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Academic literature on the topic 'Top Secret Episode'
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Journal articles on the topic "Top Secret Episode"
Johnson, Jeffrey A., Joanne E. Kappel, and M. Nabi Sharif. "Hypoglycemia Secondary to Trimethoprim/Sulfamethoxazole Administration in a Renal Transplant Patient." Annals of Pharmacotherapy 27, no. 3 (March 1993): 304–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/106002809302700309.
Full textTilling, Fabian. "“It is right to keep the secret of a king” (Tobit 12:7)—the King’s secret as a metaphor for the mysterium Dei in Origen." Zeitschrift für Antikes Christentum / Journal of Ancient Christianity 23, no. 1 (April 1, 2019): 101–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/zac-2019-0006.
Full textLipuma, Lauren. "Podcast: Toxic City Under the Ice." Eos 100 (March 18, 2019). http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2019eo118473.
Full textMiletic, Sasa. "‘Everyone Has Secrets’: Revealing the Whistleblower in Hollwood Film in the Examples of Snowden and The Fifth Estate." M/C Journal 23, no. 4 (August 12, 2020). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.1668.
Full textHunter, John C. "Organic Interfaces; or, How Human Beings Augment Their Digital Devices." M/C Journal 16, no. 6 (November 7, 2013). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.743.
Full textLawson, Jenny. "Food Confessions: Disclosing the Self through the Performance of Food." M/C Journal 12, no. 5 (December 13, 2009). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.199.
Full textRocavert, Carla. "Aspiring to the Creative Class: Reality Television and the Role of the Mentor." M/C Journal 19, no. 2 (May 4, 2016). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.1086.
Full textDavis, Mark. "‘Culture Is Inseparable from Race’: Culture Wars from Pat Buchanan to Milo Yiannopoulos." M/C Journal 21, no. 5 (December 6, 2018). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.1484.
Full textBaird, Barbara. "Before the Bride Really Wore Pink." M/C Journal 15, no. 6 (November 28, 2012). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.584.
Full textBrennan, Claire. "Australia's Northern Safari." M/C Journal 20, no. 6 (December 31, 2017). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.1285.
Full textBooks on the topic "Top Secret Episode"
Tom, Badgett, ed. Ultimate unauthorized Nintendo game strategies: Winning Strategies for 100 Top Games. New York: Bantam Books, 1989.
Find full textInc, Game Counselor. Game Counselor's Answer Book for Nintendo Players. Redmond, USA: Microsoft Pr, 1991.
Find full textFye, W. Bruce. President Roosevelt’s Secret Hypertensive Heart Disease. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199982356.003.0007.
Full textMac Suibhne, Breandán. The End of Outrage. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198738619.001.0001.
Full textNugent, David. The Encrypted State. Stanford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.11126/stanford/9781503609037.001.0001.
Full textKalyvas, Stathis. Modern Greece. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/wentk/9780199948772.001.0001.
Full textInc, Game Counsellor, ed. The Game Counsellor's answer book for Nintendo Game players: Hundredsof questions -and answers - about more than 250 popular Nintendo Games. Redmond, Washington: Microsoft Press, 1991.
Find full textBook chapters on the topic "Top Secret Episode"
Heinzen, James. "The Death of a Judge." In The Art of the Bribe. Yale University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300175257.003.0009.
Full textCurrie, Wendy L. "Health IT Policy in the UK." In Advances in Healthcare Information Systems and Administration, 363–81. IGI Global, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-4546-2.ch019.
