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But one of the great features of Fubo is the vast number of channels you can add to your plan for a relatively low price. If you’re a die-hard sports fan, you’ll love the options available.
7-Day Free Trial $94.99+ / month fubo.tv
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Fubo also carries ABC, CBS, Fox, NBC, Telemundo, The CW, and Univision.
But one of the great features of Fubo is the vast number of channels you can add to your plan for a relatively low price. If you’re a die-hard sports fan, you’ll love the options available.
7-Day Free Trial $94.99+ / month fubo.tv
Sports Lite - $9.99/month
Sports Plus with NFL RedZone - $10.99/month
International Sports Plus - $6.99/month
Extra - $7.99/month
Fubo Select - $6.99/month
Adventure Plus - $4.99/month
News Plus - $2.99/month
Fox Nation - $5.99/month
NBA League Pass - $14.99/month
MLB.TV - $29.99/month
Paramount+ with Showtime - $10.99/month...
- 5/20/2024
- by Ben Bowman
- The Streamable
If anyone knows their way around an insane police video, it’s Paul Stojanovich. Stojanovich has grown up with crazy clips due to his late father, Paul Stojanovich, Sr., one of the people behind the hit Fox show “Cops.” Stojanovich, Sr., who also continued to blaze the reality show trail with shows like “American Detectives” and the first iteration of “World’s Wildest Police Videos,” had a profound effect on his son. “I think he had a tremendous influence,” said Stojanovich, Jr. “He raised my brother and I alone and we were very close to him. I learned a point of view about reality TV that nobody ever saw. He had a [ Read More ]...
- 6/11/2012
- by monique
- ShockYa
The Series Premiere of the rebooted "World’s Wildest Police Videos" (Mon., 8 p.m. Et on Spike TV) got off to an explosive start with shocking footage of a car blowing up as a police officer was standing next to it.
The bomb disposal officer was inspecting the car parked on a street in Bangkok, Thailand when the bomb inside it was detonated remotely. He was caught in the full force of the blast, which blew him onto the sidewalk.
Thankfully his protective suit saved the officer from death or serious injury and he was able to walk away from the incident.
This was the first new episode of "World’s Wildest Police Videos" for ten years. Read what producer Paul Stojanovich, Jr. told The Huffington Post about bringing back the pioneering reality show his dad created.
All-new "World’s Wildest Police Videos" continues on Mondays at 8 p.m. Et on Spike TV.
The bomb disposal officer was inspecting the car parked on a street in Bangkok, Thailand when the bomb inside it was detonated remotely. He was caught in the full force of the blast, which blew him onto the sidewalk.
Thankfully his protective suit saved the officer from death or serious injury and he was able to walk away from the incident.
This was the first new episode of "World’s Wildest Police Videos" for ten years. Read what producer Paul Stojanovich, Jr. told The Huffington Post about bringing back the pioneering reality show his dad created.
All-new "World’s Wildest Police Videos" continues on Mondays at 8 p.m. Et on Spike TV.
- 5/8/2012
- by Catherine Lawson
- Huffington Post
The Series Premiere of the rebooted "World's Wildest Police Videos" (Mon., 8 p.m. Et on Spike TV) got off to an explosive start with shocking footage of a car blowing up as a police officer was standing next to it.
The bomb disposal officer was inspecting the car parked on a street in Bangkok, Thailand when the bomb inside it was detonated remotely. He was caught in the full force of the blast, which blew him onto the sidewalk.
Thankfully his protective suit saved the officer from death or serious injury and he was able to walk away from the incident.
This was the first new episode of "World's Wildest Police Videos" for ten years. Read what producer Paul Stojanovich, Jr. told The Huffington Post about bringing back the pioneering reality show his dad created.
All-new "World's Wildest Police Videos" continues on Mondays at 8 p.m. Et on Spike TV.
The bomb disposal officer was inspecting the car parked on a street in Bangkok, Thailand when the bomb inside it was detonated remotely. He was caught in the full force of the blast, which blew him onto the sidewalk.
