4 /10 1 Votes4
Country of origin Australia First episode date 5 June 2007 No. of episodes 13 (List of episodes) | 4.1/10 IMDb Final episode date 29 August 2007 Language English | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Starring Mick Molloy (host)Paul CallejaTiffany CherryGary EckJackie ONikki OsborneAkmal SalehPete Smith Running time 60 minutes per episodeincluding commercials Original release 5 June – 29 August 2007 Related shows Genres Sketch comedy, Comedy, Satire, Talk show Similar The Mick Molloy Show, Big Brother, The Front Bar, The Late Show |
The Nation was an Australian satirical sketch comedy and discussion series covering the week's events across political and social spectrums, premiering on Tuesday 5 June 2007 at 9:30 pm on the Nine Network.
Contents
It was hosted by Mick Molloy with a supportive cast of Akmal Saleh, Jackie O, Tiffany Cherry, Gary Eck, Paul Calleja, Nikki Osborne and Pete Smith as the announcer for the show. The show was taped at the GTV-9 Melbourne studios in front of a studio audience. The first guests on the show were Peter Garrett, Stephen Curry and Lisa McCune. The final episode was broadcast on Wednesday 29 August 2007.
Ratings
The Nation's initial episode was the Nine Network's top rating program within the 16- to 39-year-old demographic in Melbourne, Sydney and the east coast. However, the program was third nationally, beaten by Channel Seven's Crossing Jordan (974,000) and Channel Ten's Numb3rs (910,000). After the first episode, ratings began to decline with the ratings for the second episode dropping just over one fifth of the audience.
Over the course of the series, changes to the format were made. Veteran announcer Pete Smith and WSFM 101.7 compere Amanda Keller were additions to the cast. On 4 July 2007, the Nine Network confirmed that The Nation would move from its primetime Tuesday timeslot to a new time of 10:30pm on Wednesday nights, in direct competition with Ten Late News and Channel Seven's The Unit.
The ratings for episodes were as follows:
Criticism
The Herald Sun reported that The Nation had received a mixed reaction on the initial episode, with dozens of viewers complaining to the Nine Network about bad-taste jokes made on-air.