Full text"large audience” (Goldstein 1983: 26); and “Here was an Australian with a wry sense of humor and gruff charm [this was post-Crocodile Dundee], equally alluring to men and women” (Brown 1987: 33). In other words, Robert Scorpio is conveniently – if not tokenistically – played by an Australian. The limits of tolerance of the non-American for the world of network soap are instanced in General Hospital’s casting criteria for an (American) actor to play Robert Scorpio’s long-lost brother, Malcolm. The actor, John J. York, is quoted in the ABC house journal, Episodes, saying: “They didn’t want a strong dialect [sic] . . . . They didn’t want a Paul Hogan type, because that accent is too strong. They were saying ‘just a hint’” (Kump 1991: 29). The Australian is more “exotic” than Peter Pinne may have wished: too exotic. Just the accent, though, if muted, can have an appealing otherness. The second index of the acceptability of the non-American, again Australian, has yet to be tested on the American market place. Called Paradise Beach, it is not a ready-made Australian soap seeking overseas sales, but a co-production between the Australian-based Village Roadshow, Australia’s Channel 9, and the American New World Entertainment, which has secured pre-sales to the CBS network at 7:30 p.m. week-nights (beginning June 14, 1993) and Britain’s Sky Channel as well as in nine other territories worldwide (Gill 1993; Chester 1993; Shohet 1993). As an Australian-based soap directed primarily at a teen audience, it recalls Neighbours and Home and Away. As a youth drama serial set in a beach tourism center, it recalls Baywatch and summer holiday editions of Beverly Hills 90210. And like Melrose Place and the Australian E Street, each episode includes what one report breathily calls “an MTV moment . . . a two-minute montage of sleek shots of beautiful bodies and plenty of sun, surf and sand set to the latest pop music hit” (Shohet 1993: 5). Set in and around Surfers Paradise on Queensland’s Gold Coast, it recalls, for Australian viewers, the 1983 film, Coolangatta Gold, which celebrates Australian beach culture (see Crofts 1990). It is noteworthy indeed that most of the performers are recuited from a model agency, not an actor’s agency. An American actor, Matt Lattanzi, plays an American photographer, and Australian actor, Tiffany Lamb, sports an American accent. There is a concern, understandable in a program sold overseas, to make Australian colloquialisms comprehensible (Gill 1993: 2). In terms of physical geography, the locations are Australian; in terms of cultural geography, Queensland’s Gold Coast is substantially indistinguishable from much of Florida and parts of California and Hawaii. The era of the co-production re-poses the question of the degree of acceptability of non-American material in the American market-place by begging the question of the distinguishability of the two. But given the unequal cultural exchange long obtaining between Australia and the US, with shows like Mission: Impossible being filmed in Australia to take advantage of cheap labor; given the tight money of Paradise Beach’s shooting schedule of 2.5 hours of soap per week; and given New World’s Head’s, James McNamara, ignorance of Australian soaps (“Paradise Beach is the first soap to be skewed at a teen audience” (quoted by Gill 1993: 2)), one might wonder which party is defining the." In To Be Continued..., 123. Routledge, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203131855-25.
Full text"In France, Neighbours, dubbed as Les voisins, was launched by Antenne 2 in August 1989. Screened twice daily at 11:30 and 5:45, it secured ratings of 24 per cent of the market, in fact Antenne 2’s average for that year. However, for reasons which Antenne 2 is unwilling to disclose, the evening screening was shifted after only ten editions to 6:30. This put it up against stronger competition from others of the then five channels, and its rating dropped to just below 16 percent of market share. A further scheduling change briefly preceded its demise after a total of only seven months’ screening. The 185 episodes purchased only just included the debut of Kylie Minogue at episode 169. According to its French agent, Rolande Cousin, Antenne 2 bought Neighbours exclusively on the basis of its colossal British success (Cousin 1992), a phenomenon mentioned by all six articles heralding Neighbours’s arrival on French screens; its Australian success was referred to by four articles (Baron 1989; Brugière 1989; Lepetit 1989; Pélégrin 1989; Thomann 1989; and A.W. 1989). The Minogue factor also appears significant. Her singing career peaked in 1988–1989, and among the six articles she rated one cover story (Télé 7 jours), an exclusive interview and a cover story with Jason Donovan (in Télé poche), and two other references (Brugière 1989; and Thomann 1989). Cousin identifies five other potential appeals in the program for French viewers: its sun, its “acceptable exoticism,” its lack of blacks (a sensitive topic in France, as witness the racist political career of Jean-Marie Le Pen), its lack of other disturbing social material, and its everyday issues (Cousin 1992). For all this potential