User:Lady Aleena/Big fake companies

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Finder-Spyder[edit]

Finder-Spyder is a fictional brand of Web search engine that appears in numerous, otherwise unaffiliated television shows, used in the same manner as the fictitious 555 telephone number in TV and film.[1][2] Its graphic appearance varies, at times bearing a similarity to Google.[1] It has been called "an unofficial, open source stand-in for Google and its competitors" (used as a legality-free alternative to a brand-name product),[1] and "the most popular search engine in the TV universe."[3] Finder-Spyder is a regular top 10 pick in "best fictional brand" lists by various online media, along with Oceanic Airlines, Morley cigarettes, Acme Corporation, and others.[4][5][6]

Finder-Spyder offers search engines for Web, images, news, forums, and blogs, also, Phone Trace, a for-a-fee reverse phone number lookup tool.[7]

Appearances[edit]

Morley[edit]

Morley is a fictional brand of cigarette that has appeared in various television shows, films, and video games that otherwise have no connection to each other. The iconic, fictional brand packaging resembles the actual, original Marlboro brand box. The name Morley is a play on the nickname for Marlboro cigarettes, "Marleys."[8] Morleys appear at least as far back as 1960, in Alfred Hitchcock's film, Psycho. There is also a Morley Lights version, in a gold and white package (similar to Marlboro Lights), marked "Lights."[9]

Appearances[edit]

Morleys have appeared primarily in TV shows, and at times in movies, music videos, and other media, as both a prop and a plot element.[10]

Film[edit]

  • 200 Cigarettes (1999): In this comedy, Lucy, played by Courtney Love, presents a block of Morley cigarettes to Kevin, played by Paul Rudd.
  • Brooklyn Rules (2007): The three boys find a dead body in a convertible around the five-minute mark; one of the boys steals a pack of Morley off the dash of the vehicle.
  • Definitely, Maybe (2008): In 1992, Will Hayes, played by Ryan Reynolds, buys Morleys when he arrives in New York City for $3.20, and he complains that in Wisconsin they cost $2.60.
  • Epicenter (2000): At the beginning of the movie, the character Nick Constantine has a pack of Morleys in his briefcase.
  • Freddy Got Fingered (2001): Gord, played by Tom Green, can be seen smoking a pack of Morleys in one scene.[specify]
  • Gun Shy (2000): In a meeting between the police, the character Charley has a box of Morley cigarettes in front of him on the conference table.
  • The House on Greenapple Road (1970): A character steals a pack of Morley cigarettes from a desk at the police station.
  • Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead (2008): Rusty Nail, played by Mark Gibbon, is smoking Morley cigarettes as he purchases them in the opening scene in the shop.
  • Murderer's Row (1966): Matt Helm uses a dart in a cigarette to take down a guard. He leaves the now empty pack of Morley cigarettes on the guard, showing the warning about smoking possibly being dangerous to your health.
  • Murder in the First (1995): Defense Attorney James Stamphill appears smoking Morleys while laying down and speaking into a primitive tape recorder, dictating notes about the case. The pack of Morleys shown is an old-fashioned design (based on the 1930s setting of the movie), unlike the modern-looking packs of Morleys more frequently seen.
  • Platoon (1986): Morleys are smoked by American soldiers.[11][example needed]
  • Prozac Nation (2001): The character played by Christina Ricci smokes Morley cigarettes in the film version of Elizabeth Wurtzel's autobiographical Prozac Nation. Ricci plays a young writer who occasionally uses the empty cigarette packs as scrap paper.
  • Psycho (1960): At the end of the film, psychiatrist Dr. Fred Richman, played by Simon Oakland, tells the story of what really happened and shakes a cigarette out of a pack of Morleys. This film was released Jun 16, 1960 and is currently the earliest known sighting of the Morley brand.[citation needed]
  • S. Darko (2009): The boy carries a Morley pack in his left sleeve.
  • Spy Game (2001)[example needed]
  • The Tenants (2005)[example needed]
  • Thirteen (2003)[example needed]
  • The Traveler (2010)[example needed]
  • The World's End (2013): Gary smokes Morleys throughout the film, best seen after the fight scene against the twins.

