Frontseat, 10.30pm, Sunday 22nd May - So Relevant
Frontseat, 10.30pm, Sunday 22nd May - So Relevant
Frontseat, this Sunday 22nd May, 10.30pm TV
One
A SLOW TRICKLE:
Frontseat analyses what's in Budget
2005 for the arts and looks ahead to what the next political
term may hold for New Zealand's arts community.
RADIO
WARS:
Julie Hill looks at the new slew of commercial
radio stations and their fight for dominance over the
'breakfast' and 'nine-to-noon' slots. She examines the
quality of the content between the advertisements, and
assesses what National Radio's 'relevancy audit' will mean
for the public broadcaster's personalities (not to mention
the ‘bird call’).
WOMAN ON THURSDAY:
Oliver Driver
talks to journalist Bianca Zander about the new slew of
female-focused media, and whether it’s a damaging regression
into old-time femininity, or an astute reflection of what’s
been happening amongst younger feminists, who are reclaiming
crafts like knitting and preserving in a retro-feminist nod
to their grannies.
STUDENTS OF THE NIGHT:
'Hobby
courses' have come under threat following damaging headlines
about classes in diving and singalongs. Now all
extra-curricular courses are getting the once-over to decide
what's important, and this means popular adult & community
education night classes at local high schools are coming
under the microscope. Jeremy Hansen investigates.
STILL
PRESENT:
A compelling new exhibition at Victoria
University's Adam Art Gallery features photographs of
isolated people and isolating places, exploring psychiatric
institutions in photography. Frontseat talks to curator and
gallery director Sophie McIntyre and photographers Chien-Chi
Chang and Jono Rotman.
NEXT WEEK!
Sunday 29th
May, Frontseat, 10.30pm on TV One:
The Music of Rugby -
All Black Anton Oliver and Mu, the band-leader of current
chart-toppers Fat Freddy's Drop, tell Oliver Driver what
music and rugby can learn from each other.
All Black hooker and Highlander captain Anton Oliver is an arts-literate music fan and the proud owner of a NZ-made guitar. Mu (aka Chris Faiumu) is the rugby-loving captain of the Wellington all-star band Fat Freddy's Drop, who have rocketed to the top of the Top 50 Album chart with their debut long-player 'Based on a True Story'. In a world where music plays an important part in hyping up the crowds at live games, and where a Friday evening match often precedes a night out watching local bands, Frontseat is delighted to bring these two men of action together for a rare and special conversation.
Best regards,
The Frontseat
Team
TV One, Sunday Nights (repeated 6.30am the following
Sunday
morning)
ENDS