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We Can Be Heroes: Finding the Australian of the Year

We Can Be Heroes: Finding the Australian of the Year (mostly known as The Nominees outside of Australia) is an Australian mockumentary miniseries starring and created and co-written by Chris Lilley and Ryan Shelton and directed by Matthew Saville.[1]

We Can Be Heroes: Finding the Australian of the Year
Genre
Created byChris Lilley
StarringChris Lilley
Narrated byJennifer Byrne
Theme music composerBryony Marks
Country of originAustralia
Original languageEnglish
No. of episodes6
Production
Executive producerBruce Kane
ProducerLaura Waters
Running time30 minutes
Production companyPrincess Pictures
Original release
NetworkABC
Release27 July (2005-07-27) –
31 August 2005 (2005-08-31)
Related

It follows the story of five unique Australians (all portrayed by Lilley), who have each made a large achievement and been nominated by friends and family for the Australian of the Year award.

It premiered on 27 July 2005, and concluded on 31 August 2005. It was shown on the ABC on Wednesday nights at 9:00pm. There are six episodes, with each episode running for 30 minutes. The show was broadcast in the United Kingdom on FX, in the United States on the Sundance Channel, and in Canada on The Comedy Network. In Australia, The Comedy Channel aired the series as part of their Aussie Gold block hosted by Frank Woodley.

The show won a Logie Award for most outstanding comedy and Chris Lilley won the Best New Talent Logie for his performance in the show.

Characters edit

All of the Australian of the Year nominees are played by Chris Lilley.

Daniel Sims edit

Daniel Sims lives in Dunt, South Australia, which is the only fictional location in We Can Be Heroes and is based on the town of Lara, Victoria. He is 17 years old, and largely a parody of rural, country people. He lives with his mother; his hearing impaired twin brother, Nathan; and his two younger brothers and a sister. His father died in a car crash many years ago.

Daniel was nominated for Australian of the Year for donating one of his eardrums to his near-deaf brother, Nathan (also played by Lilley). As he does not know sign language, Daniel uses different methods to talk to Nathan, such as screaming at him, or using coloured cards. These cards have different meanings, including "change the Xbox game" or "piss off".

Both Daniel and Nathan, as well as their friends, enjoy rapping and beatboxing. After his hearing was partially restored, Nathan's beatboxing skills improved greatly.

Daniel was a winner for the state finals, but he did not want to wear a suit or make a speech. However, he later changed his mind when he discovered he would be able to legally buy porn and fireworks in Canberra.

Daniel and his family, along with his mother's boyfriend, regularly feature in Lilley's series Angry Boys, which highlights the lives of the twins.

Ja'mie King edit

Ja'mie King lives in the North Shore of Sydney, New South Wales, but was born in South Africa. Ja'mie is a 16-year-old girl and has sponsored 85 Sudanese children for Global Vision (a fictional organisation parodying World Vision International), which gave her the National Record. Due to her work of raising money, Global Vision decided to make her the 'face' of their organisation. Ja'mie also does the 40 Hour Famine twice a week which she says not only helps raise money but "keeps [her] looking hot".

Ja'mie is the 'popular' girl in Year 11 at Hilford Girls' Grammar School, a private school on Sydney's North Shore. She and her group of three friends are very superficial, caring only about their looks. Ja'mie's friends all support her claims to have been in the finals of "Dolly Covergirl of the Year". Ja'mie serves as a parody of the stereotypical wealthy and snobby North Shore private school girl. Ja'mie and her friends enjoy sleepovers and gossiping, as well as modelling and the arts.

She is even featured in a school assembly to promote the work of Global Vision where she makes the school repeat after her in the Sudanese language what Sonali told her when they parted at the Detention centre where Sonali is staying. "Balumbo Shamanaka" when translated in English says 'You are very beautiful girl'. She scolds the school for misusing their money telling them that each dollar they do not donate equals one dead child, and that they should convert their school oval into a "mass grave" because of the money the school accumulated from food sales at the canteen.

Two weeks before the Australian of the Year finals, Ja'mie is informed that a flood has hit 'her' village, killing all but two of her Sudanese children. She displays apparent displeasure and is shown to have a very short temper when she argues with the manager of Global Vision and then accuses her mother of not offering her support.

