I have heard several variations on this and a few are common, "Rhubarb" and "Peas and carrots" are often repeated over and over, "Peas and carrots" is used especially when extras are whispering to each other in a crowd scene, i.e. during a dramatic reveal or plot twist.
Show, as in the verb 'to show,' is miseru. Show, as in a television show, is bangumi.
Whose Line Is It Anyway?
Ver la television esta noche.
Me gusta la televisión
The Brady Bunch.
No. The TV show is over
Tea For The Tillerman by Cat Stevens
if you are talking about the TV show, i would say its not unheard of, but its not extremely popular
Extras are never identified, thus they are "extras". Extras are people who just want to be on TV, they are unpaid.
False. The casting of extras plays a crucial role in creating a believable and immersive environment for a film or TV show. The presence of extras helps to bring scenes to life and add depth to the storytelling.
Chris Martin
Underdog featured a talking beagle dog
If you are talking about someone in danger, it is "in jeopardy." If you are talking about the television show, it's "on Jeopardy."
Extras won the Golden Globe for Best Television Series - Comedy Or Musical in 2008.
http://www.rickstv.com/tvo/readalong.html The show was called "Readalong."
The TV show that Mr Hanky is from, is the comedy television show South Park. In this show he is portrayed as a talking waste. This show is made by Trey Parker and Matt Stone.
Anubis is that egyptian god, so it's a name. It'd just be Anubis. And if your talking about that tv show... House of Anubis, then it's still Anubis.