564 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
564 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
From: sharonc@meaddata.com (Sharon Crichton)
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Date: 16 Nov 92 20:34:29 GMT
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Newsgroups: alt.tv.northern-exp,news.answers
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Subject: alt.tv.northern-exp Frequently Asked Questions
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Archive-name: northern-exposure-faq
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Last-modified: 11/16/1992
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Frequently Asked Questions List for "Northern Exposure"
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and the Usenet newsgroup alt.tv.northern-exp
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Guarantees cannot be made for the accuracy of any of the information in
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this document. If you wish to flame me for my lack of knowledge, please
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do so only if you can also provide me with the correct information. I have
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tried not to influence the information in this document with my own
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opinions, but I can't guarantee that I've been entirely successful.
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I've started to include references to episodes where facts in this
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document were revealed, based on the episode titles in the Episode Guide
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by Andy Bates. Episode titles are listed in [] after a particular
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reference.
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Two companion documents to the FAQ are the Northern Exposure Episode Guide
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and the Northern Exposure Music Guide. Both are published by Andy Bates
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<bates@cs.ucsb.edu>, usually in rec.arts.tv. Latest word from Andy is that
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he's at a new site and he's in the process of rebuilding the guides.
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Hopefully he'll be able to post revised editions pretty soon.
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Erin Sasaki <usagi@jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu> maintains a quotes list for the
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show, with over a hundred participants in the list at this time. If people
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would like to subscribe to the quotes list, send mail to
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usagi@jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu with your name, a valid e-mail address, and a
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note of which list they would like to be on (the quotes list, or one of
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those that just receives notice when the quotes have been updated at
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the FTP site).
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Lee Groves <groves@noao.edu> runs a mailing list for Northern Exposure.
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You can subscribe by sending mail to trebuchet-request@noao.edu.
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---------------------------------------------------------
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Abbreviations used in this document:
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NX = Northern Exposure
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Table of Contents:
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I. What is NX?
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II. Characters and their histories
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A. Who played the flying man?
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B. Characters in episode "Cicely"
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III. Music Used in NX
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A. Toy Cows
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IV. Literature Used in NX
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V. Various Miscellaneous Stuff
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A. How did the town of Cicely get its name?
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B. Where is NX filmed?
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C. The fling thing
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D. How have the various boyfriends of Maggie O'Connell met their deaths?
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E. "Local Hero", "Going to Extremes," "Doc Hollywood," and "Twin Peaks"
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F. Why are there no children in the show?
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G. How long has Joel been in Cicely?
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H. Were Cicely and Roslyn lesbians?
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I. Satellite feed times
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J. Syndication information
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---------------------------------------------------------
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I. What is Northern Exposure?
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NX is a television show that airs on the CBS television network
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at 10:00pm EST/EDT on Monday. It was originally a summer replacement show
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from 1990 which developed a large following, and was eventually picked
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up as a regular network show. The show was created by Joshua Brand and John
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Falsey, who were also the principle forces behind "St. Elsewhere."
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NX is essentially the story of Joel Fleischman, a New York City
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raised Jewish internist who financed his medical education through a
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scholarship from the state of Alaska. Unfortunately, the terms of this
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scholarship require Joel to repay it by serving as a doctor in Alaska for
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four years. Because there were no openings in Anchorage, Joel was sent to
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the town of Cicely ("on the cusp of the new Alaskan Riviera") to serve his
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term. The show originally centered around Joel and his reaction to the
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inhabitants of the town, but has branched out in later episodes to
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concentrate more on the other citizens.
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The show is already picking up an audience outside of the North American
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continent. John Cohen <pacific@online.com> has friends from London who
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watch it, and they say the show is developing a good following in the U.K.
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II. Characters and their histories
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Main characters:
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Joel Fleischman (actor: Rob Morrow)
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A New York City raised doctor fulfilling the terms of his medical
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scholarship ($125,000 to attend Columbia University) by serving four years
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as general practitioner in the town of Cicely, Alaska. Joel is the only
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Jewish person in the entire Borough of Arrowhead County, Alaska [Things
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Become Extinct].
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Maggie O'Connell (Janine Turner)
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A bush pilot who owns the cabin that Joel rents, she is constantly at
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odds with Fleischman (rarely do they call each other by their first names).
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Maggie was raised in Grosse Point, MI and is the daughter of the youngest
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CEO in automotive history ("Do you remember the hatchback? That's my Dad.")
