The fourth season of House premiered on September 25, 2007 and ended on May 19, 2008. This season is the shortest one in the whole series due to the Writer Guild of America's strike which stopped production of the series and instead of 24 episodes, 16 were finally produced.
House Md Season 2 Episode 11 40
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Season 4 was a sharp departure from Season 3. In the finale of the previous series, House's entire team of fellows was fired or quit, leaving him without a staff. Apparently, the producers felt the show needed a cast shake up and, to be fair, the character House noted in Alone that it was strange for him to have had exactly the same staff for three straight years. In the Season 1 episode DNR, Foreman admits that he is on a three year contract, which would have ended at about the end of Season 3.
However, the biggest impact on Season 4 was the Writer's Strike, which shut down production on the series for about three months. As a result, Season 4 is the shortest season, with only 16 episodes being produced in all.
This is a full list of episodes of the Disney Channel original series, The Owl House, created by Dana Terrace. The series first premiered on Disney Channel on January 10, 2020. Disney XD started airing the series on March 23, 2020.
On May 17, 2021, the series was renewed for a third season, ahead of the second season premiere.[2] On Twitter, Terrace confirmed that the third season would be the final season,[3] which is set to premiere on October 15, 2022.[4]
Think you have what it takes to make it in the MasterChef kitchen? After 10 seasons of the reality cooking competition, we're diving into what truly goes on behind-the-scenes. From 12-hour days to a strict no recipe policy, we've rounded up the juiciest, most surprising rules that even the show's biggest fans probably don't know.
After your audition, the casting department and producers can take a long time to make their final decisions on the cast. According to Mayfield from season five, it took four months before she got a final decision from production.
The first day of filming can be a bit overwhelming, because that's when contestants are taken to the kitchen set for the first time and meet the judges. Mayfield said: "And then Gordon Ramsay walks out and, like, Joe [Bastianich] and Graham [Elliot]. I think there is this moment of me, if I remember from the first episode, where I'm fanning myself and crying and that is totally legit. I was super overwhelmed."
"So the fact that is the first shot, to me, made it an almost necessary end point for the first season. Aegon sees Rhaenyra's crown and throne claim here, but now the stakes have gone up to this point. What's going to happen next? It's such a great precipice to leave everybody on going into the second season."
House of the Dragon scored an early renewal from US broadcaster HBO after only its first episode had aired, so we can be sure that this story will continue. Here's everything we know so far about season 2.
That means a conservative estimate is that House of the Dragon season 2 could premiere in spring 2024, which could see the show return to the April launch date that the original Game of Thrones stuck to for most of its run.
It is uncertain whether Graham McTavish will reprise his role as Ser Harrold Westerling as the character has no role in the civil war, known as the Dance of the Dragons, according to George RR Martin's book Fire and Blood. He was also seen to resign from the Kingsguard in the ninth episode of the season.
Among the new figures who could be introduced are Lord Cregan Stark of Winterfell and Lady Jeyne Arryn of the Eyrie, both of whom are mentioned in the season 1 finale and who would be strong potential allies to Rhaenrya. The Queen sent her son Prince Jacaerys to treat with them - will he succeed?
Of course, Rhaenyra will want revenge after the horrifying death of Prince Lucerys Velaryon in the season 1 finale. If the series follows the book, expect a particularly brutal response to what happened.
The second season will also dramatically open up the focus to the entire ensemble cast instead of the few central characters in the first run, but still stay grounded in the story of Rhaenyra and Alicent.
The hit medical drama premiered in 1994 and ran on NBC for 15 seasons until 2009. That's 331 episodes-worth of guest stars who visited the fictional hospital. E.R.'s main original cast included George Clooney (who played Dr. Doug Ross), Anthony Edwards (who played Dr. Mark Greene), Noah Wyle (who played Dr. John Carter), and Julianna Margulies (who played Nurse Carol Hathaway). And the series went on to welcome many new medical professionals over the years, including Angela Bassett (Dr. Catherine Banfield), John Stamos (Dr. Tony Gates), Maura Tierney (Dr. Abby Lockhart), and Kellie Martin (Dr. Lucy Knight).
