- AMG Rating:



- Genre: Romance
- Movie Type: Teen Show, Prime-Time Drama
- Themes: High School Life, Teen Angst, Faltering Friendships
- Director: Steve Miner
- Release Year: 1998
- Country: US
- Run Time: 60 minutes
TV Series:
Dawson's Creek |



| Wikipedia: Dawson's Creek |
|
|
This article's citation style may be unclear. The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style of citation, footnoting, or external linking. (September 2009) |
| Dawson's Creek | |
|---|---|
Dawson's Creek intertitle |
|
| Format | Teen drama |
| Created by | Kevin Williamson |
| Starring | James Van Der Beek Katie Holmes Joshua Jackson Michelle Williams Kerr Smith Meredith Monroe Mary Beth Peil |
| Opening theme | "I Don't Want to Wait" by Paula Cole (seasons 1-6); "Run Like Mad" by Jann Arden (international airings of season 1 and DVD versions of seasons 3-6) |
| Country of origin | |
| No. of seasons | 6 |
| No. of episodes | 128 (List of episodes) |
| Production | |
| Executive producer(s) | Tom Kapinos Greg Prange Paul Stupin Kevin Williamson |
| Camera setup | Single-camera[citation needed] |
| Running time | approx. 45 minutes |
| Broadcast | |
| Original channel | The WB |
| Original run | January 20, 1998 – May 14, 2003 |
| External links | |
| Official website | |
| Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Dawson's Creek |
Dawson's Creek is an American primetime television drama which initially aired from January 20, 1998, to May 14, 2003, on The WB Television Network. The lead production company was Sony Pictures Television. The show was set in the fictional town of Capeside, Massachusetts and in Boston, Massachusetts during the later seasons. Reruns of the show are currently seen in Australia on TV1, in Canada on TVtropolis, in Norway on TV3, in the UK on Fiver, in France on TMC, in Greece on Macedonia TV, in India on Zee Café, in Italy on Italia 1 and in Lithuania on TV3.
Contents |
Aimed at a teenaged audience, the semi-autobiographical show is based on the small-town childhood of its creator Kevin Williamson (who also wrote the slasher film Scream). The lead character, Dawson Leery, mirrors Williamson's interests and background. Filmed in Wilmington and Durham, North Carolina, the show was set in a small fictional seaside town called Capeside, Massachusetts. It focused on four friends who were in the early part of their sophomore and first year of high school when the series began. The program, part of a new craze for teen-themed movies and television shows in America in the late 1990s, catapulted its leads to stardom and became a defining show for The WB. Alessandra Stanley of The New York Times declared in 2005 that "The WB is turning out to be the television equivalent of the United Nations" and that "Dawson's Creek was its Dag Hammarskjöld: It was the first series bold enough to pick up the mantle of Beverly Hills, 90210 and an inspiration for many variations on the teenage angst theme, including One Tree Hill on The CW."
Dawson's Creek generated a high amount of publicity before its debut, with several television critics and watchdog groups expressing concerns about its anticipated "racy" plots and dialogue; the controversy even drove one of the original production companies away from the project, but numerous critics praised it for its realism and intelligent dialogue that included allusions to American television icons such as The Dick Van Dyke Show and The Mary Tyler Moore Show. By the end of its run, the show, its crew, and its young cast had been nominated for numerous awards, winning four of them. The series is known for the verbosity and complexity of the dialogue between its teenaged characters—who commonly demonstrate vocabulary and cultural awareness that went beyond the scope of the average high school student, yet that is combined with an emotional immaturity and self-absorption reflecting actual teens. This precociousness has been a staple of a number of teenaged-themed shows since, notably including One Tree Hill (also filmed in Wilmington, North Carolina), The O.C. and Gossip Girl.
Kevin Williamson, a native of the small coastal town of Oriental, North Carolina, was approached in 1995 by producer Paul Stupin to write a pilot for a television series. Stupin, who as a Fox Network executive had brought Beverly Hills, 90210 to the air, sought out Williamson after having read his script for the slasher film Scream—a knowing, witty work about high school students. Initially offered to Fox, the network turned it down. The WB, however, was eagerly looking for programming to fill its new Tuesday night lineup. Williamson said "I pitched it as Some Kind of Wonderful, meets Pump Up the Volume, meets James at 15, meets My So-Called Life, meets Little House on the Prairie". The show's lead character, Dawson Leery, was based on Williamson himself: obsessed with movies and platonically sharing his bed with the girl down the creek.
