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Screenrights
A Screenrights Television and Radio Copying Licence lets schools, universities and polytechnics, colleges and wananga record whatever they like from television and radio, in exchange for the payment of an annual fee.
Dear Tertiary Institutions
Welcome to the Screenrights TV Guide for Tertiary Institutions for 2011, Vol 12, Issue 24.
Today we are pleased to include a study guide for the series Kaitangata Twitch which is re-screening on Maori TV from Saturday 16 July. Adapted for television from Margaret Mahy's book of the same name, Kaitangata Twitch is a thirteen-episode television series created in New Zealand (Aotearoa). A thrilling contemporary story for a variety of audiences, this series uses live action and CGi to give life to a magical-realist myth. An entertaining drama for children and adults, Kaitangata Twitch also invites audiences to consider serious social and political issues. The series is an appropriate resource for tertiary and middle school students, and is most ideally suited to senior school students at NZ NCEA levels 2, 3 and 4. At the tertiary level, it is appropriate for: New Zealand History, Te Reo Maori, Media Studies, Politics, Environmental Studies and English. At the secondary level, it is appropriate for: Media Studies, Maori Geography, History - The Treaty of Waitangi and Maori-Pake. Download the FREE study guide from the enhancetv.com website.
If you have received this Guide from a friend and your institution has a Screenrights licence you can subscribe yourself for free. Please send an email to tvednz@screenrights.org with "subscribe" as the subject and your name and the name and phone number of your institution in the body.
As always any feedback is welcomed to tvednz@screenrights.org
Kind regards
Anna Yates
NZ Guide Editor
Screenrights
Level 3, 156 Military Road
NEUTRAL BAY NSW 2089
Telephone: +61 2 9904 0133
Fax: +61 2 9904 0498
SCREENRIGHTS TV GUIDE FOR TERTIARY INSTITUTIONS 2011
Vol. 12 Issue 24 Sat 16th July - Fri 22nd July 2011
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PROGRAMME SUMMARIES
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VISUAL AND PERFORMING ARTS
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How To Look At A Painting (G)
(TVOne, Sun 17 July 10.15pm - 30 mins)
Artsville: Ans Westra - Private Journeys, Public Signposts (G) (TVNZ7, Fri 22 July 10.05pm - 50 mins)
SCIENCE AND ENVIRONMENT
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Our World: Saving the Panda (G)
(TVOne, Sun 17 July 5pm - 60 mins)
Stephen Fry and The Great American Oil Spill (PGR) (Prime, Sun 17 July 11.30pm - 60 mins)
Making Stuff: Cleaner (G)
(TVNZ7, Mon 18 July 9.05pm - 50 mins)
What's Really In Our Food? (PGR)
(TV3, Tue 19 July 7.30pm - 30 mins)
Superswarms (G)
(TVOne, Wed 20 July 9.30pm 65 mins)
CULTURAL STUDIES
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Kaitangata Twitch (G)
(Maori TV, Sat 16 July 6.30pm - 30 mins)
Attitude
(TVOne, Sun 17 July 8.30am - 30 mins)
Asia Downunder
(TVOne, Sun 17 July 11am - 30 mins)
NZ Stories: Pacific Screen (G)
(TVOne, Sun 17 July 11.30am - 30 mins)
I Know A Sheila Like That
(Maori TV, Tue 19 July 8pm - 30 mins)
No Longer Achmed (G)
(Maori TV, Tue 19 July 8.30pm - 60 mins)
Hindsight
(TVNZ7, Tue 19 July 9.30pm - 25 mins)
Doco of the Week: Lunchbox Bullies (PGR) (TVNZ7, Tue 19 July 10.05pm - 50 mins)
Raising Children in New Zealand
(TVNZ7, Wed 20 July 7.05pm - 25 mins)
A Child's World (G)
(TVNZ7, Wed 20 July 7.30pm - 25 mins)
Inside New Zealand: A Drunken State (AO) (TV3, Wed 20 July 8.30pm - 60 mins)
Nga Pirihimana Hou (PGR)
(Maori TV, Fri 22 July 10pm - 30 mins)
HEALTH STUDIES
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The Food Truck (G)
(TVOne, Sun 17 July 7pm - 30 mins)
HISTORY
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Prime Presents: Fromelles (AO)
(Prime, Sun 17 July 8.30pm - 115 mins)
MAORI AND PACIFIC ISLAND CULTURE
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Waka Huia
(TVOne, Sun 17 July 10.30am - 60 mins)
TOURISM
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Food Safari (G)
(TVOne, Sat 16 July 9am - 30 mins)
Jamie's 30 Minute Meals (PGR)
(TVOne, Sat 16 July 8pm - 30 mins)
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PROGRAMME SYNOPSES & WEB RESOURCES
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VISUAL AND PERFORMING ARTS
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* How To Look At A Painting (G) (TVOne, Sun 17 July 10.15pm - 30 mins) *
For the first time on TV ONE, How To Look At A Painting offers a fresh and
exciting perspective on how to truly appreciate and better understand the
world of painting. The documentary is based on the book of the same name
written by Justin Paton, senior curator at Christchurch Art Gallery.
In the series Paton, who also presents the show, embarks on a highly visual
journey of exploration across the painted world to uncover and examine the
marvels and mysteries of painting. Each episode focuses on a different theme
and asks why we should look at all. From abstract to religious, contemporary
to historical, portrait to landscape and from installations to paintings
that seem like nothing at all - this is a journey through the unpredictable
and wonderful, ever-changing world of art. By the end of the series, How to
Look at a Painting will demystify art by guiding viewers through the
historical and contemporary world of painting. The core objective is simple:
learn to relax around paintings and know what you like.
http://tvnz.co.nz/search/ta_ent_search_tv_skin.xhtml?q=how+to+look+at+a+pain
ting&sort=date%3AD%3AS%3Ad1
* Artsville: Ans Westra - Private Journeys, Public Signposts (G) (TVNZ7,
Fri 22 July 10.05pm - 50 mins) *
Standing in front of the camera was a difficult experience for Dutch born
photographer Ans Westra. The artist whose work has captured the essence of
New Zealanders since the late 50s admitted she felt uncomfortable in the
spotlight while filming this documentary. Usually hunched over her
Rolleiflex camera, Westra prefers to be an invisible observer - an unnoticed
participant who records from the inside out, her presence being that of an
interested and unobtrusive Aunty. Her photos are snapshots of New Zealand
history - life on the marae, Pacific migration, the sex industry, the rise
of Maori radicalism, all of which sit alongside the records of important
cultural moments. Her work documents more than 45 years of ordinary Kiwis
just being themselves, and in a way her photographs record the heartbeat of
an emerging sense of nationhood. Westra's visual interpretation enables
people to see ideas rather than trying to explain them, leaving the viewer
free to decide their own position. Consistently capturing major turning
points in our history, Westra has produced multi-dimensional images that
survive the arguments and academic debates.
http://tvnz.co.nz/artsville/482074
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