The Simple Life - Season 2

Season 2
Road Trip

Episodes

The Journey Begins
Paris and Nicole soak up the sun and shop on their last day of freedom before they begin a cross-country trek back to Beverly Hills. While on the road, they land jobs at the Batten Ranch, a rodeo farm, where Paris has an accident.

Mermaid Outing
After being pulled over for a minor infraction, Paris and Nicole spend the night at a trailer park. The next day, they are summoned to Weeki Wachee Springs, a water park, where they audition to be in the park's mermaid show.

Nudist Resort
Paris and Nicole are shocked to find that the resort they have arrived at is a nudist facility. While there, they reluctantly work as maids, have fun taking part in a body acceptance class, and party at the resort's nude disco.

Making Sausages
Paris and Nicole arrive in Mississipi, where they work at a sausage factory and stay with a family who expect them to follow house rules. However, their new job soon turns chaotic, while Nicole clashes with the eldest son of the family.

Jenny's First Date
The girls arrive in Louisiana and meet the Mequet family. They immediately bond with the daughter, Jenny, before heading to work with a crawfishing father and son.

Dancing Sheep
Paris and Nicole reach Texas and stay at a farm run by a husband and wife, who, along with their two sons, introduce the girls to a dancing sheep, while the girls introduce the boys to spray tanning.

Play Ball
As they continue their journey across Texas, Paris and Nicole clash with their latest hosts, the deeply religious Cash family, before working for a minor league baseball team on game night.

Brand New Look
Still in Texas, the girls stay with a biker family and work at a local beauty salon, where they are let loose on unsuspecting customers.

Deputized
The next stop for Paris and Nicole is the Click Ranch, where they help rekindle some romance between the owner and his wife, but their new role as sheriff's deputies is less successful.

Back in the Saddle
Paris and Nicole conclude their trip with a final job at a working ranch, where they participate in a grueling cattle drive before driving home to Los Angeles.

The Stuff We Weren't Allowed to Show You
A compendium of deleted scenes, outtakes and new interviews with the families and bosses from the second season of the series.
Recently Updated Shows

Frontline
Since it began in 1983, Frontline has been airing public-affairs documentaries that explore a wide scope of the complex human experience. Frontline's goal is to extend the impact of the documentary beyond its initial broadcast by serving as a catalyst for change.
.

Revival
Revival is set on one miraculous day in rural Wisconsin when the recently deceased suddenly rise from their graves. But this is no zombie story as the "revived" appear and act just like they once were. When local Officer and single mother Dana Cypress is unexpectedly thrown into the center of a brutal murder mystery of her own, she's left to make sense of the chaos amidst a town gripped by fear and confusion where everyone, alive or undead, is a suspect.

The Morning Show
Nominated for three Golden Globes®, this unapologetically candid drama looks at the modern workplace through the lens of the people who help America wake up. Pull back the curtain on early morning TV.

Grantchester
Eavesdropping on the life of Sidney Chambers, a charismatic, charming, crime-fighting clergyman, and his partner in crime Police Inspector Geordie Keating, became a highlight for the audience who revelled in their on screen partnership. Geordie's plain-speaking, down to earth approach to policing complemented Sidney's more gentle technique of coaxing information from witnesses and suspects. Their unlikely pairing became a true friendship as each offered a different insight into the crimes they unravelled.

Mayor of Kingstown
Mayor of Kingstown is set in a small Michigan town where the only industry remaining are federal, state, and private prisons, the story follows the McLusky family, the power brokers between the police, criminals, inmates, prison guards and politicians, in a city completely dependent on prisons and the prisoners they contain. It is a stark and brutal look at the business of incarceration.