Joker

Joker may refer to:

Common meanings

  • Joker (playing card)
  • Jester, a person employed to tell jokes and provide entertainment
  • Fictional characters

    In print

  • Joker (comics), DC comics villain who is Batman's archenemy
  • The Joker (comic book), a comic book featuring the character that ran 1975–1976
  • Joker (graphic novel), featuring the character
  • Joker (comic strip), featured in the British anthology comics Knockout, Whizzer and Chips, and Buster
  • Joker, a person with a harmful mutation in the Wild Cards shared science fiction universe
  • Joe Carpenter or "Mr. Joker", in the Japanese novel series Read or Die
  • Jokers, a race of super-beings in Terry Pratchett's novel The Dark Side of the Sun
  • Joker, in the novel The Short-Timers, the basis for Full Metal Jacket
  • In film and television

  • The Joker (The Dark Knight), in the film The Dark Knight, played by Heath Ledger
  • Joker (Flame of Recca), from the manga series Flame of Recca
  • Joker (playing card)

    The Joker is a playing card found in most modern card decks, as an addition to the standard four suits (clubs, diamonds, hearts and spades). Originating in the United States during its civil war, the card is unique in that it lacks an industry-wide standard appearance. Created as a trump card for Euchre, it has since been adopted into many other card games where it may function as a wild card.

    Origin

    In the game of Euchre, the highest trump card is the Jack of the trump suit, called the right bower (from the German Bauer); the second-highest trump, the left bower, is the Jack of the suit of the same color as trumps. Around 1860, American Euchre players may have devised a higher trump, the "Best Bower", out of a blank card.

    Samuel Hart is credited with printing the first illustrated "Best Bower" card in 1863 with his "Imperial Bower". Best Bower-type jokers continued to be produced well into the 20th-century. Cards labelled "Joker" began appearing around the late 1860s with some depicting clowns and jesters. It is believed that the term "Joker" comes from Juker or Juckerspiel, the original German spelling of Euchre. One British manufacturer, Charles Goodall, was manufacturing packs with Jokers for the American market in 1871. The first joker for the domestic British market was sold in 1874.

    Joker (Anna Rossinelli song)

    "Joker" is a song performed by Swiss singer Anna Rossinelli from her debut studio album Bon Voyage. The single was released on 14 October 2011 as a digital download in Switzerland. The song was written by Phillipa Alexander, Ellie Wyatt, Alex Ball, Vicky Nolan and produced by Fred Herrmann. It's a cover of "The Joker" by Kato, a Belgian artist, it was her first single after her participation at Idols 2011. The single was released in June 2011

    Track listing

    Credits and personnel

  • Lead vocals – Anna Rossinelli
  • Producer – Fred Herrmann
  • Lyrics – Phillipa Alexander, Ellie Wyatt, Alex Ball, Vicky Nolan
  • Label: Universal Music
  • Release history

    References

    External links

  • Official website
  • Anna Rossinelli on Facebook
  • Anna Rossinelli on Twitter

  • List of Batman television series characters

    The following is an overview of the characters who appeared in the 1966–1968 live-action Batman television series.

    Series regulars

    Supporting characters

    Recurring enemies

    Additional characters

    Additional enemies

    "Batclimb" cameos

    Aside from the super-criminals, another coveted spot was the Batclimb Cameo. In 14 episodes of the first two seasons and the 1966 film, a window would be opened by a celebrity for a short conversation as the Dynamic Duo scaled a building using Batarangs and Bat-ropes. The scenes were actually filmed on a horizontal surface with the camera rotated by 90 degrees to give the illusion that the Duo were on a vertical wall. Their capes were held up by strings (usually off-camera, but on occasion visible). The Batclimb cameo scenes were discontinued for the third season.

  • Ted Cassidy as Lurch from The Addams Family – Appeared in "The Penguin's Jest".
  • Dick Clark – Appeared in "Shoot a Crooked Arrow".
  • Bill Dana as José Jiménez from The Bill Dana Show – Appeared in "The Yegg Foes in Gotham".
  • Martha Wayne

    Martha Wayne (née Martha Kane) is a fictional character of the Batman series of comic books, published by DC Comics. She is Bruce Wayne's mother and Dr. Thomas Wayne's wife. When she and her husband are murdered during a holdup, her son swears to avenge their deaths by fighting crime and fulfills this as Batman.

    Background

    Martha Wayne first appeared in Detective Comics #33 (November 1939) in a story by Bob Kane and Bill Finger which detailed the origin of Batman. Initially little more than a cipher whose death inspired her heroic son, later comics would expand upon her history.

    Born Martha Kane (a maiden name given in homage to co-creator Bob Kane), Martha was the heir to the Kane Chemical fortune and a member of one of Gotham City's wealthiest families. It has not been revealed whether she has any connection to the other prominent Kanes of Gotham, Kathy Kane (Batwoman) or Bette Kane (Flamebird). Despite her Irish-Catholic background, in her youth, Martha had a reputation as a notorious party girl, socialite, and debutante, frequenting all the most prestigious country clubs, night clubs, and soirees. She also had a developed social conscience and often used her family's wealth and status to champion causes and charities.

    Suikoden III

    Suikoden III (Japanese: 幻想水滸伝III Hepburn: Gensō Suikoden Surī)  (listen)  is a role-playing video game developed and published by Konami for the Sony PlayStation 2 video game console, and the third installment in the Suikoden video game series. It was released in 2002 in Japan and North America, with a manga adaption published in 2004.

    Like other games in the series, Suikoden III features an intricate, detailed setting. The game's story is presented through the "Trinity Sight System"; rather than having only one "hero", the plot is explored through three different viewpoints, allowing events to be seen from multiple sides. There are three struggling factions in Suikoden III, each with their own divisions and politics, and there is no unambiguous "right" side. Hugo of the Karaya Clan is a Grasslander, Chris Lightfellow is a Knight of the merchant nation of Zexen, and Geddoe is a member of the Harmonian Southern Frontier Defense Force, keeping watch for the huge nation of Harmonia on the Grasslands area.

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