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- Revolves around a family of New York cops.
- An unusually nasty butler takes over the possessions of his degenerate master by means of witchcraft.
- Twenty two years ago, an arid, volcanic and island paradise nestled in the middle of the South Atlantic, a nine year old boy, Pedro was separated from his sister, Raquel. Rosa, their mother, fearful of a forbidden attraction between them, decides to send his son, not daughter, for the continent. The boy was taken by Kaleb, the rider of an old circus, passing by the island. On the mainland, Kaleb instructed the boy in circus arts and spirit, where the former islet became Zolah the Bullet Man. BLUE BLOOD begins when Zolah and the circus back to paradise. The circus is established as an island within an island, and the most solitary of these isles Zolah himself, a beautiful man who seduces everyone and everything, yet remains deeply lonely, because he could not love anyone.
- In year 2025, 45th President of United States of America is back for his 2rd term in office and re-implements Purge.
- A cop thriller set against the backdrop of a divided NYPD.
- An ensemble drama about rookie NYPD cops assigned to patrol the city's streets.
- About the child of a well-known character who performs his sinister goals by performing deceptive actions such as holding an art exhibition, investing, and helping charity.
- Two female hikers wake up in the middle of the forest, unaware of how they got there. Faced with a masked evil they are forced to fight for their lives in a ritualistic occult hunt. Can they survive?
- Heinrich von Alternberg returns home to find that the estate his father has left him is penniless. The non-conformist German count decides to adopt a more everyday appellation of Henry Altern and earn his keep through private detective work, discovering he has a knack for it. Often, he's aided by his ex-wife, journalist Lisa Prentice.
- Manny "The Dreamer" is one of the biggest fan of the TV series Blue Bloods, he doesn't miss a show every Friday night since it started. One Friday night while watching it he falls asleep and has a crazy dream but when he wakes up he realizes that maybe he should stop watching it.
- For over 100 years Oxford and Cambridge have squared off once a year in a boxing match. This is the story of the 2005 Oxford Blues team.
- Is it possible to live in such a way that everyone is happy with you? Diana, who comes from the highest strata of society, tries to adapt her life so it seems right to others. For her mother, girlfriend, society, husband. Trying to maintain status in society and trying to hide her husband's addiction, Diana's relationship with her daughter becomes traumatic. What is most important, society or a relationship with a daughter? What will Diana choose? Will you realize someone else's idea of your life?
- Go behind the scenes on game day and gain an inside perspective from the coaches, players, broadcasters, students and other fans that have lived for what is called the greatest rivalry in sports.
- More than 300 years ago, the legendary pirate captain YEN buried a large amount of treasure in the blue sea. YEN's later generations, Dong-Jing and Bei-Wei grew up with their father. The brother's whole life was about finding the treasure hidden in the ocean, until life taught them that the real treasure was with them all along, their love for each other. The father and the sons, who used to have a great relationship, gradually change as they grow up and have serious differences about the definition of "treasure". What is the so-called "treasure" of the father? Will the sea that once linked these two brothers' feelings be able to make the East meets the North again?
- Easterner Tom Butler, a disappointment to his father, travels West and finds work on a ranch owned by Jim Lane, where he soon falls in love with Leona, the boss's daughter. While recuperating from a broken ankle, Tom is ordered to guard some valuable stock certificates, but is overwhelmed by a gang of outlaws. Tom is suspected of the crime, but he evades arrest and captures the gang singlehandedly, winning Jim's approval to marry Leona.
- The Princess of Monte Cabello is divorced and is granted custody of her beloved daughter. Her ex-husband's mistress hires private detectives who take seemingly incriminating photographs of the Princess with the actor Jacques Wilson. The Princess is devastated when these cause her daughter to be taken from her, and the Princess then falls into the clutches of Wilson. In order to pay his gambling debts, Wilson forces her to humiliate herself by appearing in a play. The Princess sends a note to the Prince of Monte Cabello saying that after the first performance she will not compromise his name again.
- Old, down-on-his-luck race-horse trainer Tim is thumbing his way from San Francisco to Los Angeles when he is given a ride by Eileen and Sue Buchanan, daughters of a wealthy Southen California race-horse breeder. Tim sees "Tanglefoot", a five-year-old he had trained, and learns that the horse is destined for the dog-meat packers. Eileen buys the horse with him. Tim is given the trainer job at Buchanan's, where he sells a third interest in the horse to Bill Manning, a neighboring stockman who is in love with Sue. Tim and Eileen buy "Dinner Ring" from Manning for $10,000 and enter him against Manning's horse in a futurity stake race and Dinner Ring wins. Now they prepare Tanglefoot to run in the big San Bruno race in which Manning is entering "Alcazar." During a trial run, Alcazar breaks a leg and must be killed. Eileen, who has always been in love with Manning, gives him a sympathetic kiss, and Manning realizes it is really Eileen he loves. Tanglefoot, because of extreme nervousness at the gate during training, worries Tim until Eileen appears in a red coat, and Tim realizes that the horse is frightened by that color. He bribes the San Bruno starter to flag the race from a position that will make it impossible for Tanglefoot to see the red flag. It would be great to report that a color-blind horse wins the race but, alas, that is not the case.
