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Pop CultureMarch 24, 2025

New to streaming: What to watch on Netflix NZ, Neon and more this week

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We round up everything coming to streaming services this week, including Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, Disney+, Apple TV+, ThreeNow, Neon and TVNZ+

If you like hardcore reality shows: Alone Australia (TVNZ+, March 26)

Alone Australia returns for a third season and if you thought the last two were tough, brace yourself. Set in the harsh wilderness of Tasmania’s West Coast Ranges, ten Bear Grylls-like survivalists isolated from each other and the outside world must bear the elements and fend for themselves. Equipped only with a few pre-approved items and a camera to self-document the experience, whoever can survive the longest wins the life-changing $250,000 grand prize. If you need someone to root for there’s Shay, the only Kiwi to feature in the otherwise all Aussie lineup. To him “tapping out is not an option… it might sound crazy, but I’m going to be there for 300 days.”

If you like a heartfelt dramedy: The Last Anniversary (ThreeNow, March 28)

Based on Liane Moriarty’s best-selling novel of the same name, The Last Anniversary follows Sophie Honeywell, a 39-year-old hopeless romantic who unexpectedly inherits a house from her ex-boyfriend’s great-aunt. Located on Scribbly Gum Island, a place of many secrets, Honeywell soon becomes enmeshed in a web of lies that involve the decades-old disappearance of a young couple and the matriarchs who for generations have called the island home. Like the silver screen adaptations of Moriarty’s Big Little Lies and Apples Never Fall, The Last Anniversary is sure to be a binge-worthy treat.

If you’re a film nerd: The Studio (Apple TV+, March 26)

Seth Rogen is Matt Remick, the newly appointed head of a flailing Hollywood legacy studio. Desperate to be liked by celebrities, Rogen and his team of eccentric executives must navigate corporate demands with their own creative ambitions as they try to make great art while generating billions of dollars. He’d rather focus on making the next Rosemary’s Baby or Annie Hall, but the self-sabotaging cinephile has to first turn the Kool-Aid IP into a smash-hit film like Barbie. Labelled as “2025’s best new show to date”, The Studio is tailor made for Letterboxd addicts and cringe-comedy enthusiasts. Oh! Yeah!

If you like devastating drama: The Sixth Commandment (Neon, March 27)

Across four heartbreaking episodes The Sixth Commandment harrowingly traces the manipulation and murder of Peter Farquhar by his young lover Benjamin Field. Set against the rolling hills of the English countryside this tragic true-crime tale is a rare thing in a genre known for grotesquely exploiting its real-life subjects, “intensely researched and forged with love and respect”. More interested in Field’s victims than Field himself, the show is no Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story. Rather, The Sixth Commandment is “as immaculate a piece of TV as you will ever see”.

If you love a stylish thriller: Holland (Prime Video, March 27)

In Mimi Cave‘s Holland, Nicole Kidman delivers another captivating performance as Nancy Vandergroot, a home economics teacher in a seemingly idyllic Midwestern town. The veneer of Kidman’s picture-perfect life soon begins to fall apart as the teacher turned amateur sleuth tumbles down a rabbit hole of infidelity and homicide. Described by one critic as a “beautifully composed portrait of the claustrophobia of suburbia and the darkness simmering underneath the niceties of the Midwest” Holland could be a spiritual sequel to Leave Her to Heaven or The Stepford Wives. Buckle yourself in for a wild ride through the uneasy streets of suburbia.

Pick of the Flicks: The Rule of Jenny Pen (Shudder, AMC+, March 28, in cinemas now)

Based on an Owen Marshall short story and directed by Kiwi James Ashcroft, The Rule of Jenny Pen is a psychological horror set within the claustrophobic confines of an un-luxurious aged care facility. Geoffrey Rush plays a dour retired judge who’s sent to the facility after suffering a debilitating stroke that left him partially paralysed. Like other residents, he’s soon caught in the malevolent crosshairs of the insidious John Lithgow and his creepy eyeless puppet. Described by The Spinoff’s Alex Casey as “the most brutal and bold local film in years” The Rule of Jenny Pen is not for the faint of heart.

