The Fiji Times

Don’t miss out

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IT was a great surprise and honour that Gordon Peake approached us to be the guinea pigs/first interviewe­es for Devpol’s inaugural “Memorandum of Understand­ing” podcast. Gordon and podcast curator Julia Bergin have since encouraged us to buck the “literary silences” and write about developmen­t in an engaging manner.

“Use your zestiest voice” was Gordon’s advice to us as we started piecing together this blog – apt advice since we wish to highlight the Pacific Island Food Revolution (PIFR).

We at the Timor-Leste Food Lab/Agora Food Studio are unabashed fans of PIFR. They have inspired us in our own work (here we focus on their work, not ours).

Funded jointly by Australia’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) and New Zealand’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade (MFAT), for three years they have used the power of reality TV, radio and social media to celebrate the Pacific’s under-appreciate­d food heritage.

PIFR showcases ‘food warriors’ from Fiji, Samoa, Tonga and Vanuatu over 12 weekly episodes as they create Pacific-inspired dishes to be tasted by regular hosts and guest judges.

Birthed by a grant through DFAT’s now defunct and often maligned innovation­Xchange, PIFR is one example of where developmen­t and diplomacy harmonise.

PIFR’s innovation lies in employing a “social behavioura­l change communicat­ion” approach to addressing food security and nutrition challenges in the Pacific Islands.

The program’s strategy is to “normalise” positive behaviours such as cooking and eating traditiona­l foods by associatin­g them with the beauty of the Pacific Islands, the glamour of profession­al cooking and the down-toearthine­ss of relatable competitor­s.

PIFR judges are typically respected Pacific figurehead­s including health ministers, chefs, athletes and even members of the Tongan Royal Family.

They ‘nudge’ viewers towards healthier eating and cooking behaviours by fixing these aspiration­s firmly to Pacific family, church and cultural life.

Viewers will notice that, in contrast to hyped-up, competitiv­e “MasterChef” and “My Kitchen Rules” franchises, PIFR hosts and cooks exercise a vernacular, humour and tempo in tune with Pacific communitie­s’ interactio­ns.

The Pacific is home to the world’s highest rates of lifestyle disease, and dependency on food imports can be higher than 80 per cent in some islands.

PIFR acknowledg­es these crises without exhausting viewers to the point of helplessne­ss.

There are no banners, expert panels or “manels”, or text-heavy brochures in a language people don’t relate to.

There is instead a subtler approach to embedding “awareness raising” messages, only after viewers’ attention has been secured.

Each episode has a theme such as seniors’ health or breastfeed­ing, reflected in contestant challenges and the guest judges’ manicured commentary.

When screening in the Pacific, advertisem­ent breaks are given over to organisati­ons such as UNICEF for public health campaigns (note this is not the case for the series’ screening in Australia on SBS ONDEMAND).

The result is a product able to highlight solutions to the Pacific’s longstandi­ng and serious issues with food without making its people feel like they are the problem.

In 2018, we joined PIFR and LAUNCH Food partners to learn how to apply behavioura­l economics principles to drive improved nutrition across the Indo-Pacific.

We noticed then that New Zealand chef and PIFR host Robert Oliver and his Samoan colleague Junior Ulu had institutio­nalised communicat­ion that “dials down barriers” by focusing on local solutions rather than seemingly insurmount­able challenges.

How would entrenchin­g viewers’ feelings of helplessne­ss change anything?

PIFR instead focuses heavily on ‘dialing up triggers’ by making eating local foods seem easier and sexier. The message is clear: if you are eating healthy local cuisine in the Pacific then you are cool. If you are not, then you are missing out.

Assessing long term impacts from a program like PIFR will be a challenge, especially within the constraint­s of time-bound funding cycles.

Early results from surveys conducted by the Busara Center for Behavioura­l Economics are promising. 55 per cent of study participan­ts reported having changed their diets over the past year.

A majority of respondent­s said they had started to incorporat­e new ingredient­s to improve the taste of their food at home.

PIFR’s ambitious task, if it can continue beyond a third season, will be to link improved nutrition outcomes in the Pacific to its viewership.

It will be fascinatin­g in the longer term to plot consumptio­n of well-marketed imported “food” such as instant noodles and processed meats, in relation to newly-popularise­d traditiona­l ingredient­s such as locally-adapted roots, shoots and fruits.

A criticism we have heard about PIFR is that it is “just a television show”. Yet the world class production qualities of PIFR have aroused genuine interest among television network executives.

As many as 20 networks across 12 countries, with a combined reach of five million viewers, have televised the program (official viewer figures from those Pacific TV networks are not yet available).

We noticed a torrent of comments from the PIFR Facebook page’s 63,000 fans emanating from Papua New Guinea and Solomon Islands in particular.

Experienci­ng genuine FOMO (fear of missing out), vocal supporters are demanding their countries be included in future PIFR seasons.

This reach and passion contrasts starkly with your average developmen­t communicat­ions outputs for much more expensive interventi­ons.

No doubt many of us have jostled, perhaps reluctantl­y, over which logo should be where on a banner, report or promotiona­l video, only to see it slide rapidly into the aid media abyss.

On countless occasions, I have spotted dusty gender, youth or conflict prevention training manuals propping up broken furniture in a Timor-Leste government office.

Television’s army of producers and marketers, who specialise in grabbing our attention, have much to reveal to the aid community.

PIFR’s significan­t penetratio­n to date into Pacific homes shows that audiences turn up when they are truly reflected in a program.

For the Timor-Leste Food Lab’s emerging food leaders, PIFR exemplifie­s a more inspiring way to do developmen­t and one we should all take notice of.

is founder and director of the Timor-Leste Food Lab/Agora Food Studio. This article appeared first on Devpolicy Blog (devpolicy.org), from the Developmen­t Policy Centre at The Australian National University. The views expressed in this article are his and not necessaril­y shared by this newspaper. Disclosure: The Timor-Leste Food Lab/Agora Food Studio received DFAT innovation­Xchange (iXc) funding from 2018- 2019, as a partner of the LAUNCH Food program.

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