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In February 2023, Bruce appeared with Murray in the first part of a BBC Two documentary series, presented by Chris Packham, titled Inside Our Autistic Minds. [38] [39] On 27 June 2023, Bruce narrated the one-off More4 documentary Sounds Like the 80s. In the spring of 2023 Bruce presented six episodes of PopMaster TV on More4 with a repeat on ...
Ken Holt is the central character in a series of mystery stories advertised as being for readers between the ages of eleven and fifteen years old. [1] The series was published by Grosset & Dunlap between 1949 and 1963, [ 2 ] and the mysteries continued to be sold in the United States until at least 1966.
The documentary is composed of six parts. The first part focuses on the Pythons' lives before Flying Circus; the second part covers their coming together and starting Flying Circus; the third part is about the Python records, their personal lives, and the end of Flying Circus; the fourth part looks at their transition to film with And Now for Something Completely Different and Holy Grail ...
Brydon's book Small Man in a Book (the title a play on his "small-man-in-a-box" impression) was published in November 2011. [30] In 2009/10 Brydon had his first stand-up tour in the UK as Rob Brydon (rather than as a differently named character). The resulting DVD of the 2009/10 show, Rob Brydon: Live, was released on 23 November 2009. [31]
The series claims to survey jazz from 1917 up through 2001, but only one of the 10 episodes deals with music made after 1960. ... In this Academy Award-nominated film, Ken Burns, working off of a ...
Jackie Robinson is a 2016 American television documentary miniseries directed by Ken Burns. It debuted as a two-part series, the first half premiering on April 11, 2016, and the second half airing the following night. It concerns the life of Jackie Robinson, the first African-American to play in the major leagues of baseball in the modern era.
Burns was born on July 29, 1953, [1] in Brooklyn, New York, to Lyla Smith (née Tupper) Burns, [3] a biotechnician, [4] and Robert Kyle Burns Jr., at the time a graduate student in cultural anthropology at Columbia University in Manhattan. [3] The documentary filmmaker Ric Burns is his younger brother. [5] [6] Burns's academic family moved ...
The film includes footage of public hearings, news reports and corporate ads, along with input from scientists and activists. [6] [7] The film's title refers to an internal DuPont memorandum of sticking with "the devil we know" in the continued use of perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA), rather than spending funds to develop a safer alternative.