This guy was straight of a Shakespeare play.
Can't say he will be missed, overly much, but he was an impressive fellow.
Hey brate, after reading your post I started to tear up by myself, a manly tear, the heaviest 😥
Then again, I see (no kidding) the potential to sell this to Netflix, I can't see a better introduction to a series than a narrator

who says on a completely black screen:
At the end of the day (24.6) of the rebellion, he knew that his life was doomed and that the rest was measured in days/weeks.
Simply - that's it.
There is no great hiding place, no place where he can be protected. Maybe on the territory of the USA or the UK, but that requires a lot of preparation and agreement.
In this way, he said goodbye to his family, expressed his last wishes and enjoyed every morning as if it were his last.And then a flash, a picture from the front - helicopters, flames, drones, rockets, smoke, deafening noise of explosions:
Prigozhin - From chef to chief!Then a sudden cut,
s01e01 - In the beginning ...
happy childhood days in Leningrad... etc...
10/10, I would watch it if Prigozhin was played by Eddie Murphy for eg
If it were Disney, it would have to be a gay/trans character of color... Netflix would regulate it with only a black character and discreet gay hints in the long nights of the army tents at the front...
edit: or in the kitchen... but nothing forced, spontaneous flirting with a waiter or a Moscow courier...