Cole, Smith and Proctor and Television New Zealand Ltd - 1996-008, 1996-009, 1996-010
Members
- J M Potter (Chair)
- L M Loates
- R McLeod
Dated
Complainant
- Pita Cole, Anthony Smith, Brent Proctor
Number
1996-008–010
Programme
Montana Sunday Theatre: Forgotten SilverBroadcaster
Television New Zealand LtdChannel/Station
TVNZ 1
Summary
Forgotten Silver was the title of the seventh in a series of seven New Zealand plays
broadcast on Montana Sunday Theatre. It was screened on TV One at 8.30pm on 29
October 1995.
Each of the complainants individually complained to Television New Zealand Ltd that
while the programme was promoted and presented as a factual documentary, the
producers knew it to be fictional. As they had been deliberately misled, each
maintained that the broadcast breached the broadcasting standards.
Maintaining that the programme was not promoted as a documentary and that there were
indicators that it was a hoax, a fact which was acknowledged promptly after the
broadcast, TVNZ declined to uphold the complaints. Dissatisfied with TVNZ's
decision, the complainants referred their complaints to the Broadcasting Standards
Authority under s.8(1)(a) of the Broadcasting Act 1989.
For the reasons below the Authority declined to uphold the complaints.
Decision
The members of the Authority have viewed the item complained about and have read the
correspondence (summarised in the Appendices). As is its practice, the Authority has
determined the complaints without a formal hearing.
Forgotten Silver was the title of the programme broadcast in the Montana Sunday
Theatre slot on TV One at 8.30pm on 29 October 1995. TVNZ usually broadcasts
drama at that time and Forgotten Silver was the seventh and last in a series of New
Zealand plays.
Forgotten Silver had received a reasonable amount of publicity before it was broadcast.
It was understood that it would tell the story of Colin McKenzie, a pioneer New
Zealand film maker, as his long-forgotten work had recently come to the notice of Peter
Jackson, a successful international film director.
The programme began with Mr Jackson explaining how he came across Mr McKenzie's
work and then showed extracts from films apparently made before the first world war.
The extracts from that period included a shot of Richard Pearce flying an aeroplane in
March 1903, of an early film in colour and an early talkie (in Chinese). The programme
then explained Colin McKenzie's efforts in establishing a set on the West Coast during
the first world war and his trials while he filmed the biblical story of Salome during the
following years. It recorded that "Salome", although completed, had not been screened
until recently and that Colin McKenzie died as a news reel photographer during the
Spanish Civil War.
In Spain, it was reported, he married a young New Zealand nurse who, as an elderly
woman, was interviewed on several occasions and who had kept much of his work in a
large box in a garden shed.
Mr Jackson and his friends were seen not only examining the material held by his
widow but also locating and uncovering the set for Salome on the West Coast.
In a stone cabinet there, they found the film shot by Mr McKenzie which, it was said,
was screened at a gala premiere in Wellington in early September 1995. Actor Sam
Neill and film historian Leonard Maltin were among the people interviewed and both
spoke very highly of Colin McKenzie as a pioneer film-maker.
Forgotten Silver was presented as if it was a documentary recounting the film making
exploits of Colin McKenzie. Interspersed were comments about his personal life –
including the point that he had in fact filmed himself being shot and killed while trying
to help a person injured during the Spanish civil war. Indeed, that footage, purported to
be obtained recently from a Spanish film archive, was screened.
A news item carried in the press and on the radio on Monday morning 30 October 1995
– the day after Forgotten Silver was screened – reported that the "documentary" was in
fact "a drama" conceived, written and made by film director Peter Jackson and film
critic Costa Botes. It was also speculated that many viewers had been deceived by the
hoax.
The formal complaints to TVNZ from Messrs Cole, Fowlie[sic] and Proctor in essence
alleged that they had been misled. They considered that they had been misled and
deceived as TVNZ had broadcast a programme which had been promoted and presented
as a documentary. However, it was later acknowledged to be a fictional programme.
Moreover, Mr Proctor commented that the item raised questions as to TVNZ's
credibility.
TVNZ acknowledged that the programme appeared to be a documentary about the
discovery of some long-lost New Zealand film material whereas it was later revealed to
be an elaborate hoax. It assessed the complaints under the standards nominated by the
complainants. They require broadcasters:
G1 To be truthful and accurate on points of fact.
