These 2 best friends are buddies since the sixth grade – however in an exceedingly strange flip of events, they recently discovered that they’re not solely best friends… they’re conjointly brothers.
Over the course of the last six decades, director Macfarlane and Alan Robinson of island, Hawaii have compete cardsalong, compete soccer along, and mature up along. They conjointly had similar family histories; Macfarlane ne’erknew his father, and Robinson was adopted.
As a way of making an attempt to trace down his biological father, however, Macfarlane started investigation his ancestry on the net. when undergoing a deoxyribonucleic acid take a look at, Macfarlane discovered that he had startlingly equally biological science with a user named Robi737.
The nom de guerre over up happiness to Robinson, UN agency had taken constant deoxyribonucleic acid take a look at years earlier thus he might resolve additional concerning his birth family. additional analysis disclosed that Robinson and Macfarlane were so biological brothers.
Upon experiencing the shock of the invention, the brothers square measure currently planning to travel the globebefore they are going into retirement along.
“This is that the best Christmas present I might ever imagine having,” Robinson told KHON.
For those who were born on the 70’s, we are certain that these 80’s TV Series songs will take to back to so good old times. Although times never stops, but we wanted to take you back to your past and remember all good moments we had when we were watching these memorable series on TV.
The Love Boat
Original Run: 1977-87 Creator: Jeraldine Saunders Stars: Gavin MacLeod, Bernie Kopell, Fred Grandy, Ted Lange, Lauren Tewes, Jill Whelan, Ted McGinley, Pat Klous Network: ABC
An hour-long sitcom/drama with a laugh track that featured storylines that sometimes didn’t even involve the regular cast, a variety of tones even within the same episode and a penchant for crossing over with other TV shows (from Fantasy Island to Charlie’s Angels)—The Love Boat was its own kind of show. If you didn’t guest star on The Love Boat in the ’80s, you probably didn’t have a SAG card. You never really knew what you were going to get each week except that Your Captain Stubing and his crew would make sure that everything worked out in the end.—Josh Jackson
The A-Team
Original Run: 1983-87 Creators: Frank Lupo and Stephen J. Cannell Stars: George Peppard, Dirk Benedict, Dwight Schultz, Mr. T, Melinda Culea, Marla Heasley, Eddie Velez and Robert Vaughn Network: NBC The A-Team was like the live-action adaptation of a Saturday morning cartoon, G.I. Joe for slightly older audiences. In the style of The Incredible Hulk, it’s one of those “traveling adventure” shows—each week, the A-Team hits a new locale to help out a new group of people by driving their combat van through a brick wall. Its success is all thanks to its instantly iconic characters—strategist Hannibal, con man “Face,” wild man Murdock and Mr. T as B.A. Baracus, the role that has literally defined the man’s entire life. Honestly, if Mr. T hadn’t landed the role of B.A. Baracus, what would he have done with his life?—Jim Vorel
Cheers
Original Run: 1982-93 Creator: James Burrows, Glen Charles, Les Charles Stars: Ted Danson, Shelley Long, Kirstie Alley, Rhea Perlman, Nicholas Colasanto, John Ratzenberger, Woody Harrelson, Kelsey Grammer, George Wendt Original Network: NBC
The idea of place where everybody knew your name was central to the success of Cheers, even as Coach (Nicholas Colasanto) was replaced by Woody (Woody Harrelson), Diane (Shelley Long) was replaced by Rebecca (Kirstie Alley) and Frasier Crane (Kelsey Grammer) found his own stool at the bar. This was the idea of a “third place,” after home and work, where a community could gather to socialize. Tackling sometimes serious issues in an always hilarious manner, the show created a place without class, where Frasier could grab a bar stool across from Norm and Cliff with an equal sense of belonging. Anchoring it all was Sam Malone (Ted Danson), the womanizing former ball player, who grew a little more with each passing season.—Josh Jackson
Charlie’s Angels
Original Run: 1976-81 Creator: Ivan Goff, Ben Roberts Stars: Kate Jackson, Farrah Fawcett, Jaclyn Smith|See full cast & crew Original Network: ABC Charlie’s Angels is an American crime drama producing five seasons and 110 episodes. It follows the crime-fighting adventures of three women working in a private detective agency in Los Angeles, California, and originally starred Kate Jackson, Farrah Fawcett (billed as Farrah Fawcett-Majors), and Jaclyn Smith in the leading roles and John Forsythe providing the voice of their boss, the unseen Charlie Townsend, who directed the “Angels” crime-fighting operations over a speakerphone. There were a few casting changes, after the departure of Fawcett and Jackson, came the additions of Cheryl Ladd, Shelley Hack, and Tanya Roberts.
