Trust Me – I'm a Holiday Rep

Trust Me - I'm A Holiday Rep is a reality television show that was broadcast by Five in the United Kingdom.

The Trust Me I'm A Holiday Rep logo.

The first series ran nightly with ten programmes over two weeks. It chronicles attempts by six celebrities to work as holiday reps for tour group Olympic Holidays. The programme was presented by Toby Anstis and Nancy Sorrell.

Series 2 was also broadcast nightly over ten days from Monday 18th - Wednesday 27 September. Again the celebs were working for Olympic Holidays, this time in Malia in Crete in Greece. The series was presented by Lucy Rusedski and Andy Goldstein.

2005 Series 1: Ayia Napa

The celebrities who took part were:

Nadia was drafted in to replace Lennard after she was "sacked" half way through the show for continuous breaking of the rules and general bad attitude.

2006 Series 2: Crete

Filmed in July 2006 in the resorts of Malia, Stallis and Sissi in eastern Crete.

The celebrities who took part were:

Rowley quit the show on day 5 but was quickly replaced by former royal butler, Paul.

Executive Producer: Claire Zolkwer,
Series Producer: Helen Cooke,
Producer: Simon McKeown & Jane Eames,
Assistant Producer: Rebecca Wilcox,
Researcher: Jason Oates, David Smyth,
Runner: Holly Abey

Both series were amongst the first major TV series to be edited online using Blackbird.

gollark: I mean, all recent Intel CPUs have the Intel Management Engine, i.e. a mini-CPU with full access to everything running unfathomable code.
gollark: At some point you probably have to decide that some issues aren't really realistic or useful to consider, such as "what if there are significant backdoors in every consumer x86 CPU".
gollark: Presumably most of the data on the actual network links is encrypted. If you control the hardware you can read the keys out of memory or something (or the decrypted data, I suppose), but it's at least significantly harder and probably more detectable than copying cleartext traffic.
gollark: Well, yes, but people really like blindly unverifiably trusting if it's convenient.
gollark: Or you can actually offer something much nicer and better in some way, a "killer app" for decentralized stuff, but if you do that and it's not intrinsically tied to the decentralized thing the big platforms will just copy it.

References

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