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The episode aired on October 5, 2018 and was watched live and same day by 7.39 million viewers. [8] Within seven days, by means of DVR and video on demand services the total number of viewers rose to 10.10 million. [9] It ranked as the twenty-fifth most viewed show for the broadcast week of October 1–7. [10]
Checking her cellphone, she discovers that she had also received the cursed call at 5:58 PM; noticing the current time is 8:05 PM, she realizes Mimiko killed her in the mines before using her image to kill Yuting. Spitting out a red hard candy, she smiles and drops it as the death ringtone plays.
Xerox vacated the premises at 1200 N. Nimitz Highway after the shooting. This facility was vacant until 2004, when the producers of the TV show Lost built a sound stage there to film indoor scenes. [18] Dal-Tile currently leases the property from the Harry and Jeanette Weinberg Foundation for its tile and natural stone showroom. [19] [20]
"Nalowale i ke 'ehu o he kai" (Hawaiian for: "Lost in the sea sprays") is the eighteenth episode of the tenth and final season of Hawaii Five-0. It aired on February 28, 2020 on CBS . The story for the episode was written by Zoe Robyn, and the teleplay was written by Talia Gonzalez and Bisanne Masoud.
Gilbert Francis Lani Damian Kauhi (October 17, 1937 – May 3, 2004), also known by the stage names monumously as Zulu [1] and Zoulou, was an American actor and comedian.He is remembered largely for his portrayal of Kono Kalakaua on the long-running television program Hawaii Five-O.
Dawn Momohara was found dead the morning of March 21, 1977, on the second floor of a building at McKinley High School, in Hawaii's capital, according to the Honolulu Police Department. She was 16 ...
Hawaii's death penalty has received criticism for almost exclusively targeting racial minorities within the country. Very few executions in Hawaii were of white Americans or Native Hawaiians, to the point where some Hawaiians speculated that the abolition of the death penalty occurred "because there were too many haole (Caucasians) who risked hanging."
Hawaii Five-0 is an American police procedural television series developed for television by Roberto Orci, Alex Kurtzman and Peter M. Lenkov for CBS.It is a reboot of the 1968–1980 series Hawaii Five-O (the original series had the letter "O" instead of the number "0" in its title), which also aired on CBS.