Don't Tell My Mother
Don't Tell My Mother: Season 1
Season 2

Air Date

November 3, 2007

Episodes

10 episodes

Don't Tell My Mother

Season 1

Episodes

1. That I Am In Congo

November 3, 2007

Diego Buñuel visits the Democratic Republic of Congo where he meets female boxers, mountain gorillas, and a former beauty queen who is raising wareness about HIV.

2. That I Am In Afghanistan

November 10, 2007

Diego journeys into Afghanistan where he goes to a Kabul golf course, meets a female Army helicopter pilot, and goes to the first nightclub open to Afghans.

3. That I Am In Colombia

November 17, 2007

A tailor in Colombia who specializes in bullet-proof clothing; a former gunman who teaches children; soccer unites right-wing paramilitaries and left-wing guerrillas.

4. That I Am In North Korea

November 24, 2007

Diego poses as an actor to tour North Korea, where he is escorted, his hotel room is bugged, and he watches 100,000 dancers perform in a celebration of dictatorship.

5. That I Am In The Holy Land

March 31, 2008

Diego's journey from the Gaza Strip to Jerusalem includes meeting a Christian brewer, Fatah rappers, and a woman who rescues Palestinian donkeys.

6. The Balkans

March 23, 2009

Diego takes a road trip through Croatia, Bosnia, Serbia and Kosovo, where he sees how the people are still picking up the pieces 15 years after the Bosnian War.

7. Iran

April 9, 2009

An underground rap show in Tehran; a Jewish antiques dealer; a basketball game in Esfahan; Tehran's Museum of Contemporary Art; the Caspian Sea.

8. Pakistan

April 23, 2009

Considered 2008's most dangerous place, Pakistan proves to be very diverse when Diego experiences a school, Karachi, a TV show hosted by a cross-dressing man, and a five-star hotel.

9. Venezuela

April 30, 2009

On a trip to Venezuela, Diego discovers massive food shortages and cheap gasoline; sugar cane workers fight for land rights in San Felipe; a mobile library in the Andes.

10. Iraq

May 25, 2009

Flanked by bodyguards, the host must alter his interview routine after entering an occupied country at war where multiple searches and evening curfews are routine.