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SpongeBob grows tired of helping people with their trivial needs and attempts to fly with the jellyfish, but the townspeople chase after him. The chase ends when Old Man Jenkins (who's had a string of bad luck because of SpongeBob's flying adventures during the whole episode) launches from a cannon and hits SpongeBob, tearing up his pants.
Smitty, in the animated Pixar film Monsters, Inc. "Lady Smitty" (Lady Winchester Huntington-Smythe Jones), in Veronica's Passport; Officer Quigley Smitty, a recurring character on the police procedural crime drama "The Rookie" Officer Smitty, on the American sitcom Sanford and Son; Officer Smitty, on the animated television series Futurama
The Smitty lore on FBI: International continues to grow in unexpected ways. The Fly Team's beloved Europol representative, played by Eva-Jane Willis , already had to learn the true identity of her ...
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FBI: International’s Megan “Smitty” Garretson is the queen of keeping her personal life as quiet as possible — but this week, her past is catching up with her in an unexpected way. Eva ...
Smitty, played by Charles C. Stevenson Jr, is a bartender who regularly serves Karen at different establishments. She has been known to call other bartenders "Smitty", even when they tell her it isn't their name. If Karen is depressed Smitty will tell her a tragic story about his own life, which she will laugh at thinking it is a joke.
Fictitious people are nonexistent people, who, unlike fictional characters, have been claimed to actually exist. Usually this is done as a practical joke or hoax, but sometimes fictitious people are 'created' as part of a fraud. A pseudonym may also be considered by some to be a "fictitious person", although this is not the correct definition.
Halroy Candis Williams [1] (born December 14, 1938) [2] is an American actor, best known for his recurring roles as Police Officer Smith ("Smitty") on Sanford and Son (1972–1976), Harley Foster on The Waltons (1973-1980), and as the patriarch Lester Jenkins, the husband of Marla Gibbs's character, on the NBC sitcom 227 which originally aired from 1985 until 1990.