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Thursday 4 January 2018

Summer learning journey Week 3 Day 2

Day 2: Peace Out! (The 1960s)

Activity 1: The Dawn of Television
In the 1960s there was a great deal of change in New Zealand. Technology was evolving and the television was introduced for the first time into New Zealand homes in the 1960s. Popular programmes included Town and Around and C’mon.  Television remains popular to this day.

What is your favourite television show at the moment? On your blog tell us about your favourite television show. What is it about? Who are the main characters? What channel is it on?

My Favourite Television series | Family Feud
What is it about?
This family show is about two families competing by answering question's they survey within New Zealand. I like it because it's fun and exciting when you play along to it and see if you know the answers especially the top answer, also you learn more about New Zealand. This a good family show because you win money and a car if your family wins five nights in a row.
New Zealand Celebrities also play to make money for charities

Main characters
TV host: Dai Henwood
Game players: Two families (four members each).

Channel 3 at 5:30pm Monday to Friday.

Activity 2: Rock ‘n’ Roll
Famous bands also started travelling across the world and in 1964, New Zealand hosted, arguably the most popular band of the time, The Beatles.

People were very excited to see The Beatles, and the hype around the band was known as Beatle-Mania (similar to the modern-day Bieber-Fever)!

Read about their tour of New Zealand below, and then post three interesting facts about The Beatles Tour on your blog.

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The Beatles' first stop in New Zealand was Wellington. Seven thousand screaming fans – nearly all young women – waited as the band touched down on 21 June 1964. One girl badly hurt her leg trying to climb a wire fence, and two others were forced through the fence because of pushing from behind.

A team of 30 police officers, some in plain clothes, was on hand. Bill Brien, in charge of the operation, later said that:

“We underestimated the whole thing badly. The crowd was so big we had to … keep all the people behind a wire fence. At one stage it looked like the fence would collapse, which would have been a disaster.”

As the band stepped off the plane, the shrieks of fans drowned out the noise of the engines. Te Pataka concert party performed a haka, before doing a hongi (pressing noses) and presenting the band members with tiki.

From the back of a Holden utility, The Beatles waved to fans who lined the roads from the airport to town. The crowds outside their hotel, the St George, were so large that The Beatles had to be taken in secretly through the bottle shop entrance of the hotel. Management rushed the band up to the third floor balcony so fans could see them and not crash the hotel.

It was mayhem. 'Girls were screaming uncontrollably, quite out of their tree,' people remembered. Police used dogs to clear crowds from verandahs and other vantage points. Teenagers pushed over and damaged two police motorbikes; there was so much pushing that one of The Beatles’ cars was shunted backwards, even with the handbrake on.

Fans trekked back to The Beatles' hotel after the concert. The band was stuck inside as crowds gathered outside. Some kept up a late-night vigil on the hill behind the hotel. Others tried to get round the strict security; four girls strolled onto the sixth floor into the arms of Ringo Starr. His response was, ‘Now girls, no nonsense or else I’ll leave.’

Away from all the fuss, two of the band members took the chance to catch up with family. Police whisked John Lennon away to Levin to meet his second cousins, while Ringo Starr (formerly Starkey) met a group of Starkeys from the Wellington suburb of Karori.

The Beatles Tour
1. The Beatles were obviously famous because the girls like them.
2. The Beatles stepped out of the plane and fans were already there cheering at them.
3. The Beatles are so cool that girl tried to jump over the fence and got hurt, two others were forced through the fence because of pushing from behind.

Bonus Activity: The Three Rs - Rugby, Racing and Running
In the 1960s, sport in New Zealand was dominated by the three R’s – rugby, racing and running. The national rugby team, the All Blacks, had a great decade, winning 36 of the 40 games that they played. Many kiwis also spent their week-ends at the local racetrack and, in 1960, Peter Snell won a gold medal in the 800m race at the Olympic Games in Rome, Italy. He followed this up with two more gold medals in the 800m and 1500m races at the 1964 Olympic Games.

Watch this documentary about Peter Snell and then create a one-page poster on Canva* about this famous kiwi runner. Be sure to include a picture  of Peter along with information about his interests and other sporting accomplishments.

*You will need to register on the Canva website in order to use it. To register, first you will need to choose your poster template from the homepage. This will bring up the sign-in page. Click on the ‘Register with Email’ button and enter your details.

4 comments:

  1. Hi there Opeti, thanks for sharing your favourite television show with us, Family Feud. It's a great show because you are always learning and playing along with the contestants. I sometimes watch it and I always find myself talking to the television, sometimes yelling, I always feel like I would do a good job on the show but once you go on you freeze up and say something odd, something that no one in the survey would have said!

    What is your favourite part about the show?

    Thanks, Billy

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hello Opeti,

    You have some great facts about the Beatles, I think that the fans were very crazy about them and a bit over the top standing outside there hotel room.

    Do you think you would be a fan of them why or why not?

    Keep up the great work!

    Katelyn : )

    ReplyDelete
  3. Sup Opeti,
    Activity 1- I like family fued because the people when they get nervous or scared they just say weird things, like this guy was asked "Name a animal that has 3 letters in its name". He said "Crocodile". Haha lol.

    Great work
    Jerome;)

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hey Opeti,
    Activity 2 - I like you facts because you're using your knowledge of inferenceing to answer the questions that you've been given.

    Great work
    Jerome;)

    ReplyDelete