In the episodes, we are shown one of the Sudanese children she sponsored named Sonali. Sonali apparently has illegally entered Australia and is held at the Villawood Immigration Detention Centre. In one episode, Sonali apparently writes a letter to Ja'mie telling her that she is in Australia and asking Ja'mie to visit her. Ja'mie is sceptical at first but soon realises that this visit will bring a lot of media attention, so she invites one of her friends along because she 'is good at taking photos'. Ja'mie even takes Sonali along to Canberra for the finals and lends Sonali her Year 10 Formal dress to wear for the occasion.

Ja'mie appears in Chris Lilley's subsequent TV series Summer Heights High and Ja'mie: Private School Girl.

Pat Mullins edit

Pat Mullins lived in the suburb of Nollamara in Perth, Western Australia, was 47 years old, was married to Terry and was the mother of two children. As an adolescent, she developed skeletal dysplasia of the femur resulting in one leg being shorter than the other. In order to move around more quickly, she developed the ability to roll along the ground at high speeds.

Terry built Pat a training course, featuring various terrains and obstacles for her rolling. Her ambition was to roll from Perth to Uluru, although she experienced some injuries and setbacks during training, including having a gumnut lodged up her nose.

In the last episode, it was revealed that Pat died of liver cancer on 12 January 2006, 23 days after the announcement of Australian of the Year. She never completed her roll to Uluru.

Phil Olivetti edit

Phil Olivetti is the Queensland nominee, who in fact nominated himself for the award; he is a self-obsessed 37-year-old, from Bray Park in Brisbane. He used to work for the police force until he saved 9 children from an unsecured jumping castle that was about to crash into power lines. After that, he quit his job and tried to start a career in motivational speaking. He had plans to write an autobiography and sell merchandise. He soon became obsessive about winning the prestigious award, inviting a man on the judging panel to a barbecue to flaunt his Australian spirit and later attempt to bribe him unsuccessfully.

In the midst of his attempts to secure the award, he also tried to become involved in his son's Scouting troop through his motivational speaking course, which was based on how to deal with (unrealistic) emergency situations, such as escaping from Al Qaeda snipers. In his first and only demonstration, Phil attempted to show the troop what to do if stuck underneath a tree through the efforts of terrorists. A young boy named Jeremy volunteered to help Phil, but quickly regretted it when the tree's safety rope snapped, leaving him trapped and suffocating under the huge object. Phil tried to violently remove the tree only to inflict more pain on the scout and necessitate medical assistance. He then lamely comments that Jeremy was 'a wuss'.

Despite his enthusiasm, Phil was eventually informed that he had not made it into the state finals. In a fit of anger, embarrassment and possible denial, Phil lied about the situation to his family, leading to their going to Canberra regardless. When he tried to enter the finals, however, he was firmly asked to leave by security. His attempts to bribe the guards with a thousand dollars simply created an incident, causing his wife to expose his deceit. A bitter argument ensued ending with his family deserting him, leaving Phil to watch with utter contempt as the Queensland finalist was announced.

Three months after the announcement of Australian of the Year, Phil is still married and decided to quit motivational speaking and rejoined the police, but is also working on a miniseries about the jumping castle incident and other "situations" he got into, in which he will be played by Vince Colosimo.

As a reference to the film Chopper, Phil constantly compares Vince Colosimo to Eric Bana who was his on-screen rival in the film.

Ricky Wong edit

Ricky Wong is a 23-year-old Chinese physics student who lives in the suburb of Wheelers Hill, Melbourne, Victoria. He is often exuberant and tells his colleagues that "Physics is Phun" and that they are in the "Wong" laboratory. This is largely a vehicle for parodying the stereotypical "Chinese overachiever", or model migrant. He has achieved fame for his work in solar energy by developing a highly efficient solar energy panel, but his passion lies in acting. Ricky's dream is to become a professional actor. His father, however, does not want him acting and says that he should complete his physics degree after he finishes "Indigeridoo", a musical about indigenous Australians in which Ricky plays the main role: Walkabout Man. The production portrays many famous and well-known indigenous people, including Cathy Freeman, Deborah Mailman and Lionel Rose.

