed in his mouth[411]
  • Clara Immerwahr (1915), German chemist, gunshot[412]
  • William Inge (1973), American writer, carbon monoxide poisoning[413]
  • Arthur Crew Inman (1963), American poet, editor and author of one of the longest diaries on record[414]
  • Hideki Irabu (2011), Japanese professional baseball player, hanged[415]
  • Iras (30 BC), servant and advisor of Cleopatra[197]
  • Isokelekel (17th century), semi-mythical conqueror of Pohnpei Island in the Carolines and father of the cultural system of modern Pohnpei, bled to death after severing penis[416][417][418]
  • Silius Italicus (c. 103 AD), Roman consul, orator, author and poet, starvation[419]
  • Juzo Itami (1997), Japanese actor and film director, jumped from building[420][421]
  • Bruce Ivins (2008), American microbiologist and suspect in the 2001 anthrax attacks, overdose of paracetamol[422][423]

J[edit]

  • Charles R. Jackson (1968), American writer, barbiturate overdose[424]
  • Marcel Jacob (2009), Swedish bassist for the hard rock bands Talisman and Yngwie Malmsteen[425][426]
  • Irwin L. Jacobs (2019), American businessman, CEO of Genmar Holdings, gunshot after murdering his wife[427]
  • M. Jaishankar (2018), Indian serial killer and rapist, slitting his own throat[428]
  • Rahmah ibn Jabir Al Jalhami (1826), Arab tribal leader, pirate captain and admiral, blew himself up with his ship and crew[429]
  • Jill Janus (2018), American lead singer of the metal band Huntress[430]
  • Jang Ja-yeon (2009), South Korean actress, hanging[431]
  • Rick Jason (2000), American actor, gunshot[432]
  • Fatafat Jayalaxmi (1980), Indian actress, hanging[433]
  • Richard Jeni (2007), American standup comedian and actor, gunshot[434][435][436]
  • Ryan Jenkins (2009), American contestant on the 2009 reality TV series Megan Wants a Millionaire, hanging[437][438]
  • Jeon Mi-seon (2019), South Korean actress, hanging[439]
  • Jeong Da-bin (2007), South Korean actress, hanging[440]
  • Ji Yan (224 AD), Chinese official of the state of Eastern Wu, bureaucrat and reformer[441]
  • Prince Joachim of Prussia (1920), son of Wilhelm II, German Emperor, gunshot[442]
  • Jo Min-ki (2018), South Korean actor, hanging[443]
  • B. S. Johnson (1973), English novelist, poet, literary critic, sports journalist, television producer and filmmaker, cut his wrists[444]
  • Dan Johnson (2017), American politician, Republican member of the Kentucky House of Representatives, gunshot[445]
  • George Robert Johnston (2004), Canadian burglar and fugitive known as the Ballarat Bandit, gunshot[446]
  • Greg Johnson (2019), Canadian ice hockey player, gunshot[447]
  • J.J. Johnson (2001), American Bebop trombonist, gunshot[448]
  • Daniel V. Jones (1998), American maintenance worker, gunshot[449][450]
  • Malcolm Jones III (1996), American comic book creator known for his work on Vertigo series The Sandman[451]
  • Tor Jonsson (1951), Norwegian poet[452][453]
  • Luc Jouret (1994), Belgian religious leader and co-founder of Order of the Solar Temple[454]
  • Judacilius (90 BC), Piceni general and leader, swallowed poison and ordered to be set on fire[455]
  • Claude Jutra (1987), Canadian film director, actor and screenwriter,[456] drowning[457][458]

K[edit]

  • Antonie Kamerling (2010), Dutch actor and musician, hanging[459]
  • Sarah Kane (1999), English writer, hanging[460]
  • Chris Kanyon (2010), American professional wrestler, overdose of anti-depressant pills[461]
  • Kostas Karyotakis (1928), Greek poet, gunshot[462]
  • Bruno Kastner (1932), German actor, hanging[463]
  • Kazuhiko Kato (2009), Japanese musician, hanging[464]
  • Yasunari Kawabata (1972), Japanese writer, gassing[465]
  • Kawatsu Kentarō (1970), Japanese swimmer, self-immolation[466]
  • Andrew Kehoe (1927), American mass murderer, detonated truck full of dynamite while inside[467]
  • Brian Keith (1997), American actor, gunshot[468]
  • Mike Kelley (2012), American artist, carbon monoxide poisoning[469]
  • Israel Keyes (2012), American serial killer, strangulation[470]
  • Jiah Khan (2013), British American actress of Indian descent, hanging[471][472]
  • Margot Kidder (2018), Canadian-American actress, known for her role as Lois Lane in Superman feature films, drug and alcohol overdose[473]
  • Daul Kim (2009), South Korean model and blogger, hanged in her Paris apartment[474]
  • Kim Ji-hoon (2013), South Korean singer-songwriter (Two Two) and actor, hanging[475]
  • Kim Jong-hyun (2017), South Korean singer-songwriter, radio host, and member of boy band SHINee, carbon monoxide poisoning[476]
  • Yu-ri Kim (2011), South Korean model, poison[477]
  • Allyn King (1930), American actress, jumped from a fifth story window[478][479][480]
  • Syd King (1933), English footballer and football manager, ingestion of corrosive liquid[481][482]
  • Uday Kiran (2014), Indian actor, hanging[483]
  • Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (1938), German artist, gunshot[484]
  • R. B. Kitaj (2007), American artist, suffocation[485]
  • John Kivela (2017), American politician, hanging[486]
  • Dylan Klebold (1999), one of the two American high school seniors who committed the Columbine High School massacre, gunshot[377][378]
  • Heinrich von Kleist (1811), German author, poet and journalist, gunshot[487]
  • Billy Knight (2018), UCLA basketball player, self-inflicted blunt force injuries[488]
  • Ilse Koch (1967), Naziwar criminal, hanging[489][490]
  • Andrew Koenig (2010), American actor, hanging[491]
  • Arthur Koestler (1983), Hungarian-British author, novelist known for the antitotalitarian novel Darkness At Noon, barbiturates[492]
  • Hannelore Kohl (2001), German wife of German ChancellorHelmut Kohl, overdose of sleeping pills[493]
  • Lawrence Kohlberg (1987), American developmental psychologist, drowning[494]
  • Takako Konishi (2001), Japanese office worker known for an urban legend surrounding her death, froze to death[495]
  • Fumimaro Konoe (1945), Japanese prime minister, poison[496]
  • Ruslana Korshunova (2008), Kazakhstani model, aged 20, jumped from the ninth-floor balcony of her apartment in New York City[497]
  • Gé Korsten (1999), South African artist, gunshot[498]
  • Jerzy Kosinski (1991), Polish-born American writer, suffocation with plastic bag[499]
  • Hans Krebs (1945), German general and Chief of Staff of the OKH, gunshot[166]
  • Norbert Kröcher (2016), German 2 June Movement terrorist, gunshot[500]
  • Kuyili (1780). Indian freedom fighter. Applied ghee, set herself ablaze and jumped into the armoury of the British[501]

L[edit]

Lucretia's suicide by Marcantonio Raimondi (1534)
  • L'Inconnue de la Seine (late 1880s), unidentified French woman pulled out of the Seine, known for the influence of her death mask on literature and art[502]
  • Deborah Laake (2000), American columnist and writer, overdose of pills[503]
  • Titus Labienus (8 AD), Roman lawyer, orator and historian[504]
  • Leonard Lake (1985), American serial killer, ingesting cyanide capsules[505]
  • Karen Lancaume (2005), French pornographic film actress, overdose of temazepam[506]
  • Carole Landis (1948), American actress, overdose of secobarbital pills[507][508]
  • Hans Langsdorff (1939), German naval officer and Kapitän zur See, gunshot[509]
  • Adam Lanza (2012), perpetrator of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, gunshot to the head[510]
  • Don Lapre (2011), American television pitchman noted for several products, cut throat with a razor blade[511]
  • Anna Laughlin (1937), American actress, gas poisoning[512]
  • Florence Lawrence (1938), Canadian-American silent film actress, poisoning[513]
  • Lee Eun-ju (2005), South Korean actress, slit wrists and hanging[514]
  • Lee Hye-Ryeon (2007), South Korean singer, known as U;Nee, hanging[515]
  • Jon Lee (2002), Welsh drummer for the British rock band Feeder, hanging[516]
  • Valery Legasov (1988), Soviet-Russian inorganic chemist, member of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster commission, hanging[517]
  • Megan Leigh (1990), American pornographic actress, gunshot wound to the head[518]
  • Lemp Family (1949), Four members of the St. Louis Lemp Brewing family, gunshots[519]
  • Dave Lepard (2006), Swedish singer and guitarist (Crashdïet), hanging[520][521]
  • Marc Lépine (1989), Canadian mass murderer and École Polytechnique massacre shooter, shot himself after killing 14 women[522]
  • Andrzej Lepper (2011), Polish politician known as the leader of Samoobrona RP (Self-Defense of the Republic of Poland), hanging.[523][524]
  • Arnie Lerma (2018), American former Scientologist and critic of Scientology, gunshot[525]
  • Eugene Lester (1940), former Justice and Chief Justice of the Oklahoma Supreme Court, gunshot to the head[526]
  • Amy Levy (1889), British writer[527] inhaling charcoal gas[528]
  • Harry Lew (2011), United States Marine, gunshot[529][530]
  • Ephraim Lewis (1994), English singer, jumped off a fourth floor balcony[531]
  • Robert Ley (1945), German Nazi politician and leader of the German Labour Front, hanging[532]
  • Chris Lighty (2012), American music industry executive and manager, gunshot[533]
  • lil' Chris (2015), English pop singer, hanging[534]
  • Lin Dai (1964), Chinese actress, overdose of sleeping pills and methane gas poisoning[535]
  • Max Linder (1925), French film and stage actor, double suicide with wife Hélène 'Jean' Peters, veronal and morphine ingestion, cut wrists[536]
  • Vachel Lindsay (1931), American poet, poison[537]
  • Diane Linkletter (1969), American actress and daughter of Art Linkletter, jump from a sixth story window[538]
  • Mark Linkous (2010), American musician, gunshot to the heart[539]
  • Liu Rushi (1664), Chinese courtesan, Ming loyalist, poet, painter and calligrapher, hanging[540]
  • Philip Loeb (1955), American actor, sleeping pill overdose[541]
  • Kevin James Loibl (2016), assassin of Christina Grimmie, gunshot[542]
  • Bernard Loiseau (2003), French chef, shotgun blast to the head[543]
  • Ellen Joyce Loo (2018), Canadian-Hong Kong musician, singer, songwriter, and co-founder of the folk-pop rock group at 17, fall from her high-rise apartment building.[544][545][546]
  • Daniele Alves Lopes (1993), teen whose jump from a building was broadcast on Brazilian national television[547]
  • Ricardo López (1996), Uruguayan-born American stalker who attempted to kill Icelandic singer Björk by sending a letter bomb, gunshot[548]
  • Lu Zhaolin (684 or 686), Chinese poet, drowning in the Ying River[549]
  • Andreas Lubitz (2015), co-pilot of Germanwings Flight 9525, plane crash[550]
  • Lucan (65 AD), Roman poet, cut veins[551]
  • Lucretia (c. 510 BC), Roman noblewoman, stabbed herself[552]
  • Roman Lyashenko (2003), Russian NHL hockey player, hanging[553][554]
  • David Lytton (2015), a formerly unidentified British man found on Saddleworth Moor, strychnine[555]

M[edit]

  • Billy Mackenzie (1997), Scottish vocalist for the band The Associates, drug overdose[556][557]
  • Naevius Sutorius Macro (38 AD), Roman prefect of the Praetorian Guard[558]
  • Magnentius (353 AD), Roman usurper[260]
  • Maurice Magnus (1920), American memoirist[559]
  • Mago (344 BC), Carthaginian admiral and general[560]
  • Bhaiyyu Maharaj (2018), Indian spiritual guru, gunshot[561]
  • George W. Maher (1926), American architect[562][563][564]
  • Joe Maini (1964), American jazz alto saxophonist, Russian Roulette[565]
  • Philipp Mainländer (1876), German poet and philosopher, hanged himself using a pile of copies of The Philosophy of Redemption as platform[566]
  • Donald R. Manes (1986), American politician, stab wound to the chest[567]
  • Mădălina Manole (2010), Romanian pop singer, pesticide poisoning[568]
  • Michael Mantenuto (2017), American actor and ice hockey player, best known for his performance as Jack O'Callahan in the 2004 biopic Miracle, gunshot[569]
  • Richard Manuel (1986), Canadian pianist and lead singer for The Band, hanging[570]
  • Titus Clodius Eprius Marcellus (79 AD), Roman consul and senator, slit his throat with a razor[571]
  • Simone Mareuil (1954), French actress, self-immolation[572]
  • Michael Marin (2012), American businessman, cyanide pill[573]
  • Andrew Martinez (2006), American nudism activist who became known on the University of California, Berkeley campus as the 'Naked Guy', suffocation[574]
  • David Edward Maust (2006), American serial killer, hanging[575]
  • Maximian (310 AD), Roman emperor[576]
  • Vladimir Mayakovsky (1930), Russian and Soviet poet, gunshot[577]
  • Jacques Mayol (2001), French free diver and subject of the movie The Big Blue, hanging[472]
  • Allyson McConnell (2013), Australian-Canadian woman who killed her two children,[578] jumped off a bridge while in Australia[579]
  • Kid McCoy (1940), American world champion boxer, overdose of sleeping pills[580]
  • Mindy McCready (2013), American country music singer, gunshot[581][582]
  • Evelyn McHale (1947), American bookkeeper, subject of an iconic photograph showing her body after she jumped from an observation platform of the Empire State Building[583]
  • Tom McHale (1983), American novelist[584]
  • Kenny McKinley (2010), American football player, gunshot[585]
  • Robert McLane (1904), American politician, mayor of Baltimore, gunshot[586]
  • John B. McLemore (2015), American horologist and subject of the podcast S-Town, ingested potassium cyanide[587]
  • Maggie McNamara (1978), American actress, drug overdose[588][589]
  • Alexander McQueen (2010), British fashion designer and couturier, hanging[590][591]
  • Charles B. McVay III (1968), American naval officer, captain of the USS Indianapolis, gunshot to the head[592]
  • Joe Meek (1967), English record producer, gunshot[593]
  • Megabocchus (53 BC), Roman cavalryman and friend of Publius Licinius Crassus[193]
  • Megan Meier (2006), American high school student and victim of bullying, hanging[594]
  • Ulrike Meinhof (1976), German RAF terrorist, hanging[595]
  • David Meirhofer (1974), American serial killer, hanging[596]
  • Adolf Merckle (2009), German entrepreneur and billionaire, suicide by train[597]
  • Lucius Cornelius Merula (87 BC), Roman politician, consul and high priest, cut his veins[598]
  • Jill Messick (2018), American film producer,[599][600] method not disclosed[601]
  • Maningning Miclat (2000), Filipino poet and painter, jumped from the seventh floor of a building[602]
  • Walter M. Miller, Jr. (1996), American writer, gunshot[603][604]
  • Mary Millington (1979), English model and softcore pornographic actress, overdose of clomipramine, paracetamol and alcohol[605]
  • Minamoto no Yorimasa (1180), Japanese poet, general and politician, ritual seppuku disembowelment[606]
  • Mingsioi (1866), Chinese general, explosion[607]
  • Miroslava (1955), Czech-born Mexican actress, overdose of sleeping pills[608]
  • Dave Mirra (2016), American BMX rider who later competed in rallycross racing, gunshot[609]
  • Yukio Mishima (1970), Japanese author, poet, playwright, film director and activist, stabbed in Japanese ritual suicide[610]
  • Mithridates VI (63 BC), King of Pontus, ordered an officer to stab him[611]
  • Molon (220 BC), Seleucidsatrap of Media[24]
  • Antonin Moine (1849), French sculptor, gunshot[612]
  • Mario Monicelli (2010), Italian film director, jumped out of a hospital window[613][614][615]
  • Marilyn Monroe (1962), American film actress, barbiturate overdose[616]
  • Haoui Montaug (1991), American nightclub doorman and cabaret promoter, secobarbital overdose[617][618]
  • Henry de Montherlant (1972), French writer, gunshot in the throat[619]
  • Donnie Moore (1989), American baseball player, gunshot after shooting his wife[620]
  • Masakatsu Morita (1970), Japanese political activist, stabbed in Japanese ritual suicide[621][622]
  • A. R. Morlan (2016), American author[623]
  • Jason Moss (2006), American attorney and author of The Last Victim, gunshot[624]
  • Uwe Mundlos (2011), German National Socialist Underground terrorist, gunshot[625]
  • Ona Munson (1955), American actress, barbiturate overdose[626]
  • David Munrow (1976) English music historian, hanging[627][628]
  • Francine Mussey (1933), French actress, ingestion of poison[629]

N[edit]

  • Chūichi Nagumo (1944), Japanese admiral, gunshot[630]
  • Mirosław Nahacz (2007), Polish novelist and screenwriter, hanging[631]
  • Nakano Seigō (1943), Japanese fascist political leader and journalist, disembowelment[632]
  • Vladimir Nalivkin (1918), Russian scientist, politician, diplomat,[633] gunshot[citation needed]
  • Scott Nearing (1983), American political activist and conservationist, by self-starvation[634]
  • Nekojiru (1998), Japanese manga artist, hanging[635]
  • Nero (68 AD), Roman emperor, ordered his secretary to kill him[636]
  • Marcus Cocceius Nerva (33 AD), Roman jurist, official and confidant of Tiberius, starvation[637]
  • Klara Dan von Neumann (1963), Hungarian-American computer programmer, drowning[638]
  • Terry Newton (2010), English rugby league player, hanging[639][640]
  • Tom Nicon (2010), French model, jumped out of apartment window[641]
  • Frank Nitti (1943), American gangster in charge of Al Capone's strong-arm and 'muscle' operations, and later the front-man for Capone's crime syndicate, gunshot to the head[642]
  • Jon Nödtveidt (2006), Swedish guitarist for the black metal band Dissection, gunshot[643]
  • Mita Noor (2013), Bangladeshi actress, hanging[644]
  • Christine Norman, (1930), American stage actress, jump from building[645]
  • Hisashi Nozawa (2004), Japanese writer, hanging[646]

Badia Big Picture Serial Killers

O[edit]

  • John O'Brien (1994), American novelist, best known for his novel, Leaving Las Vegas, gunshot to the head[647]
  • Sean O'Haire (2014), American former WWE wrestler and MMA fighter, hanging[648]
  • Phil Ochs (1976), American singer-songwriter, hanging[649]
  • Oda Nobunaga (1582), Japanese daimyō and general, ritual seppuku disembowelment[650]
  • Ogawa Kiyoshi (1945), Japanese kamikaze pilot[651]
  • Aleksandr Dmitrievich Ogorodnik (1977), Soviet diplomat and spy for the CIA, cyanide capsule[652]
  • Per 'Dead' Ohlin (1991), Swedish vocalist for the Norwegian black metal band Mayhem, gunshot to the head[653][654][655]
  • Yukiko Okada (1986), Japanese singer, jumped out of window[656]
  • Lembit Oll (1999), Estonian chess Grandmaster, jumped out of window[657]
  • Ambrose Olsen (2010), American model, hanging[658]
  • Sergo Ordzhonikidze (1937) Soviet Bolshevik leader, member of the CPSU Politburo, the head of the Supreme Soviet of the National Economy and close associate of Joseph Stalin, gunshot.[659]
  • Otho (69 AD), Roman Emperor, stabbed himself[660]
  • Othryades (546 BC), Spartan hoplite, sole survivor of the Battle of the 300 Champions[661]
  • Ōuchi Yoshitaka (1551), Japanese daimyō and general, ritual seppuku disembowelment[662]

P[edit]

  • Stephen Paddock (2017), American perpetrator of the 2017 Las Vegas shooting, gunshot[663]
  • Caecina Paetus (42 AD), Roman alleged conspirator against Emperor Claudius, stabbed himself[61]
  • Tommy Page (2017), American singer songwriter[664]
  • Jan Palach (1969), Czech student, self-immolation[665]
  • Brodie Panlock (2006), Australian bullying victim, jumped from the top of a multilevel carpark in Hawthorn[666]
  • Park Yong-ha (2010), South Korean actor and singer, hanging[667]
  • Violeta Parra (1967), Chilean composer, songwriter, folklorist, ethno-musicologist and visual artist, gunshot[668][669]
  • Christine Pascal (1996), French actress, writer and director, jumped out of window[670][671]
  • Dušan Pašek (1998), Slovak ice hockey player, gunshot[672]
  • Cesare Pavese (1950), Italian author, overdose of barbiturates[673]
  • Pina Pellicer (1964), Mexican actress, overdose of sleeping pills[674]
  • Peregrinus Proteus (165 AD), Greekearly Christianconvert and later Cynic philosopher from Mysia, immolated himself on a funeral pyre during the Olympic Games[675]
  • Jeret 'Speedy' Peterson (2011), American skier, Olympic medalist, gunshot[676]
  • Petronius (66 AD), Roman senator, consul, courtier and novelist, opening his veins[677]
  • Phasael (40 BC), prince from the Herodian Dynasty of Judea and governor of Jerusalem, hit his head against a great stone[678]
  • Phila (287 BC), Macedonian noblewoman, daughter and adviser of Antipater, poison[679]
  • Philistus (356 BC), Greek historian and naval commander[680]
  • Justin Pierce (2000), English-born American actor and skateboarder known for his role in the 1995 drama Kids, hanging[681][682]
  • Rosamond Pinchot (1938), American actress and socialite, carbon monoxide poisoning[683]
  • H. Beam Piper (1964), American science fiction author, gunshot[684][685]
  • Gaius Calpurnius Piso (65 AD), Roman senator, orator, advocate and leading member of the Pisonian conspiracy, slit his wrists[686]
  • Gnaeus Calpurnius Piso (20 AD), Roman statesman and consul, cut his throat[687]
  • Alejandra Pizarnik (1972), Argentine poet, secobarbital overdose[688]
  • Sylvia Plath (1963), American poet, novelist, children's author, gassing herself in her kitchen[689]
  • Dana Plato (1999), American child actress, notable for the TV series Diff'rent Strokes, overdose of carisoprodol and hydrocodone[690] Plato's son, Tyler Lambert, killed himself on May 6, 2010, almost 11 years to the day after Plato's death, via gunshot wound to the head[691]
  • Edward Platt (1974), American actor, notable for his role on the TV series Get Smart[692]
  • E. O. Plauen (1944), German cartoonist, hanging with a towel[693]
  • Porcia (42 BC), Roman noblewoman, wife of Marcus Junius Brutus, swallowing burning coal[694] or carbon monoxide poisoning.[695]
  • Poenius Postumus (61 AD), Roman praefectus castrorum of the LegionII Augusta, fell upon his sword[696]
  • Randy Potter (2017), American former missing person, gunshot[697]
  • Jan Potocki (1815), Polish nobleman, gunshot[698]
  • Josh Powell (2012), American main suspect in the disappearance of his wife Susan Powell, blew up his house with him and his children inside[699]
  • Slobodan Praljak (2017), Bosnian Croat director, general and war criminal, potassium cyanide[700]
  • George R. Price (1975), American scientist, cutting an artery[701]
  • Phoebe Prince (2010), American high school student who was bullied at school and online, hanging[702]
  • Freddie Prinze (1977), American stand-up comedian and actor, gunshot to the head[703]
  • Ptolemy (309 BC), Macedonian general, hemlock poisoning[704]
  • Ptolemy of Cyprus (58 BC), King of Cyprus and member of the Ptolemaic dynasty, poison[705]

Q[edit]

  • Qiao Renliang (2016), Chinese singer and actor, slit wrist[706]
  • Qu Yuan (278 BC), Chinese poet and minister, drowning[707][708]
  • Henry Quastler (1963), Austrian physician and radiologist, overdosed on pills[709]
  • Quintillus (270 AD), Roman emperor, opening his veins[710]
  • Horacio Quiroga (1937), Uruguayan playwright, poet, and short story writer, drank a glass of cyanide[711]

R[edit]

