- published: 10 Jun 2016
- views: 79267
"Money" is the fourth episode of the BBC sitcom Blackadder II, the second series of Blackadder, which was set in Elizabethan England from 1558 to 1603.
Blackadder owes one thousand pounds to the Bishop of Bath and Wells, who threatens to have him killed if he does not pay. Blackadder tries unsuccessfully to blackmail the Bishop. He has only 85 pounds, which he loses when the Queen wins a bet about him with Lord Melchett.
Blackadder and Baldrick manage to get sixpence from a sailor, which is also taken by the Queen. Lord Percy tries to make them money by alchemy, without success, only producing a green substance, which he seems convinced is valuable. Blackadder manages to bully a couple into buying his house for 1100 pounds, but is again tricked out of the money by the Queen.
Finally, Blackadder drugs the Bishop and has a painting made of him in a highly compromising position. He uses this to successfully blackmail the Bishop into writing off the debt and giving him enough money to buy back his house and live in comfort. The Bishop is impressed by his treachery, but asks who the other figure in the painting is, at which Blackadder reveals Percy.
"Money" is a song by industrial rock group KMFDM from their 1992 album of the same name. It was released as a single in 1992, and released as a 7" in 2008, as the ninth release of KMFDM's 24/7 series. The song charted at No. 36 in July 1992 on Billboard's Dance/Club Play Songs Chart.
Money is a comic play by Edward Bulwer-Lytton. It was premièred at the Theatre Royal Haymarket on 8 December 1840.
The play was revived at the Royal National Theatre in 1999, directed by John Caird and with a cast including Jasper Britton, Roger Allam (winner of the 2000 Olivier Award for Best Supporting Actor for the role), Simon Russell Beale, Sophie Okonedo, Patricia Hodge (who won Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role for 2000 for her role) and Victoria Hamilton.
In 1921 the play was adapted into a silent film directed by Duncan McRae and starring Henry Ainley, Faith Bevan and Margot Drake.
A radio adaptation of the play by Kate Clanchy was premiered by BBC Radio 3 on 19 June 2011 as part of its Money Talks season and repeated on 1 July 2012. It was the first radio play to be directed by Samuel West (who also played the minor and uncredited vocal role of a French tailor). The play was recorded at Bulwer-Lytton's stately home, Knebworth House, and the music was performed by the Endellion String Quartet. The producer was Amber Barnfather. The Financial Times described the production as “faultlessly stylish”.
Deer is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Bagà is a Spanish municipality located in the comarca of Berguedà, in Catalonia.
Traditionally, Bagà is considered the capital of Alt Berguedà, the mountainous northern half of the comarca.
Bagà is located at the head of the valley of the Llobregat river, at the feet of the high mountains of the Cadí range. The town itself is at 785 metres above sea level.
Bagà is 20 kilometers to the north of Berga, and 7.5 kilometers to the south of the Túnel del Cadí, a tunnel which crosses the Cadí range, connecting with the region of la Cerdanya.
The municipality includes a small exclave to the west.
Bagà was founded in the 9th century A.D. when the region of Berguedà was repopulated by Wilfred the Hairy. The noble family of Pinós dominated most of Alt Berguedà throughout most of the Middle Ages and administered its domains from the town of Bagà, giving the town some importance.
The town was redesigned in the 13th century by Galceran IV de Pinós, and is a rare example of medieval city planning. The town grew rapidly and by the beginning of the 14th century a new neighbourhood had to be built outside of the town's walls to accommodate its growing population. Bagà was also granted a weekly market (which continues to this day) consolidating its role as a regional capital.
A bag, in the context of fishing and hunting, is a quantity of fish caught or game killed, normally given as number of animals. Laws can restrict the number of animals killed through bag limits. The term is also often used as in compound words, e.g. hunting bag scheme or bag statistics.
BAG family molecular chaperone regulator 3 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the BAG3 gene. BAG3 is involved in chaperone-assisted selective autophagy (CASA).
BAG proteins compete with Hip-1 for binding to the Hsc70/Hsp70 ATPase domain and promote substrate release. All the BAG proteins have an approximately 45-amino acid BAG domain near the C terminus but differ markedly in their N-terminal regions. The protein encoded by this gene contains a WW domain in the N-terminal region and a BAG domain in the C-terminal region. The BAG domains of BAG1, BAG2, and BAG3 interact specifically with the Hsc70 ATPase domain in vitro and in mammalian cells. All 3 proteins bind with high affinity to the ATPase domain of Hsc70 and inhibit its chaperone activity in a Hip-repressible manner.
