The Episode 3.5
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Episode 3.5InformationSeason 3, Episode 5Air dateJune 2, 2016Written bySteven KnightDirected byTim MielantsEpisode guidePreviousNextEpisode 3.4Episode 3.6"Episode 3.5" is the fifth episode of the third series of Peaky Blinders and the seventeenth episode overall. It aired on June 2, 2016.
Episode 3.5Episode InformationSeries & episodeSeries 3 Episode 5Overall episode18Original UK broadcastApril 25, 2009ChronologyPreceded byEpisode 3.4Primeval Evolved Week 4Followed byPrimeval Evolved Week 5Fire and WaterEpisode 3.6
Episode 3.5 is the fifth episode of the third series of Primeval. It was broadcast as Future Epidemic in North America, Der Pilz (The Fungus) in Germany and Un champignon venu du futur (A Mushroom/Fungus from the Future) in France.
Laura Benson (Kelly Gough), the second victim, shares details of her rape that match Trish's account, including being gagged, tied up and the smell of alcohol. She said she never reported it because she was drunk and thought she wouldn't be believed. Mayford, who worked with the employers of both victims, is arrested for Trish's assault. Hardy and Miller are told of a third victim who refused to report it to the police. The timeline, however, rules out Mayford, who was still in prison during the attack. Ian, who needs a place to live after breaking up with Sarah, asks shop owner Ed Burnett (Lenny Henry) if he can rent his caravan. Ed indignantly refuses and says Ian deserves his suffering for losing Trish. Cath, hurt after her good friend Trish confesses to sleeping with her husband, tells Jim not to come back to the marital home, and tells Ed, her boss, about Trish and Jim's conduct. Taxi driver Clive Lucas picks up Jim Atwood after his van breaks down, and he tells Jim he saw him with Trish outside the night of the party having an intense conversation. Jim forces him to pull over, chokes him and threatens him to keep quiet. Ed shows up at Jim's workshop and attacks him for cheating on Cath. Late at night, Ian sneaks into Trish's house. At the end of the episode, Mark attempts to commit suicide.
The dreaded transformation of Hetty King begins to appear in this episode. The Hetty from the first season would not have accepted Dimple's methods of teaching, let alone praise them. Dimple's charming demeanor would not have softened the first season Hetty.
(1) The Disney Channel version of this episode is entitled 'Facts and Fictions.' It's really a mystery why Disney would change the title, considering that 'Another Point of View' was more closely related to the theme.
The podcast is now available on most providers including Apple, Google, Spotify and Stitcher. However, you can also view it below or watch it on YouTube (provided below). If you subscribe on YouTube, make sure to hit the bell icon to the right and choose all notifications. That way you will automatically be notified as new episodes load.
Technical dance rehearsal at Valley Ranch with Kitty Carter during week 6 of training camp. Next is a Jay Johnson session where they have a veterans vs. rookies flag football game (with Terence Newman and Bradie James) that the veterans win, 14-7. There is a brief segment of Makenzi helping Sydney, and then the final segment of the episode is a week 6 practice at Valley Ranch, with two cuts, leaving the squad at 40.
The episode kicks off with the cameo photo shoot during week 7 of training camp. Then there is a private session at Valley Ranch with Justine teaching Melissa. Next, the candidates go to a USO troop send-off at the airport. Finally, there is a week 7 practice at Valley Ranch with Charlotte in attendance with two more cuts.
Episode 5Episode InformationAirdate17 September 2021Written byMawaan RizwanDirected byBen TaylorExecutive ProducerJamie CampbellLaurie NunnBen TaylorProduced byJon JenningsRun Time54 minutesEpisode GuidePreviousNextEpisode 4Episode 6Episode 5 is the fifth episode of the third season of Sex Education. It is the twenty-first episode of the series overall.
On this episode of Creatures of the Industry, Ralph invited Kevin Reynolds to have a conversation about his work in the industry and reflect of his union experiences since the WA resources boom in the mid-'70s. They also discuss strikes, blues, battles won, where collectivism is headed in this country, and much more.
Brian and Sarah are trying their best to make up for the longgap between the first and second episodes discussing Queen's1989 album The Miracle, so here's yet another episodeabout the album! However, this episode is serving more than onepurpose.
First, by talking about one song on its own, that leaves Brianand Sarah with three songs left to discuss on the fourth episode onThe Miracle, as well as the final reviews and ratings. Thesong up for discussion in this episode is "Rain Must Fall," whichfinds Brian and Sarah talking about the difference between "goodfake drums" and "bad fake drums," a famous poet, an Olympicathlete, and once again, plagiarism!
Second, this episode gives our hosts the chance to promote theupcoming Trivia Showdown episode, which depends a lot on you! Whilethe Quizmaster is an excellent emcee (although after last year, hisscoring methods may be somewhat suspect), he needs your help withcompiling questions for the game. Brian and Sarah provideinstructions in this episode on how to send in questions for theupcoming Trivia Showdown-- and you can always listen to pastepisodes to learn about the kinds of questions that have been sentin.
Brian and Sarah are your hosts for this look back at albums from the New Wave and Classic Rock genres-- albums which have earned a permanent spot in their record collection. The hosts start the discussion with a history of the album, followed by their personal history with it. Over the course of two episodes, they do a track-by-track review of the album and the videos that accompany the singles. They conclude by each giving the album a final review and rating of zero to 100 record adapters. Join Brian and Sarah in this fun look back at the hits-- along with some misses-- of the 70s and 80s!
Methods: We conducted a 3.5-year follow-up of a pragmatic, factorial, cluster-randomized controlled trial; 379 patients (20 family practices in the Netherlands) who visited their family physician for acute cough were enrolled in the trial and had follow-up data available (88% of original trial cohort). Main outcome measures were the average number of episodes of respiratory tract infections for which patients visited their family physician per patient per year (PPPY), and the percentage of the episodes for which patients were treated with antibiotics during follow-up.
Results: The mean number of episodes of respiratory tract infections during follow-up was 0.40 PPPY in the CRP test group and 0.56 PPPY in the no CRP test group (P = .12). In the communication skills training group, there was a mean of 0.36 PPPY episodes of respiratory tract infections, and in the no training group the mean was 0.57 PPPY (P = .09). During follow-up 30.7% of all episodes of respiratory tract infection were treated with antibiotics in the CRP test group compared with 35.7% in the no test group (P = .36). Family physicians trained in communication skills treated 26.3% of all episodes of respiratory tract infection with antibiotics compared with 39.1% treated by family physicians without training in communication skills (P = .02)
Conclusions: Family physicians' use of CRP point-of-care testing and/or training in enhanced communication skills did not significantly affect office visit rates related to respiratory tract infections. Patients who saw a family physician trained in enhanced communication skills were prescribed significantly fewer antibiotics during episodes of respiratory tract infection in the subsequent 3.5 years. 2b1af7f3a8