User Score
1 votes
No overview available.
Status
Ended
Type
Scripted
Seasons
2
Episodes
38
22 episodes
16 episodes
Host
Miwako Togawa (segment "Haioku no shoujo")
Koichi Nishimura (segment "Haioku no shoujo")
Shoji Sugiyama (segment "Haioku no shoujo")
When two brothers fall for two sisters, they quickly realize the age differences between them are too big to ignore.
Girl (segment "Haioku no shoujo")
Nobuyuki Nishimura (segment "Shineba yokatta noni")
Naoya Ozawa (segment "Shin'ya no kyouzou")
Satoko Nonami (segment "Shin'ya no kyouzou")
Naoya's mother (segment "Shin'ya no kyouzou")
Woman (segment "Shin'ya no kyouzou")
Kouta Tateyama (segment "Heya ni sumu mono")
Tatsuya Ichikawa (segment "Heya ni sumu mono")
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Breakfast with the Arts is a television program that aired on A&E from 1991 until 2007. In its first decade the program focused on classical music, dance, opera, jazz, the visual arts, theater, and film. American television audiences first heard live performances and interviews with Juan Diego Florez, Deborah Voigt, Richard Bona, Michel Camillo, Janet McTeer, Pierre Laurent Aimard, and Susan Graham on Breakfast with the Arts. Other notable guests included Catherine Deneuve, Kenneth Branagh, Michael Caine, Vanessa Redgrave, Kirk Douglas, Yoko Ono, Plácido Domingo, Daniel Barenboim, Michael Tilson Thomas, Jeremy Irons, Kate Mulgrew, Audra McDonald, Uta Hagen, Arturo Sandoval, Dave Brubeck, Terence Blanchard, Ron Howard, and Robert Altman. Later the programming was broadened to include rock music. Guests included country musician Bonnie Raitt, rock band Los Lobos, pop artist Avril Lavigne, actress Lauren Bacall, and pop singer Natasha Bedingfield. The host for the first 12 years was Peabody Award winning broadcaster Elliott Forrest; later episodes were hosted by Karina Huber. TV personality Timberly Whitfield also served as a correspondent and interviewed celebrities for the program.
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A deputy sheriff in New Mexico finds his Navajo heritage at odds with his law-enforcement duties. Filmed in and around Albuquerque, the series lasted only 13 episodes.
Hideyoshino is an average girl who always seems to find trouble wherever she goes. One day, Hideyoshino notice a blue light coming from inside a local Shrine and see a mysterious person performing a magic spell. In a stroke of bad luck, Hideyoshino trips and crashes into the shrine, prompting the magic spell to spiral out of control and sends her back in time to the Sengoku Era. But Hideyoshino realizes that everyone in the world is female. She then decides to help Oda Nobunaga find the Crimson Armor which is said to allow the person wearing the armor to conquer all of Japan.
A world-first look at the AFL Women’s Competition (AFLW) and the powerhouse movement it has become for women in sport. The six-part series spotlights four clubs: Adelaide Crows, Collingwood, GWS GIANTS, and Western Bulldogs.