![]() ![]() “The whole getting the celebrities up randomly at two o’clock in the morning to give them a beasting is spot on. Listen to The Spill, where hosts Laura and Kee interview Erin McNaught on her near-death experience on SAS Australia. They do four weeks at least 'on the hills', which is essentially carrying a lot of kit, over a long distance, very quickly." "There will be a lot of sleep deprivation and physical excretion over extended periods. “The main agenda is to take you out of your comfort zone, a bit like they do on the show, where they can be challenged 24/7. What physically happens during the course? What’s the agenda? Watch: Why Candice Warner signed up for SAS Australia. And you go straight back to your normal life. The warm cuddly stuff post-VW never happens. "It’s a fairly decent adaptation of the selection process, but the key point of difference is that while the TV show is filmed over two weeks, the real SAS selection takes six months." So, what isn’t accurate about SAS Australia? Overall, do you think SAS Australia is an accurate portrayal of the SAS recruitment process? So Mamamia spoke to Officer X, who endured the Parachute Regiment recruitment scheme and served for the SAS, to find out how real life and reality TV really match up. But we really want to know exactly how similar it is… The show declares the tasks the celebrities are forced to face are pulled directly from SAS recruitment schemes (AKA the hardest and most brutal job application in the world). SAS Australia has been on our screens for a couple of weeks now and we would be lying if we said we haven’t revelled in watching celebrities get a ‘beasting’ from ex-Special Forces soldiers while covered head to toe in mud. ![]()
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