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- Deeper Throat is a hot and spicy six episode, 30 minute series that goes deep inside the re-making of an adult film classic. The series follows some of the craziest characters in porn as they put their reputations - and their bodies - to the test making a new version of "Deep Throat."
- What happens when a wife finds out that her husband is gay? "My Husband's Secret" explores the raw emotions and complex issues that arise when women are faced with a devastating betrayal. This timely documentary special follows three families in crisis: Kristen and Kasidy, married 20 years, are on the verge of divorce. After discovering Kaeri's explicit Internet chats and confronting him about his gay affairs, Kristen must decide whether to move on with her life or try to make it work with her gay husband. Lester and Barbara, practicing Mormons and parents of four children, have made the difficult decision to stay together. But Lester's continued indiscretions and refusal to remain faithful threaten to tear the family apart. Allyson and Dave, recently divorced, struggle to put their lives back together. Can Allyson forgive her husband's secrets and lies? Or will she forever yearn for the love of her life to take her back.
- Newlyweds Nate and Danielle chose to buy and completely renovate a 40-year-old suburban tract home by themselves - just days after getting married. With a limited budget and only nights and weekends to renovate, the couple has made little progress. After ten-months, self-described perfectionist Nate, has completed only one room and the house is unlivable. With the stress reaching a breaking point in their new marriage, Nate reluctantly agrees to hire a contractor and Danielle gives them just a two-month deadline to complete. She wants a perfect house to host her very first family Thanksgiving dinner.
- During Summer 2000, the mayor of the Greek island of Lesbos tried to ban 26 Lesbians from arriving on a package holiday from the UK; but he ended up biting off more than he could chew. This programme follows the love, lust and laughs over the course of their holiday as the women drink, dance and snog their way around the island. Despite being shadowed by the papparazi and some negative islanders, nothing can stop our women from fighting for their right to party.
- The 1970's marked a high-point in modern hedonism, and the "sex and drugs" lifestyle was played out most spectacularly in California. This was the era when wife-swapping became a reality, and the new, sexually liberated way of life created a new look - captured in all it's glorious excess and tastelessness by the movie "Boogie Nights". Los Angeles was a land of bachelor pads and the conventional suburban homes - Ranch houses - were transformed with the addition of shag pile carpet and new inventions like the waterbed and the Jacuzzi, into sensual, swinging party houses. The result is an iconic image of modern decadence that has become part of the visual language of movies and music videos to this day.
- For all those people who attend open houses with no real intention of buying, this studio-based talk show takes us inside unusual private homes, both on and off the market. Each week our esteemed design and real estate panelists will countdown the top homes and debate the merits of each, all culminating in choosing the property our panel envies most.
- Anyone can floss their nostrils with electrical wire, but only on VH1s Wack TV Passport can you see a young Japanese girl floss then plug that wire in and light up a 60-watt bulb. This incandescent clip is just one of the scores of equally bizarre and hysterically outrageous shows you'll get to know on the six-part series Wack TV Passport. These six half-hour episodes showcase clips from the strangest and silliest international television programs. Imagine British eccentrics going for a catapult ride or a Latvian daredevil battling it out against his rival armed only with a humongous dead fish. And thats only the beginning Your international guides on this tour of television thrills are Oscar and Mitch, improv stars from the famed L.A. Groundlings Comedy Theatre and experienced couch potatoes who think they've seen it all until now. With their off-screen, off-the-cuff commentary, Oscar and Mitch will share their amazement, surprise, passion and even disgust for whats on screen. Whether agreeing or disagreeing, their skewed sensibility adds to the wild audio/video circus that is Wack TV Passport. You'll never see our hosts on camera, but then, who'd want to? After all, nasal flossing with electrical wire is a pretty hard act to follow.
- Throughout history, man has shown infinite creativity in his ability to inflict pain on his fellow man. In ancient Greece and Rome punishment was cruel and torture was used to control the masses, force confessions, punish crimes and justify religious persecution. The Greeks were the first to invent a torture device called The Brazen Bull, a hollow bronze bull which used to cook people alive. But it was arrival of the Spanish inquisition in the 13 century which heralded a new age of blood chilling instruments of agony. With the 17th century Age of Enlightenment, a new way of thinking was dawning. Breakthroughs in science and philosophy led to the search for more humane ways of punishing criminals. Instead of filthy, dank dungeons, prisons were formed to help the prisoner rehabilitate back into society and punishment by execution evolved from the slow strangulation of petty thieves at Tyburn into today's simple pin-prick of the lethal injection. But despite their best attempts, reformers had failed to remove cruel and unusual punishment and torture from society.
- Experience the Divine in a series of underground documentary missions to bring God to our screens. The Mission Divine is the search for that which is not known. In The Mission Divine, 6 video diarists undertake a mission to find God as best they can, and persuade Him (or Her) to make some form of appearance as the pay-off at the end their journey. Each programme represents the highlights of the spiritual journey of a single contributor traveling through Brazil, England, Israel, India, and England.
- After the LA riots, World of Wonder gave cameras to ten Los Angelinos (gang leaders, cops, teachers, Koreans, TV reporters) to make video diaries about their lives. These stories were interwoven into a feature film revealing what life in LA is like from the inside out.
