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unusual facts about Bastards


Bastards

¡Bastardos!, the eighth studio album by rock band Blues Traveler


Bastard brothers

Pevsner describes the Bastards works at Blandford as providing "One of the most satisfying Georgian ensembles anywhere in England".

Christine Morrow

In 2009, on the occasion of the anniversary of Charles Darwin's publication of On the Origin of Species, she curated the exhibition "Darwin's Bastards."

Die You Zombie Bastards!

Die You Zombie Bastards! is a 2005 American zombie comedy by directed by Caleb Emerson, written by Emerson and Haig Demarjian, and starring Tim Gerstmar, Geoff Mosher, and Pippi Zornoza.

Don't Let the Bastards Grind You Down

Don't Let The Bastards Grind You Down is the seventh studio album by The Toasters.

Francesco De Masi

De Masi also scored several action films, such as Enzo G. Castellari's Quel maledetto treno blindato (The Inglorious Bastards), but he is best remembered for his work on spaghetti westerns.

Graeme Dunstan

As organizer of the LBJ Welcome Committee he stopped US President Lyndon Johnson's motorcade in Liverpool Street, Sydney by lying under the president's car, upon which NSW Premier, Robert Askin, was reported to have said "run over the bastards".

March of the Bastards

March of the Bastards is the third studio album by hard rock band Shaman's Harvest.

She'll Be Coming 'Round the Mountain

And Newcastle United fans chant "Ten Mackem Bastards" – celebrating Shola Ameobi's excellent record against their local rivals Sunderland.

The First Store

The family is stunned, and an infuriated George hurls a chair through his own storefront window, screaming "You bastards!!" The next day, the loan officer from the bank (Roger Bowen) arrives at the Jeffersons' apartment with the final paperwork for the loan.

The Tough Crazy Bastards

The Tough Crazy Bastards name would later be used at CZW Redemption on March 10, 2007, when Zandig and Toby Klein teamed up to take on Mitch Ryder and DJ Hyde in a tag team No Rope Barbed Wire Match.

This Day Tonight

One notable example of its sometimes controversial editorial approach was a musical comedy sketch that satirised the actions of then-NSW Premier Robert Askin, who was reported to have ordered his driver to "run over the bastards" when anti-war demonstrators threw themselves in the front the car in which he and visiting U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson were travelling.


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