The rest

Netflix

Chelsea Handler: The Feeling (March 25)

Caught (March 26)

Million Dollar Secret (March 26)

Gold & Greed: The Hunt for Fenn’s Treasure (March 27)

Survival of the Thickest: S2 (March 27)

The Lady’s Companion (March 28)

The Life List (March 28)

TVNZ+

My Wife, My Abuser: Caught On Camera (March 24)

Money Train (March 24)

A Few Good Men (March 25)

Mel Giedroyc: Unforgivable (March 26)

Alone Australia S3 (March 27)

Josie and the Pussycats (March 27)

7500 (March 27)

John Wayne Gacy: Devil in Disguise (March 28)

The Repair Shop (March 28)

Kung Fu Panda (March 28)

ThreeNow

The Last Anniversary (March 28)

Neon

Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (March 25)

Tish (March 25)

The Battle of Britain (March 26)

The Cleaning Lady S4 (March 26)

Bugs Bunny Builders S2 (March 26)

I Love A Mama’s Boy S3 (March 26)

The Crow (March 27)

Bloodline Killer (March 27)

The Sixth Commandment (March 27)

Paul American S1 (March 28)

Blind Fury (March 28)

Building Off The Grid S7 (March 29)

The Pagemaster (March 29)

The Forge (March 30)

Prime Video

The Fire Inside (March 24)

Holland (March 27)

Bosch: Legacy S3 (March 27)

The Crow (March 27)

Disney+

David Blaine: Do Not Attempt (March 24)

Alexander And The Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Road Trip (March 28)

Beyblade X (March 26)

Apple TV+

The Studio (March 26)

Side Quest (March 26)

Number One on the Call Sheet (March 28)

Acorn/AMC+/Shudder

The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon – The Book of Carol S2 (AMC+, March 27)

Love After Lockup S2 P2 (AMC+, March 27)

The Rule of Jenny Pen (Shudder, AMC+, March 28)

Arcadian (Shudder, AMC+, March 30)

DocPlay

Quant (March 27)

Cunningham (March 27)

collage of kim dotcom related images with the good times album cover in the middle
Good Times

Pop CultureMarch 22, 2025

Ten years ago, Kim Dotcom made an album. It was a disaster

collage of kim dotcom related images with the good times album cover in the middle
Good Times

It was called Good Times, but the journalist who wrote the definitive story says it was anything but.

This story was originally published on Chris Schulz’s Boiler Room Substack.

Read Hayden Donnell’s original 2015 story, The madness and mayhem of making Good Times, here.

There he was on Twitter, expressing opinions on video games and criminal cases and replying to Lorde. There he was at his Coatesville mansion, partying with fans and journalists who received secret passwords through direct messages over social media. There he was in the news, being covered by section editors for business, politics, court and the gossip pages – especially after his divorce from wife Mona Dotcom, a split he claimed left him “broke, destitute and penniless”.

In 2014, Kim Dotcom was everything, everywhere, all at once, about as ubiquitous as any public figure based in Aotearoa has ever been. “He was in the news all of the time,” says former NZ Herald journalist Hayden Donnell. “He was a big Twitter guy, and he was a huge news guy. It seems strange: he’s a fringe guy now. Back then … he was a big deal. If you go back to the homepages of websites around that time, it’s Kim Dotcom, always.”

Man in dark clothing, wearing glasses, stands in front of large windows with palm trees visible outside.
A 2014 NZ Herald headline featuring Kim Dotcom.

It’s true. In the midst of all of that coverage – the Coatesville mansion parties, the court cases, the Twitter beefs, the high-profile divorce, the political scandals, the launch and demise of the Internet Party, the raids on his home, the jet skis, the jet black outfits, the bright pink Cadillacs, that Vice documentary, the numberplate that said “God”, and that time he completely slaughtered me at Call of Duty – the Megaupload founder decided to do something he’d never done before.