- A one-hour doc-u-soap about London lesbians, close -up and intimate with the outrageous lipstick lesbian scene in Englands capital. Women loving women can be glamorous and glorious. From girlie bars to strip joints across London Following characters including erotic dancers and gay girls about town.
- Jersey Celebs counts down our favorite 25 celebrities who were either born in, raised in, or have lived in the great state of New Jersey.
- A look at the confrontational world of the talkshow. A range of participants talk at how the system abuses, manipulates and exploits psychologically damaged people in search of ratings. The film contrasts the dangers of the talkshow circuit with the work of Jamie Husyman a clinical therapist who is a strong proponent of talkshows as a route to therapy. He offers a solution called Aftercare in which people who have appeared on the talkshow are offered free treatment in healthcare facilities.
- In this film we explore Warhol's shift from painting to film-making. No less radical in this area, he eschewed Hollywood conventions, setting up at The Factory his own rival East coast studio churning out films in which nothing happened. In his one reel three-minute screen tests he proved himself a true documentarian fascinated by the depths of nothingness, that would, years later, be the key ingredient of reality television. Meanwhile, to fund his experimental agenda Warhol also became a commercial portrait artist, charging wealthy patrons for flattering portraits that ,through their sheer number, became another vast work of social documentation. Warhol further capitalized on this shrewd business approach by taking on the management of seminal rock group The Velvet Underground, and playing host at the Factory to an outrageous coterie of people that his patronage transformed into superstars, culminating in an assassination attempt that he barely survived yet that set the seal on Warhol's status as both a star and a brand.
- In this debut episode we experience the vulnerable and witty emotional core of the young artist, whose shoe drawings and, in collaboration with his mother, drawings of cats and angels, reveal an artist full of humor, tenderness, and whimsy. These qualities made the young Warhol a sensational success in the commercial field, but he craved the respectability of an Artist. Trading on his shyness and strange looks, he fashioned for himself a conceptual shell that, taken with his screenprints of everyday supermarket objects, stormed the Art establishment and challenged the hitherto unquestioned reign of the Abstract Expressionists.
- In this final episode in the series we look at the way Warhol, perhaps to convince himself that he was alive (and to confound the critics who had written him off as a spent force), stepped up production in every field. He wrote books, published Inteview magazine, made television shows and did commercials. He painted everything from piss paintings to male nude torsos, collaborated with new artists like Haring and Basquait, and produced The Last Supper paintings exhibited months before his completely unexpected death. Through the subsequent establishment of two museums, the 'official' Warhol museum in Pittsburgh and the family-funded effort in Medzilaborce, the film captures how Warhol survives today by being a figure of controversy as everyone who knew him battles for their image of Warhol as the image of Warhol. In this respect, and in the world around us, Warhol seems more alive than he ever was.
- Nicole has great memories of seeing Siegfried and Roy as a kid and dreams of having her own show in Las Vegas one day. She heads to the famous Magicopolis in Hollywood, where she becomes a magician's assistant and tries her best not to steal the show.
- Instead of a honeymoon, newlyweds Nate and Danielle chose to buy and completely remodel a 40-year-old home -- by themselves. But ten-months later, only one room is complete and the house is unlivable. Nate reluctantly agrees to hire a contractor and Danielle gives them a two-month deadline to complete. She wants a perfect house to host her first family Thanksgiving dinner.
- With just two months to gut and remodel their entire home, Nate's new contractor throws out his back the day before construction begins on the kitchen addition. Any delay in pouring the foundation will throw off the entire remodel, so Nate decides to move ahead anyway. But the demands of running a job site on a tight deadline might prove disastrous for Nate's small budget and his perfectionist ways. And Danielle fears the construction is testing their marriage as their first anniversary approaches.
- Newlyweds Nate and Danielle experience non-stop setbacks as they race toward their Thanksgiving deadline. After they gut their sun room, their contractor finds wood rot and recommends tearing down and rebuilding the entire structure. Nate sees red as his budget gets blown up by unexpected expenses and schedule setbacks.
- Newlyweds Nate and Danielle finally start work on their family room when their contractor discovers asbestos tiles under the old carpet. This setback threatens to derail their aggressive construction schedule and causes Danielle to question her ability to move into their home.
- When a sub-contractor fails to show up to plaster the new walls on the first floor, panic ensues when newlyweds Nate and Danielle realize their schedule is falling apart. While Nate is challenged to quickly devise a plan B, Danielle must start scaling back on the finishes she can no longer afford.
- Nate reluctantly agrees to let Danielle mix glitter into the exterior stucco of the house. But when the design experiment fails, the newlyweds question their ability to finish the house on time and keep their relationship in tact. And as they run out of budget, Danielle fears her house won't be ready in time for her first family Thanksgiving dinner.
- With Thanksgiving just one week away, newlyweds Nate and Danielle burn the candle at both ends to finish the house before family arrives. But as they run out of time, they realize they've also run out of budget. The idea of hosting their first family Thanksgiving dinner is looking more and more like a turkey.
- When you're married to a sports nut, sometimes it helps to know a little about their favorite teams. Like, for instance, what sport the team plays. So Nicole sets out to learn everything there is to know about every single sport...in one sitting.