New Zealand TV

Seven-owned production company Great Southern Pictures is making a two-part mini series on rugby union legend Jonah Lomu. It will be shown on Three in 2019.

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BBC EARTH TO LAUNCH ON SKY 22 OCTOBER

New premium factual channel BBC Earth will launch in New Zealand on SKY on October 22, rebranding existing channel BBC Knowledge.

The BBC Earth channel will showcase a broad range of world-class factual programming represented by natural history, human stories, adventurous travels and scientific investigations, and will feature programmes from expert presenters such as Sir David Attenborough, Michael Mosley, Louis Theroux, Professor Brian Cox and Steve Backshall.

Titles in launch week include Planet Earth II , the ambitious landmark natural history series that allows us to experience the world from the viewpoint of the animals themselves; Spy in the Wild, captures how similar we are to our animal cousins through the use of spy cameras; My Year with the Tribe, sees Will Millard visit the treehouse-dwelling Korowai tribe in Papua, Indonesia; Without Limits, which follows six disabled people on an epic journey along Vietnam’s Ho Chi Minh trail; and a new series of Trust Me I’m a Doctor with Michael Mosley, who gets behind the hype to discover the truth about what’s good for your health.

Closely following the launch, BBC Earth will host ‘Being Human’, a season of programmes airing in November exploring the human race, how we might improve the way we live and what the future could hold for civilisation. Shows will include Future Human: AI , The World’s Most Extraordinary People and Meet the Humans .

Says Tim Christlieb, Director of Branded Services, BBC Studios, Australia and New Zealand: “We are delighted to be launching the BBC Earth channel on SKY, offering best-in-class premium factual programming fronted by the BBC’s renowned presenters. BBC Earth is a well-established global brand that uses compelling stories to engage audiences with the wonders of our universe. We are confident that this new channel will resonate with local audiences given New Zealander’s strong connection to their natural environment, cultural curiosity and love of travel.”

“While many of the familiar faces and shows on BBC Knowledge will transition to BBC Earth, we’ll be adding more natural history and adventure to the mix, and moving factual entertainment programmes like Who Do You Think You Are , Dragons’ Den, Traffic Cops and Top Gear to BBC UKTV.”

Says Travis Dunbar, SKY’s Director of Entertainment: “The BBC are globally renowned for the quality and diversity of their factual content and we are delighted to be bringing BBC Earth to SKY customers.”

“Through this global brand they can now access this unique mix of premium content while still watching the favourites they’ve come to know and love.”

BBC Earth will join existing BBC channels – BBC UKTV and BBC World News – on the SKY platform as part of the SKY Entertainment package. It will also be available to live stream on SKY GO and selected shows are available for Catch Up on SKY GO and SKY On Demand .

Titles to air on the channel in the first week of launch include:

Planet Earth II (22 October) - A decade ago, Planet Earth redefined natural history filmmaking, giving us the ultimate portrait of life on Earth. Ten years on, advances in both filming technology and our understanding of the natural world mean we can reveal our planet from a completely new perspective. Now, Planet Earth II allows us to experience the world from the viewpoint of animals themselves.

Spy in the Wild (22 October) - Animals love, mourn, deceive and invent – just like us. A new generation of spy cameras reveals how similar we are by using highly entertaining footage combined with fascinating scientific details.

My Year with the Tribe (22 October) - Living in treehouses and using stone tools, the Korowai were only discovered in the jungles of West Papua 40 years ago. Will Millard visits this tribe to better understand the pressures they face, and how much of their traditional hunter - gathering lifestyle still exists. What he finds shocks, surprises and confounds him, as he witnesses the last gasp of an ancient way of life which once defined us all.

Trust Me I’m a Doctor (24 October) The doctors are back to get behind the hype and headlines to find the truth about what’s good for your health.

Without Limits (28 October) - Six disabled people ride out on an epic journey along Vietnam’s Ho Chi Minh trail to discover a country of contrasts and a place to find themselves. Their journey highlights the beauty of Vietnam and challenges how the participants view their own disabilities.

Wild New Zealand (27 October) - This series reveals the country’s rich and intriguing wildlife stories, from the bustling communities of penguins hiding away in giant daisy forests to the kakapo – Earth’s only species of flightless nocturnal parrots. New Zealand was also the last place to be discovered and settled by people who brought with them new animals, like merino sheep and new predators like the stoat. Finally, Wild New Zealand meets the pioneering conservation heroes who are fighting to save some of its most endangered species.

Being Human Season (From 19 November)

Future Human: AI - From self-driving cars to robot cars, from exo-skeleton machinery to aid the disabled, to social robots whose role is to provide company for the lonely, the developments made in the field of A.I. have been astounding but what risks does it pose to human jobs and safety – and what might happen when A.I. can think for itself?

The World’s Most Extraordinary People – How might rare medical conditions be a force for good? This revelatory series reveals the extraordinary people who are helping international scientists make medical breakthroughs and advance our knowledge of the human body.

Meet the Humans - This bold new series puts human behaviour under the microscope. A plush country house is rigged with surveillance cameras and a group of unwitting test subjects invited to take part in various group activities, with Michael Mosley and experts analysing the contributors’ every move.

Change to +HR=E’s m=nu graphic today. From this:

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Speaking of Three, i’ve Heard the Channel are doing a Comedy Pilot Week from September 23, Something similar to what Network Ten did a Couple of Weeks ago when they debut Eight new shows in one week.

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When I saw it, I thought their graphics had cocked up… is it really supposed to be like that? eep.

There’s no real singular news thread I can put this in so in here it goes. I remember a special edition of Breakfast in the morning of September 11 (12th NZT) but don’t really know much more about TV1’s Coverage from that

Gogglebox New Zealand has launched across the pond

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Three’s comedy pilot week started tonight

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Jono and Ben announced tonight that their show on Three isn’t returning next year. Does that mean it was axed?

That show was appointment viewing for my family and I. I thought they had been scoring good ratings too?

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According to the Herald, the ratings had been falling this season.

In my opinion, it was at its best at 10 (Jono And Ben at Ten), the earlier timeslot was a bit too safe but I can see why it was moved there.

According to the Herald, the ratings had been falling this season.

In my opinion, it was at its best at 10 (Jono And Ben at Ten), the earlier timeslot was a bit too safe but I can see why it was moved there.

How does 61,000 sit in the NZ ratings in terms of performance?

The Block NZ finale rated 245,000 at 7:30 in 25-54 a few weeks back on a Sunday.

What’s with these stupid new tv2 idents

I guess to promote the content. didn’t they just have TVNZ Showcase?
I have to admit, the logos seem more ugly than usual!

Yea it sort of ruins the brand imo and the music on the Shortland street ident I seen… ughhh lol

Prime NZ’s 20th anniversary kinda slipped by without any fanfare…

primenz

Here’s something butt-ugly I made to celebrate! Hooray!

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Fits right in… all their logos have been foul.

Also matches their parent company, Sky NZ’s logo isn’t going to win any design awards.

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I know I’ve said it before but I’d love to see a revival of Eating Media Lunch. Just a shame today’s generation find everything offensive.

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Satire… can’t remember what that was exactly. I’m pretty sure it used to be on TV in NZ.

Doubt you’ll see EML again, but hey, you never know.