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A Dog's Show [1] is a New Zealand television series featuring sheepdog trials, presented by John Gordon. For many years it screened on TV ONE on Sundays at 6pm (before the evening news). It was broadcast between 1977 and 1992.
The soundtrack won a number of awards at the RIANZ New Zealand Music Awards. Both of the Footrot Flat singles were awarded Best Song of the Year at the New Zealand Music Awards (in 1986 and 1987 respectively). Dobbyn also won Best Male Vocalist in 1987 for his work on 'You Oughta Be in Love'. [4] [5]
New Zealand's first feature-length animated film, [4] it was released in November 1986 in New Zealand by Kerridge-Odeon, and opened in Australia on 9 April 1987. [5] [6] [7] The film grossed $2.5 million at the New Zealand box office (making it one of the most successful local films of the 1980s). [2] In Australia, it grossed $4.3 million. [3]
A Dog Show: 1980s One: Rural New Zealand show where South Island farmers compete against North Island farmers to round up sheep with their dog only using a dog whistle. The winner received a trophy. Show presented by John Gordon. Eating Media Lunch: 2003-2008 TV2: Hosted by Jeremy Wells: The Erin Simpson Show: 2009-2013 TV2
The comic's protagonist is a border-collie sheepdog known as "the Dog", owned by Wal Footrot, who runs a sheep and cattle farm called Footrot Flats near the fictional rural town of Raupo in New Zealand. The comic depicts the trials and tribulations of Wal, the Dog and other characters, human and animal, which they encounter.
Tax Day is coming up fast — April 18! — but for certain dog owners, every day is Tax Day. Or at least, that's how Matt Hobbs sees it. He's the Atlanta-based songwriter behind the viral hit ...
"Slice of Heaven" is a single by New Zealand singer-songwriter Dave Dobbyn with the band Herbs, released in 1986 on the soundtrack of the animated motion picture, Footrot Flats: The Dog's Tail Tale. The single reached No. 1 on the New Zealand Singles Chart for eight weeks and on the Australian Singles Chart for four weeks.
Highland wild dogs were also known to exist but were rarely seen by other people, as they hid away in higher altitudes from villages lower down, so much so that before 2016, they were only ...