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Squish'em, also known as Squish'em Sam, is a 1983 action game designed by Tony Ngo and published by Sirius Software [1] for the Atari 8-bit computers, VIC-20, Commodore 64, MSX, and ColecoVision. The ColecoVision version plays digitised speech without additional hardware and was published as Squish'em Featuring Sam. The game is the sequel to ...
He wrote the screenplay for his first film Squeeze while still in college. Squeeze (1997) was shot on a US$155,000 budget, and was cast with young Boston theatre students whom Spruill taught at the Dorchester Youth Collaborative. [4] Squeeze was bought by Miramax at the Los Angeles Independent Film Festival. Patton-Spruill later moved back to ...
The band's founding members in March 1974 were Chris Difford (guitar, vocals, lyrics), and Glenn Tilbrook (vocals, guitar, music). Difford claims that in 1973, he stole 50p from his mother's purse to put a card in a local sweetshop window to advertise for a guitarist to join his band, although he was not actually in a band at the time.
Rotten Tomatoes Movieclips (formerly Movieclips and later Fandango Movieclips) is a company located in Venice, Los Angeles that offers streaming video of movie clips and trailers from such Hollywood film companies as Universal Pictures, Amazon MGM Studios, Paramount Pictures, Warner Bros. (including content from subsidiaries New Line Cinema and Castle Rock Entertainment), Disney, Sony Pictures ...
"Cool for Cats" is a song by English rock band Squeeze, released as the second single from their album of the same name. The song features a rare lead vocal performance from cockney-accented Squeeze lyricist Chris Difford, one of the only two occasions he sang lead on a Squeeze single A-side (the other was 1989's "Love Circles").
It's Office Workers vs. the people who make Games and Toys in a contentious clash of board-roomers vs. board gamers! Challenges include: Great Holes of Glory, Skid Markers, Log Drop, and Chum in The Mouth. Note: Some of the footage for Log Drop is reused in this episode.
[8] Difford came up with the song title "one fine day writing the words in a New York apartment". [9] According to critic Chris Woodstra, it is an "observation of the British working class" and "offers a series of detailed snapshots of the different walks of life on a seaside holiday in Leysdown-on-Sea ."
Argybargy was the first Squeeze album to chart in the US, reaching number 71 on the Billboard 200. [15] On the Billboard dance chart , all cuts from Argybargy jointly peaked at number 76, and spent 6 weeks on that listing, in the summer of 1980.