Sunday Territorian

LAUGHS IN LOCKDOWN

The ever-reliable Have You Been Paying Attention? won’t be paying any attention to sad news, writes James Wigney

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THE team behind the Logiehoggi­ng Have You Been Paying

Attention? faced something of a dilemma when it came to making this season.

How do you make a newscomedy-quiz show when there’s only one story dominating the headlines in Australia and around the world, and there’s nothing remotely funny about a global pandemic?

This time last year quiz master Tom Gleisner, regular panellists Ed Kavalee and Sam Pang and their revolving roster of comedian guests had the luxury of a federal election campaign – and they mined plenty of comedy gold from politician­s kissing babies and talking themselves into corners, as well as the often unintentio­nally hilarious outbursts from mavericks such as Bob Katter and Pauline Hanson.

Now they are dealing with a world reeling from the coronaviru­s, with a population learning to adjust to a life in lockdown, and living in fear of wrecked economies and the growing cost in human lives.

Gleisner says that while he and the team of researcher­s who scour headlines for the biggest stories of the past week acknowledg­e the grim realities of 2020, they have no place in a show that’s intended to bring laughter and levity to a Monday night.

“Clearly that’s not a side that’s of any use to us,” Gleisner says.

“But we did a show a few days after the hideous massacre in Christchur­ch in New Zealand – we just don’t ask questions about it. It’s an unstated arrangemen­t we have with our audience.

“We know this is a huge news story – we know that you know it’s a huge news story, but there’s no fun or comedy in it, and anything we said or did would be insensitiv­e, so let’s just move on and play the Pauline Hanson clip.

“So, of course, we’re not going to show casualty wards and that sort of grim side, but there is still plenty of stuff happening in the world for us to have fun with.

“News still goes on. Obviously it is heavily dominated by the pandemic, but there is still stuff to find good questions about.

“Now that celebritie­s have discovered TikTok there is plenty of options there. Donald Trump only has to wander into a rose garden and you know there is going to be material.”

Even as the situation worsened, and the government-mandated social distancing and self-isolation measures tightened, the HYBPA team was determined to forge on with this season.

As well they might – the show has been a consistent ratings success, and has won five Logies in three years in the comedy and entertainm­ent categories.

But in the current environmen­t, the usual format of Gleisner asking the questions and Pang and Kavalee sitting alongside three guest comedians coming up with answers and inventive ways to insult each other, and the host, was not going to work.

Their solution, like countless businesses right now, was to do the show remotely. While they missed the energy and interactio­n of their usual live audience, a trial run a few weeks ago with Gleisner in the studio and Pang, Kavalee and first-week guests Kitty Flanagan, Marty Sheargold and Urzila Carlson went well enough to suggest it would work for viewers at home too.

“We sort of did it like one of those bad Zoom meetings we have all sat through,” Gleisner says with a laugh.

“And we were actually very pleasantly surprised – it looked and sounded the same show that we love. Obviously there was the odd technical glitch – we’ve got to get Marty Sheargold off dial-up and on to something resembling broadband – but once we have got over that hurdle, I think we’ve got a show.

“People were having fun and turning on each other – and of course turning on me, which is a hallmark of the show. I think we all walked away feeling a lot more confident than we perhaps were when we went into it.”

Gleisner has been an integral part of the Australian comedy scene for more than 30 years, ever since he hooked up with long

time friends and colleagues Rob Sitch and Santo Cilauro while studying law at the University of Melbourne.

He was a key member of the

D- Generation and The Late Show, and then as a part of Working Dog production­s, which went on to produce TV hits including Frontline, All Aussie Adventures and Utopia, as well as films The

Castle and The Dish.

Having produced so many laughs for so many years, he says they are more important than ever right now, both as a coping mechanism and a desperatel­y needed point of connection.

“I think the connection is a good point,” he says.

“Ours is a familiar show with largely familiar faces, so in a point of time where people may be feeling isolated there is comfort in those shows that you can turn to for an hour or so and forget about the troubles of your world or the world in general.

“I think that’s important and I think we are seeing it in TV ratings in the last few weeks. We are watching a lot of TV and shows like MasterChef – which is our lead-in – are going through the roof. And I think that points to the fact that people want a break from the unrelentin­g reality of living through lockdown.”

HAVE YOU BEEN PAYING ATTENTION? 8.30PM, MONDAY, CHANNEL 10

 ??  ?? Joking around: Ed Kavalee, Tom Gleisner and Sam Pang return for a new season of HaveYouBee­nPayingAtt­ention?
Joking around: Ed Kavalee, Tom Gleisner and Sam Pang return for a new season of HaveYouBee­nPayingAtt­ention?

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