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Maurice Minnifield (Barry Corbin)
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Ex-astrounaut with a family fortune to guard and prosper by, Maurice has
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big plans for the town of Cicely. The local radio station, KBHR (K-Bear
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57 AM), is the flagship of the Minnifield communications network, and is
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almost solely run off the extensive music collection of Maurice (including
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a fabulous collection of show tunes). Maurice also owns the local newspaper
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and 15,00 "acres of opportunity."
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Chris Stevens (John Corbett) (alias: Chris in the Morning)
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A free-spirit who can converse on the philosophies of Carl Jung and
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theoretical physics, as well as philosophize on any topic that might come
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to mind, Chris is the only DJ at KBHR. He began acquiring his vast wealth
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of knowledge when he spent time in prison in West Virginia. He jumped
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parole in 1986, which is why he can no longer vote in any U.S. election
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[Democracy in America]. Chris also doubles as the town's minister, being
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ordained after answering an ad in the back of "Rolling Stone."
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Ed Chigliak (Darren E. Burrows)
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Ed is a half-native Alaskan who was raised by one of the local tribes when
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his parents abandoned him. Ed wants to be a film director, and has already
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started pen-pal correspondences with Martin Scorcese, Steven Spielberg, and
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Woody Allen. Ed works for Maurice and Ruth-Anne, and has an IQ of 180.
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Ruth-Anne Miller (Peg Phillips)
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The owner of the general store in town, Ruth-Anne left the lower 48 when
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she was 60 years old with an old station wagon, all her household
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possessions she could carry, and her cats to make a new life in Alaska.
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Regretably, one of her children is an investment banker.
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Holling Vincoeur (John Cullum)
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The owner of one of the local bars, The Brick, Holling is an ex-trapper
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and hunter who swore off killing. Holling and Maurice are old and dear
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friends, but once were mortal enemies over the love of a woman. Holling
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does not want to marry any woman, however-- his family history of long
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life spans leads him to believe that he would outlive any woman that he
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marries, so he is content to live with and love Shelly, but not marry her.
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Holling is also a direct male-line descendant of French aristocracy [The
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Body in Question].
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Shelly Tambo (Cynthia Geary)
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Shelly is the woman over whom Maurice and Holling wanted to kill each
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other. A former Miss Northwest-Passage, Shelly came to Cicely to marry
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Maurice. But once she met Holling, she left Maurice to be with him (Holling
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is over 60 years old, but Shelly is just barely into her twenties).
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Marilyn Whirlwind (Elaine Miles)
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Joel's receptionist, who raises ostriches at her farm.
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Character note: Elaine got the part when she accompanied her mother to the
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audition. The producers and director liked her timing and sense of humor
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better.
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Recurring characters:
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Adam (Adam Arkin)
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The world's worst pathological liar (as far as Joel is concerned), Adam is
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a gourmet chef who was originally thought to be the Cicely version of
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Bigfoot [Aurora Borealis]. He pops up occasionally to cause havoc in
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Joel's life. Soon to be a father.
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Eve (Valerie Mahaffey, winner of a Best Supporting Actress Emmy)
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Adam's wife, also the heiress to a tungsten fortune, she is expecting
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their first child. She is also the world's champion hypochondriac and once
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chained Joel to her cabin so that she could have a doctor in-house
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round-the-clock [The Bumpy Road to Love].
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Bernard Stevens (Richard Cummings, Jr.)
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Chris' African-American half-brother. Bernard and Chris are psychically
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connected-- they discovered each other when they both had the same vision
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of a sculpture about the Aurora Borealis [Aurora Borealis]. They often
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share the same dreams and thoughts. Their mutual father was a travellin'
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man who just happened to have two families.
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Sgt. Barbara Semanski (Diane Delano)
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A state trooper who shares the mutual hots for Maurice, but who cannot
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sustain a relationship with him because of his disregard for the law (tax
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law, that is) [The Bumpy Road to Love].
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Elaine (Jessica Lundy)
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Joel's ex-fiance'-- she left Joel to marry an older man who died shortly
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after their marriage. She and Joel have since reconciled their relationship
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and the unfortunate way that it ended.
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Dave (William J. White)
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Cook at The Brick, he takes a lot of abuse from Adam over his style of
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cooking (bacon is not pancetta)
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Mike Monroe (Anthony Edwards)
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A lawyer suffering from MCS (mutliple chemical sensitivity), he lives in
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a geodesic dome off of Highway 3. He is hyper-allergic to the environment
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around him, a condition that has developed in the last few years of his
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life. He's now chosen Cicely, Alaska, as his home. Joel thinks he's wacko,
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but Maggie is attracted to him.
