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A&E Top 10 (1999–2000) All Year Round with Katie Brown (2003) Makeover Mamas (2003) Take This Job (2003) Sell This House (2003–11, 2022) Airline (2004–05) Growing Up Gotti (2004–05) Family Plots (2004–05) Find & Design (2004–08) Dog the Bounty Hunter (2004–12) Bearing Witness (2005) Caesar's 24/7 (2005) Criss Angel Mindfreak (2005 ...
Investigation Discovery (ID) is a channel dedicated to true crime documentaries that launched in 2008. Most of ID's programs are original productions. It also airs re-titled off-network reruns, including ABC's 20/20, CBS's 48 Hours, and NBC's Dateline.
The program spun off from Chapman's appearance on the show Take This Job, a program about people with unusual occupations. [1] Dog the Bounty Hunter captured an audience immediately by drawing viewers into the interaction of Chapman and his family/team, mixing street smarts, romance, arguments, teamwork, adrenaline-laced arrests and a philosophy of hope and second chances.
A&E launched on February 1, 1984, initially available to 9.3 million cable television homes in the U.S. and Canada. [2] The network is a result of the 1984 merger of Hearst/ABC's Alpha Repertory Television Service (ARTS) and (pre–General Electric merger) RCA-owned The Entertainment Channel.
"A Dog and Pony Show" and the rest of the first and second-season episodes were included in the four-DVD box-set "Homicide: Life on the Street: The Complete Seasons 1 & 2", which was released by A&E Home Video on May 27, 2003, for $69.95. [14]
According to A&E, the show has been widely praised by law enforcement agencies, and its investigative reports are commonly used in the training of detectives. [4]Cold Case Files first aired as a sub-series of another A&E crime documentary program, Investigative Reports, also hosted by Bill Kurtis, which ran from 1991 to 2011.
The Killer Speaks is an American documentary television series on A&E that debuted on April 11, 2013 and ended on May 29, 2014. The Killer Speaks features actual convicted felons as they describe their crimes step-by-step in chilling detail. The series purports to offer an autopsy of their psychology and motivations.
Abby proves his innocence, names him and convinces McGee to take him because her landlord won't let her keep the dog, despite the dog having attacked him earlier in the episode ("Dog Tags"). McGee is transferred to Cybercrimes Division in season five ("Judgment Day") and back to the Major Case Response Team in season six (" Last Man Standing ").