appeal, Antenne 2 still delayed transmitting by three months, pushing its opening into August, when most of France goes on holiday, and opted instead for the American Top Models (Baron 1989: 25). This lack of confidence in its purchase instances what Cousin called a “Pavlovian reflex” against non-US serial fiction (Cousin 1992), and points to broader issues than the fame of two of the program’s principals. The French commentaries differ noticeably from the American in their assessment of the ten textual features of Neighbours singled out above. One feature – women as doers – is not mentioned at all. All other features are mentioned at least once. The two most often referred to are the everyday, and the domestic and suburban. But Neighbours’s non-exceptionality, its everyday realism, had a different status for French than for American reviewers. For most of the latter it offered a desirable antidote to the spectacular confections of home-grown soaps. For French reviewers it was treated in one of two ways. While some derogated the program’s perceived banality (Brugière 1989; Pélégrin 1989), others, whether high(er) brow or plugging the Minogue factor, remained curiously non-committal about its everyday realism. There was a similarly curious abstention from either positive or negative evaluation of the program. Commentators’ apparent unease with this centrally distinguishing feature of Neighbours, its everyday realism, suggests that it represented something of a conundrum in the mediascape, in particular the field of television serial fiction screened in France, and may well echo the unease evidently felt by its buyer. The reasons require some clarification." In To Be Continued..., 125. Routledge, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203131855-27.
Full text"normally trial it for two years, both for it to catch on with its audience and, if applicable, to amortize establishment production costs. Shows as famous and successful as Cheers and Cagney and Lacey suffered poor ratings in their first two years, but were persevered with. Recent years of recession and cable’s effect of fragmenting the market have generated what Cristal calls the networks’ “ultra-conservatism.” The expansion of cable meant that by 1991 Los Angeles residents might choose from some forty-one channels, while the figure elsewhere in the country tops sixty. This enables advertisers to diversify their expenditure, spending, for instance, US$30,000 on ten different ads, rather than risk US$300,000 per minute on The Cosby Show, or somewhat less on a Neighbours. Such a situation encourages deep caution among television station executives once ratings fail to measure up. A final factor was mentioned by none of the reviews or interviewees. It is, though, reasonable to speculate that the age of the show – episode one dates from March 1985, pre-Kylie – may have combined with its lack of crisis-a-minute plot lines and strange accents to discourage viewers. For the fashion, interior decor, and casual deportment of Neighbours 1985-model would in 1991 in the US have seemed light years beyond those of daytime soaps such as General Hospital, not to mention those of Dallasty. The sitcom appearance would not have yielded enough jokes to compare with a Roseanne, while its plot lines would have appeared to belong on another planet from those of Days of Our Lives – certainly outside the orbit of the American soapscape. Neighbours’s failure in the US market, then, can be seen to proceed from its non-exceptional realism, its foreignness, the gridlock of US television scheduling for such a soap, the brevity of its run, and, probably, the quaintness of its six-year-old material. The preceding material authorizes some further conclusions, about American acceptance of other countries’ media product. In so far as the Australianness/non-Americanness of Neighbours was the sticking-point for US television executives, there are two significant indices of the degrees of acceptability of Australian/non-American material for American network television. The first is the unashamed (though not broad) Australian accent of Tristan Rogers, who plays leading man and long-time heartthrob, variously police commissioner and secret agent, Robert Scorpio, on the “goliath of daytime soaps” (Twan 1984: 13), the ABC network’s General Hospital. On his 1981 debut on the show, he expressed pride in being “the first leading man who’s been allowed to retain his Australian accent on American television [Rod Taylor had not], and I’m very pleased it’s proving successful” (quoted by Church 1981: 24). In subsequent publicity and advertorial, Rogers’s Australian origin has taken a key position in a discursive set of permutable qualifiers such as “suave,” “handsome,” “charming,” and ‘heartthrob.” Its function as a distinguishing marketing tag is evident from such descriptions as “Robert Scorpio (Tristan Rogers) whose Australian accent and smouldering good look” (Tormey 1982: 119); “Tristan . . . introduced the suave Aussie, Robert Scorpio, to General Hospital’s." In To Be Continued..., 122. Routledge, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203131855-24.
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