Robinson (TV series)
This article needs additional citations for verification. (December 2007) |
Expedition Robinson | |
---|---|
Genre | Reality competition |
Created by | Charlie Parsons[1] |
Developed by | Planet 24 |
Theme music composer | Jon Rekdal[2] |
Country of origin | Sweden |
Original language | Swedish |
No. of seasons | 15 |
Production | |
Running time | 60 minutes (1997–2005, 2012, 2018–) 85 minutes (2009–2011) 30 minutes (2018–) |
Production companies | Strix Television (1997–2005) Silverback/ITV Studios & Castaway (2009–2012) Mastiff (2015) |
Original release | |
Network | SVT (1997–2003) TV3 (2004–2005) TV4 (2009–2012, 2018–present) Sjuan (2015) |
Release | 13 September 1997 present | –
Related | |
Survivor |
Expedition Robinson is a Swedish reality game show and the original version of the international Survivor format.
The television show places a group of strangers in an isolated location, where they must provide food, fire, and shelter for themselves. The contestants compete in challenges for rewards and immunity from elimination. The contestants are progressively eliminated from the game as they are voted out by their fellow contestants until only one remains and is awarded the grand prize.
The format was developed in 1994 by Charlie Parsons for a United Kingdom TV production company called Planet 24, but the Swedish debut in 1997 was the first production to actually make it to television.[3] The show was a success, and plans for international versions were made. An American version called Survivor started in 2000.
Format
The name alludes to both Robinson Crusoe and The Swiss Family Robinson, two stories featuring people marooned by shipwrecks.
Sixteen contestants are put into a survival situation and compete in a variety of physical challenges. Early in each season two teams compete but later on the teams are merged and the competitions become individual. At the end of each show one contestant is eliminated from the show by the others in a secret "island council" ballot.
Ownership
Planet 24 was owned by Charlie Parsons and Bob Geldof.[1] Their company Castaway Television Productions retained the rights to the concept when they sold Planet 24 in 1999. In July 2017, Banijay Group acquired Castaway Television Productions.[4]
Seasons
Year | Location | Days | Castaways | Original tribes | Winner | Runner(s)-up | Final vote | Prize | Host | Producer(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1997 | Babi Tengah, Malaysia | 47 | 16 | Two tribes of eight | Martin Melin | Kent Larsen | 6-2 | 500,000 SEK ($70,000) |
Harald Treutiger | Anders Eriksson |
1998 | Pulau Mataking and Pulau Pompom, Malaysia | 47 | 15 | Two tribes of seven, and a "joker" entering at tribe merge | Alexandra Zazzi | Birgitta Åberg | 7–2 | Mikael Hylin | ||
1999 | Cadlao, Philippines | 47 | 17 | Four tribes of four, and a "joker" entering at tribe merge | Jerker Dalman | Klas Granström | 5–4 | Anders Lundin | Mattias Olsson | |
2000 | Pulau Mensirip, Malaysia | 47 | 16 | Two tribes of eight and a "joker" entering at tribe merge | Mattias Dalerstedt | Edward Lundberg | 7–2 | Hasse Aro | ||
2001 | Pulau Besar, Malaysia | 47 | 17 | Two tribes of eight | Jan Emanuel Johansson | Jan Dinkelspiel | 7–2 | Hasse Aro Kajsa Glansén | ||
2002 | Pulau Besar, Malaysia | 47 | 17 | Two tribes of eight | Antoni Matacz | Mariana "Mirre" Dehlin | 5–4 | Hasse Aro Joakim Jankert | ||
2003 | Babi Tengah and Pulau Besar, Malaysia | 47 | 24 | Fourteen returning and ten new contestants | Emma Andersson | Mille Lansburgh | 11–5 | Hasse Aro Anki Lindberg | ||
2004 | Sribuat, Malaysia | 66 | 20 | Two tribes of seven, a joker and five wildcard contestants | Jerry Forsberg | Fike Najafi | 11–9 | 1,000,000 SEK ($140,000) |
Robert Aschberg | Hasse Aro Claes Leinstedt |
2005 | Besar Island, Malaysia | 47 | 24 | Two tribes of twelve, including one returning contestant | Karolina Conrad | Max Stjernfelt | 6–5 | Hasse Aro Frida Åberg | ||
