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The stars of 'Alaska Proof' source many of their ingredients from their surrounding wilderness.
The stars of 'Alaska Proof' source many of their ingredients from their surrounding wilderness. (Photo: Animal Planet)

‘Alaska Proof’ and the Unattainable Dream of Successful Booze TV

A few Alaskan outdoorsmen (and women) are trying to make distilling sexy enough for prime time. Have they figured out where everyone else has failed?

Published: 
Wide shot of shrimp boat on water.
(Photo: Animal Planet)

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In the yawning heap of lost hours that is modern reality TV, there is one industry that鈥檚 rarely acknowledged: the craft beer and spirits scene.听

Considering that alcohol fuels a good deal of reality TV drama (and qualifies as entertainment for many people in real life), that'ssurprising. As longtime industry veteran Vinnie Potestivo explains it: 鈥淯ltimately, TV programmers see alcohol as an option between red or white, clear or dark, and hot or cold,鈥 meaning they think the nuance doesn't translate. 鈥淭hey feel it鈥檚 not visual enough for television and that鈥檚 where alcohol, as a reality TV category, falls short.鈥澨

Potestivo is the founder of VPE Entertainment and has worked on successful shows like The Real Housewives of New Jersey. But none of the booze shows he's pitched have听been picked up. The last alcohol-based show to even make it onto the air听was 2010鈥檚 , featuring Dogfish Head Brewery, and it only lasted one month.听

Now, Animal Planet thinks it鈥檚 found the missing ingredient for making booze work on TV, and it鈥檚 almost too predictable: Alaska. The network鈥檚 newest show, , follows the adventures of Toby Foster, founder and CEO of , and his听crew of outdoorsy employees as they turn Alaska鈥檚 native ingredients into bottled-and-sold commodities. These guys aren鈥檛 just making vodka, they鈥檙e making smoked salmon vodka with fish they caught themselves. And they鈥檙e doing it against the stunning backdrop of America鈥檚 last real frontier.听

鈥淚t鈥檚 like a mad science experiment each week to figure out how to use the ingredients: Should we boil it? Grate it? It鈥檚 oddly satisfying to watch.鈥

The starring character of Alaska Proof really is the landscape. Each episode includes some sort of wanderlust-inducing charge into the great white wilderness as the characters gather wild Alaskan chaga (a rare mushroom), fireweed, glacier ice, or any other number of only-in-Alaska ingredients.

鈥淚鈥檝e got some really cool stuff to work with here,鈥 says Foster, a former bush pilot who traded wings for a still after surviving a plane crash. 鈥淚 was the first to make smoked salmon-flavored vodka, and the last one too. No one else has been brave鈥攐r stupid鈥攅nough,鈥 he jokes.听

It took Foster two years and 47 tries to get his smoked salmon vodka right. And the tinkering process is what drives the show. 鈥淚t鈥檚 kind of like a build show. It鈥檚 like a mad science experiment each week to figure out how to use the ingredients: Should we boil it? Grate it? It鈥檚 oddly satisfying to watch,鈥 says Keith Hoffman, the show鈥檚 executive producer. Hoffman was nervous at first about the fact it was a booze show, but he signed on once he met the characters, whom he describes as 鈥渁 little kooky.鈥

If there鈥檚 one thing American TV viewers currently want (at least, according to nearly every single TV producer), it鈥檚 kooky characters that live in remote places鈥攑referably the swamps of the south or the frozen tundra of the north. If we haven鈥檛 hit peak Alaska-reality-TV听yet, we鈥檙e probably close. Scott Lindquist, the master distiller for Alaska Distillery, says he even got blowback from friends weary of the on-the-fringes frontiersmen trope that permeates shows about the state. 听

But now he鈥檚 truly and indelibly part of it. On a recent episode, the crew is trying to make vodka underneath the northern lights. The top of the still bursts, and a tinfoil cap has to be stuffed into the hole. Lindquist says to the camera: 鈥淯sually no one gets to beat my still with any type of wood, but tonight I say beat it, and beat it hard.鈥 In that moment he鈥檚 exactly the character Hoffman was looking for鈥攌ooky, a touch fringe-y, and exactly the guy his friends love to hate.听

Will all of this听be enough to keep one of the few booze shows on the air? Since听Alaska Proof听has only aired听a handful of episodes so far, only time will tell.听Potestivo听points out one other crucial problem with shows like this: 鈥淏ig beer companies spend big bucks for TV ad time, so why would they support a program that ultimately competes with their product?鈥 These shows, he says, are like 30-minute endorsements of big booze鈥檚 small-but-mighty craft competitors.听Potestivo听has a point. Since the first episode of听Alaska Proof听aired, sales at the small distillery have jumped 10 percent and traffic to its website has gone through the roof. The company鈥檚 website received more than 9 million hits since the first episode aired on January 14, 2016.

Like Potestivo predicted, what makes the show worth watching isn鈥檛 seeing the still belch out a bottle of the good stuff. Instead, it鈥檚 the visual aspects, like witnessing the work that goes into sourcing each bottle. It鈥檚 watching the characters light up when they find the perfect mushroom or wildflower, and guiltily enjoying the mayhem when things go wrong. It鈥檚 having Alaska delivered in high-definition to your living room鈥攊deally enjoying it with a smoked salmon bloody mary in-hand.听

Alaska Proof airs Thursdays at 9 p.m. EST on Animal Planet.

Lead Photo: Animal Planet

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