Ajouter une intrigue dans votre languePresenter Claire Sweeney and designer Derek Taylor manage a large team of painters, decorators and other workmen who invade, by invitation, a home and spend the next sixty minutes making cha... Tout lirePresenter Claire Sweeney and designer Derek Taylor manage a large team of painters, decorators and other workmen who invade, by invitation, a home and spend the next sixty minutes making changes to all the rooms to drag the home into the 21st century.Presenter Claire Sweeney and designer Derek Taylor manage a large team of painters, decorators and other workmen who invade, by invitation, a home and spend the next sixty minutes making changes to all the rooms to drag the home into the 21st century.
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Seriously, as an American this show is so much fun. People write in to get surprise makeovers for loved ones, and an entire crew comes in and tears down/throws out old stuff, then slaps some wall paper on the walls and calls it a victory. Besides the wallpaper, nearly every makeover includes a dressing table, mirrored furniture, brown striped or PINK carpet, and either a white leather Eames style chair or a "chaise lounge" that is the perfect size for a small dogs bed. Then the surprisee comes home and sees their wonderful "new" home. They are ALWAYS polite. The only way to tell if they hate it is if they say "this is amazing" quite a lot. If anyone in England ever tells you you look amazing-go change your outfit right away!!! People complaining about this show based on style are missing the point.
Are they joking? Professionals do this? Ugly finished products. I keep hoping that one makeover will be terrific, but no, all terrible. I wonder why. Anyone could do a better job. Lost interest in show. One needs beauty in one's life.
What is it with the ugly paint colors the Brits use! Purple, Royal Blue and Pink!!! Also the carpet they use is cheap looking. Does every Brit live in a shanty? They call are so small and horrible furntiture. Im watching it right now and want to vomit over the teal green paint. There has not been one so called designer that has any taste. I bet most surprised owners are so disappointed when they see the final result. I would be so embarrassed if that was may work and I called myself a designer. None of the furnishing match and usually the bedding is horrible especially when they use that shiney material on comforters and pillows. We have watch parties and just laugh at the results. In most cases, in would rather have the original look.
It's a 60 minute makeover and it looks it. Honestly, the one I saw, with Terri Dwyer, they had so many "art" mirrors, I thought they were going to hang a disco ball in the bedroom. The friend that got the surprise was polite, but it looked like she wasn't that sure that she liked it.
This is a dreadful show based on a ridiculous gimmick. What's the point of renovating an entire house in one hour? You know what? It looks like they only spent an hour on it. (e.g., most of the walls are covered in ugly wallpaper.) Although, I think some of the design choices may be cultural. As an American with a design background, I've noticed that there are fundamental differences between American and UK homes that are significant in terms of how the homes are renovated. For instance, all UK rooms have doors. In America, living rooms generally don't have doors that close them off to the rest of the house, so the UK living spaces look claustrophobic. And the majority of them are so bowling-alley narrow that it looks as if a body could stand in the middle of each room with outstretched arms and touch both walls. Overall, all the homes featured on this show are small and narrow. The most significant difference is that UK homes don't have closets. Closet space is such a huge deal in America, that it's a culture shock to see so many houses without any built-in storage. Subsequently, every bedroom makeover includes an overpowering monolithic floor-to-ceiling, wall-to-wall wardrobe that make the small rooms appear even smaller.
From a production standpoint, the majority of the show's format consists of the host (called "the presenter" here) running from room to room with a stopwatch and getting progress updates from the designer. Of course, there's a harried energy to the whole production as the dozens of workers rush to complete the renovation in the short time allotted. (It should be noted that a great deal of prep work is done prior to the beginning of the makeover that isn't counted in the 60-minute timeline.) That's all fine, but the narration is just awful . . . and boring . . . and dripping in design cliches, including the overuse of everyone's favorite interior-design descriptive phrase, "light and airy."
The only upside to this show is that it's a surprise makeover arranged by family members as a way to thank an altruistic parent or sibling, etc., so the reveal segment at the end of each episode provides a nice payoff, although I sometimes wonder if the "marks" are as pleased with the changes as they claim. At least the entire renovation is free to the homeowner.
From a production standpoint, the majority of the show's format consists of the host (called "the presenter" here) running from room to room with a stopwatch and getting progress updates from the designer. Of course, there's a harried energy to the whole production as the dozens of workers rush to complete the renovation in the short time allotted. (It should be noted that a great deal of prep work is done prior to the beginning of the makeover that isn't counted in the 60-minute timeline.) That's all fine, but the narration is just awful . . . and boring . . . and dripping in design cliches, including the overuse of everyone's favorite interior-design descriptive phrase, "light and airy."
The only upside to this show is that it's a surprise makeover arranged by family members as a way to thank an altruistic parent or sibling, etc., so the reveal segment at the end of each episode provides a nice payoff, although I sometimes wonder if the "marks" are as pleased with the changes as they claim. At least the entire renovation is free to the homeowner.
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- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Peter Andre's 60 Minute Makeover
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