The Biggest Loser Australia

Excess Baggage celebrity contestant, television presenter and weight loss advocate, Ajay Rochester has hit back at the Nine Network on her blog over its treatment of the ailing weight-loss reality show.

The blog post, ‘Channel 9 Have some balls!’ on her site, Finding My Mojo, contained thoughts from the outspoken ex-Biggest Loser hostess who has competed alongside ordinary Australian Matt Palmer in the show.

Okay, I am currently stuck on the bum’s f@ck end of Australia, Kangaroo Island, when the ratings/channel say that we should move channels…’ Rochester introduces.

Come on channel nine, have some faith. Excess baggage is a grower not a shower! Don’t flick US (our show) off onto another channel in the first week without standing behind the product you sell.  SHAME ON YOU!’

Rochester goes on to assure her fans that she is not in it for the money, and that she is not afraid to speak her mind.

‘I know that I risk not ever being employed by channel nine again, but I also did that with channel 10… seriously, channel nine….omg  the irony here is that in REAL life we want QUICK fixes but they don’t work …well it is the same with [Excess Baggage]. It gives real life solutions to healing your life! You want to heal your life watch our show!’ Rochester continued.

She also branded her former show as a ‘non-reality’ format and a ‘starvation routine’ in the process to convey her point that Baggage was a better show.

She ended her blog by pleading with fans to follow the show to GO!. ‘…if  you do send us to GO channel then for goodness sake Australia, follow us and prove that this incredible show is worth the effort we have all put into it.’

Nine moved Excess Baggage to GO! yesterday (effective from Monday) after disappointing ratings. The show has had mixed reviews and was one of the bigger risks in Nine’s schedule due to a much criticised promotional campaign.

From Monday, it will debut on the multichannel where it left off from tonight, at 6.30pm. Big Bang Theory repeats fill the 7PM void for now. There is no episode tomorrow.

Last night; reality television bowed its head for 2011 with a lovely finale for Beauty & The Geek Australia. In a blog post; I went through the key aspects that went into making the final week of reality for this year a success while also hinting at future prospects for this blog. In the final recapping blog I will be posting for this year, I will detail the year that has been; the highs and the lows. Pretend it is one of those lengthy recaps shows attach to the top of their finales. Then I will preview what is in store for the coming months and into 2012.

The year began on 30 January 2011 with the launch of The Biggest Loser Australia’s sixth season- the first in the ‘families’ format. The season began with four trainers; Shannon Ponton, Michelle Bridges, Steve Willis (formerly ‘The Commando’, now a fully fledged trainer) and new ninja warrior Tiffiny Hall, all heading to the homes of their respective families to eat what they eat, do what they do and most importantly, live how they live.

It was an eye opening experience, and the perfect way to introduce the four families- the Westren family containing Leigh Westren, fiancée Lara Whelan, mother Sharlene and father Craig. We also had the Moon family, containing sisters Sarah, Jodie, Rebecca and Kellie. The Duncan family contained Emma, Jarrod, Sarah-Jayne and Meg and the Challenor family contained Damien, Nathaniel, Joe and Greg.

One by one, these families competed for immunity and power. Joe became a villain after making his nephew Nathaniel enter an elimination when it should have been him and also giving away immunity to someone other than his brother, Damien.

Despite being eliminated, a twist in the show saw Lara, Nathaniel, Rebecca and Emma return to the show. Two of these four were supposed to be eliminated, but after gaining weight at a weigh in, previously safe contestant Joe joined the line up and was eliminated with Lara, meaning three people were allowed back into the competition.

After 13 long weeks, Kellie, Sarah, Leigh and returnee Emma returned for the finale and despite great odds, Emma Duncan was crowned Australia’s second female Biggest Loser, with Leigh coming in second and Kellie and Sarah coming in third and fourth respectively.

In the same era, My Kitchen Rules returned after a highly successful first season. Its second season seemed to tap into the success MasterChef saw in 2010, and won pretty much every night it was on.

Amongst all the teams, we had High Achievers Kelly and Ash Cooke, Newlyweds Anne-Marie Battista and Nick Sharp, urban hippies Mal Gill and Bec Saul and of course, sisters Sammy & Bella Jakubiak.

It was a toughly contested battle, and MKR became something of a phenomenon. In the end, it was sisters Sammy & Bella who took the crown and have been close to Seven’s heart ever since, even making a few appearances on Dancing with the Stars.

Speaking of which, Dancing With The Stars made its 2011 debut with a big cast. Well, it wasn’t so big, but those people in Seven’s controversy department were prepped and at the ready. A change to the judging panel saw Josh Horner take the place of Mark Wilson, someone who seemed all too keen to create a stir.

