Zach smilovitz biography for kids
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Fairview (TV series)
American adult animated satirical sitcom
Fairview is an American adult animatedsatiricalsitcom created by R. J. Fried and executive produced bygd The Late Show host Stephen Colbert.
It premiered on Comedy Central on February 9, , and received negativ reviews with critics lambasting the series for its writing, humor, and social commentary. This show only consists of 8 episodes. Although there was no cancellation announcement, the series was not renewed for a second season.
Synopsis
[edit]Set in a world populated by anthropomorphicnesting dolls, the series focuses on how national political issues caused societal problems within the communities through an interaction with the dysfunctional citizens of Fairview, a so-called idyllic small town inhabited with idiotic party people who are willing to urinate in the public and fighting in the parking lots. The town is overseen by Kelly Sampson, a former party girl turned mayor (who is not the smartest per
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You know when you find something online that you absolutely can’t pass up.
Well, during my nightly Internet search for “hockey moms” and “private dinners,” I stumbled across a whopper: a once in a lifetime discovery that I absolutely had to have — “Private Dinner for Five with Sarah Palin.”
After repeatedly rubbing my eyes and looking at the computer screen in a record-setting quintuple take, I find out that the former governor, former vice presidential candidate, former mayor and former Miss Congeniality, is auctioning off a quiet, cozy dinner for me and up to four of my friends for charity on eBay. Starting bid: a cool $25,
Dinner with Sarah Palin? How could I resist? I immediately liquidated my savings, stocks and bonds, sold my car and a kidney and did a few things I’m not too proud of in the park, but I was ultimately able to scrape together enough cash to take the lead. Only a hour plane ride, two hours by light aircraft, three by snow mobile, two more by dog sled and I’d
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Mitch Albom: Donna died here, as others died elsewhere, but her voice and influence go on
We’ve been thinking a lot about life and death lately. Terrorists murdered hundreds of civilians in Israel last weekend, including babies and grandmothers, and the carnage horrified the world. Missiles flew. War was declared. It was the kind of thing that felt so huge that all other events had to pull to the side of the road.
But humanity does not operate on a single street. I remember the same hour when those planes crashed into the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, — another act of gripping terrorism — my wife got a call that her grandmother had died. It felt like an impossible juggling act, the grief for the masses, the grief for a single loved one.
Well. History is repetitive. The same day that news broke of Hamas attacking innocent Israelis, I got a call from my good friend Bernie Smilovitz, the longtime sports anchor at WDIV-TV. We have been buddies since the s.
In a shaky voice that I