TadWorthington       
This is a real live zombie player.

Attacking a player takes four turns
Level: 10
Kills: 5
Weapon: Night Stick
Turf: Multiverse
Back to the streets
TadWorthington looks pretty brawny
TadWorthington looks pretty spooky
Kill Log
Quote:Basketball career In the 2005-06 season, Samb played for WTC Cornellá in the Spanish second division, averaging 9.6 points, 7.7 rebounds and 3.1 blocks,[1] shooting 51.4% from the field and 76.1% from the free-throw line, playing an average of 26 minutes per game in 29 games. He led the league in blocked shots, registering more blocks than the totals of all but one team in the league. Samb was drafted by the Los Angeles Lakers in the second round (51st pick overall) of the 2006 NBA Draft, but was traded that day to the Detroit Pistons for shooting guard Maurice Evans. After being drafted, he played for the Pistons in the NBA Summer League, averaging 7.2 points, 4.8 rebounds and 1.8 blocks, while shooting 65.2% from the field and 60.0% from the free-throw line. He would be loaned back to the same Spanish outfit for 2006–07. In his second season with Cornellá, Samb averaged 10.5 points, 7.3 rebounds and 2.9 blocks, while shooting 52% from the field, and 61% from the free-throw line, playing 24 minutes per game in only 19 games, in an injury-plagued season. Joining the Pistons for another Summer League, Samb posted slightly better numbers than in the previous edition, starting in four and playing in all five games. Subsequently, he signed a contract with the Pistons on July 17, 2007.[1] On November 16, 2007, Samb played his first NBA regular season game[2]: against the Los Angeles Lakers, he had four rebounds, two points and two blocks in just 15 minutes, before being allocated to the NBA Development League, with the Fort Wayne Mad Ants. On December 14, in his second D-League game, against the Dakota Wizards, Samb took an elbow to his mouth and lost two front teeth.[3] The teeth, knocked out at the root, were subsequently put in a saline solution and he was taken to a dentist to have them reset.[3] He also suffered a probable upper jawbone fracture.[3] Samb was recalled to the NBA on December 21[2], switching to the Mad Ants again on January 29, 2008.
Least Favorite Words:Klugman starred in several classic films including 12 Angry Men in 1957 (which he says is his favorite film), Days of Wine and Roses in 1962, and Goodbye, Columbus in 1969. He had also won an Emmy Award for his work on the television series The Defenders and appeared in four episodes of the acclaimed series The Twilight Zone. Klugman says his greatest thrill was appearing with Humphrey Bogart and Henry Fonda in a 1955 live television broadcast of The Petrified Forest. He is best known for his starring roles in two popular television series of the 1970s and early 1980s: The Odd Couple (1970–1975) and Quincy, M.E. (1976–1983). Jack also starred in the original Broadway production of The Odd Couple, after replacing Walter Matthau.[1] He won two Emmy Awards for the television version of The Odd Couple. Klugman was nominated for a Tony Award in 1960 for Best Supporting Actor (Musical) for his role in Gypsy, losing to Tom Bosley in Fiorello!.[2] During the pre-Broadway tryout tour in 1959, several songs were cut, including a song for the character 'Herbie' (played by Klugman) called "Nice, She Ain't" cut because Klugman had a terrible singing voice. [edit] Quiz show appearances In 1993, Klugman appeared on a special 'celebrity versus regulars' version of the United Kingdom quiz show Going for Gold. The special episode was mostly made up of actors and actresses that appeared in programmes that were on around the same time slot as Going for Gold competing against past series winners. Klugman was invited to participate as the show Quincy, M.E., in which he starred, was often on afterwards. Klugman won this special airing before going on to win the entire 1993 series. Klugman also appeared on the very first week of the 1970s revival of Match Game and then from time to time filled in for his then-wife, Brett Somers when she became a regular on the program a few weeks later.[3] [edit] Dispute over Quincy M.E. profits In 2008, Klugman sued NBC Television concern
Location:AZERTITS: And I think the "conflict" Riff Randall is referring to about Ghostface Killa was about them shitting all over him. LAZERTITS: I guess some guys are just really touchy. stickyfingaz: funny shit huh@ I guess some guys just cream their pants acting like a bunch of 7th grade jackasses that in real life would get fu*ked up for saying shit like that so they do it here. it's all in how ya look at it, your right about that sticky: seriously, stickyfingaz your point might sound a little more valid if you weren't trying to play the tough guy angle right there. sticky: everyone's a big talker when there is no one to talk back. sticky: Nonetheless, you should all go see Holy Fuck live and you will be less likely to be riled up by people on the Internet. sticky: Listening to their albums may result in feelings of incompleteness, though. Don't bother. LAZERTITS: Ooouuuh! Oh, I would go see that band just because they are named HOLY FUCK. Very sexy! LAZERTITS: I do however, have some questions for stickyfingaz. LAZERTITS: Dear stickyfingaz, LAZERTITS: Did you get bullied in the 7th grade or something@ LAZERTITS: Are those guys currently getting fucked up@ LAZERTITS: Or are they still assholes@ Are they assholes who treat their hot girlfriends like shit@ LAZERTITS: The type of girl that you can barely look in the eye. Do you wonder why they don't like nice guys like you who still, to this day, get run the fuck over by men at the office@ LAZERTITS: Do you come online with your pent up, docile aggression frantically typing out retorts to make up for a life time of being the victim@ LAZERTITS: Cuz you sound awfully upset, when everybody else is laughing. abagodan: laughing@ it was pretty stupid and mean stuff. Are you projecting onto stickyfingas@ stickyfingaz: now that is some funny shit! lazertits don't pin your life on me pal ;) I'd run you over and fuck your chick any day of the week LAZERTITS: Answer with the following: LAZERTITS: A. Yes LAZERTITS:
