Portal:Television/Did you know
- ...that the title of Dan Castellaneta's album of comedy sketches I Am Not Homer is a parody of Leonard Nimoy's first autobiography I Am Not Spock?
- ...that Anne Montgomery, who has been a sportscaster for several local television stations as well as SportsCenter, was the first female football referee in Arizona?
- ...that children up to the age of five can find it difficult to distinguish between television programmes and toy advertising campaigns?
- ...that Tomorrow's Pioneers, a television program for children produced by Hamas, features a mascot similar to Mickey Mouse?
- ...that the Zambian district of Chiengi has no television or telephone service?
Instructions
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DYK list
[edit]Portal:Television/Did you know/1
- ...that copies of the 1982 biopic Will: G. Gordon Liddy, about a Watergate co-conspirator, are stored in the Nixon Presidential Materials collection at the U.S. National Archives?
Portal:Television/Did you know/2
- ...that the book South Park and Philosophy: You Know, I Learned Something Today analyzes the animated television comedy series South Park using philosophical concepts?
Portal:Television/Did you know/3
- ...that David Letterman parodied Werner Erhard in the 1978 Mork & Mindy episode Mork Goes Erk?
Portal:Television/Did you know/4
- ...that the Simpsons short Good Night aired April 19, 1987 on The Tracey Ullman Show and was the first ever appearance of the Simpson family on television?
Portal:Television/Did you know/5
- ...that the book The Psychology of The Simpsons uses this TV series to analyze topics in psychology including clinical psychology, cognition and Pavlovian conditioning?
Portal:Television/Did you know/6
- ...that The Simpsons' history began when Matt Groening conceived of the dysfunctional family in the lobby of James L. Brooks's office?
Portal:Television/Did you know/7
- ...that the title of Dan Castellaneta's album of comedy sketches I Am Not Homer is a parody of Leonard Nimoy's first autobiography I Am Not Spock?
Portal:Television/Did you know/8
- ...that The Simpsons and Philosophy: The D'oh! of Homer, a book that analyzes the The Simpsons using philosophical concepts, is the main textbook in philosophy courses offered at some universities?
Portal:Television/Did you know/9
- ...that Richard Hanley's book South Park and Philosophy: Bigger, Longer, and More Penetrating analyzes issues of applied ethics as presented in South Park?
Portal:Television/Did you know/10
- ...that noitulovE, a cinema and television advertising campaign for Guinness draught stout, won more awards than any other commercial worldwide in 2006?
Portal:Television/Did you know/11
- ...that the television adaptation of the BBC Radio 2 sitcom Teenage Kicks, originally for BBC Two, has been taken over by ITV?
Portal:Television/Did you know/12
- ...that the air-date of "The Beginning of the End", the fourth season premiere of the television series Lost, means that the season may be interrupted by the 2007 Writers Guild of America strike even if a settlement is reached?
Portal:Television/Did you know/13
- ...that The O.C.'s music supervisor Alexandra Patsavas worked in the music department of over fifty Roger Corman B-movies before her television debut?
Portal:Television/Did you know/14
- ...that despite British Conservative MP Denis Keegan winning a marginal constituency by over 7,000 votes, he ended his political career after one term, preferring to work for the trade association for television shops?
Portal:Television/Did you know/15
- ...that the fight scene between Peter Griffin and a giant chicken on Family Guy episode Blind Ambition was originally created for the episode Cleveland Loretta Quagmire?
Portal:Television/Did you know/16
- ...that the 1994 Guinness television advertisement Anticipation used jump cutting techniques to make an actor appear to be performing a physically impossible dance?
Portal:Television/Did you know/17
- ...that one of the television advertisements from the Good things come to those who wait Guinness advertising campaign was voted the "Best ad of all time" by the British public?
Portal:Television/Did you know/18
- ...that Molly Badham, co-founder of Twycross Zoo, trained the chimpanzees who appeared in the long-running Brooke Bond PG Tips television advertisements?
Portal:Television/Did you know/19
- ...that Anne Montgomery, who has been a sportscaster for several local television stations as well as SportsCenter, was the first female football referee in Arizona?
Portal:Television/Did you know/20
- ...that popular 1950s game show Down You Go is one of the only U.S. television series to air on all four networks of television's Golden Age: ABC, NBC, CBS and DuMont?
Portal:Television/Did you know/21
- ...that Augie Hiebert not only built Alaska's first television station, KTVA, but also founded the state's first FM radio station, KNIK-FM?
Portal:Television/Did you know/22
- ...that an advertising spot immediately following Xinwen Lianbo, a daily news programme shown by most terrestrial television stations in mainland China, can sell for an estimated US$100,000?
