Gladiators (British TV show) - Factbites
 Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Gladiators (British TV show)


    Note: these results are not from the primary (high quality) database.


Related Topics

In the News (Sat 26 Dec 09)

  
 Wish Tv
Reminiscent of an old-time “Sing along with Mitch” TV show, Caldwell Elementary School students and faculty gathered in the school cafeteria Friday morning to celebrate the upcoming Christmas holidays.
She was tough fronting hit show Gladiators, funny and flirty on Vic and Bob's Shooting Stars and marvellously multilingual hosting the Eurovision Song Contest.
Adams must have provided divine guidance for that inclusion) and parts insightful especially on his subject's prim and proper British education and during the artistic period of starvation, overwork, and fame.
www.electronicweekly.co.uk /tv/wish_tv.html   (529 words)

  
 Gladiators - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gladiators was a game show shown on ITV in the United Kingdom from 1992 to 1999, (though there was another, not televised, game in 2000) an adaptation of the United States game show American Gladiators, which had developed a cult following in the UK through its night-time TV showings, as well as an Australian spin-off.
American Gladiators fans who have watched Wolf see him as the British equivalent to the American Gladiator Danny Lee 'Nitro' Clark.
Arguably the most famous Gladiator, as well as a hugely popular children's TV star, was Wolf (aka Michael Van Wijk), who remained in the show for its entire duration.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Gladiators   (795 words)

  
 FISA - The Official World Rowing Web Site - News - Latest - Full Story
Goodall, 29, came to indoor rowing six years ago as a way to improve his sporting resume in hope of getting on the British TV show Gladiators.
Meanwhile at this year's British Indoor Rowing Championships Goodall chose not to race, instead he was left to cheer on the 2,800 other competitors in his favourite sport.
His sport is indoor rowing and finishing the 2000 metre race in 5.53 placed him at the top of the standings overshadowing the dual between the Boat Race squads from Oxford and Cambridge Universities.
www.worldrowing.com /news/fullstory.sps?iNewsid=128355&itype=   (833 words)

  
 Challenge - Psychology Central
It is the closest British equivalent of the American Game Show Network (latterly GSN).
(older episodes are aired as "Classic Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?), The Crystal Maze, Fort Boyard, the Lily Savage version of Blankety Blank, Family Fortunes, the British versions of Wheel of Fortune, Play Your Cards Right, The Price Is Right, the British version of Supermarket Sweep, Gladiators, and 3-2-1.
Originally starting out as 'The Family Channel', and later 'Challenge TV', it has historically shown various game shows taken from a variety of sources, including some they made themselves, and the majority of its programmes are still in this genre.
psychcentral.com /psypsych/Challenge   (527 words)

  
 gblist.txt
Weekend at Poison Lake Series: Gladiators Note: This series, based on the British equivalent of the American Gladiators TV show, has no individual titles for its volumes, only numbers.
When the Cat's Away (with revised Sorcerer Solitaire) ___ Pocket Adventure 1: Goblin Lake ___ Pocket Adventure 2: Abyss ___ Pocket Adventure 3: Circle of Ice ___ Elven Lords (limited edition) ___ Agent of Death (from Infinity Limited) ___ JG0400.
The Curse of the Cave Creatures ___ 6.
www.gamebooks.org /gblist.txt   (527 words)

  
 gblist.txt
Weekend at Poison Lake Series: Gladiators Note: This series, based on the British equivalent of the American Gladiators TV show, has no individual titles for its volumes, only numbers.
When the Cat's Away (with revised Sorcerer Solitaire) ___ Pocket Adventure 1: Goblin Lake ___ Pocket Adventure 2: Abyss ___ Pocket Adventure 3: Circle of Ice ___ Elven Lords (limited edition) ___ Agent of Death (from Infinity Limited) ___ JG0400.
The Fear Factor: Terrorism in the City Series: Reboot ___ The Knight Watchmen ___ Racing the Clock ___ Virtual Life ___ The Virus Hunter Series: Ren and Stimpy Note: Just one issue of this comic book was interactive.
www.gamebooks.org /gblist.txt   (527 words)

  
 Media Watch: Health and Science Media Monitoring
This is no new development — obsessive texting is hardly on a level with watching lions rip gladiators to shreds for entertainment, and, as the British public seem to be moving on to a stage where fox-hunting is no longer seen as a justifiable, fun diversion, we must be doing something right.
Our frantic attempts to avoid boredom uphold a lucrative corner of the entertainment industry, while the variety of books, websites, TV programmes and videos aimed at children and called "Boredom Busters" suggests that ennui has no age restriction.
Now we know that the tragic death of a three-year-old girl weighing 40 kilos was due to a rare genetic disorder and not, as the media had almost universally concluded, to gross parental neglect and cruelty.
www.sirc.org /media/media.html   (2985 words)

  
 WHA doesn't make dollars and sense - NHL - MSNBC.com
The league could have teams in Halifax, Nova Scotia; Vancouver, British Columbia; and Dallas.
The league has not sold a ticket, has no network or cable TV deals, no players, no referees, and apparently it has just one team employee.
The Detroit Gladiators, who are scheduled to be playing in the Detroit Lions’ old Silverdome home field in Pontiac, Mich., have a coach, former NHL defenseman Moe Mantha.
msnbc.msn.com /id/5861563   (2985 words)

  
 Amazon - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sharron Davies, who went under the name Amazon in the British TV series Gladiators.
Dahomey Amazons, an all-female regiment of the African kingdom of Dahomey.
Amazon or Amazonia, the nom de guerre of a female gladiator.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Amazon   (284 words)

  
 Blog of Death: Peter Ustinov
Sir Peter Alexander Ustinov, an Academy Award-winning British actor and author, died on March 28 from heart failure.
Ustinov's six-decade film career launched in 1942, when he appeared in the film, "One of Our Aircraft Is Missing." More than 80 TV and movie roles followed, including parts in "The Great Muppet Caper," "Lorenzo's Oil," "Luther" and in several movies as Hercule Poirot.
Ustinov received his first Oscar nomination in 1951 for "Quo Vadis." He won the best supporting actor prize a decade later for playing Lentulus Batiatus, the proprietor of a school for gladiators, in "Spartacus." In 1964, he won again for his humorous portrayal of Arthur Simon Simpson in the comedic caper, "Topkapi."
www.blogofdeath.com /archives/000848.html   (284 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.