Roy and HG

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Roy and HG
Roy and HG

Roy & HG are a noted Australian comedy duo, with Greig Pickhaver, former Flinders University student politician, taking the role of HG Nelson and John Doyle as "Rampaging" Roy Slaven. Their act is an affectionate but irreverent parody of Australia's obsession with sport. Their characters based on archetypes in sports journalism: Nelson the exciteable announcer, Slaven the retired sportsman turned expert commentator. In his 1996 book Petrol, Bait, Ammo & Ice, Nelson (aka Pickhaver) summarised the duo's comedic style as "making the serious trivial and the trivial serious".

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[edit] ABC

Doyle and Pickhaver have written and hosted the live, improvised satirical radio program This Sporting Life on Triple J since 1986. They also broadcast annual live commentaries of the NRL and AFL grand finals -- dubbed the Festival of the Boot, Parts I and II -- and the Melbourne Cup. Commentaries for all three matches of the annual rugby league State of Origin series are also broadcast (main article: Roy and HG's State of Origin commentary), and they have also broadcast live commentaries of other major events, most notably the Bicentennial celebrations on 26 January 1988 and the 2007 Australian federal election (Indecision 07).


Roy and HG transferred the radio show's format to a series of ABC television shows, including Blah Blah Blah (1988) (where they were only seen in silhouette), This Sporting Life (1993), the Logie award-winning Club Buggery (1995-97) and its successor The Channel Nine Show (1998), Planet Norwich (1998) (made in the UK) and The Memphis Trousers Half-Hour (2005) (taped in Sydney but performed as if broadcast from America).

[edit] Commercial network

After transferring to the commercial Seven Network in the late 1990s, they initially appeared in the disastrous Win Roy & H.G.'s Money (2000), an ill-fitting adaptation of the US hit Win Ben Stein's Money. But they soon consolidated their popularity and reached a vast new audience with The Monday Dump and The Nation Dumps.

Their biggest hit was undoubtedly their top-rating commentary-interview television program The Dream with Roy and HG (from the Sydney 2000 Olympics), featuring their own special outlook on the event. This was followed by three spinoffs - The Ice Dream (from the 2002 Salt Lake City Winter Olympics), The Cream (from the 2003 Rugby World Cup), and more recently The Dream again for the Athens 2004 Olympics. During the Ice Dream they launched a bid for the Winter Olympics to be held at Smiggin Holes, in the humorous Smiggin Holes 2010 Winter Olympic bid with suggested slogans "Unleash the Mighty Mongrel", "Winter Wonder Down Under" and "If you've got the poles, we've got the holes.".

A Dream style coverage of the 2006 FIFA World Cup, called the Dribble mit HG und Roy was streamed via the Internet.

Roy and HG were not selected by Channel Seven to cover the Beijing Olympics because of security concerns and the belief by Channel Seven management that the style of their coverage - going to air live following a day's events - would not have suited Australian audiences given Australia's time zones[1].

[edit] Memphis trousers

In 2005, they starred in The Memphis Trousers Half Hour, a TV show they claimed was recorded in different American cities such as Baltimore or Albuquerque, ensuring that 'Australia is the flavour of the month, every month'. The show screened weekly on the ABC on Saturday nights and was named after an incident in which former Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser lost his trousers in a Memphis Hotel.

In typical style, the show was made to look like it was filmed in America, when in fact it was filmed entirely in Sydney. The format was a parody of American talk shows and pretended to present Americans with new 'facts' about Australia.

[edit] Other Facts

In 2001 a portrait of Roy and HG by artist Paul Newton won the Packing Room award and the People's choice award at the Archibald Prize.

[edit] External links