Once Ricky completed his PhD, he went to work for the CSIRO – his father had already secured him a job there. However, he soon became depressed, and much to his father's anger announced he was going to act full-time,

Episodes edit

# Episode title Written by Original air date
1"Episode 1"Chris Lilley27 July 2005 (2005-07-27)
An introduction to five unique Australians who have been nominated for the Australian of the Year Award. Phil, a rescue hero who saved nine children in a jumping castle accident, Ricky, a Chinese physics genius and aspiring actor, Ja’mie, a charity-minded schoolgirl who sponsors 85 Sudanese children, Daniel and Nathan, hearing impaired teenage twin farm boys embarking on a world first eardrum transplant, and Pat, a disabled suburban housewife turned elite athlete.
2"Episode 2"Chris Lilley3 August 2005 (2005-08-03)
Meet the friends and family of the five Australian of the Year nominees. Phil grapples with his newfound fame. Ja’mie has a sleepover with her friends. Ricky auditions for 'Indigeridoo'. Daniel and Nathan spend a day in Dunt. Pat begins planning her roll to Uluru.
3"Episode 3"Chris Lilley10 August 2005 (2005-08-10)
The nominees get a chance to demonstrate why they should be the Australian of the Year. Phil teaches rescue techniques to a scout group. Ja’mie goes to a detention centre to visit one of the girls she sponsors, who has moved to Australia. Ricky begins rehearsals for 'Indigeridoo'. Daniel shows a magazine journalist around the farm. Pat gets a gumnut wedged up her nose.
4"Episode 4"Chris Lilley17 August 2005 (2005-08-17)
The nominees face obstacles on their journey towards the Australian of the Year finals. Phil tries to bribe a judge on the selection committee. Ja’mie performs in a shock assembly presentation. Ricky tells his father that he intends to become an actor. Nathan refuses to thank Daniel for giving up his eardrum. Pat and Terry construct a protective dingo cage.
5"Episode 5"Chris Lilley24 August 2005 (2005-08-24)
State finalists are notified and the nominees wait for the important call. Ja’mie receives news that all her sponsor children have died. Phil is rejected as a finalist, but lies to his family about the result. Ricky has a teary farewell as he takes to the stage for the last time. Daniel refuses to go to Canberra, while Nathan joyfully tests his new hearing. Pat’s party is interrupted with devastating news from her doctor.
6"Episode 6"Chris Lilley31 August 2005 (2005-08-31)
The nominees head to Canberra for the Australian of the Year state finals. Ja’mie brings the Sudanese girl who moved to Australia to the awards. Daniel and Nathan are more interested in fireworks than the awards. Pat puts her illness aside and rubs shoulders with celebrities. Ricky gets the chance to meet Cathy Freeman. Phil has no invitation and tries to bribe his way into the awards. None of the five won the title. Three months later, we revisit the lives of our five nominees: Pat has died, Phil has rejoined the police.

Reception edit

The series was watched by an average of 749,000 per episode.[2]

Outside of the show edit

  • Some of the characters were interviewed on Triple J's Today Today show, by Chris Taylor and Craig Reucassel, portrayed as actual Australian of the Year candidates. Despite the fact they are obviously parodies, several listeners called in to complain about their attitudes, especially that of Ja'mie King.
  • Ja'mie King presented an ARIA Award for 'Highest Selling Single' to Anthony Callea with James Mathison in 2005.
  • Ricky Wong made an appearance at the Logie Awards in 2006. He sang a song from Indigeridoo with Cathy Freeman.

DVD release edit

We Can Be Heroes

Set details

Special features
  • 6 episodes
  • 1 disc set
  • 16:9 aspect ratio
  • Subtitles: yes
  • English (2.0 stereo)
  • Total running time: 164 minutes
  • 42 minutes of deleted scenes, bloopers and outtakes
Release dates
We Can Be Heroes Special Edition

Set details

Special features
  • 6 episodes
  • 2 disc set
  • 16:9 aspect ratio
  • Subtitles: yes
  • English (2.0 stereo)
  • Total running time: approx. 300 minutes
  • Features over 2 hours of bloopers and deleted scenes for each character
  • Behind-the-scenes documentary
  • Extended episodes
  • Cast audition tapes
  • Ricky's performance of "Indigeridoo" at the Logies
Release dates
  • Region 4 – 1 November 2006 (contains 28-page booklet)
  • Region 4 – 5 May 2011 (steelbook packaging; minus booklet)
  • Region 2 – 6 October 2008 (available in the Chris Lilley Series Collection box set, individual release Amazon.co.uk exclusive)
  • Region 1 – 4 December 2012 (HBO Home Entertainment)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ We Can Be Heroes (TV Series 2005), retrieved 24 November 2018
  2. ^ "In the Archive Australian Content on Television – Top-Rating Australian Comedy Series on Television, 2004–2009". Screen Australia. Retrieved 23 April 2019.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • We Can Be Heroes at IMDb  
  • Indigeridoo lyrics

