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- "Six Feet Under" is a Neurotic Outsiders song, released on the Neurotic Outsiders album by released Maverick / Warner Brothers Records in 1996.
- Six Feet Under is an HBO drama series which ran from 2001 and 2005 and focused on the flawed owners of a family-run mortuary. In a "Number of the Day" segment on Sesame Street, Count von Count calls the series one of his favorite programs. The Sesame Street version is markedly different, however. It shows the feet of three monsters, six feet in all, seated under a table.
- Six Feet Under is an American death metal band from Tampa, Florida, formed in 1993. The band was originally a side project by Cannibal Corpse vocalist Chris Barnes with guitarist Allen West of Obituary. They were joined by bassist Terry Butler (formerly of Massacre and Death) and drummer Greg Gall, Butler's brother-in-law. Six Feet Under have released ten albums, and are listed by Nielsen Soundscan as the fourth best-selling death metal act in the U.S., with album sales over 370,000(NOTE sales numbers are taken from 2003).[1]
- Six Feet Under is an American television drama created by Alan Ball that was originally broadcast on HBO from 2001 to 2005. It was produced by Alan Ball, Alan Poul, Robert Greenblatt and David Janollari. The series centers on a family-run mortuary, Fisher & Sons Funeral Home, and explores the lives of the Fisher family following the death of the family patriarch (the title being a colloquialism/euphemism for death, six feet being the traditional depth at which a body would be laid). The series is set in modern-day Los Angeles. Dan Attias has directed for both Six Feet Under and The Wire. The Wire cast member Michael Hyatt guest stars in the season 4 Six Feet Under episode "Coming and Going" (which was directed by Attias).
- Six Feet Under is the 22nd episode of Season 2, and is episode 44 of the full 210 episodes for the entire series. In this episode, Ray finds out that he has shrunk a quarter of an inch and is no longer six feet tall. He then spirals into a mid-life crisis.
- Save my teammates! They're buried in the snow on the hill south of Steelhead.
- Six Feet Under ... → Siehe auch Entombed, Obituary,
- Log Title: Six Feet Under Characters: Kimber Benton, Sebastian Bludd Location: Starlight Mansion - Los Angeles, CA Date: April 13, 2017 Summary: Kimber comes across Bludd while he's digging a grave.
- Siegfried gives Geralt this quest at the beginning of Chapter III. People have been disappearing in the cemetery and the Order would like to get to the bottom of it. They do not have the manpower to spare, so a witcher's help is required.
- Six Feet Under is a black comedy/drama television series which aired on HBO. It premiered on the premium cable network HBO in the United States on June 3, 2001, and ended on August 21, 2005, spanning five seasons and 63 episodes. The show was produced by Actual Size Films and The Greenblatt/Janollari Studio and was shot on location in Los Angeles and in Hollywood studios. The show depicts members of the Fisher family, who run their funeral home in Los Angeles, and their friends and lovers. The series traces these characters' lives over the course of five years. The ensemble drama stars Peter Krause, Michael C. Hall, Frances Conroy, Lauren Ambrose, Freddy Rodriguez, Mathew St. Patrick, and Rachel Griffiths as the show's seven central characters.
- We can only shortly be explained by our misunderstanding of what is really going on in the environment provided to us. These beasts hardly know the "new" English. But they've heard it extensively. I imaging from being in slave mongers quarters. They're educated enough to tell you the truth and tell you of it, most are drawn here by the allowance of the input of it to be true. But, they must have a basic understanding of a good time to bring me another distraction to our senses. a good one. They know that.
- Six Feet Under was an HBO Ensemble Dramedy created by Alan Ball that ran from 2001 to 2006. The show was about the Fisher family, who ran a mortuary in Los Angeles. During the show's run, it picked up a slew of awards, including nine Emmys, two Golden Globes and a Peabody Award. After family patriarch Nathaniel Fisher Sr. is killed in a car accident, his three children and widow take up running the family's funeral home business. Each episode begins with a death, which sets up that episode's funeral. The Trope Namer for Narm. Just got a Character Page, which needs editing.
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