Jerry Springer's Most Controversial Moments
The TV personality, who died in 2023, is the subject of new Netflix show, "Jerry Springer: Fights, Camera, Action."
Panitz was not the typical Jerry Springer Show guest.A mild-mannered single mother who didn’t even like having her picture taken, she was offered the opportunity to reunite with her ex-husband, Ralf Panitz,
Lisa Kudrow revealed during an interview on “The Drew Barrymore Show” (via People) that she recently discovered a note the late Matthew Perry left for her inside the “Friends” cookie jar, which he gifted her after they wrapped filming the series finale in January 2004. Kudrow wouldn’t reveal what the letter said but mused: “Timing …
Fights, Camera, Action" on Netflix dives deep into Springer's infamous talk show, touching on murder and scandal.
Building a show around outrage became a "trap" for producers, who "had to keep outdoing themselves" to draw in viewers, the director of "Jerry Springer: Fights, Camera, Action" told Yahoo Entertainment.
A two-part documentary series on "The Jerry Springer Show" is set to premiere on Netflix this week. Here's what you should know.
Toby Yoshimura, who stars in the Netflix documentary "Jerry Springer: Fights, Camera, Action," opens up about the moment that ultimately made him walk away from the show.
Despite being "petrified to pitch it,” the executive producers were excited by the prospect of having the Shetland pony and his husband on the show. The team worked extra hard to keep that reveal under wraps, up until the day the episode was filmed. "I Married a Horse" aired on May 22, 1998.
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The show was the home of jaw-dropping confessions and countless clashes between guests. Luke Sewell's "Jerry Springer: Fights, Camera, Action" is a quick, two-episode look back at some of the biggest scandals and shocks of the show's earlier years, under the stewardship of executive producer, Richard Dominick.
A new Netflix documentary takes a deep dive into the primordial ooze to show how grainy "The Jerry Springer Show" highlights (or rather, lowlights) echo into the present day.