Kim Dotcom made an album.

‘It’s got all the depth of a puddle’

Hayden Donnell is laughing so hard he nearly falls off his chair. He snorts, then runs off to pee. When he returns, he admits he’s been reading his own story on his phone in the toilet. “I can’t believe … that I was stupid enough to do it,” he says. These days, Donnell is a familiar voice from RNZ’s Mediawatch show and a regular contributor to The Spinoff. But back in 2014 he was a newly unemployed journalist attempting to scrape together a career and a living as a freelancer. “It seems like a big risk in retrospect. I guess I didn’t have much to lose at that point.”

In January of that year, Kim Dotcom released his album. Called Good Times, it was a mess, a 17-track album of generic Eurotrash beats and lame choruses. The songs were so out-of-step with anything going on in the current musical climate there was only one option for anyone tasked with reviewing it: complete and utter ridicule. “It’s going to be bad. Of course it’s going to be bad,” I wrote in my one-star review at the time. “What really surprises is just how awful Kim Dotcom’s Good Times really is.”

Dotcom’s album, agrees Donnell, became “a punchline”. “It’s got all the depth of a puddle,” he says. It’s true. On the song ‘Good Life’, Dotcom simply listed his favourite things: “Super yachts, fast cars, speed boats, caviar, private planes, helicopter, so insane.” On ‘Dance Dance Dance’, he creepily groans, “Hands in the air / Hands everywhere.” And on ‘Take Me Away,’ Dotcom gets his ex-wife to croon the hook. “Take me away / As fast as you can,” she sings, with seemingly little irony.

Donnell compares it to the kind of musical slop AI churns out these days. “There’s a deeply inhuman element to it,” he says. “It’s money thrown at a wall because Kim Dotcom wanted to be a musician. There’s nothing he really wants to say besides, ‘I’m wealthy and I wanna be a DJ.’”

Donnell thought there might be more to the “utterly sexless” album than a collection of pathetic dance songs. He’d received a tip, from The Spinoff founder Duncan Greive, who suggested many local musicians were involved in its creation, that the recording sessions were fraught, and that they might all be keen to talk. Greive suggested Donnell was the right person to start digging. “I really did launch into it with some vigour,” says Donnell. “Once I started I was surprised by how many of the people involved were willing to talk to me.”

Almost everyone talked: the owner of Roundhead Studios Neil Finn, late guitar legend Aaron Tokona, Kora’s Laughton Kora, and Loop record label owner Mikee Tucker. They spilled intimate details about the conditions the album was made in, the recording sessions that yielded dozens of songs all cut by Dotcom, and, crucially, what it was like being involved in Dotcom’s day-to-day orbit. Sometimes, it was savage. “We were fucked. We were so tired. And he came in and he went off at us like: ‘Why do I pay you?’” remembers one contributor to the album.

What Donnell uncovers remains among the finest pieces of music journalism produced in Aotearoa: allegations of tennis ball branding, of rampant racism including “racist days”, dwarf strippers and golliwog dolls, of aimless all-night recording sessions that would turn on a dime depending on Dotcom’s mood swings, and of a group of conflicted local musicians who were finally earning decent money yet making music they loathed.

A person smiling and holding an orange flower near their face. The background is white with the text "Good Times" in a playful font. There's also a box with the name "Kim Dotcom" in it. The image has a bright and cheerful theme.
This image was plastered on 80 buses around Auckland during the album’s release.

Dotcom pulled everyone together, including Tiki Taane, the Grammy Award-winning Black Eyed Peas collaborator Printz Board, and Roc Nation producer Deryk ‘Sleep Deez’ Mitchell, to make his album, on his schedule, with his money. According to court documents, he spent $1 million making it happen, an amount almost certainly more than any other record made in this country before – or since. “It reeks of obliviousness and out-of-touch wealth that allows someone to never come in contact with reality,” says Donnell.

