Hit The Floor - Season 1 [BETTER]
Hit the Floor, originally titled Bounce, is an American sports drama television series that debuted on VH1 on May 27, 2013. Created by James LaRosa, the series chronicles the off-the-court drama surrounding the Los Angeles Devil Girls, the cheerleaders for the Los Angeles Devils, a fictional professional basketball team. On April 27, 2017, the series was renewed for an eight-episode fourth season that premiered on BET on July 10, 2018. The network canceled the series on December 7, 2018.
Hit the Floor - Season 1
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In season three, a reunited Jelena and Terrence secretly plot to take over the Devils and oust Lionel, and Zero's unwillingness to go public becomes an obstacle to his fledgling relationship with Jude. From jail, Devils owner Oscar Kinkade (Don Stark) seeks vengeance against Sloane, who has rekindled her romance with Pete.
VH1 announced the renewal for a second season on July 15, 2013.[10][11] Season two production began on January 31, 2014,[citation needed] and premiered on May 26, 2014.[12] The season featured a whodunit story involving Olivia's murder, and LaRosa was inspired by the 1980s "Who shot J.R.?" storyline on Dallas to shoot multiple resolutions so that even the cast would not know the identity of the killer until the episode aired.[13] Teasing the reveal in the season two finale, LaRosa said, "It's definitely someone you've come to know. It's a name at the top of the credits and I can tell you that you will be shocked ... the reveal gives me chills every single time".[13]
On July 29, 2014, VH1 announced the third season renewal of Hit the Floor.[14][15] The 10-episode new season premiered on January 18, 2016 and ended on March 28, 2016. In April 2016, VH1 greenlit an hour-long summer special to resolve the cliffhangers raised in the third season finale.[16] The special aired on September 5, 2016.[17]
On April 27, 2017, it was announced that the series would move to BET for its future seasons.[18][19] In October 2017, BET announced that Cain, Elise, Freeman, Bailess, O'Keefe, and Antonello would be returning to the series,[20] and series creator James LaRosa confirmed that Paige and Senn would not be returning for season four.[2][21] Teyana Taylor was cast in an undisclosed role in October,[22] and four new regular cast members were announced in November 2017: Tiffany Hines as "mystery woman" Eve, Cort King as rookie player Pax, Kyndall as new dancer Jamie, and Kristian Kordula as reporter Noah.[23] Production began in November 2017,[22] and the series' eight-episode fourth season premiered on July 10, 2018.[23][24]
Hit the Floor is an American drama television series created by James LaRosa.[1] The series chronicles the off-the-court drama surrounding the Los Angeles Devils, a fictional professional basketball team. Hit the Floor debuted on VH1 on May 27, 2013.[2] After three seasons on VH1, Hit the Floor moved to BET for season four.[3][4] The series was canceled on December 7, 2018.[5] During the course of the series, 41 episodes of Hit the Floor aired, including one special over four seasons.
The Top 10 chefs are challenged to create healthy concessions for fans at a football game and the losers go on to a challenge involving creative prawn recipes. This season's cast includes out competitor Victoria Scroggins.
Hit the Floor season 2 is back bigger and better. Now this drama series hit our screens and it got everyone hooked to the characters and the drama they brought to us. Now, the sexy dance group the Devil Girls are still sexy as ever with the basketball player joining them in the drama galore.
This season hit off from where it left us in season 1 however there have been some few changes. We all know that Ahsha won the all-stars competition which of course did not go down well with Jelena, but then again why would it be ok with her knowing the kind of history the two have. Anyway, there is more drama and the more it is the better for us.
There is so much gossip to give but I will let you find out the rest by yourself. Trust me there is more where that came from. Find out what happens to Oliver after being fired by Oscar and also who Ahsha is dating in this season not forgetting what happens to her ex-boyfriend German. Oh, and yes Jelena and Terrence what happens between them? Be sure to catch up with the new season of Hit the Floor on VTI.
On the floor today is legislation sponsored by Rep. Ann Wagner (R-Mo.) aimed at GOP concerns about infants who survive an attempted abortion. It would require health care providers to care for a child who survived an attempted abortion, a situation that is exceedingly rare. Medical providers could face up to five years in prison under the bill. The protection is already codified by a 2002 bipartisan law that solidified that infants have the rights of a full human.
One of the men says, "Hit the floor, lady," and she does: quarters fly everywhere. The men bust up laughing and they help Karen collect her winnings. One of the men explains that he meant for her to select her floor. They help her collect her quarters and the elevator arrives at her floor. She leaves embarrassed, and the men are still laughing.
