Adelante (Forward) was an anarchist weekly workers newspaper published from Santander, Spain 1902-1903. The first issue was published on May 1, 1902. The newspaper survived until the end of March 1903. Adelante was noted for its hostility towards the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party, expressed through the rivalry with the socialist organ La Voz del Pueblo. In total 42 issues of Adelante were published.
Telecinco announced in May 2006 that the fifth series of the Spanish version of the reality show Operación Triunfo based on the international series Star Academy was to be released in October 2006.
On July 25, 2006 Telecinco released a TV show called Operación Triunfo 2006: Otra Vez en Marcha. In the show sang more of ex-OT artists (Rosa, Soraya Arnelas, Sergio Rivero, Natalia, Beth,...) and present the new generation of artist to show in the new version.
The fifth series started on October 8, 2006, with 18 finalists, and continued until 26 January 2007. Two finalists had to leave and they did not enter the academy. The Official Song from the Show 2006 was "Adelante" from the Spanish singer Naiara Ruiz. Lorena won the series and was selected to sing in the second studio album from the winner of series 4 of Operación Triunfo, Sergio Rivero.
Participants in final classification order were:
Adelante ('Forward') was a socialist newspaper in Argentina, founded in April 1916 by young left wing dissidents of the Socialist Party.
The group behind Adelante upheld Marxist and internationalist principles, and opposed the reformist leadership of the party. Prominent members of the group were Augusto Kühn, Rodolfo Ghioldi, Victorio Codovilla, and the Chilean labour leader Luis Emilio Recabarren.
Ideal may refer to:
Ideal is a British dark comedy-drama, originally broadcast on TV channel BBC Three, created by Graham Duff and produced by BBC Comedy North and Baby Cow Productions. It stars Johnny Vegas as small-time cannabis dealer Moz.
It is set in Salford, Greater Manchester, chosen because Duff was familiar with the area having done many stand-up gigs there during his youth. Most of the series takes place in Moz's flat and revolves around the eclectic array of characters who visit Moz to buy cannabis, socialise or both.
The closing theme is "Song of the Oss" from the album Nuada: Music Inspired By the Film the Wicker Man composed by British band Candidate. The series also features a number of tracks by Californian hip hop group Ugly Duckling.
It was broadcast on BBC Three in the UK, on entertainment channel 3e in Ireland and on ABC2 in Australia.
First broadcast in 2005, seven series have been shown; the most recent ended on 30 June 2011.
After the seventh series aired, Ideal was cancelled by the BBC. Following the announcement, writer and creator Graham Duff wrote to fans: "As some of you may have heard, the BBC have decided against commissioning an 8th series of Ideal. The reason given was that the new channel controller wanted to make a clean sweep. It is a source of both pride and frustration that, at the point of cancellation, Ideal was attracting its biggest ever audiences, its highest profile guest stars and its best ever reviews. And the show is now being screened in more countries than ever before - from America to Finland and beyond."
Ideal is a play written by Ayn Rand. It follows Kay Gonda, a movie star suspected of murder, as she seeks support from various fans, most of whom disappoint her. Written in the 1930s, it was never produced or published during Rand's lifetime. Since her death it has since been published multiple times and produced twice, in 1989 and 2010.
Rand originally wrote the story as a novelette in 1934, and revised it to a stage play around 1936. The text of the play was first published in 1984 as part of The Early Ayn Rand, an anthology of Rand's previously unpublished fiction. It was re-published in 2005 in Three Plays, alongside her plays Night of January 16th and Think Twice.
On July 7, 2015, Penguin Random House published an edition featuring the novelette version of Ideal along with the play version.
In 1989, Michael Paxton staged the play at the Melrose Theater in Los Angeles, California. The production opened on October 13, 1989, and closed on November 19, 1989. A video of the production was released in 2004.