I guess I have never seen the first few minutes of the show, I just catch it while channel surfing.
Im sorry Joe but NOTHING is gayer than that scene in Top Gun. I dont think Jim Neighbors pushing a wheelbarrow full of buttholes is as gay as that scene.
Damn,
Is it all fake or just some?
I watched it last night and came away thinking that some are real and some are staged. The discalimer at the begining is kinda vague and leaves room for a little reality and recreation
I really think the but kicking one was real as he was injured for several episodes afterwards. Maybe they just sell it really good.
Also the episode where thye wrecked the BMW....did they wreck another just to make the show?
Another one that looked real was when a a different repo company was hooking up a car. Seemed like a real fight about to happen with the repoed car's owner and the other repo crew.
If they're all fake then there's some "good" bad acting going on there. The bottles smashed on head's is done well too.
Say it ain't so Froy!
Operation Repo
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Operation RepoGenreComedy-DramaCountry of originUnited StatesLanguage(s)EnglishProductionRunning time30 min.BroadcastOriginal channeltruTVOriginal runApril 1, 2008 – PresentExternal linksOfficial websiteOperation Repo is an American television program where a fictional repossession team from the San Fernando Valley in California re-enact the repossession of vehicles for finance companies.
Although as a channel, truTV is described as presenting "real-life stories told from an exciting and dramatic first-person perspective"[1], Operation Repo consists of scripted re-enactments where the team is often confronted by actors portraying debtors and police officers in the repossessions.
Some of the actions shown violate the Collateral Recovery Act of the State of California and are only for dramatic purposes. Repossession agents are prohibited from breaching the peace[2] (ie: fighting and wresting with debtors). However, some of the actors on the team were repossession agents in real life.[3]
Operation Repo began in April 2008, and is based on the Spanish language program, Operacion Repo shown on Telemundo, which began in November 2006.[4]
Me and my now Ex Girlfriend got into a HUGE fight about this show. For some reason she loved it and it really annoyed me. I remember the episode, the one where the burly bald guy has to and he starts driving fast and ends up flipping the repo car. I think it's even the one where the camera guy is in the car when it wrecks. Well I made the mistake of telling her it was all Holloywood BS and that's why they had the disclaimer in the beginning of the show. She refused to believe it. Lol
Pointblank hope that fight wasn't the last straw in your relationship!
had the same disagreement with my brother who never misses and episode, I win now thanks to you all Pointblank hope that fight wasn't the last straw in your relationship!
For being a fake show... those bumps and bruises on Froy's head sure looked mighty real.
Operation Repo
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Operation RepoGenreComedy-DramaCountry of originUnited StatesLanguage(s)EnglishProductionRunning time30 min.BroadcastOriginal channeltruTVOriginal runApril 1, 2008 – PresentExternal linksOfficial websiteOperation Repo is an American television program where a fictional repossession team from the San Fernando Valley in California re-enact the repossession of vehicles for finance companies.
Although as a channel, truTV is described as presenting "real-life stories told from an exciting and dramatic first-person perspective"[1], Operation Repo consists of scripted re-enactments where the team is often confronted by actors portraying debtors and police officers in the repossessions.
Some of the actions shown violate the Collateral Recovery Act of the State of California and are only for dramatic purposes. Repossession agents are prohibited from breaching the peace[2] (ie: fighting and wresting with debtors). However, some of the actors on the team were repossession agents in real life.[3]
Operation Repo began in April 2008, and is based on the Spanish language program, Operacion Repo shown on Telemundo, which began in November 2006.[4]