The dancing line up consisted of newsreader Samantha Armytage, Home & Away’s Dan Ewing, bungled model Lara Bingle and most infamously, socialite Brynne Edelsten.

Brynne was at the centre of two very public controversies that helped lift ratings for the show. The first saw new judge Josh Horner describe her as a ‘bedazzled sack of potatoes’, causing her to cry after only her first dance. The second saw co-host Sonia Kruger comment on her and her husband, Geoffrey Edelsten’s age gap, referring to the latter as the former’s dad.

Despite all this, the country was ‘bedazzled’ by Brynne’s story, and also that of Samantha Armytage who was also given a beating by the judges. Both stayed in the contest for quite a while longer than many would have thought, with Samantha only just missing out on a place in the final.

Another contestant, Haley Bracken, who’s husband Nathan competed on the show only to be eliminated first, delighted the judges and scored herself a few ten’s, regularly winning challenges.

She made it all the way to the finale with singer Damien Leith and chef Manu Feildel.

While her dancing skills were enough to ward off Damien into third place, she was not able to beat Manu, who won the public vote and therefore the very controversial contest for 2011.

Back to TEN, and their reality ratings juggernaut, MasterChef Australia, returned for its third season. Branded as the biggest yet, a massive mystery box in Sydney Harbour was enough to herald in that promise to viewers watching at home.

The new season had a Cerebral Palsy sufferer, a surfer pin up dude, a few at home mother cooks and a fighter pilot.

Ratings for the season opened fairly high and fairly consistent, but the series was never going to reach the success of 2010. By the end of the season, it was also clear that its days of creating a 3 million plus viewership finale were over.

But there was plenty to celebrate in between. To make up for a lack of inspiration found in most of the dishes presented this year, the contestants headed to the likes of Margaret River, Busselton Jetty, a mine, Malaysia, New York and Melbourne for challenges and episodes.

The production team were in overdrive, and the production of the series was insanely great.

Storytelling also played a big part as many events grabbed news headlines. Firstly was that little fling between Ellie and Hayden which resulted in nothing. The second, and probably the biggest controversy to ever hit the MasterChef kitchen came from contestant Mat Beyer, or more frankly, his smart phone.

During one challenge, it was suspected by the judges that Mat had brought in a smart phone that could have been used to find information on recipes. Their suspicions were somewhat confirmed and he was kicked out of the competition.

Other stories also attracted attention. The shock elimination of CP sufferer John Hughes in the top 50 round, the deletion of fighter pilot Paul Lombardi before the top 24 round even started and the shock walking of contestant Adam Bowen all left viewers with something to watch.

Moving into finals week, and Ellie, Dani, Alana, Michael and Kate were left to fight for the title, although Ellie was eliminated just before all this.

It all came down to Michael and Kate in the finale where mother Kate beat out SA Michael, 87 points to 84. It wasn’t a very memorable finale, and Kate hasn’t been heard of since, but it was still another successful slate for TEN.

Reality television was Seven’s forte in 2011 with Australia’s Got Talent also on the rise. All three judges; Kyle Sandilands, Dannii Minogue and Brian McFadden returned and found the likes of The Old Fella, Ben Price, Jack Vidgen and Cosentino and launched them into the spotlight.

Also launched into the spotlight was comedian Jordan Harris where, after a successful first round of auditions which was based on jokes ‘borrowed’ from other joke makers, he managed to alienate his audience in the semi finals with a less than impressive and rather cringeworthy performance of his own.

They also ‘re-found’ Timomatic who, after modest success on the second season of So You Think You Can Dance Australia in 2009, returned to this competition to place third.

In the end, performer Cosentino placed second to singing schoolboy Jack Vidgen, who was famous in his own right for those veneers.

Seven also launched The Amazing Race Australia, which brought out probably the most diverse range of characters seen on reality television this year. We had Muslims Mo & Mos, Big W employees Anne Marie and Tracy; reunited sisters Alana and Mel and dopey farmers Tom & Matt.

The first season saw these guys race to places like Indonesia, South Africa, Czech Republic, Poland, Singapore and Hong Kong, and face challenges ranging from playing a famous Chinese casino game, to stacking crates of beer to skydiving!

In the end, it was surfer duo Nathan & Tyler, the former of which dated Erin McNaught, won the show over Perth models Renae & Sam. Surprisingly, it all came down to a race around Perth.

But I’m sure you’re all sick of hearing about Seven and TEN for now; so lets visit some of Nine’s reality offerings.

