Hoarding: Buried Alive (TLC)
#1
Posted Feb 23, 2010 @ 11:54 AM
#2
Posted Feb 23, 2010 @ 12:00 PM
Anyone know when this series is set to begin?
#3
Posted Feb 23, 2010 @ 12:05 PM
Does sound interesting though
#4
Posted Feb 23, 2010 @ 12:20 PM
#5
Posted Feb 23, 2010 @ 1:01 PM
Please PLEASE let this one have some therapists with balls.
#6
Posted Feb 23, 2010 @ 2:02 PM
#7
Posted Feb 23, 2010 @ 4:19 PM
#8
Posted Feb 23, 2010 @ 4:34 PM
#9
Posted Feb 24, 2010 @ 9:29 AM
#10
Posted Feb 25, 2010 @ 10:17 AM
#11
Posted Feb 25, 2010 @ 11:58 AM
I also want to see if a therapist who talks to a patient/subject like they're an adult.
#12
Posted Mar 3, 2010 @ 11:06 PM
My DVR search finally picked up this show. The Hoarders:Buried Alive special from 2009 will air first on March 14, then immediately afterward the series (of the same name) will start. I have no idea how many episodes will air.I think this show's been on before--I saw a hoarders show on TLC about a month ago
Edited by Galloways Cave, Mar 5, 2010 @ 10:36 AM.
#13
Posted Mar 4, 2010 @ 11:29 PM
NOOOO NOOOO!! Not the PICKLES!! Please!!"WHAT THE FUCK IS THIS? Clean this crap up RIGHT NOW or we're taking (the kids, the dog, the hamster, the pickles) the hell outta here!"
#14
Posted Mar 14, 2010 @ 8:53 PM
If I'm not mistaken, didn't Dr. Dia appear on an episode of A&E's "Hoarders"?Episode 1: Welcome to My Nightmare
Chris appears to be a handsome bachelor with it all put together. But for the last year he's been hiding something from his girlfriend Annie. Chris is an extreme hoarder and his three story townhouse is virtually uninhabitable. Revealing the severity of his secret may end his relationship on the spot, but it's a secret he can no longer keep hidden. Laurie is also an extreme hoarder and her compulsion is destroying her family. Her hoarding has distanced her from her three grown children and has her husband at his wits end. With the help of hoarding specialists Dr. Keith Saylor and Dr. David Dia, both hoarders hope to get their lives back on track and repair their broken relationships.
#15
Posted Mar 14, 2010 @ 8:56 PM
"WHAT THE FUCK IS THIS? Clean this crap up RIGHT NOW
Bwahhh! In other words, a normal reaction to a catastrophic mess :)
#16
Posted Mar 14, 2010 @ 9:04 PM
#17
Posted Mar 14, 2010 @ 9:09 PM
#18
Posted Mar 14, 2010 @ 9:26 PM
#19
Posted Mar 14, 2010 @ 10:03 PM
Still not happy about 2 people instead of 1, but really glad at how so much more realistic the goals are on this show. The lady in Louisiana just wanted her dining room back, and she got her living room as well. And the guy in NoVA (I spotted Reston Town Center!) has just gotten some walking room back after a hard 6 weeks of treatment.
Best of all, we got that relative/friend reaction that someone up thread was wanting to see. It's just a shame that Annie decided to bail on Chris at that moment but I honestly cannot blame her one little bit. I wish Chris luck in his cleanup and recovery. I hope the people he works with don't watch TLC.
Edited to add that I think Annie must have fallen asleep in the sun. More than once, I'm afraid. She was rocking the reverse raccoon eyes hard.
Edited by mharvey816, Mar 14, 2010 @ 10:15 PM.
#20
Posted Mar 14, 2010 @ 10:04 PM
#21
Posted Mar 14, 2010 @ 10:11 PM
I think I liked the special (was that what it was?) that aired before the series premiere better. They actually went into the thoughts and reasons behind the hoarding, and the emotional trauma that may have caused it. I was dying to know more about the psychological aspect, and they just never got to it. Are we ever going to get a follow-up or something?
Gah. That was unsatisfying.
Edit: Also, what the hell was with the whole gene thing in the special? We've isolated a gene for hoarding but we haven't figured out any other mental illness yet? Yeah, okay.
Edited by opivy, Mar 14, 2010 @ 10:17 PM.
#22
Posted Mar 14, 2010 @ 10:17 PM
Cindy's daughter was cute. Her son still seemed to have anger towards his mom. It was nice to see Cindy and her husband finally able to eat dinner together.
