The Biggest Loser

Nine sure do want to make sure there are no excuses for missing Excess Baggage next week, with encores galore on both Nine and GEM.

Replays on Nine include episodes 1 and 2 after the cricket on Wednesday February 1 and Friday February 3, as well as afternoons at 1pm. It also airs on GEM at 4pm on certain days as well.

So, if you’re stuck deciding which of the three head-to-head reality competition shows to watch in this coming week, just keep in mind the encore options for Excess Baggage.

Seven will almost certainly encore My Kitchen Rules – either on 7TWO the next day and/or as a block of all episodes on the weekend. The difference here, is Seven do not promote the alternative viewing times, hoping the majority of the audience will be there for the show’s first airing at 7pm Monday to Thursday.

Ten encore The Biggest Loser at 3pm the day after it airs.

Back to Excess Baggage and here is the Throng guide to viewing times for the show:

Episode 1.
7.00pm Mon Jan 30 Nine
1.00pm Tue Jan 31 Nine
4.00pm Tue Jan 31 GEM
10.30pm Wed Feb 1 Nine (after cricket so start time may be different depening on cricket outcome)

Episode 2.
7.00pm Tue Jan 31 Nine
4.00pm Wed Feb 1 GEM
11.30pm Wed Feb 1 Nine (see above)
1.00pm Thur Feb 2 Nine

Episode 3
7.00pm Thur Feb 2 Nine
3.30pm Fri Feb 3 GEM
10.30pm Fri Feb 3 Nine (after cricket)

Note – Excess Baggage is not made in HD, so GEM encores will only be in standard definition. At time of posting, there are no encores on GO! nor the following weekend on any channel. More may be added.

7.00pm Monday January 23 on Ten

The waitt is over. The Biggest Loser is back for another calorie kicking, fat busting, sweat – inducing, tear jerking seventh season! 16 contestants are about to put themselves through the weight loss journey of a lifetime – and it all starts tonight.

This year, all of the contestants are single – learning to love themselves before they can find love with another. The Biggest Loser experience is a bonding one – will the bond be stronger than ever before? Stay tuned…

Episode 1- Monday 23 January:

Join The Biggest Loser trainers as they travel the country to collect this year’s contestants. Michelle. Shannan. Tiffiny and the Commando each spend a day in the lives of their team members before heading back to Camp Biggest Loser where the roles will be reversed!

Episode 2- Tuesday 24 January:

The teams meet for the very time to size up the competition – but what the eyes can’t see. the scales will show! It’s time for the very first Weigh In – a somewhat public affair this year. Expect tears as the contestants confront the numbers that many of them have avoided acknowledging for many years – their weight.

Episode 3- Wednesday 25 January:

The training starts, and it comes as quite a shock for both the contestants and the trainers, as they get to see just what the future has in store for them! Expect tears and maybe a little bit of vomit as their bodies get used to the new regime.

And the shocks don’t stop there -the contestants have their bio-ages calculated and some are astounded at how old their bodies have become.

Also, first Temptation – will there be any takers at this early stage?

Episode 4- Thursday 26 January: The first Challenge. Last year, the contestants pulled a train….this year we’re taking them to the water- they’ll be pulling a ferry!

The Biggest Loser: Singles is almost here (that’s 7pm tonight Mon Jan 23 on Network TEN) and this season is set to be the biggest, the most intimate and of course, the most life-changing experience yet! To get you all excited, Courtney got to catch up with show trainer, mentor and new author, Shannan Ponton!

 

Courtney: Thank you for taking this time to do this interview; we really appreciate it!

Shannan: Yeah, pleasure!

 

Courtney: Shannan, this is the seventh season of The Biggest Loser which I believe is your sixth as trainer. What is it that has kept you and the crew going all this time?

Shannan: It’s a funny thing. We work flat out for five months and at the end of it, the contestants are so good; they’re ready to go and they’re ready to take life and you walk away with your head held high. You’re so happy and for the next six months you lull yourself into a false sense of security and you really look forward to coming back to work. You’re thinking, ‘how good’s this gonna be!’, and you walk in on day one and whack! It’s just like hitting a brick wall because you forget how broken and how in need of attention and love these contestants really are.

 

This first part that we’re filming now is no doubt the toughest part of the year; it tests every part of you as a trainer because when the contestants are at their worst, the trainer has to be at their best. The contestants are so broken.

