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1-21 of 21
- SNL alumnus and former Weekend Update anchor Norm MacDonald hosts as he and his team of correspondents sort through the churning mass of pop culture and social media to pull out the funniest, most bizarre and entertaining events so you don't have to.
- United States Savings Bond Division payroll informational training film produced by Paramount Pictures, starring Sandy Duncan and characters from various other television series including "Mission: Impossible", "The Odd Couple" and "Mannix".
- High school student Matt Allen collapses into a mental psychosis, shots his teacher, the high school principal, hunts his girlfriend down at work and shoots her too, and then he escapes in a school bus with three young children inside of it.
- Hit radio show host, Landmark Legal Foundation runner, Reagan-administration employee Mark Levin (AKA: The Great One) hosts his own internet news/commentary channel wherein he talks about American history, egregious violations of the law, does in-depth long-form interviews with notable and important people, points out inane comments from the political elite, and other big dopes across the face of the Earth, with intelligence and wit that makes liberals cry.
- A failed revival television pilot (for the 1961 series about the same thing) for an educational television series about beauty and being a woman, from clothing choices, makeup techniques, and to exercises, starring Eleanor Schano as herself.
- Awfully boring documentary where the only "truth" revealed is what anybody back then already knew from reading books, magazines, and watching interviews, supplemented by a painful eighty-three minutes on a camera panning in and out and around on printed images, occasionally interrupted by host Brad Steiger, who is auditioning very early to be the new host of "Inside the Actor's Studio" with his long drawn out deliveries and mono tone speech. The VHS equivalent of Chinese water torture.
- Six minute Hanna Barbara presentation pilot for an animated television series that would have revolved around a dozen kids, a big shaggy dog, and an adult traveling around the country in a specialized RV visiting various locations and people.
- Everything in Harry's life is a battle, from the car wash guy who changes his car radio station, to the department store who grossly overcharged him for a shirt, to every teller who goes on break the minute Harry is next in line, to what should have been a simple night out at the theater with their friends.
- Bob's career and personal life are both in a rut, so he attempts to turn things around by getting his writing done and asking out the hot water-delivery woman. Just when things start to go well, nobody will leave him alone to write--and then his wife, who had left him several months earlier, returns.
- In this demonstration pilot, U.S. Customes officials are tipped off by a man claiming there is an expensive underground tunnel leading from Mexico to the U.S. where drugs are smuggled, which would make it the biggest U.S. Costumes bust in their history at that time.
- The 14-year struggle to build the Brooklyn Bridge, bizarre art on human skin, dentist who uses hypnosis, religious hair cutting in India, ceremonial body mutilation in New Guinea, King Ferdinand II of Aragon and Queen Juana of Spain, Hiroshima and the A-bomb, a helmet of tubes to scan the human brain, special video games to help recovering patients, herb store in Los Angeles that sells bizarre items, back-rubbing machine trivia, the Great Wall of China, miniature artistry on finger nails, and the history of the Pony Express.
- The story of El Cid, an experimental solar-powered car treks across a desert, volunteers live as ancient ancestors, a month-long Irish singles event, wind power, hunting with Eskimos, repairing Mount Rushmore, marriage vows in India, a wind-powered car, an experimental ancient village in England, background in the Washington monument, President James Monroe's home, treasures of the Capitol building, an 185 Japanese sculptors who re-created himself for his soon-to-be widow, Japanese marriage knots, miniature solar panels, and finally a paper loop logic trick.
- The real story of the Man in the Iron Mask, the failing painting The Last Supper, falcons hunting, a sea lion on the Atlantic terrorizing penguins, miniature city in Denmark, match-stick artistry, shaping a diamond, ancient cave paintings, making diamonds from coal, the Hope Diamond, bird breeding, humming birds, the Navy vs. birds, rescuing breaking and flooded Egyptian monuments, the problems facing Venice, endangered monuments, miniature toy train, miniature toy war, and a trick to build a tower on three upright dominoes and have it still stand by removing two of them.
- The story of John Stiles, survival of fish in the ocean, angler fish trivia, the food of Fauchon, the poison and cooking of blowfish, pygmies eating caterpillars in the rain forest, edible furniture made of chocolate from master chef Andre Chanel, swifts and bird spittle soup, bats as tasty dishes, the fury of wind, two weeks of art with wind, trivia about an infant in a tree, memorial to the Hollywood worse Trigger, two churches and competitive horse racing, ceremonial harvest horses in Japan, and the story of Vlad the Impaler,
- In the original unaired cut of the pilot, a number of deleted or altered scenes are featured, as well as an entirely different score (presumably also by Frontiere, based upon how it sounds), and no opening theme is used or closing credits presented.
- On the premiere episode of the show, Mark introduces his set and talks a little bit about it, and amongst the issues talked about are the inane comments from Presidential hopeful, the despotic socialist Bernie Sanders, about police officers across America.
- Mark talks about American history, his own conservative upbringing in order to explain more in depth his endorsement for Ted Cruz for President of the United States of America. Also in the episode, among other things discussed, Mark rips congressional despot Debbie Wasserman Schultz apart for inane comments about the [nearly defunct] Republican party.
- Amongst the topics covered this episode: the sub-human radical Islamo-NAZI cockroaches who attacked Brussels, former NATO commander James G. Stavridis's recommendations on what to do about about terrorists, Obama watching Baseball and taking softball questions from ESPN in communist Cuba, reprimanding Hillary "her thighness" Clinton, and his fears on the upcoming preisdential election.
- Mark interviews Jed Babbin about the rising problems of China, going piece by piece about what China is doing in the South China sea, what China is doing in cyber space, it's satellite warfare technology, what it's doing to lock up oil contracts, vs. what's being done to our military and country as China quickly rises to overtake the United States as a super power.
- Witness a Bolivian brawl that's a religious ritual, learn how professionals determine the sex of newly-hatched chicks, fly with the world's oldest and only newspaper boy, slurp along with experts who determine the quality of coffee, see the oldest bucking horse on the rodeo circuit, run with the bulls in Pamplona, Spain; see how the famous Austrian horse are trained in defense maneuvers, see an animal tea party in England, see a large tap dancing gathering, see stilt dancers in China, see the Christ the Redeemer cleaners at work, and see break dancers in New York, learn about a maid who was a spy in Turkey.
- Dr. Venture moderates the second annual Treaty of Tolerance Summit (at the old Venture compound) where the Guild of Calamitous Intent and the O.S.I. argue over new agreements. Meanwhile, both Dean and Hank go on side adventures around the compound.