America Undercover
Encyclopedia
America Undercover is a television series of documentaries that airs on the cable television
Cable television
Cable television is a system of providing television programs to consumers via radio frequency signals transmitted to televisions through coaxial cables or digital light pulses through fixed optical fibers located on the subscriber's property, much like the over-the-air method used in traditional...

 network HBO. Within the series are several sub-series, such as "Autopsy
Autopsy (television series)
Autopsy is a television series of HBO's America Undercover documentary series. Dr. Michael Baden, a real-life forensic pathologist, is the primary analyst, and has been involved personally in many of the cases that are reviewed.-Episodes and cases:...

", "Real Sex
Real Sex
Real Sex is a television series broadcast on and a production of HBO. As its name implies, Real Sex is a sexually explicit "magazine" which "explores sex '90s style."...

" and "Taxicab Confessions
Taxicab Confessions
Taxicab Confessions is a television series of hidden camera documentaries that have aired on HBO since January 1995. In segments taped in New York City and Las Vegas, the taxi drivers are also producers who steer both the vehicle and the conversations with passengers.When passengers enter the cab,...

". The series began in 1983 and, after a brief time being broadcast weekly in 2001, is now broadcast once per month. In 2006, episodes edited to meet basic cable standards began being rebroadcast on A&E Network
A&E Network
The A&E Network is a United States-based cable and satellite television network with headquarters in New York City and offices in Atlanta, Chicago, Detroit, London, Los Angeles and Stamford. A&E also airs in Canada and Latin America. Initially named the Arts & Entertainment Network, A&E launched...

.

Over the years, episodes have covered numerous subjects such as abortion, organized crime, and pedophilia.

The show won several awards for the 1998 production of Strippers: The Naked Stages. It was a look at the human side of a lucrative profession. The HBO exclusive explored the world of women who dance for dollars in strip clubs across the country. An honest and unflinching look at the human side of a lucrative, youth-driven profession, STRIPPERS: THE NAKED STAGES offered insights into women who bare everything in front of crowds of men. They gravitated to the business primarily for the money: In a good week, a stripper can make more than $6,000. Combining case studies with on-camera comments from a variety of successful strip "artists," the film examined four strippers at various stages of their careers:

• Jennifer and Angela - These two best friends in their twenties decided to make extra money to augment their day jobs—by going "all the way" at a local strip bar in Florida. They shop for sexy clothes, tell their friends and (in Jennifer's case) family about their decision, and head over to the Pure Platinum Club for an audition.

• Maya Devine—For an accomplished stripper, the best way to make good money is also the hardest: hit the road. To help her keep her popularity, Maya has "augmentation" work on her breasts and figure. A month after the procedure, she returns triumphantly to the stage.

• Avalon - Once, Avalon was like Maya, a striptease headliner who dominated the stages of the country's top venues. Today, at 35, Avalon is smart, shapely and experienced, yet she's finding it harder and harder even to get a gig. Watching a parade of younger, trimmer and more energetic women hit the stage, Avalon feels angry, embittered and, for the first time, old.

STRIPPERS: THE NAKED STAGES was produced and directed by Arkansas native Tom Golden who was an independent film producer in Hollywood at that time. The executive producer of HBO's America Undercover series was Sheila Nevins.
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