
The Twilight Zone The Dummy
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Movies/Shows | The Twilight Zone |
Previous episode | The Gift |
Next episode | Young Man's Fancy |
Directors | Abner Biberman |
Written by | Rod Serling |
Episode number | 33 |
Writer | Rod Serling |
Season number | 3 |
Air date | May 4, 1962 |
Featur music | Stock |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2448118 |
The Twilight Zone The Dummy Life story
An average ventriloquist finds he has a not-so-average dummy. With Cliff Robertson.
Shop owners hope that tech can deter thieves

... Shoppers pick up The Dummy display case which is exchanged at the checkout for the actual product...
The crash dummy aimed at protecting women drivers

... The Dummy that is sometimes used as a proxy for women is a scaled-down version of the male one, roughly the size of a 12-year-old girl...
Rust: US Police to search arms supplier over fatal film shooting

... The document also stated that either Gutierrez-Reed or Rust prop master Sarah Zachry picked up The Dummy rounds from Kenney s PDQ Arm & Prop...
When a cobra became a murder weapon

... " He then caught the neck of one cobra and " induced" the bite on a piece of chicken tied to the plastic hand of The Dummy...
A1 dummy speed camera removed after drivers catch on

... Mike Lacey bought the parts for the camera for £40 Mr Lacey said the covers have been removed from a real camera nearby and it was having the desired effect Mr Lacey, a retired petrochemical engineer, said he was prompted to install The Dummy camera on the side of his Grade II listed home 18 months ago because drivers were reaching 90mph (144km/h) on the road, which has a 50mph (80km/h) limit...
Serena Williams: Cartoon accused of racism cleared by press watchdog

... However, the watchdog ruled that the cartoon did not depict Ms Williams as an ape, rather showing her as spitting The Dummy , a non-racist caricature familiar to most Australian readers ...
Serena Williams: Cartoon accused of racism cleared by press watchdog
A controversial cartoon of Serena Williams published in an Australian newspaper last year did not breach media standards, a press watchdog says.
next to a baby's dummy in the US Open final.
Critics complained that the caricature used racist and sexist stereotypes of African-American people.
The Australian Press Council noted that some had found The Image "offensive", but accepted the publisher's defence.
in September for her on-court behaviour where she accused the umpire of sexism and being a "thief".
The Herald Sun newspaper and cartoonist Mark Knight have consistently called their depiction a comment on Williams's behaviour, denying it was racist or sexist.
The Press watchdog said the newspaper had "sufficient public interest in commenting on behaviour and sportsmanship".
'Repugnant' depictionThe cartoon went viral in September, drawing criticism globally. The National Association of Black Journalists in the US denounced it as "repugnant on many levels".
Public complaints centred around the portrayal of Williams with "large lips, a broad flat nose. . and [being] positioned in an ape-like pose", said the watchdog.
This contrasted with the depiction of Osaka, whose father is Haitian and mother Japanese, "as white with blonde hair".
However, the watchdog ruled that the cartoon did "not depict Ms Williams as an ape, rather showing her as 'spitting The Dummy ', a non-racist caricature familiar to most Australian readers".
Spitting The Dummy is an Australian colloquialism for someone who reacts to a situation in a bad-tempered or petulant manner.
Knight told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation he was "very happy" about the watchdog's ruling.
The Australian Press Council is The Chief watchdog for complaints about Australian media, but does not have The Power to issue or enforce penalties.
media, racism, australia, journalism
Source of news: bbc.com