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Raymond Jungles Inc. is a landscape architecture firm located in Miami, Florida. [1] The company was founded in 1982 by Raymond Jungles and has maintained an international presence in landscape architecture focusing on residential, hospitality, master plan, and public work.
Jungle Jim is a 1955–56 American TV series based on the Jungle Jim newspaper comic strip. It stars Johnny Weissmuller, who had previously played the character in a series of sixteen theatrically released Jungle Jim feature films, which were produced soon after he retired from the Tarzan film series in 1948 for which he is best remembered.
Raymond Jungles is an American landscape architect and founder of Raymond Jungles Inc. in Miami, Florida. [1] Jungles primarily focuses on private gardens and resort ...
The Official Jungle Jim Sundays: v. 1 Pioneer Comics, Las Vegas, NV, 1989 (reprints July 14, 1935 – May 16, 1937) The Official Jungle Jim Sundays: v. 2, Death In The Jungle Pioneer Comics, Las Vegas, NV, 1989 (reprints May 16, 1937 – March 12, 1939) Definitive Flash Gordon and Jungle Jim Volume 1: 1934–1936 San Diego, Calif. IDW Publishing.
Jeff Jensen of Entertainment Weekly named "And Those We've Left Behind" the tenth best episode of the series, calling it "an episode worthy of one of Fringe ' s key inspirations, The Twilight Zone, with exceptional guest players taking center stage in a clever, wise, emotionally rich story in which an electrical engineer fought an unwinnable ...
The series "A Man in Full" wraps up with Croker and Peepgrass having killed each other off, Conrad Hensley freed from prison and presumably happily preparing for fatherhood with pregnant wife Jill.
As Screen Rant stated when placing "Robert's Rodeo" number seven on its list of the best Robert episodes of Everybody Loves Raymond, "While this wacky scenario makes Robert the 'butt' of quite a few jokes, it's also somewhat endearing, as it shows Ray's willingness to go out of his way to help his brother out and be there for him while stuck in the hospital."
Upon its airing, "Driving Frank" was the 21st most-viewed episode of the week with a Nielsen rating of 9.9, contributing to a ratings victory CBS had that week. [1] Screen Rant claimed "Driving Frank" to be a great example of Raymond's handling of family dynamics, also noting that it has some "pretty funny situations which include his own son (a police officer) giving him a ticket, in addition ...