Sexcetera
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Sexcetera | |
---|---|
Genre | Erotica |
Directed by | Michael Guttsen |
Starring | Various |
Composer | Jerrold Launer |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 10 |
No. of episodes | 106 |
Production | |
Executive producers | Paul Cockerill Frank Martin Rudy Poe |
Running time | 60 minutes |
Production company | Q Studios |
Original release | |
Network | Playboy TV |
Release | November 1, 1998 2005 | –
Sexcetera is an American television newsmagazine airing on Playboy TV, focused on human sexuality, that was broadcast from 1998 until 2005. Sexcetera ran for more than 106 episodes. By the time the program went off the air in 2005, it had become one of Playboy TV's longest-running shows. [1]
Sexcetera was previously repeated from time to time on Real Lives, Pick, Sky Living and Virgin1 in the United Kingdom, RTL 7 in the Netherlands, TV5 in Finland and AXN in Italy.[2][3]
The show featured four to five reports per one-hour episode. Filmed throughout the world, but primarily in the United States, the reports generally covered sexual fetishes, adult entertainment expos and gatherings, current erotic trends, sex toys, porn celebrities and tips for couples.
Correspondents presented their stories in a humorous style; female correspondents often appeared in the nude.[3] As befitting its subject matter, the series is sexually explicit,[4] with unsimulated sexual activity shown from time to time, with increasing explicitness as the series went on.[citation needed]
Reporters
[edit]- Valerie Baber
- Kara Blanc
- Susannah Breslin
- Hoyt Christopher
- Ralph Garman
- Frank Gianotti
- Lauren Hays
- Asante Jones
- Andrea Lowell
- Gretchen Massey
- Sam Phillips
- Scott Potasnik
- Kira Reed
References
[edit]- ^ "Archives - New York Post Online Edition". Pqasb.pqarchiver.com. 1998-10-20. Retrieved 2013-08-20.[dead link ]
- ^ "Playboy shows picked". Broadcast. 30 July 2003. Retrieved 2024-05-05.
- ^ a b Kate Bevan (26 February 2008). "Could British TV learn from Sexcetera?". The Guardian. Retrieved 31 May 2022.
- ^ Lemal, M; Van den Bulck, J (2009). "Exposure to semi-explicit sexual television content is related to adolescents' reduced fear of AIDS". The European Journal of Contraception & Reproductive Health Care. 14 (6): 406–409. doi:10.3109/13625180903281317. PMID 19929643. S2CID 7834368.
External links
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