The long-term Australian soap opera “Buren” will re-end his run, with the last episode scheduled to be broadcast in December 2025. The announcement will be saved barely two years after Amazon has saved the series of cancellation, making a bittersweet end the 40 -Years legacy of show.
The beloved series, which launched the careers of global superstars Kylie Minogue, Jason Donovan and Margot Robbie, has describes the lives and dramas of the fictional inhabitants of Erinborough of Melbourne since the founding.
Executive producer Jason Herbison recognized the recent successes of the show under the steward of Amazon, including consistent top 10 rankings in the UK and an Emmy nomination for the day in 2024 for Outstanding Daytime Series. “The audience around the world has loved and embraced and embraced for four decades,” said Herbison.
Despite the cancellation, Herbison remained optimistic about future possibilities for the residents of Ramsay Street. “We believe that in the future there are more stories about the inhabitants of Ramsay Street to tell,” he said, expressing gratitude to Amazon MGM studios for their role in bringing the iconic series to a new global audience.
The announcement was made through the official social media channels of the show, ending what a remarkable resurrection story was in the television history. “New episodes of the 40th birthday season will continue to be broadcast on Prime Video and ten four times a week until the end of the year, with all the big soapy turns that our viewers keep,” the “neighbors” handle Posted on X While he announced that the show “will rest from December 2025.”
In 2022 the series was canceled after 37 seasons. It was revived months later, finding a new house on Amazon’s Avod Service Freevee, who picked up the rights of the producer and distributor Fremantle van de Buren. Here is an in -depth piece about how the iconic show returned from the dead.
This second cancellation marks the conclusion of a series that is deeply embedded in the structure of international television culture, especially in Australia and the UK