Following the success of World’s Busiest Railway 2015, this new three-part series presented by Ade Adepitan, Anita Rani, Ant Anstead and Dan Snow takes viewers to the heart of three iconic public spaces in the city of New York: one of the busiest and most complex metropolises in the world. Filmed as live from Grand Central Terminal, the New Fulton Fish Market and Central Park, the series offers a 360-degree insight into the lives of New Yorkers - how they get about the city, how they are fed, and how they relax. Immersive films will show how transport, commerce, culture, leisure, food and retail play key roles in the life in the city, and the series will take viewers behind the scenes of some of the city’s biggest shops and organisations, as well as deep underground at major engineering projects to tell the story of New York, its people, and its history.
Netflix开发真人秀节目《Restaurants on the Edge 》。
Acclaimed science communicator Emily Calandrelli takes kids through lively experiments and entertaining activities in this new live-action series .
Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown is an American travel and food show on CNN. Its premier date was April 14, 2013. In the show, Anthony Bourdain travels to places that are unknown to most people.
City slickers get schooled by awesome hosts on their last chance to succeed off grid survive off the land... among us wildlife predators natural disasters
In 2009, art detective Dr Bendor Grosvenor caused a national scandal by proving that the Scottish National Portrait Gallery's iconic portrait of Bonnie Prince Charlie, the rebel Stuart who almost seized power in 1745, was not in fact him. Keen to make amends, and suspecting that a long-lost portrait of the prince by one of Scotland's greatest artists, Allan Ramsay, might still survive, Bendor decides to retrace Charles' journey in the hope of unravelling one of the greatest mysteries in British art.
在这部全新单口喜剧特辑中,坦诚而内省的喜剧演员西蒙·阿姆斯特尔敞开心扉,谈论了自己的神经质、向父亲出柜的经历以及情感关系等话题。
This show is quite possibly the biggest waste of videotape, electricity, and RF bandwidth in the 70 year history of television. It's nothing but 60 minutes of some of the worst bile that can come out of human beings, male or female. Basically, it's nothing but pure bitchy, catty, c*nty, vile harpiness among the contestants, judges, and the fashionistas (or should I say fashionazis). Typically a lot of insulting, backbiting, and bitchy, unnecessarily anal-retentive criticism. The thing that gets me about the show is how much the judges and fashionazis (and the pretentious shallow fashion industry in general) nit-pick against the equally bitchy contestants about little, petty, trivial, frivolous, anal-retentive things about their appearance, personality, etc. Things that the *REAL* people in this world (which the fashion industry lacks, thankfully) wouldn't give rat's ass number 1 about. (Myself included.) Crap like: "Oh, your left eyebrow is a yoctometer off center. That isn't gonna fly, and nobody will take you seriously in this industry because of it!" Or, "You're breathing wrong. Good luck with winning this competition." I'm just kidding here, but they usually end up saying things almost exactly like this on this show. If getting into the fashion industry is this hard, painful, bitchy, insulting, nit-picky, catty, backstabbing, and anal-retentive as this show tries to portray, than thank the good Lord that He made me all fat, balding, hairy, and dumpy-frumpy-dowdy-frowsy-geeky-lookin', because I would never want to be required to have the caustic bitchiness and anal, pretentious attitude of any model or fashionazi (or any fashion industry worker), namely the people on this show. And Janice Dickinson, mercy, do not get me started on her... This show needs to die. It's this show (and many other "reality" shows like it) that proves that competitiveness (and the fashion industry) is truly the devil's tool...
Jimmy Kimmel hosts the 64th Primetime Emmy Awards, honoring the best in television.