At the ARIA Awards in 2017, Lorde appears to be roleplaying her future in prison. (Photo by Zak Kaczmarek/Getty Images for ARIA)
At the ARIA Awards in 2017, Lorde appears to be roleplaying her future in prison. (Photo by Zak Kaczmarek/Getty Images for ARIA)

Pop CultureOctober 10, 2019

#FreeLorde: How Lorde’s songs warned us she was going to jail

At the ARIA Awards in 2017, Lorde appears to be roleplaying her future in prison. (Photo by Zak Kaczmarek/Getty Images for ARIA)
At the ARIA Awards in 2017, Lorde appears to be roleplaying her future in prison. (Photo by Zak Kaczmarek/Getty Images for ARIA)

New Zealand’s beloved singer-songwriter has been imprisoned for failing to finish school, prompting uproar across the internet. But we should have known it would come to this, writes senior crime correspondent Ernest Penman.

The internet has gone into overdrive this week following revelations, first reported by The Spinoff, that New Zealand prime minister Simon Bridges has imprisoned popular singer-songwriter Lorde. Her crime? Leaving school and not being in education. According to high level sources, Bridges, who is also chief prosecutor of the South Pacific idyll, is further considering charges of breaching New Zealand’s notorious and draconian ban on having a garden.

Lorde, whose real name is Ella Yelich-O’Connor and who is believed to have met Jacinda Ardern several times, is said to remain on remand and in isolation, in a glass box suspended above the stage at Mt Smart.

New Zealand premier Simon Bridges, pictured on the cover of his debut album, “I’m Going to Put Lorde in Jail if it’s the last thing I do”

But if Bridges thought Lorde fans would take this lying down, he was wrong. Or at least if they were lying down they were online and lying down, peppering the world wide web with demands to #FreeLorde.

But should we have known that Lorde would end up in prison one way or another? Did she prophesy her own incarceration? The answer can only be: yes she did.

In her breakout hit ‘Royals’, Lorde confesses, “I’m not proud of my address.” It’s the sort of thing you’d expect a high-security prisoner to say. Why? Because their address is a prison.

In the autobiographical song, she acknowledges “trashin’ the hotel room”, which is illegal. She says she’s been walking around in public with a “tiger on a gold leash”. Also illegal. Then comes a gobsmackingly audacious challenge to Bridges’ presidency. “Baby, I’ll rule,” she says, as if challenging him to chuck her in the gaol. “I’ll rule,” she repeats. Again: “I’ll rule.” And again: “I’ll rule.”

Incriminatingly, Lorde was involved the soundtrack for The Hunger Games, a documentary about murdering. Her central contribution was the song ‘Yellow Flicker Beat’. “YFB” is the airport code for the Canadian city town of Iqaluit – which translates from the local Inuit language to “place of many fish”. Fish, or “fresh fish”, is prison slang for new, first-time inmates. One of the scenes in the screenplay for the popular criminology film The Shawshank Redemption is even called “Fresh Fish”. Everyone in the world has seen The Shawshank Redemption at least twice on television, so it’s impossible that Lorde didn’t know what she was doing here.

Also, ‘Yellow Flicker Beat’ includes the words, “I got my fingers laced together and I made a little prison.”

On her debut album, which immediately precedes her sophomore album, Lorde covers the Replacements song ‘Swingin Party’. Of all the songs she could have chosen to cover (there are thousands of songs that have been written, perhaps tens of thousands), she opted for one that includes the lines, “Pass around the lampshade / There’ll be plenty enough room in jail”. And: “If being wrong’s a crime / I’m serving forever”.

You will be serving forever, CrimeLorde. Especially when they find out you did a song called ‘Homemade Dynamite’.

Once you’re awake to this theme in Lorde’s oeuvre you can see it’s everywhere. Such as:

  • Discussing “Writer in the Dark’ for a Spinoff podcast series, Lorde says of the song : “It’s not a police record.” Police are the organisation that arrest people in the leadup to getting put in jail.
  • ‘Million Dollar Bills’: great but were these declared for tax purposes?
  • It’s illegal just to hang your own stuff up in the Louvre.
  • The cover of Melodrama is a drawing of Lorde. ‘A Lorde drawn’ is an anagram of LAW AND ORDER.
  • There are a lot of references to killing in the song “400 Lux”. In New Zealand, it is against the law to kill other people.
  • ‘Pure Heroine’!!??
  • Her new recordings are routinely described as “releases”.

