One of the realities of this new quarantine life is the possibility of discovering a new show you wouldn't have noticed otherwise. For me, Win the Wilderness is one of the best shows I've come across on Netflix.
When it comes to reality TV, there are dozens of choices. But, according to a new study, Wyoming's favorite reality show is uniquely ours. No other state watched this show as much as we did this year...
According to CableTV.com, that show is...
Believe it or not, there are actually people in the world who don’t want to know about the Kardashian family’s every move. If you’re one of them, there may soon be hope!
They should’ve known when they asked Patricia ‘Tan Mom’ Krentcil to do a show called “Hot Mess” that things were going to get crazy. Krencil clearly took the name of the show to heart, and got kicked out of her own roast for being so drunk that she couldn’t even sit through a drag queen variety show.
After five seasons of binge drinking, late-night club brawls, Snooki-isms, and gym, tan and laundry, MTV has decided to cancel the long-running reality show ‘Jersey Shore‘ upon the end of its sixth season, premiering Thursday, October 4.
Rapper T.I. shows what it takes to juggle a career and fatherhood in his new VH1 reality series ‘T.I. & Tiny: The Family Hustle,’ which airs Dec. 5. In a trailer that premiered online, the Atlanta rap stresses the value of family and his determination to not make the same mistakes that previously landed him in jail.
The CW is currently developing a reality show based on musical chairs.
They’re calling it ‘Extreme Musical Chairs’ and, according to Variety, it “would transform the popular children’s game into a physically demanding competition with multiple rounds of elimination set in an indoor obstacle course.”
Yup,we all saw this one coming.
Courtney Stodden, who burst into the public’s consciousness in May when the then-16-year-old married 51-year-old actor Doug Hutchison, is getting a reality show.
‘Jersey Shore’ doesn’t just rot brains — it drains tax coffers, too.
MTV’s hit reality show, which depicts the exploits of a group of raisin-tanned 20-somethings as they live and party along the New Jersey coastline, has just had $420,000 of its 2009 production costs covered by the state’s Economic Development Authority.