Boo

Boo is an onomatopoeic word for a loud, startling sound, as an exclamation intended to scare, or as a call of derision (see booing).

Boo or BOO may also refer to:

Places

  • Boo, Ghana, a town in Lawra District in the Upper West Region
  • Boo (Aller), Asturias, Spain, a parish
  • Boo, Guinea, in Nzérékoré Prefecture
  • Boo Islands, West Papua, Indonesia
  • Boo, Sweden, in Stockholm County
  • People

  • Boo (name), a list of people with the given name, nickname or surname
  • Betty Boo (born 1970), English singer, songwriter and pop rapper Alison Moira Clarkson
  • Gangsta Boo (born 1979), American rapper
  • Sabrian "Boo" Sledge, half of the American hip hop duo Boo & Gotti
  • Characters

  • Boo Radley, in the novel To Kill a Mockingbird and its adaptations
  • Boo (character), a ghost character in the Mario series
  • Majin Boo, an anime and manga character in Dragon Ball
  • Boo, a human baby girl in the animated film Monsters, Inc.
  • Boo, a hamster belonging to Minsc in Baldur's Gate, and a character in Megatokyo
  • Boo, a character in the manga and anime Crayon Shin-chan
  • Frasier (season 11)

    The 11th and final season of the American sitcom television series Frasier originally aired from September 23, 2003 to May 13, 2004 on NBC.

    On May 13, 2004 a special episode, "Analyzing the Laughter" (production code 263) was shown.

    Reception

    The season ranked 35th in the seasonal ratings and had an average viewership of 10.920 million viewers.

    List of episodes

    References

    Boo! (film)

    Boo! is a 1932 American Pre-Code comedy short film by Universal Pictures, directed and written by Albert DeMond.Boo! contains clips of famous horror films, such as The Cat Creeps (1930), Frankenstein (1931) and Nosferatu, eine Symphonie des Grauens (1922) and mocks them thoroughly.

    Even though this short was produced by Universal Studios, the makers decided not to use footage from the company's own version of Dracula, but instead to use footage from the German expressionist film Nosferatu directed by F. W. Murnau. The only surviving footage of The Cat Creeps -- otherwise considered a lost film -- are the clips included in Boo!

    Plot

    The film starts with a man (Morton Lowry) reading the novel Dracula . The narrator says that they are presenting their own formula for cheap entertainment, a nightmare. They say to eat a real lobster, not the kind they send to congress, have milk, and work up a chill. The man falls asleep.

    They then go to a cellar (edited from Nosferatu) where the caretaker Hutter (Gustav von Wagenheim) is making sure all the ghosts are locked up for the night. He sees a coffin. He wants to ask his name and how he feels. It's Dracula (Count Orlok, played by Max Schrek). The caretaker tries to leave, but he keeps coming back. He can't sleep so he sleeps in a hammock (now edited of Albert Venohr). You see Dracula, so the caretaker goes upstairs and returns with a hatchet (now edited of Wolfgang Heinz) and breaks Dracula's coffin. It hurts Dracula, causing him to get up. He then leaves, and sees if it was as close as he thought. He is scared, and Dracula sucks his blood, 'Gush, Gush'. Dracula then goes to sleep for 100 years, until congress does something about the depression.

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    Rock A Bye Bye

    by: Extreme

    If you could only hear
    The silent screams
    When you wake them up
    From their dreams
    Nothing is heard
    Not even a
    Even a
    Even a word
    Rock a bye baby
    On the tree top
    When the bough breaks
    The cradle will fall
    Rock rock rock a bye baby
    Rock rock rock bye bye
    And if they had
    Any chance at all
    You still can't hear
    Those voices that call
    And when the bough breaks
    The cradle will
    Cradle will




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