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King Gary is a British television comedy series made for the BBC co-created and written by Tom Davis and James De Frond. Davis also stars as the eponymous lead character, Gary King, while De Frond directs. [1] The pilot episode was shown on BBC One in the UK in December 2018. [2]
"(Everything I Do) I Do It for You" is a song by Canadian singer-songwriter Bryan Adams. Written by Adams, Michael Kamen , and Robert John "Mutt" Lange , the power ballad was the lead single for both the soundtrack album from the 1991 film Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves and Adams's sixth studio album, Waking Up the Neighbours (1991).
"MLK" is a song by Irish rock band U2, and is the tenth and final track on their 1984 album, The Unforgettable Fire. An elegy to Martin Luther King Jr., it is a short, pensive piece with simple lyrics ("Sleep/Sleep tonight/And may your dreams/Be realized/If the thundercloud/Passes rain/So let it rain/Rain down on me").
Austin & Ally ("Can't Do It Without You") – Ross Lynch (seasons 1–3) and Laura Marano (season 4) Austin City Limits ("London Homesick Blues") – Gary P. Nunn; Automan – Billy Hinsche and Stu Phillips; The Avengers – John Dankworth (series 1, 2, 3) – Laurie Johnson (series 4, 5, 6) B Positive – Keb Mo' and Chuck Lorre
In August 2017, Yoshiki was chosen for the cover of Vogue Japan, as the first Japanese male to do so. [281] In October 2018, Yoshiki was the featured model for the Yves Saint Laurent YSL Beauty Hotel opening event in Tokyo, participating in a female makeup demonstration applied by Yves Saint Laurent's beauty director Tom Pecheux. [282] [283]
The general rule is that a younger family member (e.g., a young brother) addresses an older family member (e.g., a big sister) using an honorific form, while the more senior family member calls the younger one only by name. The honorific forms are: O-tōsan (お-父さん): father. The descriptive noun is chichi (父).
The lyrics of "Wasn't Born to Follow" celebrate the freedom that hippies enjoyed in the late 1960s. [1] They express the need for escape and independence. [2] Music critic Johnny Rogan describes the lyrics as an "evocation of pastoral freedom and the implicit desire to escape from the restrictions of conventional society."
Designing Social Inquiry: Scientific Inference in Qualitative Research (or KKV) is an influential 1994 book written by Gary King, Robert Keohane, and Sidney Verba that lays out guidelines for conducting qualitative research. [1]