Over the years, Owen's life has been mired in mourning his brother, in pain unable to extricate himself. Until one day, in their business Yuwen Entertainment Company when he encounters the lonely courier, Bare. Bare is not only cute, but he also resembles Owen's brother. His heart can't help but to fall in love with him, he'll keep getting over protective over Bare and do his best to make him happy. Meanwhile, Bare meets a security guard of a building who is also a loner like him, who also keeps protecting him but never stays for too long. The world is filled with billions of people, can all those hearts be filled with love instead of loneliness?
The game is centered around solving a word-chain puzzle. At the start of the show the chain comprised eight words. The words in the chain are linguistically or logically connected, with both the word at the top and the word at the bottom revealed at the outset. By making inferences based on the revealed words and the revealed letters in incomplete words, contestants try to fill in the word chains to score points.
Men from all over the world have left their pasts to start a new life as elite soldiers in the French Foreign Legion.
I Got a Rocket is an Australian animated series centered on a boy named Vincent "Vinnie", who received a rocket for his 13th birthday. The rocket was also given a personality, acts as a best friend to Vinnie and is fond of assisting him. Although the series was short-lived, it received a 2008 Emmy Award for "New Approaches - Daytime Children's Entertainment". I Got a Rocket was originally a book by Matt Zurbo, but was converted into an animated series. It features the voices of Thomas Bromhead as Rocket, Jamie Oxenbould as Vincent "Vinnie", Marcello Fabrizi as Vinnie's father, V. P. Stern, etc., Drew Forsythe as Ma Ducky, Biffo and Scuds Ducky, Trilby Glover as Gabby and Maya and Rachel King as Crystal and Frankie Ducky.
Supported by stunning 3D graphics, Dr. Darius Arya explains the purpose and architectural significance of ancient Roman buildings.
In the 1800s, a mysterious comet hits the U.S. southwest, transforming the local cattle and animals into their own version of the old west called Moo Mesa, complete with several lawmen dealing with bizarre outlaws.
Terrorists organization "Radical Posture Group" get access to a new generation technology resulting from Dr. Patel's joint research between India and the UK. Only man can stop them - India's Agent Condor, known to his friends as Karan. Focusing on terrorism, Karan discovers the biggest threat comes from within the ranks of Indian intelligence, from a madman who hopes to make terrorism a global trade. That foe, and the woman he loves, threaten the safety of London with their twisted agenda - Karan has to save the day unsure he can trust anyone around him.
Follows the whirlwind romance of Rob Kardashian and Blac Chyna, from their engagement to Chyna's pregnancy, and everything in between.
25-year-old Kazahaya Kyoko is appointed to head an investigative division of the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department, called the Nasi Goreng Division. She is an unconventional division head who believes that an entire investigation can be done in a room and completely rejects the “Showa” concept of legwork. Although Kyoko practically never leaves her room for an investigation, she is able to solve many difficult cases with her remarkable insight and deductive powers. Then things begin with the appearance of the middle-aged Ishinabe Kanta who has finally fulfilled his long-cherished dream to become a detective with his assignment to the Nasi Goreng Division. Ishinabe is full of enthusiasm but even though he appeals to Kyoko about his strength for legwork, she cuts him off and dismisses hot-blooded idiots as unnecessary.
Viewers ask their craziest science questions, then it’s up to Gus Sorola and Chris Demarais to match wits with evolutionary biologist Sally Le Page in search of an answer. No science theory is too dumb, but someone on this panel probably is. (It's Chris.)
Briell, the 65th wife of prophet Warren Jeffs, details her time living – and surviving – in the FLDS Church. Briell's story exposes the darkest secrets of the polygamist cult.
A lawyer and a prosecutor, whose paths cross with a murder case, will have to work together to find the murderer, and this will create an irreversible breaking point in their lives.
Noa, a very special and kind twelve-year-old girl, comes from Antarctica to study at the ESKA. Every morning at ESKA, even the most insignificant detail about the "civilized world" will become a crazy adventure for Noa and her very special group of friends. With all the flipping and jumping going around, Noa will know the true meaning of friendship and learn about being true to herself.
The otaku Lin Beichen got a mobile phone by chance, and the mobile phone took him into a world called Dongdao Zhenzhou, where he became one of the ten famous generals of the Beihai Empire [Zhantian Hou] Lin Jinnan’s heir. He is also a notorious prodigal, born with a brain disorder. At the time when Lin Jinnan, the Marquis of Zhantian, lost the battle, his family was in the middle of the road, and Lin Beichen, who had lost his backing, was blocked in the school by various ‘enemies’ and could not go out. It is a plug-in artifact that can assist in practice. Relying on this artifact, Lin Beichen started his own way of hilarious counterattack.
A deep dive into the horrific December 2014 murder of Jessica Chambers, the Mississippi teen who was doused with gasoline and set on fire. The five-part series explores the murder of 19-year-old Chambers and takes an inside look into the trial of Quinton Tellis, a local black man accused of the crime. With tensions high, a small Mississippi town seeks the truth while facing a growing racial divide over guilt or innocence. Is the right man on trial - or is a murderer on the loose?
Lili en Marleen is a television series about the fortunes of the residents of café De Lichttoren from World War II until the end of the 1960s in Antwerp (Belgium). The series is based on the play of the same name by Walter Van de Velde, which was first performed by the Traveling People's Theater in 1987.