MIPTV: Love, Dogs and Lockdown – the Reality Trends Driving the Global TV Market Georg Szalai
We can thank COVID for bringing up a kinder, gentler take on reality TV.
A year into the coronavirus pandemic, the non-scripted shows getting traction globally and generating buyer interest at the international digital MIPTV market this week favor the warm and fuzzy over the shocking and exploitative.
Take
The
Dog House, the British reality format in which would-be dog owners those newly locked-down types who see enforced quarantine as a prime opportunity to get a pooch are paired with shelter pups looking for a permanent home. All3Media International recently sold the format to HBO Max for the U.S., to Australia’s Network 10, and to public broadcaster ZDF for Germany. Broadcasters in Canada, New Zealand, and Scandinavia are also in
MIPTV: Reality Trends Driving Global TV | Hollywood Reporter
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ZDF lands in The Dog House
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film profile]) and recounts how Lucía (played by Rueda) thinks she leads an exemplary life and has everything under control. Ever since she got married, this woman has invested all of her effort in taking care of her family, with the aim of attaining what, for her, is the pinnacle of perfection. However, everything starts to fall apart the day Sara (Yuste), her son’s girlfriend, appears. Along with this young, free-spirited, foul-mouthed girl come some in-laws who are very different to the ones that Lucía had always pictured for her son. From that moment on, Lucía will find out that the perfect family was not exactly what she’d had in mind.