 

This year, I have the 18-30 year old guys and at that age, they’ve had their life squashed out of them. Some of them have never been on a date; some of them have never even been apart of a team before and at 20 years of age, some of them are ready to hang up their boots and call it a day. It is frightening to realise that someone can have their life squashed out of them like that.

 

C: I can see how that would be great motivation!

S: It definitely it; just to see the transformation; it’s phenomenal. In all honesty, I have people coming up in the street, bursting into tears and going ‘Shannon, you changed my life, I’ve watched The Biggest Loser’ or, ‘I’ve read your book’ or, ‘I’ve done your online challenge’ and these are just randoms, so it is quite incredible.

The power of The Biggest Loser transcends TV.

 

C: The Biggest Loser is definitely one of those shows that give reality television a good name. It does so much and helps other people.

S: Yeah, there are no losers on The Biggest Loser, nobody’s ever made to look bad; nobody’s ever made to sell their soul. It’s all positive and it’s a wonderful thing and I think that’s why it has had good longevity to this point.

 

C: Yes, seven seasons is great for a show like this. It remains popular with the viewers but with every reality television show, as we go along, there becomes added pressure sometimes to make bigger twists, or in Loser’s case, tougher training routines. Do you find that is the case with this show, or is the focus still very much on the weight losses?

S: You know, the results we’ve achieved on the show are pretty close to the limit of what the human weight loss is. People can lose 52% of their body weight in that time and I don’t think results like that are going to be eclipsed by too much. As far as weight loss goes, it pretty much stays the same (from season to season).

 

What is really cool this year is the dynamic. All of our contestants this year are single; none of them are in relationships. All of them are looking for love, but up until this point, they have never had the confidence, the ability or the trust in themselves to even approach getting into a relationship. So what we’re doing this year is teaching the contestants to learn to love themselves in order to find love, which is wonderful. It is such a good dynamic. I think, because of that dynamic, it’s taken a lot of pressure off the trainers because love is such an amazing motivator.

C: One of our questions was, in fact, whether or not love and romance was going to play a big part in this season and whether the ‘Singles’ tagline also alluded to the fact they are all single.

S: Without stepping too far out of my bounds, we’re seven weeks into it and there is already love in the house. There are two couples who have hooked up in the house and they’re the people that I would have thought least likely to be able to get into a relationship and it blew me away! I’ve got the young blokes, and it is one of my boys (in one of the relationships) and to see him in there and actually communicating with a girl which he’s never ever had the confidence to do, after seven weeks, is just top stuff! That story is so strong and I think it’s going to engage the viewers. There are a couple of people who have been scorned by love in there as well and those people have lost confidence and their weight has spiralled out of control and some of them have just started clawing back the years that have gone by.

 

C: When I look at the promotions on air currently, I feel like they’re very intimate and somewhat emotional. Is it going to be an emotional and intimate season this year?

S: Haha, I don’t know what there is more of this year; sweat or tears, but there is a lot of water on the floor by the time we’re finished. I think sweat and tears can be measured in equal amounts coming out of the contestants, haha.

I think love is a very powerful emotion and as a powerful emotion, I think it is a powerful motivator. I think already, the relationships that have blossomed have been jeopardised by contestants possibly going home, and it has led the contestants to be able to get more from themselves. I mean, we have eliminations every week and when love is threatened, the contestants have lifted to unimaginable proportions to get themselves secure and live in the house for another week with their new romance.

 

C: You mentioned that you were taking the 16-30 year old boys (Tiffiny Hall will be taking the 16-30 year old girls, Steve ‘The Commando’ Willis will have the 30+ guys and Michelle Bridges will be taking the 30+ girls. There will be four contestants per team). Have you formed strong emotional bonds with them yet and if so, does it help getting them to shed the kilos?

S: Hmm, yeah, we’re still right at that critical point at the start of the show where the contestants are so broken, and what they need is tough love. Unfortunately, that puts a strain on our relationship because at the moment, our contestants see what I’m doing as something weird, something foreign, something crazy. They’ll say ‘you can’t expect me to be on the treadmill for three hours a day’, when the reality is, that is what I expect from them. I think as you move through the show, you forge your relationship at the coal face and by the end of the season, your relationships have been forged and they’re strong. At the moment, they’re still critical.

 

C: Speaking of the tough love and the training routines, the show does attract quite a lot of criticism for its rapid weight loss method and the extreme training exercises. How do you respond to that?