Well, most famously, we had The Block. Now in it’s forth season, the producers mixed things up a bit and introduced a new stripped 7PM format. The show also moved out of apartment renovating with this year’s contestants asked to renovate four houses on a block!

Lastly, there were eight teams, not four. Four of those teams however were eliminated in the first week, but they all made appearances in challenges throughout the series.

The four main couples were Josh & Jenna, a bickering boyfriend/girlfriend duo who were in charge of the only double fronted house on the street; Polly & Waz, a very quirky, young and savvy couple who had nil background in renovating; Katrina & Amie, two sisters with emotions made of concrete and a very stylish yet obscure design technique, and seasoned renovators Tania & Rod.

They were all a bunch of laughs with only a few moments of sadness. There was a time when Tania & Rod were called off the block to attend a family funeral, and there was also a time when Katrina’s Crohn’s disease overtook her emotions a bit. But in the end, these couples, with the help of host Scott Cam, new host Shelley Craft, sometimes embattled onsite manager Keith and a whole set of reward winning challenges, were able to manage four great houses for auction.

The only disappointing thing about this season, was most probably the only thing that the producers didn’t want to end in disappointment- the finale.

After last year’s ‘shock’ announcement that Chez & Brenton’s apartment was to be passed in, it was a surprise to everyone watching when three of the four houses were passed in. It was even more of a shock that the winning house, selling for $15,000 profit, belonged to novice’s Polly & Waz. And it was an EVEN BIGGER shock to Jenna, whose night was turned upside down by a proposal by Josh. She said yes!

Nine also had Top Design, a brand new show by Jamie Durie, once Nine’s love child and host of The Block. The series failed to fire and was at one point shown first run on GEM ahead of a Nine screening.

Robert Davidov won the show, beating out Lisa and Steve at the finale, which was quite a high key affair for such a low key performer. I guess for me personally, the thing I will remember about this show was minutes after blogging the finale of the show on a Friday, news that Big Brother Australia was to return on Nine surfaced.

Nine also had two seasons of The Farmer Wants A Wife, however I only watched the second, which was the series’ seventh overall.

In this season, containing farmers Wil, Trent, Frank, John, Kev and Tim, a seventh mystery girl was added to the picked girls the farmers chose as potential wives. This seventh girl was chosen by the families. The farmers had to decide whether or not to take her back to the farm with him and two others.

Some jumped at the opportunity, some did not.

The show saw numerous exits; most notably, Farmer John’s favourite Belinda. The finale also saw a shocking outcome for Kev, who after two eliminations, his chosen girl got cold feet and left, leaving him with no one to pursue. Potential season eight candidate, anyone?

The season end showcasing the wedding of former contestants Nathan and Amanda.

To end the year, Nine debuted the oftentimes controversial Celebrity Apprentice to a stripped 7PM format. The series contained celebrities including Jesinta Campbell, Deni Hines, Jason Coleman, Julia Morris, Pauline Hanson and Shane Crawford.

Deni became an instant villain; constantly attacking Polly for her lack of celebrity, and generally acting like a spoilt brat and damaged diva. She was soon eliminated.

Pauline Hanson would most likely be considered as the most unlikely hero of the series after showing real integrity and a real maturity towards challenges. She was constantly saved from elimination due to her work ethic and public support backing her, especially after washing some guy’s car in underwear, was shiny.

Another surprise characterisation came from Jason Coleman, who while showed great leadership and well-spokenedness, constantly lost challenges and began to be deemed a villain in the eyes of the contestants who saw his constant need to be in control and his somewhat demeaning mannerisms to be quite rude and somewhat crippling to the receiving contestant’s place in the competition

In the final week, eliminated contestants Polly, Didier, Deni and Max returned to help out finalists Jason, Julia, Shane and Jesinta in what was an explosive and controversial week. Mad Max Markson, who was known for his immaturity, outspokenness and time wasting abilities, somewhat ironically eliminated after competing in a challenge sober of these qualities, returned to give Julia and Jason one more test of patience and control.

But it was Deni Hines who stole the show, seemingly playing up for the cameras and using the villain persona she received in her first stint on the show, and arguing with people, mostly Jesinta, at any opportunity she got.

She later admitted that she did it for fun, and even commended enemy Jesinta on her smarts. It wasn’t enough to let Jesinta and Shane win, and in the end, it all came down to Julia and Jason. Julia Morris won the show, but decided to split the money with Jason Coleman and his charity; a rare show of such true honour and dignity. Julia will be one contestant who’s ‘brand’ isn’t damaged by this show.

