![](/uploads/1/2/6/2/126278105/439542617.jpg)
![Escape Escape](http://a1.mzstatic.com/us/r30/Purple18/v4/ee/5f/0e/ee5f0eac-1594-f95d-4ff6-e8fe836ef632/sc1024x768.jpeg)
2015-11-27 Photo by Jason Leppert. For the most part, the Norwegian Escape is a splendid evolution of Norwegian Cruise Line’s popular Norwegian Breakaway and Norwegian Getaway that came before it, and as you would expect, there is a lot to take in onboard. After sailing on the new Pitbull-christened ship, I’ve gathered my tips on how to maximize your experience aboard the line’s largest ever cruise. Day 2 LONDON. After a hearty English breakfast, morning sightseeing with a Local Guide includes all the famous landmarks: the Houses of Parliament and Big Ben beside the Thames River, Westminster Abbey, Whitehall’s mounted horseguards, the Prime Minister’s Downing Street residence, Piccadilly Circus, and Buckingham Palace.
Danger Man (titled Secret Agent in the United States, and Destination Danger and John Drake in other non-UK markets) is a British television series which was broadcast between 1960 and 1962, and again between 1964 and 1968. The series featured Patrick McGoohan as secret agent John Drake. Ralph Smart created the programme and wrote many of the scripts.The first series of episodes ran to 24–25 minutes each and portrayed John Drake as working for a Washington, D.C.-based intelligence organization, apparently on behalf of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, whose assignments frequently took him to Africa, Latin America, and the Far East. In episode 9, 'The Sanctuary', Drake declares he is an Irish-American.He sometimes seemed at odds with his superiors about the ethics of the missions. Many of Drake's cases involved aiding democracy in foreign countries and he was also called upon to solve murders and crimes affecting the interests of either the U.S. Or NATO or both.Beginning with the second series, which aired several years after the first, the episode's length was increased to 48–49 minutes and Drake underwent retconning.
![Escape Escape](/uploads/1/2/6/2/126278105/704042450.jpg)
His nationalty became British, and he was an agent working for a secret British government department, called M9 (analogous to Secret Intelligence Service), though his Mid-Atlantic English accent persists for the first few episodes in production.Other than the largely nominal change of employer and nationality, Drake's mandate remains the same: 'to undertake missions involving national and global security'. In keeping with the episodic format of such series in the 1960s, there are no ongoing story arcs and there is no reference made to Drake's NATO adventures in the later M9 episodes.
![](/uploads/1/2/6/2/126278105/439542617.jpg)