In a satirical Media Sasquatch segment, Shaun Micallef and the "dean of journalism at the University of Coober Pedy" discuss the reporting of department store sale prices during current affairs broadcasts.
From turning on a jet ski to standing on your head, Richard Hammond explains the science behind the world's most jaw-dropping amateur stunts gone wrong.
Witness the world's most jaw-dropping acts of stupidity! From stage diving to water skiing without skis, Richard Hammond explains the mistakes behind amateur stunts gone wrong.
From dancing on a chair to playing racquet sports, Richard Hammond explains the science behind the world's most jaw-dropping amateur stunts gone wrong.
There is a scientific reason why dancers are virtually naked. Minimal clothing combats the pull of gravity. But if the pole is not secure, friction won't stop a dancer from falling on her head.
The 'Cannon Ball Ice Dude' racked up 2 million views on YouTube with his attempt to jump into a frozen pool. We break down the science behind what went wrong.
The investigation continues as Guy calls on the services of a medium, much to Maurice's annoyance, and light is shed on the dark entity they're dealing with.
Based on the most-documented account of poltergeist activity in British history, a London family call on Maurice Grosse and Guy Lyon Playfair when their home is beset by a mysterious spirit.
Adam explains how the idealised lawn is an unnatural monstrosity, and that the design of the suburbs is slowly killing you. Plus, the racist history of suburban planning led to today's institutionalised segregation in schools.
Misunderstood, marginalised Australians answering anonymous, online questions. Insightful, irreverent and moving this episode sets the record straight of what it's really like to be a wheelchair user.
The show that combines cold hard science with some of the craziest, most spectacular and painful user generated clips ever recorded is celebrating all things feral in a Wild Animal Special.
From playing with pinatas to negotiating children's playgrounds, Richard Hammond explains the science behind the world's most jaw-dropping amateur stunts gone wrong.
From running through walls to jumping on rollerblades, Richard Hammond explains the science behind the world's most jaw-dropping amateur stunts gone wrong.
From dancing on tables to pulling wheelies on quad bikes, Richard Hammond explains the science behind the world's most jaw-dropping amateur stunts gone wrong.
David studies how to throw a punch and avoid being hit, and learns what happens when a punch connects. Boxing champion Bernard Hopkins is recruited to deliver David's first real blow. (S.2 Ep.3) (Class. tba)
Witness the world's most jaw-dropping acts of stupidity! From performing a backflip to perfecting the slam dunk, Richard Hammond explains the mistakes behind amateur stunts gone wrong.
This episode explores how China's GNP fixation has turned supply and demand into build now, sell later. Then, discover how the situation has worsened for post-Arab Spring Egypt.
Witness the world's most jaw-dropping acts of stupidity! Skipping is a simple activity - until you add a flaming rope. Richard Hammond explains the mistakes behind amateur stunts gone wrong.
It is impossible to swallow a spoonful of cinnamon. But don't just take our word for it - see the hundreds of daredevils that have tried this popular Internet challenge ... and failed.
Buffy The Vampire Slayer star Anthony Head steps outside his character and travels to Romania to investigate for himself the origins and factual truths behind vampires.
VICE interviews outcasts of the Fundamentalist Latter-Day Saints Church, explores fattening camps in rural Mauritania, and visits the single-family skyscrapers and slums of Mumbai.
What could possibly go wrong when attempting to jump over a moving car, trying a backflip off a brick wall, or popping a wheelie on a motorbike in a crowded street? Probably more than you think.
Emily gives Adam the greatest birthday gift of all by ruining his own show. Emily debunks IQ tests, tells Adam what the show's gotten wrong in the past, and explains why it's so hard to change people's minds.
From making a touchdown to attempting the high jump, Richard Hammond explains the science behind the world's most jaw-dropping sports matches gone wrong.
With claimed muzzle velocities as high as 300km/h, potato cannons can cause some real damage. But that does not stop one man from taking a potato to the groin.
What can possibly go wrong when bungee jumping blindfolded, flying a kite in high winds, or hydroplaning a jet sprint boat at 120km/h? We breakdown the science of stunts gone wrong.
What happens when there's not enough friction on a slip and slide, or too much drag after diving off a nine metre platform? We break down the science of summer fun gone wrong.
Who knows for how long mankind has been jumping up and down for fun, and yet we still have not perfected the art of the trampoline. We break down the science of bouncing.
From the ice-bucket challenge to sliding down a staircase handrail, Richard Hammond brings you the world's most jaw-dropping amateur stunts gone wrong.
From attempting a spinning karate kick to performing a chest bump, Richard Hammond explains the science behind the world's most jaw-dropping amateur stunts gone wrong.
From the demons that possess peoples bodies to the demons inside peoples minds, Buffy The Vampire Slayer star Anthony Head goes on a journey to investigate the truth behind demons.
Insightful, entertaining, and a little tongue in cheek, The Living Artist is the story of what happens when a lucrative arts prize is offered in a small community, the same community from which the money will also be raised. And what happens when the artists all know each other and the judges know all the artists - how can the process be fair, balanced and focused?
Correspondent Thomas Morton heads to Syria to take a look at the front line of the battle for a Kurdish state, and Vikram Gandhi traces the illicit rhino horn trade from southern Africa to Vietnam.
When Semir Osmanagic, an American businessman originally from Bosnia, arrived in the small Bosnian village of Visoko, he claimed that the hills surrounding the town were actually covering pyramids that were thousands of years old. From that moment, life in Visoko was never the same. And Semir became a celebrity; a national hero. This film is a human comedy that recounts a year in the life of this community just after the pyramid discovery.
Adam drops by to explain why our hospital visits rack up huge bills and why antibiotics won't solve all our medical problems. Also, we learn about the truth behind mammograms.
Adam explains why lobbying makes filing your taxes so complicated, and why the economic numbers we focus on don't provide the whole story. Plus, American manufacturing can't come back because it was a fluke to begin with.
VICE heads to Delhi to meet Sampat Pal, an Indian woman who's formed the Gulabi Gang, or Pink Gang, to help women band together to combat the many cases of sexual assault tainting their country. Then, host Thomas Morton goes to a radiation-plagued nuclear testing site in Kazakhstan where a doctor has tried to implement a mandatory "genetic passport."
Scientist Mark Evans is on a mission to find a rational explanation for the mysterious Himalayan biped known as the yeti. He begins in a remote, Himalayan valley where marauding bears have attacked villagers, then moves to the once forbidden Kingdom of Upper Mustang on Nepal's wild Tibetan frontier. In a twisting tale, Mark weighs up the evidence from nomads, monks and mountaineers, before coming back with new, untested remains from both bears and 'yetis'. Will the DNA finally solve the world's most intriguing zoological puzzle?
Richard Hammond learns just how many ways our hounds can embarrass, injure and humiliate themselves and their owners when attempting to catch a Frisbee, riding a skateboard and running on slippery surfaces.
In this episode, Shane Smith travels to Greenland with climate scientist Jason Box to investigate why the glaciers are melting, and how the resulting rise in sea levels will devastate our world sooner than expected. Then VICE goes to Pakistan, where millions of men, women, and children work as bonded labourers in brick kilns.