  • Władysław Raginis (1939), Polish military commander, throwing himself on a grenade[712]
  • Otto Rahn (1939), German medievalist, Ariosophist and Obersturmführer of the Schutzstaffel, freezing[713]
  • Jason Raize (2004), American actor, singer and former Goodwill Ambassador for the United Nations Environment Programme, hanging[714]
  • František Rajtoral (2017), Czech soccer player, hanging[715]
  • Anil Ramdas (2012), Dutch writer and journalist, method undisclosed[716]
  • Nicola Ann Raphael (2001), Scottish bullied student, overdose of dextropropoxyphene[717]
  • David Rappaport (1990), English actor, known for the film Time Bandits, gunshot[718]
  • Jan-Carl Raspe (1977), German RAF terrorist, gunshot[74][719][720][721]
  • Geli Raubal (1931), niece of Adolf Hitler, gunshot[722]
  • Margaret Mary Ray (1998), American stalker, hit by a train[723]
  • Roy Raymond (1993), American founder of Victoria's Secret, jumped off the Golden Gate Bridge[724][725]
  • Liam Rector (2007), American poet and educator, gunshot[726][727]
  • Wilhelm Rediess (1945), Nazi SS and Police Leader in Norway, gunshot[728]
  • Terry Reeves (2005), district attorney for Winn Parish, Louisiana, gunshot[729]
  • David Reimer (2004), Canadian man who after a botched circumcision in infancy, was unsuccessfully reassigned as a girl until he learned the truth at age 13, gunshot[730]
  • Angelo Reyes (2011), Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, gunshot[731]
  • Thomas C. Reynolds (1887), Confederate governor of Missouri, jumping from the third floor into the freight elevator shaft of the Custom House in St. Louis.[732]
  • John Rheinecker (2017) American Major League Baseball pitcher, hanging[733]
  • Rikyū (1591), Japanese tea master and confidant of Toyotomi Hideyoshi, ritual seppuku disembowelment[734]
  • Al Rio (2012), Brazilian comics artist, and animation director, hanging[735]
  • Adele Ritchie, (1930) American actress, gunshot to the throat, after murdering a rival woman over the affections with whom they were both involved[736]
  • Dale Roberts (2010), English football, hanging[737]
  • Rachel Roberts (1980), Welsh actress, barbiturate and alcohol overdose and consumption of lye or alkali[738]
  • Charles Rocket (2005), American actor, cut throat[739]
  • Jamey Rodemeyer (2011), American bullied blogger and high school student, hanging[740]
  • Elliot Rodger (2014), American spree killer who perpetrated the 2014 Isla Vista killings, gunshot to the head[741]
  • Roh Moo-hyun (2009), ninthPresident of the Republic of Korea, jump from a cliff[742]
  • Erwin Rommel (1944), German general and military theorist, cyanide poisoning[743][744][745]
  • Jodon F. Romero (2012), American criminal whose suicide was broadcast on national television following a car chase in Arizona, gunshot[746]
  • Edgar Rosenberg (1987), American film and television producer and husband of Joan Rivers, diazepam overdose[747]
  • Mark Rothko (1970), American abstract expressionist painter, slit his arms[748]
  • Conrad Roy (2014), American marine salvage captain, carbon monoxide poisoning[749]
  • Ruan Lingyu (1935), Chinese actress, barbiturate overdose[750]
  • Rudolf, Crown Prince of Austria (1889), son of Emperor Franz Joseph I, gunshot during the Mayerling incident[751]
  • Lori Erica Ruff (2010), American unidentified woman who had assumed the given name, gunshot[752]
  • Quintus Corellius Rufus (before 113 AD), Roman senator, consul, confidant and teacher of Pliny the Younger, refusing food and treatment for his illnesses[753]
  • Michael Ruppert (2014), American political activist, gunshot[754]
  • Stevie Ryan (2017), American actress and comedian, hanging[755]
  • Rick Rypien (2011), Canadian professional ice hockey player[756]

S[edit]

Statue of Seneca the Younger in Córdoba, Spain
  • El Hedi ben Salem (1977), Moroccan actor, hanging[757][758][759][760][761][762]
  • Mark Salling (2018), American actor, hanging[763]
  • Johanna Sällström (2007), Swedish actress[764]
  • Alexander Samsonov (1914), Russian cavalry officer and general, gunshot[765][766]
  • George Sanders (1972), Russian-born English actor, singer, composer and author, overdose[767]
  • Sanmao (1991), Taiwanese writer and translator, hanged with silk stockings[768]
  • Mónica Santa María (1994), Peruvian model and TV presenter, gunshot[769]
  • Nick Santino (2012), American soap opera actor, overdosed on pills[770]
  • Alberto Santos-Dumont (1932), Brazilian aviation pioneer, hanging.[771]
  • Carl Sargeant (2017), Welsh politician and former member of the Welsh Government, hanging[772]
  • Sam Sarpong (2015), British-born American model and actor, jump from a bridge[773]
  • Satanta (1878), Kiowa war chief, jumping out a window[774]
  • Drake Sather (2004), American screenwriter, gunshot[775]
  • Saul (1012 BC), Jewish king, pierced himself with his sword[776]
  • Savannah (1994), American adult film actress, gunshot to the head[518]
  • Marcus Ostorius Scapula (65 AD), Roman senator, consul and military tribune, severed his veins and stabbed himself with help from a slave[777]
  • Mamercus Aemilius Scaurus (34 AD), Roman rhetorician, poet, senator and consul[778]
  • Sybille Schmitz (1955), German actress, overdose[779]
  • Robert Schommer (2001), American astronomer[780]
  • Conrad Schumann (1998), German Democratic Republic soldier who famously defected to West Germany during the construction of the Berlin Wall, hanging[781]
  • Tom Schweich (2015), American politician, gunshot[782]
  • Metellus Scipio (46 BC), Roman consul and military commander, stabbing himself[783]
  • L'Wren Scott (2014), American fashion designer, hanging[784]
  • Tony Scott (2012), English film director of films such as Top Gun, jumped off the Vincent Thomas Bridge in Los Angeles[785]
  • Junior Seau (2012), American football All-Pro player, gunshot to the chest[786][787]
  • Sonia Sekula (1963), Swiss painter, hanging[788]
  • Seneca the Younger (65 AD), Roman philosopher, cut his veins[789][790]
  • Rezső Seress (1968), Hungarian pianist and composer, choked himself with a wire[791]
  • Marcus Sedatius Severianus (161 or 162), Roman senator, consul and general, starved himself[792]
  • Sextia (34 AD), Roman wife of Mamercus Aemilius Scaurus[778]
  • Anne Sexton (1974), American poet, carbon monoxide poisoning[793]
  • Frances Ford Seymour (1950) Canadian-American socialite, cut her throat[794][795]
  • Oksana Shachko (2018), Ukrainian artist and activist, cofounder of FEMEN,[796] hanging[797]
  • Alice Bradley Sheldon (James Tiptree, Jr.) (1987), American writer, gunshot[798]
  • Harold Shipman (2004), English family doctor and serial killer, hanging[799]
  • Shoba (1980), Indian actress, hanging[800][801][802]
  • Manuel Fernández Silvestre (1921), Spanish general, gunshot[803]
  • Tiffany Simelane (2009), Swazi beauty queen, ingestion of weevil tablet[804][805]
  • Per Sivle (1904), Norwegian poet and novelist, gunshot[806]
  • Mykola Skrypnyk (1933), Ukrainian Bolshevik leader, gunshot[807]
  • Austra Skujiņa (1932) Latvian poet, jump from a bridge.[808]
  • Walter Slezak (1983), Austrian actor, gunshot[809]
  • Everett Sloane (1965), American actor, drug overdose[810]
  • Smiley Culture (2011), English reggae singer and DJ, stabbing[811]
  • Someshvara I (1068), King of Western Chalukya, drowning in the Tungabhadra river[812]
  • David Sonboly (2016), Iranian-German perpetrator of the 2016 Munich shooting, gunshot[813]
  • Barea Soranus (66 AD), Roman consul, senator and governor of Asia[814]
  • Kate Spade (2018), American fashion designer, hanging[815]
  • Gary Speed (2011), Welsh footballer and manager, hanging[816]
  • Mark Speight (2008), English television presenter, hanging[817]
  • Sporus (69 AD), Roman boy whom the emperor Nero had castrated and married, stabbed his throat with a dagger[818]
  • Andrew Joseph Stack III (2010), American embedded software consultant, plane crash[819]
  • Frank Stanford (1978), American poet, gunshot[820]
  • Scott Stearney (2018), United States Navy admiral, gunshot[821]
  • Costică Ștefănescu (2013), Romanian footballer and manager, jumping from the fifth floor of the Military Hospital in Bucharest.[822]
  • Jean Stein (2017), American author, jump from a New York City high rise[823][824]
  • Jon Paul Steuer (2018), American actor and musician, known as the first actor to play the Star Trek character Alexander Rozhenko, gunshot[825][826][827]
  • Brody Stevens (2019), American stand-up comedian and actor, hanging[828]
  • Inger Stevens (1970), Swedish-American actress, barbiturate overdose[829]
  • John Stevens (1923), English cricketer, jumped in front of moving train[830]
  • Lyle Stevik (2001), formerly[831] unidentified man using the alias name taken from a book by Joyce Carol Oates, hanging[832]
  • Adalbert Stifter (1868), Austrian writer, cut neck with a razor[833]
  • Pringle Stokes (1828), British naval officer and captain of HMS Beagle during her first voyage, gunshot[834]
  • Alfonsina Storni (1938), Argentine poet, drowning[835]
  • David Stove (1994), Australian philosopher, hanging[836]
  • Otto Strandman (1941), Estonian politician, gunshot[837][838]
  • Ludwig Stumpfegger (1945), German doctor and Adolf Hitler's personal surgeon, cyanide poisoning[133]
  • Sue Harukata (1555), daimyo of Ouchi clan, disembowelment[839]
  • Sungdare Sherpa (1989), Nepalese Sherpa mountaineer[840]
  • David Edward Sutch (1999), English musician also known as Screaming Lord Sutch, hanging[841]
  • Adam Svoboda (2019), Czech ice hockey goaltender and coach,[842] hanging[843]
  • Aaron Swartz (2013), American computer programmer, writer, political organizer and activist, hanging[844]
  • Sawyer Sweeten (2015), American former child actor (Everybody Loves Raymond), gunshot[845]

T[edit]

  • Sinedu Tadesse (1995), Ethiopian murderer, hanging[846]
  • Taira no Tokiko (1185), Japanese Buddhist nun, wife of the chief of the Taira, grandmother of Emperor Antoku, drowning[847]
  • Taira no Tomomori (1185), Japanese general, admiral and heir apparent of the Taira, drowning[848]
  • Yutaka Taniyama (1958), Japanese mathematician[849]
  • Jacque Alexander Tardy (1827), Scottish-French pirate, slit his own throat[850]
  • Jean Tatlock (1944), American physician, psychiatrist, communist activist, mistress of Robert Oppenheimer, drowning in a bathtub[851]
  • Pál Teleki (1941), Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Hungary, gunshot[852]
  • Lou Tellegen (1934), Dutch actor, director and screenwriter, stabbed himself in the chest with a pair of scissors[853]
  • Josef Terboven (1945), Nazi Reichskommissar for Norway, detonating 50 kg of dynamite[854]
  • Tewodros II (1868), Emperor of Ethiopia, gunshot[855]
  • Mike Thalassitis (2019), English-Cypriot footballer and television personality, hanging[856]
  • Jack Thayer (1945), Titanic survivor, cut his wrists[857]
  • Samuel J. F. Thayer (1893), American architect, gunshot[858]
  • Thích Quảng Đức (1963), Vietnamese Mahayana Buddhistmonk, self-immolation[859]
  • Nicky Thomas (1990), Jamaican reggae singer[860]
  • Hunter S. Thompson (2005), gonzo journalist, author of Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, gunshot[861]
  • Terry Thompson (2011), zookeeper and owner of Muskingum County Animal Farm, gunshot[862]
  • Ofonius Tigellinus (69 AD), Roman prefect of the Praetorian Guard, cut his throat with a razor[863]
  • Li Tobler (1975), Swiss actress, model and life partner of artist H. R. Giger, gunshot[864]
  • Amanda Todd (2012), Canadian high school student who was bullied at school and online, hanging[865]
  • Ernst Toller (1939), German playwright, socialist revolutionary and politician, hanging[866]
  • Radka Toneff (1982), Norwegian jazz singer, overdose of sleeping pills[867]
  • John Kennedy Toole (1969), American novelist known for A Confederacy of Dunces, carbon monoxide poisoning[868]
  • Dudu Topaz (2009), Israeli TV personality and entertainer, hanging while incarcerated in jail[869]
  • Silvanus Trevail (1903), English architect, gunshot[870]
  • Dick Trickle (2013), American NASCAR driver, gunshot[871][872]
  • Sunil Tripathi (2013), American student and former suspect in the Boston Marathon bombing[873]
  • Verne Troyer (2018), American actor known for his role as Mini-Me in the Austin Powers films, alcohol intoxication[874]
  • Tron (1998), German hacker, hanging[875]
  • Butch Trucks (2017), American drummer for the Allman Brothers Band, gunshot[876]
  • Yordan Tsitsonkov (1926), Macedonian Bulgarian assassin, hanged himself[877]
  • Tsuburaya Kōkichi (1968), Japanese marathoner, cut his wrists[878]
  • Marina Tsvetaeva (1941), Russian poet, hanging[879]
  • Kurt Tucholsky (1935), German journalist, satirist and writer, overdose of sleeping pills[880]
  • Alan Turing (1954), English mathematician, logician, cryptanalyst and computer scientist, eating an apple laced with cyanide[881]
  • Jim Tyrer (1980), American football player, gunshot[882]

U[edit]

  • Ernst Udet (1941), German pilot and air force general, gunshot to the head[883]
  • Miyu Uehara (2011), Japanese model, hanging[884][885]
  • Ugaki Matome (1945), Japanese admiral, diarist and the last kamikaze pilot, who flew his attack after Japan already surrendered[886]
  • Jack Unterweger (1994), Austrian serial killer, hanging[887]
  • Andrew Urdiales (2018), American serial killer[888]
  • Mitsuru Ushijima (1945), Japanese general, began to commit ritual seppuku disembowelment just before one of his adjutants decapitated him with a saber[889][890]

V[edit]

  • Edwin Valero (2010), Venezuelan boxer, hanging[891]
  • Kelly Jean Van Dyke (1991), American adult film actress, hanging[892]
  • Vincent van Gogh (1890), Dutch Post-Impressionist painter, gunshot[893]
  • Johannes Vares (1946), Estonian poet, doctor and politician, gunshot[894]
  • Getúlio Vargas (1954), two-time President of Brazil, gunshot[895]
  • Publius Quinctilius Varus (9 AD), Roman general, fell upon his sword[896]
  • Minnie Vautrin (1940), American missionary in China, stove gas inhalation[897][898]
  • Lupe Vélez (1944), Mexican actress, overdose of secobarbital[899]
  • Dominique Venner (2013), French author, gunshot to the head in the Notre Dame de Paris[900]
  • John Verrept (1912), Belgian aviator, first person to commit suicide using an airplane[901]
  • Marcus Julius Vestinus Atticus (65 AD), Roman senator and consul, opening his veins[902]
  • Titus Vettius (104 BC), Roman equestrian and leader of a slave revolt[903]
  • Lucius Antistius Vetus (65 AD), Roman senator, consul and governor of Germania Superior[904]
  • Juhan Viiding (1995), Estonian poet and actor, cut his veins[905][906]
  • Hervé Villechaize (1993), French actor known for his work on the television series Fantasy Island, gunshot[907]
  • Lucius Annius Vinicianus (42 AD), Roman senator, plotter of the assassination of Caligula, rebel against Claudius[908]
  • Frank Vitkovic (1987), Australian mass murderer who perpetrated the Queen Street massacre, jumped from the window of a Queen Street, Melbourne building after going on a spree killing there[909]
  • Ned Vizzini (2013), American author of young adult fiction, such as the novel, It's Kind of a Funny Story, leapt from a building[910]
  • Chris Von Erich (1991), born Chris Barton Adkisson, professional wrestler, gunshot to the head[911]
  • Kerry Von Erich (1993), born Kerry Gene Adkisson, professional wrestler, gunshot to the chest[911]
  • Mike Von Erich (1987), born Michael Brett Adkisson, professional wrestler, overdose of Placidyl and alcohol[911]

W[edit]

  • Bradford Thomas Wagner (2005), American real estate agent, gay pornographic film actor and suspected serial rapist, hanging himself with a bed sheet[912]
  • Gustav Wagner (1980), Austrian SS-Oberscharführer and deputy commander of Sobibor extermination camp, knife wound[913]
  • David Wallace (1904), father of United States First Lady Bess Truman, gunshot to the head[914]
  • David Foster Wallace (2008), American author, hanging[915]
  • Stephen Ward (1963), English osteopathic physician and one of the central figures in the 1963 Profumo affair, overdose of sleeping pills[916]
  • John William Warde (1938), Jumped off of a ledge on the 17th floor of Manahattan's Gotham Hotel[917][918]
  • Nick Wasicsko (1993), former Mayor of Yonkers, New York (1987–89), gunshot to the head[919]
  • Andre Waters (2006), former NFL safety, gunshot to the head[920]
  • Gary Webb (2004), American investigative reporter, gunshot to the head[921]
  • Jaromir Weinberger (1967), Czech/American composer, lethal overdose of sedative[922][923]
  • Otto Weininger (1903), Austrian philosopher, gunshot[924]
  • Jeff Weise (2005), American high school student who, after years of bullying, committed the Red Lake shootings and then committed suicide, gunshot[925]
  • Dorrit Weixler (1916), German film actress, hanging[926]
  • Bob Welch (2012), American rock singer-songwriter and former member of Fleetwood Mac, gunshot to the chest[927]
  • Dawn-Marie Wesley (2000), Canadian bullied high school student, hanging[928]
  • Fred West (1995), English serial killer, hanging[929]
  • Assia Wevill (1969), German born lover of English poet Ted Hughes, murder-suicide of her daughter with Hughes, gas[930]
  • James Whale (1957), English director, drowning[931]
  • Dan White (1985), San Francisco politician who assassinated Mayor George Moscone and Harvey Milk, carbon monoxide poisoning[932]
  • Kurt-Werner Wichmann (1993), German suspected serial killer and main suspect in the Göhrde murders, hanging[933]
  • Robin Williams (2014), American comedian and actor, hanging[934][935][936]
  • Rozz Williams (1998), American musician, lead vocalist for Christian Death, hanging[937]
  • Wendy O. Williams (1998), American singer-songwriter for the Plasmatics, gunshot[938]
  • Tom Wills (1880), Australian cricketer and pioneer of Australian rules football, stabbed himself in the heart with a pair of scissors[939]
  • Christopher Wilmarth (1987), American sculptor, hanging[940]
  • Jack Wishna (2012), president and CEO of CPAmerica, carbon monoxide poisoning[941]
  • Tobi Wong (2010), Canadian born designer, and conceptual artist, overdosed on pills[942]
  • Seung-yeon Woo (2009), South Korean actress and model, hanging[943]
  • Wally Wood (1981), American comic book writer and artist, gunshot[944]
  • Francesca Woodman (1981), American photographer, jumped from a window[945]
  • Virginia Woolf (1941), English author, essayist, and publisher, drowning[946]
  • Stephen Wooldridge (2017), Australian cyclist[947]
  • Tera Wray (2016), American pornographic actress[948]
  • Marcin Wrona (2015), Polish film director, hanging[949]
  • Wu Zixu (484 BC), Chinese general and politician of the Wu, stabbed himself with a sword[950]

Y[edit]

  • Yakushiji Motoichi (1504), Japanese samurai and deputy governor, ritual seppuku disembowelment[951]
  • Yamaguchi Otoya (1960), Japanese nationalist who assassinated Asanuma Inejirō, hanging[952]
  • Yang Yang (2019), Chinese tenor, jump from the 26th floor of his apartment building[953][954]
  • Yasmine (2009), Belgian singer, hanging[955]
  • Seizō Yasunori (1945), Japanese kamikaze pilot, flew his plane into the USS Bunker Hill[956]
  • Kelly Yeomans (1997), English bullied high school student, dextropropoxyphene overdose[957]
  • Sergei Yesenin (1925), Russian and Soviet poet, hanging[958]
  • Francis Parker Yockey (1960), American neo-Fascist political philosopher and polemicist also known under his pen name Ulick Varange, cyanide poisoning[959]
  • Yoon Ki-won (2011), South Korean footballgoalkeeper, charcoal-burning suicide[960]
  • Atsumi Yoshikubo (2014), Japanese psychiatrist, intentionally getting lost in the Canadian Taiga[961][962]
  • Faron Young (1996), American country music singer, gunshot[963]
  • Gig Young (1978), American actor, gunshot after fatally shooting his wife[964]
  • Lee Thompson Young (2013), American actor, gunshot[965]
  • Fakhra Younus (2012), Pakistani dancer, jumped from building[966]

Z[edit]

  • Bill Zeller (2011), American computer programmer and developer of myTunes, oxygen deprivation due to hanging led to brain damage, taken off life support[967]
  • Hai Zi (1989), Chinese poet,[968][969] lying down on railroad tracks[970]
  • Marion Zioncheck (1936), American congressman from Washington's1st district, jumped from his office window[971]
  • Joost Zwagerman (2015), Dutch writer, poet, and essayist[972][973][974]
  • Stefan Zweig (1942), Austrian novelist, playwright, journalist and biographer, barbiturate overdose[975][976]

Possible suicides[edit]

  • Clodius Albinus (197), Roman emperor, killed himself after a defeat in battle (possibly executed by Septimius Severus)[977]
  • Salvador Allende (1973), president of Chile, gunshot[978][979][980][981]
  • Gameel Al-Batouti (1999) Egyptian pilot for EgyptAir and former officer for the Egyptian Air Force who was suspected of causing the crash of EgyptAir Flight 990, plane crash[982]
  • Scotty Beckett (1968), American actor, an overdose of barbiturates or alcohol[983][984]
  • Wade Belak (2011), Canadian ice hockey player. Belak was found dead in his home in Toronto, and the police investigated his death as a suicide.[985] Later, hockey analyst and former player P.J. Stock alleged that Belak's death was not a suicide, but accidental.[986] Although Stock later stepped back from his comments, members of Belak's family also believe his death was accidental.[987]
  • Le Corbusier (1965), one of the pioneers of modern architecture. Found dead in the Mediterranean Sea following a swim.[988]
  • Albert Dekker (1968), actor best remembered for the sci-fi film Dr. Cyclops. Dekker's private life revealed that he engaged in autoerotic asphyxiation, that is achieving a sexual gratification by inflicting pain on one's self to a point near death then relinquishing.[989]
  • James Forrestal (1949), First U.S. Secretary of Defense, Secretary of the Navy, fell from 16th floor of building (disputed suicide)[990]
  • Rick Genest (2018), performance artist, actor and model, fall from a balcony[991][992]
  • Kurt Gödel (1978), Austrian-American logician, mathematician and philosopher, died of starvation as a result of refusing to eat anything not prepared by his wife, out of fear of being poisoned. It is unclear whether this is a suicide.[993]
  • Hannibal (183–181 BC),[994] Carthaginian military commander and tactician, possibly poison[995][996]
  • Jim Jones (1978), American cult leader and founder of Peoples Temple, gunshot[997]
  • Sung-jae Kim (1995), singer and former member of Deux, stabbed in the arm 28 times with a syringe containing animal anisthetic. It is unknown if it was a murder or suicide[998]
  • David Koresh (1993), American leader of the Branch Davidians, gunshot[999]
  • Jules Lequier (1862), French philosopher, probably swam voluntarily out into the ocean[1,000]
  • Primo Levi (1987), Italian chemist, writer and Holocaust survivor, jumped from his third-story apartment[1,001]
  • Meriwether Lewis (1809), U.S. explorer and partner of William Clark, gunshot; there is some debate as to whether his death was a suicide[1,002]
  • Lucretius (c. 55 BC), Roman poet and Epicurean philosopher. The only source of his suicide is Jerome who is considered by scholars as unreliable and hostile towards Lucretius[1,003]
  • Orgetorix (60 BC), Gallic member of the ruling class of the Helvetii and conspirator. It is uncertain if he committed suicide or was executed[1,004]
  • Freddie Prinze (1977), American actor and comedian, gunshot while under the influence of methaqualone and alcohol. Initially ruled suicide but later determined accidental[1,005][1,006]
  • Jean Seberg (1979), American actress, barbiturate overdose, probably foul play[1,007][1,008]
  • Elliott Smith (2003), American singer, songwriter and musician, stab wounds to chest. While Smith's death was originally reported as a suicide, the official autopsy report released in December 2003 left open the question of homicide[1,009][1,010]
  • Socrates (399 BC), Classical GreekAthenianphilosopher, credited as one of the founders of Western philosophy, drank poison, probably hemlock[1,011][1,012][1,013][1,014] Because Socrates was forced to poison himself to death as his sentence following his conviction for impiety and corrupting the minds of the youth of Athens, the question of whether this constitutes a genuine suicide is a subject of debate[1,015]
  • Luigi Tenco (1967), Italian singer and songwriter, gunshot to the head[1,016]
  • Sid Vicious (1979), English musician and member of the Sex Pistols, heroin overdose[1,017][1,018]

References[edit]

