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It’s time to turn on your TV for some moose spotting! On Tuesday, April 15, millions of viewers turned on their TVs to watch “The Great Moose Migration,” a Swedish 20-day, 24-hour annual livestream ...
Swedish slow TV hit "The Great Moose Migration" has become a phenomenon. The livestream of the annual event began airing Tuesday, a week ahead of schedule. Millions tune in to watch remote cameras ...
The idiom “jumping the shark” is well-known, referring to the 1977 episode of the American sitcom Happy Days, in which the character of Fonzie jumps over a live shark while on waterskis.
Before Swedish slow TV hit “The Great Moose Migration” began airing Tuesday, Ulla Malmgren stocked up on coffee and prepared meals so she doesn’t miss a moment of the 20-day, 24-hour event.
Millions are tuning in to the hottest show captivating Sweden: It's reality, it's live, and after hours of slow shots of calming nature, the stars arrive — Sweden's beloved moose on their spring ...
Almost every show that goes for multiple seasons eventually does the thing fans dread the most: the jump the shark. Not every show jumps the shark, but it's usually inevitable for long-running shows.
“The Great Moose Migration” has become a national hit for Sweden’s public broadcaster. For 20 days straight, cameras follow the moose on their slow, majestic journey to spring pastures ...