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Even More Pasta Just Got Recalled in That Deadly Listera Outbreak
Product Reviews

Even More Pasta Just Got Recalled in That Deadly Listera Outbreak

by admin October 4, 2025



Just when you thought it was safe to let your guard down, another food recall makes headlines.

At least 20 people have been sickened by a listeria outbreak in prepared pasta products across the U.S., with four people dying, according to the CDC. Warnings have been issued for pasta from Walmart, Trader Joe’s, and a host of other retailers across the country.

Yet another pasta has been added to the list of things to avoid. Scott & Jon’s Shrimp Scampi with Linguini Pasta Bowls (9.6-oz) have been recalled over listeria concerns. The FDA has not issued a list of retailers where the product was sold, but did provide the best-by dates to look for. They include dates in 2027, so be sure to check your freezer.

Best if used by dates:

  • March 12, 2027
  • March 13, 2027
  • March 17, 2027
  • March 21, 2027

No illnesses have been reported from consuming Scott & Jon’s Shrimp Scampi, but the product is being recalled because it contains pasta supplied by Nate’s Fine Food. Kroger stores also added recalled deli bowtie and penne pasta salads sold from Aug 29, 2025 to Oct. 2, 2025 to the list.

The CDC has identified illnesses tied to the listeria outbreak in 15 states, with the largest number of cases identified so far in Texas. The recall for some pasta from Nate’s Fine Food was first issued in June 2025 but has expanded ever since. And it’s not clear if more brands will be added to the list.

This new recall adds to the previously recalled pasta, which is listed below by retailer.

Trader Joe’s

Trader Joe’s Cajun Style Blackened Chicken Breast Fettuccine Alfredo

Best-by dates:

  • 9/20/2025
  • 9/24/2025
  • 9/27/2025
  • 9/28/2025
  • 10/01/2025
  • 10/03/2025
  • 10/05/2025
  • 10/08/2025
  • 10/10/2025

Walmart

  • Marketside Linguine with Beef Meatballs & Marinara Sauce 12-oz. – best if used by dates of SEP 22, 2025; SEP 24, 2025; SEP 25, 2025; SEP 29, 2025; SEP 30, 2025; and OCT 01, 2025.
  • Establishment number “EST. 50784” or “EST. 47718” appears on the label in the USDA mark of inspection.

Walmart and Kroger

  • Marketside Grilled Chicken Alfredo with Fettuccine 12.3 oz – best-by date of June 26, 2025, or prior
  • Marketside Grilled Chicken Alfredo with Fettuccine 32.8 oz – best-by date of June 27, 2025, or prior
  • Home Chef Chicken Fettuccine Alfredo 12.5 oz – best-by date of June 19, 2025, or prior
  • Establishment number “EST. P-50784,” “EST. P-47770,” or “EST. P-47718” appears on the label in the USDA mark of inspection.

Albertson’s and Albertson’s-owned stores

Albertson’s pasta salads supplied by Nate’s Fine Foods have also been recalled. The full list of grocery stores where the Albertson’s pasta products have been sold:

  • Albertsons
  • Albertsons Market
  • Amigos
  • Andronico’s Community Markets
  • Carrs-Safeway
  • Eagle
  • Pak ‘N Save
  • Pavilions
  • Market Street
  • Randalls
  • Safeway
  • Tom Thumb
  • Vons

Consumers with questions who may need to reach the company behind the recall can contact Nate’s Fine Foods at 916-677-7303 between noon and 7 p.m. ET (9 a.m.-4 p.m. local time on the West Coast), Monday through Friday.



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October 4, 2025 0 comments
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Chris Tilly
Esports

Silent Night, Deadly Night review: Fiendish festive remake done right

by admin September 25, 2025



Silent Night, Deadly Night takes the cult festive franchise and gives it a clever modern-day makeover, in the process subverting both audience expectations and genre tropes.

The first Silent Night, Deadly Night movie hit screens in 1984 and was a Christmas slasher that launched a franchise that’s now a favorite amongst horror fans.

The original commenced in decidedly unpleasant fashion, before focussing on Billy Chapman, a troubled man whose deep-rooted trauma has resulted in him dressing up as Santa, and killing those he doesn’t like with an axe.