  1. ^Erlewine, Stephen Thomas 'Lush: Biography'. AllMusic. Retrieved May 9, 2012.
  2. ^'Art Acord Of Screen Takes Poison, Dies'. San Jose Evening News. January 5, 1930. p. 1. Retrieved May 23, 2013.
  3. ^'Art Acord Called Suicide.; Ex-Cowboy Film Star, Working at Mining in Mexico, Takes Poison'. The New York Times. The New York Times Company. January 5, 1931.
  4. ^Hills, Elijah Clarence; Morley, S. Griswold (1913). 'Notes'. Modern Spanish Lyrics. Holt. p. 312. Retrieved June 3, 2009.
  5. ^Humberto Garza (October 10, 1998). 'Los Poetas'. Retrieved November 10, 2007.
  6. ^O’Rourke, John (March 13, 2012). 'A Gilded and Heartbreaking Life - Works of Clover Adams, socialite, society hostess, photographer'. BU Today. Retrieved December 1, 2018.
  7. ^Sellers, Charles (1991). The Market Revolution: Jacksonian America, 1815-1846. Oxford University Press. p. 95. ISBN9780195089202. Retrieved December 1, 2018.
  8. ^'Congressman a Suicide After Losses at Bridge – Stocks, Too, Had Gone Against Robert Adams, Jr. – Planned End 2 Weeks Ago – Had Just Paid His Debts to Society Women – 'Bridge Whist' Should Be His Epitaph, Says a Colleague'. The New York Times. June 2, 1906. Retrieved August 30, 2009.
  9. ^Long, Colleen; Peltz, Jennifer (May 18, 2018). 'Police: Mom apparently jumps to death with 7-year-old son'. San Francisco Chronicle. Archived from the original on May 19, 2018. Retrieved May 18, 2018.
  10. ^'Former Playboy Centerfold Apparently Jumps to Death with Son'. Associated Press/Snopes.com. May 18, 2018.
  11. ^Mike Wade, Autopsy shows star was drunk at time of suicide, The Scotsman, January 26, 2002.
  12. ^Cassius Dio, Roman History, Book 63, Chapter 21, Loeb Classical Library edition (1924). University of Chicago. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  13. ^Lang, Nancy (May 23, 2014). 'Sunhee really loved Jaehwan...'Star News.
  14. ^Bae Ji-sook (September 8, 2008). 'Actor Ahn Dead in Apparent Suicide'. The Korea Times. Retrieved on September 15, 2008.
  15. ^Dillon, Michael (2017). Encyclopedia of Chinese History. Routledge. p. 331.
  16. ^Shoard, Catherine (October 6, 2015). 'Chantal Akerman, pioneering Belgian film director and theorist, dies aged 65'. The Guardian. London. Archived from the original on October 8, 2015. Retrieved October 8, 2015.
  17. ^Jackson, Robert L. (August 16, 1991). 'Friend's Suicide Saddens Retired Adm. Crowe - Military: 'We grew to be quite close,' former Joint Chiefs chairman says of Soviet Marshal Akhromeyev'. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved August 30, 2009.
  18. ^Wilson, Jamie (August 30, 1999). ''Serial killer' found hanged'. The Guardian. London. Retrieved November 16, 2013.
  19. ^Peace, David (September 8, 2007). 'Last words '. The Guardian.
  20. ^ ab'Names of hijackers'. St. Petersburg Times. September 15, 2001
  21. ^The 9/11 Commission Report. pg. 162.
  22. ^Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca historica, Book XVIII,46
  23. ^Ruggiero, Kristen (2004). 'Eliminating Threats to the State'. Modernity in the Flesh: Medicine, Law, and Society in Turn-of-the-Century Argentina. Stanford University Press. p. 165. ISBN978-0-8047-4871-1. Retrieved August 30, 2009.
  24. ^ abPolybius, Histories, 'Defeat and Death of Molon'. Perseus Digital Library, Tufts University. Retrieved September 1, 2018.
  25. ^Donnelley, Paul (2005). Fade to Black: A Book of Movie Obituaries. Omnibus Press. p. 38. ISBN978-1-84449-430-9.
  26. ^Sandner, Harold (2004). 'II.4.2 Erbprinz Alfred'. Das Haus von Sachsen-Coburg und Gotha 1826 bis 2001 (in German). Andreas, Prinz von Sachsen-Coburg und Gotha (preface). 96450 Coburg: Neue Presse GmbH. pp. 155–156. ISBN978-3-00-008525-3.
  27. ^Johnston, Maura (December 31, 2014). 'Transgender teen Leelah Alcorn: 'My death needs to mean something'. The Boston Globe.
  28. ^Badia, Erik; Hutchinson, Bill; Eby, Margeret (August 14, 2013). 'Gia Allemand dead at 29: Former 'Bachelor' contestant dies in suicide by hanging'. Daily News. New York. Retrieved August 15, 2013.
  29. ^'Stalin's women'. The Sunday Times. June 29, 2003. Archived from the original on November 21, 2003. Retrieved March 5, 2018.
  30. ^Verhovek, Sam Howe (December 15, 1993). 'PRO FOOTBALL; A Friend Dies, and Oiler Kills Himself'. The New York Times.
  31. ^Hall, Stephen S. (November 29, 1998). 'Lethal Chemistry at Harvard'. The New York Times.
  32. ^Horn, Tina (December 12, 2017). 'Death of a Porn Star'. Rolling Stone.
  33. ^'Porn star August Ames found dead in suicide after online criticism'Archived December 7, 2017, at the Wayback Machine. BNO News. December 6, 2017.
  34. ^Améry, Jean (1998). 'Afterword'. At the Mind's Limits: Contemplations by a Survivor on Auschwitz and Its Realities. Indiana Holocaust Museum Reprint Series. Translated by Stella P. Rosenfeld and Sidney Rosenfeld. Indiana University Press. p. 104. ISBN978-0-253-21173-6. Retrieved August 30, 2009.
  35. ^Plutarch, The Life of Lucullus22. 1914. University of Chicago. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  36. ^'Missing YouTuber Etika's body found'. BBC News. June 25, 2019. Retrieved June 26, 2019.
  37. ^Max Hastings (2008) Nemesis, The Battle for Japan, 1944–45, Harper Perennial p 557.
  38. ^Pacific War Research Society, Japan's Longest Day, pp. 88-89.
  39. ^New-York Tribune. Thursday, May 16, 1889, n.p.
  40. ^'Died By His Own Hand'. The New York Times. May 16, 1889
  41. ^'Forrest Anderson, Ex-Governor Of Montana, Kills Himself at 76'. The New York Times/Associated Press. July 23, 1989.
  42. ^'Andes, leading man to Marilyn Monroe, dies at 85'. USA Today. November 27, 2005.
  43. ^Orosius, Paulus (2010). Seven Books of History Against the Pagans. p. 388. ISBN9781846312397. Retrieved February 9, 2019.
  44. ^Xenophon (411 BCE - 362 BCE). Hellenica, Book 7, Chapter 4, Section 19. Carleton L. Brownson, Ed. Perseus Project. Tufts University. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  45. ^McCabe, Scott (April 15, 2012). 'Crime History: Socialite wife of Houston bookie found dead'. Washington Examiner.
  46. ^Smith, Carlton (July 15, 1999). Death in Texas: A True Story of Marriage, Money, and Murder. St. Martin's True Crime.
  47. ^Tacitus, Annals, 16.14
  48. ^ abFlorus, Epitome of Roman History, II 21
  49. ^Seneca the Younger (ca 40 AD). 'Chapter X'. Of Consolation: To Helvia. Wikisource. Retrieved April 8, 2019.
  50. ^'One year later Heaven's Gate suicides leave a faint trail'. CNN. Retrieved May 8, 2010.
  51. ^Mōri, Tsuneyuki (2004). 'Yuki wa juunanasai tokkou de shinda (Yuki died at 17 in a kamikaze attack)'. Kamikaze Images. Retrieved March 24, 2018.
  52. ^Frassetto, Michael (2013). 'Arbogast (d. 394)'. The Early Medieval World: From the Fall of Rome to the Time of Charlemagne, Volume 1: A-M. p. 62. Retrieved August 6, 2018.
  53. ^Lubow, Arthur (September 14, 2003). 'Arbus Reconsidered'. The New York Times.
  54. ^DeCarlo, Tessa (May 2004). 'A Fresh Look at Diane Arbus'.Smithsonian magazine.
  55. ^Polybius, Histories, Book 33, Chapter 5. 'Suicide of Archias'. Perseus Digital Library, Tufts University. Retrieved September 1, 2018.
  56. ^Reinaldo Arenas' Last Letter; Montclair UniversityArchived February 7, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  57. ^'José María Arguedas'. Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved August 30, 2009.
  58. ^Roberts, Randy; Olson, James Stuart (1995). 'That'll Be The Day'. John Wayne: American. Simon & Schuster. p. 412. ISBN978-0-02-923837-0. Retrieved August 30, 2009.
  59. ^'Edwin H. Armstrong, Inventor, Dies in Plunge'. The Hartford Courant. February 2, 1954. Retrieved November 21, 2008.
  60. ^'Milestones, Feb. 8, 1954'. Time. February 8, 1954. Retrieved June 21, 2008. Died. Edwin Howard Armstrong, 63, electronics genius, one of the fathers of modern radio; by his own hand (a jump from his 13th floor apartment) after writing a note to his wife which concluded: 'May God help you and have mercy on my soul'; in Manhattan. In 1913 he worked out the regenerative circuit, which outmoded crystal receiving sets with a sensitive vacuum tube system; his superheterodyne circuit, developed in 1918 while serving in France, is still the basic circuit of AM radio. In 1939, he perfected a method for eliminating static (now known as FM). A professor of electrical engineering at Columbia University for the last 20 years, the earnest, driving inventor earned millions of dollars in patent royalties, died a rich man.
  61. ^ abPliny the Younger (AD 97/107). 'Book 3: 16. To Nepos'. Letters. Translated by J.B. Firth. (1900). Attalus. Retrieved September 1, 2018.
  62. ^Ward, Lee (October 5, 2007). 'Atchison Commits Suicide'. Wizbang Blue.
  63. ^'Fed Caught In Sex Sting Found Dead In Cell'. CBS News. October 5, 2007.
  64. ^'Chapter 7'. 9/11 Commission Report. National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States. June 2004. Retrieved September 16, 2008.
  65. ^McDermott, Terry (2005). Perfect Soldiers: The 9/11 Hijackers: Who They Were, Why They Did It. HarperCollins. p. 194. ISBN978-0-06-058469-6.
  66. ^'Jokela School Shooting on 7 November 2007: Report of the Investigation Commission'(PDF). Petäjäniemi, Tuulikki (Chairman); Valonen, Kai (LL.M. Secretary, Chief Accident Investigator). Helsinki: Ministry of Justice. February 26, 2009. Retrieved May 19, 2017.CS1 maint: others (link)
  67. ^'Nine dead after Finland school shooting'. The Age. Melbourne. November 8, 2007. Retrieved November 7, 2007.
  68. ^'Avicii died by suicide, his family confirms'. April 26, 2018. Retrieved April 29, 2018.
  69. ^Meltzer, Dave (February 19, 2007). 'Former ECW champ Mike Awesome passes away'. Wrestling Observer. Archived from the original on December 24, 2007. Retrieved February 23, 2007.
  70. ^'Marion Aye'. Lord Heath. Retrieved March 10, 2018.
  71. ^Ayim, May (2007). 'The Year 1990: Homeland and Unity From an Afro-German Perspective'. In Göktürk, Deniz; Gramling, David; Kaes, Anton (eds.). Germany in Transit: Nation and Migration, 1955–2005. Weimar and Now:German Cultural Criticism. 40. University of California Press. p. 126. ISBN978-0-520-24894-6.
  72. ^Mandel, Howard (June 7, 2008). 'Albert Ayler's Fiery Sax, Now on Film'. National Public Radio. Retrieved August 30, 2009.
  73. ^''Albert Ayler' by Jeff Schwarz, Chapter 6'. Archived from the original on October 25, 2009.
  74. ^ abcAust, Stefan (2009). Baader-Meinhof: The Inside Story of the R.A.F. The Bodley Head.
  75. ^'Burt Bacharach's daughter commits suicide'. Reuters/The Washington Post. January 5, 2007
  76. ^'Burt Bacharach, Angie Dickinson's Daughter Commits Suicide'. January 8, 2007. Archived from the original on August 8, 2011. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  77. ^Hanloser, Gerhard (April 7, 2018). 'Ein Opfer der Hetze'. Junge Welt. Retrieved April 27, 2018.
  78. ^'Famed Stripper Leaps To Death'. Spartanburg Herald-Journal. September 27, 1956. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
  79. ^Sima Qian (94 BCE). Records of the Grand Historian, Chapter 73: Biographies of Bai Qi and Wang Jian
  80. ^'David Bairstow - England Cricket'. ESPN - Cricket Info. Retrieved September 5, 2014.
  81. ^'Obituaries:Robert Baker, Satirical Novelist, 50'. The New York Times. November 24, 1997. p. 7. Section B
  82. ^Maresca, Rachel (February 12, 2013). 'TV & Movies 'Storage Wars' star Mark Balelo in apparent suicide just days after arrest for drug charges: report'. Daily News (New York).
  83. ^Finn, Natalie (February 12, 2013). 'Storage Wars Death: Mark Balelo Suicide Confirmed'. E! Online.
  84. ^Silverman, Stephen M. (February 12, 2013). 'Storage Wars Star Mark Balelo Death a Suicide'. People.
  85. ^'Two Barmaids, Five Alligators, and the Butcher of Elmendorf'. Texas Monthly. July 2002.
  86. ^Collier, Simon; Sater, William F. (2004) [1996]. 'Santa Maria and Balmaceda'. A History of Chile, 1808–2002. Cambridge Latin American Studies (Second ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 156–157. ISBN978-0-521-53484-0. Retrieved August 29, 2009.
  87. ^'Lou Bandy: Entertainer'. Geschiedenis.nl. June 28, 2006. Retrieved February 18, 2012.
  88. ^'Balika Vadhu star Pratyusha Banerjee dead, here is all about the actress'. Indian Express Limited. The Indian Express. April 2, 2016.
  89. ^Michel Foucault; Herculine Barbin (1980). Herculine Barbin: Being the Recently Discovered Memoirs of a Nineteenth-century French Hermaphrodite. Pantheon Books.
  90. ^Beevor, Antony (2002). Berlin: The Downfall: 1945. Penguin Books. p. 575. ISBN9780141903026. Retrieved June 20, 2018.
  91. ^Herculine Barbin; Schultz, David E. (2007). O Fortunate Floridian: H. P. Lovecraft's Letters to R. H. Barlow. Tampa, Florida: University of Tampa Press. ISBN978-1-59732-034-4.
  92. ^Kehr, Dave (December 11, 2009). 'All-American Soviet Heroine'. The New York Times.
  93. ^Wilmington, Michael (February 6, 2004). 'Boris Barnet series reveals a neglected Russian talent'. Chicago Tribune.
  94. ^'Ralph Barton: Self-portrait'. National Portrait Gallery. Archived from the original on May 29, 2008. Retrieved January 29, 2008. from the exhibition Eye Contact: Modern American Portrait Drawings from the National Portrait Gallery.
  95. ^Dalton, Phillip; Kramer, Eric Mark (2012). Coarseness in U.S. Public Communication. Fairleigh Dickinson. p. 146. ISBN978-1611475043.
  96. ^'Simone Battle death ruled suicide'. Daily News. New York. Retrieved September 12, 2014.
  97. ^'Seven Skeletons, and a Suburb in Shock'. New York Times. Indianapolis, USA. October 16, 1996.
  98. ^'Former Enron executive's death ruled a suicide'. USA Today. January 26, 2002.
  99. ^Naughton, Russell (1999). 'Amelie 'Melli' Hedwig Beese-Boutard (1886-1925)'. Monash University.
  100. ^Schefter, Adam; Merrill, Elizabeth (December 1, 2012). 'Jovan Belcher kills girlfriend, himself'. ESPN/Associated Press.
  101. ^Pareles, Jon (September 26, 1991). 'Peter Bellamy, 47; British Folk Singer Who Wrote Opera'. The New York Times. Retrieved August 29, 2010.
  102. ^'Model Helena Belmonte, 28, Falls To her Death'. GMA News Online. 2014.
  103. ^'Filmskaparen Malik Bendjelloul har avlidit'. Svenska Dagbladet (in Swedish). May 13, 2014. Retrieved May 13, 2014.
  104. ^Lindberg, Johan; Nyman, Emelie (May 13, 2014). 'Filmskaparen Malik Bendjelloul har avlidit'. Svenska Dagbladet (in Swedish). Retrieved May 13, 2014.
  105. ^Bruce Weber (May 13, 2014). 'Malik Bendjelloul, 36, Oscar Winner for 'Sugar Man' Documentary, Dies'. The New York Times. Retrieved May 15, 2014.
  106. ^Cederskog, Georg (May 14, 2014). 'Han hade varit deprimerad'. Dagens Nyheter (in Swedish). Retrieved May 15, 2014.
  107. ^Leslie, Esther (2000). 'Benjamin's Finale'. Walter Benjamin: Overpowering Conformism. Modern European Thinkers. Pluto Press. p. 215. ISBN978-0-7453-1568-3. Retrieved August 28, 2009.
  108. ^Upton, Julie (2004) Fallen Stars: Tragic Lives & Lost Careers. Critical Vision. ISBN978-1-90-048638-5. Retrieved August 16, 2016.
  109. ^Grow, Cory (July 20, 2017). 'Chester Bennington, Linkin Park Singer, Dead at 41'. Rolling Stone.
  110. ^'Noted Stage Stars in Murder-Suicide'. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. June 10, 1929, p. 1. Archived at Google News. Retrieved April 22, 2017.
  111. ^Sherwood, Roxanna (September 5, 2007). 'Benoit's Dad, Doctors: Multiple Concussions Could Be Connected to Murder-Suicide'. ABC News.
  112. ^Simons, Marlise (May 4, 1993). 'In French Ex-Premier's Suicide, Cries of 'J'Accuse''. The New York Times. Retrieved May 29, 2016.
  113. ^Kemmerman, Kristin (November 17, 1999). 'Mary Kay Bergman, voiceover actress, dead'Archived October 5, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  114. ^Healy, Steve (September 9, 1998). 'John Berryman: The Dreamer Awakes.'Archived May 20, 2010, at the Wayback MachineCity Pages.
  115. ^Osgood, Nancy J. (July 1992). Suicide in Later Life: Recognizing the Warning Signs. Lexington Books. p. 4. ISBN978-0-669-21214-3.
  116. ^Sacks, Ethan (November 14, 2013), 'Actor Paul Bhattacharjee may have committed suicide over bankruptcy, girlfriend testifies'. Daily News (New York).
  117. ^Usborne, Simon (November 21, 2009). 'Depressed and lonely' model is found hanged'. The Independent.
  118. ^Oldenburg, Ann (August 16, 2012). 'Elton John bassist Bob Birch, 56, found dead in L.A.'. USA Today.
  119. ^Hayward, Andrea (April 16, 2008). 'Care for David Birnie not good enough, says coroner'. Perth Now.
  120. ^Cole, Robert J. (May 17, 1975). 'DIRECT BRIBE BID IS LAID TO BLACK'. The New York Times.
  121. ^Tacitus (29-31 AD). Book 5, V.7, Annals. Translation based on Alfred John Church and William Jackson Brodribb, Wikisource. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  122. ^Kennedy, Randy (August 1, 2007). 'Jeremy Blake, 35, Artist Who Used Lush-Toned Video, Dies'. The New York Times. Retrieved December 29, 2007.
  123. ^Fisher, James; Londré, Felicia Hardison (2017). Historical Dictionary of American Theater: Modernism. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 89. ISBN9781538107867. Retrieved February 16, 2019.
  124. ^de Barrón, Íñigo; Limón, Raúl; López-Fonseca, Óscar (July 20, 2017). 'Miguel Blesa: a symbol of all that went wrong in Spanish banking: Autopsy confirms suicide of former Caja Madrid chief, who was found dead on Wednesday'. El País. (in Spanish)
  125. ^'Adele Blood Hope, Actress, Ends Life. 'Financially Pressed' After Stock Venture, Daughter Tells Harrison Police. Long Active In Theatre. Known as 'the Most Beautiful Blonde on American Stage' When She Toured Nation'. The New York Times. September 14, 1936. Retrieved December 14, 2016. Mrs. Adele Blood Hope, 50 years old, actress and stock-company promoter, shot and fatally wounded herself at her home at 12 Griswald Road on the grounds of the Westchester Country Club here tonight. She died a few hours later at the United Hospital in Port Chester without regaining consciousness. ...
  126. ^'Bloodgood Suicide Laid to Anxiety'(PDF). The New York Times. December 7, 1907. Retrieved August 13, 2009.
  127. ^Larocca, Amy (July 16, 2007). 'The Sad Hatter'. New York.
  128. ^Boltzmann, Ludwig (1995). 'Conclusions'. in Blackmore, John T. Ludwig Boltzmann: His Later Life and Philosophy, 1900–1906. Book Two: The Philosopher. Springer. pp. 206–207. ISBN978-0-7923-3464-4.
  129. ^Augustan History, The Lives of Firmus, Saturninus, Proculus and BonosusChapter 15. University of Chicago. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  130. ^'Eduardo Bonvallet: investigan muerte del polémico comentarista deportivo en Chile'. La Prensa. September 18, 2015. Retrieved November 2, 2015.
  131. ^Shenon, Philip (May 17, 1996). 'His Medals Questioned, Top Admiral Kills Himself'. The New York Times. Retrieved December 26, 2008.
  132. ^Pierre Perrone (May 17, 1999). 'Obituary: Adrian Borland'. The Independent. Retrieved June 19, 2017.
  133. ^ abKaracs, Imre (May 3, 1998). 'DNA test closes book on mystery of Martin Bormann'. The Independent. Retrieved September 17, 2017.
  134. ^Germain, Thierry (December 13, 2011). 'Jean-Louis Bory, le suicidé de la critique'. Les influences. Retrieved October 31, 2018.
  135. ^Fairfax, Kathy (1999). Comrades in Arms: Bolshevik Women in the Russian Revolution. Resistance Books. pp. 29–30. ISBN978-0909196943.
  136. ^D'Atri, Andrea. 'El rol de las mujeres socialistas al inicio de la revolución rusa'(PDF). Archivo Chile, Centro Estudios 'Miguel Enríquez'. Retrieved October 24, 2011.
  137. ^Israeli handball rocked by death of Rishon's Boskovic'. The Jerusalem Post. February 3, 2019. Retrieved February 7, 2019.
  138. ^Rania Abouzeid (January 21, 2011). 'Bouazizi: The Man Who Set Himself and Tunisia on Fire'. Time. Retrieved September 4, 2017.
  139. ^Tacitus (59-62 AD). Book 14, Chapter 37, Annals. Perseus Project. Tufts University. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  140. ^'Georges Boulanger'. Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved August 28, 2009.
  141. ^'CNN's Anthony Bourdain dead at 61'. CNN. June 8, 2018. Retrieved June 8, 2018.
  142. ^'Anthony Bourdain has died in an apparent suicide by hanging at 61'. Business Insider. June 8, 2018. Retrieved June 9, 2018.
  143. ^'Tommy Boyce; Co-Wrote Hit Songs in '60s' (1994). Los Angeles Times.
  144. ^'Karin Boye'. Encyclopaedia Britannica. Retrieved August 12, 2017.
  145. ^'Coroner: Death of Charles Boyer was a suicide'. St. Petersburg Times. 95 (36). Associated Press. August 29, 1978. p. 3A. Retrieved October 22, 2018.
  146. ^Cosgrove-Mather, Bootie (November 25, 2003). 'Actor Brandis Committed Suicide'. CBS News. Retrieved October 8, 2010.
  147. ^Gliatto, Tom (May 1, 1995). 'Paradise Lost'. People. 43 (17). ISSN0093-7673.
  148. ^McGasko, Joe (June 18, 2013). 'The Superman Curse'Archived March 15, 2014, at the Wayback Machine. Biography.com.
  149. ^Brown, Hannah (September 10, 2014). 'Mike Brant's life story to hit the silver screen '. The Jerusalem Post.
  150. ^Cohen, Karine (June 13, 2003). 'A Celebrity's Death Explored'. The Forward.
  151. ^Joachimsthaler, Anton (1999) [1995] The Last Days of Hitler: The Legends, the Evidence, the Truth, pp. 172, 173, 181.
  152. ^'The Eva Braun story: Behind every evil man...'The Independent. March 12, 2006. Retrieved November 7, 2013.
  153. ^Brautigan, Ianthe (2000). You Can't Catch Death: A Daughter's Memoir. St. Martin's Press. ISBN978-1-84195-025-9.
  154. ^Junianus Justinus (1st century BC - 1st century AD). Epitome of Pompeius Trogus' Philippic Histories: Book 24, Verse 8. Translated by Rev. J.S.Watson (1853). Attalus. Retrieved September 1, 2018.
  155. ^Grafly, Dorothy (May 28, 1967). 'Artist's Suicide Gives Tragic Overtone to Exhibit'. Philadelphia Bulletin.
  156. ^'Herman Brood (54) pleegt zelfmoord'. Nederlandse Omroep Stichting. July 11, 2001. Retrieved April 8, 2009.
  157. ^'Herman Brood van het Hilton gesprongen'. Nieuws Dossier. July 11, 2011
  158. ^Long, Colleen (May 24, 2011). 'Joseph Brooks Suicide: Medical Examiner Rules Songwriter Killed Himself'. HuffPost. Associated Press. Retrieved November 15, 2011.
  159. ^'May Brooklyn Mourned for Lovecraft – Cause of the Suicide of the Actress in San Francisco'The New York Times. February 17, 1894. Retrieved April 21, 2017.