2005 | Malaysia | [to be determined] | 15 | VIP Three tribes of five celebrities from Denmark, Norway and Sweden |
Tilde Fröling | Jan Simonsen Asbjørn Riis |
5–4–3 | 500,000 SEK ($70,000) | ||
2009 | El Nido, Palawan, Philippines | 38 | 18 | Two tribes of eight, two contestants eliminated without a tribe | Ellenor Pierre | Jarmo Heinonen | 4–3 | [to be determined] | Linda Isacsson | Cricko Akander |
2009–2010 | Samaná Province, Dominican Republic | 43 | 18 | Two tribes of nine | Hans Brettschneider | Jimmy Führ | 5–3 | Paolo Roberto | Pontus Gårdinger Ylva Hultén | |
2010 | Caramoan Peninsula, Philippines | 42 | 21 | Two tribes of nine and three "jokers" | Erik Svedberg | Heléne Ekelund | —[5] | Nicklas Nordernström Ylva Hultén | ||
2011 | El Nido, Palawan, Philippines | 36 | 20 | Two tribes of ten | Mats Kemi | Ola Ahlgren Hanna Nygren |
—[6] | Cricko Akander Ylva Hultén | ||
2012 | 35 | 14 | Fourteen returning contestants | Mariana "Mirre" Hammarling | Robert "Robban" Andersson | 3–0 | Stefan Stridh | |||
2015 | Koh Rong, Cambodia | 35 | 27 | Love Edition Twenty-seven single contestants between the ages of 20 and 42 paired together |
Jennifer Egelryd Dan Spinelli Scala |
Denice Andrée Pontus Hermansson |
8–3 | Linda Isacsson | Mia Berg | |
2018 | Yasawa Islands, Fiji | 51 | 19 | Two tribes of eight and three wildcard contestants | Daniel "DK" Westlund | Henrik Norgren | 7–2 | 500,000 SEK ($70,000) |
Anders Öfvergård | Jacob Juhl |
2019 | Kadavu Group, Fiji | [to be determined] | 22 | Two tribes of ten and two contestants (one returnee) on a separate beach | Klas Beyer | Fia Grönborg | —[7] | |||
2020 | Kadavu Group, Fiji | 42 | 23 | Two tribes of ten and three wildcard contestants | Michael Björklund | Clara Henry Priya Svang |
—[8] | Caroline Claesson | ||
2021 | Norrbotten, Sweden | [to be determined] | [to be determined] | [to be determined] | [to be determined] | [to be determined] | [to be determined] | [to be determined] |
References
- Footnotes
- ^ a b Svensson, p. 16
- ^ Lindner, Tobias (22 November 2001). "Miljoner tv-tittare har hört musiken". Aftonbladet (in Swedish). Archived from the original on 20 August 2012. Retrieved 12 August 2011.
- ^ "Reality TV around the globe". BBC News. 24 May 2001. Archived from the original on 7 February 2011. Retrieved 15 June 2011.
- ^ Tartaglione, Nancy (10 July 2017). "Banijay Raises $416M To Help Finance Acquisition Of 'Survivor's Castaway Prods". Archived from the original on 2 October 2019. Retrieved 2 October 2019.
- ^ Unlike previous seasons, this season didn't feature a jury vote to decide the winner. Instead, there was a final challenge in which Erik won against Heléne.
- ^ Like the previous season, this season didn't have a jury vote to decide the winner. Instead, it was a final challenge where Mats became the winner against runners-up Ola and Hanna.
- ^ Instead of a jury, there was a final challenge to determine the winner.
- ^ Instead of a jury, there was a final challenge to determine the winner in which Michael won over runners-up Clara and Priya.
- Sources
- Svensson, Niklas (2004). Robinsonboken - Sanningen om Expedition Robinson (in Swedish). Bazar Förlag AB. ISBN 91-7028-017-7.
Further reading
- Lindberg, Klas (23 November 2003). "Robinson - så började det..." Aftonbladet (in Swedish). Archived from the original on 9 June 2011. Retrieved 15 June 2011.
External links
- Robinson at IMDb
- Expedition Robinson at Aftonbladet (in Swedish)
- Official Strix site
- Salon article
- Expedition Robinson
- 1997 Swedish television series debuts
- Sveriges Television original programming
- TV3 (Sweden) original programming
- TV4 (Sweden) original programming
- Swedish reality television series
- Survivor (franchise)
- 1990s Swedish television series
- 2000s Swedish television series
- 2010s Swedish television series