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Terry Irwin is an American designer, academic and Professor and former Head of the School of Design at Carnegie Mellon University. She is a key figure in the development of transition design—an area of design practice, study and research focused on design-led societal transitions towards more sustainable futures.
Terri Irwin was born Theresa Penelope Raines [4] in Eugene, Oregon, United States, [5] the youngest of three daughters of environmentalist parents, [6] Clarence and Judy Raines. Commenting on her childhood, she said, "My friends and I were truly 'free-range kids.'
Welcome to Wikipedia:Deceased Wikipedians. This is a memorial listing of English-language Wikipedians who have died. (Deceased Wikipedians who contributed in other languages are documented on their respective language wikis.) People in this list have changed English Wikipedia for the better in some way.
My Steve is a biographical account of Terri Irwin's life with her late husband, the zoo owner and television personality Steve Irwin. It was published by Simon & Schuster Australia. Reviewer Bruce Elder wrote: "Terri Irwin tells a simple story with considerable passion and straightforward honesty". [1]
The series aired 64 episodes during five seasons, from 1997 to 2004, two years before Irwin's death, with a pilot episode in 1996 and 13 specials into 2007. With a nearly 11-year run, the series is the second longest-running program of any Discovery Communications network, behind MythBusters .
Irwin is an Irish, Scottish, and English surname stemming from the surname Eoforwine, a combination of the Old English words for boar and friend. [1] Notable people with the surname include: Alexander Irwin (died 1752), British Army officer
It was created as a spin-off to the original The Crocodile Hunter series hosted by Australian naturalist Steve Irwin and his wife Terri Irwin. [1] In the UK it was aired on ITV. In Australia it was aired on Network Ten. The show is more focused around the everyday lives of Steve, Terri, and the employees of Australia Zoo.
In the days following Irwin's death, reactions dominated Australian online news sources, [21] talk-back radio programs, [22] and television networks. [23] In the United States, where Irwin had appeared in over 200 Discovery Network television programs, special tributes appeared on the Animal Planet channel, as well as on CNN and major networks.