- A drama comedy about a Detective who struggles to spend time with his wife while juggling a high profile murder case.
- Anita Logan, wealthy heiress, has an ingrown superstition with regard to the worth of "blue blood." Alfred Scott, aristocratic idler, has an inherited conviction of the worth of gold dollars, and is prouder of his ancestors than they ever could be of him. A young man, a student, loves her, but his "class" is a negligible quantity, though his mind is clean and his love has no gold alloy in it. She chooses the "blue blood," and marries him, for her faith in his lineage. He marries her for his faith in the buying power of her money. A palsy of fear overcomes him when he learns that her wealth is forfeited should she marry before she reaches the age of twenty-five. He persuades her, "for her own sake," to keep it dark, and she is touched by his consideration. Under cover of his apparent freedom, Scott makes overtures to Anita's sister. He is apprehended and Anita, in order to be divorced from the aristocratic philanderer, has to declare her marriage and forfeit her fortune. But the "blue blood" has one move left. He threatens to compromise Ann's sister's name, should the suit for divorce be pushed. Ann, to save her sister's name must live out her life with the blooded aristocrat, and her sister's part of the bargain is to support them. Paul, the scientist, can never know the fulfillment of his love. Who Pays?
- A rocky friendship. A boutique pet shop. A loaded misunderstanding.
- When spoiled playboy Algernon DePont gets thrown out of Harvard, his father throws him off the family estate. Algernon proceeds to take his butler and drive out West looking for adventure. He finds it when he falls in love with the daughter of a cattle rancher and finds himself the target of a lynch mob.
- Since the days of Joan of Arc, fighting blood has not been confined to the sterner sex, and when danger has called dauntless women have been found at the fore in line with sons and husbands. Two women are involved in this silent playlet, Helen Masters, of the West, and Mrs. Henry Raymond, of the East; the one radiant with rampant red blood; the other cool and aristocratic to her finger tips. The West, rough and uncouth, had filled her with dread, but when she and Raymond appeared in the mining camp, Helen, unsophisticated in matters of the heart, merely looked and loved. So fast follows a tale. The woman of the mountains seemed to see in this man from the far East, her ideal, and her whole nature cried out against fate, which had mated him with a "weakling." Raymond himself observed with dismay his wife's trepidation, her observance of petty things, and grew troubled by reason of her childish acts. In some similar measure his admiration grew for the self-dependent, strong and reliant Helen. Then danger came, and with it an alarm. Raymond, cornered and alone, fought for his life, and both the women of Fate's combine heard the call. One might have thought the response would have been single. Helen, aroused, seized her ready gun to fly to the aid of the man she loved, the red blood surging in her veins inspired vigorous action, but this time blue blood flew quickly to the emergency. The aristocrat became the dominant factor as of old, and rushing to the front, wrested the gun from Helen, went straight on into the bullet-swept zone of danger, and kneeling low over the man she loved, held the enemy at bay until Helen arrived with aid. When Raymond was nursed back to life, his love revived for the woman who had emerged from the shell of artificiality, and honest Helen recognized the justice of the proceeding by silently bowing to the inevitable.
- Chewing gum magnate Leander Hicks tries to marry off his daughter to the son of a wealthy food producer, but she has her heart set on a handsome entomologist.
- John Spaulding saves Helen Molloy-Smythe and her mother, who has recently acquired great wealth, from a train robbery while they are on vacation out West. Some time later, John returns to his father's country estate on Long Island and again saves Helen when she almost drowns. The two fall in love, but when John learns that Helen has a reputation as a society coquette, he plans to teach her a lesson in humility. Learning of his plan, Helen retaliates by accepting the proposal of the fortune-hunting Count Berratti. All ends happily, however, when John saves Helen for a third time and she trades the count's proposal for his.
- Jim Allen is the foreman of Frazier's lumber camp. A falling tree pins Frazier beneath it and Jim rescues him, thus antagonizing the superintendent, Archer. Jim's suspicions of Archer are aroused and Archer makes his getaway by jumping on a passing train, pursued by Allen, who overtakes him at the end of the run and in a thrilling fight on a swaying scaffold captures him.
- Spencer Wellington, a wealthy young man, who is threatened with paresis, will not take his physician's warning, and marries Grace Valient. Dr. Rand loves the same woman, but his professional honor will not permit him to tell her the secret about her husband. A child is born, a hopeless defective that dies almost immediately. The mother loses her mind for a time, and another child is substituted for the dead baby. In the meantime the husband keeps getting worse. Realizing that he cannot hold off the moment of his mental breakdown much longer, Wellington starts in on a fast round of debauchery. He keeps a number of dancing girls in a secret retreat on his estate, and one night falls dead in tin- middle of a wild carouse. Indications point to the union of Doctor Rand and the widow.