When the doors don't close quickly enough to suit him, the man gruffly commands the woman to "hit four" (his floor, presumably), an instruction she hears as "hit the floor." Or he tells her to "hit the floor," meaning "press the button for the floor you want." Or in the versions where a dog is present, he commands the excited animal to "Sit, Lady!," an instruction the frightened woman immediately complies with.
"There's a story I was on an elevator with 10 bodyguards. An old lady was there. One bodyguard said, 'Hit the floor,' as in 'press the button.' The old lady got scared and dropped to the floor. And we were so embarrassed, and we helped her up, and sent her flowers and paid her hotel bill, and it never happened! Here's the clincher: Whenever I go, 'No, it never happened,' they always say, 'Yes, it did. My cousin was there.'"
In the Newhart skit, there's no elevator, a key element in every extant version of the legend. Also, although "Sit, lady!" and "Hit the floor!" versions abound, no "Sit, Whitey!" versions have surfaced in oral or written form. Had the Newhart skit truly been what sparked this legend, one would expect to find at least a couple of early tellings which feature this line.
During a temporary shutdown of operations at a large plant, trained police dogs were hired to protect the building from vandalism. A company executive who was unaware of the new regime arrived at the plant early one morning. As he was walking down the corridor to his office, he came face to face with one of the dogs, accompanied by his trainer. The dog reacted to the presence of the stranger by baring his teeth and uttering a menacing growl. The executive froze to the spot. The trainer shouted in an authoritative tone the command: "Sit!" Whereupon, the unnerved executive promptly sat down on the floor.
Ha! What a ham! Jodi Lyn O'Keefe is starring in the second season of VH1's hit series Hit the Floor. Jodi plays Lionel Davenport, the tough-skinned estranged wife of Dean Cain's character on the show.Jodi Lyn O'Keefe's Q Jewelry Design. Twitter: @JodiLyn_OKeefe , Instagram: Jodilok
she remembered no more till she regained consciousness; that a saleswoman employed by the defendant had placed a bottle on the carrier just before the accident and, turning around to go back to her counter, saw the bottle strike the floor, but did not see it strike the plaintiff; and that she never before had seen anything fall from the belt. Held, that
the delicatessen counter, after an unsuccessful inquiry for a salad, as it seemed to her, "a crash came down on the top of her head - 'it came down like the roof on . . . [her] head,"' and she remembered no more till she regained consciousness and found herself lying on the floor in a different place surrounded by a crowd among whom was a girl in a white coat or apron, sobbing; that) on the evening of the same day, a physician found a small swelling over the " parietal occipital region" (this we take to be the side of the back of the head) which, on the next day, was the size of a small egg; that, in his opinion, a blow from an object dropping on her head and "causing those immediate and subsequent symptoms " would be an adequate cause for the condition he found; that a saleswoman in the bottle goods department just before the accident took a tin pan about twelve or fourteen inches long, provided for the purpose, from under a counter, put in it a pint bottle of olive oil and a half pint bottle of salad dressing with nothing else, stood upon a stool about two feet high and placed pan and bottles on the endless belt of a carrier which took merchandise to the shipping room; that she turned around to go back to her counter, toward the delicatessen counter, and saw the bottle hit the floor, and that she did not see it between the time she placed it on the carrier belt and the time it hit the floor; that never before had she seen anything fall from the belt, though she had seen cases where girls had thrown bread up on the belt but too high so that it went over the belt; that she did not remember any sound, but she saw the bottle hit the floor; that a salesman, assisted by others, helped the plaintiff to another room; that he saw no one touch her before he reached her; that the plaintiff was near the delicatessen counter "in a lying position - half sitting position on the floor," not head down, "kind of sitting down with one hand out to the right as though she had slid down." The carrier was six feet nine inches from the floor, and its endless belt was eighteen inches wide. It ran over the edge of the counter. There were other customers near the counter.
The plaintiff may have fallen from a weakness accompanying a sudden pain in the head, or from slipping, and have jarred the bottle from the endless belt. Some sudden movement of a customer or salesman may have tilted or shaken the carrier. Some perfectly innocent cause may have occasioned a sudden jerk in the movement of the belt which resulted in the fall of the bottle. The swelling on the head of the plaintiff is as consistent with striking the head on the floor as with being struck by the bottle. The judge was right in directing the verdict for the defendant. Kirby v. Tirrell, 236 Mass. 170. Nager v. Reid, 240 Mass. 211. O'Brien v. Louis K. Liggett Co., supra. 041b061a72