S: Mate, I sit back and laugh. I absolutely sit back and laugh. I believe that as a society, we’ve become so soft, and mediocrity reigns supreme. These do-gooders want to throw up that rapid weight loss doesn’t work when it actually does. On The Biggest Loser, there is nothing artificial. There are no drugs, there are no shakes, nothing. These contestants eat good food, train hard and lose weight and I think it is absolutely attainable for anybody who would want to put that level of effort in. We have no secrets, no amazing machines. We eat well and train hard. If anyone in the world wanted to dedicate three hours a day to training, they would get the same results. Some people say ‘oh, well it’s not realistic’, well, it really is; you’ve just got to have a commitment of time and a real desire, some guts and courage to get on with it. Most diets fail because they’re not successful enough and not maintainable enough. What the contestants eat on the show is what I eat every day of my life.

 

C: The thing is, I think, is that people find these routines a little confronting.

S: Yeah, and it’s just breathing mediocrity. The more moderate you are,  the less of a threat you are to everyone else; whereas the more extreme you are at something, the more people want to chop you down which is a really sad dynamic. The less of a threat they are to you, you know, and the less of a threat that you are that you are going to have to push yourself out of your comfort zone and do something extreme to obtain those results. You’re better off sitting back, throwing stones at it and trying to break it down then actually having a crack yourself and realising ‘oh hang on, this really works’!

 

 

C: Going back to the format itself and this year, we’re going back to the original formats. There are no couples, there are no families. I notice the reversion doesn’t happen on international versions where they usually stick with the newer formats. Is it easier as a trainer to help contestants and train them when they enter the competition alone?

S: It’s much easier for us as trainers to divide and conquer when they are singles because they are that much more vulnerable and they are accountable and out of their comfort zone. The unfortunate thing about the families edition (which aired last year) was that, in my team, we had Sharlene, who was one of the biggest enablers. She allowed her entire family to get fat without wanting to take responsibility for it. I remember how Sharlene would allow her family to eat fruit at night. They would have fruit and she would say ‘yep, you can have it, it is just fruit’, when they knew damn well that you shouldn’t eat fruit at night (something they learnt from Shannan) but because she let them do that all their life, the behaviour was perpetuated. But when they are singles, I can just say ‘don’t do that’ and they will listen.

 

C: So less backchat then. Well, I guess there will be some backchat- we’ve seen it in the promos!

S: You know what, you’ll see it in my team! There have been more tears and more dummy spits and I myself have spat the dummy more this year than ever before. I’ve been so frustrated by my boys; sleeping in, not doing their morning training and even getting to the point of lying to me. My relationships are built on trust and respect. Respect is the number one rule for life.

 

C: In previous seasons, we’ve had the ‘oldest’ contestants or ‘heaviest’ contestants. Are we going to see any of these boundaries pushed this year?

S: Oh yeah, thanks for reminding me, on my team, I’ve got the biggest ever contestant ever on any Biggest Loser series anywhere in the world. He is in excess of 240kg. At one stage, as a reality check, we placed on a table what he ate in a week. It was in excess of 47,000 calories. An average male needs 14,000 calories. The quality of the food was that of a ten year old’s party. The scene is quite confronting.

 

C: Those scenes always get to me- they put things in perspective.

S: People always want to know how they get so big and the answer is right there on the table. It’s not rocket science.

 

C: One of the biggest things for me about The Biggest Loser are the weigh ins and transformations. Are we going to see bigger weight losses, bigger transformations?
S: As far as the statistics go, yes. The statistics are pretty good; each year we try to improve statistically on what we were last year. That’s the goal for everybody. The biggest stand out this year, for me, is the dynamics. I have the young guys and The Commando has the old guys so on paper, my guys should be red hot favourites because they are younger, they are more resilient to injury and they have less chance of getting injured in the first place whereas the older guys are more prone to injury and they take longer to recover. But what the older contestants have going for them is their mental strength. My guys are so weak in terms of their heads whereas the Commando’s guys are so strong. So it really is quite an amazing battle between brains and brawn. That’s really stood out. Commando’s boys have to be smart about their strategy as they have to look out for their body whereas my boys can just bash themselves but it isn’t always the best way of doing things as they lack life skills.

 

C: So how can you sum up what the viewers are about to see?

S: Umm, I think Monday, the viewers are in for a very emotional experience. Now, I say this without having seen the final cut. Right from the beginning, there are contestants who you will genuinely fall in love with. There are contestants where you’ll go ‘oh that’s my mother’ or, ‘that’s my father’ or, ‘I know someone who’s been through that’. I think that’s the stand out point.

