The New Zealand Herald

SERIOUSLY FUNNY

-

Siena Yates The Project launches next week, but can it succeed where other current affairs shows have failed, asks The Project

Thomson is miming kayaking with a cheeky grin on his face, hunched over like a kid trying to hide what he’s up to from the teachers at school.

Except we’re not at school, we’re on the set of New Zealand’s version of while everyone around us is franticall­y trying to prepare for the show’s launch.

Sitting in the daily news meeting, Thomson’s just mashed up the word “canoe” with co-host Kanoa Lloyd’s name, dubbing her “Kanua — get it?”. It wasn’t Thomson’s strongest comedy moment but their fellow host, Jesse Mulligan, still laughed.

“Thank you for your support Jesse,” Thomson says across the table, with a serious nod.

Later, Lloyd a gets her own back by cutting off a joke with a tart: “Oh, so you’re trying to be funny, here?”

The boardroom — as it is wont to do — erupts with laughter.

Thomson, Mulligan and Lloyd haven’t been together as a team for long, but they’ve already reached a point where they’re sharing in-jokes, picking on each other and communicat­ing via silent glances across the table.

It’s this dynamic Three has hinged its hopes on.

Current affairs show started in Australia in 2009, where it has since garnered a loyal following — not to mention six Logie Awards (Australia’s version of the Emmys).

Now, following the loss of shows such as and Three has renewed its battle for 7pm ratings by creating a Kiwi version of the show, even bringing in its Australian creator and executive producer, Craig Campbell, to oversee things as they get up and running.

Campbell and his Australian team have shared everything the Kiwi crew need to succeed, from the show’s format to a couple of its producers, right down to the blueprints to build the same set.

So what’s the difference? Not a lot.

Kiwi executive producer, Jon Bridges, says it will have “the same vibe, the same philosophy, the same pace and the same polish” as its Aussie counterpar­t, focusing in on a “dinner-party conversati­on vibe”.

The Kiwi aspect will come from the cast, the writers and the pure Kiwi-ness of the stories.

The first story mentioned during my time on set involves a cat causing police to shut down a busy Auckland motorway and, while there are fears “we’re just saying, ‘Hey John Oliver, come and have another dig at New Zealand’,” it is one of those stories that makes you say, “Only in New Zealand”.

In the writers’ room, they all stand rather than sit as they nut out ideas. Writer and comedian Rhys Mathewson jokes: “Feel free to call us the funniest people in the country.”

That very much remains to be seen when launches on Monday, but either way, being funny isn’t all it takes.

Australia’s version of succeeds because of its balance between hard news, accessibil­ity and comedy gold.

While current affairs shows such as and have come under fire in Kiwi media for playing things too far on the light side, is looking to build its foundation­s on the middle ground.

“That’s something everyone in this building really wants to get right,” says Lloyd.

“We keep circling back to the ‘dinner party conversati­on’ idea because . . . that’s how humans interact with and relate to one another. I hope we’re kind of stepping down from that ‘news is the granddaddy, grand master’ pedestal, and just sitting down and having a conversati­on. We want to make that work.”

When Lloyd, Mulligan and Thomson were announced as hosts of the show there was some speculatio­n that, wedged between two of the country’s most prolific comedians, Lloyd would have to be the serious one, the voice of reason. But she rejects that completely.

“That thing of the girl sitting inbetween two guys being like, ‘Oh boys, don’t be silly’ — we’ve seen that and . . . it’s a tired archetype and I also don’t think it’s very honest,” she says, clearly irked by the notion.

“What we’re trying to do is be as honest as possible and if that’s me being silly or disagreein­g with them then that’s what we’ll go for, but I don’t want to just be a girl sitting in the middle of two guys laughing at their jokes or bringing the tone down going ‘sort it out, don’t be naughty’.

“I don’t think any of us wants me to be the boring, token girl.”

Likewise, despite consistent­ly being described as someone who “just walks into a room and people laugh and they don’t really know why”, Thomson may well be about to show his serious side.

In the two-week lead-up to the show’s launch, the crew are spending each day as if they’re already live — researchin­g, writing, rehearsing and getting in front of the cameras every day to create dummy episodes in an effort to smooth out kinks and get everyone familiar with how things run.

And during this Friday news meeting, Thomson is the only one with his laptop, furiously making notes and taking the task of joking more seriously than anyone I’ve ever seen.

“I’ll definitely be hitting the hard news.

“I’m really passionate about a lot of things — in the rehearsals, I kind of freaked myself out because I kind of attacked an interviewe­r — not physically or anything,” he laughs.

“But we were interviewi­ng someone and I got really worked up about it. So yeah, I’ve got a lot of opinions, I just happen to be a moron so when I do talk about them — I do say some quite silly stuff,” he jokes.

It’s like Lloyd says: “This show takes the news — sharing informatio­n and getting stuff right — seriously, but we don’t take ourselves seriously.”

With all the tools of their successful Aussie counterpar­ts,

NZ has little excuse for failure, but it will all hinge on the three hosts and whether they can achieve a balance yet to be struck on Kiwi TV.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand