
Frank – Stories from the South: Jacob Bryant, a polite menace
'I always knew that if he survived, he'd be great,' his mother Louise McKay tells Frank Film.
And he is great. Having filmed in Iraq, Sudan, Zimbabwe, Afghanistan and beyond, Bryant's work with leading documentary makers has been nominated for multiple screen awards.
Bryant attributes his success to skills he wasn't taught at school. Rather, it seems the kids who cannot sit still in a classroom are often perfect for the jobs that rely on instinct more than instruction.
At a young age, Bryant inherited his father's .22-gauge rifle. 'I could only carry two or three possums at a time because I was so little,' says Bryant, 'but that physicality – running around these hills, climbing, walking, building things – that stuck with me my whole life.'
Sitting still was (and continues to be) almost impossible for Bryant. He struggled with academics and his secondary education ended after his first year of high school.
'It was deeply unpleasant – the idea of just sitting in one place,' he says. 'I was really driven to do as much as I could in my life, and school really got in the way of that.'
By the age of 18, Bryant had written off eight cars, was barred from every pub on Banks Peninsula and had been arrested.
'I had such a reputation. For being a f***wit actually,' he says.
But as Bryant's mother puts it, while he had a knack for causing trouble, he was always polite. Bryant realised while sitting in the holding cells of the Christchurch Central Police Station at the age of 18 that it was not his place.
'If this was my future, this was absolutely not who I was,' he recalls thinking.
Bryant moved to London in his early 20s and bought a Super 8 camera from Portobello Market. From there, he forged a career in cinematography, working on stories for the BBC, CNN, TWI and Insight during his first three years of work.
'That's all I ever wanted to do,' says Bryant. 'To shoot pictures and be able to show the world – the world that I was experiencing – to other people.'
'He certainly has an eye for beauty,' says McKay. 'He has empathy for people that he feels are being treated wrongly.'
Countless times, across three decades, Bryant has visited the world's trouble spots and put himself at risk to tell the stories of others. The most notable occasion, perhaps, was in 2015.
Māori Television was pursuing a story on the Israeli blockade of Gaza. A flotilla of vessels was trying to break through the blockade and Bryant was employed as the cameraman.
'There were definitely risks attached to that,' says Bryant. He had heard of instances where Israeli military had boarded flotilla vessels and shot several activists on board.
'We were gonna have to do some pretty drastic things to get those pictures off [the boat].'
In Frank – Stories from the South episode three, Bryant divulges how he smuggled his SD card off the boat, into an Israeli prison, and back out again, for the world to see the footage.
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The Spinoff
3 days ago
- The Spinoff
From Hilary to Oprah: Everything you missed from Jacinda Ardern's whirlwind promo tour
Tara Ward watches the big interviews from Dame Jacinda Ardern's promotional book tour. Dame Jacinda Ardern's memoir A Different Kind of Power was released around the globe this week, and hot on its heels came Ardern's promotional book tour. New Zealand's former prime minister gave a series of interviews to a variety of national and international media outlets, speaking to everyone from Christine Amanpour and CBS to Seven Sharp to Oprah bloody Winfrey. Not only was it a chance for Ardern to answer questions about her early life, political career and style of leadership, but it was also an opportunity for the world to – at last – find out what the Dame's favourite emoji is. Here's what she had to say. Seven Sharp Ardern began her interview with Hilary Barry by announcing that this chat – and not the one with Oprah or the BBC – was the one she was most nervous about. The reception in New Zealand is the most important to her, Ardern said, and admitted to feeling 'a bit squirmy'. Later, she acknowledged that she knows she remains a reminder of tough times for a lot of New Zealanders, but that Aotearoa is still home. Barry and Ardern covered plenty of topics from Ardern's book – including a breast cancer scare and a positive pregnancy test during coalition negotiations – with Barry sometimes reading aloud from the memoir. They talked a lot about kindness, and while both women admitted to being bawlers from way back, Ardern reckoned we should embrace our overthinking and worrying. 'It's not often you get leaders talking about these common character traits as not weaknesses, but strengths,' she said. Not a single tear was shed in the 30 minute interview, but this writer/overthinker would pay good money for Hils Baz to read me a bedtime story every night. CBS Sunday morning The big revelation here was that Ardern's local cafe in Boston charges an extortionate $6USD ($10NZD) for a sticky bun. A Boston bun, no less! This short interview with CBS' Robert Costa saw Ardern reflect on the changes to gun control after March 15 ('if we really said we didn't want this to happen again, we needed to make it a reality'), and the place of empathy in politics. 