 

C: So, talking about the first few weeks, last year you were introduced to the contestants by living with them and eating what they ate and all that. What are you going to be doing this time around to introduce yourselves to the contestants?

S: This year is different. For the first time, we get to go and inform the contestants ourselves that they are on the show. They are in their day to day lives, at work or doing whatever they’re doing around the house before we show up and say ‘right, we’re here!’. We open the fridge, see what’s there and live a day in their life. Haha, again we had to eat their bloody food! But thankfully, it was only for a day. But when you have four contestants to visit…

 

C: So when you go visit them on that day, they genuinely have NO IDEA that you are coming!

S: Absolutely NO idea. They all think they’re still in the audition process. We turn up there on their doorstep.

 

C: So, outside the show, there’s a bit going on. You have a new book, Hard’n Up. How has the public reception been? Can you tell us a bit about it?

S: The book came out just before Christmas. The public reaction has been wonderful. It is a labour of love and it is something that has taken me a bit longer than the other trainers.

 

I just wanted to bide my time and get it spot on and I just wanted to make sure that the philosophies I use on the show are adequately explained in the book. I wanted the book to have a point of difference.

 

In the book, I’m not talking at the reader, I’m talking with them. I’m not telling you to do ten push ups or anything. I’m explaining what happened in my life to get me to this point. Every couple of pages, there are anecdotes from my life. So I’ve actually bared a bit of my soul to the reader as well as about what has happened to me when I was growing up. It gives people an insight into my life as so I can grab their trust before talking with them through eating, through the emotions of weight problems and the diets and the last chapter is about never giving up.

 

It’s a really nice point of difference to be able to talk with the reader and not at them. I think if you give a little of yourself, you get a lot back.

 

C: So have you yourself been through any weight issues? Or have you always been a fitness fanatic?

S: I get asked this quite a lot. There’s a reason why I’m a trainer, it’s something that has been in me since I was a kid and I’ve loved exercising since I was five years old. That’s why I’m a trainer. You don’t have to have been on a weight loss journey to be a good trainer. I’m a trainer; they’re the student. It’s a point of difference.

 

The reason why I’m not obese or overweight is because I’ve always trained and always taken care of myself and I’ve always been proud of what I’ve done. So I think, for that, it’s a more powerful point to be a trainer that has never let themselves go or never will.

 

I mean, I have time off and put on a few kilos but then when that happens, its game on! Always address what’s going on and always address what’s going on. I mean, I love a beer and people ask if I eat anything bad and I say, yep, twice a week. I have something bad, like going out for a night with my wife or going to my mum’s. I also love a beer on the weekends but the difference is, I will be up the next morning training because one of the philosophies from the book is that if you play, you pay.

 

But everyone should have a ‘cheat’ meal once in a while, everyone. And to help, we’re doing an online personal training thing now. We did the first one back before Christmas which was amazing. All it is, is all my philosophies  and all the training exercises from The Biggest Loser put on one website that is accessible for everybody. So everybody now has to get rid of all their excuses like ‘oh, I don’t know what to do’ because for $100 for two months, you can transform your mind and your body and have me as your personal trainer.

 

C: So how is the best way to start with a weight loss journey?

S: The excuses. Get rid of them, get fair dinkum and go for it. You will have to realise that you’re going to have to sacrifice a bit of your life to get to where you want to go. Some people say ‘oh, I love my two glasses of wine, I love cappuccino and I love avocado on my salad’. Uh, stop it, you have to make changes.

 

C: Well thank you so much for taking this time to talk to us and we can only wish you best for what should be a great show.

S: Thanks for the support your giving to the show!

 

Shannan’s book, Hard’n Up, can now be purchased in any good bookshop and online.

 

The Biggest Loser: Singles debuts at the new time of 7.00pm tomorrow (Monday January 23) on Network TEN.

 

Courtney will be providing recaps for each and every episode of The Biggest Loser: Singles here on Throng.

 

During the week, Courtney also got the chance to catch up with former MasterChef Australia 2011 contestants, Kumar Pereira and Rachel McSweeney. You can view their respective interviews by clicking their names.

 

Did you miss Super Sunday on TEN?
 
If so, you’re in for a treat – We’re encoring three of the night’s key shows in prime-time slots this week.
 
