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Nurses, nurses everywhere (Design: Tina Tiller)
Nurses, nurses everywhere (Design: Tina Tiller)

Pop CultureAugust 4, 2022

Ten things Shortland Street has taught us about nursing

Nurses, nurses everywhere (Design: Tina Tiller)
Nurses, nurses everywhere (Design: Tina Tiller)

The government is set to collab with Shortland Street to promote nursing as a career. Tara Ward looks back at the main things the show has already taught us about the profession.

In a plot twist we didn’t see coming, health minister Andrew Little this week announced a variety of measures to address New Zealand’s health workforce issues – including the government partnering with long-running soap Shortland Street to encourage the recruitment of medical staff. As the country faces ongoing nursing shortages, Little said an agreement had been reached that would see Shortland Street “assist with promoting nursing as a fantastic career”.

While there are many reasons to applaud Shortland Street, the fact remains this is a hospital where the nurses (and all other staff, to be fair) are frequently very bad at their job. These people should be trusted with anybody’s health and wellbeing. They’re having affairs in exam rooms, they’re selling sex toys in the staffroom, they’re killing their patients – often on purpose. They’re out of control.

Shortland Street ex-nurse and murderer Carla with nurse Vincent, who dresses up as a clown in his spare time (Photo: South Pacific Pictures)

Ironically, one of Shortland Street’s current storylines is about the impact of a nursing shortage on the hospital, and the consequences of leaving an inexperienced nurse unsupervised. But desperate times call for desperate measures. In 30 years of extramural study at the Shortland Street School of Medicine, we’ve already been taught plenty of lessons about the realities of a nursing career.

1. Your mum will also get a job at the hospital and then steal your boyfriend

Think this sounds unlikely? Think again. This is exactly what happened to Ferndale nurse Tania Jeffries, who hooked up with gentle ambulance officer Ben, only for him to get the hots for her mum, Shortland Street receptionist Yvonne. Poor Tania had to watch her mother smooch a man half her age in the staffroom every day, until Ben died from being whacked in the head with a wrench while buying party ice. You’ve been warned. 

Get back to work (Photo: Supplied)

2. Your Christmas parties will be absolutely lethal (and not in a good way)

Shortland Street nurses spend their working days either trapped in the lift or avoiding helicopters crashing into the carpark, but their social life is like no other. From bomb explosions at the CEO’s bach to being hurt in a plane crash, nurses are guaranteed to have a memorable Christmas party – if you survive it, that is. 

3. Sometimes patients will park their vehicle in reception

If only Carmen Roberts knew about this work hazard before that fateful Christmas Day in 1995. When a Mack truck hooned into Shortland Street reception and killed nurse Carmen, Shortland Street staff learned that coming into the hospital on your day off can have fatal consequences. Carmen also once stole a winning Lotto ticket from a dead patient, but that probably had nothing to do with it. 

4. You’ll spend most of your shift pashing colleagues/patients/acquaintances in the supply cupboard

There isn’t a nurse in Ferndale who hasn’t got hot and heavy while restocking the sterile bandages. Should this type of multi-tasking be encouraged? Sure, why not. 

This should not be in the job description (Photo: Supplied)

5. You’ll become a suspect and/or victim in a serial killer investigation

Back in 2007, dorky nurse Joey Henderson caused mayhem as the Ferndale Strangler, a serial killer who knocked off several Ferndale locals, including nursing manager Brenda. She’d discovered the Ferndale Strangler’s true identity – she’d even made a spreadsheet about it – but Joey found her first. RIP, Excel queen. 

6. You’ll find out one of your workmates is actually your sibling

Shortland Street is packed to the proverbial rafters with secret siblings, and all nurses should automatically assume they are blood related to every single one of their colleagues. It happened to Morgan, who discovered her stalker Nicole was actually her half-sister, and then it happened to Nicole, who realised nurse Kate was also her sister.

7. You’ll probably join a cult

If it could happen to nurse Dawn, it could happen to anyone. One minute you’re doing obs in ED, the next you’re sleeping in a Followers of the Light tent and obeying the creepy orders of Munter from Outrageous Fortune. I’m sure it’s fine. Consider it off-site professional development.

8. You’ll pretend to be a patient to get pregnant with someone else’s triplets  

Look, you don’t have to do this, but it makes for a great story to tell the other nurse trainees. Morgan Braithwaite packed a lot into her medical career, including falling in love with a serial killer, impersonating a patient so she could get IVF treatment for surrogate triplets, and marrying Gerald Tippet so they could raise the trio of babes together. Commitment to healthcare? A+.

