Find the word definition

Wiktionary
small town

alt. A small (generally rural) town. n. A small (generally rural) town.

WordNet
small town

n. a community of people smaller than a town [syn: village, settlement]

Wikipedia
Small Town

"Small Town" is a song written by John Mellencamp and released on his 1985 album Scarecrow. The song reached #6 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart.

Small Town (Sports Night)

"Small Town" is the thirteenth episode of the first season of the television series Sports Night, written by Aaron Sorkin and Paul Redford, and directed by Thomas Schlamme, premiered on ABC in the United States on January 12, 1999.

In the episode, Dana and Casey are supposed to take the night off but are reluctant to do so. They choose to have a double date, Dana with Gordon and Casey with blind date Lisa. Natalie is left to produce the show for the first time, and has to handle a late trade, and Isaac and Jeremy question her authority amongst the rush of the deadline. Bobbi Bernstein, Casey's replacement for the night, claims that Dan slept with her in Spain and failed to call her afterwards, which Dan disputes, calling her "psychotic". In a subsequent episode, "Eli's Coming", Dan learns Bobbi is not wrong, but her appearance was different at the time, and Dan knew her as "Roberta".

Six characters receive top billing in the episode: Casey McCall ( Peter Krause); Dan Rydell ( Josh Charles); Dana Whitaker ( Felicity Huffman); Isaac Jaffe ( Robert Guillaume); Natalie Hurley ( Sabrina Lloyd) and Jeremy Goodwin ( Joshua Malina. Several recurring characters also appear in the episode including Kim ( Kayla Blake); Elliot ( Greg Baker), Chris ( Timothy Davis-Reed), Will ( Ron Ostrow) and Gordon ( Ted McGinley). Lisa Edelstein, who would later have a starring role in House, guest-stars as Bobbi Bernstein, while other guest stars include Alice Coppola and Amy Powell, who appear as Leesa and Kelly respectively.

The episode received mostly positive reviews. The episode won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Picture Editing in a multi-camera series at the 51st Primetime Emmy Awards in 1999, and was nominated for the award Outstanding Directorial Achievement for a Comedy Series at the Directors Guild of America Awards 1999. Janet Ashikaga was also recognised by the American Cinema Editors for Best Editing in a Half-Hour Television Series.