Procter & Gamble Productions (which produces such daytime dramas as As the World Turns and Guiding Light) was an original co-producer of the series. The company, however, sold its interest in the show three months before the premiere when printed stories surfaced about the racy dialogue and risqué plot lines. John Kiesewetter, television columnist for the Cincinnati Enquirer wrote: "As much as I want to love the show—the cool kids, charming New England setting, and stunning cinematography—I can't get past the consuming preoccupation with sex, sex, sex". Syndicated columnist John Leo said the show should be called "When Parents Cringe," and went on to write "The first episode contains a good deal of chatter about breasts, genitalia, masturbation, and penis size. Then the title and credits come on and the story begins". Tom Shales, of The Washington Post commented that creator Kevin Williamson was "the most overrated wunderkind in Hollywood" and "what he's brilliant at is pandering." In his defense, Williamson denied this was his intention, stating that "I never set out to make something provocative and racy".
The Parents Television Council proclaimed the show the single worst program of the 1997-1998 season, a title the Council would also award it for the 1998-1999 season. The Council also cited it the fourth worst show in 2000-2001. However, on the opposite end of the ideological spectrum, the National Organization for Women offered an endorsement, deeming it one of the least sexually exploitive shows on the air. For every scathing review there was a glowing one: Variety wrote that it was "an addictive drama with considerable heart...the teenage equivalent of a Woody Allen movie—a kind of 'Deconstructing Puberty.'" The Atlanta Journal-Constitution called it "a teen's dream." The Dayton Daily News listed Capeside as a television town they'd most like to live in. The Seattle Times declared it the best show of the 1997-1998 season. The New York Times had perhaps the best headline on its review: "Young, Handsome, and Clueless in Peyton Place." That was precisely the sort of allusion real teenagers weren't likely to get, let alone make, but the show's punchy dialogue was full of them. Dawson calls his mother's co-anchor "Ted Baxter" and refers to his parents as "Rob and Laura Petrie." He responds to his principal's request for a film glorifying the football team as belonging to "the Leni Riefenstahl approach to filmmaking." Jen says her parents followed "the Ho Chi Minh school of parenting." The verbiage was high-flying too: star Michelle Williams confessed in interviews she had to consult her dictionary when she read the scripts.
While never a huge ratings success among the general television population, Dawson's Creek did very well with the younger demographic it targeted and became a defining show for the WB Network. (The first season's highest ranked episode was the finale, which was fifty-ninth, while the highest rated was the second episode, scoring so well only because there was no programming on the other networks, which were carrying President Clinton's State of the Union address in the midst of the Lewinsky scandal.)
The show endured phenomenal success in Australia where it rated number one in its timeslot for every episode covering seasons one to four. Its incredible support extended out into the music industry too when "Songs From Dawson's Creek", released in 1999 on Sony Music, reached #1 on the Australian Album Chart. It remained in the top spot for six weeks and was certified 3x Platinum; inevitably, it was the fifth highest selling album of the year. This was followed in 2001 when "Songs From Dawson's Creek — Volume 2" was released. Debuting at #1, the show's second soundtrack went on to achieve platinum status and was praised by critics and fans alike.
