Every Singaporean Son

Every Singaporean Son
Country of originSingapore
No. of episodes18 episodes (Cyberpioneer, YouTube and National Geographic Channel)
7 episodes (Mediacorp Channel 5)
Production
Running time6-8 minutes
Original release
Network
ReleaseJuly 7 (2010-07-07) –
November 1, 2010 (2010-11-01)
Related
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Every Singaporean Son is a Singaporean documentary released in 2010. It serves as an education tool for all pre-enlistees during their Basic Military Training in Singapore. Most of the episodes were filmed at Pulau Tekong. 18 episodes were released. The first episode airs on 7 July 2010 on YouTube, subsequent episodes were released on every Tuesday, each clip lasted for 6 to 8 minutes.

The 18-part series was filmed between 5 February 2010 to 8 April 2010.

National Geographic Channel ordered the series and it will be aired in six episodes (30 minutes per episode) from 8 March 2011.

In August 2011, the season branched out to another 6-part series named: Every Singaporean Son – Epilogue.

The documentary was nominated for "Best Cross-Platform Content" at the 16th Asian Television Awards 2011,[1] but the series lost to the Indian series The CJ Show.[2]

On 16 August 2012, the series branched out to its second season of Every Singaporean Son, premiering every Thursday of the week. It was named: Every Singaporean Son II – The Making of an Officer. The series concentrated on a batch of cadets training to be officers in OCS Officer Cadet School and lasted 21 episodes. That same year, the series was loosely adapted to highly successful local movies directed by local celebrity film director Jack Neo known as Ah Boys to Men and Ah Boys to Men 2, which were also filmed in Pulau Tekong as well.

The show aired on Mediacorp Channel 5 on Mondays at 7pm from 31 March 2014 to 5 May 2014, each episode lasted for 30 minutes (including commercial breaks), the 18 short episode series was compacted into 7 episodes.

  1. ^ "Nomination List 2011". Asian Television Awards 2011. Archived from the original on 2011-11-29. Retrieved December 31, 2011.
  2. ^ "Winner List 2011". Asian Television Awards 2011. Archived from the original on January 7, 2012. Retrieved December 8, 2011.