TEN also experimented with The Renovators; but it turned into an overall flop, despite showing signs of life throughout its run, and even giving TEN a second place position on finale night. The renovation show saw host Brendan Moar and judges Peter Ho, Barry Du Bois and Robyn Holt guide 20 renovators through challenges, which included a 24-hour makeover of a house on wheels, carted into the show’s massive warehouse studio, and a week trip up to Brisbane to help flood victims, and eliminations which I personally noted for their initial lack of imagination.

Despite the low rating performance of the show, it was generally well received by the public, with many of you suggesting contestants for the Top 20 Reality Contestants of 2011 competition. While it was able to shake comparisons to The Block; its similarity to MasterChef remained and became the show’s only lowlight. Despite all this, I would say that where the Renovators was different was in its increased personal approach to its contestants and its laid back approach to the whole structure of the show.

There were plenty of team changes, but ultimately, Natalie from the sixties suburban (formerly, the shop), August from the shop, Peter from the half done house, Michael from the fibro cottage, Mel from the weatherboard and Luke from the terrace became the show’s finalists for auction night.

While not many houses sold for profit, they did all sell, and it was SA’s Michael Lynch’s fibro cottage that sold for the most and gave the tradie from Laura a win!

Junior MasterChef Australia was generally a miss for TEN, after initially debuting a brand new Top 50 format. Matt Preston took leave for the series, but Matt Moran took his place and Anna Gare returned as a solely Junior MasterChef judge.

The show continued the celebrated production of the main show, and the trips to Disneyland and the inspiring dish after inspiring dish of tasty food was a massive bonus; possibly making it a better season than the first, but the viewers didn’t come, and this is one show that will most probably be forgotten.

For those of you who don’t forget it, Greta Yaxley won the show, with 92 points over Jack’s 84 (if I recall).

Back to Seven and it was another year for The X Factor and it was going to be big. Natalie Imbruglia and Kyle Sandilands didn’t return, but they were replaced by the gorgeous and talented Natalie Bassingthwaighte and singing superstar Mel B. The rest returned.

This year, it was the likes of Emmanuel Kelly; a talented Iraqi orphan and Luke O’Dell, an untalented Adam Lambert wannabe who stole the show; but none of which made it to the finals.

Out of the twelve who did, Mel B’s lot soon disappeared. Tyla Bertolli and Jacqui Newland were both eliminated early on and despite a promising first half for Christina Parie, she wasn’t able to make it into the top 5.

Conversely, Guy Sebastian kept all of his three acts until the final five, with Declan Sykes leaving in fifth place. His other two acts, Johnny Ruffo and Reece Mastin, both became finalists along with Natalie Bassingthwaighte’s Andrew Wishart.

After winning last year with Altiyan Childs, Ronan Keating did not renew his success this year, with his final act Three Wishez only making it to the final four.

In the end, SA’s Reece Mastin beat out Andrew Wishart and Johnny Ruffo (runner up and third place respectively) to become the winner of the show’s third season.

Seven also had The One; a show that briefly saw the light of day in 2008 and pits psychics against each other to find out who is the most gifted.
Judges were Richard Saunders, a sceptic, and Stacey Demarco, a psychic, whose bickering became a somewhat entertainment staple for the show.

Challenges these contestants faced included anything from in studio readings, finding of objects as small as gold to as big as helicopters using only their abilities; and ended in a now controversial challenge which saw them try to locate the body of missing, presumed dead woman, Kerry Whelan.

Greg Riley, empath Heidi Hanley and detective Debbie Malone were awarded finalist positions, and you at home got to determine the winner. Like the psychics themselves, you all chose Greg to be The One- Australia’s Most Gifted Psychic.

The last show of course, was Beauty & The Geek Australia which returned with Bernard Curry as host for its third season. The twist this year was a simple one; a male beauty paired with a female geek in the form of Troy and Helen.

Other than this, the show didn’t deviate away from its usual format of humorous storytelling, classy cutaway quotes, wonderful production and just plain stupidity. There was a time when the human twists, Helen & Troy, were eliminated quite early, but they were able to return via a twist. One episode later and they were eliminated again.

The season saw geek Lachlan and beauty Jordan, who both went on to be apart of the final two teams with their respective partners, hook up, break up and make up throughout the course of the season. The main problem came when Lachlan got his partner Sarah’s name tattooed on his arse. Pardon my French.

During makeovers, which were a dazzling array of spectacles, Dolly announced her decision to quit on medical grounds, leaving previously eliminated contestant Jacelle to fill her void with Gilbert.

