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  1. I watched ten minutes of that rubbish. Who do I send the bill to, to get compensation for time wasted?

    I wonder who will be the next company to be “improved” by mr mark weldon?

  2. +100%

    Bomber also hit the nail on the head by saying that audience does not watch TV.

    When TV3 openly went against a massive public campaign by terminating Campbell Live, they not only lost viewers for that show, they actually lost the viewers from TV in general.

    TV is dead apart form to the oldies but even my elderly non tech mother has Netflix and an iPad these days.

    (Sadly she got the iPad on HP from Dick Smith and is now in some sort of Kafka like payment scheme from the creditors).

    Living the NZ dream. sarc.

  3. Jesse Mulligan hosts on RNZ.

    To me this demonstrates how the long heroic investigative tradition of that august institution has succumbed to neo-liberal dumbing down.

    RNZ is also starting to fail (or at least wobble) in its public service quotient.

    I smell political interference…

    1. Be fair to Jesse.

      He is not bad in his interviews on RNZ, except when he is leeringly breathing down the neck of (like every other 35+ year old male in NZ) Hera Lindsay Bird. Which is not a criticism of Bird.

    2. Come on, he’s only the afternoon host – Jim Mora hardly broke any hard news at 2pm! I’m more concerned with Suzie Fergusson’s inability to ask anything jornalistically significant and how the PM seems to be talking to her only now. Guyon is not that much better, either.

  4. When I first heard about “The Project” I tried to find out what it was about, and failed. That’s a bad thing, if you’re trying to market a new program.

    I have only just now learned it is supposed to be a news program. I thought it was another “Survivor” type reality show for Rentier a**holes. I wanted to hate on it for that reason, not watch it.

    That it is a news show (complete with Muppets) makes me want to watch it even less. Not that I ever watch TV, I don’t even have one. I am really only curious to find out what ideas are currently swilling around in popular culture.

    There are no ideas swirling around in popular culture, that’s what I learned.

    Because if you are a Corporate MSM Exec, the last thing on *Earth* you want to report to people is that the current system is not working, and cannot be made to work, that their politicians are paid to keep them poor and docile, and that Capitalism in particular is actually, deliberately trying to kill them.

    How do you report “news” when all the news is bad for Capitalism?

    Muppets.

    In La La Land.

    And then put a ‘news’ sticker on it.

    But don’t tell anyone.

    TV just needs to die off. Except it won’t, because that would mean the Establishment had to concede that it has lost all control over the public mind-share, and there goes billions in advertising, right down the toilet. So they keep trying to find ever more creative ways to entice us to eat their bullshit news offerings. And they keep failing.

    I’d rather get my news from RT.com, Max Keiser and the rest of my short-list of alternative online outlets.

    See ya, Muppets!

  5. Excellent appraisal Frank (and Martyn). I’ve watched a couple of episodes of THE PROJECT and both times it left me scratching my head wondering What the F was that all about??

    If TV3’s executives think it’s viewing audience will increase then they’re as braindead as THE PROJECT they gave birth to.

    No wonder Hillary Barry had a gutsful of these inept people.

  6. When the main tv stations fail to provide the public with independent critical investigative journalism and do not engage the public in discussion on major social and political issues, you end up with a nation that is politically naive, compliant, complacent and apathetic . Such a situation undermines democracy and leads directly to the election of Trump in US and the Exit EU vote in UK. The Project and Seven Sharp are gross examples of this failure.
    RNZ does much that is good, but Jesse Mulligan and Wallace Chapman are two men inflicted upon us, both doomed in their eternal search for perfect fluency and coherent thought.

  7. Both you and Bomber and spell bachelor as “batchelor” (with a t), so that’s a thing. Annnyyyyway, agree 100%. Still have thankfully not seen a single minute of The Project, although I have seen a few of Hosking’s rants on the other channel that made me throw up a little.
    I’m a NOT a Millennial (I’m Gen-X), but can nonetheless confirm you’re better off watching all your news and current affairs on YouTube than either of the NZ TV networks.

    1. Bugger. Nitrium, I could try to pull a “Keyism” and fib my way out of that typo by referring to “battyness”… but nah, it wouldn’t fly.

      I ‘fess up. It was a typo.

  8. Are we sure baby-boomers aren’t looking for some dumbing down? Because at the supermarket when I look at the covers for things like the Listener, and North and South magazine, which I assume appeal to the boomers, and in a difficult market must respond pretty quickly to sales figures, the bar seems way lower than even 20 years ago.

    The strangest thing I’ve found is those boomers who for some reason relegate the computer to the sun room, and spend their evenings staring at the box…half the time with the sound off because even they can’t deal with the inane babble.

    TV is a lost cause.

  9. When you have comedians fronting the show, song and dance advertising and the enthusiastic studio clapping a la a party, you know it’s not going to be the right forum for an item about a dying cancer victim being denied treatment. Or just about anything else except some song and dance enthusiastic party, fun and fancy fare.

    It just so happens life is not all enthusiastic party, fun and fancy fare, there are issues which are best addressed and made known. Maybe the idea is that injustices and those issues needing addressing will all be somehow forgotten about or ameliorated by a daily dash of the Project.

    Maybe that’s why it has that name, it has, it thinks it has, a grand mission. Instead it is a grand miss.

  10. ‘The Project’: Just as I am used to eating GOOD food and have SHIT come out of my other side hours later, I cannot “adjust” to eating shit, nor viewing or hearing shit. Shit to me, can only be the natural refuse from digesting something better, but having SHIT served up as ‘diet’, that is food, or “diet” for my eyes and/or ears, that is perverse and abhorrent.

    Consequently, I consider such shows we now have just as being that: SHIT I stay well clear off. It belongs down the toilet bowl and needs a good flush, so we cannot see and smell it.

    And thus ‘The Project’ will simply end there, very soon, flushed down the pipe again.

  11. Life is too short and too precious to spend it watching the shite that corporations broadcast in a feeble attempt to maintain advertising revenues and business as usual in the last days of empire.

    There is no REAL NEWS on the mainstream media.

  12. TV is for old people.

    Only old people would complain about it.

    Campbell went because his numbers were falling. His numbers were falling because his appeal was far too narrow. Talking to the left cuts out over half the potential audience on a medium that competes with infinite choices

    TV is dead. Too narrow.

    1. Campbell went because his numbers were falling….

      Incorrect.

      Campbell’s numbers were rising, and on several occassions exceeded TV1’s Seven Sharp. Ratings viewable here: http://www.throng.co.nz/2015/05/ratings-all-round-rises-at-7pm/#more-87000

      Viewership was actually increasing by the time Mediaworks broadcast the last episode. With strategic promotion (as it does with The Block, The Project, etc, Campbell Live could have done even better.

      As for “TV is for old people” – they’re still selling plenty of television flatscreen-sets at Noel Leemings…

  13. We watched one episode of The Project. That was enough. No more, thank you.

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