No mention of what or how much you win...$$$$$$
I can't see myself doing this show.
It's in France.
Hey they even talk in the last paragraph of their forefathers and their freedom.
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BBC Seeking 'War' Volunteers
LONDON (AP) -- The British Broadcasting Corp. is looking for volunteers to recreate life in the trenches during World War I as part of a documentary television program.
The participants -- still to be selected -- must be young men willing to brave sleep deprivation, food rations, rats and waist-deep mud as an earlier generation of Britons did on the Western Front in 1916.
''We will work from diaries and records to piece together exactly how it was,'' David Colthurst, the program's executive producer, was quoted as saying in The Sunday Telegraph newspaper. ''Nothing will be made up.''
The BBC would not say whether the show, entitled ''The Trench,'' will be a contest with a prize at the end. But the network said it considers the show a documentary rather than a successor to game shows such as ''Big Brother'' and ''Survivor.''
The show will be filmed at a secret location in France and broadcast sometime next year.
While the BBC said the goal is to make the program as authentic as possible, it is restricted by modern health and safety guidelines. So rotting corpses, dysentery and gasoline-contaminated drinking water will probably be absent.
''They can give people an impression of what it was like, they can churn up the mud, but they would never be able to recreate the smells ... They can never ever create that constant fear, the dread and the loathing,'' said Martin Hornby, a member of the Western Front Association, a historical society.
Some 6 million British and Irish soldiers served in World War I, and roughly 745,000 died. On one day alone -- the Battle of the Somme in northern France in July 1916 -- some 20,000 soldiers died and another 40,000 were injured.
Hornby said conditions in the trenches were so horrific that soldiers only spent six to 10 days in the front line at any one time before being moved back to support trenches.
''They couldn't stand any more than that,'' he said.
The BBC said details about the program, such as how many participants it will seek and how long the men will spend in the trench, are still being worked out.
Veterans groups said they were supportive of the show as long as it was more educational television than entertainment.
Jeremy Lillies, spokesman for The Royal British Legion, the country's largest veterans' organization, said: ''I think the BBC's plans are such that it will be sufficiently unpleasant to give people an understanding of what their forefathers endured in the defense of our freedom.''