Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuAn unconventional home-renovation show that takes on the country's most infamous homes - the ones known for the mysterious murders and incredible intrigue committed within their walls.An unconventional home-renovation show that takes on the country's most infamous homes - the ones known for the mysterious murders and incredible intrigue committed within their walls.An unconventional home-renovation show that takes on the country's most infamous homes - the ones known for the mysterious murders and incredible intrigue committed within their walls.
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I love the hosts honesty, integrity, and creativity. The format, though unusual, is quick and digestible.
If true crime and renovation ideas are your thing, check it out!
If true crime and renovation ideas are your thing, check it out!
I'm a true crime junkie and renovation show fan, so i had high hopes for this show. But it does neither genre well. The short format is extremely annoying. It's like having long commercials constantly. The show has potential, just the execution falls very flat.
You can watch any other reno show and they're all doing the same things: granite counters, white walls, shiplap slapped up to cover a variety of ills, and well... The homes in these are pretty much interchangeable.
What I like so much about this show is nothing is cookie cutter at all. The accent wall they did in one home, where they tacked wood strips onto the wall was nothing short of fantastic! And to use black paint in the dining room and foyer? I didn't think that would work at all, but by the time they were done, it looked so darn great!
I also like it when they ask the owners of the home what THEY want, rather than telling them what they want.
The other reno shows can learn from this one. How about NOT using Carrera marble? How about NOT using shiplap on every wall in the house and ceiling? How about NOT painting every wall either white or beige?
I live in a smaller home and am always on the lookout for ways to work with my space and this show does such a GREAT job of renovating based on the space, rather than what THEY like.
What I like so much about this show is nothing is cookie cutter at all. The accent wall they did in one home, where they tacked wood strips onto the wall was nothing short of fantastic! And to use black paint in the dining room and foyer? I didn't think that would work at all, but by the time they were done, it looked so darn great!
I also like it when they ask the owners of the home what THEY want, rather than telling them what they want.
The other reno shows can learn from this one. How about NOT using Carrera marble? How about NOT using shiplap on every wall in the house and ceiling? How about NOT painting every wall either white or beige?
I live in a smaller home and am always on the lookout for ways to work with my space and this show does such a GREAT job of renovating based on the space, rather than what THEY like.
I so wanted to love this show, but it was clearly created by people who watch too much HGTV and not nearly enough ID.
Maybe add a medium or retired homicide detective to the cast and a little more of the crime history and they'll have a show.
Maybe add a medium or retired homicide detective to the cast and a little more of the crime history and they'll have a show.
A classic reality home makeover format with a morbid twist. Created for the experimental streaming service Quibi and eventually purchased and picked up for a second season by RokuTV, we follow hosts and designers Mikel Welch and Joelle Uzyel as they upgrade aging homes with the catch that each house has contained some sort of horrific murder. The entire series seems like a sketch show bit that was played deadpan and extended for two whole seasons; I honestly couldn't believe throughout that the entire thing was both real and that it was being taken so seriously. Its like the worst parts of TLC and HGTV came together to produce whatever this grisly offspring is. Again, each episode follows the normal makeover format, we're introduced to some new homeowners who found out (typically after purchase) that the home they own had a murder, typically why they got it so cheap, and they then spend a few minutes of each episode going over the gory details and walking through the rooms where it happened. So much of the series is based around "bad energies" and their removal from the homes, and somehow the new paint and board trim will forget the owners of its deathly past and again release those many "bad energies". The first season is filmed where each "flip" is across multiple 5-ish minute episodes, for either the horizontal or vertical format Quibi was pushing, but season two goes back to the expected 22 min episode per new house, ending with the classic makeover reveal to the owners. A lot less renovation that I'd expect in this type of series, again most makeovers are more minor facelifts and landscaping. It felt like a series that wanted to be propelled more by its weird, quirky concept much more than anything of quality. But idk maybe it worked, I ended up watching it. But really, what even is this show?
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- WissenswertesOne of Quibi's launch titles. A short-form mobile only streaming service.
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