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Special Olympics is a 1978 American TV movie starring Charles Durning and directed by Lee Phillips for EMI Television. [ 1 ] It was also known as A Special Kind of Love .
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NBC eventually aligns with Ted Turner-owned independent station WRET-TV (now WCNC-TV), tempted by promises Turner made to NBC to make $2.5 million worth of upgrades, including a stronger transmitter and the launch of a news department; former ABC affiliate WCCB becomes an independent station, and eventually a charter affiliate of Fox in 1986.
In a spoof of the famous 1970s Crying Indian commercial, the chimp from last year's popular E*Trade commercial wanders through a ghost town on a pony. Several deserted dot-com businesses are seen, referring to the various dot-com companies which went bankrupt partly due to their commercials last year.
This is a non-diffusing subcategory of Category:1978 films. It includes 1978 films that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent. Television films released in the year 1978
Joseph Christopher Hasham (Arabic: جو هشام) (born 4 September 1949 Tripoli, Lebanon) [1] is a Lebanese-born artistic director, based in Malaysia, he is a former actor who became famous in Australia in the 1970s through his long running role of dependable and decent gay lawyer Don Finlayson in television soap opera Number 96.
From 1978 to 2012, he was a spokesman in the American TV ads for the Toyota Motor Corporation. [1] Fridell became the official Ronald McDonald clown character in 1985, after King Moody retired from the role. [1] He portrayed the character in the McDonald's Corporation television commercials and for the chain fast-food restaurants for six years ...
Hoyt was born John McArthur Hoysradt in Bronxville, New York, [1] the son of Warren J. Hoysradt, an investment banker, and his wife, Ethel Hoysradt (née Wolf). He attended the Hotchkiss School and Yale University, where he served on the editorial board of campus humor magazine The Yale Record. [2]