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The episode satirizes educational establishments, and features a parody of the video game Crash Bandicoot. In its original American broadcast, "Lisa Gets an 'A ' " was seen by approximately 8 million viewers, and finished in 51st place in ratings the week it aired.
The episode centers on Brian failing an SAT test, leading the family into thinking that he is not as smart as he claims to be, although Peter shows him the upside to being unintelligent. The cause of Brian's change in behavior is found to be a brain tumor , and Stewie longs for Brian to have it removed to return to normal.
TIL Stanford University rejected 69% of the applicants with a perfect SAT score between 2008-2013. ... TIL several MTV Cribs episodes faked lavish celebrity lifestyles. ... video games and movies ...
Eshaghoff was interviewed for CBS’s 60 Minutes [34] in an episode titled "The Perfect Score: Cheating on the SAT". [34] The segment featured Kurt Landgraf, who was the President of the Educational Testing Service at the time, [35] and Kathleen Rice, who was the District Attorney at the time. [citation needed] The interview was conducted by ...
My SAT Coach is a game on the Nintendo DS that helps students prepare for the SAT, a common standardized college-entry exam for American high school students. [1] [2] The Princeton Review partnered with Ubisoft to create the game. [2] The game features several learning exercises that progress through three stages of learning.
To mark the 100th episode of The Angry Video Game Nerd, the Nerd takes on reviewing two bad NES games – Gyromite and Stack-Up – while dealing with the unwelcome help of Nintendo's R.O.B. Notes: The intro for this episode features clips from previous episodes along with a montage of all the title cards created for it by Mike Matei.
SNL alums reflect on Will Ferrell's comedic electricity in the iconic "More Cowbell" sketch in an exclusive clip from the third episode of Peacock docuseries SNL50: Beyond Saturday Night.
Covers the early growth of arcade games and home video game consoles in the late 1970s and early 1980s until the 1983 video game crash.Featured interviews include Tomohiro Nishikado, creator of Space Invaders; Rebecca Heineman, winner of the first Space Invaders U.S. national championship; Doug Macrae, Steve Golson, and Mike Horowitz of General Computer Corporation that made accelerator boards ...