The Paul Hogan Show (TV Series 1973–1984) Poster

(1973–1984)

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8/10
The Paul Hogan Show is now on DVD
johnfos3 July 2005
Judging from comments made, a lot of people have been waiting for a DVD of the Paul Hogan Show. Well, it's finally out, in Region 4 at least. It's a 2-disc DVD featuring the best of Hoges and all his small-screen characters, and supporting cast including John Cornell (as Strop), Delvine Delaney, Andrew Harwood and John Blackman. 'The Best of the Paul Hogan Show' is rated PG, covers the years 1977-79 mainly, and runs for 370 minutes.

I have to admit that much of the material seems quite dated now, and politically incorrect, but then that was the 70s. The formula is simple: backyard ocker fun that appeals to the workers and pokes fun at politicians and others in the public eye. Notable politicians who get a (dis)honourable mention include former Australian Prime Ministers Bob Hawke and Malcolm Fraser.
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8/10
Wish someone would re-air this show!
deepc18528 October 2023
I somehow discovered this show as a 12 year old kid in North Carolina in the US in the early 80s. I swear I think it aired on PBS, which also ran Benny Hill episodes at night. Although I remember laughing hysterically and loving the show, I really only remember two actual bits. One was the skits where he and Strop lived in a shack and would make toast by impaling a piece of bread on a nail in the wall and then using a blowtorch on it. The other was one of his monologues where he discussed his first date and kiss at the movies. He took a girl to a Tarzan movie and, following the romantic advice of some friends, basically botched the entire thing until he finally managed to stumble into the kiss. "I thought all me birthdays had come at once!". He told about trying to blow into the girl's ear, but forgot he had popcorn in his mouth and so blew a piece into her ear where it got stuck, and how he waited for a romantic scene to try to kiss her, but the only semi-romantic scene was where Cheetah had to give a drowning Tarzan mouth to mouth. LOL!

I'd love to see this show again somewhere, but I do also fear that it couldn't possibly live up to my memories of it.
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7/10
Saw reruns on California TV in 1980s. Some priceless stuff, some not.
abbott-bill24 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
My all time favorite, Hogan makes a school lunch, PB&J sandwich + fruit. In a generic suburban kitchen, narrating and acting as if he was less than 10 years old. He can't use the bread at the end of the bag, its stale and that's poison, so he reaches into the middle for a couple of fresh pieces... etc., etc., etc. No better than it should be, but it's concise and memorable. See it and if you don't enjoy it at all, I'm sincerely sorry for you.

Second favorite is 3 or 4 carracture Australian men with corks hanging from their hats having shrimp on the barbie with beer. Beer cans are in insulated sleeves hanging on strings around their necks. The characters are dim and the project demands all their ability, The funny part is the breathless, semi-whispered, narration as if this is some ethnographic film of an isolated and exotic society unknown to the modern world. So its a 2 part joke, and, mostly neither part is stunning in its originality. But it's very competent, and as the school lunch bit, concise and memorable.

Special reason to love this show. The only mainstream TV show I ever saw with a prosthetic beer belly that one character or another would wear under their tee shirt. Not makeup magic of any kind, its a prop, it's treated as a prop. It makes the wearer too big to get through narrow spaces, makes them appear to drink too much, etc. It gets rolled out for one or more characters in most episodes, because, you know, you know that guy. Or you're afraid of becoming that guy.
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WOULD LOVE TO SEE THIS SHOW AGAIN
LUEXANA5 February 2003
I was a big fan of this show in the '80's. I remember this show so fondly. My favorite recurring skit was the one where Paul Hogan and John Cornell played room-mates in this seedy little apartment. To this day I still fall down laughing when I think about them preparing their breakfast. They'd nail their bread to the wall and toast it with a blow-torch. This is one of the few shows whose collection I would buy if it was made available to the public.
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10/10
Bonzer show
bazza_mckenzie0221 January 2004
G'day

This is my favourite show of all time, it's an absolute classic full of such great skits. Someone should start a petiton to have the series released on dvd, I bet you'd get millions of votes there's so many fans of the show. The best of video still goes for about 50 or sixty bucks on ebay.
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10/10
What The Beatles are to Music and Robert De Niro is to Movies, Paul Hogan is to Television
Alligator_809 October 2005
Perhaps one of, if not, the most memorable Aussie icons would have to be none other than PAUL HOGAN. Out of his material ever since he caked audiences on "New Faces", the one thing that he is most remembered for is "The Paul Hogan Show". Whoever could forget Leo Wan*er, Luigi The Unbelievable, that dumb arse Strop or the ever so sexy Delvene Delaney. Thew show was indeed one of 'laugh your pants off' sketches, clever satire and pretty decent stand-up comedy. In fact, the show even made the No.2 spot on "50 Years 50 Shows"- You might say that "The Paul Hogan Show" is a milestone in Australian Television and proof that Mr Hogan indeed has it! I must say though, it is most unfortunate that Hoges could not have the same impact on audiences after his TV run and the box-office smash "Crocodile Dundee". Anyway, I strongly advise you to get a copy of "The Best Of The Paul Hogan Show" on DVD. A 5/5 Classic TV show!
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8/10
Very amusing
guardian-657271 January 2020
Loved watching this series on TV back in the day, always loved seeing him making toast by nailing bread to the wall and using a blow torch on it, ingenious, lol all the way
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4/10
Streuth!
Rabical-9112 March 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Before Paul Hogan became a human cannonball as Mick Dundee in the hilarious 'Crocodile Dundee', Paul had a long running sketch show shown on Network Seven. It was certainly a popular show not only in Oz but also in the UK, running from the early '70's right through to the mid '80's. The sad fact was, it was scarcely amusing.