Portal:Television/Did you know/23
- ...that the proposed BBC television special Planet Relief, created to raise awareness of climate change, was cancelled before it was made, for fear that it would be biased against climate sceptics?
Portal:Television/Did you know/24
- ...that model Albert Reed, selected to appear in September 2007 on the United States television show Dancing with the Stars, admits that he cannot dance?
Portal:Television/Did you know/25
- ...that the participants of the Channel 4 programme Dumped were not told that they would be living on a landfill site for three weeks?
Portal:Television/Did you know/26
- ...that the ABC television network created controversy when they licensed and produced a doll based on fictional rapist Todd Manning?
Portal:Television/Did you know/27
- ...that actress, writer and producer Michelle Paradise created the television series Exes and Ohs without an agent?
Portal:Television/Did you know/28
- ...that children up to the age of five can find it difficult to distinguish between television programmes and toy advertising campaigns?
Portal:Television/Did you know/29
- ...that Dyesebel, a popular mermaid character in Filipino comic books, cinema and television, was based on Philippine folklore?
Portal:Television/Did you know/30
- ...that Black Entertainment Television comedy series We Got to Do Better, had its name changed from Hot Ghetto Mess amidst allegations of enforcing negative stereotypes of African Americans?
Portal:Television/Did you know/31
- ...that the television drama Hill Street Blues imitated the visual style of The Police Tapes, a low-budget documentary about a police precinct in the South Bronx?
Portal:Television/Did you know/32
- ...that the WWF in 1986 introduced a stable of masked wrestlers to keep the injured wrestler Andre the Giant on television, but off the ring?
Portal:Television/Did you know/33
- ...that Robert Raymond founded Australia's longest running current affairs television program?
Portal:Television/Did you know/34
- ...that the final episode of the 1986 television series Outlaws recycled footage from The Oregon Trail, because actors Rod Taylor and Charles Napier appeared in both programs?
Portal:Television/Did you know/35
- ...that the color signals of Israel Broadcasting Authority television transmissions were erased until 1981, to insure equality for families who couldn't afford color-tv?
Portal:Television/Did you know/36
- ...that Olivia Newton-John made at least 16 appearances on The Go!! Show, an Australian popular music television series which aired between 1964 to 1967, before she found international success?
Portal:Television/Did you know/37
- ...that Melbourne rock band The Strangers appeared on weekly television for nine years straight?
Portal:Television/Did you know/38
- ...that Gordon Murray, the creator of classic British children's television shows Trumpton, Camberwick Green and Chigley, burnt all but one of his puppets on a bonfire in the 1980s?
Portal:Television/Did you know/39
- ..that the time traveling premise featured in the Chrono series of video games was inspired by such television programs as The Time Tunnel?
Portal:Television/Did you know/40
- ...that Tomorrow's Pioneers, a television program for children produced by Hamas, features a mascot similar to Mickey Mouse?
Portal:Television/Did you know/41
- ...that Russian television implied that Filipp Kirkorov won the Eurovision Song Contest 1995 with "Kolibelnaya Dlya Vulkana" when he in fact only came 17th?
Portal:Television/Did you know/42
- ...that Dr. Andrew Rochford, a presenter on the popular Australian television show What's Good For You, got his break after he won the popular show The Block?
Portal:Television/Did you know/43
- ...that the Zambian district of Chiengi has no television or telephone service?
Portal:Television/Did you know/44
- ...that like the characters in his television series The Practice and Boston Legal, David E. Kelley worked as a lawyer in a Boston law firm?
Portal:Television/Did you know/45
- ...that Judy Morris, co-writer of the Academy Award winning Happy Feet has also acted in many of the most popular North American and Australian television programs since the age of 10?
Portal:Television/Did you know/46
- ...that British television programmes including Cluedo and The Forsythe Saga were partly filmed at Arley Hall in Cheshire?
Portal:Television/Did you know/47
- ...that the television series ER aired an episode based on the 2003 Chicago balcony collapse?
Portal:Television/Did you know/48
- ...that Ralph "Petey" Greene overcame a drug addiction and prison sentence to become an Emmy Award-winning radio and television talk show host and a guest at the White House?
Portal:Television/Did you know/49
- ...that Great American Country television host Nan Kelley (then Nan Sumrall) became Miss Mississippi in 1985 after her fellow Mississippian Susan Akin was crowned Miss America?
Portal:Television/Did you know/50
- ...that a Spokane, Washington, television station devoted the first 11 minutes of its Saturday evening newscast to the February 2007 arrests of Gonzaga University basketball player Josh Heytvelt and his teammate?
Portal:Television/Did you know/51
- ... that The Owl Service, a 1969 TV adaptation of the novel, was the first fully-scripted colour production by Granada Television?
Nominations
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