Canada's Handyman Challenge

Last updated
Canada's Handyman Challenge
Canada's Handyman Challenge, Season 2.png
Genre Reality competition
Presented by Jillian Harris (Season 1)
Jenn Robertson (Season 2)
Judges Mike Holmes
Bryan Baeumler
Scott McGillivray
Paul Lafrance
Country of originCanada
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons3
Production
Running time45 minutes
Original release
Network HGTV Canada
ReleaseJanuary 10, 2012 (2012-01-10) 
January 21, 2014 (2014-01-21)

Canada's Handyman Challenge is a Canadian reality game show. The series premiered on January 10, 2012, on HGTV Canada. Canada's Handyman Challenge is the successor to HGTV's previous series, Handyman Superstar Challenge, similar in format to the All American Handyman sister show.

Contents

Format

Canada's Handyman Challenge pits competitors against each other in a series of challenges meant to test their speed, expertise and precision. Contestants must complete tasks such as tiling a section of flooring, repairing a roof, or identifying a tool. Judges also evaluate their knowledge in question segments to test their knowledge of building codes, materials, and common measurements.

The show auditions competitors from across Canada before a final group of contestants compete in a series of handyman challenges for the title of Canada's Best Handyman and $25,000. Auditions held in Vancouver, Halifax, and Toronto included a challenge to create an item of the competitor's choice from single piece of plywood. Entrants made items ranging from a pinball machine to an old-fashioned bicycle. [1] [2]

Contestants range from artists to local handymen and part of the show's appeal is the range of talents the competitors bring to the challenges. [3] [4]

Personalities

Judges for the show are personalities from other HGTV home improvement shows. Season 1 judges included Mike Holmes, of Holmes on Homes and Holmes Inspection , Scott McGillivray of Income Property and Bryan Baeumler of House of Bryan . McGillivray and Baeumler returned as judges for the second season with the addition of Paul Lafrance of Decked Out . Holmes was a special guest judge for the finale episode of season 2. [5] [6]

Hosts for the show have been Jillian Harris (Season 1) and Jenn Robertson (Season 2).

Seasons

DebutEpisodesWinnerHostJudgesNotes
Season 1Tuesday January 10, 2012Mark Falvai [7]
Qualicum Beach, British Columbia
Jillian Harris Mike Holmes
Scott McGillivray
Bryan Baeumler
Season 2Tuesday January 22, 2013Maria Nestoras [8]
Hamilton, Ontario
Jennifer Robertson Scott McGillivray
Bryan Baeumler
Paul Lafrance
Season 3Tuesday January 21, 201410Brent Balluff
Coquitlam, BC
Jennifer Robertson Scott McGillivray
Bryan Baeumler
Paul Lafrance

Related Research Articles

<i>Canadian Idol</i> Television program

Canadian Idol is a Canadian reality television competition show which aired on CTV, based on the British show Pop Idol. The show was a competition to find the most talented young singer in Canada, and was hosted by Ben Mulroney. Jon Dore was the "roving reporter" for the first three seasons. Elena Juatco assumed the role for season four, Dave Kerr had the role in season five and Jully Black in season six.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mike Holmes</span> Canadian contractor, television host, and investor

Michael James Holmes is a Canadian builder/contractor, businessman, investor, television host, and philanthropist.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">HGTV (Canadian TV channel)</span> Canadian pay TV channel

HGTV is a Canadian English-language discretionary cable and satellite specialty channel owned as a joint venture between Corus Entertainment and Warner Bros. Discovery. HGTV broadcasts programs relating to real estate, home and garden design, and renovations.

The fifth season of Canadian Idol is the fifth installation of the Idol series in Canada. It was again hosted by Ben Mulroney, with Farley Flex, Jake Gold, Sass Jordan and Zack Werner all returning as judges. The show premiered on June 5, 2007, with a 90-minute episode. Voting began during the fourth week. New events introduced that season included the Help Idols build a house and the Kraft Confidential with David Kerr. The elimination song for this year was Walk on Home by Kalan Porter. The final episode of the season was broadcast on September 11, 2007, when Brian Melo was crowned Canadian Idol.

The sixth and final season of Canadian Idol is the sixth and final installation of the Idol series in Canada and premiered on June 3, 2008, on the CTV Television Network. It is again hosted by Ben Mulroney, with the addition of Jully Black as a special correspondent and general mentor to the contestants. Farley Flex, Jake Gold, Sass Jordan and Zack Werner all returned as judges. This season saw a number of major and minor show format changes in an effort to keep the franchise fresh and innovative. The final episode of the season, in which the Canadian Idol was crowned, aired on September 10, 2008. The winner of the sixth season was Theo Tams. The sixth season became the final season of Canadian Idol following its cancellation in 2009.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jillian Harris</span> Canadian television personality

Jillian Harris is a Canadian television personality. She is best known for appearing on the television series The Bachelor, The Bachelorette, and Love It or List It Vancouver. She has also appeared on Extreme Makeover: Home Edition, Canada's Handyman Challenge, and The Bachelorette Canada.

<i>Disaster DIY</i> Canadian television series

Disaster DIY is a show on HGTV Canada about "Do-It-Yourselfer"s who have failed at their own home renovations and are in desperate need of some on-the-job training. The host is Bryan Baeumler and it is directed by Craig Goodwill. The projects are located in the Greater Toronto Area. The show is produced by Si Entertainment.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bryan Baeumler</span> Canadian TV host

Bryan Baeumler is a Canadian television host on several HGTV/HGTV Canada shows. A former handyman and businessman, he translated those careers into a series of TV shows about home renovations in Canada and the U.S. as well as a hotel renovation in the Bahamas. He has won a Gemini Award for his hosting and has published a book on home renovations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Scott McGillivray</span> Contractor, entrepreneur, investor and television host

Scott McGillivray is a Canadian entrepreneur, investor, television host, author and educator.

