The Chaser

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This article is about the Australian comedy team. For other uses, see The Chaser (disambiguation).
The full Chaser team from left to right, Julian Morrow, Dominic Knight, Charles Firth, Craig Reucassel, Chas Licciardello, Chris Taylor and Andrew Hansen.  Knight and Firth are not regulars in the studio, this scene being the first time the team had gathered in the War on Everything studio together (14 July 2006).
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The full Chaser team from left to right, Julian Morrow, Dominic Knight, Charles Firth, Craig Reucassel, Chas Licciardello, Chris Taylor and Andrew Hansen. Knight and Firth are not regulars in the studio, this scene being the first time the team had gathered in the War on Everything studio together (14 July 2006).

The Chaser is a satirical Australian enterprise, most famous for their television programmes on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. The Chaser originated as a satirical newspaper which was known to push the limits as to what it published and for enacting its mission statement, "striving for mediocrity in a world of excellence".

Contents

[edit] The Chaser Team

The original core of The Chaser team were the founding editors of the newspaper: Charles Firth, Dominic Knight, Julian Morrow and Craig Reucassel who all came from the University of Sydney. They were later joined by Chas Licciardello, Chris Taylor and Andrew Hansen. James Edwards designed The Chaser logo and is the Video Editor of the current television series.

Other founding contributors to the team include Gregor Stronach, Johanna Featherstone, Sholto Macpherson, David Stewart and Arion McNicoll. Later contributors include Kara Greiner, Richard Cooke, Shane Cubis and Tim Brunero. Cartoonists Fiona Katauskas and Andrew Weldon drew for the newspaper from its early days.

[edit] History

The newspaper, first published in 1999, was The Chaser team's most famous (or infamous) enterprise. Among other things, they have published Australian Prime Minister John Howard's private, unlisted home phone number on their front page, which caused wide controversy. Apparently the phone number was sent to one of the writers by SMS and they sat on it for a while, until the opportunity to use it came up when John Howard ignored anti-war protests[1]. The Chaser only had a limited fan base, with the average sales numbers per issue well under 30,000. But when their newspaper was shown as a lead story in all major Australian news broadcasts, not only was the headline widely spread, but the concept and the popularity of the newspaper leaped dramatically.

Another coup by The Chaser newspaper involved the award ceremony for Australian Television, the Logies. The top award presented - the Gold Logie - is decided by a popular vote. Due to the small level of voting (restricted only to readers of the magazine TV Week), the Chaser team encouraged all their readers to vote for little known SBS news reader Anton Enus for the award. It was rumoured that the ploy was only just unsuccessful.

The newspaper also received considerable notoriety for its 9/11 edition, which was going to print just as the planes hit the World Trade Center. The team were widely condemned for headlines including "World Trade Center Janitor Declares "Best Sickie Ever"[2]".

The Chaser team have gone on to create television shows for ABC TV, including the Logie Award winning CNNNN in 2002-3 and The Chaser Decides in 2004. CNNNN was a satire of not only the popular news network CNN, but also cleverly incorporated Australian and world current affairs into the programme. The Election Chaser was the team's first television programme, covering the Australian Federal Elections of 2001. It inspired a similar programme covering the 2004 election, The Chaser Decides. The coverage, as with all the Chaser productions, was satirical, but a different view on the way the election was covered by the local media.

In 2004-5 Taylor and Reucassel hosted the Triple J radio drive programme, Today Today. In 2005 the rest of the team produced CNA, Chaser News Alerts, aired on ABC2. Episodes of this series were only a few minutes long. In 2006, the team came together again to produce their newest television show, The Chaser's War on Everything.

The Chaser has also published an annual each year since 2000 featuring many articles and columns from the newspaper and website. In August 2006, a compilation volume of the six previous editions, 50 Golden Years Of The Chaser, was released. The 2006 Annual was released in November.

In 2005, production of the paper was wound down due to lack of profitability, as well as to ease the demands on the writers. The Chaser team did however announce that they will be concentrating on other forms of media in the future. The Chaser is still published in electronic form on its web site [3]. The site includes discussion boards for members and non-members to contribute their own satirical pieces and debate contemporary political issues.

[edit] Cirque du Chaser

In March 2005 as part of the Sydney Big Laugh comedy festival [4], The Chaser team launched an 85-minute stage show named 'Cirque du Chaser' (the name is a parody of Cirque du Soleil) to sellout audiences. It was originally intended to have seven shows, but due to popular demand an eighth show was added at short notice. The show contained similar material to the Chaser's TV shows including political satire and humorous commentary on topical events.

Cirque du Chaser also appeared at the Adelaide cabaret festival [5] in June 2005.

Due to the success of these shows, The Chaser team took Cirque du Chaser on a national tour, visiting Brisbane, Melbourne, Sydney, Newcastle, Wollongong and Canberra during September and October 2005.

[edit] The Chaser's War on Everything

On 10 August 2005, The Chaser team filmed a pilot episode of a new TV show for the ABC, tentatively named "Hey Hey, It's the Chaser" (in reference to Nine Network show Hey Hey It's Saturday). The new pilot was in much the same vein as The Chaser team's previous TV shows and Cirque du Chaser. Filmed in front of a studio audience, the show contained mostly new material as well as some ideas taken from the stage show.

This variety-show approach was scrapped and was replaced with the same new content but in a different format, now titled The Chaser's War on Everything. It began airing 17 February 2006 at 9.45pm.

The series was directed by Mark FitzGerald, Bradley Howard and Craig Melville. Aside from the Chaser team appearing on screen, other writers were Lawrence Leung and Shane Cubis.

A DVD featuring the first 13 episodes of The War on Everything was released on the 17 August 2006. A second DVD was released in November 2006, concluding the first season.

It was revealed on 25 Nov 2006 at Manning Bar of the University of Sydney that the Chaser's War on Everything will return in 2007 at a "regular" time slot.

[edit] External links

The Chaser
Charles Firth - Andrew Hansen - Dominic Knight
Chas Licciardello - Julian Morrow - Craig Reucassel - Chris Taylor
Productions:
The Chaser (newspaper) - The Chaser Annual
CNNNN - The Election Chaser - The Chaser Decides
The Chaser's War on Everything
Today Today - Bloody Sunday - Cirque du Chaser