This is Piki, the brilliant new teen drama on Māori Television, begins and ends with Snapchat-style screens. In the first, the titular protagonist Piki smiles shyly, jokes about her lack of followers and alternates between earnestness, vulnerability and bravado the way teens naturally do.
By the episode's end she's collapsed in her bedroom, feeling an unbearable loneliness, and the Snapchat caption yearns for an absent - presumably dead - mother, who never will fill that void.
Hinerauwhiri Paki plays Piki Johnson and is shockingly good, a newcomer both assured and capable of brilliant subtlety. Johnson has recently moved to Rotorua, where she lives with her boozy nana and attempts to find a way to live and be and grow up. The Kapua family run a local kapa haka group for tourists, and Johnson - playing a role which mirrors her real life job - works alongside the family's children on stage and at the parents' direction.
The latter are the thinnest characters on This is Piki, a stern patriarch and indulgent matriarch. That those cliches are common enough in real life doesn't prevent them from feeling under-developed. But the adults are really bit-players in a show which is all about the teenagers and young people around whom the plot pivots. They speak in an endearing mix of te reo and English - "I could help him find his taiaha," says one with a filthy laugh - which even Paki acknowledged as ringing somewhat false in an interview: "I don't know anybody who talks like that."