real time web analytics
Report - - I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here!, Australia (2018) | European and International Sites | 28DaysLater.co.uk

Report - I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here!, Australia (2018)

Hide this ad by donating or subscribing !

TVurbex

TV Locations Aficionado
28DL Full Member
INTRO
From Wikipedia:
I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here! is a reality TV series in which up to 12 celebrities live together in a jungle environment for a number of weeks. They have no luxuries, and compete to be crowned king or queen of the jungle.

Although the filming location moved following the first series, Australian banana plantation sites have always been used for the production of the UK series – initially at Kooroomool Creek, King Ranch, North Davidson Road, Cardstone, QLD 4854 (2002) and now the Granada Dungay Site, 366-386 Dungay Creek Road, Dungay, NSW 2484 (2003-present). The current site spans further than the original and is actually leased from two families as opposed to a company, with planning permission in place for filming until 2020.

REPORT
My slight obsession for sneaking into TV sets is seen by most as peculiar at the very least, but I'd somehow managed to persuade my friend, without too much convincing, to drive several hours across Australia to get here. I’d heard that the site was patrolled by ex-SAS soldiers, so thought it best to visit outside of filming periods.

After a good couple of hundred miles of driving, my face lit with excitement as we crossed the McPherson mountain range and the sat nav read “Dungay Creek Road” aloud, as I caught a brief glimpse through the trees across the stunning valley that I'd so often seen in I'm A Celebrity... opening shots. At the bottom of a steep and slightly terrifying road, we'd reached our destination – or at least the country road that we'd told the sat nav to take us to:

41979418262_ed2359b18e_c.jpg

Dungay Creek Road

Dungay Creek Road is relatively flat and unremarkable, with a small car park for ITV crew near to the bottom of it. Around two miles up from here is the Dawes Crossing (Causeway 1) over the creek, where the road becomes unofficially known as Upper Dungay Creek Road, and also becomes private.

You don't mess with the Aussies – especially not landowner, Craig Parker, who allegedly assaulted an ITV-contracted security guard a couple of years ago – so it's here where I begin my solo mission a little more stealthily on foot. As I leave the car, my slightly concerned friend gives me advice on how to best treat a snake bite. I also realise that there's no reliable mobile phone reception out here and real fear sets in slightly, but I'm too close to turn back.

A little further up the road is the ‘Social Base’ (catering tent, wardrobe/make-up, art department, medical hut and production office) at no. 386 Upper Dungay Creek Road, but I don't hang around here and make my way off-road. The landscape quickly becomes more forest-like as opposed to the open fields surrounding the road but I soon reach the ‘Tech Base’ at no. 366A, where many of the 500-strong crew work in the control room, edit suites and other technical duties. There are around 20 or so buildings across the whole site – mostly of a temporary nature – and the Tech Base makes up for around seven of these:

41979360512_59b544596c_c.jpg

Production building

41303906734_043b9a28b8_c.jpg

'Avid Alley' (edit suites)


28151056108_fbd8c5aea5_c.jpg

Tech gallery (control room)


41123563925_71d2dc6b0a_c.jpg

Inside control room


41303892174_d009a005dd_c.jpg

Racks inside control room


28151054568_7d50a47fa2_c.jpg

Contacts list


Some structures are removed between filming periods to help preserve the natural habitat. Here, for example, is where the broadcast satellite dishes would be housed:

41979359162_1462a8a49d_c.jpg

Satellite area

As I head towards the studio along a partly tarmacked road, I notice that the terrain has become noticeably more dramatic than on Dungay Creek Road. It's unpredictably hilly, and the trees have suddenly become denser, naturally dulling the sunlight. Yet the scorching heat remains – most likely from of a combination of the more challenging conditions and my blatant lack of fitness. On my way to the studio, a number of roads head off elsewhere:

27153960497_bfabd98128_z.jpg

Road to top helipad. Mid-right: fuel tank and generator area

41303951924_26308a628b_c.jpg

Road to studio

42024385251_c01d11401e_c.jpg

Studio scaffold


I finally reach the 19-metre-high scaffold (above) where the studio stands on the jungle floor. The walkway to the studio is blocked by wooden boards and several danger signs, but I manage to unceremoniously clamber over, where I find one or two remnants of filming:

41303956634_ff1abf0e81_c.jpg

Ant McPartlin's ashtray (or an ant pot?)

