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Better Homes And Gardens Cranberry Cake

Better Homes and Gardens
Better Homes and Gardens logo.jpg
Genre Lifestyle
Home improvement
Created by Peter E. Fox (1993–1995)
Presented by Johanna Griggs (2005–present)
Noni Hazlehurst (1995–2004)
Opening theme "Getting Better"
Composer Jay Stewart
Country of origin Australia
Original language English
No. of seasons 25
No. of episodes 1,000[1] (as of 29 June 2018)
Production
Executive producer Russell Palmer
Production locations Sydney, Australia
Running time 90 minutes
Release
Original network Seven Network
Picture format PAL
HDTV 1080i
Audio format Stereo
Original release 24 January 1995 (1995-01-24) –
present
External links
Website

Better Homes and Gardens is an Australian television program which is broadcast on the Seven Network, which is based on the magazine of the same name domestically published by Pacific Magazines (itself licensing the brand and magazine format from the American Meredith Corporation). The programs covers a wide variety of lifestyle related topics. These include, gardening, landscaping, architecture, cooking, DIY, pet care, and home improvement, as well as featuring celebrity guests. The show is hosted by former Olympic swimmer-turned-television presenter Johanna Griggs, who has hosted the program since 2005.

In 2014, Better Homes and Gardens was awarded a record 12th Silver Logie for Australia's Most Popular Lifestyle Program.

History [edit]

The show was created by Peter E. Fox, who was also an executive producer for the 1995 series, along with Grahame Duckham. This was for the original magazine publisher, Murdoch Magazines and executive director Mark Kelly. The series aired its 1000th episode on 29 June 2018.[1]

Gardening guru Graham Ross has appeared on the show since 1995, presenting over 700 episodes. Resident vet Dr. Harry joined the team in 2004 and has been providing pet information and advice to viewers ever since. In 2005, Jason Hodges became the show's landscaper and almost always appears with beloved Fox Terrier, Dannii. In December 2019, it was announced that Jason Hodges would be leaving the show and will replaced by Charlie Albone from 2020.

Ed Halmagyi (known on the show as 'Fast Ed') joined the team in 2004 he transforms elegant restaurant cuisine into recipes that anyone can prepare at home. Melbourne Chef Karen Martini joined the show in 2006 bringing with her a love of relaxed cooking with fresh, healthy, seasonal produce. Tara Dennis is the show's designer and decorator and joined the show in 2006. Builder Adam Dovile joined the show in 2015 after winning season two of House Rules in 2014, and is the go-to for DIY projects on the show.

In January 2020, the Seven Network announced that James Tobin, Sam Wood (from The Bachelor), and Melissa King will join the show as presenters.[2]

Presenters [edit]

Hosts [edit]

  • Johanna Griggs (2005–present)
  • Graham Ross (2004)
  • Noni Hazlehurst (1995–2004)
  • John Jarratt (1995–98)

Food [edit]

  • Pete Evans (2018–2020)[3]
  • Karen Martini (2007–present)
  • "Fast Ed" Ed Halmagyi (2004–present)
  • Maeve O'Meara (2000–2007)
  • Belinda Jeffrey (1996–2000)

Gardening [edit]

  • Charlie Albone (2020–present)
  • Melissa King (2020–present)
  • Jason Hodges (2005–2019) (Landscaping)
  • Graham Ross (1996–present)
  • Linda Ross (1996–2000)
  • Colm O'Leary (1996-1996)

Architect [edit]

  • Peter Coulqhoun (2003–present)
  • Grahame Bond (1998–2002)
  • Tony Fragar (1996)

Decorating [edit]

  • Demi Harman (2014–2016)[ citation needed ]
  • Tara Dennis (2006–2020)[4]
  • Lissanne Oliver (2005)
  • Gwen Jones Palmer (2004)
  • Monica Trapaga (1997–2003)[5]
  • Fiona Connolly (1996–2004) (Craft)
  • Sandy de Beyer (1996)
  • Noni Hazlehurst (1995)

