It makes sense that Australia,Taro Kai Archives with its expanses of desert and ever-changing landscapes, would make a great place for slow television.
The Ghan: Australia's Greatest Train Journeyis the country's first foray into the genre, which is set to air on SBS and online on Jan. 7.
SEE ALSO: Selfie tourism is killing these incredibly cute creaturesFor those unfamiliar, slow television aims to capture events that run over a long period of time, minus any editing. Norway's Bergensbanen – minutt for minutt which captured a seven-hour journey in the country's south, popularised the genre.
The Ghan is a train that operates between Darwin on Australia's north coast, all the way down to Adelaide on the southern coast.
The trip is 2,979 kilometres (1,851 mi) long, and takes 54 hours to complete. However, the television version will be pared down to three hours.
Graphics and archival footage will be used in the broadcast to illustrate the construction of the line, named after the Afghan cameleers who helped to transport people and goods in the tough Australian desert.
Or you can do what we plan to do, and fall asleep in front of it.
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
'Black girl joy' is at the heart of this new children's picture book
Deirdre O'Brien to replace Angela Ahrendts as retail chief at Apple
SpongeBob fans are not happy with that goober of a Super Bowl tribute
A Typical Wall Street Republican
Leaked benchmark reveals Samsung's Galaxy S10 is slower than iPhone XS
British autonomous vehicles won't require someone in the car
Periscope makes live broadcasts more like talk shows
Virtual Reality: The True Cost of Admission (and Why It Doesn't Matter)
Trump's victory linked to spike in women getting long
The fat bears are already extremely fat
Elderly YouTuber individually thanks his thousands of subscribers
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。