The Weakest Link (Australian game show)

The Weakest Link
Genre Game show
Created by Fintan Coyle, Cathy Dunning
Based on The Weakest Link
Presented by Cornelia Frances
Narrated by Marcus Irvine
Country of origin Australia
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 2
Production
Location(s) South Melbourne, Victoria
Running time 60 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel Seven Network
Picture format 576i (SDTV)
Audio format Stereo
Original run 5 February 2001 – 8 April 2002

The Weakest Link was an Australian game show based on the successful UK format, which aired from 5 February 2001 until 8 April 2002 and was broadcast on the Seven Network. Presented by Cornelia Frances, the show featured nine contestants competing for a potential prize of $100,000. Airing twice weekly in primetime, on Mondays and Fridays, later Thursdays, it received modest ratings until its cancellation.

The Monday edition indirectly competed against the more-popular Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? (which airs at a later time on another network) and the Friday edition served as a lead-in to the AFL telecasts in Victoria, South Australia and Western Australia only. Later on in the year, The Weakest Link was moved to Thursdays at 7:30pm. In 2002, the show aired only once a week, on Mondays. Due to poor ratings, the show was cancelled for good with one of the final episodes being a lifestyle special that aired on 8 April 2002.

The show was produced in the Seven Network's South Melbourne headquarters.

Format

The format of the Australian series was identical to that of the British version apart from some slight time differences on rounds. The first round lasted for 2 minutes and 30 seconds as opposed to 3 minutes on the British version, and each round thereafter was reduced by 10 seconds (meaning a time limit of 80 seconds for the triple stakes round). As with the British version, any money banked in round eight is trebled (e.g. if the contestants bank $1,000 then $3,000 is added to the final total). The money tree is as follows:

The voice-over was Marcus Irvine, whilst the adjudicator was Alan Mason, the contestant revealed as the first season's Mole.

Special versions

The show also featured several special editions throughout its run.

Awards

Logie Awards:

See also

References

External links