The Amazing Race Australia


The Amazing Race Australia is an Australian adventure reality game show based on the international Amazing Race franchise. Following the premise of other versions of the format, the show follows teams of two as they race around the world. The Race is split into legs, with teams tasked to deduce clues, navigate themselves in foreign areas, interact with locals, perform physical and mental challenges, and travel by air, boat, car, taxi, and other modes of transport. Teams are progressively eliminated at the end of most legs for being the last to arrive at designated Pit Stops. The first team to arrive at the Finish Line wins a grand prize of A$250,000.
The series was first aired on the Seven Network, who purchased the format rights to produce an Australian version in 2010 and hold the Australian broadcast rights to the American version. The first two editions of the show—aired in 2011 and 2012—were produced by activeTV, which also produced the Asian and Israeli versions of the Race, in association with ABC Studios. Following a hiatus in 2013, a third edition—titled Australia v New Zealand and included teams from New Zealand—aired in 2014 and was produced in-house by the network's own Seven Productions. The host for Seven's iteration the show was actor Grant Bowler. Seven's iteration of the show was not renewed for a fourth season.
In June 2019, it was announced the series would be revived by Network 10. The show is produced by Eureka Productions and is hosted by former rugby league footballer Beau Ryan. The first edition of 10's iteration, and the fourth season overall, aired in late 2019. Casting is now open for 10's second season and the fifth season overall. The fifth season is set to only race around Australia, following concerns regarding international travel due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The Race

The Amazing Race Australia is a reality television competition between teams of two in a race around the world. The Race is divided into a number of legs wherein teams travel and complete various tasks to obtain clues to help them progress to a Pit Stop where teams are given a chance to rest and recover before starting the next leg twelve hours later. The first team to arrive at a Pit Stop is often awarded a prize while the last team is normally eliminated from the Race. The final leg of each Race is run by the last three remaining teams, and the first to arrive at the final destination wins the 250,000 cash prize.

Teams

Each team is composed of two individuals who have some type of relationship to each other. A total of 86 participants have joined The Amazing Race Australia.

Route Markers

Route Markers are yellow and red flags that mark the places where teams must go. Most Route Markers are attached to the boxes that contain clue envelopes, but some may mark the place where the teams must go in order to complete tasks, or may be used to line a course that the teams must follow.
Route markers were, however, coloured yellow and green in the second leg of the inaugural season to avoid confusion with the flag of South Vietnam. The route markers were not changed for a visit to Vietnam during the 4th season.

Clues

Clues are found throughout the Race in sealed envelopes, normally inside clue boxes. They give teams the information they need and tasks they need to do in order for them to progress through the Race.
During the Race, teams may face the following which may potentially slow them down:
At the beginning of each leg, teams receive an allowance of cash to cover expenses during the Race.
Teams then have to follow clues and Route Markers that will lead them to the various destinations and tasks they will face. Modes of travel between these destinations include commercial and chartered aeroplanes, boats, trains, taxis, buses, and rented vehicles provided by the show, or the teams may simply travel by foot. Each leg ends with a twelve-hour Pit Stop where teams are able to rest and where teams that arrives last are progressively eliminated from the Race until only three teams remain. Most legs comprise three or more challenges, often a Roadblock, Detour and a Route Info task. The first teams to arrive at the Pit Stop win prizes, usually from the show's sponsors.
;Gameplay Prizes
Occasionally, the first arriving team will win an advantage in the game.
Each Race has a number of predetermined non-elimination legs, in which the last team to arrive at the Pit Stop is not eliminated and is allowed to continue on the Race. However, that team is penalised for the next leg.
Marathon legs occur when teams are instructed to go to the next Pit Stop but actually must continue racing without a mandatory rest period. The clue to the Pit Stop says "Grant Bowler Awaits" with no mention of elimination. It occurred once every season for Seven's iteration of the series.

Rules and Penalties

Rules

Most Penalties are adapted from the American version but sometimes the show will use its own rules.
The first season premiered in May 2011 and ended in August 2011. The second season premiered in May 2012 and ended in August 2012. The casting for a third season began in August 2012, however, it was notably absent when the network revealed its 2013 schedule in October. A 2013 edition of the show was replaced by an unsuccessful revival of The Mole. A new edition was launched in August 2014, involving teams from New Zealand and titled The Amazing Race Australia v New Zealand.
In May 2019, a casting call for a new "Adventure Travel Competition" led to speculation that The Amazing Race Australia was being revived. At the time, the only information known about the series was that it would be produced by Eureka Productions and that, like the Australia vs New Zealand edition, applications were open to Australian and New Zealand citizens and permanent residents. In late May, it was reported by blog TVBlackbox that the casting call was indeed for an Amazing Race Australia revival with Network 10 commissioning the reboot. In late June, Network 10 announced the revival of The Amazing Race Australia with a new season set to air in late 2019.
;Note: Season numbering
In referencing the series, Network 10 only account for their seasons in season count—discounting the earlier Seven Network iteration of the series. By 10's season count, the 2019 season would be the 1st season. However, Wikipedia will account for all iterations as one continuous series—making the 2019 season the 4th season.

Broadcast & ratings

;Notes

Countries and locales visited

As of, The Amazing Race Australia has visited 32 countries and 6 inhabited continents.

Oceania

North America

South America

Europe

Africa

Asia

Reception

The premiere episode of season one was placed in top 5 ratings behind MasterChef Australia, Come Fly with Me and two nightly news. It had more viewers in the Melbourne and its regional area during the week of 15–21 May 2011.

Awards and nominations

This show has won the consecutive Asian Television Awards for "Best Adaptation of an Existing Format" and "Best Direction" for Michael McKay in 2011.
YearAwardCategoryNominatedResult
2011Asian Television AwardsBest Adaptation of an Existing FormatSeries 1, Episode 1
2011Asian Television AwardsBest DirectorMichael McKay for Episode 1
2011ASE AwardsOmnilab Media Award for Best Editing in a Television Non-DramaJoel Page and Tom Meadmore
2012International EmmyNon-Scripted EntertainmentSeries 1
2012Asian Television AwardsBest Adaptation of an Existing FormatSeries 2
2013AACTA AwardsBest DirectorMichael McKay for Episode 1
2013AACTA AwardsBest Reality Television SeriesMatthew Kowald and David Gardner