heroes, finding, australian, year, mostly, known, nominees, outside, australia, australian, mockumentary, miniseries, starring, created, written, chris, lilley, ryan, shelton, directed, matthew, saville, genremockumentary, sitcomcreated, bychris, lilleystarrin. We Can Be Heroes Finding the Australian of the Year mostly known as The Nominees outside of Australia is an Australian mockumentary miniseries starring and created and co written by Chris Lilley and Ryan Shelton and directed by Matthew Saville 1 We Can Be Heroes Finding the Australian of the YearGenreMockumentary SitcomCreated byChris LilleyStarringChris LilleyNarrated byJennifer ByrneTheme music composerBryony MarksCountry of originAustraliaOriginal languageEnglishNo of episodes6ProductionExecutive producerBruce KaneProducerLaura WatersRunning time30 minutesProduction companyPrincess PicturesOriginal releaseNetworkABCRelease27 July 2005 07 27 31 August 2005 2005 08 31 RelatedSummer Heights High Ja mie Private School Girl Angry Boys It follows the story of five unique Australians all portrayed by Lilley who have each made a large achievement and been nominated by friends and family for the Australian of the Year award It premiered on 27 July 2005 and concluded on 31 August 2005 It was shown on the ABC on Wednesday nights at 9 00pm There are six episodes with each episode running for 30 minutes The show was broadcast in the United Kingdom on FX in the United States on the Sundance Channel and in Canada on The Comedy Network In Australia The Comedy Channel aired the series as part of their Aussie Gold block hosted by Frank Woodley The show won a Logie Award for most outstanding comedy and Chris Lilley won the Best New Talent Logie for his performance in the show Contents 1 Characters 1 1 Daniel Sims 1 2 Ja mie King 1 3 Pat Mullins 1 4 Phil Olivetti 1 5 Ricky Wong 2 Episodes 3 Reception 4 Outside of the show 5 DVD release 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksCharacters editAll of the Australian of the Year nominees are played by Chris Lilley Daniel Sims edit Daniel Sims lives in Dunt South Australia which is the only fictional location in We Can Be Heroes and is based on the town of Lara Victoria He is 17 years old and largely a parody of rural country people He lives with his mother his hearing impaired twin brother Nathan and his two younger brothers and a sister His father died in a car crash many years ago Daniel was nominated for Australian of the Year for donating one of his eardrums to his near deaf brother Nathan also played by Lilley As he does not know sign language Daniel uses different methods to talk to Nathan such as screaming at him or using coloured cards These cards have different meanings including change the Xbox game or piss off Both Daniel and Nathan as well as their friends enjoy rapping and beatboxing After his hearing was partially restored Nathan s beatboxing skills improved greatly Daniel was a winner for the state finals but he did not want to wear a suit or make a speech However he later changed his mind when he discovered he would be able to legally buy porn and fireworks in Canberra Daniel and his family along with his mother s boyfriend regularly feature in Lilley s series Angry Boys which highlights the lives of the twins Ja mie King edit Main article Ja mie King Ja mie King lives in the North Shore of Sydney New South Wales but was born in South Africa Ja mie is a 16 year old girl and has sponsored 85 Sudanese children for Global Vision a fictional organisation parodying World Vision International which gave her the National Record Due to her work of raising money Global Vision decided to make her the face of their organisation Ja mie also does the 40 Hour Famine twice a week which she says not only helps raise money but keeps her looking hot Ja mie is the popular girl in Year 11 at Hilford Girls Grammar School a private school on Sydney s North Shore She and her group of three friends are very superficial caring only about their looks Ja mie s friends all support her claims to have been in the finals of Dolly Covergirl of the Year Ja mie serves as a parody of the stereotypical wealthy and snobby North Shore private school girl Ja mie and her friends enjoy sleepovers and gossiping as well as modelling and the arts She is even featured in a school assembly to promote the work of Global Vision where she makes the school repeat after her in the Sudanese language what Sonali told her when they parted at the Detention centre where Sonali is staying Balumbo Shamanaka when translated in English says You are very beautiful girl She scolds the school for misusing their money telling them that each dollar they do not donate equals one dead child and that they should convert their school oval into a mass grave because of the money the school accumulated from food sales at the canteen Two weeks before the Australian of the Year finals Ja mie is informed that a flood has hit her village killing all but two of her Sudanese children She displays apparent displeasure and is shown to have a very