Race Around the World
1997–1998 Australian travel-documentary TV series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Race Around the World is an Australian travel documentary and competition series produced by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation that was broadcast from 1997 to 1998. The series was brought to the ABC by filmmaker Michael Rubbo,[2] and was based on the Canadian television series La Course destination monde (1988–1999).[3]
Race Around the World | |
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Genre | |
Created by | Michael Rubbo |
Directed by | John Lander |
Presented by | Richard Fidler |
Judges | David Caesar Sarah Macdonald Tony Squires Sigrid Thornton |
Country of origin | Australia |
Original language | English |
No. of series | 2 |
No. of episodes | 21 |
Production | |
Executive producers | David Leonard (series 1) David Jowsey (series 2) |
Producers | Paige Livingston (series 1) Deborah Boerne (series 2) |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Production company | ABC TV |
Budget | $1,217,837 (series 1)[1] |
Original release | |
Network | ABC |
Release | 2 June 1997 – 26 October 1998 |
Related | |
Race Around the Corner (1998) Race Around Oz (2000) |
Both seasons were hosted by Richard Fidler, a former member of the Doug Anthony All Stars comedy group.[4]
Premise
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Perspective
For each series, eight "racers" were selected from video auditions from the Australian general public. The only stipulation for the video auditions was a lead-in of ten seconds of black. John Safran submitted his audition with ten seconds of yellow. The successful applicants undertook a brief course in documentary film-making, before deciding on an itinerary for their journey around the world. They were then given a digital video camera, and sent to their first destination.[5]
Over the next 100 days, the racers were required to devise, arrange and film a series of ten four-minute documentary films,[5] as well as a stand-by documentary and five "postcards". This gave them ten days to travel to their next destination, film the video, and send it back to the ABC in Sydney with detailed editing instructions.[6]
The series was broadcast as a weekly half-hour program, with four films shown per episode. Each film was then judged by a panel of three media and film experts including David Caesar,[7] Sarah Macdonald,[8] Tony Squires[9] and Sigrid Thornton, as well as being put to a popular viewer vote. Points were deducted for late submissions.[10]
Racers
First series (1997)
- Ben Davies from Sydney
- Bentley Dean from Sydney
- Scott Herford from Sydney
- Daniel Marsden from Brisbane
- Olivia Rousset from Perth
- Claudia Rowe from Melbourne
- John Safran from Melbourne
- Kim Traill from Melbourne, Victoria
Olivia Rousset was the winner of the first series, while, John Safran won the viewer's vote.[11]
Second series (1998)
- Cate Anderson from Kangaroo Valley, New South Wales
- Rachel Bannikoff from Canberra
- Tim Bryson from Adelaide
- Sheona McKenna from Melbourne[6]
- David Shankey from Brisbane
- John Thiris from Sydney
- Catherine Turner from Sydney
- Tony Wilson from Melbourne
Tony Wilson was the winner of the second series.[12]
After the Race
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Perspective
Although receiving fairly high ratings for its timeslot, Race Around the World was a considerable logistical and financial drain on the publicly funded ABC. In 2000, the series, now entitled Race Around Oz, was restricted to the Australian continent because it was the Olympic year and the producers wished to focus on Australia.[13]
A youth-oriented program titled Race Around the Corner was produced by ABC Children's Unit with students (14–16 years of age) making low-budget local productions in the same style as Race Around the World.[14][15]
Host Richard Fidler undertook a few more television hosting gigs, including the short-lived ABC art and culture chat program Vulture.[16] He then became a radio presenter and host of the popular Conversations radio show and podcast.[4]
In 2025, a reunion and retrospective special was produced on Australian Story, titled The Shoot Out.
Most of the racers from the series went on to pursue careers in media and film-making:
- Perhaps the biggest success story amongst the racers has been that of the controversial John Safran. Safran actually came last on the first series (won by Olivia Rousset), despite winning the popular vote. The reason for this was that Safran had been disqualified from one round after submitting a film in which he had covertly filmed priests giving confession in Rio de Janeiro.[17] Safran went on to produce and present several television programs: John Safran's Music Jamboree and John Safran vs God for SBS; and John Safran's Race Relations for the ABC.[18]
- Olivia Rousset, Bentley Dean and Kim Traill have worked as reporters for the SBS program Dateline.[5][3] Traill's book Red Square Blues: A Beginner's Guide to the Decline and Fall of the Soviet Union was published by HarperCollins in September 2009.[19]
- Catherine Turner was a reporter with Al Jazeera, and later Channel 7.[20]
- Bentley Dean was nominated for an Academy Award for Tanna.[21]
- Scott Herford has produced three Australian independent feature films.
- Like John Safran, Tony Wilson went on to host the breakfast show on Melbourne radio station 3RRR,[22] and has written a novel called Players (ISBN 1-920885-58-7).
- Ben Davies is the creator and producer of the Network Ten observational documentary series Bondi Rescue, which he created 18 seasons ago. He is founder of production company, Ronde. He is also the producer and co-creator of numerous prime time series: The Netflix drama series Territory (Netflix), heartfelt factual series Big Miracles (Nine), new reality format Billion Dollar Playground (Binge/Foxtel), observational documentary series Outback Ringer (ABC), hit comedy-drama series Here Come The Habibs (Channel Nine), comedy-panel series Show Me The Movie (Channel Ten, hosted by Rove McManus), landmark Australian documentary series the First Inventors (Paramount/Ten and NITV), tough job ob-doc series Aussie Truck Rehab (Warner-Discovery), Bondi Boardriders Vs The World (Red Bull TV), travel series - Three Blue Ducks, (Channel Ten, starring Masterchef judge Andy Allen), comedy fact-ent series - Australia Now and Then (hosted by Shane Jacobson, on Network 7) and spin-off series Bondi Rescue - Bali (Ten). Ben is the winner of 6 Logies (Australia's highest TV award)..[23]
See also
References
External links
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