- Miss de Millyuns and her mother receive a letter from the Baron reading as follows: "I love you. My blue blood curls and gives me the goose-flesh when I think that I might be accused of wanting to marry you for your money. So I spend my days roaming in the woods waiting for the day to come." From which it might be surmised that the Baron is fond of Miss de Millyuns-which he is. But. as a matter of fact, he is more than fond of her kopecks and her rubles. Now it was perfectly true that the Baron passed much of his time roaming in the park. The park was his favorite promenade and in its leafy dells he often bowed profoundly to the ladies of fashion who passed by. Being new to the ways of American women, the Baron little realized that he was flirting with a maid when lie made the acquaintance of a pretty miss in the park. The maid invited him to what supposedly was her home, but, as a matter of fact, it was the home of Miss de Millyun, where she was employed. Realizing that if he was to call upon the Fifth Avenue heiress. he would need some money, the Baron, who was absolutely penniless in his own name, "touched" a park dilettante for a few simoleons. Upon calling at the Fifth Avenue address given to him by the flirtatious maid, the Baron finds himself in the home of the de Millyuns. Mamma de Millyuns presumes, of course, that the Baron has come to call either upon herself or her daughter. She makes the Baron as comfortable as she can, sends out for wine and cigarettes and puts a pillow underneath his feet. Reggie, the wealthy scion of an old Knickerbocker family, who sincerely loves Miss de Millyun, notes that he is being superseded in the affections of the heiress and decides to propose at once. He does so, but both mamma and her daughter are so infatuated with the charming manners of the Baron that Reggie is abruptly asked to leave their home. Reggie gets a good look at the Baron, however, and recognizes him as the man who borrowed two dollars from him in the park. He calls the Baron's attention to the fact and when the latter indignantly denies having received the loan hostilities are imminent. Reggie is a gentleman, however, and he restrains his wrath. Discouraged by his throw-down, he goes into the next room and is about to waft himself into the Elysian fields when the butler interferes and takes the pistol away from him. Reggie struggles desperately to make an angel of himself and in the struggle the pistol goes off. Six bullets go through the curtain and attack the Baron in a painful spot. Mamma de Millyuns also receives several stray lead pellets in embarrassing places and the house is soon in an uproar. In the excitement the Baron sees an opportunity to get the millions of the family without marrying the daughter of the house. He makes for the family safe. While Mamma de Millyun is running around displaying her anxiety the Baron tampers with the big lock on the strong box. He gets the safe open and is about to make off with the yellow backs with which the safe is filled, when the maid with whom he flirted in the park sees him at his nefarious work and determines to get some of the bills herself. She projects herself on the Baron and snatches half a million from him. Reggie in the next room, struggling with the butter, loads his gun up again and determines that if he must die he will take everybody in the neighborhood through the Pearly Gates with him. He shoots through the curtains and partitions and another of the bullets turns a corner and bites a piece out of the Baron's trousers. The Baron feels that he has been unfairly taken advantage of and drops his roll. The corner cop hears the shots and sends in a call for the reserves. The patrol wagon rolls up a few minutes later just at the moment Reggie is emptying his fifth box of cartridges. The dum-dum bullets at once take an instinctive dislike for the cops and the latter meet with a hot reception. Feeling that they have stepped into a hostile arsenal, the cops pull their own guns and start peppering away. When they finish with their ammunition they start in with their clubs and the guests at Miss de Millyun's reception make their first acquaintance with the business end of a police billy. Meanwhile the heiress, feeling that Reggie is the only true friend she has. after all. rushes into his welcoming arms, while the Baron beats it precipitately.
- The making of 'Blue Murder', a controversial, award-winning Australian TV drama
- George the Barber is the terror of Darktown. The bravest do not turn pale at his approach, for nature has made that impossible, but they run to safe hiding places and he reigns undisputed bully of the village. He loves Pinkey, but is enraged at her coquetry. He thrashes his rivals, but as one is disposed of a dozen take his place. One day a northern stranger arrives, and after flirting with her, she gives him a photo of herself. He goes to the barber shop, and not knowing he loves the girl, tells a highly exaggerated story of his conquest to the barber. This infuriates the barber and he pursues the stranger down the street with a razor. Soon all Darktown is in an uproar. Bullets fly and rival factions riot. Finally just as the barber catches the masher and raises an avenging razor all pause in dismay as the dusky belle goes by with a mysterious stranger who has been hovering around the village for some time, and whom she has just wed. The terrible barber faints and his rival leaves for parts unknown.
- Jack will get what's coming, don't worry.
- 1986–199330mNot Rated7.7 (91)TV EpisodeSuzanne applies for membership at the Beaumont Driving Club, the most exclusive country club in Atlanta, and files an application for Julia on her behalf. However, Julia doesn't want to belong to the club because of the type of exclusivity she believes they represent. When they accept her but not Suzanne, she lets them know what to do with the application.
- Daniel Chalmers returns to convince Mr. Steele to go to England and masquerade as heir of the Duke of Rutherford.
- Baloo inherits a cursed castle.