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Home / The Country

Hunters Club has US, Canada in its sights

By David Loughrey
Otago Daily Times·
9 Jul, 2018 06:00 PM3 mins to read

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The Hunters Club's stars include Sam Yule and Anto Hall. Photo / Supplied

The Hunters Club's stars include Sam Yule and Anto Hall. Photo / Supplied

A television hunting show featuring a Hamilton hunter is about to be exposed to millions of potential viewers in Canada and the United States.

The Hunters Club, featuring Hamilton's Andrew Alipate, Wanaka's Dan Curley, Dunedin's Sam Yule, Nelson's Tim Barnett and Queenstown man Anto Hall is about to start streaming on Amazon Prime Video.

Ninety-six million households subscribe to Amazon in the United States alone.

The show is in its fourth season, after being picked up early on by Sky Television and broadcast by the pay-TV provider and on Prime.

It is already broadcast in more than 20 countries, including Russia and France, and will air in 25 by the end of the year.

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Its cameraman and producer is Dave Shaw, who studied zoology and film at the University of Otago, and started off filming for Cow TV on Dunedin's Channel 9 (now Channel 39).

Mr Curley said the show began after he hosted The ITM Fishing Show's Matt Watson in Wanaka about four years ago, taking him fishing and hunting.

Mr Shaw was Mr Watson's camera operator, was impressed with what he saw and suggested they collaborate on a pilot episode of a new hunting show.

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A pilot was prepared, and was picked up by Sky TV.

"We're just about to air our fourth season, and it's just getting international traction," Mr Curley said.

The fourth series takes in hunting in areas including Perth River on the West Coast, Three Kings Islands, north of the North Island, the Chatham Islands and Stewart Island.

Mr Curley said hunting was sometimes poorly represented on television.

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"What we show is sustenance living, and truly selective hunting."

The hunters on the show would head into the bush for a week and leave perhaps 30 animals they saw, targeting just what they had come to hunt.

"The whole philosophy behind it is earning the right to take that animal.

Dan Curley
Dan Curley

"Immersing yourself in the outdoors, and respecting the outdoors is a massive part about it, as opposed to the kill, which is 1 per cent of the show."

While the Amazon move would mean a financial boost, all three Otago hunters had day jobs, Mr Curley said.

He was a land development consultant, Mr Yule was a builder and Mr Hall worked for the Queenstown Lakes District Council.

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However, the larger potential audience meant it would be easier to negotiate with sponsors, who would get a bigger reach.

It also meant there was more than just enjoyment to be taken from hunting expeditions.

"We most definitely get paid for what we do."

The fourth series of the show screens on Sky from July 16.

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