The Chaser's War on Everything | |
---|---|
Genre | Comedy Satire |
Created by | The Chaser |
Directed by | Craig Melville, Nathan Earl, Bradley J. Howard,[1] Mark Fitzgerald, Trent O'Donnell |
Starring | Andrew Hansen Chas Licciardello Julian Morrow Craig Reucassel Chris Taylor Charles Firth (until 2007) |
Country of origin | Australia |
No. of seasons | 3 |
No. of episodes | 58 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producer | Julian Morrow |
Producers | Andy Nehl, Nathan Earl, Craig Melville, Mark Fitzgerald |
Running time | 26 minutes per episode |
Original release | |
Network | ABC1 |
Release | 17 February 2006 29 July 2009 | –
Infobox instructions (only shown in preview) |
The Chaser's War on Everything is an Australian television satirical comedy series broadcast on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) television station ABC1. It has won an Australian Film Institute Award for Best Television Comedy Series. The cast perform sketches mocking social and political issues, and often feature comedic publicity stunts. The series is produced by The Chaser, an Australian satirical group consisting of Chris Taylor, Julian Morrow, Craig Reucassel, Andrew Hansen, and Chas Licciardello. Fellow Chaser members Dominic Knight and Charles Firth are not part of the regular on-screen cast. However, Knight is a writer, and Firth compiled roving reports for the show from the United States, until he left the group to start a satirical newspaper in mid-2007. [citation needed]
The show premiered on 17 February 2006 and has since produced 58 episodes, broadcast over three seasons between 2006 and 2007 as well as during 2009. The first season was broadcast at a late timeslot on Friday nights. The second and third seasons were broadcast in a more favourable timeslot of Wednesdays at 9 pm. The show did not return in 2008, but returned on 27 May 2009 for the third season featuring only ten episodes.[2][3] Following the controversy of the "Make a Realistic Wish Foundation" sketch, the third season was reduced to 8 episodes, being suspended for 2 weeks.[4]
The stunts displayed on the show have often been controversial. For example, on 14 July 2006, Licciardello was charged (being later acquitted) after selling fake knives to Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs fans outside one of their rugby league games. Licciardello was again arrested, alongside Morrow and nine crew members, on 6 September 2007 after breaching security at the 2007 APEC summit.
The last episode of the series was aired on 29 July 2009, and rated an average national audience of 1.45 million.[5][6]