short temper when she argues with the manager of Global Vision and then accuses her mother of not offering her support In the episodes we are shown one of the Sudanese children she sponsored named Sonali Sonali apparently has illegally entered Australia and is held at the Villawood Immigration Detention Centre In one episode Sonali apparently writes a letter to Ja mie telling her that she is in Australia and asking Ja mie to visit her Ja mie is sceptical at first but soon realises that this visit will bring a lot of media attention so she invites one of her friends along because she is good at taking photos Ja mie even takes Sonali along to Canberra for the finals and lends Sonali her Year 10 Formal dress to wear for the occasion Ja mie appears in Chris Lilley s subsequent TV series Summer Heights High and Ja mie Private School Girl Pat Mullins edit Pat Mullins lived in the suburb of Nollamara in Perth Western Australia was 47 years old was married to Terry and was the mother of two children As an adolescent she developed skeletal dysplasia of the femur resulting in one leg being shorter than the other In order to move around more quickly she developed the ability to roll along the ground at high speeds Terry built Pat a training course featuring various terrains and obstacles for her rolling Her ambition was to roll from Perth to Uluru although she experienced some injuries and setbacks during training including having a gumnut lodged up her nose In the last episode it was revealed that Pat died of liver cancer on 12 January 2006 23 days after the announcement of Australian of the Year She never completed her roll to Uluru Phil Olivetti edit Phil Olivetti is the Queensland nominee who in fact nominated himself for the award he is a self obsessed 37 year old from Bray Park in Brisbane He used to work for the police force until he saved 9 children from an unsecured jumping castle that was about to crash into power lines After that he quit his job and tried to start a career in motivational speaking He had plans to write an autobiography and sell merchandise He soon became obsessive about winning the prestigious award inviting a man on the judging panel to a barbecue to flaunt his Australian spirit and later attempt to bribe him unsuccessfully In the midst of his attempts to secure the award he also tried to become involved in his son s Scouting troop through his motivational speaking course which was based on how to deal with unrealistic emergency situations such as escaping from Al Qaeda snipers In his first and only demonstration Phil attempted to show the troop what to do if stuck underneath a tree through the efforts of terrorists A young boy named Jeremy volunteered to help Phil but quickly regretted it when the tree s safety rope snapped leaving him trapped and suffocating under the huge object Phil tried to violently remove the tree only to inflict more pain on the scout and necessitate medical assistance He then lamely comments that Jeremy was a wuss Despite his enthusiasm Phil was eventually informed that he had not made it into the state finals In a fit of anger embarrassment and possible denial Phil lied about the situation to his family leading to their going to Canberra regardless When he tried to enter the finals however he was firmly asked to leave by security His attempts to bribe the guards with a thousand dollars simply created an incident causing his wife to expose his deceit A bitter argument ensued ending with his family deserting him leaving Phil to watch with utter contempt as the Queensland finalist was announced Three months after the announcement of Australian of the Year Phil is still married and decided to quit motivational speaking and rejoined the police but is also working on a miniseries about the jumping castle incident and other situations he got into in which he will be played by Vince Colosimo As a reference to the film Chopper Phil constantly compares Vince Colosimo to Eric Bana who was his on screen rival in the film Ricky Wong edit Ricky Wong is a 23 year old Chinese physics student who lives in the suburb of Wheelers Hill Melbourne Victoria He is often exuberant and tells his colleagues that Physics is Phun and that they are in the Wong laboratory This is largely a vehicle for parodying the stereotypical Chinese overachiever or model migrant He has achieved fame for his work in solar energy by developing a highly efficient solar energy panel but his passion lies in acting Ricky s dream is to become a professional actor His father however does not want him acting and says that he should complete his physics degree after he finishes Indigeridoo a musical about indigenous Australians in which Ricky plays the main role Walkabout Man The production portrays many famous and well known indigenous people including Cathy Freeman Deborah Mailman and Lionel Rose Once Ricky completed his PhD he went to work for the CSIRO his father had already secured him a job there However he soon became depressed and much to his father s anger announced he was going to