TUESDAY 24 JANUARY 2012

6:00 pm THE PROJECT
7:00 pm THE BIGGEST LOSER
8:00 pm YOUNG TALENT TIME (encore)
9:00 pm NEW GIRL (encore)
9:30 PM HOMELAND (encore)

TEN’s full Super Sunday line-up is also available via catch-up TV at ten.com.au/watchtv.

Previously scheduled programming

8.00 Modern Family – rpt
8.30 NCIS – rpt
9.30 NCIS – rpt

is replaced by the encore line up.

The Big Bang Theory (Premiere), 7.30pm, Nine
Sheldon becomes jealous and considers taking his relationship with Amy to the next level when Stuart from the comic book store asks her out on a date.

Home and Away (Return), 7pm, Seven
Charlie is found unconscious after being shot and Sid is confronted by Alan, Stu’s father.

The Biggest Loser Australia, 7pm, TEN
Join the Biggest loser trainers as they travel the country to collect this year’s contestants. The trainers each spend a day in the lives of their team members before heading back to camp.

A Current Affair, 6.30pm, Nine
Host Tracy Grimshaw is back as this program covers the realms of politics, crime, human rights, science, technology, celebrities and entertainment.

South Park, 10pm, SBS
What begins as an innocent game between the boys turns serious when Cartman joins the US Border Patrol. Not surprisingly, Cartman turns out to be really good at stopping Mexicans from crossing the border.

Next week, as is typical when Ten start airing new reality series, The Biggest Loser Singles will be encored the day after it airs at 3pm.

Monday nights’ premiere episode will be replayed on Tuesday afternoon at 3pm, with the next three episodes played at 3pm the following three days.

If you are not quite ready yet to get into a 7pm nightly television routine, this is your chance to catch up the next day. Nightly episodes also will be available online at the Ten website the next day.

The Biggest Loser Singles premieres Monday January 23, at 7pm, and continues 7pm Monday-Thursdays on Ten.

With Nine’s Excess Baggage not premiering until January 30, and Ten’s seventh series of The Biggest Loser effectively having a one week head start on the new Nine series, Nine are hoping to lure viewers with copious quantities of Big Bang Theory episodes, starting from Sunday night (January 22).

Episodes of the hit sitcom are scheduled on Sunday night at 6.30 and 7.00pm, weeknights at 7.00pm, Monday to Thursday at 7.30pm as well as Monday and Tuesday 8.00pm. Then on GO!, there are another two on Sunday night from 8.30pm, then episodes on Monday, Wednesday and Thursday nights as well.

And where is the new episode? Be careful – the one and only new episode for the week airs at 7.30pm Monday January 23. Then, the following week, assuming Excess Baggage airs for one hour on its premiere night of Monday January 30, the new episode of Big Bang for that week will air at 8.00pm (although history tells us, that is more likley to become 8.15pm).

So here is the summary of when The Big Bang Theory airs on Nine and GO! for the week January 22-28. All repeats except Monday January 23 7.30pm.

Sunday January 22.
6.30pm Nine The Electric Can Opener Fluctuation
7.00pm Nine The Jiminy Conjecture
8.30pm GO! The Jerusalem Diary
9.00pm GO! The Batjar Conjecture

Monday January 23
7.00pm Nine The Gothowitz Deviation
7.30pm NEW EPISODE Nine The Flaming Spitton Acquisition
8.00pm Nine The Pirate Solution
8.30pm GO! The Nerdvana Annihilation

Tuesday January 24
7.00pm Nine The Creep Candy Floating Corollary
7.30pm Nine The Cornhusker Vortex
8.00pm Nine The Guitarist Amplification

Wednesday January 25
7.00pm Nine The Adhesive Duck Deficiency
7.30pm Nine The Vangeance Formulation
9.00pm GO! The Bad Fish Paradigm

Thursday January 26
7.00pm Nine The Gorilla Experiment
7.30pm Nine The Maternal Congruence
9.00pm GO! The Codepiece Topology

Friday January 27
7.00pm Nine The Psychic Vortex

Episodes of Big Bang also air on The Comedy Channel at 5pm weeknights as well as Sundays from 4.00pm – 6.30pm. Interestingly, 5pm on Comedy means they also air at 7pm on Comedy+2 weeknights – same time as Nine. On Sunday, between The Comedy Channel, Nine and GO!, you could, if you chose to, watch a total of NINE episodes of The Big Bang Theory on the one day! Wonder how many of those you will have already seen too many times?! 