'The Paul Hogan Show' seemed to be a natural successor to 'The Benny Hill Show' ( which was very big in Australia ), featuring musical items, slapstick comedy sketches and monologues. Sadly, Hogan, whilst a very talented peformer, is not in Benny's league when it comes to slapstick, at least not that particular brand of slapstick.

The sketches were pretty threadbare. Some would drag on with no build up or others would build up some kind of suspension only then to end without any kind of punchline, such as those sketches featuring Hogan as Perce The Wino, which were Benny Hill inspired silent comedy sketches.

Fortunately, two years after this show ended, Hogan would go on to do the first in the trilogy of 'Dundee' movies, of which he is best remembered for, and rightly so too!
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Paul Hogan was never as good as this again
Into_The_West20 June 2004
My first exposure to Paul Hogan was when his series was syndicated on American television in the early 1980's. I always thought he was a tremendous performer, both in the material he wrote and the wide variety of characters he portrayed.

I found him far superior to Benny Hill, since Hogan's work, unlike Hill's, seemed more contemporary. Hill's work, although often amusing, always seemed like recycled music hall/"Carry On" film/"Laugh In" stuff. If Hogan did draw on things, they were instead Monty Python and Saturday Night. If he didn't draw on things, his work could be quite original, and his ability to continually re-invent characters was quite good (I recall his middle-aged beach bum character, Arthur Dunger, eventually being turned into a middle-aged beach bum superhero, and then into a middle-aged beach bum superhero video game character who ended up destroying the person playing the game).

Sadly, when "Crocodile Dundee" came out the show (which Hogan on the Tonight Show once joked was only on in America at 2 AM) got yanked, presumably for repackaging and reselling to capitalize on Hogan's new movie star status. The quality of his films declined rapidly, however, and I'm supposing up until last month, when a DVD was supposed to be released in Australia, no one saw the value in re-releasing these little masterpieces of comedy.

Although some things in "Crocodile Dundee" came close (my favorite gag in that was the "updating" of the film, "Walkabout," having its star, David Gumpilil, walk onto the scene with face paint, spear--and blue jeans!), Hogan never was able, in my opinion, to bring the magic of his TV show to his films.

One should be grateful, though, for his show, and hope a DVD will be coming this way soon.
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1/10
Not funny
davedave-223684 March 2017
Can not tell a joke and never could if there were no scripts on stage or in person he be lost, It seems you can walk on stage in shorts and short sleeve shirt spread your hands out and folks think that is funny BULL .Is only decent movie was Dundee rest were hopeless And the TV show well say no more
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Australia's Benny Hill counterpart
timmus17 April 2000
Before the "Come and Say G'Day" commercials in 1983 and the Crocodile Dundee movie in 1986 there was the Paul Hogan Show. It was Australia's Benny Hill with sophomoric but clean, biting humor yet without the infamous ribaldry. The show usually opened with a welcoming monologue featuring wisecracks in front of a live audience. Then would come a series of shorts. One of the recurring skits featured Hogan and John Cornell as two losers in a ramshackle bachelor pad planning out their supposed evening with the ladies. In a style that truly mimicked Benny Hill there were frequently accelerated-film skits. One that I remember featured Hogan trying to set up camp to the accompaniment of Canned Heat's "Up The Country".

Although sometimes bland, the Paul Hogan show definitely had its moments. One of the most unforgettable performances was Hogan as the trenchcoat-clad man in the city park, singing to the accompaniment of lush Phil Spector-esque instrumentals: "There's someone, waiting around you, just stop and see. There is someone, waiting to know you, over there, behind the tree! There is someone, who has something, that he wants the world to see! Oh somebody, anybody! oh for God sake! look at me!" [holding trenchcoat wide open] "LOOK AT ME!"

Do any tapes exist anymore? If so, drop me a line.
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"I'm here to prove that when it comes to producing thick-skulls, we Aussies is second to none..."
Nestor-428 February 2004
Ah, Memories.

Channel 4 in the UK started playing this as one of their very first programmes and, at the age of 9, it had us hooked for life. The easy-going charm of Hoges combined with his love of TV meant that either his spoofs, sitcom-sketches and his stand-up material always won audiences over.

Bloody hard to find now, we were luck to tape a number of them when Channel 4 played a batch of them again (as The Best of the Paul Hogan Show) in the 1991. The show has not been heard from since.

This is a shame, as the format is much more welcome than the ususal "long-winded-build-up-for-a-scathing-putdown" favoured by most shows these days.

We thankfully were able to transfer out tapes to the wonders of recordable DVD, so we have them backed-up once the tapes have packed-in through sheer age.

The wonders of The Incredible Weed, Benny 5-0, Leo Wanker, Perce the Wino, A Fistful of Ravioli, Arthur Dunger, Mullet and numerous others will not be lost to time so easily.
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