In the finale, Mackenzie and Jimmy were eliminated after an exam challenge; Gilbert and Jacelle were eliminated after a formal challenge and Julian and Jordan were eliminated after a quiz, leaving Lachlan and Sarah as this year’s winners.

Lovebirds Mackenzie and Troy also announced their engagement throughout the final.

 

And that my friends, was the year in reality. Quite a hefty one wasn’t it. But enough about 2011; that was so last year (well, technically it was this year, but you get my drift)- let’s talk 2012.

The only show from the above list confirmed not to be returning is Top Design, but grave fears are being held for The Renovators, which despite being announced by TEN as a returning show, has since fallen victim to second thoughts. The only other show that will probably not return is Junior MasterChef Australia- but it would be for the best. Oh, and The One.

The Biggest Loser Australia will return and revert back to a ‘singles’ format. Dancing with the Stars will return with a new host after Sonia Kruger’s defection to Nine; possibly Nat Bass. My Kitchen Rules returns with a Kiwi pair. MasterChef returns with Matt Preston.

The Farmer Wants A Wife, Celebrity Apprentice Australia, The Block, The Amazing Race Australia, Australia’s Got Talent, The X Factor and Beauty & The Geek Australia will all return, or are all set to return based on viewer satisfaction and ratings.

To join them are a sleuth of new Nine shows. We have The Voice, which features blind auditions and battle rounds. Judges will be Joel Madden, Delta Goodrem, Seal and Keith Urban.

Big Brother returns to our screens on Nine with new host Sonia Kruger and a new ‘Secrets’ format where every housemate has a secret. Location, spin off shows and narrator are yet to be confirmed.

Excess Baggage will be a new celebrity weight loss show where eight overweight celebs pair up with ordinary contestants to lose the flab. Celebrities include Darryn Lyons who has previously competed on Celebrity Big Brother UK, causing a stir after revealing his ‘six pack on top of a beer gut’ formed stomach which evolved due to ‘contouring’. Having watched this season myself, I will warn you now; just in case he takes his top off, don’t eat dinner through this program! Kate Cebrano hosts.

 

And that is just a taste of what 2012 holds in terms of reality television! It’s the substance which makes up these shows in between which will really determine the flavour. And we won’t know what any of this ‘substance’ is until these seasons debut.

 

Over the next few months, Throng will still be delivering important reality news. Of course we have the Top 20 Reality Television Contestants of 2011 competition which will run from the 16th of December right through until New Years Eve.

I will then be taking a break for the first half of January before returning with some opinion pieces to get you in the spirit of the 2012 reality ratings season. This will also be my last post before December 16 less any important announcements. I’m sure the other lovely writers here on Throng will be keeping you up to date anyway. There’s always an excuse to log onto Throng.

 

Then, in 2012 I can officially announce, Throng will be returning its episode-by-episode detailed recaps of EVERY episode of EVERY season of reality in 2012 (minus any last minute disruptions or planned events), so keep an eye out!

 

That’s all from me; a few last minute thank you’s before I sign off- firstly to AndrewB and Regan for letting me post my thoughts on reality onto this site in the first place. You have given me so much support and I have loved every minute of it.

 

Johnson, as many of you would know, has helped in nearly every single episode of MasterChef, Junior MasterChef and The X Factor; and has even helped out in other random episodes. I truly thank you for that, Johnson, as you have enriched my knowledge and therefore my love of this genre and this job.

 

And Ryno; who offered his complete support and helping hand throughout September, and while it didn’t all go to plan, I think your offer to help was the most exciting thing about this year.

 

And to the rest of the readers, who have commented kindly or constructively, or have just read my work, I am motivated by your continued support and I am proud to be able to do this for such a loving and intellectual community.

 

I’ll see you all soon; for now, it’s time to take a break.

 

Courtney xx

I was looking over my recent opinion pieces and found most of them centered around shows like Big Brother and those currently on air; but when I started to think about this topic, I found it irresistible not to revisit a personal favourite of mine; The Biggest Loser Australia.

It’s been a rocky journey for this hit television series, but fans should be happy to know that the last time the show exited our screens (at the conclusion of its sixth season), it did so on a high. Thanks to a delicious new families format and an easily digestible air time, the show picked itself up from near cancellation and found renewed faith in viewers.

We were promised another dose of The Biggest Loser: Families in the sixth season finale, but TEN soon changed their minds and opted to return the show to its roots and start the application process for single contestants only. No couples, no families; 2012′s contestants will be all on their own for the first time since 2008.

