Sam-in-bin

Pop CultureJuly 8, 2016

Jane Yee on The Block: It’s week six and time to bin the cheaters

Sam-in-bin

Our resident Blockaholic Jane Yee recaps the highs and lows from week six of The Block NZ, including terrifying face cushions and some really cereal stuff.

It’s been a whopper week on The Block NZ as the contestants faced the daunting task of completing both the master bedroom and ensuite. Along with the regular excitement of falling behind schedule with waterproofing and tiling, week six brought us night after night of mid-level reality drama. There was a classic prank and a classic plank, cheaters were exposed and a rookie error sent Big Dyls into a doom spiral.

1) ROOM REVEAL

It was bloody close this week, due to all the living rooms being of similarly average quality. The judges decided The Dylsz’ huge couch was too inviting to ignore (and it would be bad telly if Niki and Tiff aced another room), so the Double D’s won the day and justice for unpainted barn doors the world over.

Dylsz winning room

2) BARNDOORGATE

Now that we’re six weeks in I feel like I’m somewhat of an expert on door related scandals, and barndoorgate had all the hallmarks of a classic. Two arch rivals at opposing ends of the style scale had  chosen a bespoke barn door as their living room secret weapon, each hoping it would give them the edge over the competition.

Come Sunday’s room reveal there was much-hyped promise of controversy and vitriol, but all we got was a slightly pissed off Big Dyls. The dispute fizzled out and everyone got on with their lives, except me.

Not My Jam
3) PRANK CALL

Loveable larrikins Sam and Emmett kicked off the week with prank calls to Courtney and Little Dylz. The aim was to keep the prankees on the line as long as possible while inviting them to become the face of an incredibly unrealistic sounding breakfast cereal.

Courtney wasn’t born yesterday and she cottoned on to the gag within half a minute. Little Dyls, however, was born yesterday and stayed on the line, keen to become King Crack ’n Jiggle. If I were to adopt a puppy, it would be Little Dyls.

Cereal

4) CHALLENGES

The game-changer challenge this week was another fine example of The Block production office making shit up as they go along. The challenge itself was pretty straightforward: contestants had to decorate cushions in the likeness of their teammate.

The prize? Well that’s where the intern got involved. Usually the winner of the game-changer would walk away with a Plus One point, but Emma and Courtney hadn’t played the last one so it wasn’t available.

However, the opportunity was there for the winning team to open their safe – unless that winning team was Sam and Emmett as they had already opened theirs in a previous challenge.

Finally, there was an appliance package up for grabs, though every team would get a package anyway – winning this challenge just meant you might end up with an extra blender or two.

Emmett won, so without the Plus One point and with no safe opening, all that fluffing about with cushions was for a slightly larger appliance package that will have zero influence on auction day. God I love these challenges.

Cushion

Monday’s episode saw the contestants leaping ottomans in the Freedom-Free-For-All. The challenge relied heavily on the teams’ familiarity with the store’s floor stock, which I’m sure was daunting for Niki and Tiff who have never set foot inside Freedom Furniture.

N+T confused
Still, as my mum would say, those girls could fall down a drain and come up with a five pound note (mum’s British). Wouldn’t you know it, they won the challenge. The prize was a futuristic robot splashback that you can watch the telly on. Niki and Tiff will have to put a barn door in their kitchen to hide it.

The third challenge this week was the now-classic Block NZ Plank Walk. Like all dedicated viewers of reality TV I often imagine what I would do if I were cast on the show, so this week I inevitably found myself googling “how to build a long strong plank”. All I got was a dodgy autofill and not a shred of information on plank-construction.

Google

When I do go on The Block I will certainly ensure I take a leaf out of Big Dyls’ book and bring my own hooded toddler towel.

Dyls towel

Emma and Courtney built the shortest plank but were the only team who managed to stay on, so by default they won their very first challenge. Bless.

5) BRING BACK GLYNN

Who the heck is this Michael guy, and what’s he doing with Glynn’s prongs? He’s handing out pre-line passes like it’s the 1990’s and something smells fishy.

