The Oprah Winfrey Show: 20th Anniversary Collection

The Oprah Winfrey Show: 20th Anniversary Collection

Category: (DVD)

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73 used, starting at $4.22

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Editorial Reviews

The Stars. The Stories. The Moments. An unprecedented six-disc collection celebrating the 20th Anniversary of THE OPRAH WINFREY SHOW, one-on-one with Oprah Winfrey herself. See exclusive never-before-seen footage, never-before-heard thoughts and personal revelations, as Oprah takes a candid, open and look back at all the most memorable moments of 20 years of history-making television. Get the inside story on Oprah's all-time favorite guests, surprises, celebrities and the people that have touched Oprah's heart forever. Share Oprah's personal perspective on the stories that made headlines, the interviews she'll never forget and more! Plus, go on a personal tour of Oprah's home, watch never-before-seen footage from the beginning years of THE OPRAH WINFREY SHOW and take an exclusive look behind the scenes of A DAY IN THE LIFE OF THE OPRAH WINFREY SHOW! Twenty extraordinary years...from Oprah to you. Oprah Winfrey will donate 100% of Harpo's profits from the sale of this DVD Collection to Oprah's Angel Network.

Behold the power of Oprah. Whether you hate her, worship her, or liked her better when she was overweight, no one can deny the influence Oprah Winfrey has had on television and pop culture at large. Now the two decades of moments have been condensed into a six-disc collection, to benefit her Oprah's Angel Network®. The set kicks off with Oprah's humble beginnings, her most tear-jerking guests, and episodes to equip others, such as defense strategies against attackers, sex offenders, and kidnappers. Each disc has a different set of montages: following her weight gain/loss/gain/loss; her Book Club® ; her serious interviews (Nelson Mandela, John F. Kennedy Jr.); home makeovers; and some of her now-regrettable "firsts" attempts, such as filming a music video and wearing a Tina Turner wig. Each disc also contains highlights of Oprah's celebrity interviews, from "friends" like John Travolta, Maria Shriver, and Julia Roberts, to a couch-jumping Tom Cruise (yes, it’s on there), and the interview with Elizabeth Taylor she calls her all-time worst. She's also very candid about her changing looks and how she handles the tears that flow during taping.

Twenty years have wrought many changes in Oprah's connection with her audience. She started as an effervescent reporter struggling to prove there was room on the talk-show circuit for a black Everywoman (incidentally, it was Roger Ebert who, during a dinner date, suggested she go for syndication). You can see over time how that dynamic changed: Oprah, who claims to shun fame (she always puts quotes around "celebrity" like she doesn't get it), starts wearing it like a badge when she's rolling with the A-listers, as if to let the audience know she can sit at the cool kids' table, but will also bend down to grace you from her pedestal. As a one-woman empire, she knows all too well that she's worshiped by many women in America, and often her guru ways can come off as self-congratulatory. Yet you can't deny her later-years role of fairy godmother has been the most fascinating. One of the only two full-length episodes in the collection involves her journey to South Africa, where she gave gifts to some 50,000 children. (Though oddly, this was paired with the other full-length episode, her opulent 50th birthday party.) She describes how she surprised each member of her studio audience with a brand-new car not because she wanted to shock some people, but because each audience member was selected specifically because they needed one. She rewards hardworking, giving people with lavish gifts they deserve--a home, a Porsche, a college scholarship. Even if you don't watch the show regularly, that aspect alone will pique your admiration. It's almost scary how much power Oprah has, but it's nice to see her using that power for good. --Ellen A. Kim

Customer Reviews

Oprah

Reviewed by Crystal Jackson, 2010-01-26

Great DvD!
Worth every penny...I laughed.. I cried... A great behind the scences look at the show.

Like the Greedy !@#$%$#@!$ Doesn't Have Enough Money.

Reviewed by Yasha Banana, 2010-01-16

I wonder if when Oprah Winfrey is familiar with the concept of "clinical narcissism." I mean, what is it with this woman? Wasn't it Galileo who proved that the earth *doesn't* revolve around Oprah Winfrey? What, she didn't get the word?

Please let me know what this woman's talent is? Is it that people "want-to-be" Oprah Winfrey simply because she has lots of dough? But that's begging the question, isn't it? Even when she only had a few million in the bank, hordes of nimcompoops went wild over "Oprah." But why? Porque, mon ami?

What cord, what nerve, what vein in the American culture has this fat-then-skinny-then-fat-again-then-skinny-again person struck that she should be so popular?

Try getting a dozen to show up for a PTA meeting or a peace rally -- then announce that Oprah Winfrey is around the corner at a diner farting pork 'n beans and, believe me, you'd have a regular stampede on your hands.

Better yet, imagine what would happen if Oprah was taken off the air for a week. There'd be rioting in the streets! People would be throwing babies out of windows! Anarchy, chaos!

Lose your home, lose your job, pay 14 billion dollars a month for three wars in the Middle East -- that you're ok with, America -- but no Oprah? No Oprah! Can't be. How will we as a civilization go on?

I have just one question to ask this boring, vapid, hustling little dumpling -- WHO AXED YA, BUBULA?



A Classic Must Have

Reviewed by living carefree, 2010-01-07

I love this 20th Anniversary DVD collection. It was worth every penny I spent on it~

pick me up

Reviewed by S. Litus, 2009-12-08

If you are in need of a pick me up watch this collection! If you need inspiration, or you need a good cry, watch it! My only critisim is to her in that she has not released full episodes for sale. There is always good information in her shows and it would be nice to be able to purchase them to watch...

I can't get the DVD' s to work in my DVD player.?????

Reviewed by K. Reddick, 2009-12-06

I am not sure what the problem really is with these DVD's but they will not play on my DVD player while every other DVD in my house does work..and works well. I am looking into this a bit more right now. I am not sure how to send it back just yet and really have not had a lot of time to devote to it. Sad, but true.