| Asia Bagus | |
|---|---|
| Presented by | Najip Ali Tomoko Kadowaki  | 
| Country of origin | Singapore Indonesia Malaysia Japan  | 
| Production | |
| Running time | 30 minutes | 
| Original release | |
| Network | Japan - Fuji TV Indonesia - TVRI/RCTI Malaysia - TV3 Singapore - TCS Channel 5  | 
| Release | 1992 – 2000  | 
Asia Bagus! was a star-search program created by Fuji Television spanning from 1991 until 2000 to promote young up-and-coming performing artists in Asia. The show broadcast once a week throughout Indonesia, Singapore, Malaysia, Korea, Japan, Taiwan and Thailand. The prevailing champion over three shows went on to compete in a monthly run-off, while grand championships were held once a year. It was hosted by Tomoko Kadowaki and Najip Ali.[1][2]
The name Asia Bagus! was coined by a Malaysian marketing guru, Prof. Abdul Hamid Mohamed.
Fuji Television, asked me what would be a good name for an Asian got talent show. I said Asia Bagus!. They bought the idea, and I became one of the judges.
— Prof. Abdul Hamid Mohamed
The winners
| Year | Moment | Place | The Winner | Runner Up | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1992 | 1st Grand Championship | Tokyo, Japan | Krisdayanti from Indonesia
  | 
Dewi Yuliartiningsih (Dewi Gita) from Indonesia
  | 
| 1993 | 2nd Grand Championship | Tokyo, Japan | Sheikh Haikel & Ashidiq Ghazali (Construction Sight) from Singapore
  | 
Ninies Dian Ratnasari from Indonesia
  | 
| 1993 | 3rd Grand Championship | Tokyo, Japan | Amy Mastura from Malaysia
  | 
Erva Yudhisa from Indonesia
  | 
| 1994 | 4th Grand Championship | Tokyo, Japan | Nisa Lin from Taiwan
  | 
Prilianty Chintya Lamusu from Indonesia
 Tang Lai Ngor from Malaysia 
  | 
| 1995 | 5th Grand Championship | Jakarta, Indonesia | Tengku Shaharum from Malaysia
  | 
Imelda Raggilia from Indonesia
  | 
| 1996 | 6th Grand Championship | Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia | Miki Low Leang Cheng from Malaysia
  | 
Eka Mairina from Indonesia
 Akiyo Hoshino from Japan 
  | 
| 1997 | Best Of Asia Bagus | Tokyo, Japan | Krisdayanti from Indonesia 
  | 
- | 
| 1998 | 7th Grand Championship | Jakarta, Indonesia | Ida Satrianti (Atiek) from Indonesia
  | 
Ikema Akane from Japan
 Senno Haryo Hutomo from Indonesia 
  | 
| 1999 | 8th Grand Championship | Bali, Indonesia | Rio Febrian from Indonesia
  | 
Alyah from Malaysia
  | 
| 2000 | 9th Grand Championship | Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia | Caroline Gunawan (Alena) from Indonesia
  | 
Gail Satiawaki from Indonesia
 Jirayut Namkong from Thailand 
  | 
References
- ↑ "アジアバグース!". Fuji TV. Retrieved 2013-07-20.
 - ↑ Iwabuchi, Koichi (2002). Recentering Globalization: Popular Culture and Japanese Transnationalism. Duke University Press. pp. 100–100, 225. ISBN 0822384086.