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Slant Magazine listed "Tennessee" at number 98 in their ranking of "The 100 Best Singles of the 1990s" in 2011, writing, "Perhaps no other track from the early ‘90s provided better (or catchier) proof that hip-hop was more versatile and capable than prevailing gangster-rap themes than Arrested Development’s "Tennessee", its stuttering ...
Arrested Development was formed in 1988 by rapper and producer Todd Thomas ("Speech") and turntablist Timothy Barnwell (known as Headliner).The group's debut album 3 Years, 5 Months and 2 Days in the Life Of... was the number-one album in the Village Voice ' s 1992 Pazz and Jop Critic's Poll [2] and in The Wire ' s 1992 Critic's choice. [3]
It should only contain pages that are Arrested Development (group) songs or lists of Arrested Development (group) songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Arrested Development (group) songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
[4] as well as Arrested Development, a multiple Emmy Award-winning television show on the Fox network, and was an executive producer and co-creator of Running Wilde, also on Fox, along with Mitchell Hurwitz and Will Arnett. His work on Arrested Development won him a Primetime Emmy Award and a Writers Guild Of America Award.
Arrested Development is an American satirical television sitcom created by Mitchell Hurwitz.It aired on Fox for three seasons from November 2, 2003, to February 10, 2006, followed by two seasons on Netflix; season four being released on May 26, 2013, and season five being released on May 29, 2018, and March 15, 2019.
Timothy Barnwell (born July 26, 1967, in New Jersey), [1] better known by the stage name Headliner, is an American DJ and businessman. He is best known for founding Arrested Development along with Speech, who he met at the Art Institute of Atlanta, where they were both students.
The A.V. Club writer Noel Murray praised the episode, calling it "noteworthy as the Arrested Development [episode] with the greatest and strongest variety of “bland Ann” jokes." [4] In 2019, Brian Tallerico from Vulture ranked the episode as the 14th best of the whole series, calling it a "very funny episode". [5]
"Colony Collapse" is the seventh episode of the fourth season of the American television satirical sitcom Arrested Development. It is the 60th overall episode of the series, and was written by series creator Mitchell Hurwitz and executive producer Jim Vallely, and directed by executive producer Troy Miller and Hurwitz.