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Andy Geffken, Denise Thomas, and Austin Russell as D.J., Billye Brim, and George respectively, three of the many people Mary Colbert calls in getting participants for the prayer movement; Michele Bachmann, David Barton, Lance Wallnau, and William G. Boykin appear as interviewees at the end of the film; Donald Trump as himself (archival footage).
Billye Suber Aaron (née Billye Jewel Suber; born October 16, 1936), previously known as Billye Williams, is an American television host who is notable as the first African-American woman in the southeastern United States to regularly co-host a television show, starting with her debut on "Today in Georgia", in 1968.
John Charles Brim (April 10, 1922 – October 1, 2003) [1] was an American Chicago blues guitarist, songwriter, and singer. He wrote and recorded the song "Ice Cream Man" which was later covered by the rock band Van Halen for their first album, [2] and by Martin Sexton on his 2001 album, Live Wide Open, and by David Lee Roth on his album Diamond Dave and by Swedish band FJK as "Isglasskis".
Billye Brim Bible Institute, Missouri (also known as the 3BI Billye Brim Bible Institute); [72] overseen by the unaccredited Transworld Accrediting Commission International; Bircham International University [19] (formerly Oxford International University) [73] Blacksmith University, Nigeria [56] Boulder Psychic Institute, Colorado [74]
Laboratory staff discovered that the DNA was more than 22,000 times more likely to have come from Billye Brown than any other individual. If convicted, Brown, now 65, could face five to 99 years ...
John Brim (1922–2003), American Chicago blues guitarist, songwriter and singer; Katerina Brim (born 1998), American Para-cyclist; Mike Brim (1966–2005), an NFL football player; Orville Gilbert Brim Jr. (c. 1923–2016), American psychologist; Steelo Brim (born 1988), American television personality; Brim Fuentes, American graffiti artist
Skatterman & Snug Brim is a rap duo from Kansas City, Missouri, best known for their song, Block Party. After releasing projects separately, Skatterman (born Stacy Dewayne Landis[1]) and Snug Brim (born Aaron R. Henderson[1]) combined as a group. The duo released their first album, Worth A Million, in 2002 through Below Radar Records.
Orville Gilbert Brim Jr. was born in Elmira, New York and grew up in Columbus, Ohio where his father was a professor at Ohio State University. [4] He was introduced to sociology as a freshman at Yale in the autumn of 1941 and had chosen it as his major field of study when he was called up for officer training in the Army Air Corps.