The Substitute 4: Failure Is Not an Option


3:00 pm - 5:00 pm, Sunday, April 26 on WCBS 365BLK (2.4)

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About this Broadcast
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In this fourth installment of "The Substitute" series, a former mercenary becomes a substitute teacher at a military academy in an attempt to infiltrate and disband the leadership of white supremacists.

2000 English Stereo
Drama Action/adventure Guy Flick Sequel

Cast & Crew
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Angie Everhart (Actor) .. Jenny
Tim Abell (Actor) .. Devlin
Scott Miles (Actor) .. Buckner
John Michael Weatherly (Actor) .. Cadet Mauk
Bill Nunn (Actor) .. Luther
Patrick Kilpatrick (Actor) .. Commandant Brack
J. Don Ferguson (Actor) .. General Teague
Grayson Fricke (Actor) .. Ted Teague
Simon Rhee (Actor) .. Lim
Brian Beegle (Actor) .. Fry
Samantha Thomas (Actor) .. Harmon
Lori Beth Edgman (Actor) .. Cunningham
Mohamed T. El Emam (Actor) .. Robson
K.C. Powe (Actor) .. Slimy
Lonnie Smith (Actor) .. Yuler
Laura Shay (Actor) .. Griffin Dixie
Treat Williams (Actor) .. Karl Thomasson

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Angie Everhart (Actor) .. Jenny
Born: September 07, 1969
Birthplace: Akron, Ohio, United States
Trivia: The fact that redheaded stunner Angie Everhart, who set the pages of Sports Illustrated on fire in addition to numerous revealing print and film appearances, was commonly mistaken for a boy in her youth may come as more than a shock to some given that her name became synonymous with sex appeal in the mid-'90s.Born to an engineer father and a homemaker mother in Akron, OH, in September of 1969, Everhart was the middle child of three siblings, graduating from Harvey S. Firestone High School (where she took on the role of the school's mascot) in 1987. Following a playful photo session with her mother and the subsequent submission of the results to a local modeling agency, Everhart was on a plane to Paris later that same year. By the end of the following year, the burgeoning model had graced the covers of such fashion mainstays as Elle and Glamour (for which she was the first-ever red-haired cover girl). Though a horseback riding accident in which she broke her back nearly put an end to her catwalk aspirations, the determined model was soon on her feet again against all odds. Making her film debut in 1993 with the Arnold Schwarzenegger action-comedy The Last Action Hero, Everhart has since appeared in such features as Tales From the Crypt Presents: Bordello of Blood (1996), Denial (1998), Camera, and Gunblast Vodka (both 2000). In the years to come, Everhart would appear in movies like Payback (2006) and Take Me Home Tonight (2011). An avid skydiver and a master of the art of airplane dog smuggling (she likes to keep her Maltese nearby on long flights), the beautiful actress/model was briefly engaged to Sylvester Stallone in 1995, married to Ashley Hamilton from late 1996 until early 1997, and was been rumored to have been involved with Prince Albert of Monaco.
Tim Abell (Actor) .. Devlin
Born: July 01, 1958
Scott Miles (Actor) .. Buckner
Born: April 06, 1976
John Michael Weatherly (Actor) .. Cadet Mauk
Bill Nunn (Actor) .. Luther
Born: October 20, 1952
Died: September 24, 2016
Trivia: Pittsburgh native Bill Nunn's prolific career earned him such a long list of roles, it's hard to believe the actor didn't set foot onscreen until he was 35 years old. The Morehouse College graduate had a degree in English and his career sights had always been set on writing. It wasn't until a fellow Morehouse graduate, Spike Lee, offered him a role in his 1988 film School Daze that Nunn decided to try his hand at professional acting. His power onscreen was undeniable, and so was his natural acting ability. He appeared in Lee's next film, the groundbreaking Do the Right Thing, and his iconic role as Radio Raheem cemented him as a career actor. Memorable parts soon followed in 1990's Cadillac Man and 1991's controversial Mario Van Peebles film New Jack City. Critics and audiences were amazed that Nunn hadn't been learning the craft all his life, as he proved to be a bankable actor with the capacity to be both moving and funny. Nunn loved his work, too; he would continue to participate in multiple projects a year, amassing a resumé 50 roles long over the course of 20 years. Nunn's kind but steady gaze earned him a reputation for playing police officers, but from the political satire Canadian Bacon to the comic-book hero Spider-man movies, He appeared in the TV movie version of Raisin in the Sun in 2008 and made his last on-screen appearance as a series regular in the USA series Sirens. Nunn died in 2016, at age 63.
Patrick Kilpatrick (Actor) .. Commandant Brack
Born: August 20, 1949
J. Don Ferguson (Actor) .. General Teague
Grayson Fricke (Actor) .. Ted Teague
Simon Rhee (Actor) .. Lim
Born: October 28, 1957
Brian Beegle (Actor) .. Fry
Born: May 19, 1978
Samantha Thomas (Actor) .. Harmon
Lori Beth Edgman (Actor) .. Cunningham
Mohamed T. El Emam (Actor) .. Robson
K.C. Powe (Actor) .. Slimy
Lonnie Smith (Actor) .. Yuler
Laura Shay (Actor) .. Griffin Dixie
Treat Williams (Actor) .. Karl Thomasson
Born: December 01, 1951
Died: June 12, 2023
Birthplace: Rowayton, Connecticut, United States
Trivia: After attending Franklin and Marshall College, Treat Williams acted with the prestigious Fulton Repertory troupe. Williams made his Broadway debut in Grease (1976) eventually taking over the leading role of Danny Zuko. His later Broadway credits included the musicals Over Here and Pirates of Penzance and the reader's-theatre exercise Love Letters. In films from 1976, he scored his first significant success as the draft-resistant protagonist of Milos Forman's Hair (1979). He went on to play the title role in The Pursuit of D. B. Cooper (1981), then gained positive critical notice for his work as reluctant interdepartmental police informant Daniel Ciello in Prince of the City (1981). His later film roles included mob-connected labor organizer Jimmy O'Donnell in Once Upon a Time in America (1984) and the seductive James Dean clone in Smooth Talk (1985). Famed for his willingness to tackle any sort of role, Williams' artistic ambitions are backed up by his versatility and astonishing vocal flexibility. On TV, Williams played Stanley Kowalski opposite Ann-Margret's Blanche Dubois in Streetcar Named Desire (1984) and was appropriately sharkish as superagent Mike Ovitz in The Late Shift (1996). He also starred in the weekly series Eddie Dodd (1991) and Good Advice (1995). Many of Treat Williams' recent film roles have exhibited a fondness for expansive, scenery-chewing villainy, notably megalomanic Xander Drax in The Phantom (1995).

Before / After
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5:00 pm