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Mr. Sunshine (Korean: 미스터 션샤인) is a South Korean television series written by Kim Eun-sook and directed by Lee Eung-bok, starring Lee Byung-hun, Kim Tae-ri, Yoo Yeon-seok, Kim Min-jung, and Byun Yo-han. [4] [5] The series is set in Hanseong (present-day Seoul) in the early 1900s, and focuses on activists fighting for Korea's ...
Mr. Sunshine is an American television sitcom that aired from February 9 to April 6, 2011, as a mid-season replacement. [1] The single-camera comedy was co-created by Matthew Perry, who also starred in the series. [2] ABC cancelled the series on May 13, 2011, due to low ratings. [3]
The series was controversial during its run, attracting criticism from interest groups claiming that Mr. Sunshine poked fun at the visually impaired by using the lead character's disability as a focus for much of the show's humor. Supporters of the series said the show treated the character and the disability respectfully.
Mr. Sunshine (South Korean TV series), a 2018 television series Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Mr. Sunshine .
During a particularly cold New York winter, George starts to suspect that he is not himself but the creation of someone else, someone he calls "Mr. Sunshine". Sunshine and George enter into a battle of wits to determine who should be called "creator". Throughout the novel colorful characters on the campus of Cornell University appear. There is ...
Mr. Smith, as depicted in a 1912 version of the book. The following characters are interwoven through the set of twelve stories of Sunshine Sketches: Josh Smith, proprietor of Smith's Hotel, one of the leading citizens of the town. Jefferson Thorpe, owner of the barber shop, who engages in mining speculations.
The Abbeville church where the story's antagonist met his justice "Casting the Runes" is a short story written by the English writer M. R. James.It was first published in 1911 as the fourth story in More Ghost Stories, which was James' second collection of ghost stories.
Written while Salinger resided in suburban Stamford, Connecticut, the story offers insights into upper-middle class American society in the post-WWII years. In that era, writes biographer Kenneth Slawenski, “unabashed Americanism and materialism were unquestioned values”. [ 4 ]