<i>Canadas Worst Handyman</i> Canadian television series

Canada's Worst Handyman is a Canadian television series that aired on Discovery Channel Canada from March 13, 2006 to June 13, 2011. Based on a one-off 2004 episode of Britain's Worst DIYer, the show was produced by Proper Television, whose president, Guy O'Sullivan, was the director of the original Britain's Worst Driver series until its 2003 cancellation and shared its production with Canada's Worst Driver, including executive producer and host Andrew Younghusband. Like sister series Canada's Worst Driver, there have been similar adaptations in other English-speaking countries, in the United States in 2011, with America's 10 Worst DIYers and in Britain with a Britain's Worst 2005 spin-off series, Britain's Worst DIYer. Six seasons of the show have been completed. Throughout the show's five years on air, Younghusband remained in his role of being the only host of Canada's Worst Handyman and, like with Canada's Worst Driver, has appeared in every season. On January 10, 2013, the series' Facebook page posted a statement that the show is "on hiatus with an unknown date for relaunch." In June 2014, Discovery Channel Canada started canvassing for couples at www.badhandyman.ca. The new version of the show aired in 2015 under the title Blood, Sweat & Tools, featuring couples instead of individual handymen.

House of Bryan is a Canadian home renovation television series which premiered in 2010 on HGTV Canada. The show follows Bryan Baeumler, host of Disaster DIY and Leave It to Bryan, as he manages a team of professionals and apprentices build a house. The show is produced by Si Entertainment. House of Bryan 1 set an audience record for HGTV Canada, in April 2010.

All American Handyman is a HGTV reality competition show between a group of handymen and women. The show is hosted Molly Culver, and judged by Mike Holmes and Scott McGillivray. It is a spin-off of Handyman Superstar Challenge, with similar challenges. A revamped Handyman Superstar Challenge is based on All American Handyman, called Canada's Handyman Challenge.

Deck Wars is a 2011 Canadian television series, airing on HGTV. It is considered a sister series to Decked Out, and like Decked Out, stars Paul Lafrance and his deck building crew. Unlike its sister series, Deck Wars is a game show that pits two teams of contestants against each other in building a deck in two days with a common theme.

The second season of the Canadian reality competition show Top Chef Canada was broadcast on Food Network in Canada. It is a Canadian spin-off of Bravo's hit show Top Chef. In the first season, 16 chefs competed against each other in weekly challenges. The program took place in Toronto.

Paul Lafrance is a Canadian television personality on HGTV Canada. Born in Wimbledon, England, he is based in Pickering.

MasterChef Canada is a Canadian competitive cooking reality show, part of the MasterChef franchise, open to amateur home cooks across Canada. It premiered on CTV on January 20, 2014, and has since aired its seventh season. The show stars three judges: Claudio Aprile, Michael Bonacini and Alvin Leung. The show is produced by Endemol Shine International and Proper Television.

Home to Win is a Canadian home renovation reality television series, which premiered April 24, 2016 on HGTV Canada. The series features contractors and designers from all of the network's original productions collaborating on the renovation and design of a single "dream house", which will be awarded to a registered viewer at the end of the series. The series is also dubbed into the French language, and aired on the Canadian channel CASA as Maison à Gagner.

<i>Island of Bryan</i> Canadian reality television series

Island of Bryan is an HGTV Canada reality television series of renovation, home life, and business activities, premiering in Spring 2019. The show is similar to House of Bryan and Bryan Inc., two previous shows starring builder Bryan Baeumler, his wife Sarah, and their children; along with Bryan's apprentice Adam. The Baeumler family is renovating and restoring a tropical island beachfront resort, to operate as their own, that the Baeumler couple has bought by leveraging everything they have, and their financial safety net. The show was broadcast in the United States on HGTV USA as Renovation Island.

Bryan Inc. is a HGTV Canada home building, home renovation, business reality television, and homelife reality TV show. It focuses on the Baeumler family, and the construction business established by Bryan Baeumler, with his wife Sarah joining the business as a designer, to start on building new homes and buying older homes to flip and rebuild into premium properties to sell. Bryan Inc. is a follow-up to the HGTV Canada show House of Bryan, which followed the Baeumlers as they built various houses that they themselves would live in.

References

  1. "About the show". HGTV. Archived from the original on March 20, 2013. Retrieved March 1, 2013.
  2. "Handy Hopefuls Audition in Vancouver". BC Homes. Retrieved March 1, 2013.
  3. "Artist handy with a challenge". The Chronicle Herald. February 5, 2013. Retrieved March 1, 2013.
  4. "Local handyman representing the Valley on popular TV show". The Kings County Register. February 21, 2013. Retrieved March 1, 2013.
  5. "Canada's Handyman Challenge Season 2: Vancouver Audition Episode". VanCity Buzz. Retrieved March 1, 2013.
  6. "Hammer it Home at Auditions for Canada's Handyman Challenge". BCLiving. 2012. Archived from the original on December 24, 2012. Retrieved Mar 8, 2013.
  7. Brad Bird (February 23, 2012). "Falvai wins Handyman Challenge". Oceanside Star.[ permanent dead link ]
  8. Amy Kenny (February 26, 2013). "Hamilton's handywoman is tops on TV challenge". Hamilton Spectator.

See also