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The Salon was a British reality TV show where various members of the public were invited daily to have treatments in a studio built beauty salon situated in Balham, south-west London, and in the second series, a purpose-built studio inside the Trocadero, Piccadilly Circus.
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The Salon was a British reality TV show where various members of the public were invited daily to have treatments in a studio built beauty salon situated in Balham, south-west London, and in the second series, a purpose-built studio inside the Trocadero, Piccadilly Circus.
Jamie, Sooz, Nicki, Alex, Sasha and Rob - all friends, all around eighteen, and all stars in their own drama.
Banzai was a British comedy gambling gameshow spoofing Japanese gameshows and general television style. It was produced by Radar, part of RDF Media. Each segment of the show was a silly or bizarre contest. Members of the viewing audience were encouraged to bet with each other on the outcome of each segment. The pseudo-Japanese characters seen on screen during the programme are meaningless.
The Body Shocking Show is a factual series shown on E4 with the first episode being aired on 14 March 2013 at 10pm.
Street Magic TV was first aired in January 2006 on E4 as the first television series to feature new and upcoming magician Matt Grindley. Channel 4 had recently enjoyed success with Derren Brown/David Blaine specials and the show was aimed to capitalise on this in a more gritty down to earth way. Although the show received excellent reviews, the production company felt that this kind of magic had become over exposed and the format was revamped in 2007 and filmed as a one-off special for cable channel M-TV still featuring Matt Grindley and now including Bar Bets, Scams and Cons.
T4 was a scheduling slot on Channel 4 and E4. It also aired on weekdays in the school holidays. The slot had a separate station identification on screen graphic from Channel 4 and E4. The logo of T4 is noticeably the top right segment of the standard Channel 4 logo. Channel 4 originally produced the strand in-house until 2002, when production was passed onto independent companies. The slot is targeted at the 16-34 age group. Until 25 March 2012, T4 aired on Channel 4 both Saturday and Sunday, however, to make way for the introduction of Sunday Brunch in March 2012, T4 Sunday was moved to run on E4; T4 Saturday remained on Channel 4, and some programmes that previously appeared within the T4 block, such as The Simpsons, remained on Channel 4 on Sunday afternoons. On 12 October 2012, Channel 4 announced that they would be axing T4 at the end of December 2012. The show ended on 29 December 2012.
The Bronx Bunny Show is an Irish ten-part series originally broadcast in 2003 on E4 in the United Kingdom and later in Ireland. It was an adult puppet interview show which followed the premise of a semi-educational show for the good people of the Bronx, Brooklyn and Manhattan. The show was produced from a run-down tenement building in the Bronx where Bronx Bunny and his sidekick, a cigarette-smoking panda named Teddy T, would interview celebrities who "done good". The Bronx Bunny Show won "Best Entertainment Show" IFTA Award in 2003. The show was broadcast sporadically on E4 and eventually on Channel 4. The series gained a cult following as it featured interviews with guests such as Hugh Hefner, Jessica Alba, William Shatner, and Larry Flynt. The show was created by Double Z Enterprises, an Irish production company behind such characters as Zig and Zag and Podge and Rodge.