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Rakett69 is an Estonian science competition show, broadcast by Estonian Television and funded by the Estonian Research Council.[1]
Rakett 69 | |
---|---|
Genre | Science Ultimate Edutainment |
Directed by | Indrek Simm |
Presented by | Season 1 - Jüri Muttika & Martha Piigli
Season 2 - Aigar Vaigu Season 3 - Aigar Vaigu |
Judges | Heli Lukner; Mart Noorma; Aigar Vaigu |
Narrated by | Erik Lill |
Theme music composer | Tauno Aints |
Country of origin | Estonia |
Original language | Estonian |
No. of seasons | 12 |
No. of episodes | 16 per season |
Production | |
Executive producer | Ylle Rajasaar |
Producer | Kaspar Kaljas |
Production locations | Tartu; Tallinn; Tapa Army Base; AHHAA |
Editors | Mirjam Matiisen; Heidi Hanso; Karin Martinson |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | Eesti Televisioon |
Release | January 15, 2011 present | –
European Broadcasting Union elected "Rakett69" as best educational TV show in Europe in spring 2012.[2] It also won the Estonian Science Communication Award in the same year.[3]
The objective of the program is to popularize the natural sciences in Estonia. The contestants run for the €10,000 scholarship to further pursue their career in their chosen field of science. The targeted audience of the program is 75,000 people.[4]
After a talent show, where each individual shows a bit of what they know, a panel of three judges chooses the few who are good enough to compete for the prize. The chosen contestants are initially divided into three teams, each with its own colour. In each episode the teams are given three assignments of varying difficulty, each with its own time limit. The judging panel awards points, depending on how well each team handled the assignments. The team with the fewest points at the end of the episode must vote a member out (technically, they vote for which team members they want to remain in the show). This goes on until there aren't enough contestants for three teams. The remaining contestants are divided into two teams and the show goes on, with the judges now deciding who remains from the losing team. When the contestants are down to three, they are split up and given neutral assistants to help them handle the assignments.
In the final, the remaining two contestants go head to head in some given theme to get the prize pool of €10,000.
Seasons
editSeason | Original run | Winner | Runner-up | Contestants |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | January 15 – May 7, 2011 | Juhan Koppel | Jaan-Eerik Past | 12 |
2 | January 7 – April 21, 2012 | Timothy Henry Charles Tamm | Kristiina Tüür | 15 |
3 | January 12 – April 27, 2013 | Reigo Kebja | Roland Matt | 15 |
4 | Thorny Valk | Janeli Õun | 15 | |
5 | Karl Reinkubjas | Kaarel Siimut | 15 | |
6 | Frida Laigu | Gregor Randla | 15 | |
7 | Karl Vilhelm Valter | Gert Lees | 15 | |
8 | January 6 - May 5, 2018 | Kadi Siigur | Viktoria Siigur | 15 |
References
edit- ^ The television series “At the Top of the Pyramid” and “Rocket 69”
- ^ EBU Eurovision TV Summit 2012 Nordic Focus Day Programme Archived 2012-05-29 at the Wayback Machine Page 7
- ^ Results of Estonian Science Communication Award 2012
- ^ Monitoring Policy and Research Activities on Science in Society in Europe (MASIS). National Report, Estonia. Archived 2013-12-24 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Official homepage