With three weeks to go before ratings start for 2012, Ten attempts a head start with Super Sunday on January 22 featuring the much anticipated 2012 revival of Young Talent Time as well as the new series premieres of New Girl and Homeland. On Monday January 23, The Biggest Loser kicks off its 7th season this year with singles.

The Biggest Loser returns to 7pm, the stripped reailty timeslot that Ten once dominated, and that Nine revived last year. This move pushes The Project to 6pm, which in turn puts Ten’s Five O’Clock news back to the traditional one hour format.

Repeats of NCIS: LA and NCIS feature on Monday and Tuesday nights, new Glades continues late Monday nights, and the season three premiere of The Good Wife airs on Wednesday night at 8.30pm. Thursday night (Australia Day) sees the premiere of new series A Gifted Man at 8pm with the return of new Law & Order: SVU from 9pm. UPDATE: Second episode of Law & Order: SVU at 10pm Thursday is ALSO NEW.

New Glee lands on yet another night, in yet another timesot – this time at the rather strange time of 7pm Friday from January 27.

Then there is the question of whether Ten Late News will return? Plenty of rumours about, but nothing confirmed at this stage. Medium remains on at 10.30 Sunday-Thursday at this atage.

Sunday January 22
6.00 The Project
6.30 Young Talent Time – Series Premiere
7.30 Modern Family – Season return
8.00 New Girl – Series Premiere
8.30 Homeland – Series Premiere
9.40 NCIS
10.40 Medium

Monday January 23
6.00 The Project
7.00 The Biggest Loser
8.00 Modern Family rpt
8.30 NCIS: LA
9.30 The Glades
10.30 Medium

Tuesday January 24
6.00 The Project
7.00 The Biggest Loser
8.00 Young Talent Time Encore
9.00 New Girl Encore
9.30 Homeland Encore
10.40 The Good Wife – A New Beginning
11.10 Medium

Wednesday January 25
6.00 The Project
7.00 The Biggest Loser
8.00 Modern Family rpt
8.30 The Good Wife – Season return
9.30 The Good Wife – new
10.30 Medium

Thursday January 26
6.00 The Project
7.00 The Biggest Loser
8.00 A Gifted Man
9.00 Law & Order: SVU – season return
10.00 Law & Order: SVU – NEW
11.00 Medium

Friday January 27
6.00 The Project
7.00 Glee – New
8.00 Movie: Night At The Museum
10.20 Medium
11.20 Letterman

Note – House is no longer scheduled for Friday night anywhere.

Saturday January 28
6.30 Movie: Night At The Museum II
8.30 The Graham Norton Show
9.30 Movie: X-Men Origins: Wolverine

Promos now running on Nine are promoting Excess Baggage as starting Monday January 30.

As Excess Baggage will be stripped across 7pm weeknights, this will put the show directly against Ten’s Biggest Loser which will have a one week head start, as Biggest Loser premieres Monday January 23.

January 30 is also the date that My Kitchen Rules returns to Seven and as a result will be the first date we see all three reality formats air together.

With Loser airing for an hour on Monday nights, Exxcess Baggage also likely to be an hour, and MKR starting at 7.30, all three will be on at the same time for at least half an hour from 7.30pm.

Should make for some very interesting ratings competition.

Excess Baggage, 7pm weeknights from Monday January 30, 2012 on Nine

Further to the news of The Project moving to 6pm, 6 days a week, Ten have now confirmed that the Biggest Loser will air at 7pm, Monday to Thursday, starting from Monday January 23.

The news follows the recent announcement of “Super Sunday” which sees Young Talent Time premiers at 6.30pm Sunday January 22, followed by new Modern Family, New Girl and Homeland at 8.30pm.

According to Ten’s Chief Programming Officer David Mott: “Being true to our brand, I couldn’t think of a better way to start prime time than with The Project.”

“Starting our entertainment schedule earlier at 7pm with TV giant The Biggest Loser (this year to be singles) positions Ten to be competitive across prime time and dramatically improves three hours of television every night.

Ten News at Five: 5pm – 6pm Sunday – Friday

The Project: 6pm Sunday- Friday (6pm – 6.30pm Sunday, 6pm – 7pm Monday – Friday)

The Biggest Loser: 7pm Monday – Friday (launching January 23)

Ten’s new look 2012 kicks off Sunday January 22, 6pm.