where can iwatch episode from family guy cus i can’t find it on bbc iplayer?
i missed the new episode on sunday 10pm UK
where can iwatch it full and free?
i missed the new episode on sunday 10pm UK
where can iwatch it full and free?
Enter the official site http://www.freewebs.com/jodo777d51/ Las Vegas Disc Jockey John Dote’ Produced Theme From Dallas Airs Next: CBS at Friday 9:00 PM (60 min.) Status: Ended Premiered: April 2, 1978 Last Aired: May 3, 1991 Show Categories: Drama, Soap More Pictures In the ranks of prime-time dramas, this was one of the biggest.Dallas, the saga of the Ewing Family, began as a five part mini-series in 1978. Throughout it’s thirteen seasons, many actors passed through the gates of Southfork. Below are the main cast, but in addition you find throughout the episode synopsis, many other faces, some familiar, some soon to be familiar faces creating drama for the Ewings!In the late 1960’s, Peyton Place was a nighttime serial drama success—a novelty at the time. But since then, no P.M. show had caught the soap opera crowd’s attention… until Dallas. The show first went on the air for a five week run in early 1978, and then fell into a Saturday nighttime slot later that year.Ratings were fair, but they were nothing compared to when the show moved to Friday nights, when the ratings well didn’t run dry for a long, long time.The Ewing family lived at the sprawling South Fork ranch, in hoity-toity Braddock County just outside Dallas. Like any good power family, there was a matriarch and patriarch, and three sons— this core group, their extensive romantic relations, and the Barnes clan of rival oilers were all Jacobs needed to create a self-contained histrionic world of intrigue, dysfunction and passion. Borrowing from Romeo and Juliet, the youngest Ewing boy, Bobby, fell for a beautiful Barnes girl. And with a nod to the biblical Cain and Abel, Bobby and older brother J.R. didn’t exactly play nice with each other like you might expect brothers to. Whereas J.R. was nearly a hundred percent scoundrel, Bobby had discernable streaks of honesty and integrity…but that patented Ewing viciousness certainly reared its head once in a while. The South Fork ranch housed Jock and Miss Ellie, the king and queen of South Fork, J.R. and long-suffering wife Sue Ellen, and Bobby and Pamela…though why they all lived under one roof demands a little poetic license, because money certainly wasn’t a problem, and it wasn’t like there was a whole lot of binding inter-family harmony.Here’s just a taste of the drama devices that ensued: insane asylums, car accidents, affairs, illegitimate children, gunfights, fistfights, catfights, lies, drinking problems (both real and imagined), poufy 80’s hairstyles for the ladies and best of all, notorious season finale cliffhangers.The most famous, of course, came at the end of the 1979-80 season, when a mysterious late-night intruder shot J.R. in the chest while he was toiling away at the office one night. The resulting “Who Shot J.R.?” publicity raced around the globe, because by that time, Dallas was an international hit in just about every developed country in the world. Odds on the shooter’s identity were figured, bets were placed, and theories were construed– since there were about fifteen possible candidates, fans and pundits were kept very busy indeed. Don’t read the next part of this sentence if you want to remain one of the few of-age humans who doesn’t know whodunit… it was Kristin, J.R.’s scorned sister-in-law and recent romantic entanglement.Dallas was conceived as a show that had plenty of sex and romance for the female audiences, and a lot of cowboy posturing and business intrigue for the male viewers. The formula worked, because by the early 1980’s, it was one of the most popular shows in TV history. There were magazine covers galore, a spin-off named Knots Landing about