This Old House is a documentary-style TV show that follows home renovation and repair projects. It provides instructional content on various aspects of home improvement, offering tips and techniques for viewers to apply in their own homes.
Love It or List It is a reality TV show that follows homeowners who are torn between keeping their newly renovated home or selling it. Each episode features a couple who are unhappy with their current home and enlist the help of a real estate agent and a designer to make improvements. At the end of the show, the homeowners must decide whether they love their newly renovated home enough to stay or list it for sale.
Home Improvement is a sitcom that revolves around Tim "The Toolman" Taylor, a handyman and the host of a fictional TV show called "Tool Time." He constantly gets into humorous and often disastrous situations both at home and on the show. The series focuses on Tim's relationships with his wife, sons, and neighbors, and explores themes of family, friendship, and the challenges of balancing work and family life.
Property Brothers is a reality TV show that follows twin brothers, Jonathan and Drew Scott, as they help homeowners find and renovate their dream homes. With their expertise in real estate, design, and construction, the brothers guide clients through the process of buying and renovating a fixer-upper, turning it into a stunning and personalized home.
Extreme Makeover: Home Edition is a heartwarming reality TV show where deserving families are surprised with amazing home makeovers. From tearful reunions to jaw-dropping transformations, this show will warm your heart and inspire you to make a difference. The team of experts, led by host Ty Pennington, works tirelessly to create dream homes for families in need, turning houses into life-changing living spaces. Get ready to feel the love and witness the power of community as families' lives are forever changed.
Trading Spaces is a reality TV show that follows the adventures of two sets of neighbors as they redecorate a room in each other's homes. With the help of a professional interior decorator, they have a limited budget and a limited amount of time to completely transform the space. The show is filled with drama, laughter, and surprises as the homeowners see the final results.
Queer Eye is a reality TV show where a team of five experts provides style, fashion, and lifestyle makeovers to individuals. The show explores various aspects of personal growth, interior design, cooking, and self-expression. With a heartfelt and feel-good approach, the show showcases the transformative experiences of people from different backgrounds.
While You Were Out is an American reality series that aired episodes on the cable channel TLC. The format of the show is similar to TLC's Trading Spaces. While You Were Out adds a suspenseful gimmick by keeping the entire redecoration a secret from the homeowner.
Changing Rooms was a do-it-yourself home improvement show broadcast in the United Kingdom on the BBC between 1996 and 2004. The show was one of a number of home improvement and lifestyle shows popular in the late 1990s and early 2000s. The show was later franchised, generally under the same name, for the local TV markets in the United States, New Zealand and Australia.
Builder Chase Morrill is teaming up with his brother, sister and best friend to save and transform abandoned cabins buried deep in the remote woods of Maine. From historic cottages nearly a century old, to camp cabins in need of some major TLC, they'll give these properties the facelift they've needed for decades. And, you never know what you might find when you go for a walk in the woods.
A room makeover program for young people hosted by Stéphane Bellavance.
Sell This House is a reality television series that started airing on the A&E television network in 2003. Host Tanya Memme and designer/home stager Roger Hazard help homeowners who are having trouble selling their houses. First, cameras are set up to record prospective buyers' reactions in a one-day open house, followed by Memme showing and discussing the comments with the homeowners. Afterwards, Hazard makes his evaluation. He, Memme, the sellers, and their friends and family then work to stage the house, fixing, minimizing or hiding any problems he has found, on a budget of a few hundred dollars. This generally involves painting, removing excess clutter and personal items, and rearranging furniture. Finally, the same potential buyers are brought back for a second walkthrough. In 2011, for season 9, the show's name was changed to Sell This House: Extreme and the format expanded to one hour. Construction expert Charlie Frattini and designer Daniel Kucan joined the cast.
Trading Spaces: Boys vs. Girls was a 2003 reality television series spin-off of the home redecorating series, Trading Spaces, hosted by Diane Mizota. During the fourth season, Chuck Cureau hosted seven episodes until the show ended in 2005. In each episode, two friends redecorate each other's bedrooms in themes relating to the others tastes or hobbies. Trading Spaces: Boys vs. Girls aired regularly on the Discovery Kids Channel until it became The Hub.
The home decorator and tv host Ernst Kirchstegier travels around Sweden where he design and decorates everything from an outhouse to big villas with his simple but yet beautiful style.
DIY Network is on a mission to crash and trash bathrooms, transforming them into stunning, functional and modern living spaces in the new series Bath Crashers. Produced similarly to the popular House Crashers and Yard Crashers series, crasher Matt Muenster ambushes homeowners while they're home improvement shopping. When he identifies the ultimate bathroom challenge, he follows the lucky homeowner home and totally overhauls a bathroom in need of repair.
Familie Heinz Becker is a German television series that aired from 1992 through 2004. The show revolves around the lives of Heinz Becker and his family, as well as those of neighbors and onlookers, although the focus of the series changed over the course of the series. In the first season, much of the humor was derived from Heinz's petty behavior; the character of his wife, Hilde, was not played for laughs. During seasons 2-4, Hilde's character became more naive but was devoted; much of the humor came from family dialogues. After Season 4, the focus shifted more to public life. Seasons 6 and 7 are not as well esteemed by critics as they repeat a number of older jokes and much of the comedy came from awkward situations, misspeaking, and other more mainstream comedic elements.
Queer Eye for the Straight Guy is a reality TV show that aired from 2003 to 2007. The show features a group of gay men known as the Fab Five who give fashion, grooming, home decor, and lifestyle makeovers to straight men. Each episode focuses on transforming the lifestyle and appearance of a different man, often resulting in heartwarming and positive outcomes.
On her show Kitchen Crashers, host Alison Victoria dishes out loads of design advice.