Archive for April, 2005
Thursday, April 7th, 2005
I worked with a group of denominational leaders from the Methodist Pacific Council earlier this week. Our brief was to look at cultural icons for clues to the ways we might engage with popular culture. These people were from networks in Fiji, Tonga, Samoa, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, New Zealand and Australia.
Australian Identity
We began with a Qantas three minute television commercial based on Peter Allen’s song, I still call Australia home. This was the first in a series, filmed in 1997, featuring spots around the world alongside Australian scenery. Our reflection was on the sense of Australian identity developed only as people leave their home and come back again. The video was directed by Geoff Dixon for Mojo Sydney and is available to see online at Duncans TV
Australian Humour
The next advertisements came from the Bundaberg Polar Bear campaign. There are four of these available online at bungabergrum.com.au The first we looked at was the Refreshing Lime ad featuring a polar bear in a helicopter dropping cold water on two parched mates. The second featured a polar bear in a tree dropping down on cue as the boys chatted up the female tourists in the camping ground.
We talked about the perceived preoccupations in popular culture with staying cool, mateship and of course sexuality. We considered the sense of humour that used a polar bear as the mascot of a drink made in sub tropical region. This was the same sense of humour that led to tall men being called Shorty, bald men being called Curly and redheads being called Bluey.
Australian Larrikins
The third section introduced the larrikin concept.
The Hahn Premium Light advertisement, Sex Bomb was considered the funniest advertisement of 2004 in Australia. It begins with a sensuous ambience, with a woman walking to her spa and slipping into the bubbles. Out of nowhere drops the guy with his Hahn Premium Light beer. What?, he says in response to her shocked face. The ad, directed by Paul Middleditch and available to view at Duncans TV, encouraged men to drink responsibly without losing their sense of humour.
We reflected on the challenge of connecting with people who at present have no interest in the church as it is. Major points of tension included the wowser/larrikin contrast. Since the temperance movement of the nineteenth century, many of the Christian churches in Australia have had a tacit agreement that alcohol will not be consumed in connection with their gatherings. Another point of tension was varying attitudes toward sexuality and humour. The Christian church is not seen as a friendly environment for Australian blokes.
We looked at TV advertisement for Lipton Ice Tea, based on a beach. A surfer walks up to two sunbathing babes and frankly tells them he’s come to have a close up look to see if they’re good looking or not. They tell him honestly that they’ve already checked him out and decided they’re not interested, though they will play along just in case he’s rich. They tell him he’d look better if he sucked his stomach in more. He tells them he’s off to see two topless girls further up the beach. The ad finishes with the line, Be Yourself Naturally. We discussed the Australian admiration for frankness. The ad is online at Duncans TV.
We considered the fact that the ad was introducing an overseas product into Australia, appealing to the Australian psyche. This has a parallel with the attempts of the Christian church to contextualize the Christian gospel.
Australian Prejudice
Our last TV ad was Saatchi & Saatchi United Nations ad, Bad Mouth. An Aboriginal man, a Muslim man, an Asian woman, a Lebanese man, a Jewish man, and an effeminate man each vilify people of their own sort. The finishing text: It doesn’t make sense coming out of their mouths. Does it make sense coming out of yours? We talked about multicultural identity in Australia, recognizing that Australian popular culture is only now coming to terms with the changes in immigration implemented in the 1960s through to 1980s. Until the middle of the twentieth century the federal government pursued a White Australia policy, which in effect excluded people who could not easily blend into a culture dominated by white British values and appearance. The ad is online at Duncans TV.
The Uniting Church in Australia included people who had fought to have the White Australia policy lifted. Multicultural diversity was named as a key part of the values being developed at national, regional and local levels. At the same time it was proving to be difficult to move beyond a multi-ethnic approach in which the English speaking part of the Church continued to operate without much impact from other cultures. Representatives at the Monday gathering wondered why there were not Aborigine or Pacific Island representatives at the gathering. It was acknowledged that structural participation took the Church so far but that friendships needed to be built up at every level. It was difficult to develop a consistent partnership with the Aborigine people when there was no single language or political entity shared by all Aborigine and Islander people. Australia has a reputation for being a place in which different ethnic groups can live in peace, particularly in the major cities. However there is a long way to go in the development of a truly multicultural identity in which white Australians learn to engage with the cultures of their fellow Australians.
We talked about the reality that there are many Australian identities being developed. Traditionally even urban Australians have looked to the bush and the digger for their sense of national pride. Now Australia is developing a wide range of media in which women are valued, different ethnic groups are highlighted, and people of various generations are acknowledged. The Uniting Church in Australia faces the challenge of relating to the ever changing mix of contexts in each region.
