The New Zealand Herald

Why children must never hold remote

Nothing more Kiwi than boring offspring senseless

- Matt Heath Listen to Matt Heath on the Radio Hauraki breakfast, 6am-10am weekdays

For years New Zealanders spent their evenings flicking through channels desperatel­y searching for something to watch. Hard-working Kiwis finally slumping on to the couch, only to be bogged down in remote control admin.

As we all know it’s impossible to find something that a man, a woman and two or more children agree on. So Kiwis just flicked and flicked and argued.

Thankfully things have changed. We have so many options now. So many platforms. So much informatio­n at our fingertips.

As a result we spend our evenings scrolling through Lightbox and Netflix menus looking for something to watch. Scrolling, scrolling and arguing.

Not because there’s nothing to see. There is so much good stuff across these great platforms.

The problem is children. We may love them dearly but they have terrible taste in television. They’re complete visual entertainm­ent idiots and yet they demand a say.

This week I was mid-debate with my kids about what we should watch when it struck me.

My dad never asked us for our viewing preference­s. He had an armchair we weren’t allowed to sit on and the right to walk in and change channels without consultati­on.

As a result I spent much of my childhood watching incredibly boring programmes. The news, political interviews and, worst of all, nature documentar­ies.

We would be trapped on the couch with nowhere to go. Read a book? Nah. Video games on another TV? In my dreams.

Turns out our dads were right and we should follow their lead. Instead of asking our kids what they want, force them to watch our crap.

In my case (just like my dad before me) my crap is documentar­ies. I love a good doco. Children on the other hand hate all documentar­ies and rightly so. No

one under 20 should be interested in the world.

Two great documentar­ies I have punished my precious little kids with lately. Get Me Roger Stone and The Lovers and the Despot both on Netflix. Bloody good docos with absolutely nothing in them for children.

Roger Stone is a freaky-looking, muscle-bound, old dandy of a swinger with Richard Nixon tattooed on his back. He’s been involved in some of the dirtiest tricks and immoral lobbying in American political history. Watergate, Bush’s Florida hanging chads and more recently inventing Trump. If it’s big, historical and political he’ll be pestering around up front when he should be in the background.

Have you ever felt like Trump doesn’t believe the things he says? Like he’s delivering slogans he’s been fed by a master manipulato­r? Well that might be because Roger Stone came up with pretty much everything Trump and his supporters chant. Well, he claims to have anyway.

Stone is not only evil, cynical and ruthless but also quite likable and funny which makes Get Me Roger Stone a great doco. You’ll love the entire 92 minutes. Your kids will hate it. Watching a weird old dude from another country talking historic politics is a child’s worst nightmare.

The Lovers and the Despot on Netflix is good too. Turns out dictator Kim Jong-il was a major movie geek in his day. He was also so completely crazy and powerful that he had his favourite director and actress kidnapped and brought to him in North Korea.

There he forced the ex-lovers to make movies. They became slaves with big budgets.

This tale of old movies, oppressed people, the world’s most dangerous cinefile and rekindled love will enthral you while stupefying your little ones. Win-win.

There are so many others readily available. Life Itself, OJ: Made In America, Amanda Knox, Blackfish, Exit Through the Gift Shop, David Bowie: Five Years, All This Mayhem, Pumping Iron, Montage of Heck, Oasis: Supersonic, Into the Inferno, Tickled, Weiner.

We all love our kids. But they live

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