Told across four episodes, Nathan and Glen let the cameras into their homes, into appointments and along for the ride on an emotional trip to Jamaica, Glen's birthplace, as they reconnect with family roots and open up about masculinity, illness and LGBTQ+ acceptance in Caribbean culture.
In an exclusive interview with RadioTimes.com, Nathan said: "Transitioning from being a reality star, where I'm knowing for being outspoken and stuff like that, where I don't necessarily have to be vulnerable, I can give you the face that I think you want to see."
While Nathan isn't saying he isn't his authentic self on Geordie Shore, this documentary offers a "more realistic version" of the TV star, a version that is going through personal struggles with his dad, a version that people don't see.
Geordie Shore has been on television since 2011, producing 25 seasons and countless spin-off series that follows a group of young people living in the same house over the summer. But this instalment of Nathan's life is a far cry from what fans can expect from Geordie Shore.
"I've never been the type of person that puts myself in a vulnerable position, or talks about things that I'm vulnerable about," Nathan told RadioTimes.com. "So to go from one extreme to the other, it was like, 'Well, I've started now, I've just got to continue and see it through.' I think after seeing my dad cry on the first day of filming, that was when I realised. I was like, 'If he's going to be this vulnerable, I'm gonna have to be this vulnerable, otherwise it's not gonna work.'"
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