The Great Outdoors (Australian TV series)
The Great Outdoors | |
---|---|
Genre | Travel Magazine |
Presented by |
Rachael Finch (2012) Adam Brand (2012) Peter Wells (2012) Tom Williams (2001–2009, 2012) |
Country of origin | Australia |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 18 |
No. of episodes | 640 |
Production | |
Running time |
60 minutes (Including commercials) (initially 30 minutes until 2002) |
Release | |
Original network | Seven Network |
Picture format |
576i (SDTV) 1080i (HDTV) |
Audio format | Stereo |
Original release |
5 February 1993 - 15 August 2009 6 October 2012 – 24 November 2012 |
External links | |
Website |
The Great Outdoors was an Australian travel magazine series broadcast on the Seven Network. It began in 1993 and was broadcast regularly until 2009, with a short-lived revival in 2012.
History
Similar to its competitors Getaway and So Many Worlds, the program featured a team of reporters who travelled around Australia and overseas, reporting on travel destinations, tourist attractions and accommodation.
The program premiered on 5 February 1993 in a 30-minute format and was broadcast on Tuesday evenings at 8:00 pm. In 2002, the show was expanded to 60 minutes and moved to the Monday 7:30 pm timeslot, where it had stayed until 2006.
After suffering a gradual decline in ratings, the show moved to a new timeslot of 6:30 pm Saturdays from the 2007 season. On 28 April 2007, the show celebrated 600 episodes,[1] making it one of the longest-running programs on Australian television. However, after further decline in ratings, The Great Outdoors was cancelled in August 2009. The show did briefly return in October 2012 for a revamped series with 8 episodes airing on a Saturday evening at 5pm, with the possibility of a new season in 2013 which did not eventuate.
Presenters
- Rachael Finch (2012)
- Adam Brand (2012)
- Peter Wells (2012)
- Tom Williams (2001–2009, 2012)
Former Presenters
- Ernie Dingo (1993–2009)
- Sofie Formica (1993–94)
- Jennifer Hawkins (2005–2009)
- Andrew Daddo (1994, 2002–2008)
- Shelley Craft (2001–2007)
- Laura Csortan (2000–2006)
- Di Smith (1996–2006)
- Sophie Falkiner (1999–2005)
- Tony Johnston (1996)
- Bridget Adams (1994)
- Penny Cook (1993–1996)
- Neil Crompton
- Andrew Dwyer (1994)
- Terasa Livingstone
See also
- List of Australian television series
- List of programs broadcast by Seven Network
- List of longest-running Australian television series
References
- ↑ Idato, Michael (27 April 2007). "The Great Outdoors". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 9 December 2007.
External links
- The Great Outdoors at the Internet Movie Database
- The Great Outdoors at TV.com
- The Great Outdoors at the National Film and Sound Archive