One-liners from rugby stars, politicians and a kidnapped cockatoo all feature in the shortlist for Massey University’s Quote of the Year.
Speech-writing specialist Dr Heather Kavan and a panel narrowed down more than 70 nominations to 10.
Previous winners in the annual competition include a jibe from Act leader David Seymour about a potential lamington attack from protesters (“I would have thought that Grant Robertson would be a much bigger threat to lamingtons than lamingtons would be a threat to Grant Robertson”) and three Cyclone Gabrielle heroes' response to being asked if they were in the Navy: “Nah, we’re just three Māori boys.”
“Was this a difficult case for me? I think it was a difficult case for everyone.” Crown solicitor Alysha McClintock to reporters after Auckland eye surgeon Philip Polkinghorne was found not guilty of murdering his wife.
“I hate those symbols and salutes, but I quite like knowing who the idiots in society are.” David Seymour on people who use Nazi symbols and salutes.
“If he were in New Zealand, he would be called ‘Fish-and-chip-shopsy.” Jeremy Corbett on the theory graffiti artist Banksy got his name from tagging banks.
“Kāwana!” “No, don’t do that.” “Ka whakamanuwhiritia au e koe...” Te Pāti Māori MP Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke before doing a haka in Parliament and Speaker Gerry Brownlee simultaneously trying to keep order.
Kavan said they would not normally shortlist two quotes from one event, but the Black Ferns meeting the King inspired them to break protocol.
And while Luxon’s quote was the most nominated, Kavan said it was often the quiet contenders that surged into the lead – and this year, that could be the quote from Pepper the cockatoo.
At the Porirua station, officers were almost certain Pepper was the missing bird, but it was confirmed when her Staglands carers arrived and she chirped her signature phrase, “Hello darling!”
This year also saw the creation of the Freddie Award, for quotes that made their splash in a year after they were said.
The one-liner inspired this year’s “save Freddie” rallying cry at pro-environment protests, appeared often in the discourse around the Government’s new Fast-track Approvals Bill, and featured in the title of a scholarly article by Professor Jonathan Boston from Te Herenga Waka Victoria University of Wellington.
- RNZ
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