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Paranormal Investigators/Ghost Hunters

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Christian Cooper
Christian Cooper

The Blacklist



With a few exceptions, each episode features one of the global criminals, and Raymond Reddington assists the task force in hunting down and capturing them. In every such episode, the rank and name or alias of the featured criminal on Red's blacklist are displayed at the close of the opening sequence. Otherwise, only the episode name is shown. The action takes place primarily in present-day Washington D.C., other locations around the world are featured occasionally.




The Blacklist


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He offers Cooper his knowledge and assistance on two conditions: immunity from prosecution and cooperation with FBI criminal profiler Elizabeth Keen, a rookie recently assigned to Cooper. Keen and Cooper are suspicious of Reddington's interest in her, but he will only say that she is "very special". After Cooper tests Reddington's offer in locating and neutralizing a Serbian terrorist in the first episode, Reddington reveals that this man was only the first on the "blacklist" of global criminals that he has compiled over his criminal career and states that he and the FBI have a mutual interest in eliminating them.


Red and Cooper come to an agreement to resume his deal with the FBI and continue hunting down global criminals on his "blacklist" in honor of Liz's undertaking. Cooper manages to find the old task force members and re-create their division. The secrets Red kept from Liz become irrelevant, and the story now centers on not only Red but also Cooper and the field agents Liz used to work with. Now, the task force must confront new criminals as well as familiar ones who have returned in order to take revenge on Red for his betrayal.


The first season introduced several well-known actors in recurring roles. For the pilot, Ilfenesh Hadera was cast alongside Harry Lennix, playing Jennifer Palmer, a federal agent and a friend of Elizabeth. Alan Alda was cast in a major supporting role in September, as Alan Fitch, the Deputy Director of National Intelligence and one of Red's former allies.[75] To bring the series closer to reality, a former CIA agent, Bazzel Baz, was hired by the producers to supervise the shooting of some scenes. However, instead of consulting the crew, he played himself in the series.[76][77] Chin Han and Margarita Levieva were among the blacklisters besides Peter Stormare as Berlin.[78][79] Susan Blommaert and Teddy Coluca also began starring as Reddington's valuable team members.[80][81]


For the second season, Mary-Louise Parker was cast as Carla Reddington, one of Red's ex-wives.[82] The episode "Luther Braxton" introduced David Strathairn in a guest role of Peter Kotsiopulos, the Director of the National Clandestine Service.[83] Reed Birney played the final blacklister of season two, Tom Connoly, and his death scene in the season finale was met with a standing ovation from the crew.[84] Stormare continued to recur through the season and later departed in the middle of it.[82][85]


The third season featured numerous celebrities in major recurring roles as well as provided various comebacks of familiar characters. Deidre Lovejoy was cast as U.S. Marshall Cynthia Panabaker, set to replace Adriane Lenox, who had left earlier this season.[86] Fisher Stevens debuted as Marvin Gerard, an imprisoned criminal attorney joining Reddington's criminal empire, in the eponymous episode of the third season.[87] Two actors portraying former blacklisters, Lance Henriksen and Margarita Levieva, returned during the third season.[88] Strathairn also returned as one of the lead villains of the season, with two back-to-back episodes under his Blacklist number.[89] The season also featured most of the lead cast from the series' spin-off, The Blacklist: Redemption. In July 2015, Edi Gathegi was revealed as a high-class operative and assassin set up to kill Elizabeth.[90] Famke Janssen was cast as Susan Hargrave, an authoritative criminal magnate and Tom's mother.[91] Ulrich Thomsen served as the blacklister in the finale.[92]


The fifth season brought more new recurring characters. In August 2017, it was announced that Michael Aronov, and Aida Turturro would take the recurring roles of Smokey Putnum, the logistician and an embezzler, and Heddie Hawkins, his accountant.[102] In October, Jonny Coyne was cast as Red's nemesis and Tom's murderer, Ian Garvey; his adopted daughter, Lilian Roth, actually Liz's stepsister, Jennifer Reddington, was portrayed by Fiona Dourif.[103][104] Jonathan Holtzman and Genson Blimline also began starring in recurring capacities as two Reddington's operatives.[105] Nathan Lane played a notable blacklister for the series' 100th episode.[49] John Waters and Julian Sands appeared in season conclusion with Sands portraying Sutton Ross, a spy trying to take revenge on Reddington and the eventual blacklister of the finale.[106][107] Janssen also returned for one episode.[108]


In the ninth season, while casting continued for new roles, most of the recurring characters of the previous seasons, such as Lovejoy, Turturro, Holtzman, Blimline and Coluca, maintained their roles. Blimline, whose character died offscreen, departed at the end of the season.[124] In October 2022, Diany Rodriguez and Karina Arroyave revealed that they would be starring in the upcoming season as Cuban sisters Weecha and Mierce Xiu, respectively.[125][126] Keach and Richardson both returned for one episode.[127][128] Stevens also left the series after the ninth season's finale which had the title addressed to his character.[129][66] However, he was still nominated for the 47th Saturn Awards for best guest starring role.[130] Han also returned in the finale, when his character, after being incarcerated for 10 years, escapes from prison and starts gathering blacklisters from all over the world to avenge Reddington.[66]


The blacklist check will test a mail server IP address against over 100 DNS based email blacklists. (Commonly called Realtime blacklist, DNSBL or RBL). If your mail server has been blacklisted, some email you send may not be delivered. Email blacklists are a common way of reducing spam. If you don't know your mail server's address, start with a MX Lookup. Or, just send an email to ping@tools.mxtoolbox.com


Q: I'm sure that you, Anya, would wind up on the blacklist if you revealed any sort of spoilers to me in this interview. But what can you safely say the audience can look forward to as the season begins?


Mark Krikorian, the executive director of the Center for Immigration Studies, spoke for all of us here at CIS in his just-published column for the Washington Post. Krikorian wrote in response to the Southern Poverty Law Center's attempt to smear organizations that dissent from its extreme open-borders multiculturalism as "hate groups." The SPLC, which uses the hate group blacklist as one of its fund-raising scams, recently blacklisted CIS.


Kirkorian's column identifies the sinister heart of the hate-group campaign. He likens it to the question made infamous in the late 1940s by the House Committee on Un-American Activities: "Are you now or have you ever been a member of the Communist Party?" That was the era of the witch-hunt that ultimately led to the blacklisting of some 150 Hollywood figures alleged to be supportive of the party. It ruined reputations, wrecked careers, and damaged democracy.


Frankel's central character is the movie's screenwriter, Carl Foreman, who was blacklisted for refusing to cooperate with HUAC. Foreman's principled defiance of the notorious House committee finds a close parallel in the movie "High Noon" as Marshal Will Kane, played by Gary Cooper, steps up to confront a sinister gang of thugs that has intimidated everyone else in town into cowardly retreat.


In his "Fresh Air" interview, Frankel, a Pulitzer Prize-winning former reporter for the Washington Post, made some observations about the press's complicity with HUAC and the propagation of the blacklist. What he described is remarkably similar to the complicity of the reporters who have spread the word of the SPLC's blacklist of hate groups.


"Generally the press took whatever the committee came up with and ran it without really doing the independent reporting to see whether it was truthful or not," Frankel said. Later, using the present tense as a narrative device, he made this indictment of the political reporters of the time: "They become the abettors, if you will, of the folks who are running the blacklist. The assumptions are, 'Well, it's just news.'" 041b061a72


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