The Farm (British TV series) explained

Genre:Reality Television
Director:Alex Rudzinski
Presenter:Ed Hall (2004)
Colin McAllister and Justin Ryan (2005)
Narrated:Ed Hall (2004)
Theme Music Composer:Bee Gees
Opentheme:"Stayin' Alive" (instrumental), Bee Gees
Endtheme:"Stayin' Alive" (instrumental), Bee Gees
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Num Seasons:2
Num Episodes:22
Executive Producer:Louise Rainbow
Producer:Alex Dundas
Sean Hancock
Colin Whitaker
Debbie Woocock
Editor:Jennifer Hampson
Joe Pedder
Dave Tilley
Runtime:55 minutes
Company:Endemol UK
Channel:Five
Related:Celebs on the Farm

The Farm is the British version of the international TV format The Farm, produced by Strix. The show had a number of celebrities appear on it during its two series run on Five between 2004 and 2005. After the completion of the second series in 2005, Five revealed that they would not be airing any further series of the show.[1]

In 2018, a revamped version of the show titled Celebs on the Farm premiered on 5Star.

Format

In the UK version of The Farm, the show puts a group of celebrities on a farm where they live together for a short period of time. On the farm, the contestants must do typical farmer work involving agriculture and animal rearing. At regular intervals, one of the contestants is evicted from the farm by way of a public telephone vote. This process is continued until only one contestant remains, and then they gain the title of "Top Farmer".

Series 1 (2004)

Series one was announced in the summer of 2004,[2] and eventually went to air from 26 September 2004, presented and narrated by Ed Hall. The show's first series broadcast in a nightly 10pm slot from 26 September to 17 October 2004.

The show's first series caused plenty of controversy for Five when in October 2004 it showed Rebecca Loos masturbating a pig and collecting a semen sample from it.[3] This incident among others also caused outrage from the RSPCA.[4]

The winner of the show by viewers' votes was Jeff Brazier.

The celebrities that took part were:

CelebrityKnown forStatus
Stan CollymoreFootballerWalked
Paul DanielsMagicianWalked[5]
Lady Victoria HerveySocialiteEliminated 1st
Television presenterEliminated 2nd
Ritchie Neville5ive singer Eliminated 3rd
Margi ClarkeFormer Coronation Street actressEliminated 4th
Debbie McGeeMagician's assistantEliminated 5th
Rebecca LoosModelThird place
Vanilla IceRapperRunner-up
Jeff BrazierTelevision presenterstyle=background:goldWinner

Series 2 (2005)

Series two was announced soon after the completion of the first series.[6] The second series aired from 9 May 2005 for a total of eighteen days,[7] and was now presented by Colin McAllister and Justin Ryan. The show's second and final series was broadcast in a nightly 10.30pm slot (half-an-hour later than the timeslot during the first series) between 9 May and 26 May 2005.

The winner of the show by viewer's votes was Keith Harris and Orville the Duck.

The celebrities that took part were:

CelebrityKnown forStatus
Ilona StallerPornographic actressEliminated 1st
Charlene TiltonDallas actressEliminated 2nd
Flavor FlavRapperEliminated 3rd
Dancer & television presenterEliminated 4th
Emma BModelEliminated 5th
Ron JeremyPornographic actorEliminated 6th
Dave MorganJessie Wallace's ex-boyfriendEliminated 7th
Emma NobleModelThird place
Mikey GreenPhixx singerRunner-up
Keith Harris & Orville the DuckVentriloquist & dummystyle=background:goldWinner

Ratings

The show's first episode managed 1.16 million viewers for Five, and overall, the first series was a success for the Channel, managing an average of 1.4 million viewers in its 10pm nightly timeslot. The first series received an increase in viewers thanks to the incident involving Rebecca Loos, and for the series one finale scored a peak of nearly 2.3 million viewers, and a 15.2% audience share for Five.[8]

The show's second series began in May 2005 with a new nightly timeslot of 10.30pm, with the first episode taking 1.17 million viewers and a 9.2% audience share.[9] The second series did not rate as well as the first however, and overall managed an average of 1.19 million viewers in its timeslot.

Notes and References

  1. http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/tv/news/a25151/no-third-series-for-the-farm.html No third series for 'The Farm' – TV News – Digital Spy
  2. http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/tv/news/a15157/five-goes-to-the-farm-for-new-reality-series.html Five goes to 'The Farm' for new reality series – TV News – Digital Spy
  3. https://www.theguardian.com/media/2004/oct/06/realitytv.broadcasting Farmyard furore as Five lets Rebecca Loos on porker | Media | MediaGuardian
  4. http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/tv/news/a16216/rspca-tell-viewers-to-boycott-the-farm.html RSPCA tell viewers to boycott 'The Farm' – TV News – Digital Spy
  5. http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/tv/news/a16017/paul-daniels-quits-the-farm.html Paul Daniels quits 'The Farm' – TV News – Digital Spy
  6. http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/tv/news/a19399/the-farm-returns-to-five.html 'The Farm' returns to Five – TV News – Digital Spy
  7. http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/tv/news/a20785/the-farm-to-return-on-may-9.html 'The Farm' to return on May 9 – TV News – Digital Spy
  8. http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/media/news/a16393/ratings-roundup-strong-start-for-sky-ones-hex.html Ratings Roundup: Strong start for Sky One's 'Hex' – Media News – Digital Spy
  9. http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/media/news/a21133/quiet-ratings-start-for-the-farm.html Quiet ratings start for 'The Farm' – Media News – Digital Spy