Frontseat, Sunday 7th May
Frontseat, Sunday 7th May, 10.35pm on TV One (after ‘Dancing With The Stars’)
It’s the final episode of Frontseat’s Autumn season. We’ll see you again in spring after the winter series of TV One’s doco series, ‘Artsville’ (next week featuring Misery, who is extremely cool).
THE
MUSICIAN VS THE MINISTER:
The Government is gifting the
failing 100% NZ music station Kiwi FM (owned by the
profitable CanWest network) some new 102FM frequencies. But
those who’ve long championed the idea of a nation-wide Youth
Radio Network say these frequencies were set aside for the
young people of New Zealand, not a private commercial
operator. New Zealand’s most successful musician, Neil Finn,
tells Josie McNaught why this new development is an
embarrassing indulgence.
REMEMBERING ARAMOANA:
Making
a film about one of New Zealand’s darkest hours is not the
easiest of tasks, and the producers of a movie about the
Aramoana tragedy have been hugely sensitive about their
project. Now that filming’s over, Julie Hill speaks to the
film’s storytelling team: director Robert Sarkies, writer
Graeme Tetley and biographer Bill O’Brien. Upon the
producers’ request, residents agreed not to talk.
RED
LIGHTS & RED SPOTS:
Gentrification of areas formerly
populated by the fringes of society usually happens once
artists have made a place ‘acceptable’. But though
Auckland’s most famous red light strip, Karangahape Road,
has had a spruce-up, sex workers still happily ply their
trade amongst the new apartments and art galleries. In fact,
they tell Steven Oates, the increase in galleries has only
been good for business.
THE LEGACY OF JOHN
DRAWBRIDGE:
Painter and print-maker John Drawbridge died
in Wellington last July. He left behind oodles of unfinished
paintings and completed prints, and his widow Tanya Ashken
and son Cameron are now showing in these in their new South
Coast Gallery in Island Bay. The gallery will have a
Drawbridge show each year, as well as showcasing other
artists. And Cameron is continuing his father’s work in the
meantime.
PLUS:
Frontseat is repeated at 8.00am on
Saturday morning. This Saturday 6th: The stories behind New
Zealand’s Greatest Painting, ‘Cass’ by Rita Angus; a
documentary about Dunedin musician David Kilgour, and the
dealer gallery association double-up.
Best regards,
The Frontseat Team
TV One, Sunday
Nights
Repeat screening 8.00am the following Saturday
ENDS