#094 Fiji: How Paradise Became a Reality TV Factory
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Fiji is often sold to global audiences as untouched paradise: blue water, remote beaches, romance, survival, and escape. But behind that fantasy is a highly organized production machine built from land leases, labor, tax incentives, government strategy, and international media demand.
This episode looks at how Fiji became one of the world’s most important hubs for reality television, especially through shows like Survivor and Love Island. What appears on screen as isolated wilderness is actually the product of complex logistics, local partnerships, Indigenous land arrangements, legal frameworks, and high-tech production infrastructure designed to make paradise repeatable.
We get into the tension between image and reality: economic opportunity, foreign media dependence, environmental pressure, cultural sovereignty, and the question of who benefits when a nation’s landscape becomes a global entertainment asset. This is a story about paradise as product — and the hidden systems that turn escape into industry.
Follow along for the next deep dive.
Stay curious.