| Actor | Character | Regular Seasons | Recurring Seasons |
|---|---|---|---|
| James Van Der Beek | Dawson Leery | 1 - 6. | – |
| Katie Holmes | Josephine "Joey" Potter | 1 - 6. | – |
| Michelle Williams | Jen Lindley | 1 - 6. | – |
| Joshua Jackson | Pacey Witter | 1 - 6. | – |
| Kerr Smith | Jack McPhee | 3 - 6. | 2. |
| Meredith Monroe | Andie McPhee | 3 - mid-4. | 2, 4, 6. |
| Busy Philipps | Audrey Liddell | 5-6. | . |
| Mary-Margaret Humes | Gail Leery | 1 - 4. | 5 - 6. |
| John Wesley Shipp | Mitch Leery | 1 - 4. | 5. |
| Mary Beth Peil | Evelyn "Grams" Ryan | 1 - 6. | – |
| Nina Repeta | Bessie Potter | 1 - 4. | 5 - 6. |
| Actor | Character |
|---|---|
| Jensen Ackles | C.J. |
| Sasha Alexander | Gretchen Witter |
| Dana Ashbrook | Rich Rinaldi |
| Jason Behr | Chris Wolfe |
| Obba Babatunde | Mr. Green |
| Nicole Bilderback | Heather Tracy |
| Lourdes Benedicto | Karen Torres |
| Mika Boorem | Harley Hetson |
| Jordan Bridges | Oliver Chirckirk |
| Brittany Daniel | Eve Whitman |
| David Dukes | Will/Joseph McPhee |
| Megan Gray | Emma Jones |
| Carolyn Hennesy | Mrs. Valentine |
| Roger Howarth | Professor Greg Hetson |
| Oliver Hudson | Eddie Doling |
| Leann Hunley | Tamara Jacobs |
| Ian Kahn | Danny Brecher |
| Edmund J. Kearney | Mr. Peterson |
| Monica Keena | Abby Morgan |
| Ken Marino | Professor David Wilder |
| Mark Matkevich | Drue Valentine |
| David Monahan | Tobey Barret |
| Chad Michael Murray | Charlie Todd |
| Obi Ndefo | Bodie Wells |
| Dylan Neal | Doug Witter |
| Hal Ozsan | Todd Carr |
| Michael Pitt | Henry Parker |
| Harve Presnell | Arthur "A.I." Brooks |
| Gareth Williams | Mike Potter |
| Ali Larter | Kristy Livingstone |
| Rachael Leigh Cook | Devon |
| Mädchen Amick | Nicole Kennedy |
| Mel Harris | Helen Lindley |
| Marla Gibbs | Mrs. Fran Boyd |
| Tony Hale | Dr. Bronin |
| Harry Shearer | Principal Peskin |
| Andy Griffith | Mr. Brooks' Friend |
| Jennifer Morrison | Melanie Shea Thompson |
| Sherilyn Fenn | Alex Pearl |
| Jack Osbourne | Himself |
| Jaime Bergman | Denise |
| M2M | Themselves |
| No Doubt | Themselves |
| Paul Gleason | Studio Producer |
| Mimi Rogers | Helen Lindley |
| Hilarie Burton | Herself |
| Virginia Madsen | Maddy |
| Seth Rogen | Bob |
| Mädchen Amick | Nicole Kennedy |
| Bianca Lawson | Nikki Green |
| Jonathan Lipnicki | Buzz |
| Scott Foley | Cliff Elliot |
| Eion Bailey | Billy Conrad |
| Mercedes McNab | Grace |
| Sarah Shahi | Sadia Shaw |
| Danny Roberts | French Exchange Student |
| Adam Carolla | Himself |
| Dr. Drew | Himself |
Dawson's Creek was, mostly and in part, run by Kevin Williamson, Deborah Joy Levine, Paul Stupin, Alex Gansa, Jeffrey Stepakoff and Tammy Ader.
Filmed in Wilmington, North Carolina, at EUE/Screen Gems studios and on location around Wilmington, Southport and Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina. College scenes in the fifth and sixth seasons shot at Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, and additional shooting was done in Raleigh, North Carolina. In 1999 some scenes were shot on the University of Richmond campus. The fourth season episode "Eastern Standard Time" also did location shooting in New York City, including at Grand Central Terminal.
The Wilmington area benefited greatly from the show. While a number of films, commercials and music videos had been shot at the studios, the show was the first to occupy numerous soundstages for many years. One Tree Hill later occupied some of those same soundstages for several years and uses some of the same locations in Wilmington.
In addition to business brought into the community by the project, it attracted attention to the city as a filming location and boosted tourism.[citation needed] The visitors' bureau distributed a special guide to filming locations used in the show. When the program was cancelled in 2003, the news was reported on the front-page of Wilmington's daily newspaper, the Morning Star.
