Facebook is pregnant with its third season of Ample Entertainment’s docu-series 9 Months With Courteney Cox.
The company’s Facebook Watch service has renewed the unscripted show, which originally debuted in January 2019.
The weekly pregnancy docu-series takes an intimate approach to giving viewers raw access of people from all over America of various race, religion, and class as they self-document their 9-month journey of pregnancy. The first season featured a range of stories, from a cancer-stricken mother to pregnant teenagers considering adoption to a 50-year old woman struggling to conceive and more. Friends star Cox will continue to narrate and provide commentary across the series as it enters its next season.
“We’re excited that 9 Months is back for a third season and we are searching far and wide for the most surprising, most heartfelt pregnancy stories. If you’re trying to get pregnant or recently pregnant, we’re interested...
The company’s Facebook Watch service has renewed the unscripted show, which originally debuted in January 2019.
The weekly pregnancy docu-series takes an intimate approach to giving viewers raw access of people from all over America of various race, religion, and class as they self-document their 9-month journey of pregnancy. The first season featured a range of stories, from a cancer-stricken mother to pregnant teenagers considering adoption to a 50-year old woman struggling to conceive and more. Friends star Cox will continue to narrate and provide commentary across the series as it enters its next season.
“We’re excited that 9 Months is back for a third season and we are searching far and wide for the most surprising, most heartfelt pregnancy stories. If you’re trying to get pregnant or recently pregnant, we’re interested...
- 1/7/2021
- by Peter White
- Deadline Film + TV
Nat Geo Wild’s “SharkFest” is megalodon-sizing to two weeks, doubling in length as a counter-programming move against rival Discovery Channel’s popular “Shark Week,” TheWrap has learned exclusively. Additionally, the sixth annual “Shark Fest” has also shifted up on the calendar to beat “Shark Week” to cable airwaves by a week, as opposed to going (hammer) head-to-head again.
“What’s better than one week of shark TV? Two Weeks Of ‘Sharkfest,'” Geoff Daniels, executive vice president and general manager of Nat Geo Wild, told us in a statement. “We are literally jumping the shark this year by serving a supersized feeding frenzy of jaw-some shark specials, and by taking the first bite, we’re giving Nat Geo Wild viewers a bonus week of the shark shows they love. Why wait, when we need to inspire everyone to save our sharks now, more than ever? With so much ‘SharkFest,...
“What’s better than one week of shark TV? Two Weeks Of ‘Sharkfest,'” Geoff Daniels, executive vice president and general manager of Nat Geo Wild, told us in a statement. “We are literally jumping the shark this year by serving a supersized feeding frenzy of jaw-some shark specials, and by taking the first bite, we’re giving Nat Geo Wild viewers a bonus week of the shark shows they love. Why wait, when we need to inspire everyone to save our sharks now, more than ever? With so much ‘SharkFest,...
- 6/12/2018
- by Tony Maglio
- The Wrap
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