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  1. When it hit the airwaves in 1996, “The Newsroom” – created, written, directed by, and starring Ken Finkleman – was hailed by the Montreal Gazette as “the funniest comedy series in the history of Canadian television.” And by the time its all-too-short run had concluded, it had secured a huge and devoted following across the country.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › More_TearsMore Tears - Wikipedia

    More Tears is a 1998 seriocomedy television series that was broadcast by CBC Television, as a short run programme; it was written and produced by Ken Finkleman following the success of The Newsroom (1996), and was partly a remake of 8½ (1963), by Federico Fellini.. As in The Newsroom, George Findlay (Ken Finkleman) is the protagonist of More Tears, as a documentary producer, who manipulated ...

  3. Married Life: With Tom Bishop Jr., Ken Finkleman, Robert Cait, Karen Hines.

  4. Filmaffinity es una web de votación y recomendación personalizada de películas y series, una red social y diario del cine y las series con votaciones, listas y críticas, y una página de consulta de cartelera, horarios de entradas de cine y una web con toda la información de todas las plataformas y recomendaciones personales basadas en tus gustos.

  5. Married Life is a Canadian television comedy-drama series, which aired in 1995. [1] Created by Ken Finkleman as a parody of early 1990s reality television shows such as The Real World and Cops, [2] the series stars Robert Cait and Karen Hines as Frank and Ivy, a young engaged couple who agree to have their first months of marriage documented by ...

  6. Starring Ken Finkleman, Peter Keleghan, Amanda Tapping. Episodes. EPISODE 1. America, America. Jim is hired away by a hot US morning show in New York City where he bites off more than he can chew of the Big Apple and is soon escorted out of the country by the authorities.

  7. 17 de mar. de 2003 · Finkleman, Ken. Ken Finkleman is on. His arms wave in the air, his face contorts in thought, his words tumble out in machine-gun staccato, rat-a-tat-tat. The subject is TV news - a favorite - and Finkleman doesn't sermonize so much as strafe. "A plane goes down, 350 people are killed, and the TV cameras go out and shoot the family members ...