Television[edit]

  • 24 "Day 8: 9:00 p.m. – 10:00 p.m." (25 Jan 2010): Jack Bauer poses as a German buyer and smokes a Morley Light cigarette.
  • American Horror Story "Birth" (14 Dec 2011): Violet, played by Taissa Farmiga, is seen with a pack of Morley Lights at the kitchen table.
  • The Americans "Pilot" (30 Jan 2013): A background extra is smoking a Morley regular red pack cigarette.
  • Becker "Santa On Ice" (13 Dec 1999): Becker smokes a Light Morley cigarette.
  • Breaking Bad: Morleys are smoked in the final season by several characters.[specify]
  • Beverly Hills, 90210 "The Back Story" (16 Sep 1992): Brenda Walsh returns from Paris with a smoking habit. Her parents find out when a pack of Morleys falls out of her purse.[specify]
  • Buffy the Vampire Slayer "School Hard" (29 Sep 1997): Spike, played by James Marsters, smokes Morley cigarettes.[12][specify]
  • Burn Notice
    • "Scatter Point" (7 Aug 2008): The main character Michael is seen scattering cigarette butts outside a rooftop door and putting an empty pack of Morleys in the rooftop doorjamb.
    • "Fearless Leader" (25 Jun 2009): He bums a pack of Morleys.
    • "Blind Spot" (19 Aug 2010): Maddie is seen throwing a carton of Morleys into a suitcase as she packs for a trip.
    • "Square One" (21 Jul 2011): Jesse and Fiona are posing as crooked cops and extort, along with the security tapes, a carton of Morleys from a bodega.
    • "Reckoning" (12 Sep 2013): Maddie smokes her final Morley before James Kendrick's men burst into the house she and Jesse were hiding in, before she blows herself and them up.
  • Californication: Hank, played by David Duchovny, often smokes Morley cigarettes and can be plainly seen in many episodes. This is an inside joke that harkens back to Duchovny's days on The X-Files in which the Cigarette Smoking Man usually chain-smoked this brand.[citation needed]
  • Cold Case
    • "The Plan" (2 May 2004): Jerry smokes Morleys, and a pack is seen during an interrogation scene when Detective Nick Vera removes a cigarette from Jerry's hand that has burned down to his fingers.
    • "The Sleepover" (7 Nov 2004): Tiffany smokes Morleys (light brown pack instead of the traditional red) when questioned by Detective Valens.
  • Criminal Minds "North Mammon" (1 Nov 2006): DNA found on Morley cigarette butts leads the FBI team to suspect a soccer coach, who smokes Morleys, of stalking one of his star female players. The pack of cigarettes the coach holds is actually a Marlboro pack and not a fictional Morley pack.
  • CSI: NY "Boo" (31 Oct 2007): A smoked Morley cigarette is found in a voodoo doll at a crime scene.
  • The Dick Van Dyke Show "Sally is a Girl" (19 Dec 1961): Pickles brings Richie a box of Morley chocolate cigarettes.
  • ER "Beyond Repair" (10 Jan 2002): While searching his daughter Rachel's room, Dr. Mark Green, played by Anthony Edwards, discovers a pack of Morleys with a condom inside.
  • Everybody Hates Chris "Everybody Hates Playboy" (27 Apr 2006): A carton of Morleys is sold out of the back of a car.
  • Frasier "Morning Becomes Entertainment" (6 Apr 2000): Bebe pulls a pack of Morleys out of her purse and asks Frasier if he minds.
  • Friends "The One Where Rachel Smokes" (8 Apr 1999): Chandler can be seen holding a pack of these.
  • Heroes "One of Us, One of Them" (29 Sep 2008): Claire Bennet's biological mother, Meredith, tries to light a Morley in the Bennet home before Sandra Bennet asks her not to smoke in the house.
  • Jake 2.0: A terrorist disguises powerful explosives as a pack of Morley cigarettes and demonstrates its incredible power by exploding a piece of swamp in the Philippines.[specify]
  • Judging Amy "Can They Do That With Vegetables?" (5 Feb 2002): A teen is suing Morley company for causing his emphysema.
  • Justified "Riverbrook" (23 Mar 2010): A group of prison escapees rob a convenience store. One discharges a shotgun in the store, blasting a rack of cartons of Morley cigarettes.
  • Killer Instinct "Game Over" (11 Nov 2005): Morley cigarettes appear in the desk of Lt. Matt Cavanaugh, played by Chi McBride.
  • Kingdom "Please Refrain from Crying" (12 Nov 2014): Lisa Prince, played by Kiele Sanchez, is seen holding a pack of Morley cigarettes outside a roadside dinner that her and Ryan Wheeler, played by Matt Lauria, stop at after visiting his parents.
  • Lost "LA X" (2 Feb 2010): In the Flash Sideways, Rose Nadler is seen on the plane clutching a magazine with an ad for Morley cigarettes.
  • The L Word
    • "Lap Dance" (27 Feb 2005): Bette and Shane are seen smoking from a pack of Morley cigarettes whilst sitting on Bette's porch.
    • "Lunar Cycle" (16 Mar 2008): A pack of Morley cigarettes is visible on the coffee table when Shane and Jenny are lying on the sofa together.
  • Malcolm in the Middle:
    • "Stock Car Races" (2 Apr 2000): A pack of Morley cigarettes is one of the things found hidden by Malcolm's mother.
    • "Future Malcolm" (4 May 2003): Malcolm plays chess with Leonard, played by Jason Alexander. Leonard tries to pay off his debts with a pack of Morleys.
  • Mannix "All Around the Money Tree" (22 Feb 1969): Joe Mannix opens a suitcase to discover a couple packs of Morleys—in white packs.
  • Medium:
  • The Middle "The Map" (11 Jan 2012): Frances brings Aunt Edie a carton of Morley cigarettes.
