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Switch is the first album by R&B band, Switch, released in 1978.It is also their first on the Motown subsidiary Gordy. After recording as White Heat and Hot Ice, this gave them the commercial breakthrough they desired with hits like "There'll Never Be" and "I Wanna Be Closer".
Switch is an American R&B/funk band that recorded for the Gordy label in the late 1970s, releasing songs such as "There'll Never Be", "I Call Your Name", and "Love Over & Over Again". Switch influenced bands such as DeBarge , which featured the siblings of Switch band members Bobby and Tommy DeBarge.
Debbie_Does_Dallas_(1978).webm (WebM audio/video file, VP9/Opus, length 1 h 23 min 34 s, 720 × 480 pixels, 1.07 Mbps overall, file size: 640.37 MB) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
Family Switch; Freakier Friday ... Gentleman (2016 film) The Greeneyed Elephant; H. Heaven Can Wait (1978 film) Here Comes the Bride (2010 film) ... Never Say Die ...
Switch is an American action-adventure detective series starring Robert Wagner and Eddie Albert. It was broadcast on the CBS network for three seasons between September 9, 1975, and August 27, 1978, bumping the Hawaii Five-O detective series to Friday nights.
It turns out he was, but there is also evidence that 4.3 million dollars in embezzled money is — or was — down there too. When Pete and Mac take up the case and find the money hijacked from a computer account, they also come upon a shadowy killer who is intent on making the sculptor look crazy or dead and taking them with her.
Tomorrow Never Comes: Peter Collinson: Oliver Reed, Susan George: Crime: Co-production with Canada; entered into the 11th Moscow International Film Festival: Warlords of Atlantis: Kevin Connor: Doug McClure, Peter Gilmore, Shane Rimmer: Science fiction/fantasy: The Water Babies: Lionel Jeffries: James Mason, Bernard Cribbins, Billie Whitelaw ...
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "The latest in the lamentable series of Anglo-Canadian co-productions is an exploitative, crude combination of several recent genres: the disillusioned cop cycle, the problems of urban violence and the sinister workings of local authorities. The failure of any of these themes to establish themselves coherently ...