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Morty (Morty the Moose)
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Morty is a part of a captive moose herd maintained at a Washington State
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Univ. research station. Although WSU was somewhat reluctant, at first, to
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lend Morty for such blatently exploitative purposes, they finally relented
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and the rest is history.
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A. Who played the flying man in the episode involving the circus coming to
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Cicely? [Get Real]
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The flying man was played by Bill Irwin, who has appeared with the Pickle
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Family Circus. He was also in the movie "Popeye," starring Robin Williams
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and Shelly Duvall, and has had 2 Broadway shows (the first, "The Regard of
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Flight", has been recorded and broadcast on PBS). He was also the recipient
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of a MacArthur Foundation "Genius" Award.
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B. Characters in "Cicely" (and their modern day equivalents)
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Ned Svenborg = Ed
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Mace Mobrey = Maurice
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Kit = Chris
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Sally = Shelly
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Abe = Holling
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Mary O'Keefe = Maggie
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Franz Kafka = Joel
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Nurse = Marilyn
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Rhoda = Ruth-Anne
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(woman at meeting)
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III. Music Used in NX
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Andy Bates has a music guide for the show-- hopefully he can be prevailed
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upon to post the guide to this group.
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There has been a NX CD released that has a selection of pieces that have
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been played on the show. Consult the music guide if you want to know which pieces were played in which episodes. The CD includes:
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1. Theme from Northern Exposure
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Performed by David Schwartz
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2. Jolie Louise
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Performed by Daniel Lanois
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3. Hip Hug-Her
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Performed by Booker T. and the MG's
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4. At Last
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Performed by Etta James
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5. Everybody Be Yoself
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Performed by Chic Street Man
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6. Alaskan Nights
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Performed by David Schwartz
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7. Don Quichotte
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Performed by Magazine 60
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8. When I Grow Too Old to Dream
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Performed by Nat "King" Cole and His Trio
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9. Emabhaceni
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Performed by Miriam Makeba
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10. Gimme Three Steps
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Performed by Lynyrd Skynyrd
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11. Bailero from Chants d'Auvergne
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Performed by Frederica Von Stade
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with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
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Conducted by Antonio de Almeda
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12. Medley:
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A Funeral in My Brain
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Woody the Indian
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The Tellakutans
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Performed by David Schwartz
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It does not include "Toy Cows in Africa" by Chance or "Carribean Blue"
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(by Enya, from her album "Shepherd's Moons").
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A. Toy Cows [It Happened in Juneau]
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Aaron Naas <AAron@sun.soe.clarkson.edu> did the detective work to anwser
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the most important question since time began - mainly, who did the song
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"Toy Cows in Africa"?
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The song "Toy Cows In Africa" is by a group called Chance. The song is
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not on any released album, but can be acquired from Cheryl Leah (of
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Chance) at their office number. The number is (818) 980-9623.
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When you call, mention that you heard about this in alt.tv.northern-exp.
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If you want to order a copy of their demo tape, which has two other songs
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besides "Toy Cows," send $4.50 (which includes shipping), to:
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Ed Willett
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3968 Eureka Drive
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Studio City, CA 91604
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According to Louise Penberthy <louise@cc.gatech.edu>, they will be
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releasing a CD in January, with a tape to follow soon after (she spoke
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to Ed about this). If you want, he will put you on a mailing list so you
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can get notification of the CD release.
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All I can say is WOW! We went from having no clue as to the whereabouts
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of this song to a veritable plethora :-) of information.
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IV. Literature Used in NX
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There was a syndicated article that appeared in the New York Times and
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other various newspapers around the U.S. that started to touch on the
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list of books that Chris has quoted/read on the air.
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Edna St. Vincent Millay, "Renascence and Other Poems"
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Joseph Campbell, "Power of Myth"
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Shakespeare, the complete works
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Stephen Hawking, "A Brief History of Time"
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Hegel, "Early Technological Writings"
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Kierkegaard, "Sickness Unto Death"
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Emmanuel Kant, "Critique of Pure Reason"
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Walt Whitman, the complete works
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Nietzsche, "Logic," and "The Metaphysics of Morals"
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Tolstoy, "War and Peace"
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Maurice Sendak, "Where the Wild Things Are"
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Baudelaire, "Flowers of Evil" (in translation, Chris does
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not read French)
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"The Papers of Thomas Jefferson"
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Alexis do Tocqueville, the complete works
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Additions that were not in the NYT article:
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Jack London, "Call of the Wild"
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Clancy Holling, "Paddle to the Sea"
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V. Various Miscellaneous Stuff
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A. How did the town of Cicely get its name?
