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In Real Life (formerly known as In the Real World) is a Canadian reality show where eighteen young contestants aged 12–14 race across North America and compete in a series of real-life jobs, aimed to "discover the skills, strength, and stamina it takes to make it in real life."
Timmy Time is a British stop-motion animated children's comedy series made for the BBC by Aardman Studios. [1] The series premiered on 6 April 2009 and ended on 13 July 2012, with a total of 80 episodes over the course of 3 seasons. The eponymous Timmy is a little lamb, who is attending kindergarten.
It started broadcasting in the United Kingdom on 6 April 2009. [1] It is a spin-off of Shaun the Sheep, itself a spin-off of the Wallace & Gromit film A Close Shave (1995). [1] The first two series ran for 26 episodes. In the United Kingdom, its most recent run began in September 2011 on CBeebies.
As each season of Fargo follows its own self-contained narrative, "Waiting for Dutch", set in 1979, introduces a new storyline and cast, along with many new characters: in the episode, Rye Gerhardt (Kieran Culkin), the youngest son of Otto Gerhardt (Michael Hogan), the head of the Gerhardt mafia dynasty, who rules over Fargo, North Dakota ...
Rye was born in Cambridge. [1] He was a producer for Blue Peter and directed The Box of Delights from the John Masefield novel, which was broadcast in the run-up to Christmas 1984. He is well-known for his novels.
On Rotten Tomatoes, the first season holds an approval rating of 89% based on 37 critic reviews, with an average rating of 7/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "A bloody good time that benefits greatly from Brad Dourif's return, Chucky may not play well for non-fans, but franchise devotees will find its absurd humor and creative horror ...
Critical reception for "New Year's Day" was mixed. Den of Geek and IGN panned the episode, with IGN criticizing the episode for trying to portray Evigan as unattractive. [1] [2] The A.V. Club and Dread Central were more favorable.
The final two episodes had 8.1 and 8.2 million viewers on their first nights, a 74 and 75 percent increase from the premiere. [340] [353] It ranked third for streaming with 1.01 billion minutes from February 27 to March 5, [354] fourth with 1.058 billion minutes from March 6 to 12, [355] and sixth with 817 million minutes from March 12 to 19. [356]