  • Millennium "The Time Is Now" (15 May 1998): Peter Watts discovers a Morley stub in the mysterious Millennium Group's basement as a nod to the Cigarette Smoking Man from The X-Files.[13] Chris Carter created both series.
  • Mission: Impossible:
    • "Operation 'Heart'" (22 Oct 1967): Barbara Bain's character can be seen removing a pack from a table along with a handkerchief (ca 20 mins in).
    • Morleys appear in the original television series, and several characters can be seen with them.
  • Naked City "Tombstone for a Derelict" (5 Apr 1961): Four young men led by Baldwin Larne, played by Robert Redford, surround a derelict on a lonely street. Larne offers him a cigarette, and, as the derelict turns to get a light from one of Larne's companions, Larne stabs the derelict in the back, dead, and tosses the cigarette pack on the body. Detective Flint, played by Paul Burke, and company arrive on the scene of the crime to investigate, and the pack of cigarettes is shown close up to be the Morley brand, a clue. This early Morley cigarettes black-and-white appearances shows a cigarette pack with an Etruscan horse image as the brand icon, and the first and last letters of "Morley" in lower case, and the letters in between in upper case.[citation needed]
  • Nash Bridges "Power Play" (16 Apr 1999): Morleys appear on a desk in a criminal's house.
  • New Amsterdam "Love Hurts" (14 Apr 2008): A suspect in an interrogation room is about to light a Morley. John Amsterdam takes it from him and says, "No smoking."
  • Orange Is the New Black "Tall Men with Feelings" (11 Jul 2013): Pornstache pulls a Morleys from his pocket and tries to light the butt.
  • The Outer Limits
    • "Falling Star" (30 Jun 1995): Terry McCammon, while possessed by a time traveler, tosses a pack of Morleys onto a bedstand.
    • "A New Life" (30 Mar 2001): Jacob tries to smuggle two cartons of Morleys onto the bus.
  • Prison Break "Bolshoi Booze" (11 Nov 2006): T-Bag picks up a pack of Morleys from a bag in Geary's apartment.
  • Pushing Daisies "Bad Habits" (15 Oct 2008): A carton of Morleys can be seen in the cabinet full of contraband in Sister Maria Christina's room.
  • Reaper "The Devil and Sam Oliver" (26 May 2009): Mary Pat, the greeter at the Work Bench, holds up a pack of Morleys before she steps outside to have a smoke next to the LP gas tanks.
  • Saving Grace "It's a Fierce, White-Hot, Mighty Love" (4 Aug 2008): the main character, Grace, is given a Morley by a suspect as she's investigating him.
  • Shameless:
  • Seinfeld "The Invitations" (16 May 1996): George Costanza smokes a Morley in an attempt to appear off-putting to his fiancee, Susan Ross, in hopes that she will call off their upcoming wedding.
  • Sordid Lives: The Series "Pills, Poison and Penises" (6 Aug 208): Morley brand cigarettes are advertised on a sign at the convenience store where Vera works.
  • Space: Above and Beyond "Ray Butts" (22 Oct 1995): The main character, Ray Butts, has a pack of Morleys at the beginning of the episode.
  • Special Unit 2 "The Grain" (3 Oct 2001): A housewife, under the influence of the Sandman, robs a convenience store, demanding all the cash and a pack of Morleys.
  • The Strain "The Third Rail" (21 Sep 2014): Mariela Martinez throws down an empty pack of Morley Lights. Later, Zach Goodweather finds Morleys (in green-and-white packaging) on the floor of a looted grocery store, and picks up two packs for Mariela.
  • That '70s Show "Eric Gets Suspended" (30 Nov 1999): Red Forman tells Eric Forman to smoke an entire pack of Morleys after he gets caught with a cigarette at school.
  • The Twilight Zone:
  • Up All Night "I Can't Quit You" (6 Dec 2012): Chris struggles to resist buying a pack of cigarettes at a convenience store, where Morleys are visible behind the counter.
  • United States of Tara pilot (18 Jan 2009): Tara has pack or Morleys in the glove box after speeding away from school.
  • The Walking Dead:
    • "Save the Last One" (30 Oct 2011): Dale contemplates smoking a cigarette while standing on the roof of his RV.
    • "Consumed" (16 Nov 2014): Daryl finds a carton of Morley Lights soft packs on the floor next to Noah, who is trapped under a bookshelf.
    • "JSS" (18 Oct 2015): Carol finds a pack near a deceased community member, who she had previously called out for smoking, and picks it up as if to smoke one, but does not.
    • Daryl smokes Morley cigarettes, along with other group members, Merle Dixon and Abraham Ford.[example needed]
  • Warehouse 13 "The Ones You Love" (24 Sep 2012): Mrs. Frederic and Steve Jinks enter The Library, a secret room in the Vatican. There is a pack of Morley cigarettes on the table.
  • Weeds "The Brick Dance" (27 Aug 2007): Conrad asks Heylia about the Morleys that she is smoking, that she had not smoked for years.
  • The X-Files (16 Apr 2000): The Cigarette Smoking Man, played by William B. Davis, smokes this fictional brand,[14] as does Agent Monica Reyes.[15] The X-Files is probably the most well known use of Morley cigarettes.[16] On the season seven episode "Brand X", Mulder and Scully visit Morley Tobacco's headquarters after one of the employees is murdered; the company is described as a multibillion dollar global corporation.[10]

