Private eye or Private Eye may refer to:
Private Eye is a fortnightly British satirical and current affairs magazine based in London, England, edited by Ian Hislop.
Since its first publication in 1961, Private Eye has been a prominent critic and lampooner of public figures and entities that it deems guilty of any of the sins of incompetence, inefficiency, corruption, pomposity or self-importance and it has established itself as a thorn in the side of the British establishment.
As of 2013, it is Britain's best-selling current affairs magazine, and such is its long-term popularity and impact that many recurring in-jokes from Private Eye have entered popular culture.
The forerunner of Private Eye was a school magazine, The Salopian, edited by Richard Ingrams, Willie Rushton, Christopher Booker and Paul Foot at Shrewsbury School in the mid-1950s. After National Service, Ingrams and Foot went as undergraduates to Oxford University, where they met their future collaborators Peter Usborne, Andrew Osmond,John Wells and Danae Brook, among others.
Private Eye is a video game produced and published by Activision and released in 1983 for the Atari 2600 video game system. Designed by Bob Whitehead, one of Activision's co-founders, Private Eye requires players to track down clues and recover items stolen by a master criminal, ultimately leading to his capture and arrest.
In Private Eye, players assume the role of Pierre Touché, a private investigator who has been assigned the task of capturing the criminal mastermind, Henri Le Fiend. Le Fiend is implicated in a number of crimes across the city, and the player must find the clues and the stolen property in order to successfully arrest Le Fiend.
The game consists of four separate cases. Using a specially-built Model A that can jump over obstacles, players must search the city for a specific clue to the crime and for the object stolen in the crime. Each item must then be returned to its point of origin; the clue is taken to a business to verify it came from there, and the stolen object is returned to its rightful owner. These items may be discovered in any order, but players may carry only one item at a time. When both items have been located and returned, then the player must locate and capture Le Fiend, and finally take him to jail, successfully closing the case.
EP1 or EP 1 may refer to:
EP 1 (stylized as EP †) is the debut EP by the American musical group Crosses. The EP was recorded at Airport Studios in Los Angeles and self-released on August 2, 2011 in digital format. A low-quality version was made available for free, with higher-quality file types available for US $5. In November 2011, Crosses released a limited edition of the EP, including a colored vinyl 10", USB drive with remixes, and band merchandise.
Note: All tracks on the EP have a † in their title - generally substituting all t's for the † symbol; "Cross" is simply labelled "†".
Crosses
Additional musicians
Production and artwork
EP 1 Odd Year & The Reverb Junkie is the first collaborative EP release by the duo Odd Year (David Gonzalez) and The Reverb Junkie (Michelle Chamuel). It was released in September 2012. The duo had previously released a single titled "Might Not Happen" in January 2012.
a better mistake
sign on the clock
taller grandfather
wish he could stop
waving her little flag
nobody turns
they must get tired of saying
it’s your imagination
torn up daydream
what’s the point in trying
silent count
those eyes are gonna rust
under the lesson lights
no one to wind her right
it’s never time to leave
invisible side is showing
nothing to cover up her mind
it’s just a pebble in a river
he makes her let them practice on her
it’s just a sign off in the distance
afraid they’re never gonna fall asleep
room with the other girls
eyes closed heads to the wall
stay on our side
we’re not allowed to see them
he’s just a lie they’re trying to make us believe in