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As well as spawning four sequels, a loose remake followed in 2012 that changed things up, while this second remake is an equally worthwhile endeavour, for the many ways in which it toys with the audience and improves on the original.

What is Silent Night, Deadly Night about?

Cineverse

Silent Night, Deadly Night starts much like the original, with young Billy visiting his grandfather in a nursing home, who warns him that “naughty boys get punished,” and “Santa is always watching.”

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His family is then attacked at a stop light on the way home, though doubtless for reasons of good taste, his mother isn’t sexually assaulted in this version. Both parents are blown away with a shotgun, however right in front of the boy.

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The film then cuts to the present day, where grown-up Billy is still having nightmares about the events of that night. He’s also committing murders of his own, travelling from town-to-town throughout the month of December, and counting down his kills in a bloody Advent Calendar.

Billy decides to settle in a place called Hackett for a few days, where he lands a job at a gift shop called ‘Ida’s Trinket Tree,’ ostensibly because he has a crush on a woman who works there. But that throws a spanner in the works of his murderous plans, as does a spate of missing children in the area…

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Remake with a twist

The original Billy was clearly suffering from PTSD, both from what he witnessed as a child, and his brutal upbringing in an orphanage run by malevolent nuns.

This new Billy seems similarly driven by rage born during those parental murders, but there are times when it feels like jealousy might be triggering his psychotic episodes, or maybe even something more supernatural in nature.

But the big change in this iteration is that Billy hears a voice in his head, that encourages him, manipulates him, offers him advice, and even mocks him when Billy makes a mistake.

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That sense of humor means there are times when Silent Night, Deadly Night plays like a horror Venom, but it also suggests Billy might be suffering from Multiple Personality disorder; an issue that’s further complicated when the object of his affections admits to having an Explosive Personality Disorder of her own.

Santa v Santas

Cineverse

That’s the psychology at the heart of the movie, but let’s be honest, most people will be watching this one for Christmas kills, and the new Silent Night, Deadly Night delivers on that front.

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There are axes to the head, as you’d expect, while a montage of Billy’s early murders provides some violent variation.

But the best of the kills – and the finest scene in the movie – plays out at a Christmas party, the exact nature of which we won’t spoil here.

But it quickly turns the character into a genuine hero, while the sight of our Santa killing scores of other Santas is a festive feast for the eyes.

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Is Silent Night, Deadly Night good?

Cineverse

Silent Night, Deadly Night does a terrific job of paying homage to the past – yes, there is a “garbage day” callback – while doing something fresh and original for the present-day.

It’s tricky to reveal everything that’s going on here, but writer-director Mike P. Nelson keeps the film’s tongue placed firmly in its cheek, while he’s done a great job of re-imagining the franchise, and re-inventing Billy.

On that front, actor Rohan Campbell manages to make the serial killer sympathetic, in much the same way he did with the character of Corey Cunningham in Halloween Ends.

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While the film also ends with an inspired turn that perfectly sets up a sequel, and on this evidence, I very much hope we get Part 2 sooner rather than later.

Silent Night, Deadly Night score: 3/5

A fiendish and fun-filled remake that uses the good and leaves out the bad from the original, while taking the franchise in a wildly inventive new direction.

Silent Night, Deadly Night was reviewed at Fantastic Fest, and will hit screens on December 12, 2025. For more scary stuff, head here to check out our list of best horror movies ever.

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September 25, 2025 0 comments
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The 'Silent Night, Deadly Night' Remake Doesn't Ring in the Holiday Cheer
Product Reviews

The ‘Silent Night, Deadly Night’ Remake Doesn’t Ring in the Holiday Cheer

by admin September 23, 2025


A serial killer dressed as Santa Claus hacks his way through a small Minnesota town. Along the way, he also falls in love with a local business owner. He’s evil; he should be the villain, but in Silent Night, Deadly Night, we’re forced to consider, maybe he’s not?

Written and directed by Mike P. Nelson, Silent Night, Deadly Night is a remake of the 1984 cult classic of the same name by Charles E. Sellier Jr. That film also followed a man dressed as Santa who thinks he’s killing for good, but, in this remake, things get even deeper, as the film paints its central character as a hero with a fatal flaw, instead of a psychopath. And in that balance is where the film loses its way.

