Talking Footy

Talking Footy is an Australian rules football television program on the Seven Network broadcast from 1994–2004, 2013–2020 and again 2023–. The show was hosted mainly by Bruce McAvaney and Luke Darcy in both runs of the show, now to be hosted by James Brayshaw.

Talking Footy
GenreSport
Presented byTim Watson (2003–2004, 2014–2020, 2023–)
James Brayshaw (2023–)
Joel Selwood (2023–)
Trent Cotchin (2023–)
Mitch Cleary (2023–)
Country of originAustralia
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons11
Production
Production locationsMelbourne, Victoria
Running time60 minutes
Release
Original networkSeven Network (1994–2004, 2023)
7mate (2013–2020)
Original release
  • 1994 (1994)–2004 (2004)
  • 2013 (2013)–2020 (2020)
  • 2023 (2023)

Original format (1994–2004)

The program was first broadcast from 1994 until 2004.[1] It was created by Gary Fenton, the Seven Network's then Director of Sport.

The show was hosted by Bruce McAvaney from 1995 to 1998 and from 2001 to 2002, Tim Lane in 1999, Gerard Healy in 2000 and Tim Watson in 2003 and 2004.

Regular couch members included Mike Sheahan, Malcolm Blight, Terry Wallace, Caroline Wilson and Leigh Matthews.

It was initially screened on Monday evening at 8:30 pm in 1995, then on Monday at 10:30 pm until the end of 2000. In 2001 it moved to Tuesday nights and stayed there until the program was axed at the end of the 2004 season. The program struggled in the last few years due to the network not having the rights to broadcast the AFL while also having poor ratings.

New format (2013–2020)

In August 2013, the Seven Network revived the series, which aired on a Thursday night throughout the 2013 final series with Bruce McAvaney, Luke Darcy, Wayne Carey and Andrew Demetriou as panelists.

The following year saw the show return to Monday nights at 7.30 pm on 7mate in Melbourne, Adelaide and Perth, and on delay at midnight the same day in Sydney and Brisbane.

The show is hosted by Luke Darcy with Wayne Carey, Tim Watson and Jacqui Felgate. It is broadcast from Seven's Docklands studios in Melbourne. Other panellist to appear on the program included Brian Taylor, Campbell Brown, Sam McClure and Mick Warner.

In June 2020, the program will be temporarily axed along with AFL Game Day due to the effects of the coronavirus pandemic. The show was confirmed cancelled by Seven's head of sport Lewis Martin in March 2020 with a new “Footy Magazine” set to replace it.[2]

Segments

Various segments on the show include:

  • "The Blowtorch"
  • "Inside 50"
  • "Say That Again"

New format – Talking Finals (2023)

In August 2023, confirmation that Talking Footy would return with a new format labelled Talking Finals.

James Brayshaw will host the series with Tim Watson, Trent Cotchin and Joel Selwood will appear as panellist.

Mitch Cleary will provide sports breaking news, trade updates and team updates.

The show will broadcast first week of the AFL 2023 Final Series and run for 4 episodes in the led up to the finals.

The first episode of the new Talking Finals will run at 10pm and following episodes at 9pm.

Episode broadcast on Tuesday 5 September 2023.

Previous Presenters/Panellist

·Bruce McAvaney (1994–1998, 2001–2002)
·Tim Lane (1999)
·Gerard Healy (2000)
·Luke Darcy (2014–2020)

Parodies

In 2005, comedian Andrew Startin appeared on the rival Nine Network with a send-up of the show on The Footy Show. Gary Ayres was sent up with his catchphrase "at the end of the day" and "You've got your Buckleys, your Hirds, your Ricciutos"; Mike Sheahan with "what do you think?"; and Bruce McAvaney with "Special!".

Theme song

The lyrics to the song are as follows:

The weekend's come and gone,
As we talk up a storm,
'Bout our team, bout our form,
And how it could be.

But when Monday comes around,
Talk around the town,
It's what happened on the weekend in the footy.

Monday nights, we're Talking Footy.

When the show switched to a Tuesday night timeslot (which led to its demise), the lyrics changed somewhat. During the 2014 relaunch, only the second verse is used.

In the original season, the theme song was "Monday's Experts" by Weddings, Parties, Anything.

References

  1. Wilson, Caroline (16 February 2005). "Seven to pull plug on Talking Footy program". The West Australian. p. 123.
  2. "Channel Seven has made a call on its flagship footy program". sen.com.au. Retrieved 1 March 2021.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.