41303953324_8180a6fc77_c.jpg

ITV2 host monitor


A short walkway takes me to the studio floor:

41303916114_c1b2096458_c.jpg

Warning sign

41123605605_8f2d298185_c.jpg

Walkway

The two sets of stairs (above) lead up to a crow's nest used by Ant and Dec (presenters) and down to a jib (crane camera) deck which is used to film moving shots of the presenters stood on the adjacent bridges and in the aforementioned crow's nest. Directly below the studio floor is a technical area containing cabling and equipment, a fridge, workbench and various signage.

27153938747_29cd195b03_c.jpg

Studio crow's nest. Bottom left: jib deck

42024374101_791acd6781_c.jpg

Cabling


41123603465_e5ac65cfd1_c.jpg

Door


28151069118_bf3a10e092_c.jpg

Signs


28151074428_d1d0468f11_c.jpg

Fridge. ITV Studios produce the programme, but 'Granada' references can be found across the site as a relic of the company's former name


There are also two walls of graffiti from UK and Germany crews, who both use the same set:

28151072178_34883a98f8_c.jpg

Hat

41979381382_b22e76d47e_z.jpg

Graffiti

41123590315_5a34da1075_c.jpg

Lower deck context


I head back up to the upper deck which is connected to two bridges (1 and 1a) as seen on-screen. There are ten bridges across the whole site, spanning three quarters of a mile in total and although it's possible to reach the camp and trial areas via walkways across the jungle floor, I really want to follow in the footsteps of those, ahem, A-list celebs – the likes of Kilroy, Janet Street-Porter and Peter Andre – by walking the bridges. Having said that, I'd heard that the bridges are re-rigged between series to ensure their safety, and was guessing by the danger signs that this might not yet have been done, so I'm feeling reluctant to say the least.

42024394441_7c43cc9695_c.jpg

Studio floor with connected bridges

With safety in mind, I opt for taking the long route across the jungle floor. It gives me a nice view of the bridges above (and as such is used by camera crews), but after 20 or so cuts and scratches from some minty-smelling plants, I decide to go against my instincts and take the 'easy' route up high.

41304021164_5c57c97f3b_c.jpg

Looking up

Back up at the studio, I step onto Bridge 1, tightly gripping the sides as I sheepishly walk across. Every step I take causes the bridge to move, but it feels stable enough to continue to the other side. Then onto Bridge 2, and finally 3, where I eventually reach the drawbridge which was added in 2003 following an incident in series 2, where the celebs revolted and marched from camp to the studio over a dispute involving sausages.

42024388521_9a0e2533d3_c.jpg

Looking back towards the studio over Bridge 1 from Nest 2

27153948297_bfbd5e2bf6_c.jpg

Halfway across Bridge 2

42024451381_71606ca66f_c.jpg

Nest 4 and Drawbridge from Bridge 3


To be continued...
 
Last edited:

TVurbex

TV Locations Aficionado
28DL Full Member
...Continued from above

Here, cables running across the bridges from the studio/control room to camp areas (‘Croc Creek’ and ‘Snake Rock’) connect to a junction box and run off in various directions across the jungle floor. Walking around this area, I find it odd to catch glimpses of the cables and other technical equipment running through such a wild and natural habitat.

42024457001_eef47fe6d8_z.jpg

Cables from bridges

28151128908_c6528202cb_c.jpg

Junction box

28151128138_b75d237e0a_c.jpg

Cables running through trees

41303984364_52ef1c9bc4_c.jpg

Kit box in small hut amongst trees


I head down a series of wooden steps, where the path is so overgrown in parts that it can barely be considered a path. It always astonishes me just how quick nature can take over a place, and I find myself constantly dusting off cobwebs and miscellaneous bugs as I anxiously fight my way through the undergrowth. Through a series of walkways protected by acoustic screens, I encounter camera hides, fake rocks, and wooden outbuildings...:

42024437431_a01f8b38fc_c.jpg

One of many backstage walkways - this one not particularly overgrown due to it being fenced and covered