Each Christmas, Billy (Rohan Campbell of Halloween Ends) puts on a Santa suit and kills one person every day leading up to the holiday. He’s done this for years, inspired in large part by the man who killed his parents in front of him as a child, who subsequently possessed him. Now, Billy lives with a killer inside him, who talks to him about life, love, murder, and more. On the run from his latest killing spree, Billy lands in a small town and becomes instantly infatuated with Pamela (Ruby Modine), who works in the local Christmas shop. The two strike up a friendship, then a romance, as Billy simultaneously begins killing the people around her.

While Billy’s motivations seem sinister at first, we quickly learn that he and his serial killer subconscious are choosing victims based on their past transgressions. They are sometimes just as naughty as he is. So, as the film goes forward, his axe murders are presented less as evil and more as stopping evil. The issue with that is the film is infinitely more interesting when Billy has to struggle with hiding his evil side. Watching a killer masquerade as a nice, normal guy gives the film some stakes and drama. Once it pulls the curtain back on his true motivations, all that goes away, and any kind of mystery or tension just becomes about killing.

And, with this being a horror movie, that should be okay. But Silent Night, Deadly Night never really wows us with its violence or gore. It’s just there. Billy sneaks around, kills someone, and goes back to his day. One scene does stand out as you actively root for Billy against a particular set of characters, but for the most part, the kills are kind of quick, easy, and frankly boring.

Which, unfortunately, becomes the tone of the whole film. The movie slogs on as Billy kills, tries to hide it from Pamela, and then slowly that changes, too. It coasts on the idea that seeing a person killing people as Santa Claus with an axe is enough, especially if there’s a very loose story around it with a hint of character motivation. But it’s not. It gets stale very quickly, especially since Campbell plays every facet of his character exactly the same. Modine brings life and likability to Pamela, which is welcome, but she is rarely given much to do. Things do get a little more interesting by the end as a large mystery gets wrapped in, but by that point, it’s hard to forgive everything that’s come before.

I’ve never seen the original Silent Night, Deadly Night (I know, I know), so it’s impossible for me to compare the two. What I can do is say this remake had a few good ideas in it, one or two decent scenes, but was much too familiar and monotonous to impress. If anything, it did make me want to finally watch the original, just to see how far away from center this had to go to be this disappointing.

Silent Night, Deadly Night had its world premiere at Fantastic Fest 2025. It’s coming to theaters on December 12.

Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.



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September 23, 2025 0 comments
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Dying Light: The Beast Review - A Deadly Return to Form
Game Reviews

Dying Light: The Beast Review – A Deadly Return to Form

by admin September 20, 2025


Post-apocalyptic parkour is the name of the game in Techland’s Dying Light series. With two mainline entries to its name, the series capitalizes on the zombie genre, even if it can fall into some tired tropes and clichés. Still, the iconic nighttime chases, gory combat, and realistic tone have made it more than just a survivor horror franchise. Dying Light: The Beast serves as the developer’s third entry in the series, and, fortunately, it’s as effective as a zombie bite: quick, efficient, and leaves a mark.

Returning as Kyle Crane, the protagonist of the first Dying Light, you embark on a vengeful quest against The Baron, who experimented on him for 13 years. The series’ narrative track record has left plenty to be desired thus far, and, while The Beast is an improvement, it still falls short of its undead contemporaries. The stakes play it safe, and it struggles to maintain the realism the story is aiming for, despite the zombies.

This time around, Crane is a more personable character than in his debut outing. Instead of the rookie from Dying Light, we get a weathered and slightly more capable version in The Beast. Furthermore, his personality shines, and he carves out a more distinct identity within the genre. Helping out with that is voice actor Roger Craig Smith, who delivers a well-rounded performance, balancing his sarcasm with charm.

 

It’s important to note that The Beast does assume you’ve played past titles and doesn’t do much to catch you up, both in story and gameplay. It may prove challenging for newcomers, but once you get the hang of things, like Crane in his new environment, it becomes like clockwork. Past features, such as safe houses and Dark Zones, return and still reach the heights of their predecessors, especially during the intense night segments.