'We teach our kids to be kind – why shouldn't we role model that in politics?' Sure, sure, but let's hear more about the time the barista mistook Ardern for Toni Collette? The Rest is Politics Ardern was at her most relaxed with The Rest is Politics ' Alistair Campbell and Rory Stewart, cracking jokes throughout the hour-long podcast. Her memoir became a springboard to dive into bigger themes, with the interview touching on personal vs political drive, the state of progressive politics today, and about how Ardern is too coy about describing fellow political leaders in the book. 'There's certain audiences for certain things,' Ardern explained, while I couldn't stop looking at the globe on Ardern's shelf which had Australia placed front and centre. Maybe Campbell noticed it, too. He asked Ardern to rank China, the US, the UK and the EU in order of the importance of their relationship to New Zealand. 'That's a terrible question,' she answered, arguing that this kind of binary thinking is the current problem with foreign policy. Undeterred, Campbell pressed on. Which did Ardern prefer, England or Scotland? Ardern is Scottish, which left Campbell with the only option left available to him: to bring up the controversial spear tackle during the 2005 Lions rugby tour of New Zealand. ABC News In-depth It's not often a 2017 clip from The AM Show is shown on Australian television, but Ardern's interview with ABC News' Sarah Ferguson (no, not that one) dragged that pointed Mark Richardson rebuke up from the deep recesses of our cultural history. 'For context, this is the day after I became leader of the Labour Party, seven weeks out from the election,' Ardern explained, as we relived the moment she unleashed the finger point to end all finger points in response to Richardson's argument that women should have to disclose their pregnancy plans to employers. Eight years on, Ardern had no regrets. 'There's a real sense for me in that moment of 'it's fine for me', but what about everyone else?' she said. 'I don't think anyone for a moment would assume that when an employer asks you your plans, it's because they're going to prepare a gift basket for you.' The Oprah Podcast Oprah Winfrey's podcast studio looks like a beautiful summer greenhouse, with lovely rattan furniture, lush green plants and… big microphones. What better setting for Ardern to have a hearty natter about imposter syndrome, pandemics and lockdowns with the one and only Oprah? Winfrey began by recommending Ardern's memoir for 'anyone wanting leadership in their own lives', and the conversation flowed easily from there. 'I am in awe of your ability to stand in such grace and such power,' Winfrey told Ardern, as they discussed putting power to empathy, Ardern's unexpected pregnancy and leading through a global pandemic. We saw clips from the upcoming documentary film Prime Minister, which gave an insight into the realities of leading a country while also navigating pregnancy and parenthood. We watched Ardern feeding baby Neve in parliamentary offices, pumping milk in the back seat of a car, reading documents late into the night. Breastfeeding wasn't easy; as a young woman in power, there was no room to fail. What did Ardern learn? 'You can do it all, but don't expect to do it alone.' Oprah sipped chilled water through a straw while Ardern talked about gun control, Covid-19 and Ernest Shackleton. Then, after 75 minutes and several American ads for weight loss injections, it was over. 'People say don't meet your heroes, but I'm so glad to meet my hero today,' Oprah said. 'Come back to New Zealand soon,' Ardern replied. 'There are plenty of people who want to go hiking with you.' RNZ There was not a garden fern in sight for Ardern's interview with RNZ's Jesse Mulligan, who appeared to be sitting inside in some sort of heavily curtained tomb. Mulligan took us on one giant hoon of a chat, veering from small talk ('where have you been?' he began) to misogyny in politics to the moment Ardern told Winston Peters about her pregnancy over a platter of club sandwiches. 'Do you still, according to the Mormon tradition, keep three months worth of groceries in your house?' he asked. Ardern does not. Mulligan was worried about how David Cunliffe came off in the book. 'He looks like – what's the RNZ word for this – a douchebag?' he continued, having looked off camera to presumably check the official RNZ style guide. Ardern, ever the politician, said something about having just put her own experience on the page. 'You don't talk much about Winston Peters, can you explain him to me?' Mulligan asked. 'No,' Ardern laughed. After 30 minutes, we came to the really important stuff: the quickfire question round. Ardern wasn't keen, but she got on with it, just like the Queen told her. 'What's your most used emoji?' Mulligan queried. (Cry laughing). 'When was the first time you drank too much?' (Mid 20s). Finally, Mulligan asked the question that was on nobody's lips: First kiss? 'Absolutely not,' Ardern replied. 'If it didn't make the book, it won't make this interview.'


