Danger Dawg explains events of what happened after a wild roller derby bout between the Enforcers and the Devils.
RollerGames (RG), the 1989 show, belongs to Sams-Miller Productions, Quintex Productions and all others who own the rights, while the original Roller Games from 1961 to 1975 was the name of a sports entertainment spectacle created in the early 1960s in Los Angeles, California as a rival to the Jerry Seltzer-owned Roller Derby league, which had enjoyed a monopoly on the sport of roller derby — and its name — since its inception in 1935. Roller Games provided a mostly televised, increasingly theatrical version of the sport. Roller Games and its flagship team, the Los Angeles Thunderbirds (T-Birds) has endured several boom and bust cycles, including a roller derby attendance record in 1972, a major reorganization in 1975, appearances on ESPN in 1986, the aforementioned TV series called RollerGames in 1989–1990 (and its corresponding arcade game by Konami and its video game for the Nintendo Entertainment System), and a small number of untelevised exhibition matches in 1987, 1988, 1990, 1993, and the early and mid-2000s.
SWAT Kats (C) Christian & Yvon Tremblay, Warner Bros. Cartoon Network, Hanna-Barbera, and everybody else who owns the rights.
Glaswegian Devils and G-52s (C) me and me alone
RollerGames (RG), the 1989 show, belongs to Sams-Miller Productions, Quintex Productions and all others who own the rights, while the original Roller Games from 1961 to 1975 was the name of a sports entertainment spectacle created in the early 1960s in Los Angeles, California as a rival to the Jerry Seltzer-owned Roller Derby league, which had enjoyed a monopoly on the sport of roller derby — and its name — since its inception in 1935. Roller Games provided a mostly televised, increasingly theatrical version of the sport. Roller Games and its flagship team, the Los Angeles Thunderbirds (T-Birds) has endured several boom and bust cycles, including a roller derby attendance record in 1972, a major reorganization in 1975, appearances on ESPN in 1986, the aforementioned TV series called RollerGames in 1989–1990 (and its corresponding arcade game by Konami and its video game for the Nintendo Entertainment System), and a small number of untelevised exhibition matches in 1987, 1988, 1990, 1993, and the early and mid-2000s.
SWAT Kats (C) Christian & Yvon Tremblay, Warner Bros. Cartoon Network, Hanna-Barbera, and everybody else who owns the rights.
Glaswegian Devils and G-52s (C) me and me alone
Category Story / All
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 120 x 120px
File Size 18 kB
Chuong: Chloe Clements... Isn't that the same lady who hates technology but died?
Jack: Yeah that's her.
Summer: Even with traditions, people have to adapt with change. She will not like me at all because I am part of the future which is e-sports.
Juno: Farming towers and more things being made from hemp? Foodstuff factories? What else can I name that she hates?
Zax: Customer service agents working at home thanks to internet technologies, maglev trains, job automation systems, advanced recycling, clothing made from bamboo fibers, transforming stadiums, the new USPS mailing system with job automation technologies, text message alert systems, automated construction technologies, automated cleaning technologies, etc.
Chuong: Well all of us are part of the future; even the country of Greece. Its inevitable for the survival of civilization as communication is a necessity.
Colton: With prices going up in San Francisco, everybody there is contributing their part to make San Francisco the tech capital of America to inspire the world. The people of San Francisco have claimed that they are making their city set to be poised as the American city of the future. They want to design a world where one person does the job of a thousand people so that in a city of millions of people, their production will always exceed the demands of their clients around the world without ever having to literally leave home.
Jack: Yeah that's her.
Summer: Even with traditions, people have to adapt with change. She will not like me at all because I am part of the future which is e-sports.
Juno: Farming towers and more things being made from hemp? Foodstuff factories? What else can I name that she hates?
Zax: Customer service agents working at home thanks to internet technologies, maglev trains, job automation systems, advanced recycling, clothing made from bamboo fibers, transforming stadiums, the new USPS mailing system with job automation technologies, text message alert systems, automated construction technologies, automated cleaning technologies, etc.
Chuong: Well all of us are part of the future; even the country of Greece. Its inevitable for the survival of civilization as communication is a necessity.
Colton: With prices going up in San Francisco, everybody there is contributing their part to make San Francisco the tech capital of America to inspire the world. The people of San Francisco have claimed that they are making their city set to be poised as the American city of the future. They want to design a world where one person does the job of a thousand people so that in a city of millions of people, their production will always exceed the demands of their clients around the world without ever having to literally leave home.
Cripto: She couldn't like you or hate you because she's dead, my grandma, but yes. She would hate that. She wouldn't adapt to change, and she'd call you stupid. One thing I have to tell everybody again and again is that it wasn't her but her husband who had the mindset that says, "City people don't have a life. Period. Country people who farm do." All his life he was a farmer.
Leo: Any memory about her that's going to haunt me is the fact she shoved the Bible down people's throats.
Cripto: And that's the wrong way to go about spreading the Gospel and its message.
Leo: Any memory about her that's going to haunt me is the fact she shoved the Bible down people's throats.
Cripto: And that's the wrong way to go about spreading the Gospel and its message.
Tristan: Her husband is in for a very rude awakening because even farming has changed. Most of the farming these days are done in an indoor environment through vertical farming and they do take place in urban areas. Vertical farming allows more production of food without the need to use more farmland. Chloe is not going to like our current president in Croatia because she supports policies that promotes things like vertical farming and technology in the name of protecting and improving the environment.
Chuong: Oh yeah thanks to the future of science and tech, vertical farming is common in my country where farmers and city people live side-by-side though the job environment for farmers have changed a lot. Vertical farming uses a lot of job automation technologies to keep quality food production 24/7. A lot has changed in less than a century.
Jack: Trade workers are still needed; especially millwrights. Somebody has to make sure the machines are perfectly calibrated and set up perfectly. And for extra power, most awnings in downtown, especially on the office buildings, have solar panels on them so someone has to install stuff like those too. Manufacturing workers are still high in demand just like healthcare workers because job automation is meant to increase efficiency not kill jobs. Someone's gotta make sure mass-produced items still meet or exceed quality standards.
Chuong: Oh yeah thanks to the future of science and tech, vertical farming is common in my country where farmers and city people live side-by-side though the job environment for farmers have changed a lot. Vertical farming uses a lot of job automation technologies to keep quality food production 24/7. A lot has changed in less than a century.
Jack: Trade workers are still needed; especially millwrights. Somebody has to make sure the machines are perfectly calibrated and set up perfectly. And for extra power, most awnings in downtown, especially on the office buildings, have solar panels on them so someone has to install stuff like those too. Manufacturing workers are still high in demand just like healthcare workers because job automation is meant to increase efficiency not kill jobs. Someone's gotta make sure mass-produced items still meet or exceed quality standards.
Cripto: Her husband died before she did, but yes, that would be a rude awakening. *to Tristan* She's already dead, but you're right; she wouldn't like your current president. Do note that she publicly stated she didn't care who won the 2016 election; shedidn't want to live to see the end results. She got her wish.
*He leads to the gravesite, where both the husband and wife are buried side by side.*
Cripto: They're still family, and I do miss them.
*He leads to the gravesite, where both the husband and wife are buried side by side.*
Cripto: They're still family, and I do miss them.
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