On this offbeat cable-TV reality show, people drawn from within a two-hour driving radius of New York City were given makeovers to prepare them to go out on perfect dates. A team of professional "coaches" advised the lucky daters in matters of cosmetics, clothing, conversation, and body language. The cameras followed the participants during the dates themselves, while a recap of the results was provided at the end of each program. A co-production of The Learning Channel and Fremantle North America, Date Patrol was seen weekly beginning September 20, 2003.
American Juniors is an American reality television singing competition series that was broadcast for one season, in 2003, on the Fox Network. The series was a spin-off of American Idol, but with younger contestants, and had the same production team as American Idol: it was created by Simon Fuller and 19 Entertainment, along with FremantleMedia, and directed by Bruce Gowers, and produced by Nigel Lythgoe and Ken Warwick. However, unlike American Idol, the goal of the competition was not to find a single winner, but rather to create a singing group of five of the contestants. In this way, American Juniors more closely resembled the British series S Club Search, which had produced the group S Club Juniors. The only season of American Juniors aired in the summer of 2003.It was taped in Hollywood, California.