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- "Stormy Weather" is the 561st episode of Casualty and the 20th episode of the 21st series.
- "Stormy Weather" is a song performed by Saundra Santiago in the Miami Vice episode "Heroes of the Revolution".
- The newscaster has announced a big, scary storm on the way, but do the Rugrats care? NO! These babies can't wait for the excitement to start. And when it's over, the Rugrats know the storm was worth it -- now there are puddles galore!
- Stormy Rain is the eighth episode of season 1.
- Stormy Weather is a short magazine story.
- An ilovebees fanfiction. Bonita Morelli misses her husband even as she dates Simon Brown.
- Stormy Weather is episode twenty-three of season four on Family Matters. This show was originally aired on May 7, 1993. It was written by Fred Fox Jr. and directed by John Tracy.
- Stormy Weather is a Ready-to-Read storybook based on Rugrats.
- Stretching the page was a dumb thing to do. It could mess up someone's browser. It's also spam. Removed the long line of letters. ~A trustworthy Wikia user
- It has been remarked more than once that there's always a calm just before the storm. Certified meteorological phenomenon or old wives saw, it was still true as often as it wasn't. And if that storm was destined to wash away Marilou Arden, it looked like it just might take a certain pair of gumshoes with her.
- Stormy Weather is the 21st episode of Season 5 on FOX teen soap Beverly Hills, 90210.
- Season 2, Episode 3, Part I # 29.0 Production code: Air date: Length: Directed by: Written by: Storyboard: Previous: Next: Transcript Stormy Weather is episode 3 in season 2.
- "Stormy Weather," by Harold Arlen and Ted Koehler, is a blues song that uses bad weather as a metaphor for loneliness. The singer laments that "there's no sun up in the sky" and it "keeps raining all the time" ever since her lover left. Although the song was originally written with Cab Calloway in mind, it was first performed by Ethel Waters at the 1933 Cotton Club Parade and has since been sung by the likes of Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald, and Lena Horne. In his introduction, Sam the Eagle informs the audience that "besides being tremendous singers, they're church people."
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