Hoarders

They put the “scat” in “pack rat.”

I intended to buy every Christmas ornament and “decorative pick” shoved under my left arm as I browsed bins on Black Friday, but something killed my bargain-buying buzz: Hoarders. (A&E, Mondays, 10 pm) More specifically, it was Jennifer, the stay-at-home mom who “loves to shop and gets a thrill from getting a great steal.” Hoarding experts rated her home as a “5” on the hoarding scale of 1 to 5. Would my obsession with acquiring inexpensive sparkly ornaments soon force me to knock out a wall and take over my children’s play room? I put them all back.

But Jennifer and all those profiled on Hoarders have lost the capacity to stop, having “an obsessive need to acquire and keep things, even if the items are worthless, hazardous or unsanitary.” Classified as both a compulsive mental disorder and a pathological condition, three million Americans reportedly suffer from compulsive hoarding.

On each episode, producers bring in a clinical psychologist to work on the hoarder’s emotional issues while professional crews haul off endless piles of newspapers, books, moldy clothes and garbage.

Since A&E debuted the reality series this summer, shame-filled relatives of the country’s most severe hoarders must have contacted the network. The level of putrid living conditions has surpassed the former Level 5 classification.

The Season Two premiere was almost worse than the couple with 45 dead cats. Augustine was living in her dilapidated house without water, gas, heat or appliances for four years. Since authorities removed her teenager 14 years ago, she gave up cleaning completely.

Crews refused to go into certain rooms because of all the human excrement. Plus, Augustine was defensive, mean and likely to re-offend.

I preferred 21-year-old Jake, who attached meaning to his garbage.

One minute, I was disgusted (“How can a Totino’s pizza box have value, you freak?”), and 10 minutes later, I was crying after he had a breakthrough while throwing away dog hair.

Alas, the occasional good endings on Hoarders are difficult to maintain.

Executive producer Jodi Flynn admits none of the episodes are open-and-shut.

“You can’t treat a hoarder in a short-term manner,” she commented online. “We don’t claim to cure anybody. We claim to help them — get them on the right path, if we can.”

And I’ll be watching, awestruck and nauseous, throwing away everything we see on the way to bed.

TIVO-WORTHY

The Joy Behar Show Emmy-award winner Joy Behar is the best woman on The View, and her success as a fill-in host on radio and TV helped her get her own nightly show on HLN. Her celebrity guest list is impressive, and while much content focuses on entertainment and gossip, this comic knows her politics. (CNN’s HLN, weekdays, 10 pm)

Find My Family In this authentic reality show, a staff of investigative experts helps people connect with their biological family members when their own repeated attempts have failed. Both the hosts, author Tim Green and TV news anchor Lisa Joyner and most of the crew are adopted, which makes their genuine interest, and sometimes tears, believable. (ABC, Mondays, 9 pm)

“Fa La La La Lifetime” I prefer edgy comedies and dramas the rest of the year, but at Christmas, bring on the sap. The Lifetime network calls its month full of original movies “Fa La La La Lifetime.” Movies include perennial Lifetime faves like Comfort and Joy and Thomas Kinkade’s The Christmas Cottage. Lead actresses include LeAnn Rimes, Whoopi Goldberg and Kristin Chenoweth. (Lifetime, Dec. 10-25, all day)

Wild and Scenic Film Festival @ Garland Theater

Thu., April 25, 5:30-9 p.m.
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Lisa Fairbanks-Rossi

A former TV news producer and teacher, Lisa Fairbanks-Rossi has been a freelance writer for The Inlander since 1994.