  160. ^'May Brooklyn Mourned for Lovecraft – Cause of the Suicide of the Actress in San Francisco'. The New York Times (PDF of full article). Retrieved April 21, 2017.
  161. ^Wöckener, Lutz (February 26, 2014). 'Olympia-Turner tötet seinen Sohn und sich selbst'. Die Welt. (in German)
  162. ^Plutarch (2nd century AD). 'Life of Brutus', Parallel Lives. chapter 48
  163. ^'David Buckel: friends mourn LGBT lawyer who self-immolated'. The Guardian. April 20, 2018. Retrieved June 9, 2018.
  164. ^Colt, George Howe (1992). The Enigma of Suicide. Simon and Schuster. p. 169. ISBN978-0-671-76071-7. Retrieved March 18, 2018.
  165. ^Rubin, Rebecca (November 3, 2017). 'Veronica Mars' Actor Brad Bufanda Dies by Suicide at 34'. Variety
  166. ^ abBeevor, Antony (2002). Berlin: The Downfall: 1945. Penguin. p. 580. ISBN9780141903026. Retrieved June 20, 2018.
  167. ^Bryk, William (February 25, 2003). 'Old Smoke: The Death of Daniel Burros: A Jewish Klansman who did more than just hate himself'. New York Press. Retrieved February 11, 2019.
  168. ^Frankel, Todd C. (December 26, 2010). 'For Busch family, woman's death is latest in tragic history'. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Retrieved April 21, 2018.
  169. ^Newton, Michael (April 17, 2014). 'Germán+Busch',+shot+himself#v=onepage&q='Germán%20Busch'%2C%20shot%20himself&f=false Famous Assassinations in World History: An Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. p. 615. ISBN9781610692861.
  170. ^Morales, Waltraud Q. (2003). A Brief History of Bolivia. Lexington Associates. p. 117.
  171. ^ abLivy, From the Founding of the CityIX.26. Wikisource. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  172. ^Cassius Dio, Roman History, Book LX., 15.
  173. ^Parkin, Michael (May 8, 1996). 'Donald Cammell: Obituary'. The Independent.
  174. ^Wells, Pete (April 15, 2015). 'Chef Homaro Cantu dies at 38'. The New York Times.
  175. ^Rosenberg, Eli (December 2013/January 2014). 'Capital Steez: King Capital'.The Fader #89.
  176. ^Goggans, Louis (December 12, 2013). 'Details Emerge Regarding The Death Of Capital Steez'. AHumbleSoul.com.
  177. ^'French Actress, Capucine, Leaps to Her Death'. Deseret News. March 20, 1990.
  178. ^Lambiet, Jose, Laurie C. Merrill and Corky Siemaszko (July 21, 1995). 'Stunned Tourists See Man Plunge To Death'. Daily News (New York). Archived October 16, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  179. ^Hermes, Enough for One Lifetime p.291, which cites the Wilmington Morning News and The New York Times. April 30, 1937
  180. ^Haycock, David Boyd (June 1, 2010). A Crisis of Brilliance, Old Street Publishing, p. 313
  181. ^MacLeod, Scott (September 12, 1994). 'The Life and Death of Kevin Carter'. Time.
  182. ^'Tragic footballer was upset over son, inquest told'. The Northern Echo. October 15, 2008.
  183. ^'Suicide SAFC coach had a 'difficult time''. Sunderland Echo. October 16, 2008.
  184. ^Herman Hofberg: Svenskt biografiskt handlexikon (Swedish biographical dictionary) (1906) (Swedish)
  185. ^Arvid Ahnfelt: Europas konstnärer (The artists of Europe) (Swedish)
  186. ^Cohan, William D (February 2010). 'The Shot Heard 'Round the Clubs'. Vanity Fair. Retrieved October 28, 2013.
  187. ^Browning, Lynnley (September 15, 2009). 'Suicide Victim May Have Hidden Millions Abroad'. The New York Times. Retrieved October 28, 2013.
  188. ^'Ariel Castro dead: Brutal kidnapper and rapist of 3 women in Cleveland sex slave horror house hangs himself in prison'. Daily News (New York). September 4, 2013.
  189. ^Boyle, Danny (February 2, 2018). 'Fidel Castro's son 'takes own life': Late Cuban leader's eldest child found dead in Havana'. The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved February 15, 2018.
  190. ^Dreier, Fred (February 2, 2018). 'Kelly Catlin passes away at 23'. VeloNews. Retrieved March 11, 2018.
  191. ^'Marcus Porcius Cato'. Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved August 4, 2013.
  192. ^Anderson, Mark A. (December 31, 2000). 'A Poet at War With His Language'. The New York Times. Retrieved April 21, 2018.
  193. ^ abPlutarch (2nd century CE). The Life of CrassusThe Parallel Lives, Chapter 26. Loeb Classical Library edition (1916), University of Chicago. Retrieved February 21, 2019.
  194. ^'Mystery of Joseph Newton Chandler III's true identity to be revealed'. WKYC. Retrieved June 24, 2018.
  195. ^Goldston, Hillary. 'Cold Case: Why did dead Eastlake man steal young boy's identity?'. wkyc.com. WKYC. Archived from the original on August 9, 2016. Retrieved August 22, 2017.
  196. ^Benson, Heidi (January 8, 2011). 'Historian Iris Chang won many battles / The war she lost raged within'. San Francisco Chronicle.
  197. ^ abPlutarch. 'Life of Antony.' WikiSource. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  198. ^Bovsun, Mara (January 2, 2010). 'Just crazy for blood: Richard Trenton Chase, a.k.a. the Vampire of Sacramento'. Daily News. New York City. Retrieved September 17, 2017.
  199. ^Johnson, Douglas (June 25, 1999). 'Obituary: Gilles Chatelet'. The Independent.
  200. ^Groom, Nick (2002). The Forger's Shadow: How Forgery Changed The Course of Literature. London: Picador. p. 352. ISBN978-0330374323.
  201. ^Meyerstein, Edward Harry William. A Life of Thomas Chatterton. London: Ingpen and Grant, 1930. p. 450
  202. ^Barton, Chris (November 12, 2011). 'A voice for China's bottom rung'. The New Zealand Herald.
  203. ^Gonnerman, Jennifer (January 6, 2012). 'Pvt. Danny Chen, 1992-2011'. New York. Retrieved August 31, 2018.
  204. ^Sisario, Ben (December 25, 2009). 'Vic Chesnutt, Singer and Songwriter, Dies at 45'. The New York Times. Retrieved December 25, 2009.
  205. ^Gross, Terry (December 1, 2009). 'Songs Of Survival and Reflection: 'At The Cut''. Fresh Air. NPR. Retrieved January 4, 2010.
  206. ^Corliss, Richard (April 3, 2003). 'That old feeling: Days of being Leslie'. Time.
  207. ^'Actor Leslie Cheung 'found dead'. BBC News. April 1, 2003
  208. ^Vázquez-Gómez, Juana (1997). Dictionary of Mexican Rulers, 1325-1997. Greenwood Press. p. 6.
  209. ^Potter, Ned (April 28, 2007). 'Killer's Note: 'You Caused Me to Do This'. ABC News.
  210. ^'Top Actress Choi Found Dead at Home'.The Korea Times. October 2, 2008.
  211. ^'Brother of late actress Choi Jin-sil commits suicide'. Korea Joongang Daily. March 29, 2010.
  212. ^Dillon, Michael (2017). Encyclopedia of Chinese History. Routledge. p. 645.
  213. ^'Suicide du chanteur et auteur David Christie.'Libération. May 16, 1997. (French)
  214. ^Johnson, Mike (July 29, 2018). 'UPDATE: BRIAN CHRISTOPHER LAWLER TAKEN OFF LIFE SUPPORT, PASSES AWAY AT 46 YEARS OLD'. PWInsider.com. Retrieved July 30, 2018.
  215. ^Local 24 Memphis (August 13, 2018), Pictures Of Brian Lawler After His Death Raise Questions About How He Died, retrieved November 10, 2018
  216. ^Dietz, Jon (July 16, 1974). 'On-Air Shot Kills TV Personality'. Sarasota Herald-Tribune.
  217. ^Hyun-kyung, Kang (July 22, 2019). 'Pastor reveals pang of remorse for loss of politician'. The Korea Times. Retrieved July 23, 2019.
  218. ^'Mrs. Diana Churchill 'Suicided''. The Age. October 25, 1963. Retrieved October 23, 2018.
  219. ^Piggott, Solomon (1824). 'Remarkable Modes of Suicide'. Suicide and Its Antidotes: A Series of Anecdotes and Actual Narratives, with Suggestions on Mental Distress. J. Robins and Co. p. 175. Retrieved August 4, 2009.
  220. ^Hawkins, John (1875). 'Book XVII, Chapter CLXIV'. A General Gistory of the Science and Practice of Music. 2 (Revised ed.). London: Novello, Ewer. p. 784. Retrieved January 31, 2017.
  221. ^Vaziri, Aidin (March 10, 2002). 'Liam Clancy: An Irish folk vagabond lives to tell the tale'. San Francisco Chronicle.
  222. ^Hu, Winnie (October 1, 2010). 'Debate Over Charges in Rutgers Student's Suicide'. The New York Times. Retrieved October 3, 2010.
  223. ^Friend, Bernadette (February 3, 2000). ''Trust me, I'm a doctor''. Health Service Journal. Retrieved January 29, 2019.
  224. ^Herodotus (440 BC). The Histories, Book 6, Chapter 75. Perseus Project. Tufts University. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  225. ^William Smith, Ed., A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, Cleo'menes Iii. Perseus Project. Tufts University. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  226. ^Riginos, Alice Swift (1976). Platonica. Columbia Studies. p. 182.
  227. ^Liu, Marian (April 6, 2009). 'Kurt Cobain's death, 15 years later, being marked with Friday tribute'. The Seattle Times. Retrieved June 16, 2008.
  228. ^Ho, Oliver (February 11, 2010). 'Borderland Speakeasy #3: Needle in the Eye'. PopMatters. Retrieved September 24, 2018.
  229. ^Gravett, Paul (August 31, 2008). 'Jack Cole: Stretched To His Limits'. Paul Gravett. Reprinted from Comic Book Marketplace (2001). Retrieved September 24, 2018.
  230. ^Condon, Lee (June 4, 1996). 'Police To Probe Suicide Of Talk Show Host Who Hanged Self In Hospital'. Daily News (Los Angeles). Retrieved May 17, 2010.
  231. ^'Game Over'. People. 45 (24). June 17, 1996. ISSN0093-7673.
  232. ^Newton, Michael. 'Adolfo Constanzo'. Crime Library. p. 7. Retrieved April 27, 2019.
  233. ^https://www.theguardian.com/music/2014/feb/19/tarka-and-friends-life-cordell-album
  234. ^McKinley, James C. (February 1, 2012). 'Don Cornelius, 'Soul Train' Creator, Is Dead at 75'. The New York Times.
  235. ^Schuppe, Jon (May 18, 2017). 'Chris Cornell, Dead of Suicide, Was Guiding Force in Grunge Music'. NBC News.
  236. ^Silverstein, Jason (January 19, 2019). 'Coughlin kills self after being suspended for allegations'. CBS News.
  237. ^Brennan, Christine (January 30, 2019). 'Police: Former U.S. figure skater John Coughlin died by hanging'. USA Today. Retrieved February 2, 2019.
  238. ^'Hart Crane 1899–1932'. Poetry Foundation. Retrieved September 30, 2011.
  239. ^Stanton, Scott (September 2, 2003). The Tombstone Tourist. Pocket Books. p. 306
  240. ^Plutarch, Crassus 25.11.
  241. ^'Dies Under the Wheels of a Train'. The San Francisco Call. August 4, 1905. p. 1.
  242. ^'Serial Killers Part 6: Andrew Cunanan Murders a Fashion Icon'. Washington, D.C.: Federal Bureau of Investigation. March 14, 2014. Archived from the original on July 2, 2016.
  243. ^Birdwell, Russell J. (November 28, 1925). 'Hollywood'. The Eugene Guard. Eugene, Oregon. Retrieved March 8, 2015.
  244. ^Wes D. Gehring (2013). Will Cuppy, American Satirist. McFarland & Company. p. 155. ISBN978-0-7864-6961-1
  245. ^Curtis, Deborah. Touching from a Distance: Ian Curtis and Joy Division. London: Faber, 1995 (2nd ed. 2001, 3rd ed. 2005). ISBN0-571-17445-0, pp. 131–132
  246. ^Frasier, David K. (2005). Suicide in the Entertainment Industry: An Encyclopedia of 840 Twentieth Century Cases. McFarland & Company. p. 73. ISBN978-1-4766-0807-5.
  247. ^'Adam Czerniakow'. Adam Mickiewicz Institute (Warsaw). Retrieved April 22, 2018.
  248. ^'Dalida'. The New York Times. May 5, 1987. Retrieved February 28, 2008.
  249. ^Simmonds, Jeremy (2008). v. Chicago Review Press. p. 225. ISBN978-1-55652-754-8.
  250. ^'Karl Dane, Movie Star, Ends Life'. St. Petersburg Times. April 15, 1934. p. 2.
  251. ^Petersen Balogh, Laura (2009). Karl Dane: A Biography and Filmography. McFarland & Company. p. 164 & 167. ISBN978-0-786-45436-5.
  252. ^'Karl Dane Ends Life; Once Star In Movie World'. The Tuscaloosa News. April 17, 1934. p. 8.
  253. ^'Body of Dane Is Unclaimed'. Schenectady Gazette. April 16, 1934. p. 8.
  254. ^Verity, Ed (April 6, 1996). 'The Curse of Jimi Hendrix; the Suicide of Jimi Hendrix's Fiancee 25 Years after His Own Mysterious Death Brings to an End a Feud That Has Consumed Two of His Lovers Fordecades'. Daily Mail. London. Retrieved March 20, 2014.
  255. ^Davis, Susan Davis with Hilary Vries. After Midnight: The Life and Death of Brad Davis. Pocket Books, 1997, pp. 283-299; ISBN0-671-79672-0
  256. ^'Australian TV personality Charlotte Dawson commits suicide'. Fox News. February 23, 2014. Retrieved March 20, 2014.
  257. ^'Charlotte Dawson's former manager comes forward to reveal the true depth of her struggles'. The Daily Telegraph. February 23, 2014
  258. ^Thacker, Eugene (March 26, 2016). 'Black Illumination: the disqualified life of Osamu Dazai'. The Japan Times. Retrieved May 24, 2018.
  259. ^'Buffalo Woman Suicide in Africa'. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, January 22, 1942
  260. ^ abZosimus, New HistoryBook 2, Chapter 65, London: Green and Chaplin (1814). Transcribed by Roger Pearse (2002). Retrieved February 19, 2019.
  261. ^Hussey, Andrew (July 27, 2001). 'Situation abnormal'. The Guardian (London).
  262. ^'Belgium's Singing Nun Is Reported a Suicide'. The New York Times. April 2, 1985. Retrieved September 21, 2013.
  263. ^'Gilles Deleuze'. Encyclopædia Britannica.
  264. ^'Peter Delmé (Peter the Czar)'. London Online. January 15, 2013. Archived from the original on October 11, 2011.
  265. ^'Police Report On Delp's Death Reveals His Final Message'. WMUR. Archived from the original on May 22, 2011. Retrieved December 9, 2010.
  266. ^Battersby, Eileen (January 25, 2014). 'A visit to the court of King Witless'. The Irish Times. Retrieved April 27, 2019.
  267. ^'Conference about Penelope Delta at the BA'. Bibliotheca Alexandrina. April 5, 2009. Retrieved April 27, 2019.
  268. ^'Biography of Penelope Delta'. Benaki Museum. Archived from the original on June 14, 2011. Retrieved May 25, 2009.
  269. ^Lucian, Demonax, 65
  270. ^Plutarch, Demosthenes,Chapter 29, Section 1. Perseus Project. Tufts University. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  271. ^Lutteroth, Johanna (April 8, 2014). 'Der Menschenfresser von Münsterberg'. Spiegel Online. Retrieved April 5, 2018.
  272. ^'Jerry Desmonde'. UKGameshows.com. Retrieved April 4, 2019.
  273. ^German, Yuri. 'Patrick Dewaere'. The New York Times. Retrieved July 8, 2009.
  274. ^Elleman, Bruce A.; Paine, Sarah C. M. (2006). Naval Blockades and Seapower: Strategies and Counter-Strategies, 1805-2005. Routledge. p. 74.
  275. ^Quintus Curtius Rufus, Histories of Alexander the Great, Book 9, Chapter 7
  276. ^'Tove Ditlevsen Ditlevsen'. Forfatterweb. 1995. Retrieved March 8, 2019.
  277. ^Schudel, Matt (July 9, 2008). 'Thomas Disch; sci-fi writer was part of 'New Wave''. The Washington Post. p. B05. Retrieved July 12, 2008.
  278. ^Jonkers, J. J. Adriaan Ditvoorst (1940–1987) Thuis in Brabant. Retrieved December 13, 2011.
  279. ^Birley, Anthony (1999). Septimius Severus: The African Emperor, Routledge, p. 192. ISBN0-203-02859-7.
  280. ^Lloyd, J., Ebright, O., Pamer, M., & Tata, S. (February 28, 2013). 'Charred Human Remains Found in Rubble of Burned-Out Cabin'. NBC Southern California. Retrieved September 14, 2014.
  281. ^Streitfeld, David (July 29, 1997). 'A Writer's Descent -- A Dark Cloud Of Suspicion Hung Over The Final Pages Of Novelist Michael Dorris' Life; Suicide May Have Been His Only Possible Ending'. The Seattle Times.
  282. ^'Monique Demoan back working'. Archived from the original on December 12, 2008. Retrieved December 18, 2007.
  283. ^Newberg, Katelyn; Ferrara, David (January 5, 2019). 'Nevada death row inmate Scott Dozier dead from apparent suicide'. Las Vegas Review-Journal. Retrieved January 9, 2019.
  284. ^'TV newsreader found dead'. The Australian. November 2, 2007
  285. ^Brown, Mick (November 25, 2014). 'Nick Drake: the fragile genius'. The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved March 11, 2018.
  286. ^Velleius Paterculus, History of RomeBook 2, Chapter 71. University of Chicago.
  287. ^Foley, Stephen (February 22, 2011). 'Tragic NFL star's last wish could shed new light on game's risks'. The Independent. London. Retrieved February 26, 2011.
  288. ^Muha, Laura (January 21, 1988). 'Witnesses to Tragedy'(Newspaper archive). Newsday. Long Island. p. 3. When he saw Dwyer's gun, he dashed from the room calling for help Text Word Count: 1290
  289. ^'PA. Treasurer Kills Self at News Conference', Associated Press, January 23, 1987.
  290. ^Lindsay, David 'George Eastman: The Final Shot'. American Experience. PBS. Retrieved August 30, 2013.
  291. ^Davies, Nick (June 8, 2008). 'At first he just toyed with the idea of killing'. The Guardian. Retrieved July 19, 2018.
  292. ^'Ex-N. J. Governor Is Found Suicide'. Healdsburg Tribune (70). Healdsburg, California. United Press. January 26, 1931. p. 4. Retrieved April 13, 2017.
  293. ^Grinberg, Emanuella (March 12, 2016). 'Keith Emerson of Emerson, Lake & Palmer Dead at 71'. CNN. Retrieved September 5, 2017.
  294. ^Diogenes Laërtius, Life of Empedocles, translated by Robert Drew Hicks (1925) viii. 69
  295. ^Horace (19 BC). Ars Poetica, 465–466
  296. ^'Suicide keeper battled depression'. BBC News. November 11, 2009.
  297. ^Wilkins, Frank. 'Suicide and the Hollywood Sign - The Girl Who Jumped from the Hollywood Sign'. Reel Reviews. Retrieved May 23, 2015.
  298. ^Tacitus (62-65 AD). Book 15, Chapter 57, Annals. Wikisource. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  299. ^'Eratosthenes'. Encyclopaedia Britannica. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
  300. ^Cassius Dio, Roman History, Book 69, Chapter 8. University of Chicago.
  301. ^Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca historica, Book 19, 11
  302. ^ abClark, Nick (April 26, 2013). 'Badfinger: last act in a rock'n'roll tragedy'. The Independent.
  303. ^Glod, Maria (August 14, 2002). '3 Slain Girls' Cases Closed'. The Washington Post. Retrieved March 21, 2019.
  304. ^Thyness, Paul (February 13, 2009). 'Envold De Falsen' (in Norwegian). Norsk biografisk leksikon. Retrieved November 25, 2018.
  305. ^'Former basketball executive Moni Fanan commits suicide'. Haaretz. October 19, 2009.
  306. ^Appian, The Civil Wars, Book 5, Chapter 26. 1913. University of Chicago. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  307. ^Silverman, Stephen M. (July 16, 1998). 'Richard Farnsworth: Suicide'. People.
  308. ^'Suicide verdict on footballer Fashanu'. BBC News. September 9, 1998. Retrieved July 14, 2013.
  309. ^Wright, Pearce (August 3, 2000). 'René Favaloro'. The Guardian. London.
  310. ^Ahles, Andrea (December 10, 2014). 'Cliburn gold medalist José Feghali dies'. Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
  311. ^Laylin, James K. (1993). Nobel Laureates in Chemistry, 1901-1992. American Chemical Society. p. 190. ISBN9780841226906. Retrieved July 19, 2018.
  312. ^'Emil Fischer'. Science History Institute. Retrieved July 19, 2018.
  313. ^'Robert Fitzroy'. Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved June 15, 2009.
  314. ^Livy, From the Founding of the City, 42.28. Wikisource. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  315. ^Gliatto, Tom (March 20, 1995). 'From Elsewhere to Nowhere: Tortured by Depression, Alcoholism and Ill Health, Actor Ed Flanders Fell from Elsewhere to Nowhere'. People, Vol. 43 No. 11.
  316. ^'John Bernard Flannagan'. Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved May 23, 2015.
  317. ^Edmonds, Robert (2009). 'Frederick Fleet(1887–1965)'. Maritime Quest. Retrieved August 12, 2018.
  318. ^Marshall, Alex (2019). 'Keith Flint, 49, Mohawked Frontman of the Prodigy, Dies'. The New York Times. Retrieved March 4, 2019.
  319. ^'Before he hanged himself, Keith Flint asked his wife to return to him'. Newsbeezer. March 6, 2019. Retrieved March 9, 2019.
  320. ^Miller, Wilbur R. (June 19, 2012). The Social History of Crime and Punishment in America: A-De. SAGE Publications. p. 874. ISBN9781412988766.
  321. ^Mault, Deena (February 27, 2006). '[Ford] Robert and Charles Ford ancestors'. RootsWeb. Ancestry.com. Archived from the original on September 3, 2017. Retrieved June 3, 2014.
  322. ^'Charlie Ford's Funeral'. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. May 8, 1884.
  323. ^Klepper, Robert K. Silent Films, 1877–1996: A Critical Guide to 646 Movies p. 93. McFarland & Company, 2005. ISBN9-78147-6604-848
  324. ^Gagnon, Lysiane (May 22, 2000). 'He must have suffered greatly before dying'. The Globe and Mail. Retrieved February 16, 2018.
  325. ^Steinberg, Jacques (December 11, 2003). 'Robert L. Bartley, 66, Dies; Led Journal Editorial Page'. The New York Times. Retrieved April 17, 2012.
  326. ^'IX. State of Mind'. Whitewater: The Foster Report. United States Office of the Independent Counsel/The Washington Post. October 11, 1997. Retrieved December 30, 2011.
  327. ^Habib, Rashell (August 22, 1911). 'Twenty years since the Strathfield Massacre'. Inner West Courier
  328. ^Rosencrans, C. Trent (December 15, 2013). 'Report: Ryan Freel suffered from CTE when he committed suicide'. USA Today. Retrieved October 18, 2017.
  329. ^Cool, Thomas. 'Emil Fuchs 1866–1929'. Website of Thomas Cool. Retrieved March 22, 2014.
  330. ^'Fuchs left $500,000 and Art to Public'. The New York Times. January 23, 2013. Retrieved November 10, 2013.
  331. ^'主権在民史料 藤村 操' ('Sovereign residents' historical materials: Fujimura operation') February 9, 2005 Archived December 26, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  332. ^'Anton Furst, 47, Dies; Designer of 'Batman'. The New York Times. November 26, 1991
  333. ^'Alan García: Peru's former president kills himself ahead of arrest'. BBC News. April 17, 2019. Retrieved April 17, 2019.
  334. ^'PUBLIC LIVES; Mrs. Seuss Hears a Who, and Tells About It'. November 29, 2000. Retrieved November 6, 2012.
  335. ^'Institute for Sexual Science (1919-1933): Institute Employees and Domestic Personnel'. Magnus Hirschfeld Society. Retrieved January 29, 2019.
  336. ^Zosimus, New HistoryBook 5, Chapter 140, London: Green and Chaplin (1814). Transcribed by Roger Pearse (2002). Retrieved February 19, 2019.
  337. ^'Introduction to Sam Gillespie'. Cosmos and History: The Journal of Natural and Social Philosophy, Vol 2, No 1-2. Open Humanities Press. 2006. Retrieved November 28, 2010.
  338. ^Frasier, David K. (January 1, 2005). Suicide in the Entertainment Industry: An Encyclopedia of 840 Twentieth Century Cases. McFarland & Company. p. 120. ISBN0786423331
  339. ^Knight, Denise D. (1994). The Diaries of Charlotte Perkins Gilman, 2 Vols. Ed. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, p 813.
