Hoarding: Buried Alive


Hoarding: Buried Alive (Courtesy Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

Hoarding: Buried Alive is an American documentary television series that premiered on TLC on March 14, 2010. The show follows hoarders through their life experiences and helps them learn to manage their illness.

Overview

Hoarding: Buried Alive takes the viewer into the personal lives of hoarders, focusing on how the mental illness has affected the individual and the family members. Each episode usually looks at two different cases and examines the history of the victim and takes time to interview family members. The show includes an extensive look at the items each person collects. Each hoarder receives treatment provided by both a therapist and a professional organizer. These professionals help them through the process of ridding their house of the hoard. By the end of the episodes, the hoarders typically have shown signs of improvement that make the viewer hopeful for their continuing success.

Episodes

Season 1

Episode # Title Airdate
101 Welcome to My Nightmare March 14, 2010
102 Beyond Embarrassment March 21, 2010
103 Paralyzed by Clutter March 28, 2010
104 Life on Fire April 4, 2010
105 Family Secrets April 11, 2010
106 Filling the Void April 18, 2010
107 No One Would Choose This April 25, 2010
108 Everything Is at Stake May 2, 2010
109 A Million Excuses May 9, 2010

Season 2

Season 2 was split into two equal parts, with part one airing from August 8, 2010"October 3, 2010, and part two from March 2, 2011"April 20, 2011.

Episode # Title Airdate
201 Homeless Man With a House August 8, 2010
202 Robbing the Kids... August 15, 2010
203 Prison of Garbage August 22, 2010
204 Everything's Junk August 29, 2010
205 Battle with Chaos September 5, 2010
206 How Do I Get Out of This September 12, 2010
207 The Scariest Place on Earth September 19, 2010
208 The Mess I've Created September 26, 2010
209 This is Where You Sleep?? October 3, 2010
210 Nowhere Near Normal March 2, 2011
211 I Want to Cuss March 9, 2011
212 Oh My Gosh March 13, 2011
213 Better Get a Dumpster March 16, 2011
214 Overwhelming Pile of Junk March 23, 2011
215 My Biggest Embarrassment March 30, 2011
216 It's Out of Control April 6, 2011
217 Like a Dog in a Cage April 13, 2011
218 It's A Freaking War Zone April 20, 2011

Season 3

Episode # Title Airdate
301 Surviving On Trash July 10, 2011
302 There Are Mice Everywhere July 17, 2011
303 Not A Safe Place July 24, 2011
304 A Horrible Sight July 31, 2011
305 I Was Gonna Gag August 14, 2011
306 Is That A Goat? August 21, 2011
307 Stop Touching My Stuff! August 28, 2011
308 Overtaken By Puppets September 11, 2011
309 I Can't Breathe September 18, 2011

Season 4

Episode # Title Airdate
401 Tiny Monsters January 1, 2012
402 My House Can Kill Me January 8, 2012
403 Owned by the Roaches January 15, 2012
404 I'm Dumbfounded January 22, 2012
405 It's Just Sex January 29, 2012
406 Worst I've Ever Seen February 12, 2012
407 A Bomb Went Off February 19, 2012
408 Unbelievable March 4, 2012
409 Are You Serious? March 11, 2012

Reception

Hoarding: Buried Alive is an example of a reality TV rehabilitation program, a category of show that has been extremely popular since 2000. However, the ability of these shows to effectively treat people is often questioned. Some focus on the fact that these shows do get people into some rehabilitation program. It is obviously better than them continuing their addictive behaviors and receiving no professional guidance. However, the presence of the cameras can influence the way the patients act. They may exaggerate certain emotions or fail to share essential information for fear of it coming back to haunt them once the show is aired. These additions and omissions could greatly impair their ability to recover and move forward in the process.

In addition to the information regarding the disease being provided in the show, many of these programs do provide some services to help people get in contact with organizations that can provide treatment or more information on the disease. This can help viewers get a better picture of the disorders depicted and aids towards combating the stigma that surrounds mental illness.

Hoarding paints a picture of compulsive hoarders that makes viewers sympathize with them. It helps people understand that it is an illness. When these individuals enter a rehab program the quality of their lives and the lives of their families can improve drastically. It also provides a view of the disease that is not totally bent on feeding the human appetite for horror. Instead, it focuses more on giving an accurate look at the illness. It picks cases that are not overly extreme or graphic and doesn't dwell completely on the disturbing things that the patient has collected. It focuses on conveying the ugly truth about the illness, focusing on the way it affects both the afflicted individual and their family.

Hantavirus Exposure Scare

In September, 2012, during filming for the show a woman assisting with the cleanup of a home in Houston, Texas was hospitalized after contracting a respiratory illness. Initial tests indicated the woman had contracted Hantavirus. The home was quarantined, several other involved in the cleanup were tested for the disease, and books from the house originally donated to the local library were isolated and not distributed. Further testing determined the illness was not Hantavirus.

See also

  • Hoarders


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