There is a two-year lag between Don LaFontaine's and Campbell Lane's stint as narrator for the show, during which time it was believed that it had been cancelled, only for it to be brought back for another season in the summer of 2002.
Beyond Belief: Islamic Excursions among the Converted Peoples is a non-fiction book by V. S. Naipaul published by Vintage Books in 1998.
Episode 17 (segment "Titan") of the American television show Beyond Belief: Fact or Fiction tells the story of Robertson (Harris Fisher) writing Futility, or the Wreck of the Titan/Futility.
Beyond Belief: Fact or Fiction | Religious belief | Beyond Belief |
His small screen credits include the television series: "Star Trek: The Next Generation", "Diagnosis: Murder", "Beyond Belief", "Skin", "Bachelor Pad: The Original Series", and "Channel K", the later two of which he also served as creator and producer.
Reichert's other notable television series credits include guest starring roles on Poltergeist: The Legacy, Beyond Belief: Fact or Fiction, The Immortal (starring Lorenzo Lamas), and Francis Ford Coppola's sci-fi series First Wave.
Other television credits include Judging Amy, The Hughleys, Smart Guy, My So-Called Life, and The Bold and the Beautiful; she also played Kim in the short story "War Surplus," on the television series Beyond Belief: Fact or Fiction.
Eagan has worked on numerous other television productions, including CBC’s The Health Show, the TV program Curiosities and in the Man Alive documentary Beyond Belief.
V. S. Naipaul, Beyond Belief: Amongst the Converted Peoples, 1998
In 2013 her book Beyond Belief: My Secret Life Inside Scientology and My Harrowing Escape, was published under the William Morrow imprint of HarperCollins.
In 2009, they held a film festival which showed many films from Afghanistan including, The Afghan Chronicles, 16 Days in Afghanistan, Afghan Star, Beyond Belief, and Beauty Academy of Kabul
He is a frequent commentator in international and British media, including live interviews on Al Jazeera and BBC World TV programs such as World News Today with Kirsty Lang and Zeinab Badawi, and GMT with George Alagiah; BBC World Service radio programs including Europe Today, World Have Your Say and Reporting Religion; BBC Radio's Jeremy Vine Show, the Today Programme and Beyond Belief.