  340. ^Bock, Hans-Michael; Bergfelder, Tim (2009). The Concise Cinegraph: Encyclopaedia of German Cinema. Berghahn Books. p. 161. ISBN9780857455659. Retrieved March 11, 2019.
  341. ^'Granny killer found dead in cell'. The Sydney Morning Herald. September 10, 2005. Retrieved June 13, 2019.
  342. ^'Jane Doe 1987'. missingkids.com. National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Archived from the original on August 13, 2014. Retrieved August 12, 2014.
  343. ^'Case File: 23UFCA'. doenetwork.org. The Doe Network. Retrieved July 12, 2014.
  344. ^ abJoachimsthaler, Anton (1999) [1995]. The Last Days of Hitler: The Legends, the Evidence, the Truth. Trans. Helmut Bögler. London: Brockhampton Press. p. 52. ISBN978-1-86019-902-8.
  345. ^ abBeevor, Antony (2002). Berlin: The Downfall 1945. London: Viking-Penguin Books. p. 381. ISBN978-0-670-03041-5.
  346. ^Chen Shou (3rd century). Records of the Three Kingdoms, Book of Wei, Volume 8: Biographies of the two Gongsuns, Tao, and the four Zhangs'.
  347. ^Agence France-Presse (May 10, 2018). '104-year-old Australian scientist dies after flying to Switzerland to end his life'. The Telegraph. Retrieved February 19, 2019.
  348. ^Historia Augusta, The Three Gordians 16.3
  349. ^'Spider-Man's Lucy Gordon In Paris Suicide'. Sky News. May 21, 2009. Archived from the original on June 3, 2011. Retrieved July 5, 2010.
  350. ^Loo, Egon (January 18, 2010). 'Dragon Ball Actor Daisuke Gouri Passes Away'. Anime News Network. Retrieved March 24, 2018.
  351. ^Kershaw, Ian (2008). Hitler: A Biography. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN978-0-393-06757-6, p. 964.
  352. ^'Gorky's Life'. Arshile Gorky Foundation. Retrieved January 13, 2013.
  353. ^Green, David B. (November 6, 2013). 'This Day in Jewish History / Gottschalk Family Commits Suicide Rather Than Let Nazis Split Them Apart'. Haaretz. Retrieved July 19, 2018.
  354. ^Appian, Civil Wars, Book Book 1, Chapter 26. University of Chicago.
  355. ^'Frank Graham'(PDF). Broadcasting. September 11, 1950. p. 82. Retrieved August 3, 2018.
  356. ^'Philip Graham, 48, Publisher, a Suicide'. The New York Times. August 4, 1963. Retrieved October 27, 2018.
  357. ^Kellerhoff, Sven Felix (June 27, 2013). 'Bad Kleinen – die 'Exekution' war ein Medienskandal'. Die Welt. Retrieved April 24, 2018.
  358. ^'Entertainment On the Buses TV star found dead'. BBC News. November 19, 2003. Retrieved April 4, 2019.
  359. ^'Death of a Porn Queen'. The New York Times. Retrieved September 12, 2014.
  360. ^Dewan, Shaila K.; McKinley, Jesse (March 9, 2004). 'Body of Spalding Gray Found; Monologuist and Actor Was 62'. The New York Times.
  361. ^'Green scored goals wherever he was'. Watertown Daily Times. July 13, 2009.
  362. ^'-Gr'Archived September 23, 2015, at the Wayback Machine. A to Z Encyclopaedia Of Ice Hockey. October 27, 2008
  363. ^'German Bluebeard Takes Own Life'. East Mississippi Times (Starkville, Mississippi), July 14, 1922, Image 7. Archived at the Library of Congress. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
  364. ^Grossmann, Mary Ann (November 28, 2012). 'Minnesota writer Paul Gruchow's posthumous memoir details the weight of depression'. TwinCities.com, St. Paul Pioneer Press.
  365. ^Davidson, Joe (September 6, 2018). 'Jason Hairston, KUIU hunting gear CEO and former UC Davis football star, has died'. The Sacramento Bee. Retrieved September 6, 2018.
  366. ^McCallum, Simon (2013). 'Hall-Davis, Lilian (1897-1933)'. BFI Screenonline. London. Retrieved March 15, 2015.
  367. ^Flowers, John. 'Cyber-Bullying hits community'. Addison County Independent. Retrieved November 30, 2012.
  368. ^Fleischmann, Hector (1913). Napoléon III et les femmes, pp. 295–299. Bibliothèque des curieux.
  369. ^'Rusty Hamer, Actor, 42'. Associated Press/The New York Times. January 20, 1990. Retrieved May 18, 2017.
  370. ^Bar, Roni (December 6, 2016). 'The Can of Worms Opened After Iconic Photographer Accused of Rape Commits Suicide'. Haaretz.
  371. ^Merlan, Anna (November 28, 2016). 'Photographer David Hamilton Dies By Suicide After Several Women Say He Raped Them as Teenagers'. Jezebel.
  372. ^Livy, The History of Rome, Book 23: Hannibal at Capua, Chapter 41. Perseus Project. Tufts University. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  373. ^Craig, Olga (November 10, 2004). 'Laugh at Tony? I very nearly died'. The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved July 5, 2010.
  374. ^O'Connell, Robert L. (2010). The Ghosts of Cannae: Hannibal and the Darkest Hour of the Roman Republic, Randon House (New York) p. 256
  375. ^'Harden-Hickey a Suicide.; The 'Baron,' Who Proclaimed Himself Dictator of Trinidad, Dies in a Texas Hotel'. The New York Times. February 11, 1898. Retrieved August 13, 2018.
  376. ^'Meninggal Dunia Bu Mar, Bukan Sandiwara' [Death of Bu Mar: No Act]. Tempo (in Indonesian): 69. June 23, 1984.
  377. ^ ab'Columbine'. The Final Report. Season 1. Episode 9. 2006. National Geographic Channel.
  378. ^ ab'Columbine Documents'Archived September 10, 2008, at the Wayback Machine JC-001-025923 through JC-001-026859; Jefferson County Sheriff's Office; Rocky Mountain News
  379. ^Tank, Ron (May 28, 1998). 'Phil Hartman, wife die in apparent murder-suicide'. CNN/Reuters.
  380. ^Konte, Sandra Hansen (November 22, 1987). 'The Short Life of Elizabeth Hartman : Instant Stardom in 'Patch of Blue,' Then Unemployment, Then Suicide.' Los Angeles Times.
  381. ^'Donny Hathaway'. Rolling Stone. Retrieved October 3, 2013.
  382. ^'Kansas Silent Film Star Phyllis Haver is Dead'. AP. Lawrence Journal-World (November 21, 1960). Page 5.
  383. ^'Man who bulldozed through Colo. town is dead'. NBC News. June 5, 2004. Archived from the original on October 23, 2013.
  384. ^Reynolds, Michael S. (1998). The Young Hemingway. New York: Norton. p. 16. ISBN978-0-393-31776-3. Retrieved January 30, 2010.
  385. ^'Coroner Says Death of Actress Was Suicide'. The New York Times. August 21, 1996.
  386. ^Press, The Associated (July 8, 2006). 'Benjamin Hendrickson, 'As the World Turns' Actor, 55, Is Dead' – via www.nytimes.com.
  387. ^Ortiz, Aimee; Ellement, John R. (April 19, 2017). 'Aaron Hernandez kills himself in prison'. The Boston Globe.
  388. ^'British sympathy for jailed Nazi'. BBC News. September 28, 2007.
  389. ^'Wave of sadness after Hester hangs himself'. The Sydney Morning Herald. March 28, 2005.
  390. ^Strauss, Neil (June 18, 1998). 'The Pop Life: End of a Life, End of an Era'. The New York Times. Retrieved May 21, 2007.
  391. ^Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca historica, Book 14, Chapter 75-Chapter 76. Perseus Project. Tufts University. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  392. ^Longerich, Peter (2012). Heinrich Himmler: a life. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 1–3. ISBN978-0-19-959232-6.
  393. ^Kershaw, Ian (2008) Hitler, p. 955.
  394. ^Joachimsthaler, Anton (1999) [1995] The Last Days of Hitler: The Legends, the Evidence, the Truth, pp. 160–182.
  395. ^O'Donnell, James P. (2001) [1978] The Bunker, pp. 322–323.
  396. ^King, Wayne (April 19, 1989). 'Abbie Hoffman Committed Suicide Using Barbiturates, Autopsy Shows'. The New York Times.
  397. ^Nash, Jay Robert (2004). The Great Pictorial History of World Crime. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 1246. ISBN978-1-928831-22-8.
  398. ^Frasier, David K. (2002). Suicide in the Entertainment Industry: An Encyclopedia of 840 Twentieth Century Cases. McFarland & Company. p. 147. ISBN978-0-7864-1038-5.
  399. ^Pereles, Zach (July 7, 2018). 'Former UCLA star and NBA Player Tyler Honeycutt found dead following shootout with police'. Yahoo! Sports. Yahoo!. Retrieved July 7, 2018.
  400. ^'Tyler Honeycutt dies following gunfire exchange with police'. ESPN. July 7, 2018. Retrieved July 7, 2018.
  401. ^Lipsky, Dave (October 30, 2008). 'The Lost Years & Last Days of David Foster Wallace'. Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on May 3, 2009. Retrieved April 2, 2012.
  402. ^'Rock Music And Insanity'. Illuminati-news.com. December 20, 2000. Retrieved April 10, 2012.
  403. ^Erdmann, Nils, Vid hovet och på adelsgodsen i 1700-talets Sverige: en tidskrönika, Wahlströms, Stockholm, 1926
  404. ^Burke, Rusty. 'A Short Biography of Robert E. Howard'. The Robert E. Howard Foundation. Retrieved October 6, 2012.
  405. ^Miller, Russell (1987). Bare-faced Messiah, The True Story of L. Ron Hubbard (First American ed.). New York: Henry Holt & Co. ISBN978-0-8050-0654-4.
  406. ^' 'Nicholas Hughes, 47, Sylvia Plath's Son, Dies'. Retrieved September 12, 2014.
  407. ^Berryhill, Michael (August 7, 1997). 'What Really Happened To Rodeny Hulin?'. Houston Press. Retrieved December 17, 2016.
  408. ^McDaniel, Rodger (2013). Dying for Joe McCarthy's Sins. WordsWorth. ISBN978-0983027591.
  409. ^Milliken, Robert (April 5, 1998). 'The Death of a Rock Star'. The Independent. London.
  410. ^'Phyllis Hyman; Jazz Singer, 45'. The New York Times. July 2, 1995. Retrieved August 22, 2012.
  411. ^Turnbull, Stephen R. (1977). The Samurai: A Military History. RoutledgeCurzon. p. 64.
  412. ^Friedrich, Bretislav; Hoffmann, Dieter (March 2016). 'Clara Haber, nee Immerwahr (1870–1915): Life, Work and Legacy'. Zeitschrift für Anorganische und Allgemeine Chemie. 642 (6): 437–448. doi:10.1002/zaac.201600035. PMC4825402. PMID27099403.
  413. ^Brennan, Sandra. 'William Inge'. AllMovie. Retrieved June 15, 2009.
  414. ^'Daniel Aaron, scholar who helped develop academic field of American studies, dies at 103'. The Washington Post. May 2, 2016. Retrieved February 16, 2019.
  415. ^Gallagher, Jack (October 16, 2011). 'Coroner's Office says Irabu intoxicated at time of death'. The Japan Times. p. 16. Retrieved July 27, 2012.
  416. ^Panholzer, Tom; Rufino, Mauricio (2003). Place Names of Pohnpei Island: Including And (Ant) and Pakin Atolls. Bess Press. pp. xiii, 21, 22, 25, 38, 48, 56, 63, 71. 72, 74, 104. ISBN978-1-57306-166-7. Retrieved December 31, 2011.
  417. ^Lessa, William Armand (1980). More Tales from Ulithi Atoll: a Content Analysis. Folklore and Mythology Studies. 32. University of California Press. pp. 73, 130. ISBN978-0-520-09615-8. Retrieved December 31, 2011.
  418. ^Flood, Bo; Strong, Beret E.; Flood, William (2002). Micronesian Legends. Bess Press. pp. 145–7, 160. ISBN978-1-57306-129-2. Retrieved January 1, 2012.
  419. ^Pliny The Younger. 'Letter To Caninius Rufus'. Pliny the Younger: Letters: Book 3. Translated by J.B.Firth (1900). Retrieved April 27, 2019.
  420. ^Crow, Jonathan. 'Juzo Itami'. AllMovie. Retrieved June 15, 2009.
  421. ^'Filmmaker's Notes Allege Magazine Slur'.
  422. ^Broughton, Ashley (January 6, 2009). 'Let me sleep,' anthrax suspect wrote before suicide'. CNN.
  423. ^Kestenbaum, David (August 1, 2008). 'Who Was Bruce Ivins?'. NPR. Retrieved April 23, 2018.
  424. ^'Novelist's Death Ruled Suicide'. Meriden Journal. September 23, 1968. p. 7. Retrieved February 20, 2013.
  425. ^Soto, Jeff Scott. 'Marcel Jacob: January 30, 1964 - July 21, 2009'. Jeff Scott Soto: Official Site. Archived from the original on July 24, 2009. Retrieved July 21, 2009.
  426. ^'TALISMAN Bassist Marcel Jacob Commits Suicide'. Brave Words & Bloody Knuckles. July 21, 2009.
  427. ^Williams, Brandt (April 12, 2019). 'Irwin Jacobs' death ruled a suicide, wife Alexandra a homicide'. MPR News. Retrieved April 27, 2019.
  428. ^'Serial rapist Jaishankar found dead in jail cell at Bengaluru Central Prison'. February 27, 2018. Archived from the original on February 28, 2018 – via www.thehindu.com.
  429. ^Hughes Thomas, Robert (1856). 'Rahmah bin Jaubir, Chief of Khor Hassan; prepared by Mr Francis Warden, member of council at Bombay'. qdl.qa. Bombay: Printed for Government at the Bombay Education Society's Press. p. 528. Retrieved June 15, 2018.
  430. ^Fernandez, Alexia (August 16, 2018). 'Jill Janus, Frontwoman of Heavy Metal Rock Band Huntress, Dies By Suicide at 43'. People. Retrieved October 1, 2018.
  431. ^Chung Ah-young (March 8, 2009). 'Boys over Flowers Actress Jang Found Dead in Apparent Suicide'. The Korea Times. Retrieved July 9, 2019.
  432. ^'Combat!' Actor Rick Jason Found Dead'. Los Angeles Times. October 17, 2000
  433. ^Sridhar, Vijayalakshmi (February 2, 2014). 'Star suicides: Grim reality of Indian cinema'. Al Jazeera. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  434. ^'US comic dies in apparent suicide'. BBC News. March 12, 2007. Retrieved March 12, 2007.
  435. ^Ryan, Jack (June 27, 2007). 'A Comedian's Sad Demise - Coroner: Before suicide, Richard Jeni was involuntarily hospitalized'. The Smoking Gun.
  436. ^'Family Says Jeni Committed Suicide'. Associated Press/The Washington Post. March 13, 2007.
  437. ^'Murder Suspect Ryan Jenkins Found Dead Of Apparent Suicide'. MTV. August 24, 2009.
  438. ^'Accused killer Ryan Jenkins found hanged in motel in Hope'Archived November 18, 2014, at the Wayback Machine. Canada.com. August 25, 2009.
  439. ^Kil, Sonia; Kil, Sonia (June 29, 2019). 'Korean Actress Jeon Mi-seon Dead in Apparent Suicide'. Variety. Retrieved July 8, 2019.
  440. ^'Actress found hanged, apparently a suicide'. Korea Joongang Daily. February 12, 2007
  441. ^Chen Shou (3rd century). Records of the Three Kingdoms, Book of Wu, Volume 57: Biographies of Yu, Lu, Zhang, Luo, Lu, Wu, and Zhu.
  442. ^'Kaiser's Youngest Son, Joachim, Shoots Himself – Prince Found by Attendants Fatally Wounded at His Villa in Potsdam – Dies Later in a Hospital – Eitel Fritz Only Brother There – Joachim Was in Financial Straits and Divorced – His 'War Service' Denied – Berlin Reports Call Him 'Least Talented' of Family – Ascribe Act to Fit of Dementia'. The New York Times. July 19, 1920.
  443. ^Si-soo, Park (March 9, 2018). '#MeToo-hit actor Jo Min-ki found dead in apparent suicide'. The Korea Times. Retrieved March 12, 2018.
  444. ^Coe, Jonathan (2004). Like a Fiery Elephant: The Story of B.S. Johnson. London: Picador. p. 480. ISBN978-0330350488.
  445. ^Beam, Adam (December 13, 2017). 'Ky. lawmaker accused of assault dies in apparent suicide'. Yahoo! News/Associated Press.
  446. ^'Notorious U.S. fugitive identified as P.E.I. man'. CBC News. March 15, 2006. Retrieved March 12, 2018.
  447. ^'Death of former Red Wing Greg Johnson likely a suicide, police say'. Detroit News. Retrieved July 23, 2019.
  448. ^'Premier Exponent of Jazz Trombone'. 2001. jazzhouse.org. Retrieved November 12, 2014.
  449. ^Abrahamson, Alan; Lait, Matt (May 2, 1998). 'Videotape Farewell: 'I'm a Dead Man''. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved February 8, 2018.
  450. ^'Daniel Victor Jones'. LiveLeak. January 9, 2012. Retrieved February 8, 2018.
  451. ^Davis, Michael (August 8, 2008). 'Milestone: If You're Not There, You Just Won't Get It: Straight No Chaser'. ComicMix. Quote: 'I knew (we all knew) that Malcolm was a troubled soul and I'm sad to say that when he committed suicide a few years ago I was not that surprised. Denys and I would often talk about how to deal with Malcolm and reached out to him many times. That does little to erase the feeling that we somehow let our friend down.'
  452. ^Gatland, Jan Olav (February 3, 2009). 'Tor Jonsson' (in Norwegian). Norsk biografisk leksikon. Retrieved January 2, 2019.
  453. ^Aldrich, Robert; Wotherspoon, Garry (Ed.) (2002). Who's who in Gay and Lesbian History: From Antiquity to World War II. Psychology Press, p 276. Archived at Google Books. Retrieved January 2, 2019.
  454. ^'Swiss Police Identify Cult Leader's Body; Cause of Death Unknown'. Los Angeles Times. October 14, 1994. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  455. ^Appian, The Civil Wars, Book 1, Chapter 48. Loeb Classical Library (1913). University of Chicago. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  456. ^Perreaux, Les (February 17, 2016). 'Jutra's legacy descends into disgrace as Quebec erases director's name'. The Globe and Mail. Retrieved August 12, 2017.
  457. ^'Claude Jutra's body found in river'. CBC Digital Archives. Retrieved August 12, 2017.
  458. ^'Claude Jutra'. The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved August 12, 2017.
  459. ^'Antonie Kamerling overleden'. Privé. October 7, 2010
  460. ^Simon Hattenstone, article, Guardian July 1, 2000
  461. ^Lemire, Jonathan. 'Chris Kanyon's Death Being Ruled A Suicide'. Wrestling 101. April 5, 2010
  462. ^Merry, Bruce (2004). 'Karyotakis, Kostas'. Encyclopedia of modern Greek literature. Greenwood Publishing group. pp. 216–217. ISBN978-0-313-30813-0. Retrieved June 17, 2009.
  463. ^Staedeli, Thomas. 'Portrait of Actor Bruno Kastner'Archived April 18, 2011, at the Wayback Machine. Cyranos.ch. Retrieved April 21, 2017.
  464. ^'Musician Kazuhiko Kato found hanged at Karuizawa hotel'. Kyodo News. October 17, 2009. Archived from the original on October 21, 2009. Retrieved October 18, 2009.
  465. ^Donald Keene (June 2005). Five Modern Japanese Novelists. Columbia University Press. p. 26. ISBN978-0-231-12611-3. Retrieved September 22, 2010.
  466. ^'Kentaro Kawatsu'. SR/Olympic Sports. Archived from the original on February 15, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
  467. ^Gulliver, Katrina (September 15, 2016). 'Why We Have Forgotten the Worst School Attack in U.S. History'. Time.
  468. ^Simon, Stephanie (October 16, 2012). 'Actor Brian Keith Found Dead in Apparent Suicide'. Los Angeles Times.
  469. ^Gold, Lauren (February 1, 2012). 'Famed artist Kelley is found dead in South Pasadena home'. Pasadena Star-News.
  470. ^D'oro, Rachel (December 3, 2012). 'Man Charged in Barista Death Linked to 7 Killings'. ABC News. Retrieved December 3, 2012.
  471. ^Dubey, Bharti (June 4, 2013). 'Actress Jiah Khan commits suicide'. The Times of India. Retrieved June 3, 2013.
  472. ^ ab'Diving legend commits suicide'. BBC News. December 24, 2001. Retrieved May 7, 2010.
  473. ^'Superman' actress Margot Kidder's death ruled a suicide'. Associated Press. August 8, 2018.
  474. ^Bremner, Charles (November 21, 2009). 'Suicide model Daul Kim wrote blog about pressure of catwalk'. The Times. London.
  475. ^'Singer Kim Ji-hoon Kills Himself'. The Chosun Ilbo. December 13, 2017.
  476. ^Oh, S (December 18, 2017). 'Breaking: SHINee's Jonghyun Has Passed Away; Police And SM Entertainment Confirm'. Soompi. South Korea.
  477. ^'Young Fashion Model Found Dead in Apparent Suicide'. The Chosunilbo. South Korea: The Chosunilbo. April 21, 2011.
  478. ^'Ill From Dieting Singer Tries to Die'. The New York Times. March 30, 1930. p. 22.
  479. ^'Miss King, Actress, Dies After Leap'. The New York Times. March 31, 1930. p. 12.
  480. ^Addison, Heather (2003). Hollywood and the Rise of Physical Culture. Psychology Press. p. 87. ISBN978-0-415-94676-6.
  481. ^Glinert, Ed (2009). The London Football companion. ISBN9780747595168. Retrieved July 14, 2013.
  482. ^Dyer, Ken (May 24, 2001). 'West Ham ready to break new ground'. London Evening Standard. Retrieved July 14, 2013.
  483. ^'Telugu actor Uday Kiran commits suicide'. Chennai Vision. January 6, 2014. Archived from the original on January 9, 2014.
  484. ^'Ernst Ludwig Kirchner: German, 1880–1938'. German Expressionism. Museum of Modern Art. New York City. Retrieved May 23, 2015.
  485. ^Boehm, Mike (December 5, 2007). 'Kitaj's Death is ruled a suicide'. Los Angeles Times.
  486. ^Gerstein, Michael (May 11, 2017). 'Death certificate confirms Kivela committed suicide'. The Detroit News.
  487. ^Soboczynski, Adam (January 5, 2011). 'Heinrich von Kleist: Schöne Abgründe'. Die Zeit. Retrieved July 19, 2018.
  488. ^Piechowski, Joe (July 10, 2018). 'Former UCLA Basketball Player Billy Knight Found Dead in Phoenix'. Bruins Nation. UCLA Bruins. Retrieved July 12, 2018.
  489. ^'Ilse Koch: German war criminal'. Britannica. Retrieved October 1, 2015.
  490. ^Hackett, David A (1997). Bericht über das Konzentrationslager Buchenwald bei Weimar [The Buchenwald Report] (in German). Westview Press. pp. 43, 19, 3. ISBN9780813333632.
  491. ^Roberts, Soraya (February 28, 2010). 'Growing Pains' actor Andrew Koenig hanged himself from tree in Vancouver's Stanley Park: source'. Daily News (New York).
  492. ^Pace, Eric (March 4, 1983). 'Arthur Koestler and Wife Suicides in London'. The New York Times. Retrieved November 14, 2017.
  493. ^'The tortured life of Mrs Helmut Kohl'. The Independent. June 17, 2011. Retrieved May 14, 2018.
  494. ^'Lawrence Kohlberg Is Dead'. The New York Times. April 8, 1987.
  495. ^Berczeller, Paul (June 5, 2003). 'Death in the snow'. The Guardian. Archived from the original on December 19, 2014. Retrieved February 9, 2019.
  496. ^Shigeru Hayashi (July 20, 1998). 'Konoe Fumimaro - prime minister of Japan'. Encyclopaedia Britannica. Retrieved November 3, 2017.
  497. ^Eleftheriou-Smith, Loulla-Mae (November 20, 2014). 'Supermodel Ruslana Korshunova who jumped from New York office building had joined 'dehumanizing' cult before she died'. The Independent. Retrieved December 9, 2015.
  498. ^'Shock suicide: Gé Korsten found dead'. Independent Online. (South Africa). September 29, 1999. Retrieved April 27, 2019.
  499. ^Taylor, John. 'The Haunted Bird: The Death and Life of Jerzy Kosinski'. New York. June 15, 1991.
  500. ^'¡Anarquía sí! - Knofo ist tot'. Junge Welt. September 20, 2016. Retrieved April 27, 2018.
  501. ^'Tamil Nadu to build memorial for freedom fighter Kuyili'. Times of India. Chennai. May 16, 2013. Retrieved December 21, 2016.
  502. ^'Ophelia of the Seine'. The Guardian. December 1, 2007. Retrieved February 19, 2019.
  503. ^'In Memory of Deborah Laake'. Phoenix New Times. February 10, 2000. Retrieved February 19, 2010.
  504. ^Holland, Tom (2015). Dynasty: The Rise and Fall of the House of Caesar. New York: Random House. p. 260.
  505. ^Greig, Charlotte (2005). Evil Serial Killers: In the Minds of Monsters. New York: Barnes & Noble. p. 93. ISBN978-0760775660.
  506. ^de Baecque, Antoine (February 1, 2005). 'Le geste ultime de Karen Bach'. Libération (in French). Retrieved December 9, 2009.
