Trading Spaces

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Trading Spaces
Trading Spaces
Format Reality
Starring See Cast below
Country of origin Flag of the United States United States
Production
Running time 60 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel TLC and Discovery Home
Original airing October 13, 2000
External links
Official website
IMDb profile
TV.com summary
This article is about the television show Trading Spaces. For WikiProject User Page Help's Trading Spaces service, see WP:UPHTS.

Trading Spaces is an hour-long television reality program that has run for six seasons on the cable channels TLC and Discovery Home. The format of the show was based on the BBC TV series Changing Rooms.

Contents

[edit] Premise

In each episode, two sets of neighbors redecorated one room in each other's home. Each two-person team had two days (not including a "day zero" of planning and shopping for materials and furnishings, which in earlier seasons was not shown on camera), a budget of USD$1,000, (or, in later seasons, $2,000 if they choose the 'bonus room' pre-selected by the show's producers) and the services of a designer. Under the original format, the teams would share the services of a carpenter.

Beginning in March 2005, Trading Spaces moved to a "no host" format, eliminating the position of host in favor of allowing each team its own carpenter. The change allows the two homes to be farther apart. The most extreme use of this flexibility to date was with homes in New York and Oklahoma, but it was rarely exercised. Eventually, the second carpenter was eliminated.

The teams had no say over what happens in their own homes, but were able to give input into what happened in the home they are redecorating. The teams were not allowed to enter their own home for the duration of the show, and the transformed rooms were revealed only at the end of the second day.

The show was generally credited with sparking a nationwide interest in home decorating and improvement television shows in the United States. At the peak of its popularity, it inspired ancillary products such as two Trading Spaces books and a computer software program.

The new season of Trading Spaces started on October 6th, 2007. The show will again feature two designers and two carpenters. Many of the old familiar cast members have moved on to other projects, so there will be some new faces in the mix in these new episodes. The show now features mostly young, artistic couples and designers.

On November 13, 2007, it was announced that Paige Davis will be returning as the host of Trading Spaces beginning in January 2008. [1][2]

[edit] Cast

The show featured different participants each episode. The host (seasons 1-5, returning January 2008), designers and carpenters (the cast) are recurring (though there are only two designers, one host (only through season 5; returning January 2008) and one carpenter — originally one and then changed to two and now back to one — each time).

[edit] Hosts

[edit] Designers

[edit] Carpenters

Leslie Segrete and Andrew Dan-Jumbo , from the former TLC show While You Were Out have also been featured in at least one episode each as carpenter (and Leslie, as a designer). Jason Cameron, who was from the same show has appeared also. Handy Andy of Changing Rooms also worked a "special" episode that was based in London and another that was based in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

[edit] Trading Spaces: Family

Family

The first spin-off, entitled Trading Spaces: Family, also aired on TLC (2003-2005). It allowed larger teams of three or four, including children considered too young to participate in the original Trading Spaces program. The same designers and carpenters (one per episode, shared by the two teams) worked with host Joe Farrell.

[edit] Trading Spaces: Boys vs. Girls

Boys Vs. Girls

Another spin-off, Trading Spaces: Boys vs. Girls airs as a part of Discovery Kids (and also formerly aired on the network's Saturday morning block on NBC). Unlike the original, this version uses the same two designers and two carpenters for each episode. In addition, there was no budget limit, and the rooms are rebuilt into theme room, making the show look more like Monster House.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] References

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