Thankfully his protective suit saved the officer from death or serious injury and he was able to walk away from the incident.
This was the first new episode of "World's Wildest Police Videos" for ten years. Read what producer Paul Stojanovich, Jr. told The Huffington Post about bringing back the pioneering reality show his dad created.
All-new "World's Wildest Police Videos" continues on Mondays at 8 p.m. Et on Spike TV.
- 5/8/2012
- by Catherine Lawson
- Aol TV.
The back of a squad car doesn't sound like an ideal place to grow up, but Paul Stojanovich, Jr. wouldn't have had it any other way.
Stojanjovich is the son of Paul Stojanovich, Sr., a reality television pioneer who won Emmys for his work on shows like "Cops," "American Detective" and "World's Wildest Police Videos," which ran on Fox between 1998 and 2001.
Stojanovich Sr. died in 2003 after accidentally falling off a cliff near Manzanita, Ore., while posing for a photograph for his fiance. Now, his son is following the family tradition by bringing "World's Wildest Police Videos" back to the small screen.
The season premiere debuts May 7 on Spike TV and Stojanovich admits he almost feels nostalgic watching videos of bank robbers assaulting people, cars crashing and rolling into each other and people opening fire on one another.
"I grew up in patrol cars," Stojanovich Jr. told The Huffington Post. "To this day,...
Stojanjovich is the son of Paul Stojanovich, Sr., a reality television pioneer who won Emmys for his work on shows like "Cops," "American Detective" and "World's Wildest Police Videos," which ran on Fox between 1998 and 2001.
Stojanovich Sr. died in 2003 after accidentally falling off a cliff near Manzanita, Ore., while posing for a photograph for his fiance. Now, his son is following the family tradition by bringing "World's Wildest Police Videos" back to the small screen.
The season premiere debuts May 7 on Spike TV and Stojanovich admits he almost feels nostalgic watching videos of bank robbers assaulting people, cars crashing and rolling into each other and people opening fire on one another.
"I grew up in patrol cars," Stojanovich Jr. told The Huffington Post. "To this day,...
- 5/7/2012
- by Huffington Post
- Aol TV.
Paul Stojanovich Jr. practically grew up in the back of patrol cars, spending time with his father, the executive producer of World's Wildest Police Videos. Sadly, the elder Paul Stojanovich died accidentally in 2003, at the age of 47. But his son, now 28, is looking to carry on his father's legacy by bringing back Police Videos, which premieres Monday at 8/7c on Spike TV.
Read More >...
Read More >...
- 5/7/2012
- by Michael Schneider
- TVGuide - Breaking News
World’s Wildest Police Videos Preview: Get Ready for More Explosive Chases
As we've seen on countless cop dramas like The Shield and Southland, being an officer of the law comes with certain risks. Your work in the community can often go unappreciated, the bureaucracy in the department slows down even the slightest hint of forward progress, and there are certain codes one has to adhere to in order to fit in with their fellow officers. Each show highlights, as does any other police drama, the physical danger that comes from criminals and various collateral damage; you can easily remind yourself of the fictional nature of the show to help ease any tension. On World’s Wildest Police Videos, though, there's nothing at all fictional about the chaos that surrounds these officers.
Former Multnomah, Oregon sheriff John Bunnell returns to host 13 more episodes chronicling some of the scariest moments caught on camera by an officer.
As we've seen on countless cop dramas like The Shield and Southland, being an officer of the law comes with certain risks. Your work in the community can often go unappreciated, the bureaucracy in the department slows down even the slightest hint of forward progress, and there are certain codes one has to adhere to in order to fit in with their fellow officers. Each show highlights, as does any other police drama, the physical danger that comes from criminals and various collateral damage; you can easily remind yourself of the fictional nature of the show to help ease any tension. On World’s Wildest Police Videos, though, there's nothing at all fictional about the chaos that surrounds these officers.
Former Multnomah, Oregon sheriff John Bunnell returns to host 13 more episodes chronicling some of the scariest moments caught on camera by an officer.
- 5/3/2012
- by Shilo Adams
- TVovermind.com
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