Season 1, Episode 1
6th August 2005Season 1, Episode 2
13th August 2005Season 1, Episode 3
20th August 2005Season 1, Episode 4
27th August 2005Season 1, Episode 5
3rd September 2005Season 1, Episode 6
10th September 2005Season 1, Episode 7
17th September 2005Season 1, Episode 8
24th September 2005Season 1, Episode 9
15th October 2005Season 1, Episode 10
23rd October 2005Season 1, Episode 11
29th October 2005Season 1, Episode 12
12th November 2005Season 1, Episode 13
19th November 2005Season 1, Episode 14
26th November 2005Season 1, Episode 15
3rd December 2005Season 1, Episode 16
10th December 2005Season 1, Episode 17
17th December 2005Season 1, Episode 18
4th March 2006Season 1, Episode 19
11th March 2006Season 1, Episode 20
18th March 2006Season 1, Episode 21
25th March 2006Season 1, Episode 22
1st April 2006Season 1, Episode 23
8th April 2006Season 1, Episode 24
15th April 2006Season 1, Episode 25
22nd April 2006Season 1, Episode 26
29th April 2006Season 1, Episode 27
6th May 2006Season 1, Episode 28
13th May 2006Season 1, Episode 29
20th May 2006Mooi! Weer De Leeuw was a popular Dutch television show hosted by comedian Paul de Leeuw, that ran from 2005 to 2009. The programme was produced by VARA, one of the contributors to the Dutch public broadcasting group Netherlands Public Broadcasting. Broadcast weekly on Saturday evenings, the programme consisted of surprising audience members by fulfilling wishes that had been sent in by their family or friends, celebrity interviews and variety performances. The show had a distinctive, quirky feel based upon the personal comedy and tastes of De Leeuw. The show had its own small band, led by Cor Bakker, and also featured national and international acts, such as Kylie Minogue, Lionel Richie, Robbie Williams and Adele, who usually performed live in the show in addition to being interviewed. In most cases these acts were supported by the show's house band. Mooi! Weer De Leeuw is probably best known internationally for its notorious appearance in the 2006 Eurovision Song Contest, where De Leeuw gave the results of the Dutch televote from the programme's studio. De Leeuw, who is openly homosexual, flirted with the male presenter Sakis Rouvas and gave out his supposed mobile phone number. The exchange was broadcast around the world to hundreds of millions of viewers and earned De Leeuw criticism from several of the event's commentators, some of whom refused to translate it.
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