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Raising Cane's in Woodstock, Georgia. In March 2020, many of Cane's locations switched from dine-in to pick-up and take-out service only because of the COVID-19 pandemic, while others closed temporarily. As of July 2020, certain locations had reopened their dining rooms, although Graves said the company was in no rush to do so on the full scale ...
Todd Bartlett Graves (born 1972) is an American businessman and co-founder [1] of Raising Cane's Chicken Fingers, a fast food restaurant specializing in fried chicken finger meals. As of November 2024, Forbes estimated his net worth is at $9.5 billion, making him the 274th wealthiest person in the world.
Originally titled Father's Day, [4] Raising Cain was the director's first in the suspense/thriller genre in almost a decade; the prior was 1984's Body Double. The role of the five characters, or personalities (Carter, Cain, Dr. Nix, Josh, and Margo) went to John Lithgow, who had previously worked with De Palma in Obsession and Blow Out .
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In 1933, the Morgans are an African-American family living as sharecroppers in rural Louisiana, raising sugar cane for their white landlord. David Lee, the oldest son, is a bright boy who loves to hunt with his father, Nathan Lee, and their dog Sounder, but is only able to attend school sporadically in between helping his mother Rebecca on the farm.
The film mostly received positive reviews from critics. Veeyen of Nowrunning.com rated the film and wrote: "Nayakan is an exceptionally polished film, a strange combine of a creepy drama and a jet-black thriller that gradually build to an almost chimerical climax." The reviewer was all praise for the technical parts of the film.
Turkish drama (Turkish: Türk dizileri) is a type of television series in the Turkish language made in Turkey.These dramas reflect Turkish culture and considered by some to be the country's most well-known economic and cultural exports.
Emrah Güler, writing for Hürriyet Daily News, describes the film as, a comedy on cultural differences between the residents of a remote village and Americans with a newfound paranoia of Muslims after 9/11, which is the latest in a string of movies reflecting the government's Kurdish initiative.