G6 To show balance, impartiality and fairness in dealing with political matters,
current affairs and all questions of a controversial nature.
G7 To avoid the use of any deceptive programme practice in the presentation of
programmes which takes advantage of the confidence viewers have in the
integrity of broadcasting.
G11 To refrain from broadcasting any programme which, when considered as a
whole:
(i) Simulates news or events in such a way as to mislead or alarmviewers.
TVNZ explained that it was not responsible for the publicity about the programme
before the broadcast on the radio or published by the print media. In its publicity
material, it explained, it had avoided the word "documentary" and had used such
phrases as "divine discovery". It also pointed out that the item was described as a
New Zealand play and had been broadcast in an established drama spot rather than at a
time for documentaries. Thus, while not disputing that viewers could well be expecting
a documentary in view of the pre-publicity, TVNZ observed:
We also believe that a number of phrases and images in the programme itself
threw into doubt the programme's authenticity as a documentary – not the least the
opening sequence where the viewer was carefully led up the garden path.
Dealing with the specific standards, TVNZ argued that standards G1 and G6 were
irrelevant to a work of fiction. Standards G7 and G11(i), it maintained, were not
intended to stifle a creative work and, further, there was no evidence of malice which
the standards seemed to require. Overall, TVNZ concluded:
The intention was never to mislead viewers by drawing them in and convincing
them of the veracity of the "facts" presented. The intention was to develop a
carefully crafted hoax with sufficient clues to leave most viewers at least
questioning whether it was all real – and then to admit freely that one of New
Zealand's outstanding film-makers (Peter Jackson) had used his very considerable
cinematic skills to produce an elaborate hoax.
When he referred his complaint to the Authority, Mr Cole argued that the broadcast
breached the nominated standards as it involved the deliberate intention to mislead
viewers and took advantage of their confidence in the integrity of broadcasting. Mr
Smith focused on standard G11(i) and stated that Forgotten Silver violated the principle
that broadcasters were not to mislead viewers.
Mr Proctor disputed TVNZ's response in some detail and, in addition to describing
TVNZ's argument about the avoidance of the word "documentary" as sophistry,
insisted that standard G11(i) had been contravened. He considered that TVNZ's and
the programme makers' actions were reprehensible and that all who had been involved
in the "sorry saga, should be suitably chastised".
The Authority's task was to determine whether the broadcast of Forgotten Silver
breached any of the nominated standards. The standards listed are in the section of the
Television Code which applies to all programmes. Nevertheless, as the programme
was acknowledged (albeit after the broadcast) to be a play, the Authority agreed with
TVNZ that standards G1 and G6 were not applicable. It was a drama and thus neither
factual accuracy nor balance was relevant.
Standard G7 requires broadcasters to avoid the use of any deceptive programme
practice. As interpreted in earlier decisions, the Authority has confined the standard to
"technical" matters, for example such as labelling, incorrectly, some film of a news
event as an "amateur video". Forgotten Silver included some material purportedly made
by Colin McKenzie which was of the technical quality expected of old material.
Accordingly, the Authority was of the view that standard G7 was an appropriate
standard to cite.
However, as the "material" apparently filmed by Colin McKenzie was shown as part of
the hoax to mislead viewers, the Authority considered that it was appropriate with these
complaints to subsume the aspects which referred to standard G7 under standard
G11(i).
Standard G11(i) requires broadcasters to refrain from broadcasting programmes which,
first, simulate news or events, and secondly, do so "in such a way as to mislead or
alarm viewers". The complaints about Forgotten Silver are the first occasion on which
it has been necessary for the Authority to interpret the applicability of the standard
G11(i) to the broadcast of an item which later has been acknowledged to be a hoax.
In considering the first part of the standard – to simulate news or events – the Authority
decided that while the broadcast was not news, it had dealt with events as if they had
really occurred. Of the many examples which could be cited, the Authority noted the
apparent filming of a flight by Richard Pearce in March 1903, the pie in the Prime
Minister's face and the apparent filming of Colin McKenzie's death during the Spanish
Civil War. Thus, the broadcast complied with the requirements in the standard to
"simulate news or events".
The Authority then considered whether the events had been simulated in such a way "as
to mislead or alarm" the viewer. In deciding on the meaning of that phrase, the
Authority kept in mind the reference in standard G7 to the "confidence viewers have in
the integrity of broadcasting".
