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60 Days In is a television docuseries on A&E, in which volunteers are incarcerated as undercover prisoners for 60 days. [1] [2] Internationally, it is known as The Jail: 60 Days In [3] and airs in over 100 other countries. [4] The show premiered on March 10, 2016, [1] while Season 2 premiered on August 18. [5]
Booked: First Day In (2023–present) My Strange Arrest (2023–present) Buddy Valastro's Cake Dynasty (2023–present) Legends of the Fork (2023–present) Interrogation Cam (2023–present) Secrets of Polygamy (2024–present) Undercover: Caught on Tape (2024–resent) 48 Hours to Buy (2024–present) Property Virgins (2024–present)
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The previous record-holder for the network was a World War II docudrama, Ike: Countdown to D-Day, starring Tom Selleck and broadcast in 2004, with 5.5 million viewers. [22] A&E later acquired rights to rerun the HBO series The Sopranos ; its A&E premiere on January 10, 2007, averaged 3.86 million viewers, making it the most-watched premiere of ...
The Pinal County Jail is featured in Season 5 of 60 Days In, a television docu-series on A&E. [30] The Pinal County Sheriff's Office runs a weekly mini series called "Fridays with Frank" on YouTube which features Deputy Sheriff Frank Sloup conducting traffic stops in an entertaining and educational manner.
A&E Television Networks, LLC (doing business and stylized as A+E Networks) is an American multinational broadcasting company owned and operated as a 50–50 joint venture between Hearst Communications and The Walt Disney Company through the General Entertainment Content unit of its Entertainment division.
This is an alphabetical list of television program articles (or sections within articles about television programs). Spaces and special characters are ignored.
The same company also produces “60 Days In,” A&E’s No. 1 show, which follows volunteer undercover “inmates” in county jails across the country to document life behind bars.