  507. ^Parish, James Robert (2002). The Hollywood Book of Death: The Bizarre, Often Sordid, Passings of More Than 125 American Movie and TV Idols (3 ed.). Contemporary Books. p. 315. ISBN978-0-8092-2227-8.
  508. ^Gans, Eric Lawrence (2008). 'The Good Die Young (1948)'. Carole Landis: A Most Beautiful Girl. University Press of Mississippi. pp. 197–199. ISBN978-1-60473-013-5. Retrieved June 13, 2009.
  509. ^Adam, Thomas (November 7, 2005). 'Admiral Graf Spee'. Germany and the Americas: Culture, Politics, and History: a Multidisciplinary Encyclopedia, Volume 1. ABC-CLIO. p. 45. ISBN978-1-85109-628-2. Retrieved March 4, 2018.
  510. ^'Adam Lanza: Biography'. Biography.com. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
  511. ^Abramovitch, Seth (October 4, 2011). ''King of Infomercials' Don Lapre Commits Suicide'. Gawker. Archived from the original on January 5, 2015.
  512. ^'Anna Laughlin, Broadway Idol Of 1900's Ends Her Life in N.Y.'. The Washington Post. April 6, 1937. p. 14.
  513. ^Brown, Kelly R. (1999). Florence Lawrence, the Biograph Girl: America's First Movie Star. McFarland & Company. pp. 146–147. ISBN978-0-786-43089-5.
  514. ^'Top Actress Lee Eun-ju's Suicide Shocks Nation'. The Chosunilbo. February 22, 2005
  515. ^Looi, Elizabeth (January 25, 2007). 'Korean singer found hanged'Archived October 17, 2011, at the Wayback Machine. The Online Star.
  516. ^'Feeder drummer dies'. BBC News. January 9, 2002.
  517. ^Neef, Christian (March 24, 2011). ''This Reactor Model Is No Good': Documents Show Politburo Skepticism of Chernobyl'. Der Spiegel. Translated by Sultan, Christopher. But he did not die of radiation sickness, even though he spent four months in Chernobyl after the explosion there. Legasov hanged himself in his office on April 27, 1988, almost two years to the day after the reactor accident in present-day Ukraine.
  518. ^ abJohnson, John (July 16, 1994). 'Suicide of Young Superstar Weighs on Porn Industry Tragedy: Pampered, wild Shannon Wilsey, known as Savannah, was the third actress to take her life'. Los Angeles Times.
  519. ^O'Neil Tim (February 12, 2012). 'A Look Back • Lemp Mansion, home of beer dynasty and suicide'. St. Louis Post Dispatch.
  520. ^'Crashdiet vocalist Dave Lepard'. Full In Bloom Music. Retrieved November 12, 2014.
  521. ^Hoffman, K. Ross 'Crashdïet - Music Biography, Credits and Discography'. AllMusic. Retrieved September 11, 2012.
  522. ^'Marc Lepine: Biography'. Biography.com. Retrieved April 8, 2018.
  523. ^Kącki, Marcin (December 19, 2012). 'Prokuratura ustaliła, dlaczego Andrzej Lepper popełnił samobójstwo (The public prosecutor's office determined suicide motives)'. Kraj (in Polish). Gazeta Wyborcza. Retrieved June 22, 2013.
  524. ^'Scandal-hit Polish politician Andrzej Lepper dead' BBC News. August 5, 2018.
  525. ^Ortega, Tony (March 19, 2018). 'Noted Scientology critic Arnie Lerma shoots and injures wife, then kills himself'. The Underground Bunker. Retrieved September 2, 2018.
  526. ^'Oklahoma County, Oklahoma Genealogy Trails: CRIME NEWS ARTICLES'. Geneaology Trials. Geneaology Trails History Group. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
  527. ^'Poet: Amy Levy'. Poets.org. Retrieved July 23, 2018.
  528. ^Diniejko, Andrzej (May 22, 2012). 'Amy Levy: A Tragic Late Victorian Anglo-Jewish Poet and Novelist'. The Victorian Web. Retrieved July 24, 2018.
  529. ^McAvoy, Audrey (April 3, 2011). 'Marine found not guilty in hazing suicide case'. NBC News.
  530. ^McAvoy, Audrey (February 24, 2012). 'Marine found not guilty in hazing suicide case'. NBC News.
  531. ^'Genius Plus Soul: Ephraim Lewis'. Spin, August 2009, p. 75.
  532. ^Smelser, Ronald (1988). Robert Ley: Hitler's Labor Front Leader. Oxford: Berg. p. 573. ISBN978-0-85496-161-0.
  533. ^Greenburg, Zack O'Malley (August 30, 2012). 'Hip-Hop Business Pioneer Chris Lighty Dead At 44'. Forbes.
  534. ^Shenton, Zoe (March 24, 2015). 'Lil' Chris dead: TV personality Chris Hardman famous for Rock School passes away aged 24'. Daily Mirror.
  535. ^'Lin Dai'. Baidu. December 26, 1934. Retrieved May 18, 2017.
  536. ^Canby, Vincent (April 1, 1988). 'Review/Film; Homage to Max Linder, Early French Film Comic'. The New York Times. Retrieved June 13, 2009.
  537. ^Masters, Edgar Lee (b1935). Vachel Lindsay: A Poet in America. p. 361. ISBN978-0819602398
  538. ^Mikkelson, Barbara (August 15, 2005). 'Death of Diane Linkletter'. Snopes.com. Retrieved November 13, 2018.
  539. ^Barton, Chris (March 7, 2010). 'Mark Linkous, aka Sparklehorse, takes his own life, his family says'. Los Angeles Times.
  540. ^Bonnie G. Smith (2008). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Women in World History: 4 Volume Set. Oxford University Press. pp. 125–6. ISBN978-0-19-514890-9.
  541. ^'Philip Loeb Dead; Prominent Actor; Body Found in Midtown Hotel; Overdose of Sleeping Pills Apparent Cause'. The New York Times, September 2, 1955. p. 38.
  542. ^Tziperman Lotan, Gal (June 22, 2016). 'Police: Man who killed singer Christina Grimmie was 'infatuated' with her'. Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved June 22, 2016.
  543. ^Leopold, Todd (July 28, 2005). 'The master chef who killed himself: A story of a star 'Perfectionist'. CNN.
  544. ^Lam, Jeffie (August 5, 2018). 'Pop star Ellen Joyce Loo dies in fall from her Happy Valley flat'. South China Morning Post. Retrieved August 5, 2018.
  545. ^Luo, Charlotte (August 6, 2018). 'Lesbian pop star's suicide stuns fans'. The Standard. Retrieved August 6, 2018.
  546. ^Frater, Patrick (August 5, 2018). 'Hong Kong Singer Ellen Loo Dies in Apparent Suicide at 32'. Variety. Retrieved August 5, 2018.
  547. ^De Castro (September 5, 2014). 'Em 1993, Aqui Agora exibiu suicídio de adolescente e chocou o Brasil'. Televisao.
  548. ^'Inside the Mind of a Celebrity Stalker'. abcnews.go.com. December 11, 1996. Retrieved November 29, 2017.
  549. ^Mair, Victor H. (2013). The Columbia History of Chinese Literature. Columbia University Press. p. 289. ISBN978-0-231-52851-1.
  550. ^Clark, Nicola (April 3, 2015). 'Germanwings Plane Crash Investigation'. The New York Times. Retrieved April 4, 2015.
  551. ^Tacitus (62-65 AD). Book XV, Chapter 70.1. Annals. Scholars have vainly tried to locate Lucan's last words in his work but no passage in Lucan's extant poem exactly matches Tacitus's description at Annals 15.70.1. See, e.g., P. Asso, 'A Commentary on Lucan 'De Bello Civili IV.' Berlin: De Gruyter, 2010, p. 9n38.
  552. ^Dionysius of Halicarnassus. Roman Antiquities, Book IV, 67
  553. ^'N.Y. Ranger is found dead in hotel room ; Lyashenko on vacation in Turkey Cause of death reported to be suicide'. Toronto Star. July 8, 2003. p. E02.
  554. ^'Lyashenko's death a suicide, police say'. Edmonton Journal. July 10, 2003. p. D6.
  555. ^Manel, Jon. 'Body on the Moor'. BBC News. Retrieved March 12, 2018.
  556. ^Dalton, Stephen (April 2, 2007). 'Billy Mackenzie Tribute'. The Times. London. Retrieved June 3, 2009.
  557. ^'Dead rockers and our inner ghouls – The Scotsman'. Sport.scotsman.com. January 18, 2002. Retrieved July 31, 2014.
  558. ^Cassius Dio, Roman HistoryBook 59, Chapter 10. 1924. University of Chicago. Retrieved August 18, 2018.
  559. ^Maddox, Brenda (September 12, 1994). The Married Man. A Life of D.H. Lawrence. Sinclair-Stevenson Ltd.
  560. ^Plutarch, Parallel Lives, The Life of Timoleon, Book Book 22. University of Chicago.
  561. ^'Spritual [sic] leader Bhaiyyu Maharaj commits suicide'. The Hindu. PTI. June 12, 2018. Retrieved June 12, 2018.
  562. ^'Page 6'. georgemaher.com. Retrieved November 12, 2014.
  563. ^Powell, John Edward (1996). 'George Washington Maher (1864-1926)'. A Guide to Historic Architecture in Fresno, California.
  564. ^Drennan, William R. (August 21, 2008). Death in a Prairie House: Frank Lloyd Wright and the Taliesin Murders. University of Wisconsin Press. p. 166. Archived at Google Books. Retrieved May 23, 2015.
  565. ^Scherman, Tony, Backbeat: The Earl Palmer Story, Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington D.C., 1999 p. 124
  566. ^Beiser, Frederick C. (2008). Weltschmerz, Pessimism in German Philosophy, 1860-1900. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 201. ISBN978-0198768715.
  567. ^Meislin, Richard J. (March 15, 1986). 'Manes's Death: A Frantic Call, A Fatal Thrust'. The New York Times.
  568. ^'Romanian Singer Madalina Manole Willingly Ingested Toxic Substance, Investigators Say'Archived July 17, 2010, at the Wayback Machine. MediaFax. Retrieved July 14, 2010.
  569. ^Shanley, Patrick (April 27, 2017). 'Miracle' Star Michael Mantenuto Found Dead at 35'. The Hollywood Reporter/Yahoo! Movies.
  570. ^Pareles, Jon (March 6, 1986). 'Richard Manuel, 40, Rock Singer and Pianist'. The New York Times.
  571. ^Cassius Dio, Roman History, Book 65, Chapter 16. 1925. University of Chicago. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  572. ^'Suicidio de Simone Mareuil - Ya está el listo que todo lo sabe'. Ya está el listo que todo lo sabe.
  573. ^Walsh, Michael (July 27, 2012). 'Autopsy shows Michael Marin, Arizona man who was former Wall Street trader, killed self with cyanide after hearing guilty verdict. Daily News (New York City).
  574. ^Bhattacharjee, Riya (May 26, 2006). 'Friends Remember Andrew Martinez'. Berkeley Daily Planet. Retrieved January 3, 2009.
  575. ^Colander, Pat (October 1, 2015). 'TRUE CRIME: David Edward Maust was institutionalized for most of his life'. The Times of Northwest Indiana. Retrieved April 9, 2018.
  576. ^Ehrman, Bart D. (2018). 'Chapter 1: The Beginning of The End: The Conversion of Constantine'. The Triumph of Christianity: How a Forbidden Religion Swept the World. Simon & Schuster. p. 31.
  577. ^Liukkonen, Petri. 'Vladimir Mayakovsky (1893-1930) - Also: Vladimir Vladimirovich Maiakovskii'. Books and Writers. Finland: Kuusankoski Public Library. Archived from the original on July 16, 2011.
  578. ^Davies, Lisa (September 18, 2013). 'Child killer Allyson McConnell found dead'. The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved December 16, 2016.
  579. ^Purdy, Chris (September 28, 2013). 'Allyson McConnell Dead; Depressed Mom Killed Herself, Says Lawyer'. The Canadian Press at HuffPost. Retrieved December 16, 2016. Updated November 18, 2013.
  580. ^'Kid McCoy'. Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved March 9, 2007.
  581. ^'Country singer Mindy McCready dead of apparent suicide'. BBC News. February 18, 2013. Retrieved February 18, 2013.
  582. ^Schabner, Dean. 'Country Singer Mindy McCready Dead at 37'. ABC News. Retrieved February 18, 2013.
  583. ^Cosgrove, Ben (March 19, 2014). 'The Most Beautiful Suicide': A Violent Death, an Immortal Photo'. Time.
  584. ^Grayson, Richard (May 23, 2007). 'Tom McHale, novelist'. Edward Champion's Reluctant Habits. Retrieved July 1, 2010.
  585. ^'Denver Broncos Player Likely Committed Suicide'. CBS News. September 20, 2010.
  586. ^'Baltimore's Mayor Commit Suicide – Robert M. McLane, Married Two Weeks Ago, Shoots Himself – Worried Over Big Fire – Worked Without Ceasing and Was Criticised in Connection with Rebuilding of Burned Section'. The New York Times. May 31, 1904. p. 1. Retrieved March 22, 2008.
  587. ^Tayag, Yasmin (April 5, 2017). 'What Happened When John B. McLemore Drank Potassium Cyanide In 'S-Town''. Inverse. Retrieved December 4, 2018.
  588. ^Brettell, Andrew; King, Noel; Kennedy, Damien; Imwold, Denise; Leonard, Warren Hsu; von Rohr, Heather (2005). Cut!: Hollywood Murders, Accidents, and Other Tragedies. Barrons Educational Series. p. 277. ISBN978-0-7641-5858-2.
  589. ^Bell, Arthur (March 20, 1978). 'Bell Tells: Goodbye, Maggie'. The Village Voice. p. 86. Retrieved January 5, 2013.
  590. ^McQueen, Alexander (February 17, 2010). 'Alexander McQueen hangs himself'. Daily News. New York.
  591. ^'Alexander McQueen committed suicide after taking drugs'. BBC News. April 28, 2010. Retrieved April 28, 2010.
  592. ^Catarevas, Michael (November 4, 2016). 'Connecticut's Heroes Aboard the Doomed USS Indianapolis'. Connecticut Magazine. Retrieved June 29, 2018.
  593. ^Savage, Jon (November 12, 2006). 'Meek by name, wild by nature'. The Guardian. London. Retrieved July 15, 2013.
  594. ^'Parents: Cyber Hoax Led to Teen's Suicide'. ABC News. February 19, 2009
  595. ^Hooper, John (November 18, 2002). 'The dead guerrillas, the missing brains and the experiment'. The Guardian (London).
  596. ^Sullivan, Ted (October 12, 2005). 'Personal Items Belonging to 1974 Murder Victim Found in Manhattan (Mont).'Bozeman Daily Chronicle. Retrieved April 19, 2018.
  597. ^Rayner, Gordon ()January 9, 2009. 'Adolf Merckle: what made this German billionaire commit suicide?'The Daily Telegraph.
  598. ^Velleius Paterculus, Roman History, Book 2, Chapter 22. University of Chicago.
  599. ^Mumford, Gwilym (February 9, 2018). 'Jill Messick: producer's death 'collateral damage' of Weinstein scandal, family say'. The Guardian.
  600. ^'Jill Messick's Family Issues Blistering Statement on Harvey Weinstein and Rose McGowan'. The Hollywood Reporter. February 8, 2018. Archived from the original on February 8, 2018.
  601. ^'Producer Jill Messick, 50, commits suicide; Family blames Rose McGowan-Harvey Weinstein fight'. February 9, 2018. Retrieved February 23, 2018.
  602. ^Lolarga, Elizabeth (April 22, 2012). 'Maningning lives anew in the Miclat family's season of rebirth'. Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved February 9, 2019.
  603. ^Haldenman, Joe (February 1996). 'An Appreciation', Locus, pp. 78-79.
  604. ^Streitfeld, David (October 9, 1997). 'Canticle' Author Unsung Even In Death'. Orlando Sentinel.
  605. ^Sheridan, Simon. Come Play with Me: The Life and Films of Mary Millington 1999 (FAB Press, Guildford)
  606. ^Turnbull, Stephan R. (1977). The Samurai: A Military History. New York: MacMillan Publishing Co. p. 47.
  607. ^Kim, Hodong (2004). Holy War in China: The Muslim Rebellion and State in Chinese Central Asia, 1864-1877. Stanford University Press. p. 55. ISBN9780804767231.
  608. ^'Hundreds At Rites For Actress Who Killed Self'. Los Angeles Times. March 12, 1955
  609. ^'BMX Legend, Dave Mirra (41) Dies'. Archived from the original on February 11, 2016.
  610. ^Nathan, John (1974). Mishima: A Biography, Little Brown and Company: Boston/Toronto.
  611. ^Appian. Roman History, Third Mithridatic War, §111-112
  612. ^'Antonin Moine'. Encyclopedia Universalis (in French). Retrieved February 19, 2010.
  613. ^'Italian cinema great Mario Monicelli kills himself'. BBC News. November 30, 2010.
  614. ^'Mario Monicelli morto suicida a Roma' (in Italian). Corriere della Sera. November 29, 2010. Retrieved November 29, 2010.
  615. ^Roston, Michael (November 29, 2010). 'Mario Monicelli, Italian Director, Dies at 95'. The New York Times. Retrieved November 30, 2010.
  616. ^Summers, Anthony (1985). Goddess, The Secret Lives of Marilyn Monroe. Guild Publishing, London. p. 171. ISBN978-0-575-03641-3.
  617. ^Lynn Yaeger. 'All Sold Out at CBGB'. The Village Voice.
  618. ^France, David (January 13, 1997). This Doctor Wants to Help You Die. New York. New York Media, LLC. p. 29. ISSN0028-7369. Retrieved June 9, 2013.
  619. ^Freund, Andreas (September 23, 1972). 'Henry de Montherlant Is Dead; French Novelist and Playwright'. The New York Times. Retrieved July 25, 2019.
  620. ^'Donnie Moore Dies in Apparent Suicide : Home Run Pitch in 1986 Playoffs Haunted Moore, Says His Agent'. Los Angeles Times. July 19, 1989
  621. ^Sato, Hideaki; Inoue, Takashi (2005). 決定版 三島由紀夫全集・第42巻・年譜・書誌 [Final edition-Yukio Mishima complete works No.42-Biographical sketch and Bibliography] (in Japanese). Shinchosha. p. 332.
  622. ^Fukushima, Jyuro (2005). 再訂資料・三島由紀夫 [Second revised edition - Documents of Yukio Mishima] (in Japanese). Chobunsha. p. 183.
  623. ^'A.R. Morlan (1958-2016)'. Locus Online. January 11, 2016. Retrieved June 25, 2019.
  624. ^Kalil, Mike. (June 13, 2006) 'Best-selling author of book on serial killers kills himself.'Las Vegas Review-Journal. Retrieved May 19, 2017.
  625. ^'BKA-Chef: Kiesewetter in Beziehung zu NSU-Gruppe'. Hamburger Abendblatt. November 19, 2011. Retrieved April 27, 2018.
  626. ^Stephens, Chuck (January/February 2013). 'A Face in the Crowd: Ona Munson'. Film Comment.
  627. ^Donovan, Paul (December 13, 2015). 'Radio Waves: A worthy legacy'. The Times. Retrieved December 24, 2018.
  628. ^Hewett, Ivan (May 23, 2012). 'David Munrow: Tragic genius who brought early music to the masses'. The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved December 24, 2018.
  629. ^'Mussey, Francine Biography'. Movies.Pics. Retrieved May 18, 2017.
  630. ^Owen, J. (August 17, 2013). 'Chuichi Nagumo, Vice Admiral IJN'. PearlHarbor.org. Retrieved June 7, 2018.
  631. ^Rojewski, Janek (July 21, 2017). 'Mirosław Nahacz, jeden z największych talentów literackich XXI w. 10 lat temu odebrał sobie życie'. Polityka (in Polish). Retrieved October 12, 2018.
  632. ^'Nakano, Seigo'. Portraits of Modern Japanese Historical Figures. National Diet Library (Tokyo, Kyoto). 2013. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
  633. ^Shishkin, Philip (June 24, 2014). Restless Valley. Yale University Press. Archived at Google Books. Retrieved May 23, 2015.
  634. ^Nearing, Helen (June 29, 2000). 'At The End Of A Good Life'. In Context. Context Institute. Archived from the original on February 13, 2010. Retrieved February 10, 2010.
  635. ^Patten, Fred (November 21, 2003). 'New from Japan: Anime Film Reviews'. Animation World Magazine. Retrieved May 23, 2009.[permanent dead link]
  636. ^Bunson, Matthew (2009). Encyclopedia of the Roman Empire. Infobase Publishing. ISBN978-1-4381-1027-1. Retrieved October 28, 2013.
  637. ^Tacitus (32-37 AD). Book 6, Chapter 26, The Annals. Wikisource. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  638. ^'Former Wife of Late Atomic Energy Commission Official Drowns'. Albuquerque Journal. November 11, 1963. Retrieved July 22, 2017.
  639. ^'Former Great Britain hooker Terry Newton found dead'. The Guardian. London. September 26, 2010. Retrieved October 10, 2012.
  640. ^'Hanged rugby league player Terry Newton had taken drugs'. BBC News. December 20, 2010. Retrieved December 21, 2010.
  641. ^Roberts, Laura (June 21, 2010). 'Burberry model Tom Nicon commits suicide at start of Milan Fashion Week'. The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on June 21, 2015.
  642. ^Koziol, Ronald; Baumann, Edward (June 29, 1987). 'How Frank Nitti Met His Fate'. Chicago Tribune.
  643. ^'Dissection Frontman Jon Nödtveidt Commits Suicide'. Metal Storm. Retrieved December 10, 2011.
  644. ^'Mita Noor killed herself'. bdnews24. July 1, 2013. Retrieved August 25, 2015.
  645. ^'STAGE BEAUTY DIES IN 20-STORY PLUNGE'Associated Press/Evening Star, p. 1, March 6, 1930.
  646. ^'Archives 2004'. JLit. Archived from the original on February 1, 2009. Retrieved February 25, 2009.
  647. ^O'Brien, Erin. 'Clues In John O'Brien's 'Better''. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved August 11, 2014.
  648. ^Caulfield, Philip (September 10, 2014). 'Former pro wrestler Sean O'Haire dies at 43'. Daily News. New York. Retrieved February 7, 2019.
  649. ^Schumacher, Michael (1996). There But for Fortune: The Life of Phil Ochs. New York: Hyperion. pp. 344–352. ISBN978-0-7868-6084-5.
  650. ^Beasley, W. G. (August 31, 2000). 'The Unifiers'. The Japanese Experience: A Short History of Japan. University of California Press. p. 123. ISBN978-0-520-22560-2.
  651. ^Nolte, Carl (March 29, 2001). 'Doing His Duty / Vet's grandson gives personal effects back to kamikaze pilot's family'. San Francisco Chronicle.
  652. ^'TRIGON: Spies Passing in the Night'. Central Intelligence Agency. June 20, 2016. Retrieved February 16, 2019.
  653. ^Stefan Rydehed (director) (2008). Pure Fucking Mayhem (motion picture). Index Verlag.
  654. ^Aaron Aites (director, producer), Audrey Ewell (director, producer) (2009). Until the Light Takes Us (motion picture). Variance Films.
  655. ^Freyja (March 19, 2010). 'The 'True' History of Black Metal – 2 of 4'. Raginpit Magazine. Archived from the original on January 2, 2011. Retrieved April 3, 2010.
  656. ^'Yukiko Okada'[permanent dead link]. ACA Music. Retrieved May 23, 2015.
  657. ^Rosendahl, Erik. 'Departures and Homecomings: On Estonian Chess'(PDF). ChessCafe.com. p. 6. Retrieved March 18, 2010.
  658. ^Black, Rosemary (May 18, 2010). 'Why are so many models attempting suicide? Lives of top catwalkers fraught with pressure: experts'. Daily News (New York).
  659. ^Kotkin, Stephen (October 31, 2017). Stalin: Waiting for Hitler, 1929-1941, Penguin Press. p. 384.
  660. ^Plutarch, Parallel Lives, The Life of Otho, 17.3
  661. ^Herodotus, The HistoriesBook 1, Chapter 82. Perseus Project. Tufts University. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  662. ^Hall, John Whitney (1991). The Cambridge History of Japan, Volume 4. Cambridge University Press. p. 315.
  663. ^'Stephen Paddock: What we know about Las Vegas mass shooter'. San Francisco Chronicle. October 2, 2017. Retrieved October 9, 2017.
  664. ^'Tommy Page, Singer and Former Billboard Publisher, Dies at 46'. Billboard. March 4, 2017. Retrieved August 29, 2017.
  665. ^'Jan Palach: Charles University Multimedia Project'. Charles University in Prague. Retrieved May 18, 2017.
  666. ^Butcher, Steve (December 9, 2009). 'Brodie's Torment'. The Sydney Morning Herald. Archived from the original on August 11, 2017. Retrieved August 12, 2017.
  667. ^'Actor Park Yong-ha found dead in apparent suicide'. Yonhap News Agency. June 30, 2010
  668. ^Mena, Rosario. 'Eduardo Parra: My Sister Violetta Parra'. Nuestro.cl. Retrieved September 6, 2012.
  669. ^Mena, Rosaries. 'Eduardo Parra: My Sister Violetta Parra'. Nuestro.cl. Retrieved September 6, 2012.
  670. ^Kirkup, James (September 3, 1996). 'Christine Pascal: Obituary'. The Independent.
  671. ^Lefort, Gérard. 'Christine Pascal nous abandonne. L'actrice de 'Que la fête commence' et réalisatrice du 'Petit Prince a dit' s'est suicidée vendredi. Elle avait 42 ans'. Libération. Retrieved December 11, 2011.
  672. ^'1982 NHL Draft Pick: Dusan Pasek'. HockeyDraftCentral.com. Retrieved January 15, 2013.
  673. ^'Cesare Pavese'. Italica. Archived from the original on June 6, 2011. Retrieved June 2, 2011.
