Synonyms for freakylinks or Related words with freakylinks

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Examples of "freakylinks"
In 2000, GMD Studios teamed up with Haxan Films to create the FOX TV show FreakyLinks, largely inspired by the Haxan-directed indie film The Blair Witch Project.
The production company also produced the Fox TV series "FreakyLinks", and the feature films "Altered" (2006), "Seventh Moon" (2008), and "Lovely Molly" (2012), along with "Exists" (2014).
Placing works in film and TV, the painting "Headless Angel" was part of the main set design in the 2000-2001 Fox horror/paranormal television series Freakylinks.
His credits include "Pacific Blue", "The Pretender", "", "FreakyLinks", "Numb3rs", "Bones", "Moonlight", "", "" and "" (also co-producer and associate producer). He also worked as a second unit director on "CSI: Miami" and the series "Dark Angel" and "She Spies".
"FreakyLinks" centered on Derek Barnes (played by Ethan Embry), who ran a website called "FreakyLinks.com" that sought out the dark and forbidden truths behind paranormal phenomena and urban legends, assisted by his friends Chloe (Lisa Sheridan) and Jason (Karim Prince).
FreakyLinks was an American television show that combined elements of horror, mystery, and comedy. It aired on the Fox Network from October 2000 until June 2001, for a total run of 13 episodes. The feel of the show closely modeled that of The X-Files and other supernatural-themed shows that were popular at the time.
Wester has appeared on television shows such as "The Visitor", "George & Leo", "Son of the Beach", "Dirt", "FreakyLinks", "Cursed", "Boston Public", "Undressed", "Dharma & Greg", "Scrubs", "Felicity", "Septuplets", "Six Feet Under", "Jake in Progress", "Night Stalker", "E-Ring", "One on One", "", and "Supernatural", "Justified".
"FreakyLinks", originally titled "Fearsum" until a few months before airing, was developed by Haxan, the creators of the film The Blair Witch Project. The talents of Haxan were highly sought after following the then-recent success of Blair Witch that had taken the entertainment industry by surprise.
Lisa Sheridan (born December 5, 1974 in Macon, Georgia) is an American actress and Photographer. She has appeared in TV series "Invasion", "FreakyLinks", "Legacy", "Las Vegas", "", "", "Journeyman", and "The Mentalist". She attended the Carnegie Mellon School of Drama in Pittsburgh, PA.
His television credits include "Eerie, Indiana", "New York Undercover", "American Gothic", "The Practice", "Millennium", "" (including the episode ""Limitations"" for which he won the Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Episode in a TV Series), "FreakyLinks", "The Guardian", "The Dead Zone", "House M.D.", "Persons Unknown", "The River" (a series he co-created) and "NYPD Blue" for which he won a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series.
The show was scheduled to debut during October 2000 at 8:00 p.m. on Fridays, but this never eventuated, with reality show "Police Chase" and "Freakylinks" airing in its place. It eventually aired on Fox from July 12 to September 6, 2001 as a summer filler. Billy Brown reflected "There was a changing of the guard at Fox between the time we filmed the pilot and the time the network was ready to order the series. The new regime wasn't convinced an anthology would work, yet everyone agreed that the pilot was good. I had the feeling the network didn't think the show was hip enough".
Lerner's writing career began on the CBS crime series "Martial Law", after which he served as a writer and producer on several series through the late 90's until the early 2000s, including "FreakyLinks", "Roswell", "John Doe", "Boston Public", "LAX" and "Smallville". In 2005, he and Friend joined the writing staff of the medical mystery series "House". Their first episode, "Acceptance", was the premiere of the second season. At the start of the fourth season Lerner became an executive producer, a job which he currently still occupies.
Friend's writing career began on the CBS crime series "Martial Law", after which he served as a writer and producer on several series through the late 90's until the early 2000s, including "FreakyLinks", "Roswell", "John Doe", "Boston Public", "LAX" and "Smallville". In 2005, he and Lerner joined the writing staff of the medical mystery series "House". Their first episode, "Acceptance", was the premiere of the second season. At the start of the fourth season Friend became an executive producer, a job which he currently still occupies. He is also a Consulting Producer and writer on Glee.
Before the development of the ARG genre, television sought to extend the reality of its shows onto the web with websites that treated their world as real, rather than discussing it as fiction. An early example was Fox's Freakylinks, developed by Haxan, creators of "The Blair Witch Project", who would later go on to develop the well-known ARGs The Art of the Heist and Who Is Benjamin Stove. Freakylinks employed a website designed to look like it had been created by amateur paranormal enthusiasts to generate internet interest in the show, which gathered a cult following but was canceled after 13 episodes. In September 2002, following a successful initial foray into ARG-like territory with 2001's "Alias" web game, ABC brought alternate reality gaming more definitively to the television screen with the show "Push, Nevada". Produced and co-written by Ben Affleck, the show created a fictional city in Nevada, named Push. When advertising the show, LivePlanet advertised the city instead, with billboards, news reports, company sponsors, and other realistic life-intruding forms. During each episode of the show, highly cryptic clues would be revealed on screen, while other hidden clues could be found on the city's website. The show was cancelled mid-season, and all of the remaining clues were released to the public. Clever watchers eventually figured out that the show would still be paying out its $1 million prize during "Monday Night Football". The last clue was revealed during half-time, prompting those fortunate enough to have solved the puzzle to call a telephone number. The first person to call received $1 million. In October 2004, the "ReGenesis" extended reality game launched in tandem with the Canadian television series "ReGenesis". Produced by Xenophile Media in association with Shaftesbury Films, clues and stories from the series sent players online to stop a bioterrorist attack.
