2020-03-07 New Zealand Listener

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MARCH 7 2020 LISTENER 67


LIFE UNDER LOCKDOWN:
News organisations often
rely on the storytelling
ability of ordinary citizens
to cover events in places
journalists can’t go, and
Britain’s Channel 4 News
has found an absolute gem
of a citizen correspond-
ent in Irish teacher Ben
Kavanagh, who posted
video diaries of life in locked-down Wuhan as
the effects of the Covid-19 coronavirus disease
became apparent. The channel has edited
together his dispatches, culminating in a 14-day
quarantine on British soil, into a 20-minute story
called Coronavirus & Me. Kavanagh is at turns
droll, pensive and stoic – his relief at reaching
safety and seeing his mother is tempered with
regret at leaving a life in Wuhan that he loved.
tinyurl.com/NZLKDiary

WUHAN DIARY: There are other Wuhan diaries,
including a series made by Chinese cinema-
tographer Hai Tang as he cared for his wife, an
emergency-room nurse who developed pneu-
monia after contracting the virus. The series has
been subtitled by a Western YouTube user and
it’s intimate and at times very moving – in epi-
sode six, he ventures out to get flowers for their
wedding anniversary. “I never really imagined it
would happen to us,” Tang tells the camera in
the first episode. “But now that it has happened,
I need to face this head on.” tinyurl.com/NZLTang

human-rights movement has


seen so much progress in the


space of 50 years,” says Firrell,


“but there is always more to


be done. How we think about


gender now will liberate – or


blight – people’s lives for the


next 50 years.”


WEDNESDAY MARCH 11

Tōku Whare Kōhanga Reo (Māori


TV, 8.30pm). Like Marae DIY,


but with kōhanga. Te Ataakura


Pewhairangi and Nathanial


Howe present this new series


in which language nests


around the country get a


spruce up. Some are hoping


the makeover will attract


new tamariki, others need to


expand because of demand.


The series begins at Te Kōhao o


te Ngīra in Hamilton, where
the roll has fallen to just 18
pupils.

THURSDAY MARCH 12
Lego Masters USA (Three,


  1. 3 0 p m). It began in Britain
    and it has been rolling around
    the world like a big rolly thing.
    Australia was first out of the
    blocks (sorry) with last year’s
    show hosted by Hamish Blake;
    the American version is hosted
    by none other than actor
    Will Arnett, the voice of Lego
    Batman, who is an executive
    producer along with Brad
    Pitt and his Plan B produc-
    tion company partners. The
    judges are Amy Corbett and
    Jamie Berard, both designers
    at Lego – Berard is famous for


Online by RUSSELL BROWN


Catch of the Week


of a mostly female group of


doctors in an underground


hospital to provide care for


the citizens of Eastern Ghouta,


a suburb of Damascus that


was reduced to rubble in


2013 by Syrian armed forces,


with Russian air support. It’s


confronting, especially in its


unflinching depiction of the


awful injuries suffered by


Ghouta’s children.


Not all reviewers have


applauded Fayyad’s focus on


injury and suffering. Writ-
ing for the AV Club website,
Vikram Murthi lamented its
tilt into “morally questionable
grotesquerie, a catalogue of
anguish that doesn’t spot-
light anything except endless
brutality”. But the director was
unrepentant in an interview
with the CBC last year, “The
film should put people in an
uncomfortable position to
look through the terrible real-
ity around us.”

SVOD HIGHLIGHT: What’s
good in subscription
video on demand. Liz
Garbus, who directed
the documentary What
Happened, Miss Simone?
for Netflix, tells the real-
life story of the Long
Island serial murders as
a narrative drama in Lost
Girls, which premiered
recently at the Sundance
Film Festival. It’s on
Netflix from March 13.

Ben Kavanagh

Lego Masters USA, Thursday.
Free download pdf