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‘This never happens': Bailey Poching on getting cast in Netflix's North of North
‘This never happens': Bailey Poching on getting cast in Netflix's North of North

The Spinoff

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • The Spinoff

‘This never happens': Bailey Poching on getting cast in Netflix's North of North

The comedian and actor takes us through his life in television. It was on a Monday morning that actor and comedian Bailey Poching recorded his audition for Netflix's North of North, describing himself as being 'a hair's breadth' from throwing in the towel and heading back into hospitality. He sent his tape in, and got a reply that afternoon asking if he could audition in his own accent. By Tuesday, he had a Zoom meeting with Netflix and the showrunners. By Wednesday, he had got the job. Less than a week later, he was shooting his first scene in the Arctic Canadian territory of Nunavut in -40 degree conditions. 'I think I'll be telling that story for the rest of my life,' Poching laughs. 'It was like trying to appreciate the feeling of winning the lottery in real time. We romanticise this happening, but this never happens for actors.' For the next three months, Poching played Colin, a radio DJ looking to find love in the arctic circle in Netflix's first Canadian production – and the first show of its kind to be centered around the indigenous Inuk community. 'It felt like capturing something really special, and it was really cool to be even peripheral to that,' he says. Poching, who is Māori and Samoan, says he learned a lot about story sovereignty from being a part of the groundbreaking series. 'I remember asking the showrunners for advice on making indigenous TV shows and they were like 'you will have an easier time, because at least there's a precedent for indigenous film and TV in New Zealand',' he says. 'There was a sense of reckoning with the fact that, in our position as Pacific and Māori storytellers, we do have more opportunities than some of our indigenous whānau around the world to make television – even if there's still not heaps.' Closer to home, Poching is a part of another important onscreen kōrero in Don't, TVNZ's new big issue comedy series. In it, comedian Bubbah is joined by a host of funny friends to interrogate the big issues facing rangatahi today. Poching's episode is all about marriage, including interviewing university students and rest home residents alike about their attitudes towards it. 'The title is quite provocative, but Don't really holds space for so many different cultural and social perspectives on what marriage represents, the origins of it and how we feel about it now,' he says. 'There's no sense of judgment in it at all.' A lot of that, he says, comes down to host Bubbah's own curiosity about the world. 'She has such an interesting lens and so much to say, but she's also an incredible listener.' Taking a leaf out of the beloved comedian's book, we carefully listened to Poching's eclectic life in television, including Scottish Wipe Out for kids and how Coca-Cola made him famous in Australia. My earliest TV memory is… I spent the first 19 years of my life in the UK, and so my TV memories are of CBBC, the children's BBC channel, and a show called Balamory. The jingle really sticks in my head – ' what's the story in Balamory, wouldn't you like to know?' It's one of those things that I'll say to myself, but then people here don't really know what I'm talking about. We also had lots of VHS tapes of The Wiggles, and they did a crossover episode with the crocodile hunter Steve Irwin. It was like Avengers: Endgame. The show I would rush home from school to watch was… I watched so much TV as a kid. Superhero cartoons were huge for me – X Men, Spider Man, Fantastic Four. There was a game show called Raven that was like Wipe Out, but fantasy themed and for kids. The host was called Raven and he wore a feathered cloak and had a big staff. If a kid failed a challenge, he would like place his staff on the kid's shoulder, and then they disappeared. It was the most terrifying thing – that kid just applied to be on a TV show, now he's vanished. My first time on television was… A Coca-Cola commercial, just before Covid. I was playing an Uber Eats driver and I appear for two seconds at the end. Honestly, because of the way TV commercials work, that really helped me out through Covid. I didn't realise it played in Australia as well, so I had family sending me photos and it was a huge moment of pride. Now, I don't know how I would feel about doing a Coca-Cola commercial, but I needed that at the time. My favourite NZ TV ad is… This was such a phenomenon for me moving here, when I realised that a lot of these local ads have vice-like grip on people of a certain generation. I remember Ghost Chips was huge on YouTube. The 'do it yourself' kid tradies were also pretty big in my house because I have a dad who grew up in New Zealand and a mum who grew up in Australia. Any kind of recognition of those two countries was always nice. My TV guilty pleasure is… Any YouTube show where celebrities eat food, so things like Hot Ones and the Angela Hartnett and Nick Grimshaw podcast Dish. I'll line up a bunch of those while I'm making food or cleaning up and just watch celebrities eating food. I love food, and I'm interested in celebrities as well. They are kind of like the modern talk show. A TV moment that haunts me is… Anything from the David Tennant Doctor Who era, which had a lot of really scary stuff in it. I remember there were these monsters that had pig faces and human bodies, or one big brain with a single eye and all these tentacles. It traumatised me – I asked my brother to wait outside the bathroom while I was showering, because I was so scared. My favourite TV character is… Mark Corrigan from Peep Show. Word for word, some of the funniest dialogue maybe ever put on television. I have a deep affection and appreciation for cringe humour and he's a character whose whole purpose is putting his foot in his mouth while also having that common trope of unearned confidence and being so certain of himself. He's so smart, he's done everything he was told to do growing up, and he's still a failure. It's so poetically funny. My favourite TV project I've ever been involved in is… North of North is a very special one because of the indigenous kaupapa. It feels like such a triumph to have that story on TV, and to be even peripheral to it was such an honour. But I have to make a special mention to Kid Sister, because Simone Nathan was kind enough to give me that opportunity and I had a blast. A TV project I wish I could be involved in is… I always romanticise the lifestyle of an SNL writer, where you pitch on Monday, and then you're up all Tuesday night writing the silliest stuff. And I feel like I've seen a picture of Bobby Moynihan smoking a cigarette out a window and they're all there with Bill Hader and Seth Meyers. This idea of working with your closest, funniest friends would be my dream. That, or doing a voice on a superhero cartoon. My controversial TV opinion is… We should be making weirder television and taking more creative risks. I think there's so much space for us to explore the weirder stories of New Zealand, rather than packaging up something neat for a global audience. There's a lot of idiosyncrasies and dark little stories for us to tell, and not just in the grim murder mystery way. I think there's so much to explore still in our underrepresented communities, and I dream of seeing abstract, surreal, artistic television made here. A TV show I will never watch, no matter how many people tell me I should is… The White Lotus is becoming that for me. I remember, with season one, seeing that it was a show about privilege, set in Hawaii, and that was the cast? I think this trend of shows about people with too much privilege is hopefully curving downward, because the more seasons it gets, the more it's too much homework now to catch up on. I'm sure it's actually incredible, but something about that initial idea turned me away from it. The last thing I watched on television was… The first season of Severance, which was really good. I got told to catch up before season two started, so I watched the whole of season one on a plane and it was gripping – I was totally locked in. Interesting craft, interesting filmmaking decisions, interesting writing decisions, and all just carried by great performance and production design. Well-crafted TV.

