Misery Loves Company is an American sitcom television series that aired from October 1 until October 22, 1995.
A tough-as-rawhide cowpoke, debonair ladies' man and Harvard-educated smarty-britches roams from Frisco to Jalisco in pursuit of outlaws who killed his father...and in search of a mysterious orb possessing out-of-this world powers. Hot lead and cool anachronisms await Brisco as he and his sidekicks - including Comet, the intellectual equine who doesn't know he's a horse - fight for justice in the way, way, way-out West.
Burnt-out private dick Jacob Aloysius Spanner teams up with his brother to help an old adversary track down his one remaining loved one, his kidnapped granddaughter. But who's the hood and who's being hoodwinked?
Doctor Doctor is an American television sitcom that aired on CBS. It began a short run in June 1989, and was picked up for a full season the following fall. A second season followed in fall 1990, but the show was cancelled at the end of the 1990-1991 season, due to low ratings. One episode, "Long Day's Journey Into Deirdre", remains unaired in the US.
Arlo accepts what seems to him to be a dream promotion to Idaho. He soon discovers, however, that moving has its own share of problems.
A man is mistaken as a spy by the CIA when he arrives at the airport with one red shoe.
A young man searches for the "master" to obtain the final level of martial arts mastery known as the glow. Along the way he must fight an evil martial arts expert and rescue a beautiful singer from an obsessed music promoter.
Following the death of a former football player turned private investigator, his daughter, his former coach, and three of his players take over his PI business.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Julius J. Carry III (March 12, 1952 – August 19, 2008) was an American actor. Carry appeared primarily in numerous television roles, including Dr. Abraham Butterfield on Doctor, Doctor and the bounty hunter Lord Bowler in the The Adventures of Brisco County, Jr. He also portrayed the main villain Sho'nuff in the cult classic film The Last Dragon. In addition to that movie he was also a supporting actor in the Rudy Ray Moore film Disco Godfather, and appeared in the film The Fish That Saved Pittsburgh. He also appeared on shows such as Murphy Brown, Family Matters, A Different World, Two Guys, a Girl and a Pizza Place, and Boy Meets World. His final appearance as an actor was in the season one episode "Eating The Young" on the CBS series The Unit. It aired in 2006. He died on August 19, 2008 of pancreatic cancer. Description above from the Wikipedia article Julius Carry, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
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