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TV Shows & Series: Best "exercise" TV Shows/Series


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6 TV shows/series found (page 1/1):

The Biggest Loser(2004-2020)

TV-PG
| 1h 30min per episode | Reality-TV
2.6/5 (with 12 votes)

The Biggest Loser features obese people competing to win a cash prize by losing the highest percentage of weight relative to their initial weight.

With Bob Harper, Jillian Michaels, Kim Lyons, Cara Castronuova, Brett Hoebel, Anna Kournikova, ...

Learn to Grow Old(2019-)

3h per episode | Talk-Show
1.0/5 (with 1 vote)

Learning to age gives a new meaning to old age, not as the end of life, but the beginning of a new stage that we can design to be enriching and enjoyable.

How Heavy Are the Dumbbells You Lift?(2019)

TV-14
| 24min per episode | Animation, Comedy
3.9/5 (with 122 votes)

Hibiki Sakura is your average high school girl, with a voracious appetite. Noticing her clothes tightening in lieu of her slowly expanding waistline she decides to look into enrolling in the nearby gym. There she runs into a girl from her grade named Souryuuin Akemi. Akemi, who has a muscle fetish tries to get Hibiki to enroll in the gym despite its high ratio of macho men. Thankfully a beautiful trainer, Machio, appears and unknowingly convinces her to enroll and start her quest to a great body.

How to Be Behzinga(2020)

22min per episode | Documentary, Reality-TV, Drama
5.0/5 (with 1 vote)

Once a poster boy for poor health, Ethan Payne (aka Behzinga) has turned his life around. His biggest challenge yet, the London Marathon, has been cancelled- so what will he do next?

Hey Duggee & Joe Wicks - The Workout Badges(2021-)

The brilliant Joe Wicks joins Duggee and the squirrels to teach kids how to exercise and keep fit! In each episode, the kids try to win a different badge all while doing simple exercises. Will you be able to win a badge too? You won’t know unless you try!

Run Run Revolution(2024-)

2h per episode | Documentary

Series following 10 inactive middle school students as they train to run in the youth section of the Boston Marathon. The stars, however, are the kids themselves. They are the faces of the next generation of Canadians, one whose state of health need not be dictated by fast-food and video games. --By Joe Woodward