Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Cacciatore: The Hunter (Italian: Il cacciatore) is an Italian television series [1] [2] based on the autobiographical book Cacciatore di mafiosi by magistrate Alfonso Sabella. It originally aired on Rai 2 in March 2018.
King Leonardo and His Short Subjects (also known as The King and Odie Show) is an American Saturday-morning animated television series that aired on NBC from October 15, 1960 to December 23, 1961; the original Short Subjects package last aired on the network on September 28, 1963, when new segments of The King & Odie and The Hunter aired as part of Tennessee Tuxedo and His Tales.
The Hunter and Other Poems, a 1916 poetry book by Walter J. Turner; The Hunter, a 1926 novel by Ernest Glanville; The Hunter, a 1950 novel by James Aldridge; The Hunter (Stark novel), a 1962 novel by Donald E. Westlake under the pseudonym Richard Stark "The Hunter", a 1967 short story by Howard Fast, featured in the collection The Hunter and ...
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 15 February 2025. This is a list of television programs that have or will air on Cartoon Network's evening network, Adult Swim in the United States. Although both entities share the same channel space, Adult Swim is classified as a separate network for the purposes of Nielsen ratings. Original ...
In developing the show, Iginio Straffi wanted to create a "cultured alternative to Japanese manga and American cartoons, giving viewers the opportunity to learn about Italian and European culture." [ 10 ] A first season of 26 episodes was announced in October 2006, along with a reported budget of approximately US$8.62 million.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate
TTV created and produced a variety of animated TV series, including The King and Odie (the studio's first program), [2] The Hunter, Tooter Turtle, Tennessee Tuxedo, Go Go Gophers, The World of Commander McBragg, Klondike Kat and Underdog. For these series, Biggers co-wrote more than 500 scripts and composed all theme songs, words and music.
The series' opening and ending title sequences famously used Johann Sebastian Bach's Toccata and Fugue in D minor as the main theme music. Shortening the piece to only two minutes in length, the introduction uses the very beginning, which jumps into the start of the middle section and finally the dramatic ending to coincide with the destruction of Earth at the end of the intro. [2]