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Episode 3 of 13: This episode is four weeks and a day before the events of "Nature", picking up directly from "School Pageant," with the townspeople realizing that the song Orel sang in the school musical is blasphemous and fearing that God will punish Moralton for it (citing various signs, like how Orel raised the dead in Season 1).
The show was also the fourth most watched show on Fox that week after House, The OT, and Bones while being fourth in the Adults 18–49 viewing for the week after House, The OT, and Family Guy. [ 5 ] Robert Canning of IGN stated in his review "In the end, for all the small bits that worked -- Moleman operating on himself, Moe and the angry mob ...
"O Brother, Where Bart Thou?" is the eighth episode of the twenty-first season of the American animated television series The Simpsons. Being the last episode to air in the 2000s, it originally aired on the Fox network in the United States on December 13, 2009. [ 1 ]
The episode was watched by 1.90 million viewers with a 0.7/2 share among adults aged 18 to 49. [1] This was a 5% decrease in viewership from the previous episode, which was watched by 2.00 million viewers from a 0.9/3 share in the 18-49 demographics.
As the holiday season approaches, Chuckie is dreading another forgettable Christmas. To liven things up, he mistakenly steals a great tree to replace the lame one his dad has picked out. When he discovers that the whole community is after the thief, he hatches a plan to rectify the situation. Meanwhile, Tommy and Dil write a Hanukkah song.
"Tales from the Public Domain" is the third trilogy episode produced for the series, the other two being "Simpsons Bible Stories" from season 10, and "Simpsons Tall Tales" from season 12. Al Jean , the show runner for the episode, stated that trilogy episodes are "very fun for the writers" to do because it allows them to parody "great works of ...
The official trailer for You was released on April 10, 2018, by Lifetime. [102] You premiered on Lifetime in the United States on September 9, 2018. [103] In May 2018, it was announced that Netflix acquired the exclusive international broadcast rights to You, making it available as an original series on the platform.
You might feel super, super awkward a couple or fifty times, but by God, you'll be entertained." [39] Tiffany Kelly from Daily Dot recommended the first season in her review of the series by stating that it "quickly evolves into a disturbing profile of a psychopath in the digital age, one who uses social media to aid his stalking."