Explore TV Series

1,520 Matches Found

Triplets

It tells, in a comedic tone, the story of the Scarpelli triplets (Guillermo Francella), Marcelo, Enzo, and Luis. Marcelo is a charming, womanizing hustler who aspires to succeed as an actor. Enzo is an unscrupulous office worker capable of anything to get money, and Luis, divorced with four children, is a serious and obsessive man responsible for running the family restaurant. Three brothers, very similar on the outside but very different on the inside, will find themselves united by various twists and turns in which they will share hilarious situations of entanglement.

Triplets

8.0 N/A
Extreme Survival

Extreme Survival is a survival television series hosted by Ray Mears. The series airs on the BBC in United Kingdom, it is also shown on Discovery Channel in the United States, Canada, India, Italy, Brazil, New Zealand, Australia, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, the Netherlands and Russia, where he demonstrates his wilderness skills and shares amazing tales of survival from some of the world's most menacing environments. The show was first broadcast in 1999, after the success of World of Survival from 1997–1998, and ended in 2002. His journeys have take him to the farthest corners of the earth, encountering indigenous peoples who embody his philosophy and live in tune with their natural environment.

Extreme Survival

8.0 N/A
Early Today

Early Today is an American early morning television news program airing on NBC. The program features general national and international news stories, financial and entertainment news, off-beat stories, weather forecasts, and sports highlights. It is anchored by Richard Lui for the Pacific and Mountain time zone editions, and Mara Schiavocampo or Veronica De La Cruz for the Eastern and Central time zone editions. It is the only early morning network newscast on any of the Big Three television networks that is not produced jointly with an overnight news program. The program is broadcast live at 4:00 a.m. Eastern Time, and is transmitted in a continuous half-hour tape delayed loop until 10:00 a.m. ET, when Today begins in the Pacific Time Zone. The program usually airs as a lead-in to local morning newscasts on most NBC stations, although in the few markets where the NBC station does not produce a morning newscast, it may air in a two- to three-hour loop immediately before the start of Today. The show is updated for any breaking news occurring before 7:00 a.m. ET, while stations throughout the network will join Today in all time zones past that time at their local discretion or network orders for live coverage.

Early Today

9.0 N/A