Newsroom
3 days ago
- Newsroom
Jacinda, by Janet Wilson
Nothing better explains the polarising opinions that crop up about Aotearoa's 40th Prime Minister, the Right Hon Dame Jacinda Ardern, than a phenomenon psychologists call splitting. It's a form of black-and-white thinking in which the patient sums up a person as either an exalted angel or an evil wrongdoer. And if both groups are looking to confirm their biases – the Greek Chorus of devotees and the Baying Crowd of haters – they're bound to find ample ammunition in Ardern's new memoir, A Different Kind of Power. In her 15 years as a politician, six as Prime Minister, Ardern has always been a master at framing-up all the feels. Many of her Greek Chorus don't reside here but are examples of the kind of progressive elites CNN's Jake Tapper and Axios's Alex Thompson inventory in another recent Penguin publication, Original Sin: President Biden's decline, its cover-up and his disastrous choice to run again. Their lavish praise is spread unctuously on the book's first page, accompanied by names like Melinda French Gates (Bill's ex), actress Natalie Portman, and Ben Rhodes, who was Obama's speechwriter. It signals the book wasn't written with the New Zealand market in mind but for all those progressives in the Northern Hemisphere who exulted in Ardern's considerable wins, such as her handling of the Christchurch Mosque shootings, the Whakaari/White Island disaster, her successful Covid-19 shut down of the country in 2020, and the political qualities of kindness she espouses. Ardern has always been the queen of identity politics. She turns her beliefs into full-blown convictions that you're either onside with, or absolutely not. It's revealing that issues outside of that, for example the broken promise to build 100,000 KiwiBuild properties, receive scant attention in her book. Instead, her memoir indexes the life of a thin-skinned and sensitive kid who channelled her impostor syndrome and, jet-propelled with considerable amounts of determination, became the leader of the Opposition amid the 2017 election campaign. And it's here that Ardern, a priestess of presenting just-enough information at the right time, seems to be sharing the PG-version of events. Ardern contends that with polling at 23 per cent, it was Opposition Leader Andrew Little who declared he should stand down and she should take over as leader. Her version of events is that she told him that a leadership change only months out from election day was a bad idea– but nevertheless walked into the Legislative Chamber Council six days later to tell media she had been elected leader unanimously. According to Ardern, when Little informed caucus he was resigning and immediately nominated Ardern, the only ripple of discontent came from a colleague who shouted, 'This is fucked!' As a bystander of not one but two leadership changes in National Party ranks three years later, I rather think this ignores the fact that there would have been several MPs in the caucus at that time who were facing certain electoral annihilation and would be shouting that from the rooftops. 'This is fucked' wouldn't begin to explain their rage. At any rate the Age of Jacindamania was born, and the gamble paid off. But politics is a zero-sum game. You enjoy some success until, eventually, you lose. Covid-19 presented leaders around the world with a once-in-a-lifetime challenge–and in the first year it arrived on Aotearoa's shores, Ardern shone. Her March 2020 announcement of the first lockdown was a masterclass in call-to-arms speeches. By and large the country's population of just over five million rallied. 'We began a new phase,' she writes in A Different Kind of Power. 'Long stretches of normalcy punctuated by the occasional raising of the alert level.' By the end of that year Labour had won more than 50 per cent of the vote in the October election, and the country was enjoying a summer of festivals and barbecues. Fast forward to just over a year later to February 2022 when Ardern's zero-sum game reached its nadir. Because if 2020 was where she excelled, 2021 was the year where the mistakes piled up, layer upon layer upon layer. First the then-Government was too slow to order vaccines. Then it gave the Rapid Antigen Testing contract not to a provider with a track record but an outfit who didn't even have one. By December 2021, Auckland had been in a different lockdown from the rest of the country for three months, and many, many Aucklanders were fed up. Not that Ardern mentions anything about this. But she does talk about her nadir – the Parliamentary Protests. Ardern describes the antics of the growing crowd protesting the vaccines and mandates wearing their tinfoil hats, and provides readers with her own explanation of why she didn't greet the crowds. She writes, 'How could I send a message that if you disagree with something, you can illegally occupy the grounds of Parliament and then have your demands met? No, I would not meet the protestors.' She goes on to say the occupation 'was about trust…. or more accurately mistrust.' That mistrust rose, biliously, from a fed-up nation. Less than a year later Ardern announced she was stepping down as Prime Minister and leaving politics. Ardern's analysis of getting to that point is an interesting mix of her analytical head and her sensitive heart. She discusses leaving politics with Grant Robertson, as well as her Chief of Staff Raj Nahna, telling him that she'd become a flashpoint, 'a political lightning rod.' But it was also daughter Neve asking, 'Mummy, why do you have to work so much?' It had 'got to the heart of my dilemma, and that of parents everywhere.' It's too early yet to assess Ardern's political leadership skills except to note it was an administration of striking highs and lows. Her own book doesn't attempt to make an assessment. It's less a political memoir than another sprinkling of Jacinda fairy stardust to her adoring Greek Chorus of devotees. The Baying Crowd will read it too, just to confirm their bias, and to sneer. Her book has landed at a time when politics, in New Zealand and across the world, is taking a particularly cruel turn. The New York Times characterised it this week as 'the death of empathy'. Will progressive liberals take A Different Kind of Power – Ardern is their posterchild after all – and use it as their talisman to lead them out of electoral darkness? Probably not, but expect the virtue signalling to continue unabated. A Different Kind of Power: A Memoir by Jacinda Ardern (Penguin, $59.99) is available in every bookstore across the land. ReadingRoom is devoting all week to coverage of the book. Monday: experts in the book trade predict it will fly off the shelves. Tuesday: a review by Steve Braunias. Tomorrow: a review by Tim Murphy.


NZ Herald
7 days ago
- NZ Herald
Israeli actor Gal Gadot's Hollywood star defaced with slur, graffiti removed
The Hollywood star dedicated to Israeli actor Gal Gadot has been defaced with the words 'baby killer'. Vandals used a black permanent marker to write the slur against Gadot, a former member of the Israeli Defence Forces. They also changed her surname from Gadot to 'Greestien' – a misspelling of