Louis Theroux's Weird Weekends is a television documentary series, in which Louis Theroux gives viewers the chance to get brief glimpses into the worlds of individuals and groups that they would not normally come into contact with or experience up close. In most cases this means interviewing people with extreme beliefs of some kind, or just generally belonging to subcultures not known to exist by most or just frowned upon. It was first shown in the United Kingdom on BBC2. In 2001, Theroux was awarded the Richard Dimbleby Award as well as the Best Presenter BAFTA for his work on the series.
Louis Theroux's Weird Weekends | |
---|---|
Starring | Louis Theroux |
Opening theme | Mini Skirt by Esquivel |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
No. of series | 3 |
No. of episodes | 17 |
Production | |
Executive producer | David Mortimer |
Running time | 50 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | BBC Two |
Release | 15 January 1998 30 October 2000 | –
Theroux's view on Weird Weekends:
Weird Weekends sets out to discover the genuinely odd in the most ordinary setting. To me, it's almost a privilege to be welcomed into these communities and to shine a light on them and, maybe, through my enthusiasm, to get people to reveal more of themselves than they may have intended. The show is laughing at me, adrift in their world, as much as at them. I don't have to play up that stuff. I'm not a matinee idol disguised as a nerd.
Episodes
editSeries overview
editSeries | Episodes | Originally aired | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | |||
1 | 5 | 15 January 1998 | 23 December 1998 | |
2 | 6 | 12 May 1999 | 6 July 1999 | |
3 | 6 | 25 September 2000 | 30 October 2000 |
Series 1 (1998)
editNo. overall | No. in series | Title | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | "Born Again Christians" | 15 January 1998 | |
In Dallas, Louis meets TV evangelists Marcus and Joni Lamb, and joins a group of hardline Christians called "The Family" as they visit the Deep Ellum entertainment district. | ||||
2 | 2 | "UFOs" | 22 January 1998 | |
This episode follows several people who believe in UFOs. One of these is a man called Thor Templar, the self-titled "Lord Commander of the Earth Protectorate". He claims to have killed more than twenty aliens. | ||||
3 | 3 | "Porn" | 29 January 1998 | |
This episode offers a look at very different sides of the porn industry, as Louis interviews both male and female porn stars. He reveals the problems a lot of porn actors face, be it not getting a job in straight porn and therefore having to do gay porn, or not getting an erection when it is needed. | ||||
4 | 4 | "Survivalists" | 5 February 1998 | |
In Idaho, Louis meets military enthusiasts and right-wing patriots (such as Bo Gritz) who are preparing for a global catastrophe, including trips to survivalists' store Safetrek and a mountain refuge for conspiracy theorists called Almost Heaven. Louis also visits the Aryan Nation Church and helps to build a straw-bale home. The episode focuses on the survivalism movement and communities formed around it. That several self-proclaimed survivalists were also hippies and environmentalists is a recurring theme. | ||||
5 | 5 | "Weird Christmas" | 23 December 1998 | |
Louis invites someone from each of the four episodes of series 1 to his home for Christmas. |
Series 2 (1999)
editNo. overall | No. in series | Title | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
6 | 1 | "Infomercials" | 12 May 1999 | |
Louis attempts to become a presenter on Florida's Home Shopping Network TV channel and meets Anthony Sullivan and Billy Mays. He also meets people who invent, sell and make a fortune from products such as the Win Gym.[1] | ||||
7 | 2 | "Swingers" | 26 May 1999 | |
Louis meets a couple from Southern California who host swinging parties. He visits one of these to find out what drives couples to want to swap partners. This programme also offers a brief look into other kinds of swinging through an organisation that has a database of members that are rated on a scale of 1 to 10. Under this system, people rated highly are invited to exclusive parties intended to keep out unattractive, socially awkward, or otherwise undesirable people. | ||||
8 | 3 | "Black Nationalism" | 2 June 1999 | |
