Who Do You Think You Are?
- TV Series
- 2004–
- 1h
IMDb RATING
8.0/10
1.3K
YOUR RATING
Celebrities study their lineages and family trees, usually learning surprising secrets they never knew about their families.Celebrities study their lineages and family trees, usually learning surprising secrets they never knew about their families.Celebrities study their lineages and family trees, usually learning surprising secrets they never knew about their families.
- Won 2 BAFTA Awards
- 2 wins & 6 nominations total
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Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe series abandoned an episode on Michael Parkinson because his family history was deemed to be too boring.
- Crazy creditsThe opening titles for each season show all the participants for that season, each in front of objects or buildings which are relevant to their story. The order of the participants changes from one episode to the next, with the subject of the episode always being the final one in the sequence.
- ConnectionsFeatured in This Morning: Episode dated 16 July 2009 (2009)
Featured review
I have a fascination for history, particularly social history and I always find this show fascinating. They have done a huge range of people and the amount of work which must go into each show is staggering. I think it's a very engaging and human way to learn about history.
I'd just like to refer to one of the other posters on here and say that these people are generally not employees of the BBC so their political leanings are of no import. There is a long tradition of creative types who lean a little to the left, so I'm not sure why that comes as a shock, and a large number of the subjects (actors or otherwise) of this series are far from uneducated. I think what may have got lost in translation is exactly who some of the individuals in earlier series are. And perhaps their sense of humour. A large number of these people are well-known in the UK but perhaps not elsewhere. I believe that this has been picked up in other countries now as well and made with more relevant subjects.
One of the reasons I think it's so interesting in the UK is that it highlights how mixed the people living here are.
I'd just like to refer to one of the other posters on here and say that these people are generally not employees of the BBC so their political leanings are of no import. There is a long tradition of creative types who lean a little to the left, so I'm not sure why that comes as a shock, and a large number of the subjects (actors or otherwise) of this series are far from uneducated. I think what may have got lost in translation is exactly who some of the individuals in earlier series are. And perhaps their sense of humour. A large number of these people are well-known in the UK but perhaps not elsewhere. I believe that this has been picked up in other countries now as well and made with more relevant subjects.
One of the reasons I think it's so interesting in the UK is that it highlights how mixed the people living here are.
- stripysocksrock
- Oct 29, 2009
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Top Gap
By what name was Who Do You Think You Are? (2004) officially released in India in English?
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