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- Two prisoners chained together flee during an escape attempt gone bad.
- Failing Latin is one thing, but failing in Love is unthinkable! K has no hope until the Roman Poet Ovid materializes in order to not only teach the art of love and help K pass Latin, but more importantly to escape Communist Romania.
- TV Series
- The Rev. John Grant receives a letter from his sister, Nell, in which she tells him that her husband has speculated with and lost the $10,000 church funds he entrusted to him. Arthur Evans, his brother-in-law, contemplates suicide, but John Grant enters just in time and saves the man's life. Grant tells Arthur, "As you have my sister and child to care for, I will take all the blame for the loss of this money." He writes to the church vestryman that the $10,000 subscribed for the church and entrusted to Grant has been lost in speculation and that he is forced to go away. The vestrymen order the Rev. John Grant's arrest. The parson arrives at Ten Strike, Nevada, where he opens a little church and works among the rough westerners. His acquaintanceship with Bess, the organist, ripens into love, but he tells her there is a stain upon his name and he can never marry. Later, the whereabouts of Grant are discovered and orders are sent to arrest him, but the westerners resolve to rescue him from the sheriff. The parson, however, agrees to go with the sheriff. Just as he is about to be rushed into prison, a telegram comes that the guilty man has confessed and Grant is freed.
- The Booth and Barrett Dramatic Club of Cedarville was just as bad as one would imagine. It put on the worst possible plays in the most impossible manner, but Cedarville pretended to enjoy it, because the talent was "home folks." Yet the day came when the populace rose in its wrath, but the only one who suffered was "Hungry Hamlet." Hungry Hamlet was not really his name. His press clippings described him as Lancelot Fortesque. When he first appeared in Cedarville, he was headed for Broadway, plodding along the railroad tracks, carrying his own baggage. Johnnie Jenkins christened him "Hungry Hamlet." It must be admitted that Johnnie was jealous, for "Hamlet" landed a job as professional coach of the B. & B. Dramatic Club, and also essayed the hero role, a part that had belonged to Johnnie by right, because he was really in love with the leading lady. But Hamlet sneered at Jenkins, and when casting the play told Johnnie he could either be the front legs of the horse or the hind legs, whereas Johnnie retired from dramatic life. The vehicle selected for the edification of Cedarville, "The Jealousy of Envy." It had as its hero a brave country lad, who enlisted to fight the battles of his country, leaving his poor old mother in their cottage with the mortgage. There were also two girls he left behind him, one the sweet belle of the village, to whom he had plighted his troth, while the other was a scheming adventuress. During the horrors of war the adventuress sought to take his life, being aided by a captain of the enemy's forces, while the heroine was always showing up in time to aid him. The jealous Johnnie Jenkins could see that his rival would score heavily less something happened. At the first performance the beauty and chivalry of Cedarville was assembled in the Town Hall. The first scene opened outside the home of the hero. He bade his weeping, gum-chewing mother farewell. In the second act the hero is led a captive into a fort of the enemy. He escapes sliding down a rope. Unexpectedly the rope broke, and the audience laughed instead of being thrilled. His enemies seized him, and bound him to a railroad track, just as the "midnight express" came tooting along. At the performance the train did not toot, somebody having plugged up the property man's whistle. The train came along, the property man walking back of the smoke stack with a smoke pot, to give the illusion. Suddenly the man slipped, the train progressed on its way, leaving the "smoke" and "whistle" behind it. Then the hero leaped into the ocean, and the "waves" collapsed, showing him floundering about on a mattress. In the final act the walls of the fort fell down, revealing to the audience that the "soldiers" who were marching there were simply a few men with pitchforks upon which were helmets and bayonets, but the show collapsed when the prop horse broke in half, the front end running off the stage, while the rear part became tangled with the hero. This was the cue for "Hungry Hamlet," and he fled, bombarded with eggs and vegetables supplied to the audience by the vengeful Jenkins. Then the latter comforted the leading lady, and was soon in her good graces again. The cause of the theatrical fiasco can be attributed to the revengeful Johnnie, who tampered with the props so that everything would go wrong as he had planned.
- After Russia's invasion of Ukraine started, countless families have been forced to flee in order to survive. Katerina Vittozzi from Sky News has met some of the survivors.
