‘It's an opportunity to show some hope': Hit housing show finally lands in Australia
Like many young Australians, The Project panellist Georgie Tunny never expected to own a home. But that didn't stop her and her flatmates from obsessively watching the American reality series House Hunters, running since 1999 and more than 200 seasons, and its spin-off, House Hunters International.
These days, The Project panellist is happily installed in the Melbourne house she purchased in 2021 with her fiance, singer and actor Rob Mills, and feels qualified to narrate the inaugural House Hunters Australia on Ten.
'There's a script, but I can add my own little touch,' says Tunny. 'I have sat watching House Hunters on my couch and just essentially Goggleboxing what was going on. So this felt like that. I found it so fun.'
Like the original, the series follows prospective buyers as they are introduced to three listings in their desired location and price range. There's no obligation to buy, of course, but it boosts the feel-good factor if they can chant 'we bought a house!' in unison at episode's end. Much of the mild dramatic tension comes from style clashes, something to which Tunny could relate.
'Robert and I probably would have benefited from a show like House Hunters because it forces you to say exactly what you're looking for and be really upfront with each other,' she says.
'When we first started dating, Robert was into the Scandi vibe – minimalist, lots of blues and greys, not too much clutter. I am more of a maximalist when it comes to a house looking like it's been lived in. I don't want it to look like an art gallery. So we've been trying to find a middle ground. I'm introducing more colour to him – a lot more textures, and a lot more knick-knacks because I have a lot of stuff.'
Although they competed together in Ten's Amazing Race: Celebrity Edition, Tunny isn't sure they would actually make such a compatible team on House Hunters: 'I think we might have killed each other.'
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