act full time Episodes edit Episode title Written by Original air date1 Episode 1 Chris Lilley27 July 2005 2005 07 27 An introduction to five unique Australians who have been nominated for the Australian of the Year Award Phil a rescue hero who saved nine children in a jumping castle accident Ricky a Chinese physics genius and aspiring actor Ja mie a charity minded schoolgirl who sponsors 85 Sudanese children Daniel and Nathan hearing impaired teenage twin farm boys embarking on a world first eardrum transplant and Pat a disabled suburban housewife turned elite athlete 2 Episode 2 Chris Lilley3 August 2005 2005 08 03 Meet the friends and family of the five Australian of the Year nominees Phil grapples with his newfound fame Ja mie has a sleepover with her friends Ricky auditions for Indigeridoo Daniel and Nathan spend a day in Dunt Pat begins planning her roll to Uluru 3 Episode 3 Chris Lilley10 August 2005 2005 08 10 The nominees get a chance to demonstrate why they should be the Australian of the Year Phil teaches rescue techniques to a scout group Ja mie goes to a detention centre to visit one of the girls she sponsors who has moved to Australia Ricky begins rehearsals for Indigeridoo Daniel shows a magazine journalist around the farm Pat gets a gumnut wedged up her nose 4 Episode 4 Chris Lilley17 August 2005 2005 08 17 The nominees face obstacles on their journey towards the Australian of the Year finals Phil tries to bribe a judge on the selection committee Ja mie performs in a shock assembly presentation Ricky tells his father that he intends to become an actor Nathan refuses to thank Daniel for giving up his eardrum Pat and Terry construct a protective dingo cage 5 Episode 5 Chris Lilley24 August 2005 2005 08 24 State finalists are notified and the nominees wait for the important call Ja mie receives news that all her sponsor children have died Phil is rejected as a finalist but lies to his family about the result Ricky has a teary farewell as he takes to the stage for the last time Daniel refuses to go to Canberra while Nathan joyfully tests his new hearing Pat s party is interrupted with devastating news from her doctor 6 Episode 6 Chris Lilley31 August 2005 2005 08 31 The nominees head to Canberra for the Australian of the Year state finals Ja mie brings the Sudanese girl who moved to Australia to the awards Daniel and Nathan are more interested in fireworks than the awards Pat puts her illness aside and rubs shoulders with celebrities Ricky gets the chance to meet Cathy Freeman Phil has no invitation and tries to bribe his way into the awards None of the five won the title Three months later we revisit the lives of our five nominees Pat has died Phil has rejoined the police Reception editThe series was watched by an average of 749 000 per episode 2 Outside of the show editSome of the characters were interviewed on Triple J s Today Today show by Chris Taylor and Craig Reucassel portrayed as actual Australian of the Year candidates Despite the fact they are obviously parodies several listeners called in to complain about their attitudes especially that of Ja mie King Ja mie King presented an ARIA Award for Highest Selling Single to Anthony Callea with James Mathison in 2005 Ricky Wong made an appearance at the Logie Awards in 2006 He sang a song from Indigeridoo with Cathy Freeman DVD release editWe Can Be Heroes Set details Special features 6 episodes 1 disc set 16 9 aspect ratio Subtitles yes English 2 0 stereo Total running time 164 minutes 42 minutes of deleted scenes bloopers and outtakes Release dates Region 4 1 September 2005 Region 2 1 November 2006 We Can Be Heroes Special Edition Set details Special features 6 episodes 2 disc set 16 9 aspect ratio Subtitles yes English 2 0 stereo Total running time approx 300 minutes Features over 2 hours of bloopers and deleted scenes for each character Behind the scenes documentary Extended episodes Cast audition tapes Ricky s performance of Indigeridoo at the Logies Release dates Region 4 1 November 2006 contains 28 page booklet Region 4 5 May 2011 steelbook packaging minus booklet Region 2 6 October 2008 available in the Chris Lilley Series Collection box set individual release Amazon co uk exclusive Region 1 4 December 2012 HBO Home Entertainment See also editList of Australian television seriesReferences edit We Can Be Heroes TV Series 2005 retrieved 24 November 2018 In the Archive Australian Content on Television Top Rating Australian Comedy Series on Television 2004 2009 Screen Australia Retrieved 23 April 2019 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to We Can Be Heroes Finding the Australian of the Year nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to We Can Be Heroes Finding The Australian of the Year Official website We Can Be Heroes at IMDb nbsp Indigeridoo lyrics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title We Can Be Heroes Finding the Australian of the Year amp oldid 1204836533, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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