Miniland Coonabarabran TV advertisement
1989
Miniland Coonabarabran TV advertisement
1989
- NFSA ID92Q2CTXS
- TypeTelevision
- MediumMoving Image
- FormSeries
- GenresNews
- Year1989
It started off mini, it ended up huge. When Peter Zorgdrager began Miniland in a gravel pit in Western New South Wales, his first intention was to build a world in miniature, but he ran into problems when his pet peacocks started eating his creations. The peacocks didn’t have a chance with his next efforts: giant animatronic dinosaurs made on chicken-wire frames. Even though the scale of his brainchild had ballooned, Zorgdrager kept the name.
The park opened in 1969; this TV ad from 1989 shows why it became a favourite stop for road-tripping families. Miniland had clearly developed over the two decades: it now boasted a museum, a castle, electronic cars, BBQs, rowboats and a long metal slide (whose lack of safety barriers might give parents pause these days). The ad has a home-made feel that matches the adorable DIY vibe of the not-so-fearsome dinosaurs. The Brontosaurus dribbled real water into its pond; the Tyrannosaurus’ fearsome roar was based on a recording of a plastic lawnmower.
Miniland survived into the ’90s. After its closure the dinosaurs rusted in place until the whole site was razed by a bushfire in 2013. It’s remembered fondly by generations of children who begged their parents to stop there.
It started off mini, it ended up huge. When Peter Zorgdrager began Miniland in a gravel pit in Western New South Wales, his first intention was to build a world in miniature, but he ran into problems when his pet peacocks started eating his creations. The peacocks didn’t have a chance with his next efforts: giant animatronic dinosaurs made on chicken-wire frames. Even though the scale of his brainchild had ballooned, Zorgdrager kept the name.
The park opened in 1969; this TV ad from 1989 shows why it became a favourite stop for road-tripping families. Miniland had clearly developed over the two decades: it now boasted a museum, a castle, electronic cars, BBQs, rowboats and a long metal slide (whose lack of safety barriers might give parents pause these days). The ad has a home-made feel that matches the adorable DIY vibe of the not-so-fearsome dinosaurs. The Brontosaurus dribbled real water into its pond; the Tyrannosaurus’ fearsome roar was based on a recording of a plastic lawnmower.
Miniland survived into the ’90s. After its closure the dinosaurs rusted in place until the whole site was razed by a bushfire in 2013. It’s remembered fondly by generations of children who begged their parents to stop there.
- NFSA ID92Q2CTXS
- TypeTelevision
- MediumMoving Image
- FormSeries
- GenresNews
- Year1989
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