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The Corner is a 2000 HBO drama television miniseries based on the nonfiction book The Corner: A Year in the Life of an Inner-City Neighborhood (1997) by David Simon and Ed Burns, and adapted for television by David Simon and David Mills. It premiered on HBO in the United States on April 16, 2000, and concluded its six-part run on May 21, 2000.
Corners is a Children's BBC children's television series of the 1980s. Produced by Alison Stewart, the format of the programme was that viewers would submit questions and queries (usually general knowledge, but sometimes metaphysical or scientific), and the two hosts, Tracy Brabin [1] (later Sophie Aldred and then Diane-Louise Jordan) and Simon Davies, would try to answer the questions, aided ...
The Corner: A Year in the Life of an Inner-City Neighborhood is a 1997 book written by Baltimore Sun reporter David Simon and former Baltimore homicide detective Ed Burns. This book follows the lives of individuals who lived on the corner of Fayette Street and Monroe Street in West Baltimore over one year.
Back in Time for... is a British factual entertainment television series produced by Wall to Wall and broadcast on BBC Two from 17 March 2015 to 23 June 2022. [1] Each series takes one "typical" family or multiple individuals relating to the topic (e.g., factory workers in Back in Time for the Factory) and immerses them in life of past decades.
Mitchell also co-hosted and reported for UTV's GAA discussion series End to End between 2001 and 2004. [6] Mitchell presented the entertainment series School Around the Corner from 1996 to 2005, [7] Ultimate Ulster in 2007 to 2009 [8] and the weekday magazine show UTV Life between 1999 and 2009. His Ultimate Ulster programme featuring an array ...
Sally Abbott created The Coroner from an idea by Will Trotter, executive producer and head of BBC Drama Birmingham, about a woman coroner aged about 40 and in a location such as the Cotswolds or Devon. The series would have self-contained stories with drama and humour; a formula successfully used in Father Brown from the
There was social media stuff, but it really kicked off backstage at the Emmys or possibly the TV upfronts. There were two different instances where Quinta and Rob were occupying the same space in ...
The programme became (around 1994) the first BBC TV show to invite contributions by email, and at one point, its producer Bernard Newnham [6] - who produced more than five years worth of shows, four of which were with Anne Robinson - had the only Internet connection in BBC Television Centre. [7]