American Stuffers

American Stuffers is an American reality documentary on Animal Planet. The series debuted on January 1, 2012 and follows taxidermist Daniel Ross and his employees at his company, Xtreme Taxidermy, as they live preserve the pets of the customers that come into the store.[1][2] The series was cancelled after five episodes due to low ratings.[3]

American Stuffers
Joseph, Dixie, Daniel Ross and Fred (from left)
StarringDaniel Ross
Country of originUnited States
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes8 (3 unaired)
Production
Executive producer(s)
  • Jeff Collins
  • Mick Kaczorowski
Production company(s)Collins Avenue Entertainment
Release
Original networkAnimal Planet
Picture format480i (SDTV)
1080i (HDTV)
Original releaseJanuary 5 (2012-01-05) 
February 2, 2012 (2012-02-02)
External links
Website

Episodes

No.TitleOriginal air dateU.S. viewers
(millions)
1"Keep Your Dead Animals Out of My Kitchen"January 5, 2012 (2012-01-05)0.58[4]
2"The Woman with a Pet Raccoon?"January 12, 2012 (2012-01-12)0.57[5]
3"How to Stuff a Chihuahua"January 19, 2012 (2012-01-19)0.53[6]
4"The Yorkie a Hawk Tried to Carry Away"January 26, 2012 (2012-01-26)0.47[7]
5"The Dog Named Precious"February 2, 2012 (2012-02-02)0.55[8]
6"The Cat Without a Nose"N/AN/A
7"The Hairless Dog"N/AN/A
8"A Tornado Hits Romance"N/AN/A

Reception

The program has received mixed reviews. The New York Times called it possibly "The most wholesome reality show on television right now," noting "it succeeds in being as entertaining as less-wholesome shows is a testament to the wry good humor and general niceness of its subjects".[2] The A.V. Club was less positive, with the reviewer saying that the show "will probably be a goldmine for [clip show program] The Soup" while noting that the program "was touching in ways I didn’t expect as well as disturbing in ways I didn’t expect".[9] A reviewer from the Arkansas Times was negative, saying that pet lovers will find that the show "is going to make you want to scream and jump backwards through a plate glass window", and that the reviewer "couldn't stop chuckling at some of the seemingly-heartwarming situations captured in the clips I saw".[10]

gollark: It's not much better apart from having a bigger standard library.
gollark: You'll end up probably having to reinvent data structures from scratch - or use a library, except C has no proper generics anyway - and reimplement stuff which is simple in other languages.
gollark: Also, C is slower to develop with.
gollark: Fine, esolang or not, it doesn't really matter much.
gollark: Also also also, speed hardly matters for a prototype esolang.

References

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