(The) Third degree or 3rd degree may refer to:
3rd Degree is an American game show that aired in syndication from September 11, 1989 to June 8, 1990 (with repeats airing until September 7). The series was hosted by Bert Convy, while Bob Hilton served as announcer. It was the final game show hosted by Convy (although he was slated to host the 1990 edition of Match Game for ABC), who died thirteen months after the series was cancelled.
The show was produced by Burt & Bert Productions, Kline & Friends, in association with Lorimar Television, and distributed by Warner Bros. Television. The series was similar to the Goodson-Todman panel games What's My Line? and Make the Connection. 3rd Degree was taped at Studio 31 at CBS Television City in Hollywood.
A panel of four celebrities who were split into two teams (two men, two women) faced a team of two contestants who have a special relationship between them. Two rounds were played for each civilian team; in each round, each team of celebrities had a limited time to question the contestants (or give them "the third degree", hence the name of the show). In the first round, each team of celebrities had one minute to question the contestants, and in the second round, the time was cut to 30 seconds.
3rd Degree is a crime novel written by James Patterson and Andrew Gross. It is the third novel in the Women's Murder Club Series, And the sequel to 2nd Chance. The book was published on March 1, 2004.
In this installment after a house with a family home blows up and Lindsay rushes in to save whoever may have survived the blast, a group of killers known as August Spies vow to kill every three days. They target various political figures time and time again. Lindsay Boxer, with the San Francisco PD, Claire Washburn, the Medical Examiner, Cindy Thomas, a Chronicle Reporter who recently broke up with her pastor boyfriend from the previous novel, and Jill Bernhardt an Assistant District Attorney who is revealed to have been a victim of spousal abuse for a while, dive into the case. The case takes a deadly turn when Jill is murdered.
Oddly enough this actually leads the remaining three ladies to find a tie-in to a case that Jill's father prosecuted and to a cover up years old that has launched this terrorist action.
Tell me is the title of an advertisement calling for universal suffrage in Hong Kong. It ran once as a full page ad on the front page of most Hong Kong newspapers on 28 October 2005, and inspired many other people and groups in Hong Kong to run advertisements supporting democracy, in response to the government's reform proposal which ruled out universal suffrage in 2007 and 2008 elections.
It was written in white text on a dark background. It also included a picture of an hourglass. About HK$200,000 ($25,600) was spent in placing the ads. In 2007, two more ads were placed costing about HK$100,000. The old man quoted in the ad worked in the property industry and is now retired. Legislator James To assisted him in designing and placing the advertisements.
"Tell Me!" was the Icelandic entry in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000, performed in English by August & Telma. An Icelandic version was recorded but not released.
The song is an up-tempo duet, with the singers confessing their love for one another and planning to leave where they are in order to "be together all the time". The title comes from the chorus, where both singers ask each other to "tell me" how much they love each other.
It was performed twelfth on the night, following Cyprus' Voice with "Nomiza" and preceding Spain's Serafín Zubiri with "Colgado de un sueño". At the close of voting, it had received 45 points, placing 12th in a field of 24.
The song was succeeded as Icelandic representative at the 2001 contest by Two Tricky with "Angel".
Tell Me may refer to:
I done lost all my money and I'm about to lose my mind
Yeah and yeah!
I done lost all my money and I'm about to lose my mind
Yes I am!
And it seems like my baby is tryin' to leave poor me behind
Yes it do!
But all women used to holler "here comes a good sweet loving man"
Yeah they did!
All the women used to holler "here comes a good sweet loving man"
Yeah they did!
And now when they see me, they won't even wave a hand
No they don't!
Let me tell you now whoah, yeah, how could this happen to me?
Yeah and yeah!
I'm broke and I'm lonely and my heart's in misery
Yes it is!
Yeah!
[Instrumental]
If I ever get some money and get back on my feet again
Yeah and yeah!
If I ever get some money and get back on my feet again
Yeah and yeah!
I'm going back down to Texas to wave them off, these chicks and friends
Yes I am!
Let me tell you now whoah, yeah, how could this happen to me?
Yeah and yeah!
I'm broke and I'm lonely and my heart's in misery
Yes it is!
You know I'm broke and lonely now
My heart's in misery
Hey hey
Hey now child
Oh, I'm broke and lonely
My heart's in misery
Yeah, yeah...
Yeah... talkin' 'bout misery
Yeah...
I'm broke and lonely...
Yes I am
I'm broke and lonely now
My heart's in misery
I'm just lonely...