Dallas
Original Run: 1978-91 Creator: David Jacobs Stars: Larry Hagman, Barbara Bel Geddes, Patrick Duffy, Linda Gray, Steve Kanaly, Victoria Principal, George Kennedy, Charlene Tilton, Ken Kercheval Network: CBS
The king of all prime-time soaps, Dallas had the whole nation (and beyond) wondering what would happen next, especially on March 21, 1980, when J.R. Ewing was shot twice outside his office by a mysterious assailant. When the show returned that November, 76 percent of all TV viewers (90 million Americans) were tuned in to find out Who Shot J.R. For comparison’s sake, the most-watched episode of Desperate Housewives drew just over 30 million viewers. It was a phenomenon that reached all the way to the Queen of England. Not bad for a melodrama about a Texas oil tycoon.—Josh Jackson
Miami Vice
Original Run: 1984-89 Creator: Anthony Yerkovich Stars: Don Johnson, Philip Michael Thomas, Saundra Santiago, Michael Talbott, John Diehl, Olivia Brown Network: NBC
There is an urban legend that Miami Vice was birthed after NBC exec Brandon Tartikoff wrote the phrase “MTV cops” on a napkin and presented it to Hill Street Blues writer Anthony Yerkovich. Yerkovich has since dismissed this story, but you’d be hard-pressed to find a more concise approximation of the show’s appeal. Starring Don Johnson and Phillip Michael Thomas as a pair of Miami-based detectives, the show made police work look cooler and sexier than ever before. And while the show’s fashion trends and absurd storylines have not aged well, its cultural influence is impossible to deny. Not to mention, the pilot episode, directed by executive producer Michael Mann, remains one of the most compelling, and visually stunning hours in the history of the medium.—Mark Rozeman
Moonlighting
Original Run: 1985-89 Creator: Glenn Gordon Caron Stars: Cybill Shepherd, Bruce Willis, Allyce Beasley, Curtis Armstrong Network: ABC
Since the Blue Moon Detective Agency stopped investigating crimes, David Addison (Bruce Willis) and Maddie Hayes (Cybill Shepherd) have become a cautionary tale in the will-they-or-won’t-they television trope. But during the heyday of Moonlighting, no TV couple did sexual tension like Willis and Shepherd. When they finally decided to consummate their relationship, they literally burned the house down. While the series had plenty of behind-the-scenes strife (starting with the fact that Shepherd and burgeoning movie star Willis didn’t get along), it consistently entertained, pioneered the dramedy genre that is so popular today, and regularly broke the fourth wall in innovative ways.—Amy Amatangelo
Fame
Original Run: 1985-89 Creator: Alan Parker Stars:Eddie Barth, Irene Cara, Lee Curreri… Network: MGM
Producer David De Silva conceived the premise in 1976, partially inspired by the musical A Chorus Line. He commissioned Gore to write the script, originally titled Hot Lunch, before selling it to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). After he was hired to direct the film, Parker rewrote the script with Gore, aiming for a darker and dramatic tone. The script’s subject matter received criticism by the New York Board of Education, which prevented the production from filming in the actual High School of Performing Arts. The film was shot on location in New York City, with principal photography beginning in July 1979 and concluding after 91 days. Parker encountered a difficult filming process, which included conflicts with U.S. labor unions over various aspects of the film’s production.
let’s face it – this shit is inevitable. So let’s just do this, all at once, like a Band-Aid. Here we go.
#1. Decisions WILL Be Made for You…
“You will have to make very practical (sometimes very cold) decisions about what you want from life and what you’re willing to give up. And if you don’t make them then life will make them for you.”
#2. You’re Gonna Die
“I think it’s in your twenties when you finally learn that life is finite. As a kid life is just this thing that goes on forever. Consequences don’t matter as much because of the future in unfathomably far away. It’s a good time for making bad decisions but as you progress through your twenties you start realizing that the future is coming up fast and how it looks actually does depend on what you do now.”
#3. Relationships Take Work
“You learn that relationships aren’t like in the movies, that they take work and thought and that everyone is flawed and damaged and that they’ll probably kick you in the gut at least a dozen or so times.”
#4. Money Will Cut You
“Don’t spend more money just because you are starting to earn more. Lifestyle inflation creeping in is a bitch.”
#5. Loss Is Inevitable
“People you love are going to die. i don’t want anyone to learn this lesson, ever, but it provides some pretty serious perspective when it inevitably happens.”
#6. You Do You, Boo
“Do stuff that makes you happy instead of doing stuff that makes you look cool.”
#7. “Go to the fucking dentist.”
“Go to the fucking dentist. You can’t wait for mommy to make an appointment for you and hold your hand the whole way… get your ass in there before it’s too late. Teeth don’t heal and once you’ve fucked them up, you’ve fucked them up. Oh and it doesn’t take much at all to screw them up. I wish my 20 year old self realized that.”
#8. People Grow in Opposite Directions
“You learn that the friendships you took for granted as a kid actually fall away pretty quickly if you neglect them and that even if you don’t, time has a habit of changing people and your best friend from school is different since he got married or that guy you did a bunch of blow with at university never really got the hang of stopping that and isn’t as much fun anymore.”
#9. Failure Is a Decision to Quit
“Sometimes your best isn’t good enough. Sometimes you put everything you’ve got into something and still don’t get what you wanted…and that doesn’t mean you’re a failure. Find a new goal, keep striving.”
