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Home Sweet Rome! (April 7, 2023–present) [4] I Woke Up a Vampire (May 5, 2023–present) [5] Life with Derek (2006–16; reruns) Malory Towers (July 1, 2020 ...
Derek B Scott sings “Home, Sweet Home” (1823) from victorianweb.org "Home Sweet Home" from seiyaku.com; The short film A NATION SINGS (1963) is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive. Far Cry New Dawn version of "Home, Sweet Home" on YouTube. Mead, Julia C. (16 January 2005). "The Home Is Sweet, but It Wasn't His".
"Rome, Sweet Rome" is an alternative history and military science fiction short story by American freelance writer and military historian James Erwin. Posted online on Reddit under his handle Prufrock451 on August 21, 2011, [ 1 ] it describes what might happen if a United States Marine Corps expeditionary unit were somehow transported back to ...
A 13-year old girl named Lucy moves from California to Rome to start a new life with her dad and stepmom (who happens to be an Italian pop star) in upcoming live action musical TV series “Home ...
He plays Doc on Letterkenny, and Will/Dad on the HBO Max show Home Sweet Rome. He wrote and directed the short film One Last Last Heist, which played at many film festivals and was an Official Selection of the Tribeca Film Festival, where it was nominated for Best Narrative Short. Sony developed One Last Last Heist for television. [citation needed]
Home Sweet Home (2007 video game), a 2007/2008 game for PC and WiiWare; Home Sweet Home (2017 video game), a 2017 horror game; Home Sweet Home (museum), a historic house and museum in East Hampton Village District, New York
Home Sweet Homer is a 1976 musical with a book by Roland Kibbee and Albert Marre, lyrics by Charles Burr and Forman Brown, and music by Mitch Leigh. Originally called Odyssey, it is one of the most notorious flops in Broadway theatre history. Loosely based on Homeric legend, it focuses on Odysseus and Penelope, awaiting his return to Ithaca.
"Home Sweet Home" is a power ballad by American heavy metal band Mötley Crüe. It was originally released in 1985 on the album Theatre of Pain, and again in 1991 for the Decade of Decadence 81-91 compilation album. It has been covered by several artists, most notably country singer Carrie Underwood, who released her version as a single in 2009.