Oct 9, 2009 | Entertainment
If it's Thursday, this must be the mailbag. . . . Q: What ever happened to Chuck Connors and Johnny Crawford of the ''Rifleman'' series? A: After The Rifleman ended its five-season run in 1963, Connors made other forays into television, both as a regular and guest star.
Westbrook: As late as '60s, Buddy Holly, Elvis, others helped dealers sell new cars
There was always a little bit of show business in the Lubbock car dealerships of the mid-20th century.
Director, producer Laven, 87, dies
By Los Angeles Times LOS ANGELES - Arnold Laven, a film and television director and producer who was a partner in the production company that produced the TV series "The Rifleman" and "The Big Valley," has died.
The Big Screen Bulletin 08.31.09: Thingamajigs and Whatchamacallits
Miles O'Keefe: Sgt. Darkin Fred Williamson: Feather Scott Green: Trash Gabriele Gori: Bronx Mike Malin: Nose Daniel Alvarado: Major Chuck Connors: Senator Morris Directed By: Stelvio Massi Written By: Roberto Leoni Release Date: August 18, 2009 Not Rated Ok, so the first thing I should say is that this is not a sequel to The Inglorious Bastards , ...
Cowards who run can't help city schools
Heidi Ramirez, who recently resigned from the state's School Reform Commission that oversees Philadelphia public schools, has been getting the heroine treatment for putting up a good fight.
The 25 Greatest Legal TV Shows: Honorable Mentions
And now a dozen others our judges thought worthy of mention: Adam's Rib Nora Ephron scripted this serial adap tation of the Tracy-Hepburn classic.
Los Angeles Film Fest: Hot Rods and Fast Times
Think of it as a wake for Pontiac. Three drag-racing movies, three decades of cars, shifting attitudes toward rule of law and youth culture as seen through the drive-in projector.
What do your clothes say about you?
Does anyone out there remember that TV show from the '60s called Branded, starring Chuck Connors? It was about the lone survivor of a Wild West battle who was wrongly branded a coward.
Appeals court: Sex offender signs are too harsh
Quoting from the title song of the 1960s television series "Branded," a state appeals court panel ruled Friday that a Stafford County judge overstepped his authority when he ordered a man to put signs on his house and car announcing that he is a sex offender.
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