His piece soon became about something more than the making of a truly terrible album. “In many ways, it’s about the isolating power of wealth,” he says. Donnell drilled into the stark differences between the local musicians being paid more money than they’d ever seen, and the incessant wants and needs of their demanding new boss. “It’s this collision of different lives, different levels of power, resourcing, and the kind of obliviousness that gave Kim Dotcom license to treat people in a way that you wouldn’t get away with if you weren’t in his position.”

Finally, at the end of 2014, after many interviews, an ultra-careful writing process, multiple rounds of edits, and lengthy discussions with Greive about just how far they could push the story, Donnell’s piece was ready to be published. Despite refusing his multiple interview requests, Dotcom would soon have something to say about it.

‘Media is under threat. Help save The Spinoff with an ongoing commitment to support our work.’
Duncan Greive
— Founder

‘Lorde tweeting about it was a pretty big deal’

It landed not with a bang – but with a whimper. At the beginning of 2015, Sonic Doom: The Madness and Mayhem of Making Good Times ran in 1972, a now-defunct in-house magazine published by the men’s fashion outlet Barkers being edited by Greive. Unlike today’s digital-first newsrooms, the story wasn’t available online. “People buying a suit jacket might read an intricately researched story on the making of Kim Dotcom’s album,” laughs Donnell about the strangeness of that situation.

He pushed for his story to be published online. In April, 2015, that happened when it was syndicated on the online publication The Pantograph Punch. That, says Donnell, is when it started gaining traction. “It did kick off,” he says. One day, he woke to notifications from Lorde who had been tweeting about it. Dotcom replied. That tweet no longer exists, but Donnell remembers Lorde saying something like, “This is fucked up,” and Dotcom replying, “Don’t believe everything you read or hear.” To date, it’s the only time Dotcom has interacted with Donnell about his story.

Greive remains proud of his role in the piece, and says lawyers were heavily involved over defamation fears. He persisted, feeling it was an important topic to cover because of Dotcom’s Megaupload legacy. “It was particularly fascinating because of the immense (and profoundly negative, in my view) impact he’d had on the music industry through Megaupload,” Greive told me. “The irony of him recycling that wealth into a tawdry vanity album remains extraordinary. It required someone with Hayden’s skill and persistence to build it out.”

It paid off. Donnell ended up winning a Voyager (now Canon) Media Award for the story, taking out the title of best arts and entertainment feature writer in 2016. It was, he says, his first proper feature, and it’s a high he’s been chasing ever since. Among all of his work, from trying to get things into Te Papa and deciphering whether a cafe full of people applauded Amanda Palmer, to his incisive coverage of traffic jams and housing problems in Auckland, Donnell ranks his Kim Dotcom investigation among his best work, second only to a successful hunt for the creator of the Kiwi onion dip.

The giant back-of-the-bus ads for the album have disappeared, and Dotcom has faded from the public eye, but Good Times is still available on streaming services. Spotify reports Dotcom receives 6,000 monthly listens, those tuning in finding one of the last remaining remnants of the time an internet mogul attempted to make an album using as many of Aotearoa’s finest musical resources as he could lure with his vast fortune.

Despite writing the definitive story on the subject, Donnell remains as perplexed by it now as he was back then. Constraints, he says, can help inform great art. “If there’s no structure because the resources are infinite and time is boundless, there’s no urgency there, and no coherent vision,” says Donnell. “Kim Dotcom clearly thought, ‘I’ll just pay musicians to work in separate rooms, come up with weird sounds and we’ll put them together in the studio, and that’s how you do music.’”

Like most people who push play, Donnell still hasn’t made it all the way through Good Times, because that album, from the making of it, to the music that made the final cut, was definitively not, in fact, a good time. “It’s a really tough listen,” says Donnell. “Like, obnoxiously bad.”