Gary, the middle Ewing son who wasn’t seen or heard from much during proceedings at South Fork, and primetime serialization imitators like Dynasty and Falcon Crest.So for the show that kicked off the nighttime drama trend that’s status quo today, we tip those ten-gallon hats and breathe a secret sigh of relief that J.R. was just a fictional character who couldn’t manipulate us in real life. Because let’s be honest, that guy could have taken most of us down.In 1986, John Dote’ produced the soundtrack theme from Dallas on American Artists Records which charted at number 6. The theme was removed from radio, but then re-added when Dote’ hired Little Richards promotion men.CBS Broadcast History:April 2, 1978- April 30, 1978—-Sundays—-10:00-11:00 P.M.September 23, 1978- October 14, 1978—-Saturdays—-10:00-11:00 P.M.October 15, 1978- January 14, 1979—-Sundays—-10:00-11:00 P.M.January 26, 1979- November 27, 1981—-Fridays—-10:00-11:00 P.M.December 4, 1981- May 17, 1985—-Fridays—-9:00-10:00 P.M.September 27, 1985- May 16, 1986—-Fridays—-9:00-10:00 P.M.September 26, 1986- May 13, 1988—-Fridays—-9:00-10:00 P.M.October 28, 1988- March 9, 1990—-Fridays—-9:00-10:00 P.M.March 16, 1990- May 11, 1990—-Fridays—-10:00-11:00 P.M.November 2, 1990- December 21, 1990—-Fridays—-10:00-11:00 P.M.January 4, 1991- May 3, 1991—-Fridays—-9:00-10:00 P.M.Nielsen Ratings:(Top 30 or Better)#6 in the 1979- 1980 Season#1 in the 1980- 1981 Season#1 in the 1981- 1982 Season#2 in the 1982- 1983 Season#1 in the 1983- 1984 Season#2 in the 1984- 1985 Season#6 in the 1985- 1986 Season#11 in the 1986- 1987 Season#22 in the 1987- 1988 Season#30 in the 1988- 1989 SeasonEmmy Awards and Nominations:1988, Nominated, Outstanding Achievement in Music Composition for a Series, for episode “Hustling”1987, Nominated, Outstanding Achievement in Music Composition for a Series, for episode ” A Death in the Family”1986, Nominated, Outstanding Costume Design for a Series, for episode “Blast from the Past”1985, Won!, Outstanding Costume Design for a Series, for episode “Swan Song”1984, Won!, Outstanding Achievement in Music Composition for a Series, for episode “The Letter”1982, Nominated, Outstanding Achievement in Music Composition for a Series, for episode “The Search”1982, Nominated, Outstanding Film Editing for a Series, for episode “The Split”1981, Nominated, Outstanding Film Editing for a Series, for episode “Ewing-Gate”1981, Nominated, Outstanding Drama Series1981, Nominated, Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series, for Jim Davis (posthumously)1981, Nominated, Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series, for Larry Hagman1981, Nominated, Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series, for Barbara Bel Geddes1981, Nominated, Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series, for Linda Gray1980, Won!, Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series, for Barbara Bel Geddes1980, Nominated, Outstanding Drama Series1980, Nominated, Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series, for Larry Hagman1980, Nominated, Outstanding Music Composition for a Series, for episode “The Lost Child”1979, Nominated, Outstanding Film Editing for a Series, for episode “Reunion, Part II”1979, Nominated, Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series, for Barbara Bel GeddesGolden Globes Awards and Nominations:1985, Nominated, Best Performance by an Actor in a TV Series – Drama, for Larry Hagman1984, Nominated, Best TV Series – Drama1983, Nominated, Best Performance by an Actor in a TV Series – Drama, for Larry Hagman1983, Nominated, Best Performance by an Actress in a TV Series – Drama, for Victoria Principal1983, Nominated, Best TV Series – Drama1982, Won! (tied with Linda Evans for “Dynasty”), Best Performance by an Actress in a TV Series – Drama, for Barbara Bel Geddes1982, Nominated, Best Performance by