• About
  • Stuff the British Stole
    • No One Saw It Coming • ABC
    • Stuff The British Stole • ABC & CBC
    • This Is Not A Game • Audible
    • House of Skulls • Audible
    • Nut Jobs • Audible
    • It Burns • Audible
    • Download This Show • ABC
    • Not Alone • Beyond Blue
    • Stuff The British Stole TV Series
    • The Secret DNA of Us
    • Red Flag • Music's Failed Revolution
    • Came From Nowhere
    • The Mission
    • The Kingdom
    • Framed
    • The School That Tried To End Racism
    • Born Small: The Future of Dwarfism
    • Stuffed: Inside Australia's Biggest Museum Heist
    • Hong Kong: Behind the Frontline
    • Sex In Japan: Dying for Company
    • Hong Kong: Crazy Rich, Crazy Poor
    • Torture Therapy
    • Postnatal Psychosis
    • The Price of K-Pop Fame
  • Interviews
    • Planet According to the Movies
    • That Movie Book
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Marc Fennell

Journalist + Maker of Things
  • About
  • Stuff the British Stole
  • Podcasts
    • No One Saw It Coming • ABC
    • Stuff The British Stole • ABC & CBC
    • This Is Not A Game • Audible
    • House of Skulls • Audible
    • Nut Jobs • Audible
    • It Burns • Audible
    • Download This Show • ABC
    • Not Alone • Beyond Blue
  • Documentaries
    • Stuff The British Stole TV Series
    • The Secret DNA of Us
    • Red Flag • Music's Failed Revolution
    • Came From Nowhere
    • The Mission
    • The Kingdom
    • Framed
    • The School That Tried To End Racism
    • Born Small: The Future of Dwarfism
    • Stuffed: Inside Australia's Biggest Museum Heist
    • Hong Kong: Behind the Frontline
    • Sex In Japan: Dying for Company
    • Hong Kong: Crazy Rich, Crazy Poor
    • Torture Therapy
    • Postnatal Psychosis
    • The Price of K-Pop Fame
  • Interviews
  • Books
    • Planet According to the Movies
    • That Movie Book
Featured
Sam Smith's queer awakening
Sam Smith's queer awakening
Guy Sebastian on grief, break-ups and the dangers of politics.
Guy Sebastian on grief, break-ups and the dangers of politics.
Tiny painted rocks changed this man's life
Tiny painted rocks changed this man's life
The Black Eyed Peas on staying together and fighting cancer
The Black Eyed Peas on staying together and fighting cancer
Louis Theroux doesn't trust Scientologists
Louis Theroux doesn't trust Scientologists
Michael Parkinson was told he'd never be on TV
Michael Parkinson was told he'd never be on TV
Homeless piano virtuoso Natalie Trayling
Homeless piano virtuoso Natalie Trayling
Ryan Reynolds combats anxiety with improv
Ryan Reynolds combats anxiety with improv
The Red Wiggle Murray Cook on hanging up the skivvie
The Red Wiggle Murray Cook on hanging up the skivvie
Vampire Weekend's Ezra Koenig never quite made it as a rapper
Vampire Weekend's Ezra Koenig never quite made it as a rapper
Matt Corby explains how he got the nickname 'Captain Fiddlefingers'
Matt Corby explains how he got the nickname 'Captain Fiddlefingers'
Basketballer Elizabeth Cambage on rage, race and ego
Basketballer Elizabeth Cambage on rage, race and ego
Lupita Nyong'o likes to take roles that scare her
Lupita Nyong'o likes to take roles that scare her
Henry Rollins' fans have made him a more empathetic person
Henry Rollins' fans have made him a more empathetic person
Jordan Peele on why he takes joy in making people scared
Jordan Peele on why he takes joy in making people scared
Lily Allen: beating sensationalist media at their own game
Lily Allen: beating sensationalist media at their own game
Marc's Favourite Interviews & Stories of 2018
Marc's Favourite Interviews & Stories of 2018
Jamie Lee Curtis: Reflections on a life nearly lost to addiction
Jamie Lee Curtis: Reflections on a life nearly lost to addiction
Tom Morello: On the front lines with Rage Against the Machine
Tom Morello: On the front lines with Rage Against the Machine
Ruel: 'Songwriting is exaggerating'
Ruel: 'Songwriting is exaggerating'
Eric Bana talks with The Feed's Marc Fennell about watching a seance, his varied career and what horror has in common with sketch comedy. Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SBS2Australia Twitter: https://twitter.com/sbs2 Tumblr: http://sbs2australia.tumblr.com/

Eric Bana

July 25, 2014 in Interviews, SBS, The Feed
Planet Of The Apes, Lord Of The Rings, Star Wars, King Kong Life Of Pi; all star animations. So who creates them? Rob Coleman and Erik Winquist talk special effects with Marc Fennell. George Lucas' animator, Rob Coleman, talks about his creations Caeser, Yoda, Gollum... and Jar Jar Binks.