34°11′20″N 77°50′45″W / 34.1888°N 77.8459°WCoordinates: 34°11′20″N 77°50′45″W / 34.1888°N 77.8459°W Sunset shots of Dawson standing on his dock among the marsh grass were filmed along Hewlett's Creek on Pine Grove Road between Masonboro Loop Road and Holly Tree Drive in Masonboro, North Carolina.[1]
Capeside is a fictional town in Massachusetts where the Dawson's Creek takes place. It is a modest harbor city located along the Atlantic Ocean in a long bay with sparse housing. The separation between homes often requires that residents travel to the city center via car, although Dawson and Joey typically take a boat. Founded in 1815, the town has a population of 35,000 and is located between the cities of Providence, Rhode Island and Boston, Massachusetts. Capeside exteriors were shot in and around Wilmington, North Carolina. Its bays and coastlines are similar to those found along the coast of Massachusetts. The houses used for Dawson Leery's and Jen Lindley's homes are located on Head Road, while the house used for Joey Potter's home is located on Pine Grove Road.
A Dawson Creek actually exists in the Canadian province of British Columbia. It is named for the river of the same name that runs through it. Another exists in Oriental, NC, which flows into the Neuse River. This served as the inspiration for the show's name.
Capeside High School is the fictional high school in Capeside, Massachusetts attended by several characters during the first four seasons of the show. Exteriors were filmed at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington.
Worthington University is a fictional university from Dawson's Creek. Joey (played by Katie Holmes) and Audrey (played by Busy Philipps), characters from the series, attended this school. It is supposed to be located in Boston, Massachusetts and to have been founded in 1787 by Josiah Worthington. It is sometimes said to be an "Ivy League college".
Producers had not planned for the show to extend beyond the characters' high school years. The architectural uniformity of UNC Wilmington prevented it from being used for Worthington University exteriors. The scenes at Worthington were filmed over 2 hours away at Duke University,[2] and a number of its students served as extras. .[3] Some filming was also done on Franklin Street adjacent to nearby University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Interiors for The Icehouse were filmed at The Icehouse bar in downtown Wilmington several blocks from less picturesque water so exteriors were filmed at the Dockside Restaurant at 1308 Airlie Road in Wrightsville Beach, NC. Nearby constructions at the real IceHouse forced producers to eliminate the bar from the storyline by burning it down.[1]
The Hells Kitchen bar featured in the show was a natural food store at 118 Princess Street in Wilmington which was purchased by producers, dressed as a seedy college bar and used for production during the show's last season. When production completed, the building was purchased by a local restaurateur, along with much of the set and decorations, and convereted it into a real restaurant and bar. It retains the name as well.[1]
Leery's Fresh Fish, exteriors were filmed at Water Street Restaurant at 5 South Water Street in Wilmington.[1]
Dawson's Creek was shot like a motion picture using a single camera and often filmed on location, rather than being largely studio bound. The series used soothing colors, similar to Party of Five, rather than the cold, harsh look of shows such as The Practice. While most of the episodes were conventional, there were two Rashomon-like episodes exploring a story from differing perspectives, and the somber fifth season episode "Downtown Crossing" featured only one regular, Joey, and her interaction with a mugger. The fourth season episode "The Unusual Suspects," was filmed as a film noir detective story—complete with camera work and music appropriate to the genre. At times, Dawson's Creek was deliberately self-conscious, as when Eve tells Dawson he is Felicity, beginning a discussion of why Dawson doesn't like television shows, which concludes with his observation that they cut away when the best part comes—immediately demonstrated by Eve, about to kiss him, is interrupted by the main titles. It also made fun of itself on other episodes besides that one, especially the finale, when Dawson is the creator of a TV show called "the Creek."
Dawson's Creek was nominated for fourteen awards, including ALMA Awards, Casting Society of America Awards, Golden Satellite Awards, TV Guide Awards, and YoungStar Awards. Joshua Jackson won the Teen Choice Award for Choice Actor three times and the show won the Teen Choice Award for Choice Drama once. The series also won the GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding TV Drama Series.
