Missing - Television

Television

  • Missing (2003 TV series), a U.S. series that profiles missing persons cases
  • Missing (2012 TV series), a U.S. television drama about a former CIA agent searching for her son in Europe
  • Missing (Canadian TV series) (originally titled 1-800-Missing), a 2003–2006 series based on the 1-800-WHERE-R-YOU novels by Meg Cabot
  • Missing (UK TV series), a 2009–2010 BBC police drama
  • Missing Live (originally titled Missing), a UK morning series that profiles missing persons cases
Episodes
  • "Missing" (.hack//Roots)
  • "Missing" (Adam-12)
  • "Missing" (Baywatch)
  • "Missing" (The Bill)
  • "Missing" (Blue Heelers)
  • "Missing" (Body of Proof)
  • "Missing" (Brothers & Sisters)
  • "Missing" (Dallas)
  • "Missing" (ER)
  • "Missing" (La Femme Nikita)
  • "Missing" (A Fine Romance)
  • "Missing" (Flipper)
  • "Missing" (Heartbeat)
  • "Missing" (In the Heat of the Night)
  • "Missing" (The Killing)
  • "Missing" (Law & Order)
  • "Missing" (Lincoln Heights)
  • "Missing" (The Listener)
  • "Missing" (Man with a Camera)
  • "Missing" (Miami 7)
  • "Missing" (My Secret Identity)
  • "Missing" (NCIS)
  • "Missing" (New York Undercover)
  • "Missing" (Orleans)
  • "Missing" (Parenthood)
  • "Missing" (Perfect Strangers)
  • "Missing" (Point Pleasant)
  • "Missing" (Power Rangers S.P.D.)
  • "Missing" (Powers)
  • "Missing" (Roswell)
  • "Missing" (Sirens)
  • "Missing" (Stargate Atlantis)
  • "Missing" (Street Justice)
  • "Missing" (Sue Thomas: F.B.Eye)
  • "Missing" (Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job!)
  • "Missing" (Time Trax)
  • "Missing" (Watching)
  • "Missing" (Webster)
  • "Missing" (Witch Hunter Robin)

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Famous quotes containing the word television:

    They [parents] can help the children work out schedules for homework, play, and television that minimize the conflicts involved in what to do first. They can offer moral support and encouragement to persist, to try again, to struggle for understanding and mastery. And they can share a child’s pleasure in mastery and accomplishment. But they must not do the job for the children.
    Dorothy H. Cohen (20th century)

    What is a television apparatus to man, who has only to shut his eyes to see the most inaccessible regions of the seen and the never seen, who has only to imagine in order to pierce through walls and cause all the planetary Baghdads of his dreams to rise from the dust.
    Salvador Dali (1904–1989)

    Television ... helps blur the distinction between framed and unframed reality. Whereas going to the movies necessarily entails leaving one’s ordinary surroundings, soap operas are in fact spatially inseparable from the rest of one’s life. In homes where television is on most of the time, they are also temporally integrated into one’s “real” life and, unlike the experience of going out in the evening to see a show, may not even interrupt its regular flow.
    Eviatar Zerubavel, U.S. sociologist, educator. The Fine Line: Making Distinctions in Everyday Life, ch. 5, University of Chicago Press (1991)