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A precursor to the cult television series The Prisoner episode "Arrival" from Metropolitan Magazine, 1905. The caption reads, "The light flooded the apartment. It was almost a replica of my own studio."
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Here's a precursor to Ronette Pulaski of Twin Peaks. (Fans of the series will recognize the scene in question.) The illustration appears about a century earlier, in Henley I. Arden's Elizabeth or Cloud and Sunshine (1891).
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Before Arrested Development introduced us to the fictional self-help book The Man Inside Me (2004), there was The Man Inside (1914). "For there's a man inside me, and only when he's finally out, can I walk free of pain." —Dr. Tobias Fünke
Recreation of The Man Inside Me cover by VIsraWratS.
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Here's a precursor to filmmaker John Waters "jumping the shark." By the time audiences and auteurs settled into the ’80s, America’s look back in affection at the ’50s had begun to show its age. (When Fonzie jumped the shark in an episode of "Happy Days,” his daredevil stunt soon became shorthand for that precise moment in time when a beloved piece of pop culture begins to overstay its welcome). That didn’t stop "Pope of Trash” John Waters from mining the world of downscale greasers for 1990’s "Cry-Baby.” —Scott Stiffler
Our precursor appears in Frederick Upham Adams' The Kidnapped Millionaires: A Tale of Wall Street and the Tropics (1901).
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Forty-four years before Doctor Dolittle talked to the animals, we learned that animals say such things as: - He did it first.
- I wish.
- I don't care.
- Not my fault.
- What is that to you?
- I am as good as you.
- More, more.
- Why not?
Additionally: ( The Man's Boot and Other Tales; or Fabulous Truths in Words of One Syllable by Gertrude Sellon, 1876.)
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