![]() During the show's third edition, there was a preference for serious entrants, as opposed to people trying for fun. The production company sold television rights for the show to Germany, Belgium and Switzerland in 1974, creating a possible audience of up to twenty million viewers. However, already during the first production, the TROS stated their interest to produce a second edition. The show failed in its objective completely, as all of the just fifteen contestants fell down in the water quite quickly with its winner noting a time of 1.82 seconds. The show was supposed to produce just one episode, recorded in Enkhuizen, which was to be aired on 22 June 1973 on Nederland 1, featuring people jumping of a six metres tall tower in the harbour of that town. The competition's main prizes were a holiday and the possibility to get a pilot's license. In this competition, participants were asked to try to break the world record in world's longest human flight. In April 1973, TROS, in collaboration with producer René Stokvis, launched a televised competition called Vlieg er eens uit. Polygoonjournaal on the second edition of Vlieg er eens uit in 1974. Until its end in 2011, it was one of the most popular television productions on the public broadcaster. From 1978 onwards, the show started to expand, adding new competition elements and rotating between cities. ![]() The show was initially branded as Vlieg er eens uit - a pun on the two sayings "ga er eens uit" ("go on holiday") and "uitvliegen" ("leave the nest") - between 19. Te land, ter zee en in de lucht ( On land, at sea and in the air) was the longest-running general amusement television show and game show of the Netherlands, originally broadcast by TROS. ![]() Te land, ter zee en in de lucht recording in Veurne, Belgium. ![]()
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