Getaway is Australia's longest-running travel television program. Debuting on 14 May 1992, it is broadcast on the Nine Network and TLC. Its main competitor was The Great Outdoors on the Seven Network until 2009. A New Zealand version of the program, with some local content, used to be broadcast on TV One and Prime TV. The first season only looked at only Australian resorts and locations, but by 1993 had expanded to look at overseas destinations.
Follow Nikolaj Coster-Waldau’s search for the people, ideas, traditions, and attitudes – the solutio...
Best buds Martin Compston and Phil MacHugh are back on the road enjoying a fling in the fjords. They...
Best friends Joel Dommett and Nish Kumar travel to locations across the globe to immerse themselves ...
This is a fast-paced, modern, thirty-minute program that explores the best of Michigan. Airing on PB...
Comedians Elis James and Miles Jupp take a series of unconventional trips around Wales.
Miriam Margolyes embarks on an epic road trip through the heartlands of middle America with her uniq...
A group of famous faces travel to India to see if retiring in India would be better than retiring in...
Having road-tested retirement in India, Miriam Margoyles, Wayne Sleep, Bobby George and Rosemary Shr...
Wildlife cameraman Gordon Buchanan travels to the remotest regions on three continents to join three...
Jimmy Doherty visits far-flung places to meet people who have created new lives for themselves in su...
Eighty-seven-year-old adventurer Tim Slessor sets out to recreate his own 1955 record-breaking drive...
Artist and social commentator Grayson Perry crosses the US, exploring its biggest fault lines, from ...
Relax, reset and recharge. Robson takes the roads less travelled across his beloved North East Engla...
Monty Don travels to Spain, discovering gardens across the country’s diverse landscape and exploring...
Embark on a series of journeys through the skies over Japan. Fly to airports nationwide and enjoy br...
Intrepid adventurer Michael Palin takes a journey through the Himalayas.