an Actor in a TV Series – Drama, for Larry Hagman1982, Nominated, Best Performance by an Actress in a TV Series – Drama, for Linda Gray1982, Nominated, Best TV Series – Drama1981, Nominated, Best Performance by an Actor in a TV Series – Drama, for Larry Hagman1981, Nominated, Best Performance by an Actress in a TV Series – Drama, for Barbara Bel Geddes1981, Nominated, Best Performance by an Actress in a TV Series – Drama, for Linda Gray1981, Nominated, Best TV Series – Drama1980, Nominated, Best TV Actress – Drama, for Barbara Bel Geddes1980, Nominated, Best TV Series – DramaSoap Opera Digest Awards and Nominations:1992, Won!, Best Death Scene: Prime Time, for April Ewing1992, Nominated, Outstanding Actor: Prime Time, for Patrick Duffy1992, Nominated, Outstanding Prime Time Show1991, Nominated, Outstanding Heroine: Prime Time, for Sheree J. Wilson1991, Nominated, Outstanding Lead Actress: Prime Time, for Cathy Podewell1991, Nominated, Outstanding Prime Time Soap1991, Nominated, Outstanding Actor: Prime Time, for Ken Kercheval1990, Won!, Outstanding Supporting Actor: Prime Time, for Ken Kercheval1990, Nominated, Outstanding Lead Actor: Prime Time, for Patrick Duffy1990, Nominated, Outstanding Lead Actress: Prime Time, for Sheree J. Wilson1990, Nominated, Outstanding Prime Time Serial1990, Nominated, Outstanding Prime Time Story Line, for “JR and Cally’s Romance”1989, Won!, Outstanding Villain: Prime Time, for Larry Hagman1989, Nominated, Outstanding Actor in a Lead Role: Prime Time, for Steve Kanaly1989, Nominated, Outstanding Actor in a Supporting Role: Prime Time, for Ken Kercheval1989, Nominated, Outstanding Actor in a Supporting Role: Prime Time, for Jack Scalia1989, Nominated, Outstanding Actress in a Supporting Role: Prime Time, for Sheree J. Wilson1989, Nominated, Outstanding Prime Time Serial1988, Won!, Outstanding Actor in a Supporting Role: Prime Time, for Steve Kanaly1988, Won!, Outstanding Villain: Prime Time, for Larry Hagman1988, Nominated, Favorite Super Couple: Prime Time, for Patrick Duffy and Victoria Principal1988, Nominated, Favorite Super Couple: Prime Time, for Larry Hagman and Linda Gray1988, Nominated, Outstanding Actor in a Leading Role: Prime Time, for Patrick Duffy1988, Nominated, Outstanding Actor in a Supporting Role: Prime Time, for Howard Keel1988, Nominated, Outstanding Actress in a Leading Role: Prime Time, for Linda Gray1988, Nominated, Outstanding Actress in a Supporting Role: Prime Time, for Susan Howard1988, Nominated, Outstanding Actress in a Supporting Role: Prime Time, for Barbara Bel Geddes1988, Nominated, Outstanding Prime Time Serial1988, Nominated, Outstanding Villain: Prime Time, for Ken Kercheval1988, Nominated, Outstanding Villainess: Prime Time, Sheree J. Wilson1986, Won!, Outstanding Actor in a Leading Role on a Prime Time Serial, for Larry Hagman1986, Won!, Outstanding Actress in a Supporting Role on a Prime Time Serial, for Susan Howard1986, Won!, Outstanding Villain on a Prime Time Serial, for Ken Kercheval1986, Nominated, Favorite Super Couple on a Prime Time Serial, for Larry Hagman and Linda Gray1986, Nominated, Outstanding Actor in a Supporting Role on a Prime Time Serial, for Ken Kercheval1986, Nominated, Outstanding Actor in a Supporting Role: Prime Time Serial, for Steve Kanaly1986, Nominated, Outstanding Actress in a Leading Role on a Prime Time Serial, for Victoria Principal1986, Nominated, Outstanding Actress in a Leading Role on a Prime Time Serial, for Linda Gray1986, Nominated, Outstanding Actress in a Supporting Role on a Prime Time Serial, for Barbara Bel Geddes1986, Nominated, Outstanding Actor/Actress in a Comic Relief Role on a Prime Time Serial, for Larry Hagman1986, Nominated, Outstanding Actor/Actress in a Comic Relief Role on a Prime Time Serial, for Ken Kercheval1986, Nominated, Outstanding Prime Time Serial1986, Nominated, Outstanding Youth