Like Netflix's 'Drive to Survive', 'All or Nothing' understands that the best drama in sport doesn't always play out on the field. After weeks of its own off-field drama and uncertainty, the same could be said about the state of New Zealand rugby.
The big Ian Foster question was finally put to bed on Wednesday, following weeks of press conference dissections, lively debate and intense online negativity.
As attention now turns back to the rugby ahead of the All Blacks' test against Argentina, fans have been called upon to end their outrage and get behind the team.
"It's time now we accepted where we are, the vitriol should be over and we should get behind the team and hoping they go to Christchurch and have a good win against Argentina and develop further into the World Cup," said former All Blacks coach John Hart, who was one of many to speak out against the backlash towards Foster.
Fans and media have been accused of launching personal attacks at Foster and the All Blacks, but the vast majority of criticism has been nothing but fair and based on the evidently poor performances on the field. It's a natural manifestation of fandom in modern day sport, and pales in comparison to the type of reaction that goes on in other sports, especially overseas.
If anything, the seemingly widespread anxiety towards the Foster regime only further underlines the passion that still exists in New Zealand for the national game.
This chapter of New Zealand sport's very own docu-drama, playing out in real time as the All Blacks stumble to new lows, ended with Foster keeping his job.
But the critics and dissenters will likely remain. As Arsenal supporters will attest, it's sometimes what being a fan is all about.
Keith Quinn needs to log off
Retired All Blacks commentator Keith Quinn continues to showcase his outdated views on rugby on Twitter, his latest having a harmful racial tinge.
Quinn, who has come under fire in the past for posts lamenting the end of "bloke-ism" when sports stars dared to show emotion on the field, decided to wrongly suggest All Blacks Rieko and Akira Ioane were holding up "Mongrel Mob signs" in a perfectly innocent photo following the victory over the Springboks.
Aside from the racist stereotype, the post is another example of how the 75-year-old is completely out of his depth online.
Time to log off.
Athletes still getting shafted by broken system
If high performance organisations don't support athletes, then why do they exist?
That's the question posed by Kiwi swimming great Moss Burmester, after Lewis Clareburt's coach Gary Hollywood revealed Clareburt's Olympics preparations could be derailed by a lack of funding.
"The money … is based on the results that the top athletes have," Burmester said this week. "My results and Lewis' results would mainly determine what swimming gets, administration costs and everything else.
"But Swimming New Zealand doesn't count Lewis as an employee so Lewis doesn't get the credit he deserves for the funding he has brought in.
"Living allowance [payouts] that they pass on are a pathetic amount.
"I've always said that if you take away the coaches and athletes, there is no reason to have national sporting organisations. The swimmers and coaches are there and they will always carry on and do their best."
Burmester nails the reality of sport's broken funding model. Athletes, in any professional context, are the ones that provide the value to sporting organisations, yet they continue to not receive their fair share, financially or otherwise.
Add in concerns around athlete safety and wellbeing following the death of Olivia Podmore, and it's clear New Zealand sport's high performance system is fundamentally broken – and it's the athletes who continue to suffer the consequences.