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Popular is an American teen comedy-drama television series that aired on The WB, created by Ryan Murphy and Gina Matthews, starring Leslie Bibb and Carly Pope as two teenage girls who reside on opposite ends of the popularity spectrum at their high school, but are forced to get along when their single parents meet on a cruise ship and get married.
Sam and Friends is an American live-action and puppet sketch comedy television series and a lead-in to The Tonight Show created by puppeteer Jim Henson and his eventual wife Jane Nebel. It was aired live twice daily as a local series in Washington, D.C. , on WRC-TV in black and white , and later color [ citation needed ] , on weeknights from ...
Sam Bennett (Passions) Olivia Benson; Billy (Billy and Mandy) Blue Cat; Bob the Builder (character) The Boston Teens; Shauna Bradley; Philipp Brandner; Cleveland Brown; Mackenzie Browning; Bubbles (Trailer Park Boys) Matthew Buchanan; Megan Buchanan
This table displays the top-rated primetime television series of the 1999–2000 season as measured by Nielsen ... Friends: 14.0 6: Frasier: 13.6 7: Monday Night ...
The popularity of his work on Sam and Friends in the late 1950s led to a series of guest appearances on network talk and variety shows. He appeared as a guest on many shows, including The Steve Allen Show, The Jack Paar Program, and The Ed Sullivan Show. (Sullivan introduced him as "Jim Newsom and his Puppets" on September 11, 1966.)
Bonnie Somerville (born February 26, 1974) is an American actress and singer. [1] She has had roles in a number of movies and television series, most notably as Mona in Friends; she has also appeared in NYPD Blue, Grosse Pointe, The O.C., Cashmere Mafia, Without a Paddle, and Golden Boy.
John Francis Daley (born July 20, 1985 [2]) is an American filmmaker and actor.He is best known for playing high school freshman Sam Weir on the NBC comedy-drama Freaks and Geeks and FBI criminal profiler Dr. Lance Sweets on the crime drama series Bones, for which he was nominated for a 2014 PRISM Award. [3]
The series finale becomes the fifth highest-rated series finale television program of the 1990s and the ninth overall series finale ever presented on a single network in television history, watched by 35.5 percent of the households sampled in America, and 21.6 percent of television viewers.