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- "Newlyweds" follows the lives of pop stars Nick Lachey and Jessica Simpson in the same way "The Osbournes" follows Ozzy's clan.
- Newlyweds Lauren (Sarah Borne) and David (Yoshi Sudarso) are enjoying their honeymoon when Lauren suddenly disappears. Between footage of Lauren walking with another man and noticing David's bank account has been drained, police believe Lauren left on her own. But David knows that Lauren would never leave him like that; she must have been abducted. With the help of a private investigator named Gina (Catherine Dyer), David focuses on finding his wife. Elsewhere, Lauren-who really has been kidnapped-is being forced by her captors to launder money. But, when one of the captors is revealed to be David's ex-wife, Sadie (Olivia Jordan), it's clear that the true goal of this scheme goes much deeper than money.
- Married couples compete to see how much they really know about each other.
- Newlyweds Buzzy and Katie find their blissful life disrupted by the arrival of his half-sister and news of her sister's marriage troubles.
- The young and beautiful Yuki decides to leave her husband. She goes back to the place where she grew up. There she is initiated to S&M and bondage. But is it really the perfect cure to forget all about her past and regain happiness?
- A young newlywed begins to doubt her husband's love when his rival is found dead. When she starts investigating the death and her husband's past, she becomes his next target.
- An recent update of the long-running game show, with veteran host Bob Eubanks returning to the show. Newlywed husbands and wives would take turns answering (often risque) questions while their spouses were backstage. After answering, the spouses would return and be asked the same questions, earning points if their answers matched their spouse's. The couple that finished with the most points would win a prize.
- 3 newlywed couples answer questions about their relationships, trying to match their spouse's answer
- You've got to be 16 to drive, 17 to enlist, and 18 to vote. Teenage Newlyweds literally asks: is there an age limit on love? By showcasing several pairs of young engaged couples with different backgrounds and ideals as they head to their wedding, we may find the answer lies in the subsequent honeymoon episode.
- "The Newlywed Game" is among the most enduring game shows of the genre. This 1985 five-day-a-week syndicated revival of the classic game show, again hosted by Eubanks, sported a new set, but with no other notable changes. The rules remained the same as in previous versions four couples, each married less than two years, answered a series of questions designed to expose how well the spouses knew (or didn't know) each other. The husbands were asked a series of questions while their wives were secluded offstage. The wives returned and answered the same questions; matches were worth 5 points each. As before, incorrect answers usually led to full-scale fights and verbal assaults (with Eubanks and the audience not making things any easier). The process was repeated with the wives answering the questions and the husbands herded offstage; questions were now worth 10 points. A final bonus question (usually general, first posed to the wives) was worth 25 points. The couple with the highest point total at the end of the game won a bonus prize "chosen especially for" them usually a trip, furniture or mode of transportation (other than a car or truck). Reruns of the 1985 version of "The Newlywed Game," as do the show's other versions, continue to air on Game Show Network.
- In a competition among three married couples, husbands guess how their wives answered questions, and wives guess how their husbands answered questions, with prizes for the most accurate pair.
- The basic premise of the perennial game show "The Newlywed Game" has been copied and imitated many times, but this original show proved to be the one fans loved (or hated) the most. The rules to this 1970s five-day-a-week syndicated series were identical to those in the classic ABC series. Four couples, each married less than two years, answered a series of questions designed to expose how well the spouses knew (or didn't know) each other. The husbands were first to answer the questions while their wives were secluded offstage; many times, the answers involved "whoopie" (a euphemism for "sex"). Matching answers were worth 5 points each, while not matching usually led to high-pitched arguments much to the delight of Eubanks and the audience. The process was repeated with the wives answering a series of questions and the husbands taken backstage, correct answers were worth 10 points. A final bonus question (usually general, answered by the wives) was worth 25 points. The couple with the highest point total at the end of the game won a bonus prize "chosen especially for" them usually a trip, furniture or mode of transportation (other than a car or truck). Reruns of "The Newlywed Game" remains among the highest-rated shows on the Game Show Network.
- ShortA couple face the reality of marriage behind the veil of a high-octane wedding. The Wife struggles to confront what newlywed bliss looks like outside the fantasy of her mind. The validation she expects after marriage is all but smoke and mirrors despite her attempts of social media posts, collected mementos, and monthly anniversary milestones. The Husband struggles to accept the wife's need for perfection. Will they embrace one another on the path ahead?