American black nationalist groups have been branded anti-Semitic, homophobic, misogynist and racist by the mainstream press. Louis Theroux goes to Harlem in New York to meet its proponents, and meets the Reverend Al Sharpton, the main point of contact in the black nationalist movement. Theroux also meets Khalid Abdul Muhammad, dubbed by the media 'the most dangerous man in America' and visits the Israelite School of Universal Practical Knowledge, who believe that blacks are the true Israelites and that all English monarchs until early modern times were black. Theroux also joins Al Sharpton on a march on Wall Street to protest at the shooting by New York police of Amadou Diallo, who was shot at 41 times and killed. | ||||
9 | 4 | "Demolition Derby" | 9 June 1999 | |
Louis has to overcome his nerves to enter a demolition derby in car-mad Michigan. | ||||
10 | 5 | "Off-Off Broadway" | 15 June 1999 | |
Louis meets the hordes of out-of-work actors in New York as they try to land a part – and even goes on an audition himself, for a job on a Norwegian cruise ship, in front of Craig Revel Horwood. | ||||
11 | 6 | "Wrestling" | 6 July 1999 | |
Louis takes a look at different types of wrestling from the high profile World Championship Wrestling (WCW) to people organizing events in their spare time. He meets several WCW wrestlers, including Rowdy Roddy Piper, Goldberg, Randy Savage, Berlyn, Raven, and Pez Whatley. He also visits the WCW Power Plant, a training facility where some of the WCW wrestlers started out. The training he receives there from DeWayne Bruce shows him that some wrestlers will not break kayfabe (the illusion of fiction being fact) and will take exception when their profession's authenticity is questioned. Also Chuck Palumbo makes a cameo at the 33 minute mark. |
Series 3 (2000)
editNo. overall | No. in series | Title | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
12 | 1 | "Self-Fulfilment" | 25 September 2000 | |
Louis meets a Las Vegas hypnotist who claims he can make dreams come true and meets Ross Jeffries who teaches chat-up techniques. | ||||
13 | 2 | "Indian Gurus" | 2 October 2000 | |
Louis travels to India to witness Westerners seeking enlightenment. In Goa he meets 57-year-old American astrologer (and former psychology professor) "Deepak" who studies meditation. He moves on to meet Mike, who is a follower of Swami Ganapathi Sachchidananda, and Amma who is popularly known as the hugging saint.[2] He then re-joins Amma on a pilgrimage with 400 believers on their three-month tour of India. | ||||
14 | 3 | "Whites" | 9 October 2000 | |
Louis meets white separatists who dream of building non-black communities in post-apartheid South Africa, including Neo-Nazi leader Eugène Terre'Blanche. | ||||
15 | 4 | "Body Building" | 16 October 2000 | |
Louis looks at the world of body building in the USA, including the female body building fetish scene and producers of wrestling videos. | ||||
16 | 5 | "Looking for Love" | 23 October 2000 | |
Louis visits a Bangkok marriage agency where Western men meet Thai brides. | ||||
17 | 6 | "Gangsta Rap" | 30 October 2000 | |
Louis travels to America's South to have a look at the gangsta rap scene known as the "Dirty South". He starts his own Gangsta rap, having a CD cover designed for him as well as getting the rappers Reece and Bigelow to write a song for him to perform on a rap radio show. Other parts include him interviewing pimp turned rapper Mello T, as well as rap superstar Master P. "Jiggle Jiggle" was created based on a rap trend that Theroux had been involved in. |
Book
editIn 2005 Louis released a book called The Call of the Weird: Travels in American Subcultures where he revisits people he previously interviewed for the Weird Weekends documentaries.[3][4] He attempts to track down ten of his subjects, up to seven years after the shows, claiming a desire to see what "changes in their subcultures might say about the changes in the world at large", or at least "curious of what became of some of the odd folk [he] got to know".
He tracks down Thor Templar (alien resistance commander), JJ Michaels (porn star), Ike Turner (musician and ex-husband of Tina, from an uncompleted episode), Mike Cain (survivalist), Haley (prostitute), Jerry Gruidl (Aryan Nations), Mello T (pimp turned rapper), Oscody (survivor of Heaven's Gate, also from an incomplete episode), Marshall Sylver (Hypnotist), and Lamb & Lynx (the singing White Nationalist twins – aged 11).[5]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Hanks, Robert (13 May 1999). "Television Review". The Independent. London. Retrieved 4 October 2010.
- ^ "'Hugging Saint' Embraces Denton". 22 June 2018.
- ^ William Grimes (7 February 2007). "Back on the Road, Tracking the Red, White and Odd". The New York Times.
- ^ Mount, Harry (December 2005). "TV's Socrates". Literary Review. Retrieved 20 February 2024.
- ^ "The Call of the Weird by Louis Theroux". Pop Matters. Retrieved 4 October 2010.