The Effects Designers

July 25, 2014 in Interviews, SBS, The Feed
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SBS2Australia Twitter: https://twitter.com/sbs2 Tumblr: http://sbs2australia.tumblr.com/

Inside Calvary with John Micheal McDonagh

July 25, 2014 in Interviews, SBS, The Feed
Imagine if we had half the population speaking eleven different languages; how much harder would it be to get movies made and watched in that market? That's the challenges faced by the South African film industry. Check out this story about a film going against the odds.

South African Rom Coms?

July 25, 2014 in Interviews, SBS, The Feed

Stop Putting Your Kids Online?

July 25, 2014 in SBS, Technology Reports, The Feed
Guy Pearce's terrible hair, R Patz's insecurity, and shooting in the desert with flies. Marc Fennell interviews the actors and creator of The Rover. Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SBS2Australia Twitter: https://twitter.com/sbs2 Tumblr: http://sbs2australia.tumblr.com/

Robert Pattinson, Guy Pearce + David Michod talk The Rover

July 25, 2014 in Interviews, SBS, The Feed
for the last 12 years Director Cedric Klapisch has been busy making one of the most successful franchises. It's made stars of some of Europes most popular actors and it's all about a group of backpackers. Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SBS2Australia Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheFeedSBS2

The Chinese Puzzle with Cedric Klapisch

July 25, 2014 in Interviews, SBS, The Feed
In the wake of the Elliot Rodger massacre, people have been asking; does geek culture breed misogyny? Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SBS2Australia Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheFeedSBS2

misogyny in geek culture

June 02, 2014
Tags: the feed, geek culture

hugh jackman + peter dinklage

May 22, 2014 in Interviews, SBS, The Feed

jennifer saunders

May 22, 2014

making 52 tuesdays

May 22, 2014 in Interviews, SBS, The Feed

52 Tuesdays was a tiny Adelaide film production that's gone on to win huge attention around the world. I sat down with the team behind 52 Tuesdays.

Tags: 52 tuesdays, tilda-cobham-hervey, sophie hyde

April 17, 2014 in Interviews, SBS, The Feed
Tags: ralph fiennes, directing, grand budapest hotel, actor, interviews

April 02, 2014 in Interviews, SBS, The Feed

It's got Batman. It's got Superman. It's got Wonder Woman. It's got Lego. I sat down with The Lego Movie's animation director Chris McKay.

The movie opened strongly in the United States taking $A76.7 million on it's opening weekend and it's since taken more than $400 million worldwide with a large proportion of the audience being adults.

Animation director Chris McKay says Warner Bros gave the Animal Logic team a lot of latitude with the film because of the team’s passion for Lego. 

"On the one hand they were expecting us to sort of push the envelope a little bit," says Mr McKay. "They understood what we were trying to do."

The film is filled with pop-culture references but many of them are in the background - a style which Mr McKay says pays homage to the style of movies like 'Who framed Roger Rabbit'.

To many people The Lego Movie might feel like a stop motion film but it’s all computer generated. Mr McKay says the animators paid particular attention to things like camera movement and lighting to apply real world limitations to their 3D animation.

"[We] put the camera in places that on a set only the camera could go... put the lights in a place that only the lights could go" says Mr McKay. "That gave it a very realistic feeling."

The Lego Movie was made locally at Animal Logic in Sydney - the studio known for its work on films like Happy Feet.

But despite film being made in Australia we're one of the last countries to see it in cinema.

Mr McKay says he wished The Lego Movie could have been shown here earlier.

"I understand the frustration, I've felt it myself," says Mr McKay. "Top to bottom this movie was made here in Australia."

"There's nothing I wanted more than to show this to the people that made it."


