The Anti-Gravity Room was a weekly Canadian television program of the early- to mid-1990s, spotlighting comic books and video games, and hosted by Nick Scoullar and Phil Guerrero.
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Viewers would call in with questions on comic books and host Nick Scoullar would answer them.
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It featured interviews with international comic creators, coverage of comic events, reviews of video games, and guest hosts such as Ben Stiller and Kevin Smith.
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During the mid-1990s he starred in a popular television show (which aired in the US on the Sci Fi Channel and internationally on other stations) called The Anti-Gravity Room, where he discussed comic books and interviewed several famous people, including Kevin Smith (of Clerks fame), Howard Stern and Ben Stiller.
He was shot dead by around 6 November 1965 in the anti-Communist purge during the Transition to the New Order.
"Chomsky, Language, World War II and Me" by John Williamson criticizes Chomsky's linguistic work and recounts a long email debate between Chomsky and the author in which Williamson claims Chomsky repeatedly lied about his own statements and about historical facts and sources.
Much like the more popular Shamela by Henry Fielding, the female protagonist is portrayed as a social climber, although Haywood's character is much less licentious than Fielding's Shamela.