Videogames[edit]

  • Gone Home: A pack can be found on the top shelf of Sam's locker.
  • System Shock 2: Packs of Morley cigarettes are an item within the game; when smoked, they cause the player character to lose health.

Other media[edit]

  • "Because I Got High" Positive Remix by Afroman: In this music video, a man sitting on a motorized couch is seen smoking and holding a pack of Morleys before he smokes a joint, throws the cigarette behind him, and drops the pack because he got high.
  • Broken Saints: The character Raimi buys a pack of Morley cigarettes in this online cartoon. William B. Davis of The X-Files is a member of the voice cast, but Brooke Burgess, creator of Broken Saints, confirmed that the Morley cigarettes were in the original series "WELL before Bill signed on — but he liked the nod, none-the-less."[citation needed]
  • Sherbet (American comic book): In the short story, "Milk," the eponymous detective, Sherbet Lock, reveals that both she and the missing child Belinda Darwin favor Morley cigarettes.

Oceanic Airlines[edit]

Oceanic Airlines (less frequently, Oceanic Airways) is the name of a fictional airline used in several films, television programs, and comic books; at times in works that feature plane crashes and other aviation disasters, with which a real airline would prefer not to be associated.[citation needed]


The brand is used prominently in the TV series, Lost, where Oceanic Airlines is featured branded with a highly stylized logo depicting an Australian Aboriginal dot painting that resembles a nazar, a bullseye, an island, or an "O". The show's fictional storyline begins with the crash of an airline flight called Oceanic Flight 815.

Airlines with this name have also been featured in other media, starting as early as the 1960s. Before Lost, the most prominent use of Oceanic Airways was in the 1996 film Executive Decision. The film's producers shot extensive footage of two actual Boeing 747s with Oceanic Airways logo and livery (but not the same logo used later on Lost). This stock footage has been reused in several films and television programs, spreading the Oceanic Airlines brand across various otherwise unrelated fictional universes.