I believe:Quincy, M.E. is a United States television series from Universal Studios that aired from October 3, 1976, to September 5, 1983, on NBC. It stars Jack Klugman in the title role, a Los Angeles County medical examiner. The show resembled the earlier Canadian television series, Wojeck, broadcast by CBC Television and took some inspiration from Los Angeles coroner Thomas Noguchi. The first half of the first season of Quincy was broadcast as 90-minute telefilms as part of the NBC Sunday Mystery Movie rotation in the fall of 1976 alongside Columbo, McCloud and McMillan (formerly McMillan & Wife). The series proved popular enough that midway through the 1976–1977 season, Quincy was spin-off into its own weekly one-hour series. The Mystery Movie format was discontinued in the spring of 1977; Quincy was the only one of the rotating series to continue. In 1978, writers Tony Lawrence and Lou Shaw received an Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America for the second-season episode "...The Thighbone's Connected to the Knee Bone..." (originally aired February 11, 1977). Many of the episodes used the same actors for different roles in various episodes. For example, an actor that plays a crooked Navy captain also plays a ballistics expert in several of the later episodes. Using a small "pool" of actors was a common production trait of many Glen A. Larson TV programmes. Contents [hide] * 1 Synopsis * 2 Cast * 3 DVD releases * 4 International broadcasts o 4.1 Australia o 4.2 United Kingdom o 4.3 Japan * 5 Notes * 6 External links [edit] Synopsis The series starred Jack Klugman as Dr. Quincy, a strong-willed, very principled Medical Examiner (forensic pathologist) for the Los Angeles County Coroner's Office, working to ascertain facts about and reasons for possible suspicious deaths. (The character's first name was never fully given, although in the third-season episode "Accomplice to Murder" his name i
Style: American television sitcom that ran from July 19, 1991 to July 12, 1992 for thirteen episodes. The series was television's first "instant" rerun. Each week, a new episode of the series aired on ABC as part of their Friday night TGIF lineup. The same episode would re-air Sunday night on Nickelodeon as part of the channel's Nick at Nite lineup. ABC stopped airing the series after the sixth episode of the first season. The show's second season only aired on Nick at Nite before being cancelled in July 1992.[1] The series was taped before a live audience in Nickelodeon Studios at Universal Studios Florida. Contents [hide] * 1 Premise * 2 Cast and characters * 3 Episode guide o 3.1 Season 1: 1991 o 3.2 Season 2: 1992 * 4 References * 5 External links [edit] Premise The Nielsens (named after the Nielsen ratings) are a family of fictional characters from a 1950s sitcom that's been canceled; they've been relocated to the real world, which is different from the world they know. They use a device called a Turnerizer (named after Ted Turner) to switch between color and black-and-white within their home. Mike Duff, the teenage son of the family next door, is the only real-world person who knows their secret. In most episodes, there are guest appearances by actors from classic TV shows, playing their characters; e.g., Gale Gordon appears in episode 1 as Theodore J. Mooney (from The Lucy Show). [edit] Cast and characters * Honey Nielsen (Charlotte Booker) — An archetypal 1950s sitcom housewife and mom. * Lloyd Nielsen (Stephen C. Bradbury) — The bumbling, somewhat clueless dad. * Babs Nielsen (Julie Benz) — The Nielsen's pretty, popular, and well endowed teenage daughter. Target of a crush by Mike Duff. * Chucky Nielsen (Danny Gura) — The Nielsen's chubby and naive younger son. * Elaine Duff (Susan Cella) — Sarcastic next door neighbor to the Nielsens and single mom to two sons. * Mike
Favorite Move:Development The series was the brainchild of Dale McRaven (who also co-created Mork & Mindy) and producers Tom Miller and Robert Boyett. Miller claimed that the inspiration for the series came in the wake of the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, when America was going through a wave of renewed patriotic sentiment.[1] Their idea for a comedy about an immigrant in America was initially rejected by all three of the major television networks. In December 1984, Bronson Pinchot garnered notice for his role in Beverly Hills Cop as Serge, an effeminate art gallery employee with an unplaceable foreign accent. When Miller and company pitched Pinchot as the star of their immigrant show, ABC signed on to the project, originally entitled The Greenhorn. By this time, however, Pinchot had become unavailable, as he had taken on the role of a gay attorney in the NBC series Sara alongside star Geena Davis. Sara failed to find an audience, and was canceled by May 1985. With Pinchot now available, Miller and Boyett began to develop the show in earnest. By November, comedian Louie Anderson was cast as the immigrant's American cousin.[2] A pilot episode was put into production, but in the end Anderson was not considered right for the role. Development was placed into overdrive when ABC President Brandon Stoddard offered the producers a prime tryout slot for the spring of 1986 between the hit shows Who's The Boss@ and Moonlighting on Tuesday nights.[3] After running through several actors for the part of Balki's cousin, the producers settled on Mark Linn-Baker, whom they had recently seen in a guest appearance on Moonlighting. Linn-Baker displayed immediate chemistry with Pinchot, and the series raced into production under the new title Perfect Strangers. It premiered on ABC on March 25, 1986. [edit] Season 1 (1986) The series commences with Larry living alone in an apartment in Chicago. In the pilot episode, Balki unexpectedly shows up at Larry's door claiming to be hi
 
Player ID: 20972
Last Login: 2010-09-27