The show had, in the words of television experts Tim Brooks and Earle Marsh, a "semi-spinoff", Young Americans. The protagonist of Young Americans, Will Krudski (Rodney Scott), was introduced in three episodes at the end of the show's third season, as a former classmate of Dawson, Joey, and Pacey, who had moved away some years before and had returned for a visit. He was never referred to or seen before or since. Young Americans was made by the same company as Dawson's Creek, Columbia TriStar Television, and appeared in Dawson's Creek's timeslot when it went on hiatus during the summer of 2000. The reason the show is considered a semi-spinoff instead of a true spinoff is because Will was not originally created for Dawson's Creek. He was added to Dawson's solely to set up and promote the series Young Americans.
The publisher Simon and Schuster published a series of fifteen mass-market paperback novelizations of the series.
The show also aired in numerous international markets, listed here with the premiere dates:
| Country | Premiere | Channel |
|---|---|---|
| Vizion + | ||
| January 19, 1999 | Network Ten (Original Broadcast - 1999-2004) TV1 (Syndication - 2001-Current) |
|
| ORF 1, Reruns on Puls 4 | ||
| 1999 | VT4, Reruns on 2Be (2008) | |
| March 3, 1998 | Rede Globo | |
| 2000 | Nova Television | |
| January 20, 1998 | Global | |
| 2000 | MEGA | |
| 2001, September | ||
| 2005, January | Cubavision | |
| September 9, 2000 | TV Nova | |
| Is currently repeated on TV2 Zulu | ||
| January 10, 1999 | c | |
| January 3, 1999 | Sat.1 | |
| January 10, 1999 | Mega | |
| September 11, 1999 | TV2 S1-S3, RTL Klub S4-S5, Cool TV S6 | |
| April 2008 | Zee Cafe | |
| 2007 | Global TV | |
| May 1998 | RTE TWO reruns on Channel6 | |
| September 1, 1998 | Channel 3 | |
| January 3, 1999 | Italia 1 | |
| TV3 later moved to TangoTV (TV6) | ||
| July 2008 | Net Television | |
| Canal 5 | ||
| Net5 | ||
| June 25, 1999 | TV2 (New Zealand) | |
| September 1, 1998 | TV3 | |
| Sony Entertainment Television (Latin America) | ||
| Studio 23 | ||
| September 6, 1998 | Polsat | |
| April 8, 2001 | TVI | |
| February 28, 1999 | Pro TV | |
| December 2007 | MBC 4 | |
| 2000 | ||
| EBS | ||
| 2000 | La 2 de RTVE | |
| 2000 | ARTv | |
| December 27, 1998 | ||
| May 15, 1999 | True Series | |
| 1999 | CNBC-E | |
| 2008 | 1+1 | |
| May 2, 1998 | Channel 4 | |
| 1998 | Televen |
|
|
This section does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (March 2009) |
| # | Season | U.S. ratings (millions of viewers) |
Network | Rank |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1998 | 6.6 | The WB | #125 |
| 2 | 1998–1999 | 5.4 | The WB | #118 |
| 3 | 1999–2000 | 4.0 | The WB | #122 |
| 4 | 2000–2001 | 4.1 | The WB | #120 |
| 5 | 2001–2002 | 3.9 | The WB | #134 |
| 6 | 2002–2003 | 4.0 | The WB | #134 |
Created by Kevin Williamson.
Produced by Columbia TriStar Television/Sony Pictures Television and Outerbanks Entertainment. Originally, Granville Productions and Procter & Gamble Productions were producers, but left the show before it aired.
Executive-produced by Kevin Williamson, Paul Stupin, Charles Rosin, Deborah Joy LeVine, Jon Harmon Feldman, Alex Gansa, Greg Berlanti, Tom Kapinos, Gina Fattore, Jeffrey Stepakoff.