BAG gene has been implicated in age related neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's. It has been demonstrated that BAG1 and BAG 3 regulate the proteasomal and lysosomal protein elimination pathways, respectively. It has also been shown to be the cause of familial dilated cardiomyopathy. That BAG3 mutations are responsible for familial dilated cardiomyopathy is confirmed by another study describing 6 new molecular variants (2 missense and 4 premature Stops ). Moreover, the same publication reported that BAG3 polymorphisms are also associated with sporadic forms of the disease together with HSPB7 locus.
Money · KMFDM Money ℗ 2006 Metropolis Records Released on: 2006-11-21 Writer, Composer: En Esch Writer, Composer: Gunter Schulz Writer, Composer: Sasha Konietzko Auto-generated by YouTube.
KMFDM Money Money
Money · KMFDM Money ℗ 2006 Metropolis Records Released on: 2006-11-21 Writer, Composer: En Esch Writer, Composer: Gunter Schulz Writer, Composer: Sasha Konietzko Auto-generated by YouTube.
Provided to YouTube by Ingrooves Money · KMFDM EXTRA Volume 1 Released on: 2008-06-03 Writer, Composer: Sasha Konietzko Auto-generated by YouTube.
Money music video in better quality.
Provided to YouTube by Ingrooves Money · KMFDM EXTRA Volume 1 Released on: 2008-06-03 Writer, Composer: Sasha Konietzko Auto-generated by YouTube.
KMFDM - Money (Deutschmark Mix)
Here's the music video for another one of my favorite KMFDM songs, "Money".
This is KMFDM's 1992 single, Money/Bargeld 1- Money (Radio Mix) 2- Bargeld (Radio Mix) 3:54 3- Money (Cover Charge Mix) 7:57 4- Bargeld (Rubber Club Mix) 14:36 5- Money (Metal Mix) 19:05 6- Bargeld (Jezebelbuttfunk Mix) 25:06 7 Money (Death Before Taxes Mix) 30:52
Full Album playlist: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lgRkoaWPCoY&list;=PLEdOgCi3G9aiRbNPMtk-3PxPAs6lDHJmz
"Money" is the fourth episode of the BBC sitcom Blackadder II, the second series of Blackadder, which was set in Elizabethan England from 1558 to 1603.
Blackadder owes one thousand pounds to the Bishop of Bath and Wells, who threatens to have him killed if he does not pay. Blackadder tries unsuccessfully to blackmail the Bishop. He has only 85 pounds, which he loses when the Queen wins a bet about him with Lord Melchett.
Blackadder and Baldrick manage to get sixpence from a sailor, which is also taken by the Queen. Lord Percy tries to make them money by alchemy, without success, only producing a green substance, which he seems convinced is valuable. Blackadder manages to bully a couple into buying his house for 1100 pounds, but is again tricked out of the money by the Queen.
Finally, Blackadder drugs the Bishop and has a painting made of him in a highly compromising position. He uses this to successfully blackmail the Bishop into writing off the debt and giving him enough money to buy back his house and live in comfort. The Bishop is impressed by his treachery, but asks who the other figure in the painting is, at which Blackadder reveals Percy.
[Chorus]
Gotta bag full a money
Bag bag full a cash
I'm on give it to da bank
Day ain't even gotta ask
Gotta bag full a money
Bag bag full a cash
{Verse 1}
I walked up in the bank
They all know me
Always got money
Every time that I leave
Got money everywhere
Got money up my sleeve
Got money all over
From my head to my feet
Everytime I walk
Money's all I talk
I got more green
Than a f*ckin beanstalk
I got so much money
I take a bath in it
When it comes to money b*tch
I'm in it to win it
B*tch I make money
Just walkin down the road
I got so much money
It gets hard to even tote
So now what I do
With the money that I make
Is put it in a bag
And walk out of the bank
[Chorus]
{Verse 2}
Hit me up with a bag full a money for I go
I got so much money up in the bank you don't even know
Normally by now I would be rappin fast as Ceelo
With my rhymes comin so fast it's hard to even hear the flow
But I decided to take it a little slower for this verse
Losin my life or my money b*tch I don't know which is worse
I just make money talkin I don't even need to work
Got all these hoes on me cause where there's money they tend to lurk
Got more presidents in my wallet than in history books
Got money all over me so everyone of yall will look
I got so much money now this is the most I've ever had
I walk up in the bank and come out with a full bag
[Chorus]
{Verse 3}
This is that sh*t that attracts all the hoes
So say this sh*t as your walkin down the f*ckin road
But while you say it b*tch you need to walk real slow
And get that money in your bag and show em what you f*ckin hold
This is the high-rollers anthem that all the playas know
So say this sh*t as you're walkin down the f*ckin road:
"I get dat money"
"I get dat green"
"I get dat skrilla b*tch, know what I mean?"
"I get dat money"
"I get dat green"
"I get dat skrilla b*tch, know what I mean?"
Now that you've said it, take all the money that you have
Put it in a sack and go out and show off yo money bag