Michael

I’m worried about Glynn. Did a moisture test up the road with a Real Housewife of Remuera get ugly? Here’s hoping I’ve got the wrong end of the prong and he’s simply on annual leave, letting out his curls on a sweet vaycay. Miss you Glynn.

Glyn

6) CHEATING SCANDAL

Last week Sam was caught on camera talking to a “just a friend” on the blower, and after realising he was being filmed he got more than a bit sheepish.

Sam on phone

Suspicions were aroused and next thing you know Mark Richardson was confronting Team Purps with some dodgy text messages. Turns out Sam and Emmett’s phone-a-friend was somewhat of a styling expert. Consulting with experts is not the done thing on a DIY show, as Big Dyls pointed out when he said “what does DIY stand for? Do. It. Yourself.”

Do It Yourself

The text evidence was damning, Mark didn’t want to go so far as to say it was cheating but a punishment was handed down nonetheless. Sam and Emmett were forced to gift their Kids Room winnings to the other teams. Envelope pushers they may be, but we all still love them a million times over because they’re downright adorable

Sam in bin

7) PITA AND THE PITS

In a moment of generosity – or sponsor obligation – Peter Wolfkamp decided to treat the teams and their tradies to a whole whack of Pita Pit this week. He got some promo staff from The Rock to carry it down the driveway, presumably because he’s still exhausted from making that condiment shelf a few weeks back.

As the Wolf sauntered down the driveway with his radio pals, my bored brain went to a weird place and pictured him as the lead singer of a covers band. I imagined he’d changed the spelling of his name to Pita and booked in a residency at The Poe under ‘Pita and the Pits’

Their signature hit?

Hungry like the wolf

8) NO MORE MR NICE DYLS (AGAIN)

Hate is a strong word, but if Dyls is not afraid to say “we’ve got balls and we’re using them,” on nationally telly, then he’s certainly not afraid to drop the H-bomb. After Niki and Tiff pipped team Dylsz at the post in the Freedom Free-For-All, a camera op hiding behind a wall of cushions caught Big D in an Ugly Kid Joe moment, spewing forth his true feelings about Team Yellow.

He hates them. Because they are winning. And he is 12.

Dyls hates N+T

Dyls’ hate confession was just the tip of the iceberg, things were about to get a whole lot worse. The Double D’s did an all-nighter hand-screwing gib to a weird shaped, very high ceiling. I don’t know much about building, but that shit looked like seriously hard work, even for two can-do blokes with giant biceps.

The next day, Wolfie discovered the lads had forgotten to install the second layer of insulation, meaning all that gib would have to come down. As a viewer I was selfishly excited. Big Dyls is not a cool, calm and collected kinda guy – the potential fallout from this error had me embarrassingly excited.

Dyls Darkness
The Dylsz were ordered to remove the gib and install insulation, which went down like a tonne of bricks. Big D was angry with himself for making such a stupid mistake, but he was also super dark on Wolfkamp. Just last week the pair were forming a firm builders bromance, but this week the love affair was over.

When the Wolf was unavailable to discuss The Dylsz’ ceiling woes because he was too busy being smug, Big Dyls completely lost the plot and shoved lots of stuff while emitting many profanities. Like any reasonable child would, Dyls immediately cancelled his fledgling friendship with the Wolf and swore to hold a grudge forever and ever, amen.

Dead to me

After swearing down the house, in a few minutes of the most amazing TV I’ve seen in a long long time, Dyls went silent. He blanked the Wolf, then turned up for a piece-to-camera but refused to speak. It was an exceptional display of intentional childish behaviour that had me thinking The Block NZ may well have just reached it’s peak.

Dyls not talking

Week six was a shocker for Dyls, but it was fantastic for me. Sadly I don’t have high hopes for next week. After all the drama and excitement of the last four episodes, the ‘will they complete the room?’ cliffhanger is a bit of a non-starter.

I’ll tune in on Sunday, because I have to, but I’ll probably borrow this face from Emma when I do.

