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Page Not Found (404) Sorry, what you're looking for can't be found! The page might have been removed, had its name changed, or is temporarily unavaible. Or it probably just doesn't exist.Looking for some toys this holiday season? Amazon has you covered. The holidays and the end of the year are upon us. Amazon is starting to clear some inventory out, and while these toys won’t arrive in time for Christmas, at these prices you aren’t going to care. And the board games would definitely make it to you in time for any New Year’s parties you may be having. You can check out all of the toys on sale on the deals page.Due to constant abuse from this IP range, all interactive traffic is blocked. If you are running a legitimate crawler/robot, ensure that it properly identifies itself via the user agent with a contact site or address.HomeMailFlickrTumblrNewsSportsFinanceCelebrityAnswersGroupsMobileVideoYahoo TVDecember 15, 2016The titular sneak — whose name isn’t really Pete — warns the viewer in the trailer above: “If you think you know who I really am, you’ve been conned.”




Pete, a.k.a. Marius, is at the center of Amazon’s new January drama Sneaky Pete, in which Emmy nominee Giovanni Ribisi plays a recently released con (and con man) who assumes the identity of his cellmate (Ethan Embry) while he hides out from Vince, a gangster to whom he owes a pile of cash.The series — created by Emmy winner Bryan Cranston (whose childhood nickname was Sneaky Pete) and House creator David Shore — also features Justified creator Graham Yost as its showrunner. The stellar cast includes Justified and The Americans Emmy winner Margo Martindale, Peter Gerety, Marin Ireland, Domenick Lombardozzi, Malcolm-Jamal Warner — and in the recurring role of Vince, Cranston himself, who appears in every episode.Marius, as Pete, gets himself into an even more complicated jam when he heads off to Pete’s family’s farm, where the family — a dysfunctional, but colorful and endearing brood with issues of its own — immediately welcomes him into the home as one of their own.




Almost as immediately, at least for some of the family members, questions arise about where “Pete” has been for the last 20 years, and what ensues is a fun, funny, drama, as Marius/Pete is constantly forced to come up with ways to prevent getting caught… by Vince, his new fake family, and his parole officer (Warner).“The lengths that Marius goes to in order to keep everything going, it speaks to his character, where you kind of wonder, is it for survival, or is it for the game?” says Ribisi. “Or is it just straight up this addiction that he has to creating that illusion?“Then what’s also great is that you see that in so many other characters, where things aren’t all copacetic within the family,” continues the actor. “They have their own demons and skeletons in the closet. That’s one of the themes and the premises of show, is that there’s a lot more complexity within human nature, within that farmhouse, with Vince. Where you see Vince having, later on, glimpses of humanity.




He has his own moral code, his own sense of ethics that he abides by.”Sneaky Pete premieres on January 13 on Amazon Prime.#video#sneaky-pete#bryan-cranston#giovanni-ribisi#amazon#featuredWhat to Read NextComic book fans from all over the world are converging on the Big Apple this weekend for New York Comic Con. However, you don’t need to hit the Javits Center or the Hammerstein Ballroom to see your favorite superheroes this weekend. Right now, Netflix has more superhero shows than ever before! We waded through the streaming site’s extensive library and selected the Top 10 Superhero shows on Netflix. (Yes, there’s a lot from Marvel’s Defenders and the “Berlanti-verse.”) [Decider’s Guide To Streaming The Marvel Universe In Order] [Decider’s Map of the onscreen DC Comic Universe] Netflix kicked off a bold new age for superhero shows when they launched the original Marvel series Daredevil in 2015. Since its debut, the series has not only spawned a successful sequel season (and an upcoming third season), but it helped set the tone for future “Defenders” series.




[Watch Daredevil on Netflix] Marvel’s Jessica Jones was Netflix’s first follow up to Daredevil and it doubled as a groundbreaking take on the superhero genre. The series shone a light on an anti-heroine forced to become a hero to battle her own demons. The show brought a frank approach to sex and offered an unflinching portrayal of psychological recovery. [Watch Marvel’s Jessica Jones on Netflix] Netflix’s latest collaboration with Marvel is also arguably its most ambitious. Marvel’s Luke Cage tackles race relations with more power than Luke Cage himself takes down the thugs at Crisps Attucks. The series also features a cavalcade of strong female characters and a banging soundtrack. [Watch Marvel’s Luke Cage on Netflix] ‘Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.’ Marvel Entertainment’s first big attempt at the small screen is still one of its most charming titles. Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. focuses on the men and women often pushed to the background in the larger-than-life Avengers films.




As it turns out, the lives of these humble foot soldiers have more impact on the larger Marvel Universe than you’d assume at first glance. [Watch Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. on Netflix] DC Comics offered audiences a chipper, yet ferocious, new heroine last fall with CBS’s Supergirl. Melissa Benoist stars as Kara Jor-El, Superman’s older cousin, who, through an accident, winds up on Earth way after her baby cousin. She arrives to discover that he’s already grown into the hero of the age – so where does she fit in? This bright and bubbly series starts a new chapter on the CW this Monday. [Watch Supergirl on Netflix] Arrow kicked off a revolution in superhero storytelling on television. The series was grounded, yet pulpy. Fun, yet brimming with intense action scenes. Most of all, Arrow is addictive. The success of the series helped plant the seeds for wide and wild new universe of comic book storytelling. [Watch Arrow on Netflix] If Arrow heralded the dawn of the “Berlantiverse,” The Flash solidified The CW and DC’s hold on superhero storytelling on TV.




The Flash not only continued to expand the DC comic book universe, but dabbled in science fiction in glorious new ways. [Watch The Flash on Netflix] ‘Lego DC Comics: Batman Be-Leaguered’ Who would have thought that Legos would be able to give our favorite comic book characters a healthy dose of fun and an extra layer of pathos? There are tons of great Lego cartoon series — no, we can’t believe we just said that either — but we’re particular fans of the Lego Batman stuff. [Watch Lego DC Comics: Batman Be-Leaguered on Netflix] Batman is perhaps the most popular superhero today and Gotham offers a bold revisionist take on his origin story. In fact, Gotham is less about Bruce Wayne and more about the rogue’s gallery of villains he would one day battle as the Dark Knight. Watch the Penguin rise as a kingpin, Catwoman struggle to survive, and the Riddler spiral out of control. [Watch Gotham on Netflix] For decades before Marvel conquered the big screen, the comic book company’s most successful onscreen ventures were in animation.

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