It was asked if the Uniting Church had engaged with television advertising. Pentecostal groups had engaged with television programming that was aimed at people engaging with product - be that healing or prosperity. Christian Television Association had taken a documentary approach in which people could engage with faith through education. Engaging with a television culture would lead people to consider carefully the aspects of the gospel that could be highlighted, but also the aspects that could be left behind. For example, radical counter-cultural discipleship that did not promise benefits would not do down easily in a consumerist environment.
Continuing Conversion
We finished with a look at Darrell Guder’s book, The Continuing Conversion of the Church, Eerdmans, 2000. Guder reminds us that failing to take the risk of translation amounts to sin. We should follow God’s lead in inculturating the gospel.
Mission is to be a continuing process of translation and witness, whereby the evangelist and the mission community will discover again and again that they will be confronted by the gospel as it is translated, heard and responded to, and will thus experience ongoing conversion while serving as witness.
Posted in Worth Reading | 2 Comments »
Sunday, April 3rd, 2005
There’s something striking about the John 20 story of frightened disciples hiding behind locked doors only to discover the resurrected Jesus in the room.
What were they hiding from? The text suggests these followers of Jesus were guarding their lives from the same people who had put Jesus to death in the week before. They were keeping out ‘The Jews’.
And Jesus appears suddenly, saying to them, “Peace be with you”.
But probably not in the high church sense with a carefully waved hand. I think he was more likely to greet them with a throaty ‘Shalom!’. Like in Shalom - the Neurotrash.com spoof of Budweiser’s Wassup ads. And then he shows them the wounds. This was not likely to be some ghostly mystical experience. From the text it reads more like a jubilant reunion.
Jesus breathes the Holy Spirit into these disciples and tells them they must forgive sins. I think they all would have particular sins and particular people in mind. The people who had put Jesus through all his suffering and ultimate death. Fear and bitterness were threatening to stifle any sense of life. Without the life-giving Spirit of God in them, and without the will to forgive, they would spend the rest of their days behind locked doors.
It strikes me that we still have the potential to spend time behind locked doors. I see it happening when I turn up at some Christian gatherings. I’m treated with suspicion until people are convinced that I have the right language and the right doctrine. If that’s how a Christian of 40 years is regarded then how would a rank outsider be treated? There’s more focus on keeping the gospel pure than giving the gospel away to people who need it most. Usually I find that there’s an experience of hurt behind the attitude of suspicion.
I preached on this passage on Anzac Day back in 2001. I encouraged people to learn the lessons learnt by people in the trenches at Gallipoli. Nationality, at the end of the day, is not our defining mark. It is our inner attitude towards others that changes who we are. The Australians and New Zealanders learned to work with one another - becoming known as one unit, the ANZACs, the Australian New Zealand Armed Corps. It still puzzles me that on this day Australians seem oblivious to the fact that there were New Zealanders involved!
It was at Gallipoli that the British and their southern Colonialists realised that Southern Europeans were just as skilled at soldiery. A mutual respect was developed in the middle of a tragic prolonged battle. The Turkish people have shown an incredible grace and generosity in forgiving the nations who attempted to invade their land. Australians and New Zealanders who travel to Gallipoli in Turkey today will not be treated with harshness. Indeed they are welcomed with warmth and respect. That’s the attitude Jesus came to give his beseiged followers.
At the heart of this is identity. Do we find our identity by naming and keeping out the enemy? Or do we find it in sharing the capacity of Jesus to forgive those who killed him?
Posted in Gospel | 1 Comment »
Sunday, April 3rd, 2005
Karol Josef Wojtyla (since 1978 known as Pope John Paul II) died this morning. He’s been around a long time. Nearly 27 years as pope. That puts him in the top three popes when it comes to longevity! People younger than thirty would have known only John Paul II as pope.
One of my kids asked this morning, do you remember any popes before John Paul II?
The pope I grew up knowing about was Pope Paul VI, otherwise known as Giovanni Battista Enrica Antonia Maria Montini. He’s remembered for his 1968 statement on human sexuality in which he made it clear that artificial birth control was sinful. Apparently the flack over that got to him. As well as the criticism he copped for actioning the advances of Vatican II (1962-1964) like introduction of the mass in the vernacular languages of the world. In his later years he seemed reluctant to come out with anything controversial or striking.
I was 16 when the next pope, John Paul I, Albino Luciani, died suddenly, 34 days after his election in September 1978. I remember John Paul I as a smiling, humble man, somewhat similar to Peter Sellars in appearance. And I remember the many conspiracy theories that came out after his death. The Vatican at the time seemed to be covering up.
David Yallop came out with a book, In God’s Name, suggesting that this pope was murdered after he threatened to expose and deal with corruption in the Vatican Bank. John Cornwall in his book, A Thief in the Night, suggested that the pope had health problems before taking on the new position and died of a pulmonary embolism.