Even before the development of the ARG genre, television sought to extend the reality of its shows onto the web with websites that treated the world as real, rather than discussing it as fiction. An early example was Fox's Freakylinks, developed by Haxan, creators of the Blair Witch Project, who would later go on to develop the well-known ARGs The Art of the Heist and Who Is Benjamin Stove. Freakylinks employed a website designed to look like it had been created by amateur paranormal enthusiasts to generate internet interest in the show, which gathered a cult following but was canceled after 13 episodes. In September 2002, following a successful initial foray into ARG-like territory with 2001's "Alias" web game, ABC brought alternate reality gaming more definitively to the television screen with the show "Push, Nevada". Produced by Ben Affleck and Matt Damon, the show created a fictional city in Nevada, named Push. When advertising the show, they advertised the city instead, with billboards, news reports, company sponsors, and other realistic life-intruding forms. During each episode of the show, highly cryptic clues would be revealed on screen, while other hidden clues could be found on the city's website. Unfortunately, the show was cancelled mid-season, and all of the remaining clues were released to the public. Clever watchers eventually figured out that the show would still be paying out its $1 million prize during "Monday Night Football". The last clue was revealed during half-time, prompting those fortunate enough to have solved the puzzle to call a telephone number. The first person to call received $1 million. In October 2004, the ReGenesis Extended Reality game launched in tandem with the Canadian television series ReGenesis. Clues and stories from the series sent players online to stop a bioterrorist attack.
For her performance as cocaine addict Caroline Wakefield in Steven Soderbergh's crime drama film "Traffic" (2000), she received the awards for Breakthrough Female Performance at the MTV Movie Awards, Standout Performance – Female at the Young Hollywood Awards, and Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture at the Screen Actors Guild Awards. Also in 2000, Christensen guest starred in single episodes of "Time of Your Life", "Movie Stars", "FreakyLinks", and "The Pretender". In 2001, she had a recurring role on the sitcom "The Geena Davis Show". She also appeared in an episode of the Fox sitcom "That '70s Show", reuniting her with her "Traffic" co-star Topher Grace. She was named one of "People" "Breakthrough Stars of 2001". The following year, Christensen starred in three feature films: the teen thriller "Swimfan", the crime drama "Home Room", and the comedy "The Banger Sisters".
When she was six months old, Hillis and her family moved to Normal, Illinois and at age 3, to Sheboygan Falls, Wisconsin. She moved to Charlotte, North Carolina at age 13 and performed at The Children's Theater. She auditioned for Broadway plays in New York City with TV shows of "Felicity" (2 episodes in 1999), "FreakyLinks", "Undressed" (2000), "Baywatch", "JAG", "Boomtown" and "Less Than Perfect". Her several film roles are "All the Wrong Places", "Kiss Kiss Bang Bang", "Must Love Dogs", "", "The Ultimate Gift", and "The Heartbreak Kid" and the Los Angeles play, "A Good Soldier". Her video game roles are Lightning in "Final Fantasy XIII", its sequels and "Dissidia 012 Final Fantasy", Liara T'Soni in the "Mass Effect" trilogy, Ariel Hanson in "", Karin in the "Naruto" series, Palutena in "" and Isabelle "Izzy" Sinclair in "Fuse".
The episode opens with Peter telling the rest of the family that "Family Guy" has been canceled. He lists the following 29 shows (in chronological order), that he says Fox has to make room for: "Dark Angel", "Titus" (though "Titus" was facing cancellation the same year "Family Guy" was), "Undeclared", "Action", "That '80s Show", "Wonderfalls", "Fastlane", "Andy Richter Controls the Universe", "Skin", "Girls Club", "Cracking Up", "The Pitts", "Firefly", "Get Real", "FreakyLinks", "Wanda at Large", "Costello", "The Lone Gunmen", "A Minute with Stan Hooper", "Normal, Ohio", "Pasadena", "Harsh Realm", "Keen Eddie", "The $treet", "The American Embassy", "Cedric the Entertainer Presents", "The Tick", "Luis", and "Greg the Bunny". Lois asks whether there is any hope, to which Peter replies that if all these shows are canceled they might have a chance, the joke being all these shows had indeed already been canceled by Fox. "The New York Times" reported that, during the first "Family Guy Live!" performance, "... the longer [the list] went, the louder the laughs from the Town Hall crowd [became]".
Early episodes based much of their comedy on Stewie's "super villain" antics, such as his constant plans for total world domination, his evil experiments, plans and inventions to get rid of things he dislikes, and his constant attempts at matricide. As the series progressed, the writers and MacFarlane agreed that his personality and the jokes were starting to feel dated, so they began writing him with a different personality. "Family Guy" often includes self-referential humor. The most common form is jokes about Fox Broadcasting, and occasions where the characters break the fourth wall by addressing the audience. For example, in "North by North Quahog", the first episode that aired after the show's revival, included Peter telling the family that they had been cancelled because Fox had to make room in their schedule for shows like "Dark Angel", "Titus", "Undeclared", "Action", "That '80s Show", "Wonderfalls", "Fastlane", "Andy Richter Controls the Universe", "Skin", "Girls Club", "Cracking Up", "The Pitts", "Firefly", "Get Real", "Freakylinks", "Wanda at Large", "Costello", "The Lone Gunmen", "A Minute with Stan Hooper", "Normal, Ohio", "Pasadena", "Harsh Realm", "Keen Eddie", "The $treet", "The American Embassy", "Cedric the Entertainer Presents", "The Tick", "Luis", and "Greg the Bunny". Lois asks whether there is any hope, to which Peter replies that if all these shows are canceled they might have a chance; the shows were indeed canceled during "Family Guy"s hiatus.