41123678245_2c32087b30_c.jpg

Access to Camera Hide 7. Left: basket drop counterweight to enable food etc. to be lowered into camp


41303976504_cf8a63ab57_c.jpg

Rock facades disguising camera hide

40216449710_db703f1e11_c.jpg

Inside Camera Hide 8

41979428742_7708420e34_c.jpg

Medical hut


28151130438_08cf1c1eea_z.jpg
28151134768_4bc09025be_z.jpg

'Bush Telegraph' - external and internal

...before reaching the Snake Rock camp clearing itself:

41979420132_a83880bbff_c.jpg

Water pump

41303846184_7056148492_c.jpg

Clearing (note the camera hide in the 'rocks')

40216447710_9fa62dde24_c.jpg

Camp beds under tarpaulin

I head back uphill and make my way onto what is surprisingly the main production road on this side of the site. The locals refer to the area close to here along the Queensland/New South Wales border as ‘Suicide Hill’, and I can see why. The road itself is relatively flat but is built along a steep incline - it's also narrow, rocky, and on the edge of a sheer drop. A sign reads ‘DEAD SLOW’, which someone has fittingly altered to read ‘DEAD OR SLOW RIP’, and I'm thankful that I'm on foot and not in a vehicle.

27153962607_198fcd5062_c.jpg

Top of road with turning circle

41303961904_d267be2640_c.jpg

Bottom of road with warning sign


At the bottom of the road, I reach an area which was once the main part of the banana plantation but is now used for ‘bushtucker trials’:

40216365310_95ddb6f04c_c.jpg

'Hazardous waste landfill' trial

28151052758_e905000712_c.jpg

Clearing


40216367050_df6ea90def_c.jpg

'Frahm's Hole' German trial


28151035998_f35b1cc9b7_c.jpg

Various trial sets


As I continue along this path, the trees gradually become less dense. Back in the semi-open, the fear of an animal attack is no longer playing on my mind as it had been for the whole time I was trekking through the overgrown jungle. I'd not been constricted by a snake or bitten by a deadly spider and felt that the chances of such were low now that I was out of the bush.

Then out of nowhere, a herd of wild boar appear from the forest beside the ‘Celebrity Cyclone’ trial clearing. I know that they can be fierce and sometimes deadly, so I slowly make my way towards the set of the ‘Fright House’ trial – in my head thinking of ways that I might be able to climb it if I needed a sure-fire way to escape the boars.

The pack walk towards me, but seem more curious by the sight of a human than at all vicious, so I respect their territory and we peacefully part ways.

41303886824_94c1ce418d_c.jpg

Celebrity Cyclone and Fright House trials

41303844004_4aece647d7_c.jpg

One of the boars


Heading away from the friendly boars, I venture up ‘Zorb Hill’, which, as the name might suggest, is used for rolling the celebs down in plastic orbs for the entertainment of the British public. The top of the hill provides another rather beautiful view which I attempt to capture on camera but not quite to the same effect as viewing with the naked eye.

41303843464_eca0698f86_c.jpg

Bottom of Zorb Hill

At this point, I'm aching, sweating, tired, probably a bit dehydrated and covered in scratches, so accept this as my last photograph. There's undoubtedly more to see, but I'm still alive so decide to quit while I'm ahead and say to myself "I'm An Urban Explorer... Get Me Out Of Here!" :wanker

41303848414_a7a506d05e_z.jpg

View from top of Zorb Hill

This was perhaps my most irresponsible adventure to date, yet also the most fulfilling. To many, I've travelled over 10,000 miles to go and look at some portacabins, scaffolding and bits of plywood – but to me, it's the ultimate achievement – the pièce de résistance of TV set exploration, if you will (I will).

Thanks for reading if you made it to this point and hope you enjoyed! :thumb Full set of photos here.
 
Last edited:

Jack Wilkinson1

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
That looks brilliant mate! Personally I love the programme and watch it every year so I would loveto have a look round myself one day. Really nice work:thumb
 

catbalou

off the wall
Regular User
Thats fantastic that is, I hate the show, but its fascinating to see behind the scenes and the set up. Really enjoyed reading that..
 
Top