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Boasting a rich catalog, TFX features more than 16 shows, with broadcasting dates ranging from 2002 to 2022. Icons of TFX, Appels d'urgence and Super Nanny made their debut in 2002 and 2005, setting industry standards. Explore our list of the top rated shows up to date from November 2024 that includes over 16 unique series.
They are popular with the public for having experienced love stories that have ended badly ... We will help them regain their self-confidence and give them all the keys to seduce, so that they can, finally, find the GREAT LOVE !
In a heavenly place, 8 famous couples test their love and try to realize the dream of their life. They are all convinced that their love is stronger than anything! And all have the same goal: to become the couple of the year and win up to €50,000.
The game contestants are cut off from the rest of the world during ten to fifteen weeks in a house called “house of secrets”, where every room is fitted with video cameras, except the restroom. The goal is to keep a secret while trying to discover the other contestants' secret.
Today, it is several thousand miles away that the JLC Family has decided to rebuild TOGETHER. Direction, Los Angeles to live the American Dream.
TF! Jeunesse is a French children's television program. It launched on September 1, 1997, replacing Club Dorothée. The program was renamed TFOU in 2007. TF! Jeunesse first appeared on Monday, September 1, 1997 at 4:30 in the afternoon on TF1, with the first episode of Beetleborgs. TF! Jeunesse was created by Dominique Poussier, the director of children's television for TF1. It was hoped that this new show would distance itself from its predecessor, whose shows had often been accused by parents and the Conseil supérieur de l'audiovisuel of being too violent. Poussier had previously created the morning program Salut les Toons!, which was presented by two CGI-generated mice, in 1996. In September 1997, she was given the difficult task of revitalizing children's programming on TF1, whose ratings had been in decline thanks to the popularity of Minikeums on France 3. Using the same model which she had already presented with The Planet of Donkey Kong on France 2, Poussier suggested a program without animation. "T. F. Ouais" was chosen as the title for the program. The logo had been that of a defunct channel. An adult voice was the presenter of the show.