The New Zealand Herald

60 years of NZ TV

These are the TV moments that defined us, writes Karl Puschmann

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HISTORY DOES

not record the name of the person who flicked the switch from the “Off” position to “On” 60 years ago and changed New Zealand forever.

We do, however, know other details. It was June 1, a Wednesday night, and fittingly, occurred smack-bang during prime time, 7.30pm. From a building in Shortland St — the name would later be made world famous in New Zealand when it was repurposed as the title for a soap opera in 1992 — our first official television transmissi­on had begun. Beaming out from downtown Auckland to unite the country.

A mere two hours later the first official television transmissi­on in New Zealand would cackle to a close. Leaving behind only static and a promise of the future.

For six weeks it carried on like that. Two transmissi­ons a week for two hours a pop. The following month, TV gave the people what they wanted: more. Broadcasts cranked up to a whopping four nights a week.

It seems so quaint. Ridiculous even. Here in 2020, we can watch damn near anything we want, whenever we want, for as long as we want, any time we want on any number of devices we own.

Was this revolution televised? Did I miss it? Because my first reaction to hearing that TV in New Zealand was turning 60 was one of disbelief. 60? Is that all? Are you sure? It feels like it should be much older.

“Yeah, I guess, 60 years is a reasonable stint though,” Kathryn Quirk from the online television web archive NZ On Screen says. “But I know what you’re saying. It’s television in New Zealand. Television was around in the world longer than 60 years.”

Quirk and her team at the site, which offers around 4000 local titles from the beginning to the present day all available for free streaming, are celebratin­g the milestone by releasing a collection of 60 defining moments in New Zealand television. It’s a celebratio­n of the serious and the silly side of our broadcasti­ng history.

“It wasn’t an easy task,” she says of curating 60 years down to 60 memorable moments.“When I first started the list it was pre-Christmas. It was quite hard. The original list happened over a matter of days and it’s been evolving since then. It’s changed again today actually.”

Her natural inclinatio­n was towards the lighter and funnier side of our viewing experience, mainly because that content is the most popular on the NZ On Screen website, and who doesn’t enjoy a good laugh. But she wanted the list to be well balanced and offer those serious, harder-hitting moments that can be considered pivotal in broadcasti­ng.

There also had to be room for

important milestones such as the introducti­on of colour TVs and the launch of TV3 in 1989.

“The list is not all instant gratificat­ion. Arguably, it should be in this day and age because that’s what everyone wants. But there’s deeper stuff in there as well. Given what we do as a site it seemed appropriat­e to recognise those moments as well,” she explains. “Hopefully I’ve got the mix right. There will be things in there where people go,‘Why is that on the list?’ But that will be different for different people.”

The hard part, she says, wasn’t making sure they had enough moments, nor was it narrowing an overflowin­g list down. The difficult part was not leaving anyone, or anything, off.

“Honestly, as recently as two weeks ago I went,‘Oh no, I left Billy T. James out!’,”she laughs.“How could I have done that?”

She’s laughing now, she wasn’t at the time. But she says she’s “relieved” they had time to catch any oversights before the full list goes live on site on Monday.

“There was no pressure because it’s fun. And we’re not positionin­g it as a definitive list. The collection will come out and there will be a dreadful oversight, I’m sure,” she smiles.“I hope not, but there may well be ... ”

That’s the other bit of important info. They haven’t compiled a ranked Top 60 countdown. Rather, it’s intended as a celebratio­n of television and the collective impact it’s had on our small nation. From Monday, you can vote for your favourite and be in to win $5000.

You’ll find significan­t and memorable moments from news and current affairs, light-ent programmes and even some TV commercial­s. Though, when you think memorable New Zealand television you don’t necessaril­y think of paid advertisin­g.

“No,” Quirk agrees.“But the older ones like Crumpy and Scotty are quite significan­t in television and the history of television. Ghost chips is another one. It would have been wrong not to have them in.

“At NZ on Screen we’re agnostic, we’re all about television not a particular broadcaste­r, and we’re about commercial­s too, to a point, because they are TV moments and they do resonate and have that longevity. They’re really popular content on our site so it seemed wrong to exclude them.”

Having spent months and months sorting through and viewing our history I wonder if she ever felt like she was living in the past.

“No, I love it,” she smiles. “Tapping the nostalgic veins is a really powerful thing to do. There’s some absolute gold, not just in this collection, but in a lot of the content we have on our site.”

But it’s not all bad haircuts and terrible fashion choices in the deep end of the NZ On Screen archives.

“You look at stuff from the 60s and 70s especially and you realise how little has changed,” Quirk sighs.“So much has changed and so little has changed. A lot of environmen­tal stuff, a lot of the things we are complainin­g about now were a problem in the 70s and we’ve done nothing. Nothing! I find it a really powerful thing to look back at.”

But that’s the past. What of the future? Where to for television from here? Life begins at 60? In this age of streaming and YouTube and TikTok, the blunt answer is probably not.

The humble TV still holds one ace, however, that not even the ever-increasing number of streaming outlets can match.

“Broadcast television can deliver to a broad audience and offer a shared viewing experience. So long as it has that point of difference it’s going to have a life because that’s really important for people,” Quirk says.

And while there’s more content available to watch now than ever before, she questions whether that volume is sustainabl­e or even desired.

“There’s only so many hours in the day,” she says.“You don’t want to spend them all with a screen in front of you.”

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