Appearances[edit]

The following sources feature an airline called Oceanic Airlines.

Lost[edit]

Oceanic Airlines is a central plot element in the TV series, Lost. The show explores the aftermath of the crash of Oceanic Flight 815 (a Lockheed 1011 was used to create the crash, but the plane in-universe is stated as a Boeing 777[citation needed]) from Sydney to Los Angeles. The producers of Lost also created a now defunct website for the fictional airline, including clues and references to the show's plot.[citation needed] In flashforwards, a group of the characters that survive the crash are nicknamed the "Oceanic Six" (Hurley, Kate, Jack, Sayid, Sun, and Aaron). In Jan 2008, viral marketing billboards for Oceanic Airlines were placed by ABC in various large cities around the world as part of the Find 815 alternate reality game.[citation needed] Fictitious TV advertisements for the company also aired on ABC and the internet, including one advertisement that apparently airs in an alternate universe where flight 815 did not crash and Oceanic has a "perfect safety record".[citation needed]

Other media[edit]

Apps and Internet[edit]
Comics[edit]
Film[edit]
  • Code 11–14 (2003 television movie): an FBI agent searches for a murderer aboard Oceanic Flight 816, a Boeing 747SP bound for Los Angeles from Sydney.[17]
  • For Love of the Game (1999): An Oceanic flight is announced over the PA system in the airport lounge near the end of the movie.
  • Nowhere to Land (2000 television movie): A Boeing 747–200 from Sydney to LAX flying with a bomb programmed to detonate one hour prior to landing.[18]
  • Survivor (2015): A flight from Heathrow, London to Chicago carried out by Oceanic Airlines.
Radio[edit]
  • Cabin Pressure: In the Christmas special "Molokai" (broadcast 25 Dec 2010), first officer Richardson accidentally wishes a Shinto-Buddhist captain of an Oceanic flight a merry Christmas.
Television[edit]
Videogames[edit]
  • Dead Island (2011): After the first boss fight, the player hears a radio dispatch from Oceanic Flight 1012 stating that the plane will land in the jungle. When the player gets to the roof of the building, they can actually see the plane pass by the coast as it prepares to crash in the jungle. The plane has also broken into 3 parts (cockpit, midsection and tail), as did Oceanic 815.
  • The Wolf Among Us (2013): An Oceanic Airlines advertisement is displayed on the roof of a taxi.

Reused footage[edit]

In Executive Decision (1996 film), Oceanic Flight 343 from Athens to Washington, D.C. was hijacked by an Islamic terrorist. Stock footage from Executive Decision was reused in the following:

List of fictional Oceanic Airlines flights[edit]

Flight number Incident description Occurrence Aircraft used
1097 Carrying money for the Federal Reserve Bank. White Collar: 06.05 "Whack-A-Mole"
1012 Crashed onto the island of Banoi during a localized zombie apocalypse. Dead Island
816 Serial killer pursued by FBI agent on Boeing 747SP. Code 11-14 Boeing 747SP
815 Explosive decompression caused by electromagnetic pulse. Lost Boeing 777, Lockheed L-1011 used as prop wreckage.[25]
815 Shot down by surface-to-air missile. Chuck: 01.02 "Chuck versus the Helicopter" around 06:55
762 Forced landing caused by lightning strike. Category 6: Day of Destruction Boeing 747-400
762 Nerve agent attack threatened by mental illness sufferer. Nowhere to Land Boeing 747-200
456 First officer murdered in-flight and aircrew members afflicted by illness. Diagnosis: Murder: 04.23 "Murder in the Air"
408 Brought down by magical storm over Canada. Champions Online
343 Skyjacking by Islamic terrorists; aircraft retaken in-flight by special forces. Executive Decision Two aircraft used: Boeing 747-200 and Boeing 747-100
105 Skyjacking by North Korean extremists; aircraft retaken in-flight by JAG personnel. JAG: 05.18 "The Bridge at Kang So Ri"
017 Aircraft ditched in the Atlantic Ocean, 80 miles south of Miami, Florida. Flipper: 02.07 "The Ditching" Douglas DC-3
009 [26] Out to Sea
22 An example reminder for Gmail Inbox users, from SFO-JFK on Dec 4, at 8:00 AM. Gmail Inbox
57 The crew must solve an air marshal's murder on a NYC-London flight with the help of a mystery writer and his daughter. Castle: 07.21 "In Plane Sight" Boeing 747, possibly the -200 variant

