West Wing. What sort of annual fees would someone like Martin Sheen earn from syndication revenue? I recalll reading that the folks from Seinfeld were earning 7 figures annually. Anybody have any information on that topic?
It depends. Residuals are usually hashed out in contracts and this always depends on the actor and their representation. The number of times the episode runs changes the amount of residuals as well I believe. I think you get the most the first run and them the amount goes down after that. Sometimes the contract can be a complete buy out so much many that will be paid if the show is sold in syndicate.
State Bank of India
Syndicate Bank
Corporate Bank
Canara Bank
State Bank Of Baroda……..
I tried visiting the websites of these banks but got confused because so many rates were given……
It varies upon the period of the deposit..
for 1 year…
1. SBI – 9%
2. SB – 9%
3. CORP BANK – 9.5%
4. CB – 9%
5. SBB – 9.5%
Susan Estrich – Wed Jul 29, 3:00 am ET
Creators Syndicate –
You just have to see the picture of her: a girl on the verge, finding her style, raising her voice, about to embark on a life she could barely yet imagine. This summer she was supposed to volunteer helping homeless drug addicts on Skid Row. Instead, according to police, she was killed by one.
Her mother is a lawyer and law professor, her father a journalist. She was driving a Volvo.
Forgive me for identifying: When my daughter was her age, barely two years ago, she got an advance for her first novel, "Hancock Park," about a girl like Lily. Many of the girls at her school drove expensive, not to mention dangerous (in my book), cars. I smiled because the other used Volvo belonged to a girl whose mother is also a sensible lawyer, which is what I like to think I am. Like Lily’s mother.
A man abducted Lily across the street from her mother’s office in what was once the Bullocks Wilshire, which Southwestern Law School converted into classrooms, offices and an impressive library.
Lily called both of her parents to ask how she could withdraw money from an ATM with her credit card so she could buy shoes.
Her parents said she sounded rushed, not scared.
She was dead in her car before her parents got home from work.
The guy they picked up, with her car key and cell phone, was arrested because he was clearly a junkie who’d done something wrong. While being held on unrelated charges, 50-year-old parolee Charlie Samuel was tied to Lily’s murder two days later by fingerprints at the scene.
Some people (many of them formerly liberal) are screaming that he’s a repeat offender and parole violator who should’ve been locked up, demanding to know why he was out free, pretending to get drug rehab, when police knew he was a lowlife. (According to the police, he was leaving a clinic when he abducted Lily, and was drinking from a paper bag with a drug pipe in his pocket when he was arrested not even two hours later.)
Others (trying still to be liberal) respond that his record didn’t include anything remotely as violent, and that if every lowlife were locked up forever, there’d be no room for anyone else. It’s a hard one because a lot of these people knew Lily Burk and her parents.
The truth, for what it’s worth, is probably somewhere in between: What shows up on a person’s criminal record is generally the "bargained down for a guilty plea" version of what he’s actually done. The issue facing the system now is not who to hold longer, but who to let go. This guy, if the police are right, will be lucky to rot in hell. What we do with tens of thousands of others, one or more of whom could turn into him, depends on whether we’re willing to swallow hard and let out the white-collar scumbags who don’t threaten our kids in order to keep in the lowlifes who do.
But none of that will bring back a girl with a sparkle in her eye, who was on her way home on a Friday afternoon after picking up her mom’s exam papers.
Her parents, in a very graceful statement, asked people to enjoy every day. That must, of course, be the lesson. But the other one, the one that no parent can miss, is that we can’t protect our children. She drove away in her black Volvo, and she never came home. She called her parents, but she didn’t want to scare them.
May she rest in peace. May God grant comfort to her family.
I am very saddened by the chaotic nature we have to live in. This is just one of many stories about how we as parents are unable to protect our children due to the dirt scumbags that reside in our communities. Also, politicians & those involved in created programs for these people that only function is to waste taxpayers dollars. What more can you add?
to answer the above answerers, mid-wilshire is NOT a harsh area,Im from LA and i know that for a fact. and nor she was a prostitute that is what is so sad that under the circumstances that she was in which was NOT in any way endangering she still got killed WOW. There are alot of girls who are endangering there lives on the daily and nohting ever happens to them.(not that they deserve it) but you know what i mean.I feel really sad too. people should not answer if they dont know the facts therefore they dont know what there talking about. My prayers go out to her family.
you need to have 10 ribbons in TOTAL on your party pokemon. e.g. you can have 1 with 4 ribbons, 3 with 2 ribbons, and 2 with none
Right under Broadcast: Public, there is a new feature called Syndication. It is only on the videos I uploaded yesterday, not earlier videos. Some say Syndication : Completed, others say Syndication: Not started. Anybody know what that is or what it means? Thanks!
it makes copies of your video in different formats so it can be played on mobile devices.
