Skip to content
🎉Life Quotes🥳

"Felicity is an American drama television series created by J. J. Abrams & Matt Reeves. Abrams and Reeves share executive producer duties with Brian Grazer, Tony Krantz, Jennifer Levin, Ron Howard, John Eisendrath & Laurie McCarthy. It was produced by Touchstone Television (now known as ABC Studios) and Imagine Television. The series first aired on September 29, 1998, and ended on May 22, 2002 after four seasons on The WB. The series revolves around the fictional college experiences of the title character, Felicity Porter (portrayed by Keri Russell), as she attends the "University of New York" (based on New York University). While Felicity works to sort out her emotions, she continues the basic motions of student life and moves into her dorm. There, she meets the resident advisor Noel Crane (Scott Foley). Eventually, romance ensues, and the relationships among Felicity, Ben, and Noel form the basic dramatic conflicts in the show throughout the series. A number of other characters appear and play large roles in Felicity's life, including her close-knit group of roommates and friends. A recurring episode opener of the show is a stark camera shot of Felicity sitting in a dormitory room or apartment holding a tape recorder, recalling events in order to make a cassette tape to send to an old friend named Sally Reardon (voiced by Janeane Garofalo). This occasionally provides a method for Felicity to narrate an entire episode. At the end of episodes like this, Felicity is often shown to be listening to a tape that Sally has sent in reply. In 2007, Felicity was one of Time magazine's "100 Best TV Shows of All-Time." AOL TV named Felicity one of the "Best School Shows of All Time." In June 2010, Entertainment Weekly named Felicity Porter one of the "100 Greatest Characters of the Last 20 Years". Over the course of four seasons, Felicity aired a total of 84 episodes. Each season corresponds to the traditional American university divisions of freshman, sophomore, junior, and senior years. ==Series overviewEpisodesSeason 1 (1998–1999)=Season 2 (1999–2000)=Season 3 (2000–2001)=Season 4 (2001–2002)=ReferencesExternal links== * Episode list for Felicity * Category:Lists of American teen drama television series episodes "

— List of Felicity episodes 🦚

"Fabrício Ramos Melo (born June 13, 1986) is a Brazilian footballer who plays for Águia de Marabá. ==References== Category:1986 births Category:Living people Category:Brazilian footballers Category:Brazilian expatriate footballers Category:Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in Turkey Category:Association football midfielders Category:Paysandu Sport Club players Category:Sertãozinho Futebol Clube players Category:Associação Desportiva Cabofriense players Category:Bursaspor footballers Category:Boavista Sport Club players Category:Águia de Marabá Futebol Clube players Category:Associação Atlética Anapolina players Category:Paragominas Futebol Clube players Category:Independente Futebol Clube players Category:Tuna Luso Brasileira players Category:Clube do Remo players "

— Fabrício Ramos Melo 🦚

"Gillian Wigmore (born 1976) is a Canadian poet and fiction writer. Wigmore was born and raised near Vanderhoof, British Columbia. Her mother, an English teacher, and her library of contemporary Canadian poets helped her develop her poetry in the eco-poetry genre. As a vet and a father of four children, her father often took her on outcalls to farms, where she developed her passion for nature and its many intricacies. She improved her skills in the writing program at the University of Victoria and graduated in 1999 with a double major in Writing and in English. Wigmore published her first chapbook, home when it moves you in 2005, followed by her first book of poetry, Soft Geography in 2007. Some of her success can be attributed to the poetics of Derk Wynand, who taught her to notice every detail and to take writing seriously. Wigmore was a finalist for the 2008 Dorothy Livesay Poetry Prize and won the 2008 ReLit Poetry Award. In 2014 her first fiction, Grayling (a novella), was published by Mother Tongue. The novella follows a couple as they descend the Dease River in northwestern BC. She currently lives in Prince George, British Columbia with her two young children. == Wigmore and the environment == As a child, Wigmore spent time with animals her veterinarian father treated, and in effect dedicated many poems to her experiences with these animals. Instead of manicured or censored language, she creates raw and lively descriptions of barn smells, sensations of cow calves she held and the sight of her father treating these animals. Soft Geography has been described as a "detailed poetic map and guide to life in Northern British Columbia". She writes about the landscape, flora and fauna, climate and attitudes of the people who inhabit the area, focussing on her experiences in its midst. Her descriptions show attention to natural details and her passion for the environment. She identifies native plant species of British Columbia by name. She compares natural processes in the wild to events in society and to the mannerisms of Northern British Columbians. Wigmore draws attention to the fragility of the natural world and its many ecosystems with examples of how it has been altered by humans. She speaks of the contrasts between the natural and the unnatural, emphasizing the power of the natural world over human creations and society. == Works == * 2005 home when it moves you * 2007 Soft Geography * Published in CV2, filling station, the Inner Harbour Review, Geist Magazine and other Canadian publications. == References == * Carscadden, Martha. "News & Events." Gillian Wigmore Wins 2008 ReLit Poetry Award > News > BC Book Prizes. 25 July 2008. BC Book Prizes. 1 Dec 2008 . * "Gillian Wigmore." Creekstone Press, Gillian - About. Creekstone Press . 1 Dec 2008 . * "Poets." Poets - Whitehouse Poetry Collective. 2007. Whitehouse Poetry Collective. 1 Dec 2008 . * "Small Wonder." greenboathouse archive :: gillian wigmore. Greenboathouse Books. 1 Dec 2008 . * "What's New?." Welcome to Caitlin Press Online. 2008. Caitlin Press. 1 Dec 2008 . Category:1976 births Category:Living people Category:21st-century Canadian poets Category:Canadian women poets Category:People from Prince George, British Columbia Category:21st-century Canadian women writers Category:21st-century Canadian novelists Category:Canadian women novelists "

— Gillian Wigmore 🦚

Released under the MIT License.

has loaded