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Jay Garmon (16 Mar 2009). "Geek Trivia: Search party of the second part". TechRepublic (CBS Interactive). Retrieved 1 Apr 2014.
  2. ^ "The Search Engine Equivalent Of The 555 Telephone Numbers Seen In Television And Film Is?". How-To Geek. Retrieved 20 Jul 2015. (WebCite archive)
  3. ^ Seitz, Dan (11 Dec 2009). "5 Things Hollywood Reuses More Than Plots". Cracked (Demand Media). Retrieved 20 Jul 2015. (WebCite archive)
  4. ^ "Top 10 Fictional Brands from Movies and TV". WatchMojo.com. 12 Aug 2013. Retrieved 1 Apr 2014.
  5. ^ "Best 'fake' brands in film and TV". DigiTitles.com. 2013. Retrieved 1 Apr 2014.
  6. ^ Stacy Conradt (3 Mar 2009). "The Quick 10: 10 Fake Brands Used by the Entertainment Industry". Mental Floss. Retrieved 1 Apr 2014.
  7. ^ "Cat's in the Bag...". Breaking Bad. Season 1. 27 Jan 2008. AMC Networks. The wife of lead character, Walter White (Bryan Cranston), uses Finder SPYder's Phone Trace reverse phone number lookup tool to find out who was behind a suspicious call to her husband. Whether she used the 30-day free trial is unclear. Note the espionage-friendly capitalization of "SPY."
  8. ^ Wolf, Mark J.P. (2014). Building Imaginary Worlds: The Theory and History of Subcreation. Routledge. p. 218. ISBN 978-0415631204.
  9. ^ Morley Lights can be seen in The Walking Dead, "Consumed" (5x06) (Daryl finds a carton of Morley Lights), and in The Strain, "The Third Rail" (1x11) (Mariela Martinez throws down an empty pack of Morley Lights).
  10. ^ a b "The X-Files - Season 7, Episode 18: Brand X". TV.com.
  11. ^ Conradt, Stacy (3 Mar 2009). "The Quick 10: 10 Fake Brands Used by the Entertainment Industry". Mental Floss. Retrieved 24 Oct 2015.
  12. ^ "Wizard World Philly Spike PALz". RTM News. 2005-05-12.
  13. ^ Smith, Gabe (1998-10-02). "Fox mystery drags on". The Michigan Daily.
  14. ^ van der Linden, Nils (2008-08-01). "X-Files: I Want To Believe". iafrica.com. Whether you hate the show/can't remember all the convoluted conspiracy stuff/know that Cigarette Smoking man prefers Morley, he wants you there.
  15. ^ Avalos, George; Michael Liedtke (2001-03-01). "X-Cursions: `This Is Not Happening' marks a return to form". Contra Costa Times. As for Reyes, we don't know much about her, other than that she is hooked on Morley cigarettes, leading to speculation that she may somehow be tied to the late, great Cigarette Smoking Man.
  16. ^ Burlingame, Russ (16 Nov 2014). "The Walking Dead: Daryl Smoked The Same Brand Cigarettes as Dale...And On The X-Files and Breaking Bad". ComicBook.com. Retrieved 24 Oct 2015.
  17. ^ "Code 11-14". IMDb. 2003.
  18. ^ "Nowhere to Land". IMDb. 2000.
  19. ^ Murder in the Air at TV.com. Retrieved 1 May 2008.
  20. ^ Vanished at TV.com. Retrieved 1 May 2008.
  21. ^ The Bridge at Kang So Ri at TV.com. Retrieved 1 May 2008.
  22. ^ Nowhere to Land at the Internet Movie Database (IMDb). Retrieved 1 May 2008.
  23. ^ Panic in the Skies! at the Internet Movie Database (IMDb). Retrieved 1 May 2008.
  24. ^ The West Palm Beach Story at TV.com. Retrieved 1 May 2008.
  25. ^ http://www.widebodyaircraft.nl/l1011.htm
  26. ^ Out to Sea at the Internet Movie Database (IMDb). Retrieved 6 Jun 2008.