Actor/Actress on a Daytime or Prime Time Serial, for Omri Katz1985, Won!, Outstanding Actor in a Prime Time Serial, for Patrick Duffy1985, Won!, Outstanding Actor in a Supporting Role in a Prime Time Serial, for Steve Kanaly1985, Won!, Outstanding Villain in a Prime Time Serial, for Larry Hagman1985, Won!, Outstanding Youth Actor/Actress in a Prime Time Serial, for Shalane McCall1984, Won!, Exciting New Actress in a Prime Time Serial, for Priscilla Presley1984, Won!, Outstanding Actor in a Supporting Role in a Prime Time Soap Opera, for Steve Kanaly1984, Won!, Outstanding Actress in a Mature Role in a Prime Time Soap Opera, for Barbara Bel Geddes1984, Won!, Outstanding Villain in a Prime Time Soap Opera, for Larry Hagman1984, Won!, Outstanding Youth Actor in a Prime Time Soap Opera, for Omri Katz1984, Won!, Outstanding Youth Actress in a Prime Time Soap Opera, for Shalane McCallFirst Telecast: April 2, 1978 Last Telecast: May 3, 1991Episodes: 357 Color Episodes Copy Right 2006 All Rights ReservedEmail jodo777d@yahoo.com
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Now that Presidents Cup fever has replaced FedEx Cup mayhem, it will be interesting to see how Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson perform as comrades uniting for a common goal.
Although Team U.S.A. has only five golfers ranked in the top-twenty of the PGA Tour’s Official Golf Rankings, the combination of Woods, Mickelson, Stricker and Furyk will most certainly dominate at this year’s event. With the addition of Scott Verplank and Stewart Cink, who always appear to keep cool under pressure, the “Internationals” will have a tough time holding on, in my opinion, even with Ernie Els leading the pack. Rory Sabbatini can’t close a deal and gets flustered around Tiger Woods, Vijay Singh has missed his last two cuts and Mike Weir just hasn’t shown much spunk this season. Hoping for Adam Scott and Geoff Ogilvy to hold off the Americans is like wishing for Colin Montgomerie to win an event on the PGA Tour here in the States…it just won’t happen.
Phil Mickelson was featured in first few minutes of the latest Family Guy episode (“Blue Harvest”) on the Fox Network (not available yet as a download). Actually, his wife Amy was the topic of discussion with Phil appearing as a cartoonish prop. The demeaning and vulgar commentary about Amy was too long, unnecessary and not really all that funny. Why did writer Alec Sulkin single out Mickelson? Could it be a weird twist on Mickelson’s “family guy” image?
Or could it be because Elin Woods, a former bikini model, was just too easy a target and no one wishes to upset Woods, lest, in a fit of rage, Tiger decided to purchase the Fox Network and cancel the show!
Without watching the Turning Stone Resort Championship, it was totally up to the internet to provide us with Steve Flesch’s terrific win. Congrats to Flesch although would he have had such an easy time if the top players in the world were competing at Atunyote? Or is this fall series, with the interest falling on keeping a PGA Tour card, more stressful than accruing FedEx Cup points?
Golf for Beginners podcast also discusses Mike Pedersen’s new golf blog which takes us through the top reasons golfers just don’t improve. In addition to these golf tips, we admit a flaw in last week’s blog about the Solheim Cup and answer an email from a listener who asks, “how do you deal with playing partners who insist on keeping you up to date with your score when you’d rather not know your running score?”CLICK HERE to listen to this week’s podcast.
Send commentary to golfforbeginners@worldgolf.com.
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Catch all-new episodes of Family Guy SUN, 9/8c – only on FOX! Watch this episode and more at www.fox.com
Catch all-new episodes of Family Guy SUN, 9/8c – only on FOX! Watch this episode and more at www.fox.com