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Pop CultureJuly 25, 2019

Review: Have You Been Paying Attention NZ – the fast, funny rival to 7 Days

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Last night TVNZ2 premiered their own panel show, where comedians riff on news from around the country and the world. Sound familiar? Alex Casey reviews. 

I could only find one moment when Have You Been Paying Attention NZ took a breath last night. Guest quizmaster Ben Barrington, appearing for a special Shortland Street-themed round, was answering a question from host Hayley Sproull about his favourite day at work. He launched into a monologue about the mayhem of his very first day on set, being star struck by Chris Warner and then the surreality of watching it all on TV weeks later. 

I say monologue, it was probably about two or three sentences – but it felt like War and Peace compared to the quips that had whizzed around the studio up until that point. Sensing the sag, Urzila Carlson hit her contestant buzzer, cutting Barrington off mid sentence. “Are we doing a whole episode now?” she asked, getting a huge laugh from the studio, and a relieved croak-chortle from this frog sitting at home. 

To borrow a phrase from The Bachelor NZ‘s Jordan Mauger, Have You Been Paying Attention NZ did not come here to fuck spiders. Ploughing through rounds of news-based questions delivered at breakneck speed by Sproull to a keen panel of comedians, the energy stayed roughly as wired as Pax Assadi’s kid after eating a whole bag of gummy bears, her wide-eyed photograph shared in a sort of show and tell situation that opened the show. 

For an internet goblin who will pull out my phone at any lull in a TV show, movie, conversation, wedding or funeral, HYBPA worked hard to keep my focus. Hayley Sproull, already fronting the exceptionally good Golden Boy on Three, is invaluable as razor sharp host. “We would have accepted equal pay, but that’s cute” she sneered of the Support Women’s Sport Basin Reserve rename, later guessing that the Ranfurly Shield’s first female referee must be due to pay cuts. 

While those jokes sliced deep, Sproull similarly wasn’t afraid to play the fool. “C’mon Trump, call him by his full name: As Soon As Possible Rocky.”

Mixing panel stalwarts Urzila Carlson and Vaughan Smith with the more unruly likes of Brynley Stent, Tom Sainsbury and Pax Assadi made for a few golden moments. Stent feigned naivety at a sped up clip, noting earnestly that the camera man must have been running very fast. Assadi answered “what was Steve Hansen so happy about?” with a glassy-eyed “… rug…by?”. When pushed for more information, he offered “rug…by… ball?”

It feels like a bonus that HYBPA can afford to properly introduce the comedians, whether through sharing funny photos (not as lame as it sounds) or repeatedly roasting them for playing a slice of beetroot (not as funny as it sounds). It warmed up the show before the panel hit the ground running, and built up some goodwill for the fantastically stupid individual quiz round “Tour De France cyclist or Number One Shoe Warehouse Shoe” (Sfida Holly will surprise you). 

That said, the main bulk of the rounds, spanning world news, showbiz and sport, happened in a blur. An advantage to the speed was that dud jokes were gone before you’ve even had time to realise they were duds. Sadly, that also meant that the best moments weren’t always allowed the time to breathe. One of the more recent strengths of 7 Days has been its willingness to follow the likes of Dai Henwood when they barge off script, off format and sometimes even out of the studio. 

Of course, 7 Days has made hundreds of episodes and HYBPA has made one, so I will make like Ben Barrington and shut the hell up for now. I’m just excited to see all the ways the comedians will inevitably break through the rigid format, something there were glimmers of in episode one – if you didn’t make the mistake of blinking. 

Keep going!
Veronica knows – if it’s anywhere.
Veronica knows – if it’s anywhere.

Pop CultureJuly 25, 2019

Where can I watch the fourth season of Veronica Mars in New Zealand?

Veronica knows – if it’s anywhere.
Veronica knows – if it’s anywhere.

Sam Brooks embarks on a search to watch the much-hyped season four of Veronica Mars. For an update, scroll to the end of the piece to find out where you can watch.

The short answer to that question in the headline: You can’t. At least not legally.

The new season of Veronica Mars is not on Netflix, not on NEON, not on Lightbox, not on Amazon Prime, not on TVNZ (not even on Demand!), not anywhere. The Spinoff reached out to all these services, as well as Three, and received various phrasings of ‘Nope, sorry, no plans to pick it up either’ in return.

So if you want to watch it legally, book your plane tickets because you’re going to America to watch it on Hulu, baby.

In the days of yore, when you had to watch television on an actual television, it was common for a TV show not to make it to the Land of the Long White Cloud. But these days, if you’ve got the dosh to subscribe to four different streaming services, chances are you’ll find that show that everybody’s talking about on social media overseas.

Which is why it was so bizarre to find on Friday, when the fourth season of a much-loved television show dropped (albeit a week early), that I couldn’t watch it anywhere. Over the weekend, fans on Twitter were raving about the twists and turns of the season, and especially the ending. But if you were in New Zealand, don’t you dare think about (legally) participating in that conversation! Go watch Mean Mums, you Kiwis.

The Veronica Mars situation is a throwback to that time when New Zealand would get shows months, if not years, after the fact. The wait could be so long that a show might be cancelled before it even got its primetime premiere over here. I still have fond memories of the ridiculously lavish campaign that TV2, as it was then called, ran for LAX, a Heather Locklear show about Los Angeles Airport which by that point had already been put out of its misery after just eight episodes.

Another, more relevant example is the original three-season run of Veronica Mars. The show originally aired on UPN, a now-defunct TV network whose hits included Roswell, Star Trek: Enterprise, a lot of wrestling and, uh, Jake 2.0. Barely anybody watched those first two seasons of Veronica Mars, and when the network shuttered it was picked up by the CW, and ran for one troubled season.

But in New Zealand, Veronica Mars aired in a primetime slot on a Friday night – or at least the first season did. If you wanted to watch seasons 2 and 3, it meant spending your sunny Sunday afternoons indoors. But for that first season, the show was a genuine hit, and people loved it. I’d bet a not inconsiderable amount of money that I’ve talked to more fans of the show from New Zealand than I have from anywhere else, which is why it’s so surprising that no streaming service here has picked up the new season.

That’s especially so when you consider that the first three seasons are there to be watched on TVNZ OnDemand right now! And if you haven’t seen those three seasons, you really should. Veronica Mars, as a character, is one of the greats. She’s flawed without being monstrous, badass without being unrealistic, and has conflicts both internal and external that make her a genuinely compelling person to watch develop over three seasons. Plus, Kristen Bell’s performance is still, to this day, highly underrated and under-rewarded.

Which is all to say: Somebody buy this show now! You’ll get your money’s worth, I promise.

UPDATED: Neon has announced that they’re going to be receiving the fourth season of Veronica Mars for streaming on August 2, as well as seasons 1-3 and the 2014 film.