The correspondence between the parties referred to some other well-known hoax
broadcasts – the Country Calendar item on gumboot-wearing turkeys, the item by
Richard Dimbleby on spaghetti farming in Italy and, in TVNZ's words:
Most famous of all was the Orson Welles radio broadcast of "War of the Worlds"
where a work of fiction was presented as though a live description of aliens
landing from another planet.
That "most famous" of the hoaxes was the one with which the Authority believed
standard G11(i) was designed to deal. Not only did that hoax mislead listeners, it was
also a cause of some degree of alarm throughout the United States. By comparison,
spaghetti farming and gumboot wearing turkeys (or Country Calendar's item on the
music created by plucking fence wires) involved the potential to mislead. However,
they did not have the potential to cause an even mild panic.
Following its examination of Forgotten Silver, the Authority was of the opinion that it
equated with these relatively harmless spoofs rather than the unexpected – and fear
provoking, eg the arrival of aliens.
The Authority concluded that standard G11(i) applied to those spoofs which, in addition
to possibly misleading, also contained the potential to cause alarm to viewers
because of the credibility granted by viewers to the major broadcasters. Because the
broadcast in question did not include the potential to alarm, and because it contained a
number of indications which disclosed its true nature, the Authority concluded that
standards G11(i) had not been contravened.
For the reasons above, the Authority declines to uphold the complaint.
Signed for and on behalf of the Authority
Judith Potter
Chairperson
8 February 1996
Appendix I
Mr Cole's Complaint to Television New Zealand Ltd - 4 November 1995
Pita Cole of Wellington complained to Television New Zealand Ltd about the
programme Forgotten Silver broadcast at 8.30pm on Sunday 29 October 1995.
Pointing out that the programme was promoted and presented as a factual documentary,
while the producers knew the story to be fictional, Mr Cole said that he felt misled,
deceived and betrayed. He alleged that the broadcast breached standards G1, G7 and
G11(i) of the Television Code of broadcasting Practice.
TVNZ's Response to the Formal Complaint - 15 November 1995
Assessing the complaint under the nominated standards, TVNZ began:
You will recall that the programme appeared to be a documentary about the
discovery of some long-lost New Zealand film material, only to have it revealed
later as an elaborate spoof or hoax.
TVNZ also expressed regret that Mr Cole had been annoyed to the extent that he was
although, it added, it was understandable if viewers were a little miffed. Nevertheless,
it had been hoped that they would take the hoax in good humour. TVNZ also referred
to some other noteworthy broadcasting examples - such as the gumboot wearing
turkeys - where fiction had been presented as fact.
Contrary to the assertions in the complaint, TVNZ said the publicity before the
broadcast had avoided the word "documentary" - using instead such phrases as "divine
discovery" - and it was listed as a New Zealand made play. It continued:
We also believe that a number of phrases and images in the programme itself
threw into doubt the programme's authenticity as a documentary - not the least the
opening sequence where the viewer was carefully led up the garden path.
Pointing out that the item was not broadcast in an established documentary slot, but in a
"theatre" one, TVNZ said that to label it in advance as a spoof would have destroyed the
purpose of the broadcast. It observed:
This is not something that happens every night on television, nor every week,
month or year. It is an extremely rare event but we believe it has its place and on
this occasion was particularly noteworthy because of the extremely creative
manner in which the spoof was constructed and developed.
Turning to the standards allegedly breached. TVNZ argued that G1 was irrelevant to a
work of fiction. Standard G7, it added, was not applicable as it had not intended to
stifle a creative work. Further, there was no malice which G7 seemed to require and, it
maintained, as the hoax was freely acknowledged, the integrity of broadcasting had not
been threatened.
Standard G11(i), it said, fell into a similar category and, declining to uphold the
complaint, TVNZ wrote:
The intention was never to mislead viewers by drawing them in and convincing
them of the veracity of the "facts" presented. The intention was to develop a
carefully crafted hoax with sufficient clues to leave most viewers at least
questioning whether it was all real - and then to admit freely that one of New
Zealand's outstanding film-makers (Peter Jackson) had used his very considerable
cinematic skills to produce an elaborate hoax.