When you put it all together it does make quite a lot of sense for her to be in prison. But still #FreeLorde please.

Keep going!
Simon Dallow Tall Ships feature

Pop CultureOctober 9, 2019

This is the news, Simon Dallow, but not as you know it

Simon Dallow Tall Ships feature

Think the news is boring? Think again. Tara Ward discovered some snazzy graphics on 1 News and realises that TVNZ’s current affairs have been zhushed up beyond her wildest dreams.

The news. Who watches it? Who trusts it? Definitely not Trump and definitely not me, until the other day when I found myself in front of the old gogglebox at six in the evening. 1 News’ Simon Dallow and Wendy Petrie welcomed me with kind eyes and warm smiles, before hitting me with a barrage of depressing information. They calmly poured more and more newsy salt onto the open wound I fondly call ‘my soul’, and just as I remembered why I hated the news, something incredible happened.

Simon Dallow stood up, and the magic began.

Simon Dallow walked away from the safety of the news desk, like a captain abandoning his ship. Lights began to shimmer and fancy graphics appeared from nowhere. The studio suddenly transformed from a blank canvas into a visionary masterpiece, where stormy seas swamped Simon Dallow’s feet and lush native forests swayed in a fake breeze and entire solar systems appeared before our very eyes. Grinning politicians rose up from the floor and Silver Ferns burst into the room, balls flying everywhere. Simon Dallow! What the heck did you do?

What was I watching? This was a 1 News bulletin so beautiful it could have been hung in the Louvre. Newsflash, the news is not the news any more. It is a work of art, and Simon Dallow is the Mona Lisa.

Simon Dallow in Jurassic Park, apparently.

TVNZ have zhushed up their news with some augmented reality shenanigans, and frankly, it’s a joy to behold. I remember when the six o’clock weather report was mostly cardboard clouds stuck on with velcro dots, and now we’ve got newsreaders standing on enemy lines just to remind us that World War 1 finished. I don’t know how they do it, and I don’t want to know. All I know is that ten seconds ago Simon Dallow was reading the news and now he has actually landed on Mars.

Simon Dallow on Tatooine!

This visual symphony must remain forever shrouded in a pixellated curtain of mystery. Some people watch the news and reckon the world is going to hell in a handcart, but have they ever seen Simon Dallow face off with a MOTHERFORKING TANK before the first ad break?

Now THIS is the fucking news.

Simon Dallow with a tank!

This is the snazzy news, the jazzy news, the suck-on-this-Newshub-news, and you know what? I bloody love the news now. The world is Simon Dallow’s augmented reality oyster. Look! Here’s Simon Dallow at the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi!

Kapow! Here’s Simon Dallow on the Western Front!

Shazam! Here’s Simon Dallow in a galaxy far, far away!

Basically Simon Dallow is a superhero now and if you think that’s not true, I’m sorry but I SAW IT ON THE NEWS.

He might begin the bulletin with his sombre voice and serious face, but every night an augmented reality beast sits inside Simon Dallow, just waiting to be unleashed. Sometimes he even lets Wendy have a turn, so that one minute she’s explaining how Kiwibuild works and the next she’s standing on Chunuk Bair watching the ANZACs arrive.

Sure, she could have warned them they were landing on the wrong beach, but she was also due in the trenches in five minutes, so you know, lots to do.

I’m not sure Simon and Wendy are getting the danger money they deserve. Each night they have to burst through a vortex of time and space, enduring everything from tornadoes to rocketing petrol prices. They’re risking their lives for the nation, dodging cars that hoon across the studio and sidestepping planets that randomly swing into their orbit, just so us idiot New Zealanders are better informed. It’s worked a treat. Bless you, 1 News, for making the news fun again. War and famine have never looked so good.

You can watch the news at 6PM every night. That’s how it works.