It’s something that’s never really been done. In other countries, once the show moves into the Couples or Families stage, they don’t return to the singles format. In the US, over the course of twelve seasons, the show has regularly returned to a Couples format or a Families format after trying even different things; but even they have never reverted this much.

In a way, it shows the progressiveness of the show and the diversity of its format. Reality shows are criticised for their lack of imagination and lack of long living format potential. The Biggest Loser is able to renew itself and as we’ve seen this year, it has.

The show has never been a constant ratings bonanza. Even from its first season back in 2006, The Biggest Loser Australia would generally generate, in its stripped format, about 700,000-800,000 viewers throughout most of its run however prove itself in the final weeks by delivering viewerships of over 1 million viewers. But back in a time before multi channels, when the format was still in ‘singles’ mode, achieving 700,000-800,000 was not a solid effort.

So to remain viable and on air, the show couldn’t afford to lose a following and generally, it didn’t. These were the typical figures to expect right through to the end of its fourth season in 2009. Many just put the somewhat average viewership down to ‘playing on TEN, straight after summer’. And we all know how tragic TEN is through summer; many would have seen the show’s ratings as a bit of a godsend for the troubled network.

The show did teeter a bit in its third season, possibly thanks to increased competition due to the arrival of HD exclusive channels but most probably due to a singles format which was heavily based on cruel eliminations and the same old, same old.

With the arrival of Australia’s first true multichannel (well, except for ABC2 which arrived on screens a good year before The Biggest Loser Australia even premiered) in the form of ONE and the upcoming overall arrival of an onslaught of multi channels in the near future and therefore added competition, the show had to evolve, and evolve it did.

2009 saw the show move into a couples format, and while it didn’t do anything significant to the ratings, it didn’t damage them. The great cause for concern was still yet to come.

2010 would continue the format, but with a few changes. Hayley Lewis took over from Ajay Rochester as host and the show moved to 7.30pm thanks to the arrival of The 7PM Project. This meant that the show, which remained in its stripped six nights a week format, would now be playing in the middle of the prime time battlefield with some episodes now extended to an hour where before, this wouldn’t have occurred.

Safe to say, it didn’t work. With the poor lead in from the then-struggling Project and the somewhat short lived happy-go-lucky feel of a Couples format, the show regularly went below 700,000 and even dipped to below 600,000 on the odd occasion. For the first time ever, its renewal was a shock. Surely it would have been cancelled despite picking up in the final weeks, which was expected.

But 2011 saw some promise. A fresh new families format, a brand new host in Tiffany Hall, the extended roll of The Commando, a fresh new face in the form of brand new branding and a spanking new logo and a twist that saw the trainers head to the contestant’s homes for the week made ripples with the viewers.

The show also had a change of heart when it came to its air time. Instead of airing at a gruelling six nights a week; the show would now only air on Sundays, Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays; making the most of light competition and hopefully a new fan base.

It was a lot of change, but would it work? Umm…yah! The show launched to an impressive 1.3m viewers and held its head above 1 million viewers for the first few weeks. Even its Friday episodes impressed; something TEN has struggled with in recent years and even just recently. The show, which dumped its MasterClass format and saw the contestants battle it out in power-winning challenges, has even done better in the ratings than the once popular MasterChef MasterClasses.

The show didn’t see a huge rise in ratings going into the final, but the show constantly stayed around the 800,000-900,000 mark which was a huge success. It’s huge finale was also a high rating one, watched by over 1.6 million viewers. Impressive.

And so it should be! The families format brought on a brand new atmosphere for the show. There was more competition and therefore a bigger sense of will that these contestants believed in themselves and wanted to win. Being families, there was a lot of character bonding from the get go and a lot of conflict. This was not just an ordinary, cheesy set of characters you’d find on Top Design; these guys had soul.

Tiffany and Steve (Commando) brought a whole new light to the show, despite the Commando’s role of being the bad guy becoming a slight victim of the overhaul. Having four teams however meant less predictability and Lewis, who was a bit stiff in her first season in 2010, guided this new series to success with some new found confidence. I don’t miss Ajay one bit!

So does it seem odd to you, that after all this progression and the introduction of a new face for the show that looks like it could last for years, the production company would risk everything and try their luck at a Singles format?

There are some doubts, but it may not all be bad.

When the season, now the show’s seventh, goes to air early next year, it would have been four years since the singles format has been visited. Many have yearned for an opportunity to apply by themselves as victims of being the only obese person in their family. This isn’t a negative move in this regard.

The added competition factor the show proved this year also didn’t come down to the fact that it was family v. family, but because of the new challenges (including the Contest), the added number of teams and the versatility of the contestants. If this is replicated in the revised format, it could bring with it the life it enjoyed this year.

