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Get ready to croc

‘Crocodile Hunter’ Steve Irwin’s family returns.

- By David Bauder

NEW YORK — Crikey! The Irwin family is returning to television’s Animal Planet, 11 years after the death of “The Crocodile Hunter” star and family patriarch Steve Irwin.

The network said Wednesday that Irwin’s widow, Terri, and children Bindi and Robert will reappear on Animal Planet starting next year. The family has carried on Steve’s conservati­on work in Australia, running a zoo and a wildlife preserve, and supporting projects that try to save endangered animals worldwide.

“It seemed like a really good time, since we do so many things together as a family,” Terri Irwin said in an interview from Australia.

It’s still not clear what form their Animal Planet work will take. The family and network are discussing several ideas for television and digital products, said Patrice Andrews, the network’s general manager.

“The Crocodile Hunter” aired on Animal Planet from 1996 to 2007. Irwin’s colorful personalit­y, seeming fearlessne­ss in wrestling dangerous animals and his Australian­isms — like the expression “crikey!” — made him a favorite.

“Steve was very much the face of our channel,” Andrews said. “People even today, in focus groups, bring up the impact of ‘The Crocodile Hunter.’”

Having such defining characters is becoming tougher and tougher for cable networks. Bringing back the Irwins is part of the network’s refocusing on animals, Andrews said. That may seem obvious for a network called Animal Planet, but in recent years the network drifted from that, even adopting the tagline “Surprising­ly Human.”

Currently, the network’s most popular series is “Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet,” with a new series focusing on animals at the Bronx Zoo also doing well.

Steve Irwin died, at age 44, in September 2006 while filming an underwater scene for a television series, when a stingray’s stinging barbs pierced his heart.

Since Bindi was 8 and Robert was 3 when their father died, Terri Irwin said her first responsibi­lity was raising them. Both grew up committed to the family business and haven’t been strangers to television: Bindi, now 19, won a “Dancing With the Stars” competitio­n in 2015, and Robert, who is 14, has appeared on “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon,” displaying animals.

“Grief is never something you get over,” she said. “You don’t wake up one morning and say, ‘I’ve conquered that. Now I’m moving on.’ It’s something that walks beside you every day. And if you can learn how to manage it and honor the person that you miss, you can take something that is incredibly sad and have some form of positivity. That’s kind of what we decided to do with Steve.”

Irwin said she’s tried to channel some of the competitiv­eness that she and Steve had as a couple, working to complete milestones on a 10-year business plan they wrote together shortly before he died.

Now they’re working on projects he hadn’t dreamed of, like making accommodat­ions for camping at their zoo, she said.

“I have friends who have lost husbands and have gone off and tried different things,” she said. “Nothing wrong with that. For us, conservati­on work isn’t just what we do. It’s who we are. It’s really defined us that this is what we’ve dedicated our lives to.”

 ?? AP ?? Members of the Irwin family — Robert, from left, Terri and Bindi — are returning to television’s Animal Planet 11 years after the death of “The Crocodile Hunter” Steve Irwin.
AP Members of the Irwin family — Robert, from left, Terri and Bindi — are returning to television’s Animal Planet 11 years after the death of “The Crocodile Hunter” Steve Irwin.

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