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・ Hooten
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・ Hootenanny (The Country Gentlemen album)
・ Hootenanny (The Replacements album)
・ Hootenanny (U.S. TV series)
・ Hootenanny Hoot
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Hooterville
・ Hooterville Cannonball
・ Hootie
・ Hootie & the Blowfish
・ Hootie & the Blowfish (album)
・ Hootie Ingram
・ Hootie Mack
・ Hootin' 'n Tootin'
・ Hooton
・ Hooton (surname)
・ Hooton 3 Car
・ Hooton Levitt
・ Hooton Pagnell
・ Hooton railway station
・ Hooton Roberts


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Hooterville : ウィキペディア英語版
Hooterville
Hooterville is a fictional farming community that is the setting for the American situation comedies ''Petticoat Junction'' and ''Green Acres'', two rural-oriented television shows created or commissioned by Paul Henning for Filmways and CBS in the 1960s. Hooterville is a town, a valley, and a county, and has been described as "a place simultaneously Southern and Midwestern, but in a vague sort of way." 〔Moore, Barbara ''Prime-time Television: A Concise History'' p. 124〕 Little concrete or reliable information can be gleaned from the two shows about the place, as references in individual episodes are rife with inconsistencies, contradictions, geographic impossibilities and continuity errors. The writers of the two shows often changed the details about the Hooterville community at will for the purpose of cracking a joke, and they left certain details (such as its home state) purposely vague and unexplained.
==Citizens==
Citizens include Oliver Wendell Douglas and Lisa Douglas, the new residents from New York City; Eb Dawson, the handyman for the Douglas family; Newt Kiley, who farms over 80 acres (32 ha); Ben Miller, the apple farmer; Mr. Haney (first name disputed, Eustace or Charlton), the county antiques dealer and con man; Hank Kimball, the idiotic county agent; Sam Drucker, owner of Sam Drucker's General Store; Sarah Hotchkiss Trendell, the telephone operator; the Monroe Brothers, Alf and Ralph (despite Ralph's name and status as a brother, Ralph is a woman — seemingly, only Oliver Wendell Douglas questions the bizarre contradiction); Fred Ziffel, a pig farm owner; Doris "Ruthie" Ziffel, Fred's loud and nosey wife; Arnold Ziffel, Fred and Doris's porcine "son"; and Charley Pratt and Floyd Smoot, the engineer and conductor, respectively, of the local train, the ''Hooterville Cannonball''. 〔http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0058808/fullcredits#cast〕 Kate Bradley and her Uncle Joe Carson and her three daughters, Betty Jo, Bobbie Jo, and Billie Jo reside at the Shady Rest Hotel on the outskirts of Hooterville.
The citizens of Hooterville are old-fashioned to the point of thinking that Calvin Coolidge is President, although they later believe the President to be the slightly more modern Herbert Hoover. They are also quite provincial: they have never heard of the Federal income tax or tax refunds. 〔Zelenak, Lawrence ''Learning to Love Form 1040: Two Cheers for the Return-Based Mass Income Tax'' p. 88〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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