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- John Pitman meets a selection of women to ascertain their views on the wearing of coats made of fur.
- Explores the archives for the sultry sounds and looks of 'Jazz Divas Gold'. Featured Jazz legends include Ella Fitzgerald, Cleo Laine, Sarah Vaughan, Nina Simone, Peggy Lee, Amy Winehouse, Eartha Kitt and many more.
- A late night comedy variety television show, filmed in a sound stage in West London, with the set designed to resemble a cabaret club.
- 2006–201624mTV-Y5.8 (8)TV EpisodeThe Wonder Pets help a Cool Cat and Hip Hippo how to take turns at a jazz performance in Greenwich Village./Tuck's cool, coordinated, older cousin, Buck, visits the classroom and winds up trapped in the schoolhouse cubby!
- Julian Clary goes on a journey around New York to find Roger Whittaker.
- Emmy-winning Los Angeles show in which Regis Philbin discussed current issues with popular celebrities.
- 1996–2002TV-G1.0 (11)TV Episode
- Black history month tribute; opening jokes; research study on money circulation. Interview with Special Guest: John Amos. Black History Month Minute I; Oscar picks; Black History Month Minute II. Musical performance by Kake. Chasing John sequence.
- This satirical sketch show, a successor to the BBC's "That Was the Week That Was" (1962), ran from November 1964 to April 1965. Picking up where they had left off on TW3, David Nathan and Dennis Potter continued as a sketch-writing team, although Potter dropped out before the end of the series.
- The Paul Ryan Show footage collection consists of nearly 700 half-hour long, in-depth, one-on-one interviews with many of the biggest names in television.
- 1995–200030mTV-Y6.9 (12)TV EpisodeHans Christian Anderson's classic tale of the Snow Queen and how she freezes a young boy's heart and turns him into a creature as cold as she. The boy's long-time, childhood friend travels far and wide and risks her life to save him. Her sweetness, innocence and tears that warm his heart return him to his real self. Eartha Kitt camps it up and steals the show as she sings how it is "Cool to Be Cold."
- The goings on within the film industry.
- A collection of home movies made by the family of Fayard and Harold Nicholas from mid-1930s to the early 1950s.
- "Right of Reply/Right of Correction" - Michel Polac's cult program "Droit de Réponse" - live, controversial and French.
- "A special childhood movie that I'll always love."
- This game consisted of two teams of two players each. One player would be at a game board while their teammate would be in a soundproof booth. The person at the game board communicated a word or phrase to their teammate in the booth using three letters at first and added a letter every five seconds until the word or phrase was identified. The team using fewer letters won the game. Normally there was a "Home Team" consisting of two celebrities and a "Challengers Team" of one celebrity and a contestant. A tie score was considered a win for the contestant, who would win prizes for each game won by the Challengers Team. In other words, if the Challengers won a game, the contestant would win a prize. Each show included a P. D. Q. Special, a three-game match with special prizes awarded to the contestant if the Challengers won two out of the three games. A Bonus Round was held at the end of the show, with the contestant being asked to identify ten words, one at a time in five seconds or less, with only three letters per word to work with. If the contestant could successfully identify all ten words, they would win an automobile. If not, they were awarded a dollar amount redeemable for merchandise from the Spiegel Catalog. The jackpot total was either $250 or, if the Challengers used fewer letters than the Home Team over the course of the show, $500.
- It's 1920 in a small town in Kentucky, and Teddy, a teenage girl, dreams of escaping from her boredom at home to the excitement of Chicago.
- A modern retelling of Romeo and Juliet.