There is just something about Alone.
To the uninitiated, the series may not seem a million miles away from any other “last person standing” competitive reality show going all the way back to the granddaddy of them all, Survivor. Originally produced by The History Channel in 2015, Alone sees a disparate group of competitors shuttled off to a remote corner of the wilderness and pretty much left there until only one emerges the victor.
The cast of ‘Alone’ season 3. Source: SBS
Voila! You could be forgiven for thinking such a simple conceit has limited utility, but while the occasional new twist has been tried – season 4 threw pairs of family members into the bush, while the shooting location has varied from Canada to Patagonia to Mongolia – the basic model remains unchanged.
‘Alone Norway’. Source: SBS
And clearly so do a lot of people around the world. Every version of Alone has proved hugely popular with SBS audiences. There are a few key reasons for its appeal.
One is that, even with the competitive factor in play, Alone is low key slow television. It takes its time. There’s a pleasingly procedural element to Alone, and a lot of the enjoyment comes from watching people tackle known, quantifiable problems and tasks, be it catching a fish, starting a fire, erecting a shelter, or whatever. The attention to detail, to process, is deeply engrossing, and Alone allows time and space for us to get caught up in the many daily challenges that surviving in the wild offers.
Stine, a 27-year-old participant of ‘Alone Denmark’. Source: SBS
But for the veteran Alone fan who has hacked their way through multiple seasons, what’s really interesting are the commonalities. No matter what the season, or even which country any given series originates from, there are a few things you can rely on. At least one person is going to make a Blair Witch-style monologue direct to camera while something rustles around in the undergrowth outside their tent. There is almost always one overconfident guy in his 20s who won’t make it a week, having grossly underestimated the nature of the challenge. There will be a couple of weathered, rugged quite achievers – normally in their 50s or so – who quietly go about the job at hand, and make you hope someone like them is around come the apocalypse. There will be someone who channels a lot of cottagecore or crystal woo energy and gives the impression that they are absolutely doomed out there, but absolutely thrives when left to their own devices – one Season 3 competitor built a sauna out of rocks. And as the numbers dwindle and the season goes on, there will be a number of triers for whom sheer willpower gets them by even when their actual bushcraft lets them down (a lot of these guys eventually need to be medically evacuated, but you must admire their moxie).
Alone season 1 Source: History Channel
Alone Australia premieres Wednesdays at 7.30pm, exclusively on SBS and . Single episodes continue weekly until 24 May, when there will be a double episode finale. will release teacher resources to accompany the series. Jump into episode 1 now:
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Alone Australia
series • action
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series • action
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Alone US
series • adventure
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series • adventure
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Alone Denmark
series • nature • Danish
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series • nature • Danish
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Alone Sweden
series • reality
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series • reality
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Alone: Frozen
series • adventure
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series • adventure
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Alone Norway
series • nature • Norwegian Bokmål
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series • nature • Norwegian Bokmål
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Stream free On Demand
Alone: The Skills Challenge