I am very saddened by the chaotic nature we have to live in. This is just one of many stories about how we as parents are unable to protect our children due to the dirt scumbags that reside in our communities. Also, politicians & those involved in creating programs for these people that only function is to waste taxpayers dollars and destroy more lives. What more can you add?
Susan Estrich – Wed Jul 29, 3:00 am ET
Creators Syndicate –
You just have to see the picture of her: a girl on the verge, finding her style, raising her voice, about to embark on a life she could barely yet imagine. This summer she was supposed to volunteer helping homeless drug addicts on Skid Row. Instead, according to police, she was killed by one.
Her mother is a lawyer and law professor, her father a journalist. She was driving a Volvo.
Forgive me for identifying: When my daughter was her age, barely two years ago, she got an advance for her first novel, "Hancock Park," about a girl like Lily. Many of the girls at her school drove expensive, not to mention dangerous (in my book), cars. I smiled because the other used Volvo belonged to a girl whose mother is also a sensible lawyer, which is what I like to think I am. Like Lily’s mother.
A man abducted Lily across the street from her mother’s office in what was once the Bullocks Wilshire, which Southwestern Law School converted into classrooms, offices and an impressive library.
Lily called both of her parents to ask how she could withdraw money from an ATM with her credit card so she could buy shoes.
Her parents said she sounded rushed, not scared.
She was dead in her car before her parents got home from work.
The guy they picked up, with her car key and cell phone, was arrested because he was clearly a junkie who’d done something wrong. While being held on unrelated charges, 50-year-old parolee Charlie Samuel was tied to Lily’s murder two days later by fingerprints at the scene.
Some people (many of them formerly liberal) are screaming that he’s a repeat offender and parole violator who should’ve been locked up, demanding to know why he was out free, pretending to get drug rehab, when police knew he was a lowlife. (According to the police, he was leaving a clinic when he abducted Lily, and was drinking from a paper bag with a drug pipe in his pocket when he was arrested not even two hours later.)
Others (trying still to be liberal) respond that his record didn’t include anything remotely as violent, and that if every lowlife were locked up forever, there’d be no room for anyone else. It’s a hard one because a lot of these people knew Lily Burk and her parents.
The truth, for what it’s worth, is probably somewhere in between: What shows up on a person’s criminal record is generally the "bargained down for a guilty plea" version of what he’s actually done. The issue facing the system now is not who to hold longer, but who to let go. This guy, if the police are right, will be lucky to rot in hell. What we do with tens of thousands of others, one or more of whom could turn into him, depends on whether we’re willing to swallow hard and let out the white-collar scumbags who don’t threaten our kids in order to keep in the lowlifes who do.
But none of that will bring back a girl with a sparkle in her eye, who was on her way home on a Friday afternoon after picking up her mom’s exam papers.
Her parents, in a very graceful statement, asked people to enjoy every day. That must, of course, be the lesson. But the other one, the one that no parent can miss, is that we can’t protect our children. She drove away in her black Volvo, and she never came home. She called her parents, but she didn’t want to scare them.
May she rest in peace. May God grant comfort to her family.
I agree, scumbags should be locked up
My work’s are planning to start a lottery syndicate and have asked me to find out how to set up a contract to stop any arguments if in the unlikly event we win a large cash prize.
You can download a bit of software from camelots website that helps you run your syndicate – it includes a contract set up feature….
http://www.syndicatesareluckier.co.uk/application.php?form=luckysyndicates
You are close.
Go here:
http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/april2007/300407deathbedconfession.htm
Be sure and listen to the confession tape
OK, now know this: Kennedy issued executive order 11110 to reduce dependence on loans the Federal Reserve bank. He issued Silver certificates to avoid getting any more loans from the Federal reserve. Five months later he was shot to death.
Larry McDonald (a Georgia congressman) was fiercely anti Federal Reserve. He was shot down (with over 200 other passengers) by the Soviet Union in 1983. Footnote: The Rothschild banking family (England) financed the Communist revolution in 1917 AND they are major shareholders in the Federal Reserve Bank.
Louis T. McFadden was poisoned to death in 1936. He was making headway in congress to shut down the Federal Reserve Bank.
Now remember this: George Bush Sr. was once head of the CIA and when Ronald Reagan was shot in 1981 George W Bush’s brother was scheduled to have dinner with Hinckley’s brother the day after the assassination attempt. With 300,000,000 people in the US what are the chances of the Bush family knowing the Hinckley family on pure chance?
Research what I’ve told you and then you’ll be ready for this:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=5420753830426590918&q=aaron+cancer+jones&total=7&start=0&num=100&so=0&type=search&plindex=0
i didnt registered my name properly. But i had properly filled the application form will there be any problem?
NO,not a problem,they don’t match the numebrs usually