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Riverchase Galleria, locally known as The Galleria, is a large, super–regional shopping mall and mixed use development in Hoover, Alabama, in the Greater Birmingham metropolitan area. It is ranked 43rd on the list of largest shopping malls in the United States .
RollerJam was the brainchild of Knoxville, Tennessee-based television writers Ross K. Bagwell Sr. and Stephen Land.Land, a boyhood fan of roller derby, was inspired to bring the sport back to television by an obituary for roller derby legend Joan Weston that he had read in The New York Times in May 1997, and shared his idea with Bagwell, his mentor, who gave him a positive response. [2]
The Daniel Building is a 20-story, 238 foot (86 m) office building located in downtown Birmingham, Alabama.Built in 1970, the building originally served as a regional office for the engineering and construction company Daniel International.
Chip and Joanna Gaines are bringing reality TV to a whole new level with the first-ever roller skating competition series!. PEOPLE got an exclusive first look at the trailer for the Magnolia ...
Sparks, 34, auditioned for American Idol at just 16 years old in 2006, failing the Los Angeles audition but later passing one in Seattle.In May 2007, at age 17, she became the show's youngest ...
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Birmingham, Alabama, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many National Register properties and districts; these locations may be seen together in an online map. [1]
The show paved the way for a revival ten years later with the 1999 premiere of The New TNN's WSL RollerJam, where former RollerGames skaters Richard Brown, Patsy Delgado and Ray Robles skated. In January 2008, RollerGames coproducer David Sams announced that he "intends to put banked-track Roller Sports back on Television and the Internet in 2008."
Books-A-Million was founded in 1917 in Florence, Alabama, [1] as a newsstand by 14-year old Clyde W. Anderson, who dropped out of school to support his family after his father died. [5] Anderson saw a business opportunity after workers on the nearby Wilson Dam complained that they could not get their hometown newspapers.