#10. You Write Your Own Story
“There is nowhere you “should be by now.” All life paths are different and equally valid.”
These 2 best friends are buddies since the sixth grade – however in an exceedingly strange flip of events, they recently discovered that they’re not solely best friends… they’re conjointly brothers.
Over the course of the last six decades, director Macfarlane and Alan Robinson of island, Hawaii have compete cardsalong, compete soccer along, and mature up along. They conjointly had similar family histories; Macfarlane ne’erknew his father, and Robinson was adopted.
As a way of making an attempt to trace down his biological father, however, Macfarlane started investigation his ancestry on the net. when undergoing a deoxyribonucleic acid take a look at, Macfarlane discovered that he had startlingly equally biological science with a user named Robi737.
The nom de guerre over up happiness to Robinson, UN agency had taken constant deoxyribonucleic acid take a look at years earlier thus he might resolve additional concerning his birth family. additional analysis disclosed that Robinson and Macfarlane were so biological brothers.
Upon experiencing the shock of the invention, the brothers square measure currently planning to travel the globebefore they are going into retirement along.
“This is that the best Christmas present I might ever imagine having,” Robinson told KHON.
• Roy Gibney, a metal worker, scooped the £7.4m jackpot in the casino in 1998
• Now he is selling the mansion he bought with prize for just £375k for awesome £1.125m
• The Brambles comes with an indoor swimming pool that has Mr Gibney’s name and winning numbers on it
• It also has a 17-acre garden with a fishing lake, timber lodge, two storey garage and all-weather tennis court
If you’re eager for an extra lottery luck, perhaps moving into the home of a luckier person as the former winner, might make some better fortune on you – and now you can do just that.
Roy Gibney, 63, has put the property he bought with his £7.4million jackpot back in 1998 for sale with a massive price of £1.125million.
The six-bedroom house in Barnoldby-le-Beck near Grimsby was originally bought for just £375,000 but since then it has been upgraded including the addition of an indoor swimming pool with the winning numbers on the bottom.
Beside the pool with its own changing rooms, there is a steam room and a jacuzzi, as well a huge glasshouse for relaxing.
Grimsby-born Roy Gibney, 63, is selling the six-bedroom property that he bought with his £7.4m winnings in 1998 for just £375,000
The Brambles comes with an indoor swimming pool that has Mr Gibney’s name, the amount he won, his winning numbers, and the date he won (Pictured: Mr Givney with his then-girlfriend Meaka Edwards)
They did major upgrades to the property since then, including a games room with a movie projector and pool table, and is now worth £1.125million
Next to the indoor swimming room there is a large conservatory for relaxing in after working out at the pool or lounging in the steam room and jacuzzi
The kitchen has a breakfast bar and a wood-burning stove, and the master bedroom has a balcony overlooking the garden.
The property has luxury fittings including a wood-burning stove and a breakfast bar for dining on in the kitchen area
Within the garden is a double storey garage block with an office above and an all-weather tennis court.
If you think it’s not attractive enough with all these fittings, perhaps the 17-acre garden that features a fishing lake and a timber lodge may tempt you.
The 17acre garden with a massive fishing lake and an all-weather tennis court in the grounds
The master bedroom has a triangular balcony with views to the garden
With no surprise, there is four bathrooms in the house and two of the bedrooms have en suites.
Roy gave up his job as a metal worker just after winning the casino jackpot
Mr Gibney has been very happy during these 14 years, being impatient and set up his own business with a friend (Pictured: Roy Gibney (left) and Robert Gale of Altringham celebrating after they both won £7.5m)
When the father-of-three cashed in his winnings he immediately presented his job resignation and moved into the property business. Now selling off as well as several other houses in the Grimsby area.
Thanks to his new fortune, he had been getting experience for 14 solid years, so he decided to establish himself his own business.
For those who don’t enjoy swimming, there is a very modern gym with a number of machines so you may get fit and healthy
Before he won the Casino jackpot, he had been living in the two-bedroom house for 10 years and was working as a sheet metal worker. Now, due to his good luck, Mr Gibney lives a life of luxury.
When eating meals at this dinner table, diners are treated with incredible views of the garden and lake just outside the window
The massive swimming pool with a Jacuzzi, steam rooms and changing rooms. Next to it, there is a glasshouse for relaxing
There are four bathrooms in the whole property and two of the bedrooms are en suite, including this bathroom with a huge bathtub
He told the Mirror: ‘When I won I enjoyed all the luxuries you would expect of a lottery winner – even featuring my winning lottery numbers on the bottom of my 50’ swimming pool which I built at my Grimsby home.
‘Nowadays I don’t indulge myself quite as much as I used to but still enjoy the carefree life winning has given me. I spilt my time between my villa in Cyprus and Britain.
‘I also feel it was important to give back and have supported many charities – whether its running charity fishing days or dressing up as Father Christmas for the local hospital.’