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The Pretender and Profiler continued airing together on Saturday nights, earning respectable ratings for NBC. At the midseason point of the 1999–2000 season, NBC reintroduced the Thrillogy lineup with the addition of paranormal series The Others. [24] However, NBC cancelled the entire lineup at the end of the season.
The following is a list of episodes for the NBC television series The Pretender. The series ran for four seasons from 1996 through 2000, with 86 episodes produced, plus two television film sequels that aired on TNT in 2001.
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The Wire ("Way Down in the Hole") – The Blind Boys of Alabama (season 1), Tom Waits (season 2), The Neville Brothers (season 3), DoMaJe (season 4), Steve Earle (season 5) Wiseguy – Mike Post; The Wizard of Odds – Alan Thicke; Wizards of Waverly Place ("Everything Is Not What It Seems") – Selena Gomez; WKRP in Cincinnati – Steve Carlisle
According to The Pretender: Rebirth, Jarod uses about 20% of his brain, while most people use about 10%. It is also revealed near the end of season 2 that Jarod and his brother, Kyle, share a rare blood type, AB− blood. It is mentioned twice in season 4 ("Risque Business" & "Cold Dick"), that Jarod has a pistachio allergy.
The Pretender 2001 (also called Pretender 2001) is an American made-for-television action drama film and the first of The Pretender franchise of movies to air after the series was cancelled by NBC. It was originally released on American cable channel TNT on January 22, 2001, written by Steven Long Mitchell and Craig W. Van Sickle, directed by ...
"The life of an idiot, perhaps. But certainly not a happy one," writes Carlin. [10]Ultimate Classic Rock critic Michael Gallucci rated it as Browne's 4th greatest song, calling it "a nearly six-minute breakdown of one man's occasionally harsh, and almost always dishonest, survival instincts" as "'60s idealism had finally given way to mid-'70s cynicism."
Velton Ray Bunch (born January 22, 1948 [1] [2] in Goldsboro, North Carolina) is a film and television composer.Sometimes credited as Ray Bunch.Bunch has been nominated for an Emmy three times for his work, and won the fourth time for his score to the Star Trek: Enterprise episode "Similitude".