Chris had a really extreme case. They didn't really mention a specific reason/incident that triggered the hoarding. All the women's husbands were supportive and stayed married to them, so I felt kind of sorry for Chris and the fact that his girlfriend probably wasn't going to stick around. It seems like he was slowly making some headway.
If this show stays on the air, I hope they do follow-ups on these people to see how they have progressed.
Next week looks like another extreme case. The woman said she hadn't thrown out trash in a year.
#23
Posted Mar 14, 2010 @ 10:38 PM
I hadn't watched the A&E show, so what I've seen on hoarders has been the Dr Phil/Oprah approach, with dump truck and crew. I've got to say that that method is more satisfying from a viewers point of view.
You could have three or four seasons of Chris before you'd see any change. I really want to see follow up on these people.
I too didn't see them finding out why Chris hoarded.
#24
Posted Mar 14, 2010 @ 10:51 PM
I hadn't watched the A&E show, so what I've seen on hoarders has been the Dr Phil/Oprah approach, with dump truck and crew.
That's pretty much the A&E approach--send a therapist, a professional organizer and a few dump trucks w/ crew and voila! a cleaner house in two days. I agree it's kind of more fun to see tons of crap being thrown out, but after watching the A&E show and this one, I think this one is actually helping the hoarders more and will do more for them in the long run.
It's just a shame that Annie decided to bail on Chris at that moment but I honestly cannot blame her one little bit.
I was kind of on the fence about her--on one hand, you can't blame her, and he did hide this from her for a long time, but on the other hand, he did call the show and agree to work on it, so I couldn't decide if her dropping him immediately was kind of bitchy or not. Loved her reaction to the hoard, though.
And next week, possible sailferrets!
#25
Posted Mar 14, 2010 @ 10:57 PM
I do like the more realistic goals set in this show. They're showing multiweek efforts rather than on weekend. It doesn't seem as exploitive.
#26
Posted Mar 14, 2010 @ 11:15 PM
I was on the fence too. I totally understand where she is coming from...but I also don't think she made any great effort to understand where HE was coming from. I can also get behind what she said about being independent and not letting him live in her house and she's not going to change who she is, but I got the impression that it was not in an "I stand up for myself because that's healthy and smart" way (which it is) but in a self-entitled "No way am I going to let this affect the fabulous life I deserve and am living and if this doesn't fit into the mold, I am out" kind of way. Which in the end is just as well for both of them, if she doesn't have the feelings for him to make the fight worth it. With the extent of his problem, I can't blame her, but I think she could have couched it a little more compassionately.I was kind of on the fence about her--on one hand, you can't blame her, and he did hide this from her for a long time, but on the other hand, he did call the show and agree to work on it, so I couldn't decide if her dropping him immediately was kind of bitchy or not.
I also agree this is a much more helpful and less sensationalistic approach than Hoarders.
#27
Posted Mar 14, 2010 @ 11:22 PM
I watch A&E Hoarders and always wonder how the spouses get sucked into that crazy mess. He hid the fact that he was a hoarder for a year...to me that's on par with hiding extreme mental illness, drug addiction, etc. He does not need a relationship right now, he needs to work on himself, his compulsive shopping, and cleaning up that hoard.
#28
Posted Mar 15, 2010 @ 12:34 AM
The new show had good ole Dr. Dia from the Missy/Alex episode of hoarders. Chris's outbreak of temper had lots Jerry Springerish potential. His gf was prolly wide to get out but she the kind of prisspot I normally escew IRL. The Louisiana lady I had sympathy for and her dining room DID look great for her Mardi Gras deenah party.
All in all, no kids living in abject squalor and the raging narcissism was minimal.
#29
Posted Mar 15, 2010 @ 2:03 AM
I also agree this is a much more helpful and less sensationalistic approach than Hoarders.
I agree even though I was bored to tears. I felt like I was watching case studies instead of real people. I didn't feel anything for the hoarders or the people in their lives (except the grandma taking care of her grand kids). At least with the A&E show I feel something!
I'll try again next week, but this show left me feeling unsatisfied just like Hoarders does but in a different way.
#30
Posted Mar 15, 2010 @ 5:05 AM
Felt the same way. In fact, I think this was the first time I got bored watching a hoarder on TV. I think A&E's version, for all its faults and completely unrealistic expectations, is so much better.I agree even though I was bored to tears. I felt like I was watching case studies instead of real people. I didn't feel anything for the hoarders or the people in their lives (except the grandma taking care of her grand kids). At least with the A&E show I feel something!
I'll try again next week, but this show left me feeling unsatisfied just like Hoarders does but in a different way.