- Photographer ALLIE ADAMS is covering the wedding of Jenna Cole and Kevin Davis when tragedy strikes. During the bride and groom's first dance, a gunshot rings out from somewhere in the dark reception hall. Jenna gasps in horror as Kevin falls to the ground, dead. The reception now a crime scene, Allie is interviewed by DETECTIVE SAM ACOSTA, who asks Allie for her cooperation (and her photographs). The two are interrupted by Kevin's sister, Sabrina, who tearfully points the finger in the direction of a single suspect: Allie's brother GREG, Jenna's ex-boyfriend who had crashed the previous night's rehearsal dinner to win her back. Allie is quick to defend her brother, but despite numerous attempts to reach him,he is nowhere to be found. When Greg finally returns, a day later, he tells Allie he had gone to the family cabin. He had not taken the news of Jenna's impending wedding well and needed some space. But with no one able to confirm his alibi,the police, led by Detective Acosta, zero in on Greg as the prime suspect. In an effort to clear her brother's name, Allie decides to launch her own investigation. With the help of her assistant NOAH and best friend MAYA, she quickly narrows down the suspects to those who attended the rehearsal dinner. Allie's search leads her to three guests with possible motives: Kevin's father MR. DAVIS, who was vehemently opposed to the wedding. BILL CROSS, an employee at Kevin's family-run development firm that believed Kevin had received the promotion Bill deserved. And BRANDON STILES, the lone groomsman who never showed up to the wedding ceremony after a falling out with Kevin. As Allie follows the clues, her investigation intersects with Detective Acosta's. Their frosty rapport thaws, and she is able to persuade him that there is more to the murder of Kevin Davis than meets the eye. But even Allie is thrown when she delivers wedding photos to Kevin's sister Sabrina, and discovers a love note from Greg. When her brother confirms he had
- Newlyweds who are on the verge of breaking up videotape each other, and then receive an assessment from therapist Gary Direnfeld. He challenges them to change their behavior, and hopefully bring back the love.
- Explores the ups and downs of marriage as diverse couples from across the country experience the trials and tribulations of their first year of marriage. From the moment they say 'I do' to their one-year anniversary and everything in between, the cameras capture the significant milestones, difficult adjustments and everyday life of the twelve newlyweds to see whether or not they can survive what proves to be the most difficult year of marriage.
- Weddings are supposed to mark the beginning of a new chapter filled with love, hope, and possibilities. But, for these newlyweds, a vow to love until death do them part, was fulfilled much sooner than they expected.
- A young man and a young woman, each unlucky in love, determine never to marry. But Cupid has other ideas.
- An updated version of the long-running game show, now with host Paul Rodriguez. Newlywed husbands and wives would take turns answering (often risque) questions while their spouses were backstage. After answering, the spouses would return and be asked the same questions, earning points if their answers matched their spouse's. The couple that finished with the most points would win a prize.
- Armed with plenty of defiant optimism, this elderly woman prepares a birthday party, grapples with her husband and even rescues a wedding that is about not to happen.
- A short-lived version of the US quiz show, where couples compete to answer questions about one another. Presented by Gloria Hunniford, despite reasonable ratings, it lasted just one series.
- Newlyweds Bob and Suzi have landlord troubles when Suzi's mother arrives on a visit and brings her dog and dogs are forbidden in their apartment house and they face eviction. Mother leaves and all is well. Bob's boss (Donald MacBride) tells Bob he will promote him to sales manager if Bob takes care of his unruly police dog while he is out of town. Nothing ventured, nothing gained thinks Bob until the irate landlord shows up again. But Bob's boss takes care of that problem by buying the property and saying Bob and Suzi can keep all the dogs they want.
- A timid young man marries the daughter of the entomologist he works for. On the train for their honeymoon, he takes his young wife in his arms when a customs officer suddenly enters the compartment. The groom is now inhibited.
- Seven recently married couples compete in a variety of challenges for an ever-increasing cash prize.
- Step into the past in this unaired MTV reality show chronicling Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera's tumultuous marriage.
- Aram and Suzy are newlyweds and Suzy's father, comes to live with them. He is a widower and used to be an officer in the Soviet Army and has an old world take on life. While the young couple, struggle with getting know each other more intimately and closely, he is constantly around at the wrong times. One day, when speaking with a friend, Aram wonders what Suzy will look like physically, in a few years, because Suzy mother was a heavy-set woman, Aram is concerned that Suzy will become the same. So, this is where the conflict starts and miscommunication ensues and comedy is created.
- Newlywed Evangelical Christians discover the magic of sex in this entertaining comedy short.
- The first entry in the two-reel shorts series based on "The Newlyweds" (later changed to "Snookums") comic strip by George McManus. There is a neighborhood feud when Snookums throws empty cans into the neighbor's yard. This one features dancing eggs with the feet sticking out, a trained goose, and Snookums getting dizzy on a phonograph turntable.
- When her newlywed husband, Bob, mistakenly follows the diet prescribed for their dog and starts eating grass, Betty calls for a psychiatrist. To complicate their martial-bliss even more, Betty's parents comes for a visit and her father, a retired insurance salesman, forces an unneeded policy on Bob.
- A young, recently married couple struggle with the turmoils of marriage and the demanding expectations brought upon them due to their religious upbringing.
- Michael and Abby are newlyweds and they want to show you how to wash your dogs. But things go awry when Doug the neighbor comes to visit.