Weekend Herald - Canvas

Entertainm­ent

Calum Henderson’s guide to staying in and staying entertaine­d during the lockdown

-

What are we going to do to pass the time? One idea is to sit (or lie) on the couch (or bed) and simply watch stuff. Here are some things that could fill the void of going out.

SPORT

These are desperate times for sports fans. Last weekend on Twitter I saw people watching Sky Sport’s full replay of the 2015 Cricket World Cup semi-final and tweeting about it as if it were live. That’s one option.

There are also heaps of season-long fly-on-the-wall documentar­y series to get stuck into. I recommend Sunderland ’Til I Die (Netflix), which follows one of England’s biggest football clubs through a couple of spectacula­rly, historical­ly unsuccessf­ul seasons. There’s also Cheer (Netflix), the All Or Nothing series (Amazon Prime Video) or Keeping the Faith: 25 Years With the Warriors (Neon).

DINING

If you miss going out to restaurant­s, it’s hard to say whether watching mouthwater­ing restaurant-based shows like Ugly Delicious or Chef’s Table (both Netflix) will make you feel better or much, much worse. What I can equivocall­y recommend is visiting the Bon Appetit Test Kitchen on Youtube.

If you’ve never visited the test kitchen before, prepare for some of the most comforting and wholesome content ever created. Start with It’s Alive with Brad, which is all about fermenting, then try Gourmet Makes, where Claire attempts to recreate famous snack foods from scratch. Soon you’ll know every member of the test kitchen by name (“Delany…”) and feel like you’re part of their perfect work family.

HANGING OUT

Speaking of work families, there’s no better time to revisit old faves — The Office (UK or US, both are good), Parks and Recreation, Brooklyn 99 — you know the ones. In the new season of Curb Your Enthusiasm (Neon), Larry opens a coffee shop. Why not?

If you want some new mates to hang out with, try Terrace House (Netflix), the Japanese reality series about young people living together that’s like a cute, non-confrontat­ional version of Love Island. Not only is it considerab­ly more relaxing to watch, the fact that it’s subtitled forces you to look at your phone less and we should probably all be looking at our phones less. Plus, there’s literally hundreds of hours of it to get through.

GIGS

To paraphrase another famous David (Brent): who says quarantine has to be depressing? With the Comedy Festival among the raft of cancellati­ons, innovative local funnymen Tim Batt and Guy Montgomery have launched a Facebook show called Happening, a low-budget online variety show that streams live from Batt’s garage. When I tuned in, Montgomery was talking about buying new undies — and it genuinely cheered me up to hear such inane chit-chat. Speaking of local comedy innovation­s, earlier this year Leigh “That Guy” Hart launched his own streaming platform, Moonflix. I thought it was a joke at first but it’s real — and you can go there to watch practicall­y everything he’s ever made — Moon TV, Late Night Big Breakfast, Screaming Reels and more, all for free.

DATING

You can still swipe your fingers to the bone during quarantine but you’re going to have to take a long raincheck on that drink. At least there’s still Netflix rom-coms (hot tip: Love, Rosie is out the gate) or anthology series Modern Love (Amazon Prime Video) to keep the romance alive.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Chef Martinez shows his stuff on Chef’s Table.
Chef Martinez shows his stuff on Chef’s Table.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand