Explore TV Series

7,375 Matches Found

Eternity’s Pillar

Throughout the mid-1980s, viewers tuning in late at night to Los Angeles’s KTTV Channel 11 could catch a broadcast unlike any other: ETERNITY’S PILLAR, a journey through the astral plane created and hosted by jazz visionary and spiritual guru Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda. Blending music, meditation, chanting, and an avant-garde video-art aesthetic, this singular audiovisual experience—four episodes of which are presented here—is a sublimely cosmic expression of Coltrane’s deep-held belief in music’s capacity to attain spiritual transcendence.

Eternity’s Pillar

NR N/A
Bumper Stumpers

Bumper Stumpers is a Canadian game show in which two teams of two players attempted to decipher vanity license plates. It aired on the Global Television Network in Canada and on the USA Network in the United States from June 29, 1987 to December 28, 1990. The series was produced by Global in association with Barry & Enright Productions and Wink Martindale Enterprises, in cooperation with USA. It was created by Wink Martindale, developed by Mark Maxwell-Smith, and was hosted by Al Dubois with Ken Ryan announcing. Reruns of the series were seen on Global from 1990 to 1995, and on Game Show Network in 1994-95 and 2000, and on GameTV since October 1, 2012.

Bumper Stumpers

9.0 N/A
Fandango

Fandango is a country music-themed quiz show which aired on TNN from March 8, 1983 to March 31, 1989, when it was replaced by Top Card. Fandango was the first TV game show to air on TNN and was one of the longest-running game shows on a cable network. The show was hosted by singer Bill Anderson, who was joined by Blake Pickett as co-host in 1987. Disc jockey Charlie Chase has sometimes been identified as the voice of "Edgar the Talking Jukebox", but Anderson's autobiography Whisperin' Bill names Edgar's voice as being that of Anderson's long-time friend, radio announcer Bill Robinson.

Fandango

8.0 N/A
Alibaba

The story revolves around the famous story of (Ali Baba) and his discovery of the cave of thieves, and the conflict between good and evil continues in the city, where corruption is spread at the highest levels, even in the governor's palace, and the gang of forty thieves spreads corruption and thefts in society, and Ali Baba works in the service of his rich cousin, then escapes from it and discovers the cave and becomes the masked knight who works to spread good, and tries to thwart the gang's plans

Alibaba

8.0 N/A
The Charron Junkyard

The Charron Junkyard was a TV show that aired on MaxTaxTV from 1985 - 2000. It was owned by MaxTaxTV until later seasons until the end (6 - 8). Daft owned many other TV shows that were too graphic and horrible so they got banned, we would tell you the shows but we would get sued if we did. From seasons 6 - 8 (When Daft bought the show) is when the show started getting bad, the reason it got bad is because that was when they started torturing the main character Lennox Charron (Or what the public calls: "The torture era"). An example from the show is a scene where the script was that Lennox's parents went into his room and said "YOU WERE SUPPOSED TO CLEAN THIS ROOM! CLEAN THIS ROOM, NOW!" and they proceeded to destroy his room 𝐈𝐦𝐦𝐞𝐝𝐢𝐚𝐭𝐞𝐥𝐲 after. The show ended in the year 2000 in the middle of the crew making the script for each episode of season 9 that never released because the company Daft got sued and filed for bankruptcy, after half of season 9's script was made.

The Charron Junkyard

NR N/A
Ethics in America

Ethics in America was a ten-part television series, originally aired from 1988 to 1989, in which panels of leading intellectuals from various professions discussed the ethical implications of hypothetical scenarios, which often touched on politics, the media, medicine, and law. The panels were moderated by law professors from leading law schools. The series was developed and hosted by former CBS News president Fred Friendly and produced by Columbia University Seminars on Media and Society. It was funded in part by the Annenberg/CPB Project. The executive producer was Cynthia McFadden. The series was originally broadcast on PBS. In 2006, Fred Friendly Seminars produced a new series, Ethics in America II, which also aired on PBS.

Ethics in America

NR N/A
Love and Ambition

Set from postwar of the Korean's war to the present (1980s). The story revolves around two brothers, Tae-jun and Tae-su, from the country of Chuncheon, struggling in poverty and family often verbally argue. After the death of their father, Tae-jun (the eldest son) pursues further on his education and earns a merit to law school, whereas Tae-su (the youngest) hides out escaping the crime he assaulted back at home. However, Tae-jun is romantically in love with his first love, Mi-ja, who becomes a movie star, debating about her career and their pending marriage. Love and Ambition is an intriguing intense tale circling into romance and obsession.

Love and Ambition

NR N/A