P2P-TV systems have become part of the Internet landscape (See for instance http://www.pplive.com, http://www.soapcast.com, http://www.tvants.com, and many others). The architecture of these (normally proprietary) applications is generally receiver-driven, in that receivers actively search for suitable peers to download from, trying to maximize their performance. This results in very aggressive applications that generate huge and non optimized traffic loads. The demo summarized in this short paper shows the impact of various P2P streaming options and the efficiency of the Napa-Wine approach (compared to more traditional approaches) by running real streaming clients in realistic conditions. To make this comparison possible, the software developed in Napa-Wine is highly modular and configurable, allowing the user to test different topology management and chunk trading techniques developed within the Napa-Wine project, as well as to configure it to mimic other chunk/peer selection strategies known from literature.