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Gold Rush (titled Gold Rush: Alaska in the first season) is a reality television series that airs on Discovery and its affiliates worldwide. The series follows the placer gold mining efforts of various family-run mining companies, initially in Alaska , but then mostly in the Klondike region of Dawson City , Yukon , Canada .
Gold Rush (2010–present) Gold Rush: Freddy Dodge's Mine Rescue (2022–present, moved from Discovery+) Gold Rush: Parker's Trail (2017–present) Gold Rush: White Water (2018–present) Hoffman Family Gold (2022–present) Harpoon Hunters (2025–present) Homestead Rescue (2016–present) How It's Made (2001–present) Hustlers Gamblers ...
Gold Rush (formerly Gold Rush Alaska) is a reality television series that airs on Discovery Channel, with reruns also airing on TLC. The show's ninth season began airing on October 12, 2018. As of May 4, 2018, a total of 176 episodes of Gold Rush have been aired, including 16 specials and two mini-series.
Klondike is a three-part miniseries about the Klondike Gold Rush that was broadcast by the Discovery Channel on January 20–22, 2014. Based on Charlotte Gray's novel Gold Diggers: Striking It Rich in the Klondike, it is the Discovery Channel's first scripted miniseries.
Players can download songs on a track-by-track basis, with many of the tracks also offered as part of a "song pack" or complete album, usually at a discounted rate. Tracks released for Rock Band 2 on the Wii platform are only available as singles while Rock Band 3 offers multi-song packs as well as singles.
Gold Rush: White Water, a spin-off series of Gold Rush; Gold Rush, a 2006 American reality competition web series "Gold Rush!", a 1986 episode of The Raccoons; Gold Rush, a 1998 novel by Miri Yu; Gold Rush Country (Dreamworld), a themed area inside the Dreamworld amusement park in Gold Coast, Australia
"Gold Rush" originated as a demo that the band planned to discard, but was revisited at the suggestion of producer Rich Costey and combined with another demo. [1] The song was written by lead vocalist and guitarist Ben Gibbard as "a requiem for a skyline", inspired by the rapid changes to Seattle's Capitol Hill neighborhood, where Gibbard had lived for 20 years and some areas were "almost ...
Young's new home and romantic relationship would inspire several new songs. After completing After the Gold Rush, Young promoted the album through a series of solo acoustic concerts. After playing Carnegie Hall in December 1970, Young returned to his ranch for a break in touring. While picking up a slab of walnut, Young injured his back, which ...