Tags: lego movie, animal logic, chris mckay, interview

Coffee - The world's most popular drug

April 02, 2014 in SBS, The Feed

It began in Africa with horny dancing Ethiopian goats. Legend has it that the very first effects of caffeine were noticed by Ethiopian shepherds who saw their goats eating these plump red coffee berries. Suddenly the animals began to dance and copulate wildly.

These days Some 25 million people around the world now grow it, and roughly 27 million acres are given over to farm it.

Coffee is consumed by the richest countries in the world and made by the poorest. The average Guatemalan coffee picker makes less than $2 a day while there are some that will pay up to a $1000 for a special brew delivered straight from the anus of a wild Sumatran cat. It is the world’s most popular and socially sanctioned psychoactive drug. 

But the story of coffee is also the story of modern civilisation, politics and culture.

Coffee owes its popularity directly to the rise of Islam.

Back in the 16th century, as the Ottoman spread throughout the globe so too did their drink of choice - coffee - especially, given alcohol was a no-no. In fact the word coffee is actually derived from an old Arabic word for wine.

By the end of the 17th century, Europe was also hooked. London alone had 2,000 coffeehouses. So much so that the King of England Charles the 2nd tried to ban them arguing that coffee houses were where people met to conspire against him.

An early feminist group also demanded the coffee houses be shut down, saying that the drink was causing their husbands to become snotty, “Frenchified” fellows who had lost all interest in sex. Clearly it didn’t work.

Coffee was too perfect a product for every wannabe colonial power looking to exert their economic might. It was non-perishable, addictive, and conveniently made in places filled with slaves.

The relationship between coffee and slavery are unmistakable. By 1791 half the entire world’s coffee was being made by African slaves working on an island in the Caribbean. The conditions for slaves were so brutal; they burnt the plantations down and declared independence. Today we call that country Haiti.

High-powered politics and coffee have always gone together. (And we are not just talking about how George Washington invented instant coffee. He did, but that's not US President George Washington it is actually a Belgian man who was living in Guatemala at the time.) We're actually talking about the cold war.

Coffee was at the centre of the cold war. The US would use their huge buying power to poor Latin American countries like Guatemala, El Salvador just to make sure they wouldn’t align with soviets.

But why? What is the hold that this humble drink has had over us?

Well the key is these two the adenosine and adenosine receptors in your brain. They want to be together, but when you have caffeine in your system it pushes them apart. Your pituitary gland assumes there’s some kind of crisis on and tells the body to produce adrenaline which in turn boosts your dopamine levels and hello caffeine high.

A high that has given rise to empires, nations, corporations and to helping you get out of bed every morning. Because that is the power of coffee.

Graphics by Dan Holohan, Gabriel Virata, and Miller Marshall.

Tags: coffee, addiction, infographics

Real Men Dance: Nick Frost talks Cuban Fury

April 02, 2014 in Interviews, SBS, The Feed
Tags: nick frost, simon pegg, comedy, interview

Phubbing: Is using your mobile phone an addiction?

April 02, 2014 in Interviews, SBS, Technology Reports, The Feed

Everyone is guilty of it but is using your mobile phone really an addiction? Some people say it is and are pushing for people to stop 'phubbing' and return to the real world.

We're all guilty of it. You're sitting around talking to friends and you pull out your phone to check your emails, or reply to texts only to realise that you don't know what happened in the conversation.

Phubbing is a mashup of the words phone and snubbing and many online are using it to describe people using their phones and ignoring others around them.

But there's a growing movement of people aiming to put their phones down and break the phubbing trend.

"We've all sort of been in that situation where you're in a cafe or bar, someone whips out their phone and they start ignoring you or they start snubbing you," says Alex Haigh the campaign leader of the stop phubbing movement. 

There's now more than 37,000 people who have joined the stop phubbing movement and Mr Haigh says many people have contacted him online as they try to kick their mobile phone use.

"We've had some people get in contact and they might be phubbing at a funeral for example, or a bride phubbing a groom," says Mr Haigh. "I think the smartphones come in... in that they help you to fuel this digital identity."

"It all ties in to this online person that you've created and whether or not that matches up with you you are as an actual person, it varies from person to person."

And while many people might call phubbing an addiction the truth is it is currently not listed as an official disorder in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorder (DSM).

Dr Ben Williams, a senior lecturer in psychological science at Swinburne University of Technology, says phone addiction could potentially fall in the category of behavioural addictions like problem gambling.

