When Neighbours at War wrapped up last year after eight seasons it left an unexpectedly big gap in the local television landscape. Where else on telly were we going to find the real, unfiltered version of New Zealand the show's bitter, surreal, funny neighbourly disputes reliably provided?
An answer of sorts arrived on Thursday night, in the form of Gutsful, a new show from the makers of Neighbours at War. Its biggest point of difference is that it has removed the 'neighbours' criteria and opened the floor to anyone with a grievance to air about anything.
The resulting topics are a lot more universal, things most New Zealanders can relate to and have probably even had a gutsful of themselves. The show deals to these annoyances - freedom campers and traffic snarl-ups, charity shop dumpers and stupid council bylaws - like a kind of haphazard, colloquial alternative to Fair Go.
Gutsful shares with its predecessor the unmistakable wry narration of Bill Kerton, who also directs this series. While slightly more restrained, the show still exhibits the same eagle eye for a funny visual detail or perfectly-timed sound effect which consistently elevated Neighbours at War above the usual mire of factual TV.