  674. ^'Mexican Actress a Suicide'. The New York Times. Mexico City: The New York Times Company. December 12, 1964. p. 34. Retrieved July 18, 2018.
  675. ^Lucian, De Morte Peregrini, 35-36.
  676. ^Grey, Jamie (July 26, 2011). 'Olympian Jeret Peterson has died'. KTVB. Boise, Idaho. Archived from the original on August 6, 2011. Retrieved July 27, 2011.
  677. ^Tacitus (65-66 AD). Book 16, Chapter 19. Annals. Wikisource. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  678. ^Titus Flavius Josephus, Antiquities of the Jews, Book XIV,13
  679. ^Plutarch, Parallel Lives, The Life of Demetrius, 'Chapter 45'. Attalus. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  680. ^Sanders, Lionel Jehuda (2008). The Legend of Dion. Edgar Kent. p. 78. ISBN978-0888666574.
  681. ^'Justin Pierce - Biography'. Yahoo! Movies. Retrieved January 15, 2013.
  682. ^'Justin Pierce, 25; Starred in 'Kids''. The New York Times. July 13, 2000.
  683. ^'Rosamond Pinchot Ends Life In Garage'. The New York Times. January 25, 1938. p. 1.
  684. ^F., Carr, John (2008). H. Beam Piper : a biography. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Company. p. 1. ISBN9780786433759. OCLC173240831.
  685. ^'Piper, H Beam'. The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
  686. ^Tacitus (62-65 AD). Book 15, Chapter 59, Annals. Wikisource. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  687. ^Tacitus (20-22 AD). Book 3, Chapter 15, Annals. Wikisource. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  688. ^'Alejandra Pizarnik: biografía literaria'. Centro Virtual Cervantes. Retrieved November 3, 2012.
  689. ^'American History: From Revolution to Reconstruction and beyond'. University of Groningen. Archived from the original on March 7, 2012. Retrieved May 18, 2017.
  690. ^O'Neill, Anne-Marie (June 7, 1999). 'Seeking Serenity'. People. 51 (20).
  691. ^'Dana Plato's son dies at age 25'. USA Today. May 12, 2010. Retrieved May 12, 2010.
  692. ^'Overview for Edward Platt'. Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved April 28, 2017.
  693. ^'Der Zeichner e.o.plauen, verraten von einem Freund'. Welt. April 5, 2014. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
  694. ^Church, Alfred J. (2000). 'CATO, BRUTUS, AND PORCIA'. Roman Life in the Days of Cicero. The Baldwin Project. Retrieved June 18, 2018.
  695. ^Church, Alfred J. (2000). 'CATO, BRUTUS, AND PORCIA'. Roman Life in the Days of Cicero. Retrieved October 23, 2018.
  696. ^Tacitus (109 AD). Book 14, Chapter 37. Annals. Perseus Project. Tufts University. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  697. ^'Dead man sat in truck at airport parking lot for eight months and no one noticed'. New York Post. September 18, 2017. Retrieved April 21, 2018.
  698. ^However, Justin (March 10, 2009). 'Jan Potocki and the Manuscript Found in Saragossa'. Tor.com.
  699. ^'US father Josh Powell blows himself up with two young children'. The Guardian. London. Associated Press. February 6, 2012. Retrieved October 26, 2018.
  700. ^'Praljak: Bosnian Croat war criminal dies after taking poison in court'. BBC. Retrieved November 29, 2017.
  701. ^Brown, Andrew (2000). The Darwin Wars: The Scientific Battle for the Soul of Man. London: Touchstone Books. p. 1. ISBN978-0-684-85145-7.
  702. ^Eckholm, Erik; Zezima, Katie (March 29, 2010). '6 Teenagers Are Charged After Classmate's Suicide'. The New York Times.
  703. ^Scott, Vernon (January 31, 1977). 'Freddie Prinze buried on hill overlooking NBC studio'. The Capitol Journal. Salem, Oregon. UPI. p. 6. Retrieved February 16, 2019 – via newspapers.com.
  704. ^Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca historica, Book Book 20, Chapter 27. University of Chicago.
  705. ^Plutarch, The Life of Cato the Younger36. 1919. Loeb Classical Library. Retrieved July 27, 2019.
  706. ^【不斷更新】28歲《小時代》男星驟逝 公司證實「憂鬱症輕生」. Apple Daily (in Chinese). September 16, 2016.
  707. ^'The Sad story of Qu Yuan'. eBeijing, the Official Website of the Beijing Government (Beijing). Retrieved May 19, 2017.
  708. ^'Qu Yuan (c. 340-278 B.C.): Embracing Sand'. The Ethics of Suicide Digital Archive, J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah, Oxford University Press. Retrieved May 19, 2017.
  709. ^Daniel Baumann, 'Gertrude Quastler', 2013 Carnegie International, Carnagie Museum of Art, 2013.
  710. ^Zosimus, New HistoryBook 1, Chapter 25, London: Green and Chaplin (1814), Transcribed by Roger Pearse, Ipswich (2002). Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  711. ^'Horacio-Quiroga'. Encyclopædia Britannica. July 20, 1998. Retrieved May 18, 2017.
  712. ^Krajewski, Andrzej (September 4, 2009). 'Polskie Termopile, czyli cud pod Wizną'. Polska the Times (in Polish). 207 (575): 16–17. ISSN1898-3081.
  713. ^Preston, John (May 22, 2008). 'The original Indiana Jones: Otto Rahn and the temple of doom'. The Daily Telegraph.
  714. ^Sutton, Candace Suttonl Sams, Chris (February 15, 2004). 'Mystery over stage star's death in bush'. The Sun-Herald.
  715. ^'Gaziantepspor's Czech striker Rajtoral commits suicide by hanging'. Daily Sabah. April 23, 2017.
  716. ^Zantingh, Peter (February 17, 2012). 'Journalist en schrijver Anil Ramdas (54) overleden'. NRC Handelsblad.
  717. ^'May God forgive these bullies... because I never will'. Kirkintilloch Herald. March 17, 2002. Archived from the original on July 25, 2011.
  718. ^'Star Wars to Snow White: The life of a dwarf actor'. BBC News. December 23, 1999. Retrieved May 6, 2009.
  719. ^Childs, David (April 9, 2007). 'Hans Filbinger'. The Independent. Archived from the original on May 5, 2011. Retrieved April 27, 2019.
  720. ^Hofmann, Paul (October 19, 1977). '3 JAILED GERMAN TERRORISTS REPORTED SUICIDES AS HOSTAGES FROM HIJACKED PLANE FLY HOME'. The New York Times. Retrieved April 27, 2019.
  721. ^'New Pictures of RAF Terror Cell Events Unearthed in Germany'. Deutsche Welle. August 5, 2008. Archived from the original on August 5, 2008.
  722. ^'Hitler's True Love Wasn't Eva Braun – It Was His Niece'. All That's Interesting. February 8, 2018. Retrieved April 21, 2019.
  723. ^'Former Stalker Of Letterman And Astronaut Commits Suicide'. The Seattle Times. October 6, 1998. Retrieved February 28, 2019.
  724. ^'Roy Raymond, 47; Began Victoria's Secret'. The New York Times. September 2, 1993.
  725. ^Bonander, Ross (December 2, 2009). '5 Things You Didn't know: Victoria's Secret'. AskMen.com. Retrieved December 2, 2009.
  726. ^Fox, Margalit (August 17, 2007). 'Liam Rector, 57, a Poet and Educator, Dies'. The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved November 28, 2010.
  727. ^Cox, Peter; Geller, Andy (August 16, 2007). 'Top N.Y. Poet Kills Self'. New York Post. NYP Holdings, Inc. Archived from the original on October 21, 2012. Retrieved November 28, 2010.
  728. ^Goeschel, Christian (2009). Suicide in Nazi Germany. OUP Oxford. p. 153. ISBN978-0191567568.
  729. ^'Winn Parish district attorney apparently kills himself'. The New Orleans Times-Picayune. July 22, 2005. Retrieved December 6, 2018.
  730. ^Colapinto, J (June 3, 2004). 'Gender Gap: What were the real reasons behind David Reimer's suicide?'. Slate. Retrieved February 13, 2009.
  731. ^Evangelista, Katherine (February 8, 2011).'Angelo Reyes commits suicide'Archived November 8, 2014, at the Wayback Machine. Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved February 8, 2011.
  732. ^'The Late T. C. Reynolds'. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. 37 (232). March 31, 1887. p. 2. ISSN1930-9600. LCCNsn83045501. OCLC01764810.
  733. ^Scott, Mike (July 19, 2017). 'Former MSU pitcher John Rheinecker dies at 38'. OzarksSportsZone.com.
  734. ^Airi, Kinoshita (February 1, 2014). 'Sen no Rikyu -The Greatest Tea Master'. The Kyoto Project, Kyoto University of Foreign Studies. Retrieved March 24, 2018.
  735. ^Minovitz, Ethan (February 2, 2012). 'Animator, artist Al Rio dies in apparent suicide'. The Big Cartoon Database. Archived from the original on February 26, 2012. Retrieved February 2, 2012. ...died Tuesday [January 31, 2012] morning.
  736. ^'Two Women Die'. Sarasota Herald Tribune. April 25, 1930. p. 2. Retrieved May 18, 2017.
  737. ^'Dale was so depressed'. Evening Telegraph. Northampton. November 18, 2011.
  738. ^'Rachel Roberts Ruled a Suicide'. The New York Times. January 6, 1981.
  739. ^'Charles Rocket's death ruled a suicide'. North County Times. October 18, 2005. Archived from the original on October 22, 2012. Retrieved August 14, 2013.
  740. ^Donaldson James, Susan (September 22, 2011). 'Jamey Rodemeyer Suicide: Police Consider Criminal Bullying Charges'. ABC News.
  741. ^Nagourney, Adam (June 1, 2014). 'Before Brief, Deadly Spree, Trouble Since Age 8'. The New York Times.
  742. ^Kim, Rahn; Park, Si-soo (May 23, 2009). 'Former President Roh Jumps to Death'.The Korea Times.
  743. ^Shirer, William L. (1960). The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich. New York: Simon & Schuster. p. 967-969. ISBN978-0-671-62420-0.
  744. ^'Manfred Rommel, son of the Desert Fox, forged a great friendship with Monty's son which became a symbol of post-war reconciliation'. The Daily Telegraph. November 10, 2013.
  745. ^'The Desert Fox' commits suicide'. History. Retrieved August 23, 2014.
  746. ^Testa, Jessica (May 9, 2013). 'Why did Jodon Romero kill himself on live TV?'. BuzzFeed News. Retrieved December 5, 2018.
  747. ^'Edgar Rosenberg: The Public Ending of a Private Life : Suicide of Rivers' Husband Came Without a Warning'. Los Angeles Times. August 20, 1987. p. 15.
  748. ^'Press Releases Late at Tate at Tate Liverpool (October 22, 2009): Reflect on Mark Rothko's Seagram Murals in the twilight hours (Tate Liverpool)'. Tate. Archived from the original on July 12, 2011. Retrieved July 13, 2011.
  749. ^Cogan, Marin (March 1, 2016). 'Does Encouraging Suicide Make You a Killer?'. New York. Retrieved July 1, 2017.
  750. ^Yu, Wentao (April 7, 2006), 'Tragic Goddess', China Daily, retrieved April 12, 2016
  751. ^Tuohy, William (March 19, 1989). '1889 Hapsburg Tragedy at Mayerling: 'Love Deaths' Remain Fascinating'. Los Angeles Times.
  752. ^Golgowski, Nina. 'Texas woman's true identity baffles ex-husband, authorities years after her suicide'. Daily News. New York. Retrieved November 8, 2015.
  753. ^Pliny the Younger, Letter to Calestrius Tiro. Letters: Book One. Translated by J.B.Firth (1900). Attalus. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  754. ^Todrov, Kerana (April 16, 2014). 'Sheriff: Author Michael Ruppert dies of self-inflicted gunshot wound'. Napa Valley Register.
  755. ^Winton, Richard (July 3, 2017). 'YouTube star Stevie Ryan died in suicide L.A. County coroner finds'. Los Angeles Times.
  756. ^Addison, Bob (August 15, 2011). 'Former Canuck Rick Rypien found dead'. Vancouver: CKWX News 1130. Archived from the original on September 8, 2011. Retrieved February 27, 2018.
  757. ^Scott, Jay (1987). Midnight Matinees: Movies and Their Makers, 1975-1985. Frederick Ungar Publishing Company. p. 49. ISBN978-0-804-46848-0.
  758. ^Watson, Wallace Steadman (1996). Understanding Rainer Werner Fassbinder: Film as Private and Public Art. University of South Carolina Press. p. 107. Archived at Google Books.
  759. ^'The bitter tears of Fassbinder's women'. The Guaridan. January 8, 1999. Retrieved November 27, 2014.
  760. ^Peucker, Brigitte, ed. (2012). A Companion to Rainer Werner Fassbinder. John Wiley & Sons. p. 579. ISBN978-1-405-19163-0.
  761. ^Ebert, Roger (2003). The Great Movies. Broadway Books. p. 26. ISBN978-0-767-91038-5.
  762. ^Mayne, Judith (2002). Cinema and Spectatorship. Routledge. p. 169. ISBN978-1-134-96688-2.
  763. ^Gonzalez, Sandra (January 30, 2018). 'Mark Salling, 'Glee' actor, dead at 35'. CNN.
  764. ^Olof Westerberg, Olof (December 23, 2007). 'Johanna Sällströms död utreds'. Sydsvenskan (in Swedish).
  765. ^David, Saul (2013). '29 August 1914: 'the booty is immense' '. 100 Days to Victory: How the Great War Was Fought and Won 1914-1918. Hodder & Stoughton.
  766. ^McMeekin, Sean (2017). 'Chapter 4: Russia's War, 1914-1916'. The Russian Revolution: A New History. Basic Books.
  767. ^Ascher-Walsh, Rebecca (May 8, 1992). 'Bored to Death.'Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved August 14, 2014.
  768. ^Ren Zhongxi. 'In memory of an olive tree'. China Internet Information Center. Retrieved February 9, 2019.
  769. ^Morales, Vanessa (July 2, 2017). 'Las últimas horas de Mónica Santa María: la dalina de 'Nubeluz' que perdió las ganas de vivir' (in Spanish). Univision. Retrieved September 10, 2018.
  770. ^Fowler, Brandi (January 29, 2012). 'Soap Actor Commits Suicide After Putting Dog to Sleep'. E! Online.
  771. ^'Alberto Santos-Dumont Facts'. Your Dictionary, 2010. The Gale Group, Inc. Retrieved October 23, 2018.
  772. ^'Carl Sargeant: 'Hanging' cause of ex-minister's death'. BBC News. November 13, 2017.
  773. ^McRady, Rachel (October 28, 2015). 'Sam Sarpong Dies: Model, Yo Momma Host Dead of Apparent Suicide'. Us.
  774. ^'Satanta'. Texas State Library and Archives Commission. December 5, 2017. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  775. ^Brawley, Eddie (June 21, 2016). 'Who Is Drake Sather?'. Splitsider.
  776. ^1 Samuel 31 (NLT)
  777. ^Tacitus, The AnnalsBook 16, Chapter 15. Wikisource. Retrieved February 19, 2019.
  778. ^ abTacitus (32-37 AD). Book 6, Chapter 29, Annals, University of Chicago.
  779. ^Stephens, Robert (2007). Germans on Drugs: The Complications of Modernization in Hamburg. University of Michigan Press. p. 285. ISBN978-0-472-06973-6. Retrieved April 29, 2016.
  780. ^'Científicos destacaron trayectoria de Astrónomo Robert Schommer', Diario El Día (La Serena). January 4, 2002
  781. ^Staunton, Denis (June 22, 1998). 'Escaped soldier found hanged'. The Guardian. Manchester (UK). p. K2
  782. ^Hancock, Jason; Helling, Dave (February 26, 2015). 'Missouri Auditor Tom Schweich dead of apparent suicide'. The Kansas City Star.
  783. ^Roller, Matthew (2001). Constructing Autocracy: Aristocrats and Emperors in Julio-Claudian Rome. Princeton University Press. p. 105. ISBN9781400824090. Retrieved September 18, 2017.
  784. ^'L'Wren Scott suicide confirmed, body moved to funeral home as Mick Jagger stays in Australia'. Daily News. New York. March 19, 2014. Retrieved March 20, 2014.
  785. ^Hardigree, Matt (August 20, 2012). 'Top Gun And Days Of Thunder Director Tony Scott Found Dead After Jumping Off Bridge poet'. Deadspin.
  786. ^Bishop, Greg; Davis, Rob (May 2, 2012). 'Junior Seau, Famed N.F.L. Linebacker, Dies at 43; Suicide Is Suspected'. The New York Times.
  787. ^Stickney, R.; Grieco, Sarah. 'Former Charger Junior Seau Commits Suicide: Cops'. NBC San Diego.
  788. ^Mann, Richard G. (2015). 'Sonia Sekula'(PDF). GLBTQ Archive. Retrieved March 27, 2018.
  789. ^Tacitus (62-65 AD). Book 15, Chapter 63, Annals.
  790. ^Tacitus Translated by Alfred John Church and William Jackson Brodribb (2007). The Annals of Imperial Rome Book XV (New York, Barnes & Noble). p 341
  791. ^'Rezsoe Seres Commits Suicide; Composer of 'Gloomy Sunday''. Obituaries. The New York Times. January 14, 1968. p. 84.
  792. ^Lucian How to Write History 21, 14, 25
  793. ^Hendin, Herbert (Fall 1993). 'The Suicide of Anne Sexton'. Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior. 23 (3): 257–62. PMID8249036.
  794. ^Capretto, Lisa (August 17, 2015). 'How Jane Fonda Uncovered The Truth About Her Mother's Death'. HuffPost. Retrieved September 16, 2018.
  795. ^Bosworth, Patricia (September 24, 2011). 'Connected, Darkly, to Jane Fonda'. The New York Times. Retrieved September 16, 2018.
  796. ^Osborne, Samuel (July 24, 2018). 'Oksana Shachko death: Femen founder's body discovered in Paris apartment'. The Independent.
  797. ^'FEMEN movement co-founder Oksana Shachko commits suicide'. UNIAN. July 24, 2018.
  798. ^Gregersen, Erik (October 8, 2012). 'James Tiptree, Jr.'Encyclopædia Britannica.
  799. ^'Harold Shipman found dead in cell'. BBC News. January 13, 2004.
  800. ^Kumar, S. R. Ashok (May 3, 2002). 'It's a heavy price to pay'. The Hindu. Retrieved January 11, 2012.
  801. ^'A story on suicides and actresses'. Behindwoods.com. January 4, 2007. Retrieved January 11, 2012.
  802. ^'Why South Indian heroines are embracing death'. Mid Day. April 20, 2002. Retrieved January 11, 2012.
  803. ^Beevor, Antony (2006). 'Chapter 2'. The Battle for Spain: The Spanish Civil War 1936–39. Hachette UK.
  804. ^Motau, Phepile (August 19, 2009). 'Beauty pageant sector shocker'. Times of Swaziland.
  805. ^Dlamini, Welcome (August 20, 2009). 'Ex-Miss SD tiffany is dead'. Swaziland News.
  806. ^Helleve, Eirik (February 13, 2009). 'Per Sivle' (in Norwegian). Norsk biografisk leksikon. Retrieved November 25, 2018.
  807. ^Applebaum, Anne (2017). 'Preface'. Red Famine: Stalin's War on Ukraine. Penguin Randomhouse.
  808. ^Anita Rožkalne; LU literatūras, folkloras un mākslas institūts (2003). Latviešu rakstniecība biogrāfijās (in Latvian). Riga: Zinātne. pp. 539–540. ISBN978-9984698489. OCLC54799673.
  809. ^Flint, Peter B. (April 23, 1983). 'Walter Slezak, Actor, Is a Suicide at 80 on L.I.'. The New York Times.
  810. ^'Blindness fear cited in suicide.'Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, August 7, 1965. p. 11. Archived at Google News. Retrieved May 23, 2015.
  811. ^'Reggae star Smiley Culture stabbed himself during police raid'. BBC News. July 2, 2013.
  812. ^Sen, Sailendra Nath (1999). Ancient Indian History and Civilization. New Age International. p. 385.
  813. ^Aisch, Gregor; Keller, Josh; Lai, K.K.Rebecca; Omri, Rudy; Pearce, Adam; Shaver, Julie; Singhvi, Anjali; Yourish, Karen (July 22, 2016). 'What Happened in the Shootings in Munich'. The New York Times. Retrieved October 13, 2017.
  814. ^Tacitus (65-66 AD). Book 16, Chapter 33, Annals, Wikisource. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  815. ^Bromwich, Jonah Engel; Friedman, Vanessa; Schneier, Matthew (June 5, 2018). 'Kate Spade, Whose Handbags Carried Women Into Adulthood, Is Dead at 55'. The New York Times.
  816. ^Hughes, Mark (November 27, 2011). 'Wales boss Gary Speed found dead'. Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved November 27, 2011.
  817. ^Holmwood, Leigh (May 20, 2008). 'Speight hanged himself with shoelaces, coroner rules'. The Guardian. London. Retrieved April 19, 2012.
  818. ^Suetonius, The Lives of the Caesars: The Life of Nero, Chapter 49, Loeb Classical Library (1914), University of Chicago. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  819. ^Simon, Mallory; Castillo, Mariano (February 19, 2010). 'Texas plane crash pilot: 'I have just had enough''. CNN. Retrieved May 16, 2018.
  820. ^Ehrenreich, Ben (2008). 'The Long Goodbye'. The Poetry Foundation.
  821. ^'US Navy's Middle East chief Scott Stearney found dead in Bahrain'. Aljazeera.com. Al Jazeera Media Network. December 2, 2018. Retrieved December 4, 2018.
  822. ^'Former soccer player Costica Stefanescu commits suicide'. Nine O'Clock. August 22, 2013. Retrieved December 5, 2018.
  823. ^Miranda, Carolina A. (May 1, 2017). 'Author Jean Stein, who wrote about New York and Hollywood elite, dies at 83'. Los Angeles Times.
  824. ^Sandomir, Richard (May 2, 2017). 'Jean Stein, Who Chronicled Wealth, Fame and Influence, Dies at 83'. The New York Times.
  825. ^Singer, Matthew. 'Portland Musician and Restaurateur Jonny P. Jewels Has Died'. Willamette Week. Retrieved August 3, 2018
  826. ^Fernandez, Matt (January 5, 2018). ''Star Trek' Actor Jon Paul Steuer Dies at 33'. Variety. Retrieved June 12, 2018.
  827. ^Fernandez, Alexia (June 11, 2018). 'Star Trek's Jon Paul Steuer Cause of Death Ruled Suicide: Report'. People.
  828. ^Scott, Katie (February 25, 2019). 'Brody Stevens, comedian and 'Hangover' actor, dies from apparent suicide at 48'. Global News. Archived from the original on May 6, 2019. Retrieved May 4, 2019.
  829. ^'Autopsy Reports Actress Inger Stevens Killed Self'. San Bernardino Sun. August 4, 1970. p. 24.
  830. ^Firth, David (2011). Silence Of The Heart: Cricket Suicides. Random House. pp. 75–76. ISBN978-1780573939.
  831. ^Dube Dwilson, Stephanie. 'Lyle Stevik: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know'. Heavy. Heavy, Inc. Retrieved June 16, 2018.
  832. ^Scott, Robert (November 1, 2010). Blood Frenzy. Mass Market Paperback. pp. 296–297.
  833. ^'Suicides are Spiteful'. Der Spiegel. Retrieved May 2, 2009.
  834. ^'SMan on a suicide mission'. The Guardian. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
  835. ^'Alfonsina Storni'. Encyclopædia Britannica. September 25, 2013.
  836. ^Torrance, Kelly Jane (November 28, 2011). 'Is That All There Is?'. The Weekly Standard. Vol 17, No. 11.
  837. ^'Otto (August) Strandman'. Chancellery of the President of Estonia. October 4, 2006. Retrieved March 18, 2010.[dead link]
  838. ^Sulbi, Raul (July 9, 2008). 'Avati riigivanem Strandmani mälestuskivi' (in Estonian). Postimees. Retrieved March 18, 2010.
  839. ^Sansom, George (1961). A History of Japan, 1334–1615. Stanford University Press. pp. 234–235. ISBN978-0804705257.
  840. ^McDonald, Bernadette (2012). Keeper of the Mountains: The Elizabeth Hawley Story. Rocky Mountain Books Ltd. p. 210.
  841. ^'Suicide verdict on Sutch'. BBC News. August 31, 1999. Retrieved July 14, 2013.
  842. ^Willoughby, Ian (May 7, 2019). 'Ex-ice hockey international Svoboda dies at 41'. Radio Praha. Retrieved May 10, 2019.
  843. ^'Tragédie! Bývalý reprezentační gólman Adam Svoboda spáchal sebevraždu'. Sport.cz (in cz). Prague. May 7, 2019.CS1 maint: Unrecognized language (link)
  844. ^Martinez, Michael (January 13, 2013). 'Internet prodigy, activist Aaron Swartz commits suicide'. CNN.
  845. ^Brumfield, Ben (April 24, 2015). 'Everybody Loves Raymond child actor Sawyer Sweeten commits suicide'. CNN.
  846. ^Butterfield, Fox (May 29, 1995). 'Harvard Student Stabs Roommate to Death'. The New York Times. Retrieved February 9, 2019.
  847. ^Varley, H. Paul (1994). Warriors of Japan: as Portrayed in the War Tales. University of Hawaii Press. p. 240.
  848. ^Frédéric, Louis (2002). Japan Encyclopedia. Harvard University Press. p. 928.