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Cicely was founded, but nameless (and lawless) until two women, Cicely and
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Roslyn, came to town to form a utopian society. For more details, see
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the episode "Cicely" which tells the history of the two women and the
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society. For those people who haven't seen the show, the town is named
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after Cicely, due to her selfless death to protect Roslyn.
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B. Where is NX filmed?
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NX is filmed in the town of Roslyn, Washington. There really is a
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Roslyn('s) Cafe', a bar where The Brick is (but the inside looks nothing
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like The Brick), and a store where Ruth-Anne's general store is located.
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Word from the people who have visited is that the local people are very
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excited about the show and generally do not mind non-nosy tourists
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visiting. There are certain "hot" sets that you cannot enter, but
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generally the whole town is very open and friendly. Most people who post
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articles about their visits have not been able to locate the church where
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the wedding of Adam and Eve took place, so it may not be in the area.
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Exterior shots are filmed during mid-week. Interior shots are filmed in a
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warehouse/soundstage in Redmond, Washington, and are not open to the
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public (closed sets).
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C. The fling thing
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That thing is called a trebuchet (pronounced tray-boo-shay). For more
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information, I quote a post by Hank Nunes <hwnunes@leland.stanford.edu>:
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""Car & Driver" did a whole article on the 'trebuchet.' It was called
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"Seige the Day." Two guys in England built a replica and fling toilets
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filled with gasoline and small cars and people. They thought that they
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might sell a few of these, but at the time of the article, they had only
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sold one-- to NX. If you want one, they only cost $18,000.00."
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Some references/cites:
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Car & Driver, June 1992
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"All Things Considered", National Public Radio, Jan. 2 1992.
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The Wall Street Journal, July 30, 1991
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If you want a full set of articles, you might look these up on the Nexis
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on-line news service. Try the search "trebuchet" in the file nexis;currnt
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and yes, this is a shameless plug for my employer. Either that, or I'm
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doing a really good imitation of H. Ross Perot. :-)
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Items that have been flung:
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Maggie's burnt piano [Burning Down the House]
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Chris' dead friend Tooley [Heroes]
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The exact quote by Chris about the fling:
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"It's not the thing you fling, it's the fling itself."
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D. How have the various boyfriends of Maggie O'Connell met their deaths?
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This is known as the curse of Maggie O'Connell-- every serious boyfriend
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she has ever had has died in some gruesome accident. The latest was Rick
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Pederson, who was played by Grant Goodeve in the first season (until
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Rick's untimely demise). Until her house burned down, Maggie had small
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shrines to each boyfriend on her mantel.
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Harry ---- potato salad at a picnic
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Bruce ---- victim of a terrible fishing accident
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Glenn ---- took a wrong turn in his Volvo onto a missile test site
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Dave ---- fell asleep on a glacier and froze to death
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Rick ---- hit by a satellite
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This is from the eulogy given at Rick's funeral by Chris [Slow Dance].
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Additions after season premiere [Northwest Passages]:
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Steve ---- struck by lightning while working on an oil rig
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(revealed during Maggie's hallucination)
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E. "Local Hero," "Going to Extremes," "Doc Hollywood," and "Twin Peaks"
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"Local Hero" is a film by Scottish director Bill Forsythe. In Local Hero,
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an upwardly-mobile young professional (oilman) goes to a remote part of
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the world (northern Scotland) where he is initially annoyed by the lack
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of modern conveniences but eventually enchanted with the local culture.
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At one point a old Russian town friend stumbles into the scene, and the
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main character deals with a kind, elderly store-keeper woman.
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"Going to Extremes" is another Brand/Falsey creation. It has been described
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as "St. Elsewhere" on the sand with characters from NX thrown in.
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Comparisons to NX are natural-- doctors thrown into a foreign culture with
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lots of colorful local characters. It is currently being shown Tuesday at
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10:00pm EDT/EST on the ABC television network.
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"Doc Hollywood" is a movie that was released in the summer of 1991. It
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stars Michael J. Fox as a doctor, who while travelling to Beverly Hills
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to begin a career as a plastic surgeon, ends up stuck in the small town
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of Grady, trying to pay off a debt by filling in as the town doctor. No
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one can be certain which came first: NX or "Doc Hollywood." Rumor has it
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that the script for DH had been floating around Hollywood for years, but
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NX was created by Brand and Falsey after talking to a doctor friend of
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theirs.
