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How Roy and HG became national treasures


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Imagine a world where a world-class gymnast’s ceramic frog collection is more newsworthy than their gold medal. For nearly 40 years, the legendary Australian comedy duo Roy and HG—composed of Greig Pickhaver (H.G. Nelson) and John Doyle (Rampaging Roy Slavin)—have ruled the airwaves by "making the serious trivial and the trivial serious." In this episode of pplpod, we explore the enduring power of Satire through the lens of a duo that transformed from subversive radio voices into national treasures. We unpack the 22-year run of This Sporting Life, the longest-running program in Triple J history, and analyze how their alternative Olympic commentaries like The Dream fundamentally rearchitected how a nation consumed Australian Sport. By examining the "Smiggin' Holes" Olympic bid and their 1997 Logie win, we reveal the mechanical precision of a Deadpan act that never once winked at the camera. Join us as we navigate the transition from silhouettes on a screen to winning the People’s Choice Award at the Archibald Prize, proving that if you pretend to be a legend long enough, the establishment eventually hands you a trophy.

Key Topics Covered:

  • The Serious/Trivial Pivot: Analyzing the specific comedic formula that exposed the artificial stakes of the modern news cycle by inverting traditional priorities.
  • The Triple J Crucible: Deconstructing the 22-year tenure of This Sporting Life, a subversive program that became a fixture of the National Film and Sound Archive.
  • The Parallel Broadcast Universe: Exploring the "Ice Dream" and "Festival of the Boot" live commentaries, where viewers actively chose a fictionalized narrative over the official one.
  • The Smiggin' Holes Bid: A look at the 2002 Winter Olympics gag that utilized mock-serious slogans like "If you've got the polls, we've got the holes" to parody global sports diplomacy.
  • From Parody to Portrait: Analyzing the 2001 Archibald Prize victory, where a fine-art portrait of two fictional characters signaled their absorption into the national establishment.

Source credit: Research for this episode included Wikipedia articles accessed 3/16/2026. Wikipedia text is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0; content here is summarized/adapted in original wording for commentary and educational use.

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