Mr Cole's Complaint to the Broadcasting Standards Authority - 20
November 1995
Dissatisfied with TVNZ's decision, Mr Cole referred the complaint to the Broadcasting
Standards Authority under s.8(1)(a) of the Broadcasting Act 1989.
Mr Cole argued that as the broadcast involved the deliberate intention to mislead viewers
and took advantage of their confidence in the integrity of broadcasting, the complaint
should be upheld under the nominated standards.
TVNZ's Response to the Authority - 30 November 1995
In its report to the Authority, TVNZ noted that Mr Cole did not accept its interpretation
of the standards. In reply to that point, TVNZ referred back to its letter of 15
November to Mr Cole and repeated that Forgotten Silver was listed as one of a number
of New Zealand plays.
Mr Cole's Final Comment - 6 December 1995
In response to TVNZ's comment, Mr Cole asked where was it listed that Montana
Sunday Theatre would screen "a number of New Zealand plays". As for TVNZ's
observation that drama was based on fact, Mr Cole replied that such material was
promoted as drama whereas Forgotten Silver was promoted as a factual programme.
Arguing that television had enormous power, Mr Cole wrote:
I feel TVNZ has betrayed the trust people have in television and the fact of
TVNZ's unrepentant attitude demonstrates they would have little compunction in
deceiving television audiences again.
Appendix II
Mr Smith's Complaint to Television New Zealand Ltd - 3 November
1995
Anthony Smith of Palmerston North complained to Television New Zealand Ltd about
the programme Forgotten Silver broadcast on TV One at 8.30pm on Sunday 29 October
1995. The programme, he believed, breached the standards requiring fairness and
accuracy.
Pointing out that the programme was later acknowledged to be a hoax, which TVNZ
and the programme maker might think was a "bit of a laugh", Mr Smith said that there
was no indication before, during or immediately after the broadcast that the
"documentary" was fictitious. Not only were viewers misled by the advertisements that
claimed that New Zealand was about to learn of a new hero, the fabrication was a black
mark on TVNZ's record.
Mr Smith did not accept that the placement in the Montana Sunday Theatre slot was
sufficient as true stories had been featured at that time before. He concluded:
I hope that you will consider this complaint seriously for the benefit of all those
who watched the programme that promised to rewrite the New Zealand history
books and were bitterly disappointed to find out it was a lie. More importantly I
hope that TVNZ never engages in this type of programming again, as I view
watching "Forgotten Silver" an absolute waste of time.
TVNZ's Response to the Formal Complaint - 15 November 1995
TVNZ's response was very similar to its reply to Mr Cole and it has been summarised
in Appendix I.
Mr Smith's Complaint to the Broadcasting Standards Authority - 27
November 1995
Dissatisfied with TVNZ's response, Mr Smith referred his complaint to the
Broadcasting Standards Authority under s.8(1)(a) of the Broadcasting Act 1989.
Explaining that he was not satisfied with TVNZ's reply and standing by his original
complaint, Mr Smith considered that TVNZ had seriously breached the requirement in
standard G11(i) pursuant to which broadcasters were required not to mislead viewers.
"Clearly" he wrote, "Forgotten Silver violates that principle".
Specifically in response to TVNZ's letter, Mr Smith said just because a past broadcast
had been shown to be a hoax, eg Orson Welles War of the Worlds radio broadcast, that
did not make the current broadcast acceptable: "each case should be examined on its
own merits".
TVNZ's Response to the Authority - 6 December 1995
In its report to the Authority, TVNZ advised that it had considered the complaint under
the standard - G11(i) - stressed by Mr Smith in his complaint to the Authority. It wrote:
When considered as a whole, the programme clearly did not simulate news or
events in such a way as to mislead or alarm viewers. It was not a news
programme with events set up to mislead. In fact, there were many clues
throughout the programme to establish its fictitious nature.
As one of its main objectives was to entertain viewers, and as Forgotten Silver had done
that, TVNZ did not accept that the broadcast was a breach of faith with its viewers.
Further, many viewers had applauded the quality of the programme.
Mr Smith's Final Comment - 15 January 1995
In his final comment, Mr Smith disputed TVNZ's claim that the programme was not
designed to mislead "as the clear intention of the documentary was to mislead". He
added:
I am of the firm belief that it is the broadcasters' responsibility to do their utmost
to ensure that such misleading information and visual representations are blocked
from being shown to the public.
He concluded:
I still maintain that this represents a breach of faith with the New Zealand public.