The Shameless actor appeared on ER in the recurring role of Dr. David Morganstern, County General's Chief of Surgery and Emergency Medicine. He appeared throughout ER's first four seasons, as well as an episode in 2009.
The Wonder Woman actor got his first credited role as a guest star on the NBC medical drama. In a 2003 episode, Pine played Levine, who visits the ER after drinking too much at a Valentine's Day party. This is Pine's first IMDb credit, according to an IMDb interview with the actor. "I remember on the stage they built and the entire ER was unbelievable," he told IMDb in the video interview. "It was my first time doing anything scripted and long, and it was really neat."
The Department of the Treasury's Emergency Rental Assistance Program allows grantees to make payments to households up to the maximum of the applicable Fair Market Rent or Small Area Fair Market Rent in cases where the household does not have documentation of actual rent paid. The following table shows the maximum of the Fair Market Rent or Small Area Fair Market Rent by bedroom size. For more information about the Emergency Rental Assistance Program, please visit -issues/cares/emergency-rental-assistance-program.
Philadelphia publishing house Quirk Books celebrated its tenthanniversary with the Writers House and WXPN at today's edition of LIVE.Eric Smith, Quirk's social media and marketing coordinator, explainedthe history of Quirk, from The Worst-Case Scenario Survival Handbook in2002 to The Peanut Butter Cookbook in 2009. Dougie Horner, proclaimed"the funniest guy in Philly" by Philadelphia Magazine, read an excerptfrom The History of the Berenstain Bears, proving through snappyone-liners and bizarre plot lines that Philadelphia Magazine choseright. Don Steinberg taught us jokes every man should know, and CarolineTiger informed us how to spot the serial long-distance dater (hint:"when you joke about his weekday girlfriend, there is a long pausebefore he laughs"). Musical guest Emily Bate provided lively tunes abouther new subject of interest, lady criminals. And Michael Rogalski,creative director at Quirk Books, ended the night by sharing hisexperience and expertise. While most known for the internationalbestseller Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, the authors and staff atQuirk demonstrated that talent extends to every corner of the publishinghouse.
For the 92nd episode of LIVE, we invited valued members of the Writers House community to come share their poetry. We were joined by writers Anne-Adele Wight, Frank Sherlock, Susanna Frye, Michelle Taransky, and Ryan Eckes, as well as the musical group Honey Watts, comprised of folk artists Liz Fullerton and Carl Cheeseman. Many of the poets expressed themselves through natural imagery, as in Taransky's "No, I will be in the Woods" and Wigh''s commentary on environmental issues in "Sidestep Catapult." The poets also voiced their concerns with social issues and educating people, as we saw in Sherlock's piece on the Occupy Wall Street movement. We concluded the session close to home, with Eckes' series of poems about Philadelphia, finishing appropriately with a poem exploring what the word "friend" really means.
As a precursor for the 10th anniversary First Person Festival of Memoir and Documentary Art, LIVE hosted its 90th episode with poets and spoken word artists set to perform at the festival. The storytelling began with comedian Hillary Rea sharing stories of her celebrity encounters, told in backwards chronological order. Among the rest of the storytellers were Michelle Myers and Kao Kue, who each performed works that brought out their distinctly Asian American heritage, paying special attention to their ancestors. Erik Thomas shared his funny, captivating, yet emotional poem, "Daddy Issues," which offered his perspective on growing up gay. Hip-hop artist and poet Native Son, as well as musician and self-proclaimed "teaching artist" Jack Drummond, shared stories as well.
The Writers House welcomed contributors to the literary journal Philadelphia Stories as well as musician Adrien Reju to the 89th episode of LIVE. To start off the evening, Christina Delia read us her short story "The Robbery" from the journal, as well as a story about dreams called "All Through the Night." Next, we heard James W. Morris's ridiculous yet chilling "The Captive," and Chad Willemborg's creepy and emotionally charged "The Boat." Quaker writer Helen W. Mallon shared a few of her unique stories featuring a spiritually lost, bi-racial mother of twins and a girl's father that refuses to come out of the bathroom for weeks. Finally, Debrah Morkun shared a series of poems called "IDA." With the exceptions of Morkun and Reju, the works read by the writers present can be found in print in Philadelphia Stories. 2ff7e9595c
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