Nicholas "Nick" Corbishley Owen (born 1 November 1947) is an English television presenter and newsreader, best known for presenting the breakfast television programme TV-am and the BBC's local news show Midlands Today since 1997. He is also the current chairman of Luton Town Football Club.
Born in Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, to father Bertie, a headmaster and Dunkirk veteran, and mother Esme (née Burton), a music teacher. He attended Kingsland Grange prep school, an independent boarding school in Shrewsbury which has since been renamed Shrewsbury High Prep School, between the ages of 7-13, then Shrewsbury School between the ages of 13-18. While at Kingsland Grange, Owen borrowed a Cliff Richard record from Bob Warman, who later went on to become the longest serving regional news presenter on ATV and Central in the Midlands. Also while there he would hand write his own newspaper and take it to a copier to print; said to be his first experience of journalism.
Actors: Laurence Brown (actor), Mike Burnell (actor), James Z. Feng (actor), Asmar Fontenot (actor), Ryan Jurgensmeier (actor), Basil Muhammad (actor), Ramon Vasquez Jr. (actor), Chad Zuber (actor), Megan Elizabeth (actress), Megan Elizabeth Wescott (actress), Pin Young (actress), Charda Bell (producer), Asmar Fontenot (producer), Ramon Vasquez Jr. (producer), Mirna Vasquez (producer),
Plot: Nick "The Nightmare" Owen was a well respected and successful fighter. After years of stale fights and no "real" big breaks, Nick's career starts going down hill until one day he wakes up a loser of 8 straight fights. The doctors and Nick's wife, Lainy, both till Nick maybe it's time to throw in the towel. Together with the help of Freddy Dutch, his trainer, Nick trains to prove to everyone that he still has it, even if it's just for one last round.
Keywords: african-american, asian, asian-american, domestic-drama, hispanic, independent-film, latino, redemption, student-film, underdogKnocked Down
One Hundred Million Souls are joined together.
All hope for something better.
And daring to just ask the question.
€œWhat is all this worth?€
Because the answers have all lost their meaning.
They got us all believing.
We really have a future?
And who will get there first?
Knocked down, stumble then you fall
Stay down, find some use for it all
No way, walk before you crawl
When will you fall?
So many hopeless lives have been forgotten,
Defeated once too often.
Just hoping to find resolution
Held down by a greater force.
In the search we find no solutions
And dream of revolutions.
But wake to find we're part of the problem.
So tell me what is worse?
Knocked down, stumble then you fall
Stay down, find some use for it all
No way, walk before you crawl
When will you fall?
When will you fall?
*When will you fall?
Knocked down, stumble then you fall
stay down, find some use for it all
No way, walk before you crawl
Knocked down, stumble then you fall
Stay down, find some use for it all
No way, walk before you crawl
Knocked down
Stay down
Knocked down
Sit down
When will you fall?
When will you fall?
When will you fall?
When will you fall?
Nicholas "Nick" Corbishley Owen (born 1 November 1947) is an English television presenter and newsreader, best known for presenting the breakfast television programme TV-am and the BBC's local news show Midlands Today since 1997. He is also the current chairman of Luton Town Football Club.
Born in Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, to father Bertie, a headmaster and Dunkirk veteran, and mother Esme (née Burton), a music teacher. He attended Kingsland Grange prep school, an independent boarding school in Shrewsbury which has since been renamed Shrewsbury High Prep School, between the ages of 7-13, then Shrewsbury School between the ages of 13-18. While at Kingsland Grange, Owen borrowed a Cliff Richard record from Bob Warman, who later went on to become the longest serving regional news presenter on ATV and Central in the Midlands. Also while there he would hand write his own newspaper and take it to a copier to print; said to be his first experience of journalism.
South China Morning Post | 11 Jun 2019
WorldNews.com | 12 Jun 2019
WorldNews.com | 12 Jun 2019
Alternet | 11 Jun 2019
WorldNews.com | 12 Jun 2019
WorldNews.com | 12 Jun 2019