Inspired by the British series, Spitting Image, Public Eye uses latex puppets to caricature topical personalities, mostly drawn from the world of politics.
Inspired by the British series, Spitting Image, Public Eye uses latex puppets to caricature topical personalities, mostly drawn from the world of politics.
Inspired by the British series, Spitting Image, Public Eye uses latex puppets to caricature topical personalities, mostly drawn from the world of politics.
Inspired by the British series, Spitting Image, Public Eye uses latex puppets to caricature topical personalities, mostly drawn from the world of politics.
Inspired by the British series, Spitting Image, Public Eye uses latex puppets to caricature topical personalities, mostly drawn from the world of politics.
Inspired by the British series, Spitting Image, Public Eye uses latex puppets to caricature topical personalities, mostly drawn from the world of politics.
Skits include: kumara; sale of State Owned Enterprises (SOEs); Lotto; Katherine Mansfield; Tim Shadbolt; Whare Paia; Peter Bland; Fair Go; Jim Anderton; Koro Wetere; Gloss; giant pandas; AIDS campaigns.
Topics covered include: new health package; politicians' ethics; the Government's advertisements on television; pandas; Whare Paia; cricket; Winston Peters on the United States election; firebombing police stations; John Banks and 'Lauranorda' (law and order); Telecom commercials; frigate deal; Radio With Pictures (RWP) and the gothic music cult; kumara and Maoritanga; sale of State Owned Assets (SOEs); and National Party infighting.
Topics covered include: Kinetic Investments; Democratic Party siege in parliament; poor lazy farmers; Winston Peters meets Ronald Reagan; Gloss; Maori Affairs; cricketer Richard Hadlee; Richard Prebble's sacking from Cabinet; Prime Minister David Lange's 'dictatorial' behaviour; Sir Robert Muldoon's television commercials; Neil Roberts; AIDS commercials; Unemployment This Week.
Topics covered include: Sharon Crosbie; Opposition leader Jim Bolger; ANZAC frigates; rugby books; forestry workers; Treaty of Waitangi; television weather forecasts; Auckland; Bob Tizard interview; Nancy Prebble; men in New Zealand; National Party leadership; 'Glosspital'; 'Sideline Stan'; Stan Rodger; Government economic policy; Phil Goff and unemployment.
Inspired by the British series, Spitting Image, Public Eye uses latex puppets to caricature topical personalities, mostly drawn from the world of politics.
Inspired by the British series, Spitting Image, Public Eye uses latex puppets to caricature topical personalities, mostly drawn from the world of politics.
Topics covered include: sports; Tim Shadbolt; Television programme "It's In The Bag"; Winston Peters and Koro Wetere; TV4; Berlin Wall; Television programme "Sale of the Century"; Tizard for Panmure; Richard Prebble on gangs; falling school rolls; registering vehicles in the names of children; taxis and tow trucks; MPs on television and newspaper columnists; Antarctica.
Topics covered include: Property magnate Robert Jones (aka Bob Jones); Fletcher-Challenge; unions; traffic officers; Saturday Live; toys for children; health budget; gangs; 1990; television; Queensland police; National Party leadership; Christmas; boxer Bruno Lawrence.
Topics covered include: financial collapses; industrial relations; Geoffrey Palmer as Prime Minister; Tomorrow's Schools; cigarettes; leadership of the National Party; traffic officers and violence; Air New Zealand advertising; All Black tour of Wales; local body elections' Government spending cuts; Bank of New Zealand (BNZ) television advertising; race relations; World war Two television season; law and order; Telecom advertising; safer sex; Tampon advertising; so-called 'computer nerds'; and the sharemarket crash.
Topics covered include: hole in the ozone layer; National party leadership; port strike; rugby; Sale of the century; NLP; Air New Zealand television advertising; Aaron Cohen; television advertising on Sundays; gang huis; Holmes show; foreign ownership of New Zealand; Roger Douglas as Minister of Police; privatisation of prisons; Accident Compensation Corporation (ACC); Prime Minister Geoffrey Palmer; cricket; Fletcher-Challenge ownership of the Rural Bank; "Holmski".
Topics covered include: Winston Peters; new United States Ambassador to New Zealand Della Newman; Guy Fawkes; Patricia Bartlett; Air New Zealand television advertising; dentists; Halloween; 1990 Commonwealth games; rugby; education; stock market; Health Minister Helen Clark; bailiffs' right to seize property; Instant Kiwi lottery; wine tasting and glue sniffing; Holmes show; Penelope Barr as weather presenter; National Party leadership contest between Jim Bolger and Winston Peters.
Inspired by the British series, Spitting Image, Public Eye uses latex puppets to caricature topical personalities, mostly drawn from the world of politics.
Inspired by the British series, Spitting Image, Public Eye uses latex puppets to caricature topical personalities, mostly drawn from the world of politics.
Inspired by the British series, Spitting Image, Public Eye uses latex puppets to caricature topical personalities, mostly drawn from the world of politics.
Inspired by the British series, Spitting Image, Public Eye uses latex puppets to caricature topical personalities, mostly drawn from the world of politics.
Inspired by the British series, Spitting Image, Public Eye uses latex puppets to caricature topical personalities, mostly drawn from the world of politics.
Inspired by the British series, Spitting Image, Public Eye uses latex puppets to caricature topical personalities, mostly drawn from the world of politics.