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    • Danny Masterson

      Image courtesy of newsbreak.com

      newsbreak.com

      • Danny Masterson, who played the smart sardonic Steven Hyde, was recently accused of raping five women while he was a cast member on the show in the early 2000s. The LAPD are currently investigating the claims.
      www.news.com.au/entertainment/tv/flashback/the-dark-days-on-the-set-of-that-70s-show/news-story/cb5d65c3d33944e169513bc2b998830a
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  2. "Time Team" Brancaster, Norfolk (TV Episode 2013) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  3. Jan 6, 2013 · Brancaster, Norfolk: Directed by Chris Rushton, Siân Price. With Tony Robinson, Phil Harding, Francis Pryor, John Gater. Tony and the team take a look around a site at Brancaster in Norfolk, which is believed to have been a Roman 'Shore-Fort' in the past.

    • (17)
    • Documentary, History
    • Chris Rushton, Siân Price
    • 2013-01-06
  4. Time Team (TV Series 1994– ) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  5. Tony and the team work with volunteers from Operation Nightingale, [5] an initiative to help injured veterans of the war in Afghanistan. They are investigating the ancient Barrow Clump on Salisbury Plain, where they discover burials from 2000BC and rare Saxon finds. The team are joined by Richard Osgood, an archaeologist from the Ministry of ...

  6. Jun 25, 2013 · Mick Aston, a former resident academic on Channel 4's Time Team, has died at the age of 66. He appeared on the show, which sees experts carry out archaeological digs, from its inception in 1994...

  7. The following is a list of episodes of Time Team, a British television/web programme about archaeology, that aired on Channel 4 from 16 January 1994 to, [1] 7 September 2014. In 2022 Time Team returned on YouTube, with Series 21 onwards presented by Gus Casely-Hayford.

  8. Dec 7, 2012 · A few days later news of Time Team‘s demise broke in the Guardian. It was a perfunctory end for a television institution that, over two decades, made British archaeology more accessible and popular than ever. Here we chart the highs and lows of a revolutionary format that aimed to bring archaeology to the people.

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