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2016 Fall TV Preview: 30 Premieres You Can’t Miss
2016 Fall TV Preview: 30 Premieres You Can’t Miss
2016 Fall TV Preview: 30 Premieres You Can’t Miss
These days, it'd take at least two years to watch only only one season's worth of #PeakTV, a quarter of which won't even be around a second year. You’d need some sort of absurd television guidance periodical to navigate it all, but because we love you' we've put together an in-depth look at 30 major must-see premieres kicking off as early as August 31. Come, wrap some barbed wire around your bats and grab a coffee in Stars Hollow, as we descend into the madness that is Fall TV 2016!
Aasif Mandvi Joins Both ‘Mr. Robot’ and Netflix ‘Series of Unfortunate Events’
Aasif Mandvi Joins Both ‘Mr. Robot’ and Netflix ‘Series of Unfortunate Events’
Aasif Mandvi Joins Both ‘Mr. Robot’ and Netflix ‘Series of Unfortunate Events’
Well, there’s two properties you never expected to share a casting announcement. Yes, following his work on HBO’s The Brink, former Daily Show correspondent Aasif Mandvi has landed himself two shiny new gigs, one busting hackers for USA’s Mr. Robot, the other as a sinister uncle to Netflix’s Series of Unfortunate Events. I smell crossover!
What States in America Use the Most Energy?
What States in America Use the Most Energy?
What States in America Use the Most Energy?
Americans use a lot of energy. A LOT. In fact, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, the United States burned up a whopping 98 quadrillion BTUs of energy in 2010, up from 95 quadrillion a year prior—a mind-boggling amount of energy consumption for a country that only makes up about 4.5 percent of the global population. Worldwide BTU usage is approximately 500 quadrillion, so tha
US Named Funniest Country; Germany Named Least Funny [VIDEO]
US Named Funniest Country; Germany Named Least Funny [VIDEO]
US Named Funniest Country; Germany Named Least Funny [VIDEO]
Maybe we should work on exporting some knock-knock jokes. The US has been named the funniest country in a Badoo.com survey of 30,000 people from 15 nations around the globe, while Germany - long known for its poor sense of humor - kept up the stereotype by finishing at the bottom.