Penthouse (Australian TV series)

Penthouse is an Australian television series which aired 1960 to 1961 on Sydney station ATN-7. It was a daytime series featuring Pat Firman (1922-1980) interviewing guests in a set designed to look like a penthouse. It was sponsored by Women's Day and Pix, both magazines.

The archival status of the series is not known, though a single episode is held by the National Film and Sound Archive. This episode features Rolf Harris and Janine Arnold.

References

  • http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=JedUAAAAIBAJ&sjid=sJIDAAAAIBAJ&pg=2833%2C976750
  • http://colsearch.nfsa.gov.au/nfsa/search/display/display.w3p;adv=;group=;groupequals=;holdingType=;page=2;parentid=;query=penthouse%20Media%3A%22TELEVISION%22;querytype=;rec=0;resCount=10
  • http://colsearch.nfsa.gov.au/nfsa/search/display/display.w3p;adv=;group=;groupequals=;holdingType=;page=2;parentid=;query=penthouse%20Media%3A%22TELEVISION%22;querytype=;rec=1;resCount=10
  • External links

  • Penthouse on IMDb
  • Penthouse (telenovela)

    Penthouse, is an Mexican telenovela directed by Raúl Araiza Sr for Televisa in 1973. Starring Fanny Cano and Raúl Ramírez.

    Cast

  • Fanny Cano
  • Raúl Ramírez
  • Gregorio Casal
  • Germán Robles
  • Julieta Bracho
  • Leonor Llausás
  • Alejandro Parodi
  • Wolf Rubinsky
  • Martha Roth
  • José Loza
  • Miguel Gómez Checa
  • Arturo Benavides
  • Jesús Colin
  • References

    External links

    Penthouse at the Internet Movie Database


    Penthouse (magazine)

    Penthouse, a men's magazine founded by Bob Guccione, combines urban lifestyle articles and softcore pornographic pictorials that, in the 1990s, evolved into hardcore. Penthouse is owned by FriendFinder Network, formerly known as General Media, Inc. whose parent company was Penthouse International Inc. prior to chapter 11 restructuring. Although Guccione was American, the magazine was founded in 1965, in the United Kingdom, but beginning in September 1969, was sold in the United States as well. At the height of his success, Guccione, who died in 2010, was considered to be one of the richest men in the United States. He was once listed in the Forbes 400 ranking of wealthiest people (1982). An April 2002 New York Times article reported Guccione as saying that Penthouse grossed $3.5 billion to $4 billion over the 30-year life of the company, with net income of almost half a billion dollars.

    The Penthouse logo is a stylized key which incorporates both the Mars and Venus symbols in its design. The magazine's centerfold models are known as Penthouse Pets and customarily wear a distinctive necklace inspired by said logo.

    Index

    An index is an indirect shortcut derived from and pointing into a greater volume of values, data, information or knowledge. Index may refer to:

    Business

  • Index Corporation, a Japanese video game developer
  • INDEX, a market research fair in Lucknow, India
  • Index fund, a collective investment scheme
  • Stock market index, a statistical average of prices of selected securities
  • Publishing

  • Bibliographic index, a regularly updated print periodical publication that lists articles, books, and/or other information items, usually within a particular discipline
  • Citation index
  • Index (publishing), a detailed list, usually arranged alphabetically, of the specific information in a publication
  • Index (typography), a (rare today) punctuation mark
  • Index cards in a rolodex, an old library card catalog or other organizational purpose, usually but not always 3" x 5", early and mid-20th century technologies for maintaining list of information, and in the card catalog also useful for cross-referencing information
  • Germany's List of Media Harmful to Young People, colloquially known as The Index, published by the Bundesprüfstelle für jugendgefährdende Medien
  • Database index

    A database index is a data structure that improves the speed of data retrieval operations on a database table at the cost of additional writes and storage space to maintain the index data structure. Indexes are used to quickly locate data without having to search every row in a database table every time a database table is accessed. Indexes can be created using one or more columns of a database table, providing the basis for both rapid random lookups and efficient access of ordered records.

    An index is a copy of select columns of data from a table that can be searched very efficiently that also includes a low-level disk block address or direct link to the complete row of data it was copied from. Some databases extend the power of indexing by letting developers create indices on functions or expressions. For example, an index could be created on upper(last_name), which would only store the upper case versions of the last_name field in the index. Another option sometimes supported is the use of partial indices, where index entries are created only for those records that satisfy some conditional expression. A further aspect of flexibility is to permit indexing on user-defined functions, as well as expressions formed from an assortment of built-in functions.

    Index (typography)

    The symbol is a punctuation mark, called an index, manicule (from the Latin root manus for "hand" and manicula for "little hand") or fist. Other names for the symbol include printer's fist, bishop's fist, digit, mutton-fist, hand, hand director, pointer, and pointing hand.

    History

    The symbol originates in scribal tradition of the medieval and Renaissance period, appearing in the margin of manuscripts to mark corrections or notes.

    Manicules are first known to appear in the 12th century in handwritten manuscripts in Spain, and became common in the 14th and 15th centuries in Italy with some very elaborate with shading and artful cuffs. Some were playful and elaborate, but others were as simple as "two squiggly strokes suggesting the barest sketch of a pointing hand" and thus quick to draw.

    After the popularization of the printing press starting in the 1450s, the handwritten version continued in handwritten form as a means to annotate printed documents. Early printers using a type representing the manicule included Mathias Huss and Johannes Schabeler in Lyons in their 1484 edition of Paulus Florentinus' Breviarum totius juris canonici.

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