It may be so that some people enjoyed this programme, but I for one, and I know
many others who share my feelings, found the whole incident a regrettable
precedent.
Appendix III
Mr Proctor's Complaint to Television New Zealand Ltd - 9 November
1995
Brent Proctor of Bluff complained through the Broadcasting Standards Authority to
Television New Zealand Ltd about Forgotten Silver broadcast as the Montana Sunday
Theatre item on TV One at 8.30pm on Sunday 29 October 1995. TVNZ had claimed,
he wrote, that the programme would be a documentary about the life and work of
pioneer film-maker Colin McKenzie. However, next morning TVNZ had "lamely
admitted it was a fake".
The pre-broadcast publicity had included an item in the "Listener" and an interview on
National Radio in which the "perpetrators" of the hoax had spoken of an important
documentary and, Mr Proctor stated:
"Forgotten Silver" surely raises the most towering single credibility issue the New
Zealand broadcast media has ever faced; namely, that TVNZ, Jackson, Botes et al
conspired in a cruel hoax. There was no disclaimer before, during or after the
programme.
Arguing that the "miscreants" could not claim to be original, Mr Proctor criticised
TVNZ when he referred to:
... its willingness to lend succour to such an infantile and nefarious enterprise and
to actively participate in the deception of its viewers. At the end of the day we
remain none the wiser: was Colin McKenzie created out of thin air or did he really
exist?
Mr Proctor said that the item had denigrated some gifted people - Richard Pearce and
John Britten - by encouraging disbelief and cynicism. He considered that TVNZ and
the programme makers should be required to apologise fully. He concluded:
For the 1995 outrage of "Forgotten Silver" heads must roll. They could be
delivered - a la "Salome" - on a silver platter. Your teeth meantime, to borrow
from Germaine Greer, should be in their arses.
Mr Proctor also complained to the Minister of Broadcasting and the Commerce
Commission's Fair Trade Division.
In a later letter to TVNZ (23 November 1995), Mr Proctor referred to standards G1,
G7, G11(i) and wrote:
To succinctly reiterate, it is my contention that "Forgotten Silver" was a work of
fiction presented as fact; by acting as they did, the film-makers and TVNZ abused
statutory guidelines for documentary material; that the perpetrators were
fraudulent and deceitful.
TVNZ's Response to the Formal Complaint - 6 December 1995
TVNZ's response was very similar to its reply to Mr Cole and it has been summarised
in Appendix I.
Responding to the criticism about the publicity in the "Listener" and on National Radio,
it pointed out that it was not responsible for what was included in other media.
Mr Proctor's Complaint to the Broadcasting Standards Authority - 15
December 1995
Dissatisfied with TVNZ's response, Mr Proctor referred his complaint to the
Broadcasting Standards Authority under s.8(1)(a) of the Broadcasting Act 1989. He
analysed TVNZ's reply in detail and listed 12 matters on which he considered the
broadcaster was incorrect.
1) Agreeing "sadly" with TVNZ that it was not the first occasion that such a
programme had been broadcast, Mr Proctor explained that he had referred to
"similar wrecks" perpetrated by the international media and noted that TVNZ had
not disputed his argument that Forgotten Silver deserved the same title.
2) TVNZ had not attempted to rebut his argument that Forgotten Silver had crossed
"the clearly etched line" and thus it had acknowledged the breach of broadcasting
standards.
3) Mr Proctor considered TVNZ's avoidance of the word "documentary" as
sophistry. It had conceded awareness of the hoax which was an admission of
complicity in the wilful misleading of viewers.
4) The absence of an explanation as to why TVNZ lent succour to the enterprise (for
example, by not listing cast credits), he argued, was a clear contravention of
standards G1 and G7.
5) TVNZ's point that the item was broadcast in a theatre spot for New Zealand plays
was answered by the interview with the programme maker who, in the "Listener"
article, had said McKenzie's life was so dramatic that a drama spot was not
inappropriate.
6) As for TVNZ's declining to accept responsibility for other media, Mr Proctor
responded that it amounted to an abandonment of integrity on TVNZ's part. The
attitude displayed, he wrote:
...- means TVNZ threw responsibility to the wind and, simultaneously,
compromised that which is at the nucleus of mass communication:
believability.
