Australia You're Standing In It
Australia You're Standing In It | |
---|---|
Genre | Comedy |
Country of origin | Australia |
Original language | English |
No. of episodes | 13 |
Production | |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | ABC |
Release | 1983 1984 | –
Australia You're Standing In It is an Australian sketch comedy series produced by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, first screened in September 1983[1] with a second series screened in September 1984.[2] In honour of the 30th Anniversary of the show, the complete series was released on DVD on 13 March 2013.[3]
Cast
[edit]- Rod Quantock
- Mary Kenneally
- Stephen Blackburn
- Geoff Brooks
- Sue Ingleton
- Evelyn Krape
- Tim Robertson (Series 1)
- Peter Browne (Series 2)
Format
[edit]Australia You're Standing In It featured many recurring sketches and characters that parodied well known personalities, pop stars, music videos, television programs and advertisements of the day, or simply sent-up well-known social situations. These included:
- Two pretentious society matrons (Ingleton and Kenneally) and a third (Krape) who could never quite make the grade much to the delight of the other two who mocked her. Catchphrase: "Helloo Daaaahlings!"
- The Dodgy Brothers (Blackburn and Brooks), two badly dressed and dim businessmen who appeared in low-budget and badly produced television advertisements selling their dodgy products. Partly a parody of the then ubiquitous advertisements for the Saba furniture warehouse, and other cut-rate advertisements of its ilk.
- "Brainspace", a new-age segment presented by Tim and Debbie (Kenneally and Blackburn), whose convoluted and pretentious talk was a smokescreen for their ignorance. Their main catchphrase was "Amaaazing!"
- Mock advertisements for fictional product "Chunky Custard". Most of these were parodies of familiar contemporary advertisements for real products, mimicking current commercials for such products as Big M or Four'N Twenty Pies. Halfway through the second series Chunky Custard was phased out and replaced by "Hot Yak Fat", which came in a can resembling a beer can. Viewers were exhorted to "crack a Fat today" (a play on a common Australian slang term for a penile erection).
- Many parodies of popular songs and music videos, including Mary Kenneally as Bonnie Tyler in "Total Eclipse of the Brain".
- Bruce Rump (Brooks), a parody of Bruce Ruxton. Rump always ended his skits with "And that's why we should keep the bloody flag the same! Now clear out!"
- Rod Quantock in stand-up routines in which he would address the audience directly. In one episode he attempted to put Victorian viewers to sleep by hypnotizing them with an Australian Rules football.
- "Fair Cops".
- The Catalogue Collectors, a pair of scarf-clad Melburnians who lived in a caravan next to Port Phillip and collected catalogues. Catchphrase: "Home is where the front door is."
Spinoffs
[edit]- For a short time Tim and Debbie hosted Reel To Real on the ABC, in which the pair presented old B-movies (e.g. The Boy with Green Hair) and proceeded to interrupt, deconstruct, and generally mock them in voice-over as the movie screened.
- A long-playing record of most of the Tim and Debbie sketches was released under the title Brainspace, Vol. II. Another album, Australia - you're standing in it (Brainspace Vol III) followed in 1986.
- The Dodgy Brothers (again portrayed by Blackburn and Brooks) and Bruce Rump (Brooks) were resurrected in the later Fast Forward.
Awards and nominations
[edit]ARIA Music Awards
[edit]The ARIA Music Awards are a set of annual ceremonies presented by Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA), which recognise excellence, innovation, and achievement across all genres of the music of Australia. They commenced in 1987.
Year | Nominee / work | Award | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1987 | Australia You're Standing In It | Best Comedy Release | Nominated | [4] |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ 'What's Yellow and is Served Up as Humour By Aunty?' Sydney Morning Herald 4 September 1983 p. 54
- ^ John Lethlean 'Expectations Unfulfilled' The Age 27 September 1984 p. 37
- ^ "Australia You're Standing in It". Archived from the original on 20 May 2013. Retrieved 13 April 2013.
- ^ "ARIA Awards Best Comedy Release". Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA). Retrieved 17 April 2022.