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A DH/NX connection is that Roberts Blossom played both the judge who
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sentenced Fox's character (Ben Stone) to community service in DH, and
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the elder Ned Svenborg [Cicely]
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"Twin Peaks" has also been compared to NX. TP was also filmed in the state
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of Washington (in Snoqualmie) and took place in a town filled with
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colorful characters. But while TP was mainly about a series of bad events
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in an generally evil place, NX is mainly about a series of slightly odd
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events in a generally nice place (this is entirely the FAQ's author's
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opinion, who has seen both shows and infinitely prefers NX over TP).
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NX has done an homage to TP. There was an episode where the characters
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were all gathered by a scenic waterfall (similar to the falls in TP) and
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there was some vague TP-type music playing in the background.
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F. Why are there no children in the show?
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Well, a lot of people who subscribe to this newsgroup are pretty glad
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there aren't any main characters who are under 18 years of age. Others
|
|
believe that children are missing and should be included. There have been
|
|
children in certain episodes; there were children in Ed's film "Cicely"
|
|
[Animals R Us], there were children around during the visit by the circus
|
|
[Get Real], and there were children at the wedding [The Wedding]. But if
|
|
you think about the lack of children, consider that all of the main
|
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characters are single and highly independent, so the inclusion of any
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children would be against the characters as drawn so far in the show.
|
|
|
|
|
|
G. How long has Joel been in Cicely?
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|
|
|
Joel's contract requires four years of service to the state of Alaska. It
|
|
is inconclusive as to how much actual calendar time has passed (see the
|
|
rerun episodes of "MASH" for a comparison to this situation). The only
|
|
episode that can be used to gauge calendar time is the one where Joel
|
|
renews his subscription to "The New Yorker" and states the exact amount of
|
|
time he has left to serve.
|
|
|
|
|
|
H. Were Cicely and Roslyn lesbians?
|
|
|
|
Yes. Maurice has asked Chris to downplay this part of their town's history.
|
|
It is also aluded to in the pilot episode, where Maurice tries to tell
|
|
Joel that, despite what other people will tell him, they were just good
|
|
friends. It is not stated but alluded to in "Cicely" during the
|
|
conversation between Mary O'Keefe and Roslyn about alternatives to men.
|
|
|
|
|
|
I. Satellite feed times
|
|
|
|
The feed for NX is on satellite T1, channel 13 at 4:00am EST Sunday
|
|
morning. This NEXP feed is from the production company to the network, so
|
|
there are no commercials.
|
|
|
|
J. Syndication information
|
|
|
|
At this time, NX is not in syndication so it cannot be found in regular
|
|
reruns. CBS has been rerunning some shows at different times slots but
|
|
this does not mean that it is in syndication. Hopefully, I'll be able to
|
|
replace this paragraph in the near future with some real syndication
|
|
information. :-)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Much thanks to the following people for helping to edit this document, and
|
|
for helping with contributions to this document:
|
|
|
|
Andy Bates <bates@cs.ucsb.edu>,
|
|
Henry W. Nunes <hwnunes@leland.stanford.edu> (formerly know as hankdtank),
|
|
Dan Goldstein <dang@cicero.uchicago.edu>,
|
|
Tim Pierce <twpierce@unix.amherst.edu>,
|
|
Melissa Brown <MMB3@PSUVM.PSU.EDU>,
|
|
Greg Bole <BOLE@hmivax.humgen.upenn.edu>,
|
|
George Mitchell <george@tessi.com>,
|
|
Howard Gershen <howard@boxhill.com>,
|
|
Larry J Lennhoff <bml@Athena.MIT.EDU>,
|
|
Erin Sasaki <usagi@jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu>,
|
|
Douglas J Renze <drenze@icaen.uiowa.edu>,
|
|
Matt Mccoy <matt@ms.uky.edu>,
|
|
John Cohen <pacific@online.com>,
|
|
Evan Rosser <ejr@wam.umd.edu>,
|
|
Brian Fristensky <frist@ccu.umanitoba.ca>,
|
|
John Cohen <pacific@online.com>,
|
|
Micheal Tucker <mtucker@lamar.ColoState.EDU>,
|
|
Aaron Naas <AAron@sun.soe.clarkson.edu>,
|
|
Louise Penberthy <louise@cc.gatech.edu>,
|
|
Melissa Safran <m4safran@student.business.uwo.ca>,
|
|
Erin Sasaki <usagi@jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu>,
|
|
Lee Groves <groves@noao.edu>,
|
|
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|
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|
Copyright (c) 1992 by Sharon Crichton. That's all.
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--
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Sharon Crichton ***************** Mead Data Central
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|
sharonc@meaddata.com **HAPPY! HAPPY!** P.O. Box 933
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uunet!meaddata!sharonc ** JOY! JOY! ** Dayton, OH 45401
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***************** FAX: (513) 865-1655
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