Listener
Encyclopedia
Listener may refer to:
  • A prisoner in a UK jail, specially trained by Samaritans
    Samaritans (charity)
    Samaritans is a registered charity aimed at providing emotional support to anyone in emotional distress or at risk of suicide throughout the United Kingdom and Ireland, often through their telephone helpline. The name comes from the Biblical parable of the Good Samaritan, though the organisation...

     to provide confidential emotional support to other prisoners


In media, arts, and entertainment
  • The Listener (magazine), a defunct British magazine, published for most of its history by the BBC
  • New Zealand Listener
    New Zealand Listener
    The New Zealand Listener is a New Zealand magazine. First published in 1939 and edited by Oliver Duff and the Monte Holcroft it originally had a monopoly on the publication of of upcoming television and radio programmes. In the 1980s it lost its monopoly on the publication of upcoming television...

    , a New Zealand magazine
  • Listener (musician), a rapper from Siloam Springs, Arkansas
  • The Listener (TV series)
    The Listener (TV series)
    The Listener is a Canadian science fiction drama set in Toronto about a young paramedic named Toby Logan with the ability to listen to people's minds. The series premiered on Fox International Channels beginning with the Arabic-speaking area of northern Africa and south-western Asia on March 1, 2009...

    , a Canadian TV series about a telepathic paramedic
  • Ashema the Listener
    Ashema the Listener
    In the fictional Marvel Comics' universe, Ashema the Listener is a member of the cosmically powerful Celestials.-Fictional character biography:...

    , a character in Marvel Comics


In computing:
  • An object in a computer program called an event listener; see Observer pattern
    Observer pattern
    The observer pattern is a software design pattern in which an object, called the subject, maintains a list of its dependents, called observers, and notifies them automatically of any state changes, usually by calling one of their methods...

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