Emma Face


The Block NZ airs Sunday 7pm and Mon-Wed at 7.30pm on TV3

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DAWSON’S CREEK: Pictured (left to right):  Joshua Jackson as Pacey Witter, Michelle Williams as Jennifer Lindley, James Van Der Beek as Dawson Leery, Kerr Smith as Jack McPhee, Katie Holmes as Joey Potter (Photo: © The WB / Andrew Eccles
DAWSON’S CREEK: Pictured (left to right): Joshua Jackson as Pacey Witter, Michelle Williams as Jennifer Lindley, James Van Der Beek as Dawson Leery, Kerr Smith as Jack McPhee, Katie Holmes as Joey Potter (Photo: © The WB / Andrew Eccles

Pop CultureJuly 7, 2016

Shut up, Dawson: Introducing the Dawson’s Creek rewatch drinking game

DAWSON’S CREEK: Pictured (left to right):  Joshua Jackson as Pacey Witter, Michelle Williams as Jennifer Lindley, James Van Der Beek as Dawson Leery, Kerr Smith as Jack McPhee, Katie Holmes as Joey Potter (Photo: © The WB / Andrew Eccles
DAWSON’S CREEK: Pictured (left to right): Joshua Jackson as Pacey Witter, Michelle Williams as Jennifer Lindley, James Van Der Beek as Dawson Leery, Kerr Smith as Jack McPhee, Katie Holmes as Joey Potter (Photo: © The WB / Andrew Eccles

At the start of the millennium Pete Douglas invented a drinking game to accompany his favourite emo teen drama, Dawson’s Creek. Years later, he sat down with a six-pack to see how it stacked up.

I remember reading about Dawson’s Creek before it even made it to New Zealand screens back in 1999. The show was promised as a kind of Party of Five or Beverly Hills 90210 on crack, with all the ridiculous age-inappropriate casting and risque plotlines of its predecessors, but emboldened by a new secret weapon – completely OTT dialogue.  

At the time I was a massive 20-year old dork. I was awkward with girls, a wearer of cream cargo pants, teal shirts and brown shoes, and overly sensitive to a fault. Naturally I loved the Creek, and if I’m honest it wasn’t even in an ironic way. I had a massive Katie Holmes crush, and that was a convenient excuse to watch, but really it was just the best kind of trashy TV available. A few years after Dawson’s peak popularity, a friend and I devised a set of rules as a flimsy excuse to continue watching the show. And thus was born the Dawson’s Creek drinking game…   

THE RULES

Single drink any time:

  • A bad song from the late 90’s/early 2000’s plays (I have to jump in here and note that someone has remarkably created a playlist of EVERY SONG FROM EVERY SEASON of Dawson’s here).
  • A bad double entendre is made.
  • Joey rows her boat on the creek.
  • Any cast member (OK – Joey) climbs the ladder to Dawson’s room.
  • A phrase no teenager would actually say is uttered by one of the teenagers.
  • A Steven Spielberg mention or reference occurs.
  • Joey’s upbringing or family is referred to as being tough/wrong side of the tracks, etc.
  • Jen’s fast-paced, promiscuous, city-slicker past in New York is referenced.
  • Jen and her Grams clash over religion.
  • A scene starts where one or more characters are wearing cargo shorts.
  • Two characters kiss.

Full vessel any time:

  • Anyone cries.
  • Anyone dies.
  • Anyone gets punched.
  • Two lead characters have sex.  

Easy right?! But how would it hold up on a rewatch, decades later? In order to recreate conditions of the time, I invested in a half dozen slightly warm Victoria Bitter stubbies and settled down in front of the TV, ready to play.  

THE GAME

Kicking things off with the pilot episode, and I’m instantly drinking  – Dawson and Joey are lying on a bed watching E.T. – one Spielberg reference done. After some idle chit chat about how it’s not a good idea for Joey to sleep over anymore, this phrase comes out of Joey’s mouth:

“I just think our emerging hormones are destined to alter our relationship and I’m just trying to limit the fallout”

… Said no actual teen ever. Drink. Dawson responds that they “can still remain friends despite any mounting sexual theretics.” Drink.  

