


Wie kann man sich riesige Warenvorräte beschaffen und dabei viel Geld sparen? Antworten liefert "Couponing Extrem", eine Doku-Serie über Leute, die niemals den vollen Preis zahlen. Ob Zimmer voller Gratis-Toilettenpapier, ganze Regale mit reduzierter Babynahrung oder Kaffeebohnen, die für 20 Jahre reichen: Echte Gutschein-Freaks sind stolz auf ihre Deals und immer auf der Suche nach neuen Schnäppchen. Dafür durchforsten sie Supermärkte oder durchwühlen auch mal Abfall-Container nach Gratis-Coupons. Und so kann es vorkommen, dass beim 500-Dollar-Einkauf nach Verrechnung der Gutscheine nur noch 11,50 zu berappen sind! Schnäppchen-Profi Nathan Engels verrät überraschende Geldspartricks. Callie ist mit ihrer Familie von Louisiana nach Colorado gezogen, wo ihr Mann Jacob eine Ingenieurschule besucht.
Avis de la communauté (5)
Finding out the US couponing system is retardedly exploitable was kind of interesting, I guess, but the problem with this show is that every episode is almost exactly the same, so it gets boring fast. I won't be watching season 2.
It is really disturbing. I saw 2 episodes so far, one woman actually said that she loved her self with groceries almost as much as her own family....
Yes, the show the inside of people's homes. One lady's home they showed that she had shelving units in her bedroom with products on it. Rolls of paper towels stored under her kid's beds. Her kid's closets were full of cereal boxes. Some had additions added to their homes just to store the crates and crates of coupons. The more I reflect on what I watched the more disturbing it becomes.
I don't know about this show. There seems to be 2 different types of people on the show, those that do this out of necessity and those that are obviously disturbed. There are a few on the show who are feeding their families and then there's those that buy 300 rolls of dental floss for the thrill of being able to do so. When you have over a thousand tubes of toothpaste and you're still buying more, even if you get them for sales tax only, there's something wrong with you. Watching someone buy hundreds of bottles of mustard for 30 cents a bottle just so they can have the thrill of watch the checkout total go from $500 to $30 won't keep me hooked for very long.
Buying a thousand tubes of toothpaste does seem a little disturbing, knowing that probably more than 80% of that will expire before you could actually use them especially if its just for one person. I wonder if those people are also hoarders that throw nothing away. Do they show the inside of peoples homes in this show?