All in a day’s work (Photo: Supplied)

9. You’ll be kidnapped/held hostage in the elevator/an ambulance/hospital cafe

In 30 years of Shortland Street there have been at least four separate hostage situations and too many kidnappings to count. Never forget sweet nurse Wendy, killed in the line of duty during a hostage crisis in the hospital cafe. Wendy was a great nurse. She loved her kids, she loved a casserole. May she be resurrected to teach the nation both nursing and slow cooking skills.

10. You’ll end up marrying Chris Warner

Sorry, I don’t make the rules.

Shortland Street screens on TVNZ 2 at 7pm on weeknights, and on TVNZ+. 

Keep going!
Image: Tina Tiller
Image: Tina Tiller

Pop CultureAugust 3, 2022

Watching Love Island at the pub, reviewed

Image: Tina Tiller
Image: Tina Tiller

What’s it like to have all your wildest dreams come true? Alex Casey heads to a Britomart pub to find out. 

They say be careful what you wish for, but nothing could have prepared me for this. It was just over a month ago that The Spinoff published my impassioned plea to watch Love Island at the pub. Last night I was just a girl, sitting in a Britomart tavern, staring down multiple screens emblazoned with Love Island’s glittering heart in sand, wondering what kind of monster she had created. 

Luckily, if this season of Love Island has taught me anything, it’s how to turn any tricky situation into something joyful. If you accidentally lick a forbidden tit in Casa Amor, confess to it in such an absurd way that it becomes the defining moment of your existence. If someone hands you a screaming baby, simply chuck some lipstick and lashes on it and make it say “Heeeey boys”. 

And if you campaign online for Love Island to be screened in pubs, you best turn up expecting not to be able to hear a damn thing over a crowd that is, to use a phrase, “absolutely buzzing”. 

Basically the villa (Photo: Alex Casey)

The event itself had it all – heart-shaped lollipops, “LOVE” spelled out in rose gold helium balloons, “Ti Amo” and “It is what it is”-themed cocktails and even a spot prize where people would “get a text” if they won a big thing of fake tan. Upon arrival, a YouTube video of the Love Island theme tune glowed from every single screen, and the pizzas and nachos were rolling out of the kitchen smoother than a freshly shaved bum cheek. All this before the episode had even started.

Thankfully two of the most memorable moments of this, the season’s penultimate episode, were subtitled anyway, so it didn’t matter that the buzzing crowd of honeybunz drowned out Dami’s mumbles completely. Paige’s mum whispering that she was “not buying” Adam Collard’s schtick elicited a huge gasp from the room. When Davide spoke with his mother and sister in Italian about Ekin-Su, reminding them both that “lei è un’attrice” (“she’s an actress”), the whole room of Davide die-hards cracked up knowingly. 

The author laughing with all her new friends (Photo: Duncan Greive)

There were other great moments where the whole pub reacted en masse to a simple detail. When Luca’s father walked out wearing plastic fish shoes, there was an actual scream. When Ekin-Su’s brother swaggered out, there was a shared sharp intake of breath at the surprise hotness. And when Luca decided to pack a sad for the seven millionth time about the voting, the whole room rolled their eyes at once. “Ugh, here we fucking go,” groaned a woman nearby, taking a swig of beer. 

Look, I really don’t want to write a monocle-polishing thinkpiece about reclaiming space here, but there was something delightful about seeing a pub full of 98%* women publicly delighting in a private guilty pleasure. Halfway through the episode, two bombshell lads in their 20s walked in, both sporting slicked back hair, crisp hoodies under blazers, ready for a Big Tuesday. They immediately looked stunned by the screens and inquired at the bar about what tf was going on. 

“That’s buzzy” blazer number one said. “We’re going to have to sit here and watch Love Island?!” blazer number two laughed. The bombshells left the villa as quickly as they arrived. 

As the episode came to an end, another large group of men burst through the door. More bombshells. And just like Adam Collard himself, one of them had already been on our screens before. It was Steve from The Bachelorette, with a bunch of friends who all burst out laughing when I asked him where I recognised him from. Given that he was from the reality romance world, surely he would have wanted to watch Love Island at the pub? 

“Nah,” he scoffed. “I don’t watch that shit.”

*And Duncan Greive.


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The Love Island finale arrives today on Neon.