Boom – into the theme song, I Don’t Want to Wait’ by Paula Cole. No question on the bad ’90s song drink here. Three minutes in and my initial veneer of confidence has been chinked by all the drinking of warm and quite bad Australian beer I’ve had to do thus far. In the next scene we are introduced to Pacey (the clown to Dawson’s earnest dork) and the gang meet Jen, who emerges in super slow-mo from a taxi to the quite creepy BoDeans song ‘Hey Pretty Girl’ (drink). Good lord, I’m gonna have to open more VB.  

While reflecting excitedly on having met Jen (Joey was there too – but in classic Y2K She’s All That style, she’s brunette and a tomboy, so no one has noticed she is attractive yet). Dawson and Pacey are shown running in cargo shorts. Pacey is even wearing white socks pulled up high to complete the look. DRINK.

This cargo/sock combo was a core part of my own personal brand cruising the bowling alleys and movie theatres of Auckland at the turn of the millennium, so I have another drink to congratulate myself on how far I’ve come. As if the cargo shorts weren’t enough, Dawson and Pacey find Mitch and Gail Leery, Dawson’s parents, pashing on the coffee table. Drink. After some awkward chat we cut to Joey rowing on the creek (drink).   

We’re only 12 bloody minutes into this thing when Sophie B Hawkins ‘As I Lay Me Down’ plays (drink). Dawson and Jen are up in conversation in Dawson’s room, and he exclaims that “all the mysteries to life’s questions can be found in a Spielberg movie”. DRINK! Meanwhile Joey climbs the ladder to Dawson’s room, before waiting for Jen to leave and hopping in. Drink.  

Jen has breakfast with Grams, where Grams refers to Joey as “the wrong element” which soundly slots into the narrative of Joey being from the wrong side of the tracks and gets a hearty drink. Then Jen and Grams have a clash on religion – plus Jen says “I don’t covet a religious God”. That’s one drink for the argument and one for the ridiculous way of saying she’s an atheist.  

dawsons
Cargo shorts! Drink!

Cut to Capeside High. Jen and Joey are talking and Jen wants to know why her Grams rags on her. “Pick a topic,” says Joey. “There’s my dad the imprisoned convict or my sister impregnated by her black boyfriend…” Drink. Later on we see Jen, Dawson and Joey chatting, where Dawson asks Jen to look the screenplay for his film – “Would you mind looking at act three? I’m having a climax issue.” Cue massive eye roll from both Joey and myself – at least Jo doesn’t have to drink more of this warm beer I’m struggling through.    

Less than half an hour into the show and Jen and Grams are clashing about church (drink) AGAIN. Jen doesn’t want to go, and Grams says she knows what happened in New York (drink). Jen says she will when Grams says the word penis. She mercifully doesn’t. Then we move to the Leery household where Dawson bemoans everyone’s obsession with sex in conversation with his dad. “If sex is so important than how come Spielberg has never had a sex scene in one of his movies?” Oh Dawson. Drink.  

Next we’re at the movies, and Pacey gets punched by the date of his English teacher who he is trying to seduce (I just didn’t see that coming – full vessel consume!). Luckily there’s some Joey and Dawson yelling at each other in simple non-Spielberg-laced terms to give me a breather and the chance to open yet another beer. We then cut to Dawson walking Jen home, and Jen talking about how things were not so great for her in New York (drink). I’m drunk.   

feature

When Dawson gets home Joey is sitting in his wardrobe (of course) and Dawson and Joey chat until the inevitable Spielberg reference comes from Joey this time: “Even Spielberg outgrew his Peter Pan syndrome.” Drink. Joey challenges Dawson on their ability to talk about anything. “How often do you walk your dog? You know what I mean.” (She means masturbation). “What time of day, how many times a week?” Drink. When Dawson can’t answer honestly we get Joey climbing down the ladder (drink) and running away crying (drink) to the sound of ‘I’ll Stand By You’ (DRINK).

I’m dead, but that’s not the end.     

As Joey starts rowing home (drink) she sees Dawson’s mum and her co-worker kissing (drink) and intrigue is set for the next episode. I’ve thrown down four beers in 44 minutes, and decide to stop.  

What a great show. Sure, maybe any show is good if you drink constantly through it – but it’s safe to say I’m hooked on the Creek once again. Now, where are my cargo shorts…

All seasons of Dawson’s Creek are currently streaming on Netflix