7) Mr Proctor advanced two examples which countered TVNZ's case that standard
G1 did not apply to works of fiction. First, the broadcast contained apparent
proof that Richard Pearce flew in March 1903 and scenes were shown from the
gala premiere of the film "Salome" at a Wellington theatre on 3 September 1995.
He considered the publication of that information to be a breach of the standards
cited.
8) TVNZ's argument that dramas were based on facts which were not facts was a
euphemism for mendacity. He considered that it was a breach of standard G1.
9) In response to TVNZ's case that standard G7 was not intended to stifle creative
work, Mr Proctor maintained that it was intended to thwart the hijacking of the
airwaves by such programmes as Forgotten Silver.
10) Mr Proctor did not accept TVNZ's case that the programme had not threatened the
integrity of broadcasting or damaged viewer confidence. He referred to some
comments from viewers published elsewhere who supported his stance.
11) TVNZ did not supply figures to support its contention that it had received more
support than criticism for the broadcast. The Listener had noted:
"Of the writers of the 24 letters received on ÔForgotten Silver', 16 express
disapproval, five approve and three still believe - Editor"
12) The last points focused on standard G11(i) and, in reply to TVNZ, Mr Proctor
wrote:
News is news, fact is fact, fiction is fiction. Where the twain meet, overlap
or could cause confusion, identify and acknowledge. Period. End of
story. Forge, fake, misrepresent, propagandise or plagiarise at your
considerable peril.
He referred to programmes which clearly were fictional and those based on a fact. In
the latter case, eg "Heavenly Creatures", the programme was known to be cinematic
fiction based on fact. He continued:
All the events in "Forgotten Silver" were news-accented. The pea-brained twerps
relied on the tried and true documentary format of narrative with cameo
interviews, including several with stoic widow Hannah McKenzie and
movieworld luminaries Neill and Maltin. The real-life Hannah was not identified.
Despite TVNZ's protestations, Forgotten Silver's storyline had been designed to
mislead and the requirements in standard G11(i) had been treated "with utter contempt".
By way of summary, Mr Proctor described TVNZ's actions as shameful and, he
concluded:
The bottom line must be that TVNZ, Jackson, Botes et al were reprehensible at
the outset, they were reprehensible during and, if [TVNZ's] Mr Vautier is to be
taken at his not-upheld word, they are reprehensible in the aftermath. TVNZ not
only trampled upon every section of the Codes of Broadcasting Practice I have
cited it nuked them. ...
TVNZ, as the getaway driver in this stickup of the collective conscience, is as
culpable as gunman Jackson and cohort Botes. They are now, certainly in my
books, certified members of the Hitler Diaries Club. An unrepentant TVNZ, for
its part in this sorry saga, should be suitably chastised.
Further Correspondence
When Mr Proctor referred his complaint to the Authority, he enclosed a copy of the
letter received from the Commerce Commission explaining why it did not intend to take
action of his complaint. Mr Proctor later forwarded the Authority a copy of the reply he
received from the Minister which referred to the statutory complaints process.
TVNZ's Response to the Authority - 16 January 1996
As Mr Proctor appeared to argue that it was essential for the broadcaster to signal a hoax
in advance of the broadcast, in its report to the Authority TVNZ argued that such notice
would destroy the very idea of a hoax.
TVNZ maintained that it was legitimate for writers and film makers to use a hoax. It
reminded the Authority that the British "documentary" on spaghetti farming was widely
recognised as a classic in the field. TVNZ concluded:
We repeat that we are sorry that "Forgotten Silver" has caused so much distress.
We understand that he did not enjoy being taken in by the programme - but
recognise on the other hand that many viewers took pleasure from the programme
and expressed admiration for the clever way in which the hoax was developed and
executed. In this, as in other programmes, television cannot please all the viewers
all of the time.
Mr Proctor's Final Comment - 24 January 1996
Maintaining that TVNZ's response amounted to rearranging the Titanic's deck chairs,
Mr Proctor wrote:
No responsible broadcaster can knowingly air a hoax masquerading as a
documentary and, when called to account willy-nilly declare the programme art.
In TVNZ's entire stance, the late Justice Mahon's immortal phrase - "an
orchestrated litany of lies" - assume a chilling echo.
He argued that TVNZ had ignored his arguments about viewer reaction other than to
maintain that many were "rapturous". He described the broadcast as TVNZ's iceberg.