Episodes were produced by Dana Baratta, Greg Berlanti, Janice Cooke-Leonard, Alan Cross, Zack Estrin, Gina Fattore, Jon Harmon Feldman, Maggie Friedman, Darin Goldberg, David Blake Hartley, Tom Kapinos, Drew Matich, Chris Levinson, Paul Marks, Drew Matich, Shelley Meals, Rina Mimoun, Steve Miner, Gregory Prange, Jed Seidel, David Semel, Cynthia Stegner, Jeffrey Stepakoff, Dale Williams, Mike White
Episodes were written by Dana Baratta, Greg Berlanti, Hadley Davis, Gina Fattore, Anna Fricke, Maggie Friedman, Alex Gansa, Diego García Gutiérrez, Liz Garcia, Laura Glasser, Holly Henderson, Tom Kapinos, Rina Mimoun, Jason M. Palmer, Jed Seidel, Jeffrey Stepakoff, Liz Tigelaar, Mike White, and Kevin Williamson
Episodes were directed by Lou Antonio, Allan Arkush, John Behring, Sanford Bookstaver, Arvin Brown, Jan Eliasberg, Michael Fields, Rodman Flender, Morgan J. Freeman, Dennie Gordon, Bruce Seth Green, Joshua Jackson, Joanna Kerns, Peter B. Kowalski, Perry Lang, Michael Lange, Nick Marck, Melanie Mayron, Robert Duncan McNeill, Steve Miner, Jason Moore, Joe Napolitano, Patrick R. Norris, Scott Paulin, David Petrarca, Gregory Prange, Krishna Rao, Steven Robman, Bethany Rooney, Arlene Sanford, David Semel, Kerr Smith, Sandy Smolan, Lev L. Spiro, David Straiton, Jay Tobias, Jesús Salvador Treviño, Michael Toshiyuki Uno, and James Whitmore Jr.
James Van Der Beek, Katie Holmes, Michelle Williams, Joshua Jackson and Mary Beth Peil were the only cast members who remained series regulars from beginning to end of the series. Katie Holmes was the only cast member to appear in every episode of the show.
Mary-Margaret Humes, John Wesley Shipp and Nina Repeta were all regular cast members throughout the show's first four seasons until the fifth season, in which the younger characters moved on to college and only Mary Beth Peil remained the regular "adult" presence in their lives. Instead of simply vanishing from the show completely though, all three of them occasionally reprised their roles in guest starring capacities.
Kerr Smith and Meredith Monroe joined the series in the show's second season but were not billed as regulars until the third season. Though Kerr Smith remained with the show throughout the rest of its run, Meredith Monroe eventually left the show in the middle of the fourth season, but continued to be billed as a regular until the end of that year as her character returned for the season finale. She also returned in the show's final episode. Her scenes in the series finale were cut from the original broadcast version, but remain intact on the show's DVD releases.
Busy Philipps joined the regular cast in the show's fifth season and remained with the show for its final two years on the air.
Katie Holmes and Joshua Jackson stated that they will indeed return for the reunion special.
| This article includes a list of references or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it has insufficient inline citations. Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations where appropriate. (February 2009) |
Darren Crosdale's Dawson's Creek: The Official Companion (Kansas City, Missouri: Andrews McMeel, 1999) (ISBN 0-7407-0725-6), thoroughly chronicles the show, but only covers events through to the end of the second season. Scott Andrews' Troubled Waters: An Unauthorised and Unofficial Guide To Dawson's Creek (Virgin Publishing 2001 (ISBN 0-7535-0625-4)) also covers the series thoroughly but it includes all episodes up to the end of Season Four and, because it is unofficial, is freer with both criticism and praise. A less thorough book from about the same time, aimed at teens, is Meet the Stars of Dawson's Creek by Grace Catalano, which has more about the show than the title would imply. Andy Mangels's From Scream to Dawson's Creek: An Unauthorized Take on the Phenomenal Career of Kevin Williamson (Los Angeles: Renaissance Books, 2000) (ISBN 1-58063-122-3) covers the show well but omits later seasons.
Other references include:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
| James Van Der Beek (Actor) | |
| Shooter (Rock Band, '90s) | |
| ...And Your Point? (1999 Album by Shooter) |
| Does Dawson Creek have Blizzards? Read answer... | |
| Was there a Dawson's Creek reunion show? Read answer... | |
| Why was Dawson's Creek canceled? Read answer... |
| Who dies on dawsons creek? | |
| Who did a benefit for dawson's creek? | |
| What is dawson creek's population? |
Copyrights:
![]() | TV Listings. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ® , a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Dawson's Creek". Read more |
Mentioned in