Similar Posts

- Advertisement -

15 Comments

  1. It makes perfect sense, it’s about white people behaving badly so Creative NZ are all over it.
    You’ve just got to think like a waste of space troughing woke narcissistic wanker with half a brain.

  2. The unruly tourists were apparently a group of white people, so Creative New Zealand may think that they’ve pulled off the coup of a lifetime – not withstanding the family now coping with a very sad loss.

    1. FHS the ‘sad loss’ thing gets rolled out again by sensitive, sympathetic people to the latest tragedy du jour. Now it’s the gross tourists and their appropriate children. But we have regular tragedies du minute in NZ and don’t actually act to prevent them. Wasn’t there something in Lewis Carroll about stored up tears. We’re so good at these ‘crocodile’ tears someone could set up a business called ‘Healing Tears’ (copyright not applied for and not wishing to contravene) that would be sold in little flasks like holy water

  3. I thought that the unruly tourists were a family of Irish travellers who visited New Zealand, in which case it looks as if Creative New Zealand are being racist again and they should be reported to the Race Relations Conciliator. They wouldn’t get away with making a musical about badly behaved Americans or Maori. It’s culturally insensitive, and nothing to sing and dance about. If the unruly tourists were in fact Brits, then it’s just business as usual for the Arts Council, bashing away at our shared heritage.

    1. Singing, dancing and oodles of kiwi humor (I hope). Can’t wait! 4 stars (minus one star coz it’s an opera). Brilliant idea. Those tourists were aresholes

    2. It’s because Trevor Mallard went over there (to Ireland) and now they are honouring (buttering up) the country that has taken him on.

      1. Greywarbler. It’s unclear quite how a production showing unruly Irish travellers behaving badly in New Zealand, could be seen as honouring, or buttering up to
        Ireland.

        A musical showing the ground-breaking work carried out in education by pioneering Irish nuns around Canterbury and the West Coast, far from their own land and families, could be seen as honouring Ireland. This looks more like dragging the Irish down, assuming that the persons concerned were, in fact, Irish. And the unruly got to go back home again, which is more than most of those young nuns ever did.

        At least the Uk government doesn’t sponsor revelations of Kiwis on pub crawls around London, and we may not appreciate it if they did.

  4. Oh I can’t wait for this to drop!! With a bit of luck it will stop swathes of tourists from coming to “racist NZ” while we rebuild our shattered country. I only wish it was a comedy play though rather than an opera. Much more fun.

  5. Unruly tourists coming here eh?
    Anyone noticed drunken Kiwi antics at Oktoberfest? (Have to admit when Germans asked me “are those New Zealanders?’ I answered ” of course not -Australians)

    1. Stevie. Hush. You might put ideas into the Minister of Culture and Heritage’s empty head. The Arts Council femmes may be salivating at more men’s heads being handed to them on a platter. Hush.

    1. Anker. It could be helpful to hear Carmel Sepuloni, the Minister for Culture and Heritage, comment upon this, but I imagine that she’s quite busy ensuring that the Children’s Commissioner is abolished.

      I do hope that Creative New Zealand isn’t enabling unruly travellers’ children to be featured in this opera. The implications of that aren’t good. It could damage the kids but it could also make them wrongly think that they are little heroes. Hopefully Kelvin Davis, the Minister for Children, will be keeping a watchful eye on the children’s interests here and ensuring that New Zealand isn’t seen as exploiting or bullying children, or doing so.

Comments are closed.