A big part of the show’s downfall pre-2011 was the stripped format. The show promises to return in its four-day-a-week format which is welcomed. Many think that having a stripped format is healthy for a show, as it lets viewers tune in more frequently and not lose track of a show. I personally think that it is a hinderance considering the amount of commitment people have to put into shows like that; especially if those shows are more suited to an hour-a-night format.

Not to mention a singles format could dispell any complexities in format regarding family members playing as individuals; and may make the whole viewing experience a lot simpler.

No, there will be no families which may make it harder for personalities to come to light. But what it could mean is more competition and more character building as these contestants try to get to know one another. It means alliances can be formed and broken without relying on other contestants (eg, other familiy members) to agree with any alliances made. I was a bit nervous when I read the TEN press release on the announcement of the show, which made mention the word ‘romance’. This is what could kill the show.

This is not a ‘romance’ show and even though risks have served this show well, turning it into a dating format couldn’t help the show at all. Surely it would mean too big a swing from the overall crux of the show.

But what I am most concerned about with this change in format is that the new found viewers may have viewed the new-look 2011 format as ‘belonging’ with the families twist. Having singles in there instead could damage the atmosphere and feel of the show, and new viewers may just decide its just not for them any more.

There are also other problems; general viewer fatigue (maybe the ‘extra’ viewers were just there to sample the show one last time), revision of a tired format (which I believe is absurd as I don’t think formats can just ‘go out of date’; I mean, it aint cheese, people!) and just generally a change in format which does not go to plan in terms of audience reach. But all these problems don’t necessarily apply to the fact the show is moving from its 2011 format to its original- these problems could occur with any change from any format to any format at any given time in any given season. In that case, I could also mention TEN’s loss of viewership for many other big brands such as MasterChef and Junior MasterChef; which could also be an omen for the show.

Either way, TEN has proven itself as a worker of miracles in the past; and whether or not this show needs a miracle in the first place is hard to tell. Do you think the switch to what could be a more simpler ‘singles’ format is a good move, or will it fall flat? Would you prefer a singles format to a families one? Share your thoughts below.

And on the topic of The Biggest Loser Australia; filming has started and if what I read in Adelaide’s Advertiser, this should be a very interesting season. Apparently, a van that was carrying the contestants (all or part of the group, I don’t know) buckled under their weight. They had to make a stop at the servo for immediate repairs. Should be a good episode plot if they managed to film it.

The Biggest Loser Australia – Singles airs on Network TEN early next year.

The finale of The Biggest Loser (US) airs on ELEVEN from 8.30pm, Saturday August 27, 2011, during which you will see the winner announced of the series.

Then on Saturday September 3, it’s the finale again!

Well, not quite – it is a reunion episode that sees all participants of the series return to reveal how successful they have been with their weight loss.

US reality shows tend to really milk their brands with so many of them having reunion episodes after the finale. Survivor is one of the major reality series that do it every season.

The Biggest Loser US “reunion” is a big commitment, airing over three hours on ELEVEN from 8.30pm, Saturday September 3, 2011, on ELEVEN.

Meanwhile, Ten have announced, as part of the network’s 2012 line up, that The Biggest Loser (Australia) will revert to singles – despite the fact, that, after the 2011 series finales, they promoted families to apply for the 2012 season.

The Biggest Loser (Australia) will air on Ten in February, 2012.

 

It has been revealed that the seventh season of The Biggest Loser will revert back to its original format featuring individuals competing for the title of Australia’s Biggest Loser 2012.

From its launch in 2006, until its third season in 2008, the show transformed single, overweight Australian’s into fit, healthy role models.

Mimicking the US format, the show decided to try other make ups that included contestants competing with family members or close friends. From 2009 until 2010; contestants entered the game with an overweight loved one or close friend to compete as couples, and this year, four families competed together.

Unlike the US version, which has never once reverted back to the singles format, the Australian homepage is asking for individuals to compete on the show which will air in early 2012.

But in true Biggest Loser form; this may not just be the case. In a press release detailing the network’s 2012 launch spread; TEN teased that audiences should ‘get ready for some romance’; and with the word ‘singles’ now featuring prominently in its title for the first time, it could just be a double entendre.

The Biggest Loser- Singles returns in 2012 on TEN.

Hmmm…. good question, Courtney!

So I was quite surprised when I saw Andrew B’s story and found out that Nine has scheduled The Farmer Wants A Wife to take over from The Block in the 7pm timeslot.