DIY [edit]

  • Adam Dovile (2015–present)
  • Rob Palmer (2004–14)
  • Scott McGregor (1999–2003)
  • John Jarratt (1995–98)

Motoring & Technology [edit]

  • James Tobin (2020–present)

Health & Fitness [edit]

  • Sam Wood (2020–present)

Pets [edit]

  • Harry Cooper (2004–present)
  • Noni Hazlehurst (1995–2003)

Better Living (consumer advice) [edit]

  • Noni Hazlehurst (1995–97)

Broadcast [edit]

The program originally aired on Tuesdays at 7:30 pm and ran back to back with The Great Outdoors until the travel program was moved to Mondays early in the 2000s. It then aired before Room For Improvement, which was hosted by then-DIY presenter Scott McGregor. Better Homes was moved to Saturday nights at 7.30 pm in 2004, before being shifted to 6.30pm. Both timeslots were reportedly disastrous for ratings and the show struggled immensely against Australian rules football on other networks. In 2005, it was shifted to 7:30pm on Friday nights, where it has enjoyed ratings success since. It is now the longest-running Australian TV lifestyle program and the highest rating show on Australian TV. It was often among the top 10 rating programs in Australia during the 1990s, sometimes with audiences in excess of two million.[ citation needed ]

From 2007 until 2011, the Seven Network showed Better Homes and Gardens at 7:30 pm., prior to its coverage of Friday Night Football starting at 8:30 pm. This was a very successful timeslot for the show, but the scheduling was unpopular amongst football fans on the east coast, because it meant that the football was shown on a one-hour delayed telecast (except for matches in Perth, which were live due to the time difference). Sports fans and media continually called for Seven to shift Better Homes and Gardens and show the football live, but Seven preferred to leave the show in its top-rating timeslot, moving it only for particularly large matches.[6] [7] Better Homes and Gardens was forced into a new timeslot at the start of the 2012 AFL season, as the new AFL Broadcast Rights deal forced Seven to show the football live on Friday nights.[8] Better Homes now airs in all states on Friday nights at 7:00 pm on Channel 7 when the AFL is not on and 7Two when the AFL is on.

See also [edit]

  • List of Seven Network programs
  • List of Australian television series

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b Knox, David (26 June 2018). "Better Homes and Gardens reaches 1000 episodes". TV Tonight . Retrieved 26 June 2018.
  2. ^ "Sam Wood, Melissa King and James Tobin join Better Homes and Gardens". Better Homes and Gardens . Retrieved 13 January 2020.
  3. ^ Knox, David (8 May 2020). "Pete Evans and Channel 7 part ways after TV chef was fined $25,000 by TGA". news.com.au. Retrieved 10 January 2021.
  4. ^ Knox, David (10 January 2021). "Tara Dennis quits Better Homes & Gardens". tvtonight.com.au. Retrieved 10 January 2021.
  5. ^ Cossar, Lynne (27 February 1997), "Now Monica's home on Seven", The Age, pp. 51 & 52 (Green Guide)
  6. ^ Musolino, Adrian (17 February 2010). "Battlelines drawn over live Friday Night Footy". The Roar. Retrieved 9 September 2011.
  7. ^ Sheahan, Tony (20 June 2010). "Live Friday footy feast when Geelong take (sic) on St Kilda". Herald Sun. Retrieved 9 September 2011.
  8. ^ Withem, Jennifer (28 April 2010). "AFL's $1.25 billion broadcast deal". Australian Football League. Archived from the original on 8 October 2012. Retrieved 9 Sep 2011.

External links [edit]

  • Better Homes and Gardens (Australian)
  • Better Homes and Gardens on 7plus

Better Homes And Gardens Cranberry Cake

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Better_Homes_and_Gardens_(TV_program)

Posted by: motleychricand.blogspot.com

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