Guardian Weekly

G’bye Erinsborough

On 18 March 1985, Australian viewers were introduced to a suburban cul-de-sac. Over the course of an unremarkable pilot, a noisy stag do disrupts the sleep of Ramsay Street residents and one of them decides to take matters into his own hands. Four months later, the show was cancelled and its network, Seven, destroyed all the sets to make sure it couldn’t be replicated.

But by 1986, Neighbours had been revived and rebuilt by rival studio Network Ten and had become a surprise hit in the UK. A daytime staple for students, the sun-kissed scandals of Ramsay Street lent an exotic glamour to the murky TV schedules of Coronation Street and EastEnders. Despite a declining viewership since its late-80s heyday, Neighbours became Australia’s longest-running soap, launching the careers of the likes of Kylie Minogue, Margot Robbie and Guy Pearce. As its final episodes air, after the UK’s

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