I have to admit two things at this point. Firstly, I’ve never watched The Farmer Wants A Wife as it hasn’t interested me too much. Secondly, I am an avid fan of The 7PM Project. In saying that, I recognise that in this particular instance, I may not be speaking for the majority of the public, but I’ve made some notes on what I think audiences are doing at 7pm and how this may affect Farmer for its upcoming Seventh season.

I’m going to start with some of my concerns with this scheduling.

No matter what you say, it was obvious that when The Block debuted at 7PM nine Mondays ago, where the audience was coming from; The 7PM Project.

The week before it premiered, The 7PM Project scored 987,000 viewers. The first night of The Block dropped this figure to 724,000; a drop of 263,000. For comparisson, Home & Away dropped from 1.262m to 1.160m, a drop of just over 100,000. I should also note that the Monday before The Block was a public holiday Monday where ratings are usually higher than usual.

Disregarding that, The 7PM Project has been well behind the figures it was managing last year, and well down on those it was averaging immediately before The Block. Of course, I was one of those people who migrated to The Block.

One of the thoughts I and many others I have interviewed on the topic have in common is that the best thing about this arrangement was that The Block was only on for 9 weeks, after which I could then go back to watching The 7PM Project. I’d imagine there are a few Home & Away viewers who thought the same.

The thing about The 7PM Project; it has built an audience of fairly consistent followers, and the sudden drop it has experienced could only have been put down to The Block. Being consistent followers, I’d imagine that many of them would have expected to make the move back to the news program, that isn’t one you’d need to watch every single night, after the finale.

So my question is, will the viewers stick around for Farmer, or is 9 weeks long enough? For me, it would have been.

I’m all up for reality television in the 7pm timeslot; but to me and many others, 7PM is a regular home complete with laughter and information and is a nice way to start the evening. One thing I noticed when watching The Block, is that my night on the couch felt quite odd; like I had sat down in a completely different living room.

I was on a nine week holiday, sampling different things in a seemingly foreign culture and was awaiting my return to my old home at the end. Now, my fight has been diverted to land in a nation that has seemingly popped up overnight.

The fact is, The Farmer Wants A Wife didn’t exactly light the ratings world alight in season six and to many people, the concept of reality being back at 7PM is still a new thought. I really don’t think people were ready for an onslaught of it.

The Biggest Loser Australia was stripped at 7.30pm during 2010, six nights a week. This pretty much failed, and the solution was to simply cut down on the number of hours the show aired a week.

If anything, it would be interesting if Nine was able to reverse The Farmer Wants A Wife’s fortunes by doing the exact opposite, and create more exposure. In the past however, this hasn’t worked.

I made mention that The Farmer Wants A Wife being at 7PM feels like a nation has been created overnight, because this just seems like such a big move that has just eventuated a week out of when it is meant to happen.

If viewers did only migrate to Nine for The Block, who’s to say they will be prepared to keep on going with The Farmer Wants A Wife? The Block is a popular concept which even at 7PM isn’t hitting the heights of its first two seasons (although on Sunday it is doing damn fine, I’m yet to hear if Farmer will air on Sunday) and I just don’t know if the audience that is into The 7PM Project will find this show to be a suitable replacement for them.

Still, it isn’t all bad; there are definitely things that could work for the show.
First, I have no idea how they will turn the show into a stripped format, but if they are able to keep the episodes at half an hour in length on average; people may be willing to sample this. If anything, there should be enough curiosity factor there to drive viewership up for the first week.

The ratings for The Block may not reflect the popularity of the show, but possibly of the reality alternative Nine is dishing up at 7pm. Time will tell I guess.

At the end of the day, I couldn’t see The Farmer Wants A Wife succeeding too well for Nine in any other scenario (except maybe as a replacement for Top Design) so it is good to see Nine taking a few risks.

Sorry guys, I couldn’t seem to write this without it seeming as if I was just trying to talk up The 7PM Project. By all means, when The Block ends, I can expect many viewers to migrate to Home & Away; this is certainly not a push of any agenda.

But it is of my belief that Nine isn’t doing itself too many favours by announcing this mammoth move now. Still, it is probably a better strategy than the alternative (Big Bang anyone? Yuck, no!) and at the end of the day, it could mean MORE reality at 7PM.

But with a poor sixth season, little notice, a large viewership who were counting on The Block’s short run time and plenty of competition, The Farmer Wants A Wife will have to fight hard to keep viewers on Nine and I wish it all the best.

As Throng’s reality televsion correspondent, I will of course be exiting the 7PM plane at arrival gate 9 to cover The Farmer Wants A Wife from August 22. Please remain seated until the seatbelt sign is switched off!