The city of Castor Woods, filled with foliage and Swiss Alps-inspired architecture, isn’t as parkour-forward as Dying Light 2 Stay Human’s Villedor, but it still captures the thrill of traversal quite well, especially in the townscapes. Dying Light is a beacon for free-running, and The Beast does an excellent job of capturing the feeling of the unreal adrenaline high with your life on the line. Jumping from rooftop to rooftop and finding safe houses in the dark before the supercharged zombies catch up to you is exhilarating. Techland has nailed the aspect of maps being essentially large playgrounds for Crane to slaughter zombies and freestyle his way around. Unfortunately, story missions do it a disservice, as you end up going back and forth to the same places repeatedly; getting there ends up being the fun part.

While Dying Light 2 improved upon Dying Light’s combat, The Beast combines both to make one of the most responsive systems in the series. You can feel each swing of a weapon and every shot of a gun like it is actually in your hands. Even more so, you’re never at an advantage against foes, fitting for an apocalyptic setting. The new Beast mode, which makes Crane a hulking powerhouse, does help thin crowds and score some gory kills. Its addition adds more variety to combat and traversal, and I’d be lying if I said it wasn’t fun to just wreck house from time to time.

 

One of the highlights of Dying Light: The Beast, aside from stellar parkour, is how good it looks in action. The series has always delivered impressive visuals, and that’s only become truer as technology and fidelity have improved over the last decade. The autumnal Castor Woods sometimes lack color, but it feels ripped straight from a photograph. Characters, zombies, and gore are rendered with precision, showcasing some of Techland’s best-looking work.

Dying Light: The Beast can feel a touch safe at times with a serviceable story, but the high-flying parkour and gorgeous graphics are top-notch. Castor Woods makes for the perfect zombie-slaying playground for you to enjoy. It’s pure adrenaline packed into its 20 hours, continuing to carve out its own corner of the crowded zombie space.



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September 20, 2025 0 comments
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The creators of Deadly Premonition and No More Heroes are releasing a typically over-the-top roguelite 'fever dream' next month
Gaming Gear

The creators of Deadly Premonition and No More Heroes are releasing a typically over-the-top roguelite ‘fever dream’ next month

by admin August 22, 2025



HOTEL BARCELONA – Xbox Launch Trailer | Coming September 26, 2025 – YouTube

Watch On

Back in 2019, Goichi “Suda51” Suda and Hidetaka “Swery65” Suehiro announced a forthcoming horror game under typically bizarre circumstances. As Fraser reported at the time, the duo—who are responsible for No More Heroes and Deadly Premonition respectively—basically brainstormed the project during a livestream. At the time they decided it would be an indie horror game called Hotel Barcelona. The PS2 game Siren would be an inspiration, and Devolver would publish.

Six years later, it turns out Hotel Barcelona is an actual game that will see an actual release next month—on September 25 to be exact—but it has clearly evolved away from those early ideas. For one, Devolver isn’t publishing: the relatively new Cult Games will handle that duty instead. Another big departure, at least to my eyes, is that Hotel Barcelona doesn’t look scary. It’s a 2.5D sidescrolling action roguelite set in a bizarre hotel, with all the surrealist flair you would expect from this duo. If you came away from that 2019 livestream thinking “great, two of the weirdest fellows in games are making a Siren tribute”, then maybe keep your expectations in check.

The trailer above is ample evidence that Suda51’s affection for 1980s edgelord trappings remains undiminished, but as for the basic gist of what you’re doing in Hotel Barcelona, I’ll let the publisher’s note do the talking. “With trippy anime-style visuals designed by the artists behind genre-defying Japanese hits like Chainsaw Man, Persona, and Final Fantasy VII Remake, try to escape this luxury getaway turned psychedelic nightmare and defeat the hotel’s bloodthirsty new management – tough as nails brutes, psychopaths, and criminals from all over America. Suffice to say, you won’t be alive by checkout.”


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The precision-oriented combat comes with an interesting twist: as the protagonist Justine becomes drenched in the blood of her enemies she’ll build towards a special attack that unleashes Dr. Carnival, who is a “deranged murderer” she happens to share her brain with. The game will be split across seven areas, each inspired by different sub-genres of horror. There’s also three-player online co-op and PvP invasions.

Hotel Barcelona releases September 26 and it’s on Steam now. It’s also launching on Xbox Game Pass.

Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.



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August 22, 2025 0 comments
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