

So get ready to blast off in a rocket fuelled Starfield performance preview.E-Views deliver a non-printable, complete preview script to your Pioneer library for reading anytime. We also compare the improvements over the previous showing, enhancements within the engine, and much more. The biggest question after the show(s) was: why is it 30fps on Xbox Series X and Series S and not 60fps? In this IGN Performance preview, we dive into the details shared by the team, the revealed PC minimum and recommended specifications, and how the Creation Engine 2 works, comparing the previous games to gauge some of the potential reasons why the team might have chosen 30fps. With Starfield being the center of the Xbox 2023 Showcase last week, Bethesda gave us a deep dive into one of the biggest games this generation. Want to read more about The Wizard of Oz? Check out the weird alphabetized Wizard of Oz remix and find out which legendary director hated the movie. Only three other pairs of ruby slippers remain from the production – one held by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, another at the Smithsonian, and another owned by a private collector. Obviously, they’re largely associated with the film’s iconic line, “There’s no place like home,” which saw Garland click her heels together in a magical moment to return to Kansas from the fairy tale land of Oz. The shoes themselves are known as the Travelling Pair – the slippers worn by Judy Garland for the majority of the 1939 classic.

Now, on May 17, 2023, a summons was issued for Martin with a court date set for June 1 via video. However, in both cases, there were no takers. Minneapolis Police originally offered $250,000 for the recovery of the items, with a private donor also offering a massive $1 million at a later date. Over the years, multiple appeals offered cash rewards for the recovery of the slippers. This resulted in an FBI sting operation, and while the shoes were recovered in 2018, no arrests were made. The (yellow brick) road to the recovery of the slippers began in 2017 when a man told the shoes’ insurers that he could help to get them back. Martin currently lives just 12 miles from the Judy Garland Museum and its executive director Jane Heitz said she was “a little bit speechless” that somebody had finally been charged for the theft. The shoes, one of just four pairs of remaining ruby slippers from The Wizard of Oz, were on loan to the museum when someone climbed through the window and broke their display case, stealing the shoes which are estimated to be worth around $3.5 million.

Martin was indicted on one count of theft of a major artwork after he allegedly stole the shoes from the Judy Garland Museum in Minnesota back in 2005. As reported by The New York Times, Terry J.