- Little Mrs. Chalmers is afraid of nothing. When the men push past the line of waiting women at the railroad station she throws them back into their proper place and holds them there until the women have been waited upon. A masher follows her through the park and persists in annoying her with his attention. She makes quick work of him, throwing him into the river. She foils an attempted holdup and captures a Black Hand abductor with scarcely an effort but she is only a woman after all and when she sees a tiny mouse running around on the floor, she climbs onto a chair and screams for help as loudly as if she had never accomplished great feats of bravery. Her feelings may well be imagined when it is found that the mouse is only a mechanical toy operated by her son Johnny in revenge for her refusal to let him go out and play. To cry over a real mouse would have been humiliating, but a clockwork affair-. Johnny is very very sorry that he did it, but it is too late to mourn. The illusion has been shattered.
- When reaching adulthood, a young woman talks about her days within a dysfunctional family; her fears, wishes and frustrations. That lead her on an unwavering quest for a piece that stubbornly doesn't come.
- 1981–199210mTV-Y7-FV7.7 (22)TV EpisodePenfold receives an intergalactic delivery: a free gift from the Cosmos book of the light year club. It's the 'Cowards Pop-up book of Slobbering Monsters by I.L. Scaremstiff. Once he opens it, J.J. Quark unleashes a remote animation ray from space to bring the monsters to life.
- A magic spell gone awry casts the Pocket Dragons into the world of Tales of the Arabian Nights, where they are mistaken for famous bakers come to cook for the sheik - and they had better be good, or else! In order to get home, Pocket Dragons must bake a batch of cookies worthy of a sheik's appetite, and keep the Wizard's spell book out of the hands of the sheik's opportunistic Mystic Advisor.
- 2008–Podcast Episode
- 2016–20239.8 (8)TV EpisodeMohammed Umer is an Uyghur activist who operates an underground railroad in Pakistan, smuggling persecuted Muslims into other countries.
- Episode: (2021)2018–TV Episode
- 2015– TV-14TV Episode
- 2021– 9mPodcast EpisodeAnother one bites the dust. In early July, Britney Spears' longtime manager Larry Rudolph announced he was resigning after 25 years. He said it was because Britney had apparently decided to retire for good.
- 2017–Podcast Episode
- Episode: (2011)2008–Podcast Episode
- 2002– 10mPodcast Episode
- 2016– 20mPodcast Episode
- Presents the spiritual leader Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh in a skeptical light.
- 2015– TV-14TV Episode
- 2021– 14mPodcast Episode
- 2021– 23mPodcast Episode
- Episode: (2019)2017– 8mPodcast Episode
- 2019– 2h 9mPodcast Episode
- 2020– 18mPodcast Episode
- Brucetravius Frazier is found dead in his car from a gunshot wound to his head. When an attempt is made on the life of a witness, police realize they are not dealing with the average killer and must work quickly to bring them to justice.
- Episode: (2021)2021– 2mPodcast Episode
- Episode: (2021)2018– 1h 9mPodcast Episode
- 2018– 1mPodcast Episode
- 2010– 13mPodcast Episode
- Episode: (2021)2016– 36mPodcast EpisodeSeth takes a closer look at the governor of Texas threatening to arrest lawmakers who fled the state to block a draconian new voter suppression law designed to keep Republicans in power. Then, Amy Poehler talks to Seth about when they auditioned for Saturday Night Live 20 years ago, gushes over her Making It co-star Nick Offerman and shares her experience working with Late Night producer Michael Shoemaker.
- 2020– 11mPodcast Episode
- Texas' power grid fails, Texans are now contending with surging electricity bills, and Ted Cruz flees the scene. Brian interviews the host of Fox LA's "The Issue Is" Elex Michaelson about whether this situation will have an impact on Ted Cruz's future and whether polarization means that politicians can basically do anything without political consequences.
- Episode: (2021)2017– 39mPodcast Episode
- 2015– 18mPodcast Episode
- 2020– 11mPodcast Episode
- 2020– 17mPodcast Episode
- Episode: (2022)2021– 11mPodcast Episode
- Episode: (2022)2021– 11mPodcast Episode