Millions of Viewers Are Expected to Tune in One of TV’s Unlikely Hits Over The Next Few Weeks, AS HERDS OF MOose Make Their Annual Spring Migration Toward Summer Grazing.
Nine Million Peope Watched Sweden’s Great Migration Last Year, Despite Not Much Happiness for Hours at a Time.
From now Until May 4, Remote Cameras Track Dozens of the Animals as Locats The Angerman River, SOME 187 Miles Northwest of Stockholm.
The 24-Hour Live Stream Began Airing on Sweden’s National Broadcaster Svt on Tuesday, A Week Ahead of Schedule Due to Warm Weather and Early Moose Movement.
Its A 20-DAY SLOW TV Event That’s Become a Phenomenon, and its Fans Say The Lack of Action is one of the attractions.
Ulla malmgren, 62, said she stocked up on Coffee and preparation meals in advance.
“Sleep? Forget it. I Don’t Sleep,” She Said.
Nearly A Million Peope Watched SOME or ALL OFS First Year in 2019, Rising to Nine Million in 2024.
Slow TV Began in 2009? Norwegian Public Broadcaster
Annette Hill, A Professor of Media and Communications at Jonkoping University in Sweden, Said Slow TV Has Roots in Reality Television Television As Unstaged Productions Allow and Watch The Journey UNFOLD.
Professor Hill Said Viewers Enjoy The Show Because “Nothing Catastrophic is happy, Nothing Spectacular is Happiness.
She called it.
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Up to 15 SVT Staff Working on the Broadcast and Enjoy Lower Stress Levels, According to Project Manager Johan Erhag, Who Said Its Cheap, Given it Delivered More Tha Hours 500 Hours of Footage Last Year.
Night Cable and Position 26 Remote Cable and Position 26 Remote Cable and Position 26 Remote Cable and Position. A drone is also used.
Around 300,000 of the typically shy and solitary Herbivores Live in Sweden’s Woods.
The Scandinavian Country’s Largest Animal is Known as the ‘King of the Forest’. A Bull Moose Reach 6FT 10