Going with the floes in northern exposure
Going with the floes in northern exposure

Otago Daily Times

time26-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Otago Daily Times

Going with the floes in northern exposure

Bailey Poching plays a radio DJ looking for love in Netflix's new Arctic comedy. The young Samoan and Māori actor relished the role, which brings Indigenous communities together, writes Jogai Bhatt. One Monday in March last year, comedian and actor Bailey Poching got a call from his agent — Netflix wanted him to audition for a new series. By Wednesday he had the role and by Friday he was on a plane to Vancouver, headed straight into production for Netflix's new Canadian original series, North of North . "I did the big Netflix audition over Zoom, in front of the showrunners and the director, on like a Mac stacked up on some books on a chair ... it was such an insanely quick turnaround." North of North follows Siaja (Anna Lambe), a young Inuit woman who wants to build a new future for herself after a spontaneous — and extremely public — exit from her marriage. All while being under the watchful gaze of her small community, where everyone knows each other, and it's hard to keep secrets. Poching plays Colin, a young Māori man who has travelled to the Arctic for love. He works at a community centre with Siaja and Millie (Zorga Qaunag), where he's a communications co-ordinator and radio DJ. "Colin and Millie are kind of like R2-D2 and C-3PO supporting characters that are in her corner, they're there to give her advice, they're kind of her place to turn to when she's at a loss for what to do. "It's kind of a comedic relief character, which is so much fun to play." When Poching first heard about the project, his instinct was to audition for the role with a neutral American accent. While shopping at the supermarket, he got a call from his agent saying they'd like to hear from him again, but this time, in his natural accent. "I did a couple of auditions in one day. "I think they had an idea that they wanted Colin to potentially be Indigenous, and that's something they arrived at quite quickly. "I got the impression they started zoning in on Aotearoa and Australia and realised there was something about Māori and Pasifika humour, and that kind of sensibility, that really worked with the show." "They were looking at comedic performers and maybe my agent sent a clip of some stand-up to them. "It was a matter of connecting some dots." More Kiwis have been making their mark on Netflix lately — Jess Hong in 3 Body Problem , Roseanne Liang working behind the scenes on Avatar: The Last Airbender , and a wave of local talent in Sweet Tooth , shot largely in Auckland and Queenstown, with musician Marlon Williams in the mix. Poching says the New Zealand Netflix scene is small enough to cross paths. On North of North , he shared the screen with fellow New Zealander Jay Ryan. "He's from New Lynn, he's like a Westie OG, that was really nice to be out somewhere remote and have another Kiwi in my corner. "I wish there was some kind of big Netflix group chat." Poching says it was rewarding being part of a project created and led by Indigenous showmakers. "When Indigenous communities come together and I've found this at film festivals and other opportunities I've had to connect with Indigenous people, there's so much we actually have in common, whether it's our values or our relationship to the land. "What we found in shooting the show is humour is really innate to the indigenous experience, and that it's a really effective way to deal with grief or move through difficult times." In the series trailer, Poching recalls a moment where the humour just cuts through. "Siaja asks for Colin's help, something really horrible has happened, she asks for a ride and Colin goes, 'You got $20 bucks?'. "I improvised that line kind of assuming it wouldn't get used, then I found out they kept it. "I was quite surprised. "One of the showrunners mentioned that it's quite an Inuit joke or way of relating to someone, using humour like that. "It was interesting they saw it as an Inuit joke, and I saw it as very our kind of way of doing things as well." North of North is now playing on Netflix, and Poching is back in New Zealand ahead of his show in the NZ International Comedy Festival, On The Shoulders of Giants.

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