  849. ^O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., 'List of suicides', MacTutor History of Mathematics archive, University of St Andrews.
  850. ^'Face of infamous Scots pirate is revealed'. August 20, 2015. Retrieved October 16, 2018.
  851. ^Bird, Kai; Sherwin, Martin J. (2006). American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer. Vintage Books. p. 250.
  852. ^Ablonczy, Balázs (2006). Pál Teleki (1874-1941): The Life of a Controversial Hungarian Politician. Social Science Monographs. p. 230.
  853. ^'Actor Lou Tellegen Ends Life'. Chicago Daily Tribune. October 30, 1934. p. 1.
  854. ^Goeschel, Christian (2009). Suicide in Nazi Germany. OUP Oxford. p. 152. ISBN978-0191567568.
  855. ^'Tewodros II'. EthiopianHistory.com. Retrieved August 14, 2014.
  856. ^'Mike Thalassitis: Love Island star left notebook at scene of death'. BBC. Retrieved June 5, 2019.
  857. ^'John Borland Thayer, Jr.'Encyclopedia Titanica. Retrieved March 22, 2017.
  858. ^'Shot himself'. Los Angeles Times. March 19, 1893. p. 16.
  859. ^'World Press Photo of the Year 1963'. World Press Photo.
  860. ^Moskowitz, David V (2006). Caribbean Popular Music: an Encyclopedia of Reggae, Mento, Ska, Rock Steady, and Dancehall. Greenwood Press. p. 292. ISBN978-0-313-33158-9.
  861. ^Douglas Brinkley (September 8, 2005). 'Football Season Is Over Dr. Hunter S. Thompson's final note ... Entering the no more fun zone'. Rolling Stone.
  862. ^Leckrone, Jim (October 20, 2011). 'Charging bear got close to police before shot dead'. Reuters.
  863. ^Tacitus (c. 100–110 AD). HistoriesBook 1, Chapter 72, Loeb Classical Library edition of Tacitus (1925). University of Chicago.
  864. ^Drury, Nevill (1985). 'At Home with Giger'. Shadowzone #5. Archived from the original on April 16, 2010. Retrieved April 1, 2010.
  865. ^Grenoble, Ryan (October 10, 2012). 'Amanda Todd: Bullied Canadian Teen Commits Suicide After Prolonged Battle Online And In School'. HuffPost.
  866. ^'Ernst Toller - Der Dramatiker als Revolutionär'. Bayerischer Rundfunk. August 1, 2011. Retrieved May 9, 2018.
  867. ^Andersen, Unn Conradi (August 31, 2008). 'Distansert blikk: Nyansert portrett, mangler en klo'. Dagbladet (in Norwegian). Retrieved August 28, 2018.
  868. ^Nevils, René Pol & Hardy, Deborah George. Ignatius Rising, Louisiana State University Press. 2001 ISBN0-8071-3059-1 pgs. 168–9
  869. ^Ben-Zur, Raanan (2009). 'Entertainer Dudu Topaz commits suicide'. ynet news.
  870. ^'Silvanus Trevail Dead – President of British Royal Society of Architects Believed to Have Killed Himself'. The New York Times. November 8, 1903. Retrieved April 22, 2009.
  871. ^Newton, David (May 17, 2013). 'Ex-driver Dick Trickle dead at 71'. ESPN Nascar.
  872. ^Bernstein, Viv (May 18, 2013). 'A Racer Known to Many, and Now a Mystery'. The New York Times. Retrieved May 19, 2013.
  873. ^Nark, Joseph (April 30, 2014). 'The Boston bombing's forgotten victim'. Philly.com. Archived from the original on October 31, 2014. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
  874. ^'Verne Troyer's death ruled as suicide'. The Guardian. London, England: Guardian Media Group. Associated Press. October 10, 2018. Retrieved October 11, 2018.
  875. ^Dambeck, Holger (January 10, 2006). 'Streit um Tron: Darf man einen Hacker beim Namen nennen?'. Spiegel Online.
  876. ^'Butch Trucks, Allman Brothers Band Co-Founder, Dead at 69'.
  877. ^Благов, Крум (2000). '47. Атентатът в Народния театър'. 50-те най-големи атентата в българската история (in Bulgarian). Bulgaria: Репортер. ISBN978-954-8102-44-5.
  878. ^Larimer, Tim (October 2, 2000). 'The Agony of Defeat'. Time. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
  879. ^Cooke, Belinda. 'Marina Tsvetaeva, Poet of the extreme'. Retrieved April 21, 2009.
  880. ^Pawel, Ernst (December 1, 1968). 'Kurt Tucholsky and the Ordeal of Germany, 1914-1935, by Harold L. Poor; Kurt Tucholsky: What If ...? Translated by Harry Zohn an'. Commentary.
  881. ^Hodges, Andrew (1983). Alan Turing: The Enigma. London: Burnett Books. pp. 529, 488, 489. ISBN978-0-04-510060-6.
  882. ^'Former all-pro Tyrer kills wife, then self'. Toledo Blade. Ohio. Associated Press. September 16, 1980. p. 23.
  883. ^'Ernst Udet: The Rise and Fall of a German World War I Ace'. HistoryNet.com. June 12, 2006. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
  884. ^''Talent' Miyu Uehara dead after apparently hanging herself at home'. Japan Today. Japan: GPlusMedia. May 12, 2011. Retrieved May 13, 2011.
  885. ^'TV personality Miyu Uehara dead in apparent suicide'. The Mainichi Daily News. Japan: Mainichi Newspapers. May 12, 2011. Archived from the original on May 12, 2011. Retrieved May 13, 2011.
  886. ^Chen, C. Peter. 'Matome Ugaki'. World War II Database. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
  887. ^Malnic, Eric (June 30, 1994). 'Austrian Slayer of L.A. Prostitutes Kills Self'. Los Angeles Times. ISSN0458-3035.
  888. ^Ganey, Steve (November 5, 2018). 'Convicted SoCal killers Andrew Urdiales, Virendra Govin found dead in San Quentin'. Los Angeles: KTLA. Retrieved November 10, 2018.
  889. ^Rothman, Lily (June 22, 2015). 'The Gory Way Japanese Generals Ended Their Battle on Okinawa'. Time.
  890. ^Willbanks, James H. (September 2007). 'Okinawa (March-June 1945)'. PBS. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
  891. ^'Boxer Edwin Valero found dead in jail'. The Arizona Republic (Associated Press). Retrieved April 19, 2010.
  892. ^'Actor Jerry Van Dyke's Daughter Found Hanged'. Los Angeles Times. November 19, 1991. Archived from the original on July 30, 2018. Retrieved February 9, 2019.
  893. ^Hulsker, Jan. The Complete Van Gogh. Oxford: Phaidon, 1980. ISBN0-7148-2028-8. pp. 480-483.
  894. ^Shtromas, Alexander (October 14, 2003). Totalitarianism and the Prospects for World Order: Closing the Door on the Twentieth Century. Lexington Books, Archived at Google Books. Retrieved August 12, 2014.
  895. ^'1954: Brazilian president found dead'. British Broadcasting Corporation. August 24, 2008.
  896. ^'Publius Quinctilius Varus'. Encyclopedia Britannica. July 20, 1998. Retrieved November 3, 2017.
  897. ^'Minnie Vautrin'. Yale Divinity School. January 27, 2016. Retrieved July 29, 2018.
  898. ^Lu, Suping & Minnie Vautrin, Terror in Minnie Vautrin's Nanjing: Diaries and Correspondence, 1937-38, 2008, University of Illinois Press. pp. xxvii-xxviii
  899. ^'Lupe Velez. Biography'. Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved July 17, 2011.
  900. ^Lichfield, John (May 21, 2013). 'Far-right French historian, 78-year-old Dominique Venner, commits suicide in Notre Dame in protest against gay marriage'. The Independent.
  901. ^'John Verrept 1889–1912'. earlyaviators.com. Retrieved March 5, 2012.
  902. ^Tacitus (62-65 AD). AnnalsBook 15, Chapter 69, Wikisource. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  903. ^Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca historica, Book 36, Chapter 2, Wikisource. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  904. ^Tacitus (65-66 AD). AnnalsBook 16, Chapters 10-11, Loeb Classical Library edition of Tacitus (1937). University of Chicago. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  905. ^Krull, Hasso. 'Juhan Viiding'. Estonian Literature Information Centre. Retrieved March 18, 2010.
  906. ^Kruus, Oskar (May 13, 2000). 'Eesti kirjanikud lähevad pigem hulluks kui tapavad enda' (in Estonian). Ärileht. Archived from the original on July 20, 2011. Retrieved March 18, 2010.
  907. ^'Herve Villechaize; Actor, 50, Commits Suicide at His Home'. The New York Times. September 5, 1993
  908. ^Barrett, Anthony A. (2016). The Emperor Nero: A Guide to the Ancient Sources. p. 205.
  909. ^Murphy, Damien (December 10, 1987). 'Killer leaves trail of carnage'. The Age. p. 6.
  910. ^Kellogg, Carolyn (December 20, 2013). 'Writer Ned Vizzini has died at 32'. Los Angeles Times.
  911. ^ abcCohen, Eric. 'Who's Who in the Von Erich Family?'. About Sports. Retrieved November 13, 2014.
  912. ^Webb, Dennis (July 13, 2005). 'Wagner hangs himself in Boulder jail'. The Aspen Times. Retrieved February 11, 2019.
  913. ^'Biographies of SS men'. www.sobiborinterviews.nl. Retrieved September 9, 2013.
  914. ^'Bess Truman'. Encyclopædia Britannica's Guide to American Presidents. Retrieved January 15, 2013.
  915. ^Noland, Claire; Rubin, Joel (September 14, 2008). 'Writer David Foster Wallace found dead'. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 22, 2011.
  916. ^'The fall guy for Profumo'. Daily Telegraph. Retrieved October 2, 2013.
  917. ^'Fourteen Hours'. Project Woodhaven. February 2010 (Woodhaven, Queens). (PDF). Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  918. ^'Window Ledge Sitter Leaps To Death', A Century of Journalism, New York Post, Volume III, pp. 62 - 72.
  919. ^Steinberg, Jacques (November 9, 1993). 'Ex-Yonkers Mayor's Death Is Laid to Fears of Inquiry'. The New York Times. ISSN0362-4331. Retrieved June 27, 2018.
  920. ^McDonald, Thomasi (November 20, 2006). 'Former NFL player, St. Aug's coach dies'. The News & Observer. Archived from the original on September 22, 2008. Retrieved September 5, 2018.
  921. ^Grandin, Greg (October 10, 2014). 'The New York Times' Wants Gary Webb to Stay Dead'. The Nation.
  922. ^Beckerman, Michael '. The Orel Foundation. Retrieved December 24, 2018.
  923. ^Norton, Leslie (April 5, 2004). Leonide Massine and the 20th Century Ballet. McFarland & Company. p. 259. ISBN978-0786417520.
  924. ^Cowley, Jason (August 21, 2000). 'The duty of genius. A misogynist and anti-Semite, the philosopher Otto Weininger was obsessed by decay. Jason Cowley on the brief life and work of a disturbed icon of fin-de-siecle Vienna'. New Statesman.
  925. ^Jill Burcum (December 19, 2007). 'Was Jeff Weise a 'victim'? Debate splits Red Lake familiies [sic]'. Star Tribune. Retrieved January 1, 2015.
  926. ^'Dorrit Weixler (1892–1916)'. Postkarten Archiv. Retrieved January 15, 2013.
  927. ^Duke, Alan (June 7, 2012). 'Musician Bob Welch kills self'. CNN.
  928. ^'B.C. girl convicted in school bullying tragedy'. CBC News. March 26, 2002
  929. ^'From the Archives: Suicide in Birmingham saw Fred West cheat justice'. Birmingham Mail. February 16, 2011. Retrieved November 7, 2013.
  930. ^Anahad O'Connor (March 23, 2009). 'Son of Sylvia Plath commits suicide'. The New York Times.
  931. ^'Film Producer Dead: James Whale Falls Into Pool: Directed 'Frankenstein''. The New York Times. May 30, 1957. p. 33. Retrieved November 4, 2008.
  932. ^Robert Lindsey (October 22, 1985). 'Dan White, Killer Of San Francisco Mayor, A Suicide'. The New York Times. Retrieved December 29, 2008.
  933. ^Rebaschus, Matthias (December 28, 2017). 'Kurt-Werner Wichmann: War er ein Serienmörder?'. Die Zeit. Retrieved July 27, 2019.
  934. ^Warner, Kara (November 3, 2015). 'Susan Williams Opens up to PEOPLE About Husband's Battle with Lewy Body Dementia'. People.
  935. ^'Robin Williams' widow says his health was a nightmare'. BBC. November 3, 2015.
  936. ^Klien, Gary (August 12, 2014). 'Marin coroner: Robin Williams hanged self in bedroom'. Marin Independent Journal. MediaNews Group Inc. Archived from the original on August 13, 2014. Retrieved August 12, 2014.
  937. ^Layne, Anni (April 9, 1998). 'Goth Pioneer Rozz Williams Hangs Himself'. Rolling Stone.
  938. ^Skanse, Richard (April 9, 1998). 'Plasmatics' Wendy O. Williams Commits Suicide'. Rolling Stone. Retrieved May 18, 2017.
  939. ^de Moore, Greg (2011). 'An Australian Legend: Tom Wills and a tale of two doctors'Archived November 13, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, Chiron (Melbourne Medical School). Retrieved May 13, 2013.
  940. ^McFadden, Robert D. (November 20, 1987). 'Christopher Wilmarth, 44, Dies; Sculptor Is an Apparent Suicide'. The New York Times.
  941. ^'Jack Wishna found dead: Death of music 'dealmaker' in Vegas ruled suicide'. Las Vegas: Associated Press/ABC 15. November 28, 2012. Archived from the original on December 8, 2012.
  942. ^Grimes, William (June 3, 2010). 'Tobias Wong, Witty Designer and Conceptual Artist, Dies at 35'. The New York Times. Retrieved June 3, 2010.
  943. ^'Starlet Found Dead in Apparent Suicide'. The Chosun Ilbo. April 29, 2009. Retrieved May 18, 2017.
  944. ^McLauchlin, Jim (July 2010). 'Tragic Genius: Wally Wood'. Wizard (228). Archived from the original on December 30, 2013.
  945. ^Loos, Ted (December 1, 2011). 'Sharing a Guarded Legacy'. The New York Times.
  946. ^Merkin, Daphne (June 8, 1997). 'This Loose, Drifting Material of Life'. The New York Times.
  947. ^'Olympic cycling champion Stephen Wooldridge dies'. The Sydney Morning Herald. August 15, 2017. Retrieved December 5, 2018.
  948. ^Wayne Static's Widow Tera Wray Static Found Dead. Blabber Mouth. January 14, 2016, Retrieved May 18, 2017.
  949. ^Sedia, Giuseppe (November 5, 2015). 'Demon (2015): The film and its director's tragic suicide behind it'. Krakow Post. Retrieved May 18, 2017.
  950. ^Durrant, Stephen W. (1995). The Cloudy Mirror: Tension and Conflict in the Writings of Sima Qian. State University of New York Press. p. 77.
  951. ^Berry, Mary Elizabeth (1994). The Culture of Civil War in Kyoto. University of California Press. p. 2. ISBN9780520081703.
  952. ^'Assassin of Inejiro Asanuma remembered by right-wing groups on 50-year anniversary'. Tokyo Reporter. October 14, 2010. Retrieved March 22, 2018.
  953. ^Lier Ren, Xiao-yang (June 11, 2019). '一线独家丨45岁男高音杨阳离世 同事:从26楼跳下;刚得二胎 ('45-year-old tenor Yang Yang passed away colleagues: jumped from the 26th floor; just got a second child')'. Tencent QQ. Archived from the original on June 22, 2019. Retrieved June 22, 2019.
  954. ^Yue, Huairang (June 11, 2019). ''中国十大男高音'之一杨阳去世,享年44岁'. The Paper. Archived from the original on June 17, 2019. Retrieved June 12, 2019.
  955. ^'Flemish TV personality Yasmine takes her own life'. Archived November 23, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, Flanders Today, Retrieved June 26, 2009
  956. ^Asahina, Robert (January 4, 2009). 'The Other Suicide Bombers'. The Washington Post. Retrieved March 24, 2018.
  957. ^Lacey, Hester (February 22, 1998). 'Focus: Bullied to death'. The Independent.
  958. ^'Sergei Yesenin'Archived May 19, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. Spartacus Educational. Retrieved July 27, 2012
  959. ^Lee, Martin A. (June 13, 2000). 'John William King Quotes Francis Parker Yockey in Statement of About Crime'. Intelligence Report. Southern Poverty Law Center. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
  960. ^'Incheon United goalkeeper dies'. The Korea Times. May 6, 2011
  961. ^'Atsumi Yoshikubo's belongings found with human remains near Yellowknife'. CBC. September 2, 2015. Retrieved April 21, 2018.
  962. ^'Atsumi Yoshikubo wrote a suicide note before leaving Japan'. CBC. November 6, 2014. Retrieved December 29, 2018.
  963. ^Pareles, Jon (December 11, 1996). 'Faron Young, Singer, 64, Dies; Country Star and Businessman'. The New York Times.
  964. ^Darst, Elizabeth (March 15, 2002). 'Oscars: Woman Seeks Dad's Statuette'. People. Retrieved June 18, 2013.
  965. ^Goldblatt, Daniel (August 19, 2013). 'Rizzoli & Isles' Star Lee Thompson Young Found Dead'. Variety.
  966. ^Nelson, Sara C (March 29, 2012). 'Fakhra Younus, Former Pakistani Dancing Girl Commits Suicide 12 Years After Acid Attack (Pictures)'. HuffPost. Retrieved August 20, 2013.
  967. ^'Promising Princeton Student Kills Self Over Rapes'. ABC News. February 24, 1942.
  968. ^Hyo Jin Bo (July 28, 2006). 'March 26 Hai Zi's death'. People Daily. Japanese Education Network Technology Network. (Chinese)
  969. ^van Crevel, Maghiel (February 28, 2011). Chinese Poetry in Times of Mind, Mayhem and Money. BRILL. p. 91. Archived at Google Books. Retrieved May 23, 2015.
  970. ^Bingbin, Han (March 23, 2012). 'Poetry put in motion'Archived September 3, 2018, at the Wayback Machine. China Daily. Retrieved September 2, 2018.
  971. ^'Last Picture Taken of Zioncheck and Bride'. Healdsburg Tribune (236). Healdsburg, California. August 10, 1936. Retrieved June 4, 2017. Archived at the California Digital Newspaper Collection.
  972. ^Pieters, Janene (September 9, 2015). 'Netherlands mourns death of writer Joost Zwagerman, 51'. NLTimes.nl.
  973. ^'Dutch best-selling writer Joost Zwagerman commits suicide ahead of new book launch'. DutchNews.nl. September 9, 2015.
  974. ^'Joost Zwagerman overleden'. Privé. September 8, 2015
  975. ^'Stefan Zweig, Wife End Lives In Brazil'. The United Press in The New York Times. February 23, 1942. Retrieved February 23, 2012. Stefan Zweig, Wife End Lives In Brazil; Austrian-Born Author Left a Note Saying He Lacked the Strength to Go on – Author and Wife Die in Compact: Zweig and Wife Commit Suicide
  976. ^'Died'. Time. March 2, 1942. Retrieved June 30, 2010.
  977. ^Collingwood, Robin George; Myres, John Nowell Linton (1998). 'Severeus and Albinus'. Roman Britain and English Settlements. Biblo & Tannen Publishers. p. 155. ISBN978-0-8196-1160-4. Retrieved January 27, 2009.
  978. ^'Salvador Allende Gossens'. Presidencia de la República de Chile. Archived from the original on August 11, 2004. Retrieved April 8, 2006.
  979. ^Gonzalez Camus, Ignacio, El dia en que murio Allende ('The day that Allende Died'), 1988, pp. 282 and following.
  980. ^'Former Chilean President Allende's death confirmed as suicide'. CNN. July 19, 2011.
  981. ^'Chilean president Salvador Allende committed suicide, autopsy confirms'. The Guardian. July 19, 2011.
  982. ^'NTSB Releases EgyptAir Flight 990 Final Report'. National Transportation Safety Board. March 21, 2002. Archived from the original on October 10, 2012. Retrieved January 10, 2019.
  983. ^Scott, Vernon (August 11, 1969). 'Actress' Death One of Series of Hollywood Tragedies'. Reading Eagle (Reading, Pennsylvania). p. 9. Archived at Google News.
  984. ^'Children of the screen'. The Milwaukee Journal. July 17, 1973. p. 28.
  985. ^Harrison, Doug (September 1, 2011). 'Ex-NHLer Belak committed suicide: sources'. CBC Sports. Retrieved September 3, 2011.
  986. ^Wyshynski, Greg (September 3, 2011). 'CBC's P.J. Stock: Wade Belak not a suicide but an 'accidental death''. Yahoo! Sports. Retrieved September 2, 2018.
  987. ^'Feschuk: Belak's family trying to cope with tragic 'accident''. Toronto Star. September 18, 2011. Retrieved February 27, 2018.
  988. ^Weber, Nicholas Fox (2008) Le Corbusier: A Life, Alfred A. Knopf, ISBN0-375-41043-0
  989. ^Jacobson, Laurie (October 1, 1984). 'Albert Dekker; The Distinguished..Extinguished'. Hollywood Heartbreak Publisher: . ISBN067149998X)
  990. ^'Wilcutts Report'.
  991. ^'Model and artist known as Zombie Boy dead at 32'. Toronto: CBC News. August 2, 2018.
  992. ^Kaufman, Gil (August 6, 2018). 'Rick 'Zombie Boy' Genest's Family Believes He Died in an Accidental Fall From a Balcony'. Billboard.
  993. ^Davis, Martin (May 5, 2005). 'Gödel's universe'. Nature. 435 (7038): 19–20. doi:10.1038/435019a.
  994. ^Cornelius Nepos, Hannibal 13.1
  995. ^Cornelius Nepos, Hannibal 12.5; Juvenal, Satires X.164
  996. ^Pausanias. 'Pausanias, Description of Greece, 8.11.11'. Perseus Digital Library, Tufts University. Retrieved April 10, 2016.
  997. ^'Jim Jones'. Biography.com. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  998. ^Jeong Hyeon-su (정현수) (February 18, 2009). 광고모델로 부활한 듀스 김성재 사연 (in Korean). Money Today.
  999. ^'David Koresh and the Branch Davidians: 6 Things You Should Know'. A&E. January 24, 2018. Retrieved April 16, 2019.
  1000. ^Camus, Albert. The Myth of Sisyphus, p.3
  1001. ^Gambetta, Diego (April – May 2004). 'Primo Levi's Last Moments: A new look at the Italian author's tragic death twelve years ago'. Boston Review. Archived from the original on June 8, 2011. Retrieved August 17, 2017.
  1002. ^Guice, John D. W.; Holmberg, James J.; Buckley, Jay H. (2006). By His Own Hand? The Mysterious Death of Meriwether Lewis. University of Oklahoma Press.
  1003. ^Smith, Martin Ferguson (2001). Lucretius, On the Nature of Things. p. vii. ISBN978-0872205871.
  1004. ^Caesar, Gaius Julius. Commentarii de Bello Gallico.1.2
  1005. ^'Suicides: Freddie Prinze: Too Much, Too Soon'. Time. February 7, 1977
  1006. ^Snauffer, Douglas (July 23, 2008). The Show Must Go on: How the Deaths of Lead Actors Have Affected Television. McFarland & Company p. 74. Archived at Google Books. Retrieved May 23, 2015.
  1007. ^Raith, Mark Alan (July 19, 1981). 'The Life and Death of Jean Seberg'. Reading Eagle. p. 36. Retrieved December 2, 2012.
  1008. ^'Charges filed in Seberg death'. The Montreal Gazette. June 23, 1979. p. 41. Retrieved December 2, 2012.
  1009. ^Dansby, Andrew (December 2003). 'Smith Autopsy Inconclusive'. Rolling Stone.
  1010. ^'Rocker's Autopsy Doesn't Rule Out Homicide'. The Smoking Gun. January 8, 2004.
  1011. ^Plato. Apology, 24–27.
  1012. ^Fallon, Warren J. (2001). PMID19681231. US National Library of Medicine. National Institutes of Health. 121:91-106. Retrieved September 12, 2013.
  1013. ^Linder, Doug (2002). 'The Trial of Socrates'. University of Missouri–Kansas City School of Law. Retrieved September 12, 2013.
  1014. ^'Socrates (Greek philosopher)'. Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved September 12, 2013.
  1015. ^R. G. Frey (January 1978). Did Socrates Commit Suicide?. Philosophy, Volume 53, Issue 203, pp 106-108. University of Liverpool. doi:10.1017/S0031819100016375.
  1016. ^'Lo strano suicido di Luigi Tenco'. Misteri d'Italia. Retrieved April 21, 2017.
  1017. ^'Sid and Nancy: A Punk Mystery Story'. The Independent. October 12, 2003. Archived from the original on May 6, 2019. Retrieved May 6, 2017.
  1018. ^Ward, Laura (2004). Famous Last Words: The Ultimate Collection of Finales and Farewells. Robson Books, Ltd. p. 131. ISBN1-861-05723-7.

External links[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to People who died by suicide.
  • Marder, Lisa (March 6, 2017). 'Painting and Grief'. ThoughtCo.
  • 'Hollywood Suicides'. Life.
  • 'Famous Artist Suicides'. Life.
  • 'Famous Suicides'. Famously Dead.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_suicides&oldid=909525342'