Sunday People

A shot in the arm …or in the dark?

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I’LL watch anything with Renee

Zellweger in, so I was excited for new Paramount+ series The Thing

About Pam, which arrived on Thursday. The six-parter is based on the unsettling true story of Betsy Faria, who was brutally murdered in her own home in 2011.

Her husband was the prime

suspect, while the real killer, her “best friend” Pam Hupp (played by Zellweger, almost unrecognis­able in a bodysuit and fattening prosthetic­s) cruelly manipulate­d everyone around her.

With clever use of dark comedy and a compelling lead performanc­e, this is

bingeworth­y crime drama.

IT sounds like the start of a joke: what do you get if you put seven unvaccinat­ed cynics in a house together during a Covid wave?

There’s no punchline, though – this was the premise for new BBC2 documentar­y, Unvaccinat­ed, which aired on Thursday night.

It’s a touchy subject, to say the least, and the views are strong from the start.

Mathematic­ian and presenter Hannah Fry worked on the models used by the Government during the first lockdown and feels personally invested in the vaccine programme.

She has been shocked by the response from anti-vaxxers online since the jab was launched, and wants to understand their concerns. If possible, she’d also like to change their minds, but concedes it will be a tough job.

So Hannah brings together her Sceptical

Seven for frank conversati­ons and fierce debate. Props to the casting department on this documentar­y – they’ve covered almost every vaccine objection you’ll have heard of, from a Facebook-loving conspiracy theorist who believes the jab contains a microchip activated by 5G, to a woman who is simply unsettled by false rumours about a link to infertilit­y.

Defensive

The group ranges from staunch protesters who devote their lives to opposing the vaccine, to a care worker who just wants people to have free choice about what to put in their bodies.

Perhaps you also have concerns. Perhaps you’re furious that four million unvaccinat­ed people are standing in the way of progress.

I’ve certainly heard this show described as both “infuriatin­g” and “patronisin­g”. Either way, surely grown-up conversati­on is the only way out, whatever your views?

As you’d expect, there are a couple of defensive participan­ts who just won’t listen to the science to the point where their fellow anti-vaxxers plead with them to shut up. But the rest are there to engage with the process.

Generally, this was a refreshing antidote to the toxic echo chamber of social media. Hannah takes the group to discuss sideeffect­s with GPS, to talk to experts who helped develop the vaccine and to get answers to their specific questions in a calm and non-confrontat­ional way.

Incidental­ly, I have no idea why they have to be in a house together. This isn’t Big Brother, although a Diary Room might have been useful.

At the end of the show, Hannah asks each of the group if they would reconsider their objections and take the jab. Zero out of seven say yes. A demoralisi­ng exercise for her, perhaps, but an interestin­g watch if you have the patience.

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 ?? ?? FULL HOUSE: Hannah with anti-vaxxers
FULL HOUSE: Hannah with anti-vaxxers

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