John Paul II has certainly made a difference in the image of the Catholic Church around the world. First of all he’s Polish not Italian. He’s helped move the Catholic Church beyond the confines of Italian culture. He’s moved around, appeared publicly, been shot and forgiven his would-be assassin. He probably played a part in the fall of the Iron Curtain in Eastern Europe. Yes he has promoted a conservative line on sexuality and theology, attempting to reduce the impact of movements centred on liberation theology and creation spirituality. He’s made sure that priests continue to be male, single and celibate. At the same time he’s engaged with popular media, releasing his work on the internet and on CD. It will be interesting to see what happens next.
Darren Rowse of Melbourne and the team behind Breaking News Blog collective are hosting a web site dedicated to following news related to the life and death of Pope John Paul II and the Vatican. It will be worth monitoring.
Posted in Worth Reading | 1 Comment »
Sunday, April 3rd, 2005
I took my son to see the Highlanders (Otago/Southland in NZ) play the Queensland Reds at the Ballymore Stadium in Brisbane on Friday night. It’s the one night this year the two teams meet up here in Queensland. Assuming they won’t meet in the Super 12 semifinals or final.
Rugby Union isn’t big here in Australia in the same way it is in New Zealand. There’s steep competition from Rugby League and Aussie Rules (AFL). After Friday night I can see why. The play is interrupted so much by penalties and injury time. It’s hard for a crowd to get excited when the clock is ticking away with nothing happening.
Having said that, it was good to be part of the live action instead of watching it on Fox Sports. It was a warm clear night. The crowd was full of courteous well behaved people. The drunken element were on the XXXX Hill at the other end.
And who won? The Highlanders of course.
So far this season they’ve been beaten by the Auckland Blues in Dunedin, drawn with the Investec Stormers (Western Province) in Dunedin, trounced the Blue Bulls (Pretoria) in Dunedin, floored the Coastal Sharks (KwaZulu-Natal) in Durban, and narrowly beaten the Cats in Johannesburg.
This time it was the Reds they beat 23 to 16. Josh Blackie took two excellent tries in the first half an hour. Ben Blair kicked 13 points in conversions and penalties.
I was impressed with the public transport put on by Queensland Rugby Union. It meant we could leave the car at work, train into the city and then get the free bus to the stadium. It was a chance to mingle with the fans.
There was one scrap out of one of the rucks. Who knows what started it. But the most visible feature of the fight was when Wendell Sailor and Josh Blackie eyeballed each other. In full view of the crowd and ref Sailor punches and head butts (or brushes with head) Blackie. And he doesn’t even get sent off. This was a bit steep when Craig Newby was sent off for backchat. Mind you later on in the game Sailor was sinbinned for tripping Ben Blair when he’d missed the tackle. I note that Wendell’s been cleared to join the Reds in South Africa. Either there were extenuating circumstances or Wendell is just too valuable to be dropped.
Sponsors and TV Advertising
Advertising is a key part of the Super 12. Tooheys is the major sponsor. They’ve got a couple of blokey TV ads in mpeg format, featuring a lost dog, a bloke and a babe.
Queensland Reds are sponsored by Bank of Queensland, Castlemaine’s XXXX, and Canterbury of NZ. I’m not impressed by the absence of television advertising on the Castlemaine site. They’ve put out some crackers over the years. But they’re floating around online in poor quality. Castlemaine is more popular in the UK than in Australia it seems. It would help if they could keep an archive of their ads online.
Otago Highlanders are sponsored by Ford, Speights and Adidas. Once again, the beer site is troubled when it comes to TV advertising. The Speights ads are all there to view - but due to a codec problem (codec 75) it’s seems impossible to watch the asx format videos. Having said all that, the ads portray a classic stockman/shepherd ‘Southern Man’ approach to life in which beer and mateship are higher priorities than finding the right woman. The NZ shepherd has a tougher image than in Australia where traditionally shepherds were regarded as soft versions of cattle stockmen.
Posted in Worth Reading | No Comments »
Friday, April 1st, 2005
Am having a couple of days off to get over the flu.
I spent a couple of hours yesterday competing with online scribblers - playing “iSketch”. The way it works is you join a group of online players who have agreed to use a particular vocabulary (which may be English Easy, Intermediate or Difficult). There are ten timed rounds in which one person draws while the others guess what it might be. Once someone gets it right the time speeds up. You get 10 points for the first person who gets yours right. After that there’s one point for each extra correct guess. You get points for guessing, 10 if you’re the first, 9 if you’re second, and so on.

The game is a bit like a shockwave version of Pictionary.
All of the family are now likely to have addictive episodes with iSketch, though we can’t be more than one person from the same address in the same game at one time. All in all, good competitive addictive interactive fun.
www.isketch.net
Posted in Worth Reading | 5 Comments »