Louis Theroux: Extreme Love: Autism


12:30 am - 01:45 am, Tuesday, February 10 on U&W (25)

Average User Rating: 0.00 (0 votes)
My Rating: Sign in or Register to view last vote

Add to Favourites

About this Broadcast

-
Autism

In the first of two documentaries focusing on neurological conditions, Louis visits a school in America for people with autism - a developmental disorder characterised by difficulties with social interaction and communication. The DLC Warren in New Jersey is one of the most innovative centres of its kind, with specialist intervention designed to help both the students and the families who care for them. He meets 13-year-old Joey, whose mother Carol is finding it increasingly difficult to cope with his explosive tantrums, 19-year-old Nicky, who has written a novel, and 20-year-old Brian, whose extreme behaviour has led to the decision to place him in residential care


HD subtitles 16x9 audio-description
Documentary News/Current Affairs

Cast & Crew

-

Louis Theroux (Presenter)
Jamie Pickup (Director)
Nick Mirsky (Executive producer)

More Information

-

No Logo

Did You Know..

-

Louis Theroux (Presenter)
Born: May 20, 1970 in Singapore
Best Known For: His controversial documentaries.
Early-life: Louis Sebastian Theroux was born on May 20, 1970, in Singapore, to American writer Paul and his British wife Anne. He has an older brother, the broadcaster Marcel, and his cousin is actor Justin Theroux. After attending Westminster School, where he befriended comedians Adam Buxton and Joe Cornish, and politician Nick Clegg, Louis gained a first-class degree in modern history from Magdalen College, Oxford. He landed his first journalism job working for alternative free paper Metro Silicon Valley, and in 1992 moved to Spy magazine.
Career: Theroux got his TV break as a reporter on Michael Moore's TV Nation. When that ended, he was snapped up by the BBC to make the series Louis Theroux's Weird Weekends. In 2001 he fronted When Louis Met…, featuring an array of celebrities who were shadowed by the journalist. Two years later, the BBC aired a series of one-off specials in which Louis explored various figures in America. In 2006, he signed a deal with the BBC to film 10 documentaries over three years, which aired sporadically. Among them were The Most Hated Family in America and Louis Theroux: Under the Knife. He continues to make acclaimed documentaries on a range of unusual subjects.
Quote: "The subjects I'm interested in are quite extreme. They're so far beyond the pale of normal human interaction that you're never going to get a reality show on that territory."
Trivia: He's won several awards and in 2005 published a book, The Call of the Weird: Travels in American Subcultures.
Jamie Pickup (Director)
Nick Mirsky (Executive producer)