Fashion Police (TV Series) - Segments

Segments

Regular segments include:

  • Rack Report, where a celebrity is guessed based solely on the amount of cleavage revealed by their outfit.
  • Bitch Stole My Look, where two or more stars are shown to have worn the same outfit on different occasions. Joan and the panelists discuss the stars in question and declare which person looked best in the outfit. Both the loser and the winner may be subject to ridicule, with the winner being chosen as the lesser of two evils.
  • Busted!, where celebrities are caught wearing the same outfit at two or more different events.
  • Gotta have it!, Make it Stop!, where new trends among celebrities are discussed deciding whether we should have them or make them stop.
  • Hot Ticket, in which the panelist discuss looks by celebrities shown at the premiere of a movie or an Hollywood event.
  • Slut Cut, in which Joan and the panelist dishes on celebrities choosing to cut their dresses shorter than the original runway length. (until 2010)
  • Starlet or Streetwalker, in which a photograph of a person with their face obscured is presented, often the person in question will sport revealing or disheveled clothing. Joan and each of the guests has a paddle with 'Starlet' written on one side and 'Street walker' written on the other. The persons outfit is generally ridiculed, before Joan and each of the guests holds up their paddle to declare whether they think the person in question is a starlet or a street walker before the mystery persons identity is revealed. If they turn out to be a starlet they are ridiculed further. Any of the guests who guess incorrectly will be mocked. This segment has recently come under fire for its use of pictures of commercially sexually exploited women, and potentially underage girls, as a punch line for wealthy celebrities' fashion choices. The organization Girls Educational and Mentoring Services (GEMS) has started a petition to end this segment and to call on Joan Rivers and the producers of Fashion Police to educate themselves on the realities of the sex trafficking and the commercial sex industry. Rachel Lloyd, Founder and Executive Director of GEMS, wrote an article on HuffingtonPost.com to explain how harmful and stigmatizing these kinds of segments are.
  • Guess Me From Behind, where the hosts guess a celebrity based solely from their behind.

New Segments from 9 March 2012 along with an all-new hour of truth of Fashion Police:

  • Look Who's Trending, is a weekly segment where the hosts talk about the latest celebrities' fashion dishes, news, and/or trends, majoritically from Twitter.
  • Ad Sanity, where the hosts guess & talk about a celebrity ad based on one thing, "What do they want to tell & sell in ad?".
  • Fan Find, where the hosts talk about one picture that send from the Fashion Police fans via Twitter with #FanFind.

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Famous quotes containing the word segments:

    It is not, truly speaking, the labour that is divided; but the men: divided into mere segments of men—broken into small fragments and crumbs of life, so that all the little piece of intelligence that is left in a man is not enough to make a pin, or a nail, but exhausts itself in making the point of a pin or the head of a nail.
    John Ruskin (1819–1900)