"It comes down to whether or not the behaviour is causing you distress or to neglect other obligations that you have," says Dr Williams. "I think the difference between a problem with say smoking and a problem with say mobile phones is you don't have to smoke but most of us have to make phone calls."

Tags: phubbing, science, technology, addiction

oscarnomics

April 02, 2014 in SBS, The Feed

The Oscars are terrible when your favourite movie doesn’t win or when Gwyneth Paltrow does. But there is a reason your favourite didn’t win today and it all comes down to the demographics.

There are nearly 6000 people who decide who wins and who looses at the film industries night of nights. Oscar voters are nearly 77% male and 94% Caucasian.
 
The academy is broken down into branches. Actors, producers, special effects etc. Caucasians currently make up 90% or more of almost every one of the 14 academy branches. 
 
But age is the real issue here. The median age of an Oscar voter is 62. Only half of academy voting actors have even appeared on screen in the last two years, and hundreds haven't worked in decades. 
 
Back in 2011, Sony Pictures executives argued that the reason 'The Social Network' lost to 'The Kings Speech' for best picture is simply because old white men don’t get Facebook.
 
But Oscars don’t come cheap. These days the average cost to win yourself an Oscar is about $5 million. Last year, the makers of Silver Linings Playbook even hired Obama’s deputy campaign manager to help their chances. 
 
And then there’s the vote itself - which is a big part of why sometimes Oscar wins can be a bit bland. 
 
The Academy is one of the few parts of America to use preferential voting.
 
PriceWaterhouseCoopers literally print out every ballot - even if you voted online - and they stack them up according to who people put at the top of the list. You need over 51% to win.

Let’s say it’s a close year - and this year’s almost definitely was - you suddenly have 2-3 contenders. But none of them have that golden 51%.

So you then head to the other end of the list and take the movie with the least votes and see what was their 2nd preference. Then you redistribute the votes and you keep on redistributing shifting down the 3rd, 4th preferences until someone hits the 51% mark.

But often only a fraction of the winning votes were from people thinking it was the best. Most people thought it was 2nd or 3rd best. 
So, no matter what you wanted from this year’s Oscars - it's important to remember that who wins an Oscar is not quite as simple as who is the most popular but who most voters think is OK.

Tags: academy awards, marc fennell, analysis, oscars, demographics

anatomy of a flop: the eye

April 02, 2014 in Interviews, SBS, The Feed

Have you ever seen a film that was so bad that you found yourself wondering "How did it get this way? How did this end up as such a mess?" Well imagine if you could sit down with a director and ask them where it went wrong. Well, we did. And the result was... surprising.

Tags: the eye, jessica alba, 2008, horror, flop, david moreau

proving ground: face substitution

April 01, 2014 in SBS, Technology Reports, The Feed

Have you ever imagined yourself looking like a film star or perhaps a president? Well a new piece of software aims to help you become your favourite celebrity by replacing your face with theirs - but does it work?

Imagine being able to broadcast yourself to the internet but with someone else’s face? Face Substitution is an application that claims to offer just that.

Want to be Nic Cage? Sure! Want to be a terrfying pseudo-Rihanna? Okay! Want to be Bieber for a day? No problem!

Face Substitution can track your favourit celebrities face on yours as you’re skyping away. But is it very convincing?

The app maps your facial features and lighting from your webcam and currently has has 17 different faces for you to “wear” in full Silence of the Lambs mode from The Queen to stranger, more abstract masks like “Picasso”.

It's an unusual idea but is Face Substitution something you would ever use?

Tags: facesubstitution, app, website, technology review, marc fennell, proving ground

proving ground: seene

April 01, 2014 in SBS, Technology Reports, The Feed

Selfies. footstagrams. babygrams. drinkstargams. They are the lifeblood of the social web. But now you can exponentially enhance your narcissism with a third dimension.

Seene is an app that wants to bring the third dimenson to your phone. Quite simply it lets you take photos in 3d.

The technology itself has been around for a very long time but they’re using the motion senseors inside the phone to help you map a shape.

You select the subject and rotate around it. Then Seene maps it into a 3d shape. It doesn't always work and when it doesnt you just get the stuff of childhood nightmares.

But the cool part is that that you can use the images Seene creates on any platform - mobile or desktop.

Just last week Seene was even named the UK’s most innovative mobile company by the Smart UK project.

Tags: seeene, seene, 3d, proving ground, marc fennell, review, technology, app
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