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"The Great Moose Migration" 2025 livestream starts in Sweden, delighting millions with slow TV
"The Great Moose Migration" 2025 livestream starts in Sweden, delighting millions with slow TV

CBS News

time16-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • CBS News

"The Great Moose Migration" 2025 livestream starts in Sweden, delighting millions with slow TV

Sweden's slow TV hit " The Great Moose Migration " kicked off early this year with the livestream set to capture moose crossing a Nordic river over the next few weeks. So far, 14 moose have crossed the river in their annual spring migration, according to the count on the livestream, as of Wednesday, April 16. "The Great Moose Migration" is streamed online by the Swedish national public broadcaster, SVT. It went live on April 15 and is expected to continue until May 4. It is live 24 hours a day. The live broadcast first aired in 2019. Executive producer Johan Erhag and producer Stefan Edlund were inspired by slow TV series produced in Norway, they said in a video on the making of "The Great Moose Migration." The concept of slow TV began in Norway in 2009 with a broadcast of a train ride through a snowy scenery. It ran for seven hours, and about a quarter of the country watched for some part of the journey. That success led to multiple slow TV series. Erhag and Edlund said they visited Norway and saw how producers there installed cameras on a cliffside, capturing different types of birds in the area. "By the time we got back from Norway, we were so inspired. It was impressive. We wanted to do something like that," Edlund said. They just needed a subject. Once they learned that herds of moose cross part of the Ångerman River about 190 miles northwest of Stockholm every year, they started to set up cameras. "We wanted to share this with the population of Sweden," Erhag said. It took a few years to get SVT to take the pitch. And when they launched in 2019, the first few days went by with no moose. Every day that passed with no sightings was more and more tense, Erhag said. But finally, they showed up and walked straight into the camera shot. "We managed to convey this sense of wonder to our viewers," Erhag said. Edlund explained that "a great deal of technology is required" to broadcast something like "The Great Moose Migration." "The location is demanding, due to the river. We need to set up cameras on both sides and there are loads of cables," he said. They lay almost 12 miles of cable and position 26 remote cameras and seven night cameras. A drone is also used. The crew of up to 15 people works out of a control room, producing the show at a distance to avoid interfering with the migration. Thomas Hellum, a producer behind the train broadcast in Norway, told "CBS News Sunday Morning" in 2017 that slow TV needs to be "an unbroken timeline." "It's all the boring stuff in there, all the exciting things in there, so you as a viewer has to find out what's boring and what's interesting," he said. That's true for the moose livestream, which often shows nothing but the scenic woodlands. Nearly a million people watched the first broadcast of "The Great Moose Migration" in 2019, and in 2024, viewership hit 9 million on SVT's streaming platform. Annette Hill, a professor of media and communications at Jönköping University in Sweden, told The Associated Press that slow TV has roots in reality television but lacks the staging and therefore feels more authentic for viewers. The productions allow the audience to relax and watch the journey unfold. "It became, in a strange way, gripping because nothing catastrophic is happening, nothing spectacular is happening," she said. "But something very beautiful is happening in that minute-by-minute moment." The moose migration has attracted many fans. A Facebook group with over 78,000 members lets viewers share updates. "I would actually like to be a little fly on the wall in every household that watches the moose migration," one mega-fan, Ulla Malmgren, told the AP. "Because I think there is about a million people saying about the same thing: 'Go on! Yes, you can do it!'" The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Millions tune in for three-week live stream of Sweden's moose migration
Millions tune in for three-week live stream of Sweden's moose migration

The Guardian

time15-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

Millions tune in for three-week live stream of Sweden's moose migration

Most of the time, nothing much happens. A wide Nordic river, melting snow still lining its banks, meanders peacefully through a pristine forest of spruce and pine. But this spring, as every spring for the past six years, a lot of people will be glued to it. When Den stora älgvandringen – variously translated as The Great Moose Migration or The Great Elk Trek – first aired on the public broadcaster SVT's on-demand platform in 2019, nearly a million people tuned in. Last year, it was 9 million. This year, who knows? Given the state of the world, a three-week-long, round-the-clock live stream of a few hundred moose gingerly crossing the Ångerman River in northern Sweden to reach their summer pastures could be just what viewers need. The show's latest edition launched a full week early on Tuesday because of warmer than usual spring weather. 'There are a lot of moose about,' the producer, Stefan Edlund, told SVT. 'They're waiting for us. We've had to adjust. But it should be OK.' The programme's 15-strong crew, working out of a control room in Umeå, 400 miles (600km) north of Stockholm, had already laid most of their 20,000 meters of cables and positioned their 30-plus remote video and night vision cameras, Edlund said. Which is just as well, because the show's fans are more than ready. Ulla Malmgren, 62, said she had stocked up on coffee and pre-cooked meals for the duration so she did not miss a moment. 'Sleep? Forget it. I don't sleep,' she said. Malmgren, who is in a Facebook group of 76,000-plus viewers, told the Associated Press she loved the thought that there were 'about a million people' watching 'all saying about the same thing: 'Go on! Yes, you can do it!'' Another fan, William Garp Liljefors, 20, said he had been known to be late for class while the show was on. 'I feel relaxed, but at the same time I'm like, 'Oh, there's a moose. Oh, what if there's a moose? I can't go to the toilet!'' he said. The show – and its success – are part of a growing trend for 'slow television' that some argue was pioneered by the late US pop artist Andy Warhol, whose 1964 film Sleep showed the poet John Giorno sleeping for five hours and 20 minutes. More recently, the concept took off with the Norwegian broadcaster NRK's pre-recorded Bergensbanen, which showed, minute by minute, a seven-hour train journey from Bergen to Oslo with archive footage to enliven time spent in the line's 182 tunnels. About 20% of Norway's population tuned in at least once to that. Two years later, roughly half the country's 5.5 million people watched at least some of NRK's coverage – live and non-stop, this time – of a 134-hour sea voyage from Bergen to Kirkenes. Since then the broadcaster has aired at least one slow TV show a year, including 18 hours of salmon swimming upstream, 12 hours of firewood burning, 24 hours of academic lectures on the constitution and a 12-hour knitting marathon. Sign up to This is Europe The most pressing stories and debates for Europeans – from identity to economics to the environment after newsletter promotion Broadcasters in Spain, Portugal, France, the UK, Australia and elsewhere have followed suit. In Utrecht, in the Netherlands, a live stream from an underwater camera allows viewers to ring a virtual doorbell and let spawning fish through a lock gate. Slow TV shows something happening at the rate it is experienced, rather than speeded up through plotting and editing. Its attraction, media experts say, seems to lie precisely in the soothing absence of staged tension and drama. 'It becomes, in a strange way, gripping, because nothing catastrophic is happening, nothing spectacular is happening,' said Annette Hill, a professor of media and communications at Jönköping University in Sweden. 'But something very beautiful is happening in that minute-by-minute moment.' Espen Ytreberg, a professor of media studies at the University of Oslo, has likened slow TV to a sort of window or 'escape valve' from the medium's usual frenetic pace. 'Just when did we come to accept that television should be this accelerated, busy, intense, in your face thing?' he wondered – appropriately, almost a decade ago – in an interview with CBS. 'But at some point, that became the norm.' Just occasionally, of course, stuff does happen. SVT even sends a push alert when the first moose shows up on The Great Moose Migration, and runs an on-screen counter showing how many have managed to cross the river, which is wide and can be perilous. Last year, the programme's cameras captured 87 making it safely across. Some do get into difficulties. Undeniably, though, viewers are, most of the time, staring at sky, water and trees. Maybe a duck or two. Wait, is that a moose?

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