VISION |
AUDIO |
DATELINE STING |
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MONTAGE Pictures of agricultural workers
in PPE, empty supermarket shelves etc. |
VO: The Coronavirus pandemic has disrupted the way we live VO: Social distancing and business closures have severely
stressed global food supply lines VO: In Europe, restrictions on movement mean farm workers
are in short supply and food is at risk of rotting in the fields VO: In the developing world, food is available but increasing poverty means many can’t buy it VO: Whilst in Australia, we have a glut of workers to pick
our crops and stock our shelves – at least for now. |
PROGRAM TITLE: PANDEMIC FARMING Will Reid, Colin Cosier |
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TITLE 1: AUSTRALIA TITLE 2: Orange, NSW PICS: big drone rural landscape |
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INT – CAR – DAY A car drives through beautiful
rolling countryside. Inside the car, Will Reid gives
a PTC PICS AUS D2 [00:08:34] WILL PTC AUS D2 - 0:00 - EXT car + GVs Old photo of Will AUS D1 DRONE AUS D2 JOEL DRONE |
AUS D2 [00:08:34] WILL PTC: My family have farmed the land
around here for generations. And
before I got a job in the media <insert baby farmer Will pic>, so did I. VO: SO, WHEN I HEARD THAT COVID 19 IS CAUSING PROBLEMS FOR
FARMERS – I WAS CONCERNED VO: Australia farmers were already struggling VO: Years of drought had brought many on the land to their
knees VO: And then there was the worst bushfire season on record. VO: SO HOW ARE THEY - AND THEIR WORKERS - COPING WITH THE
PANDEMIC? |
EXT – APPLE FARM – DAY WILL meets a group of backpackers
who have just arrived at a farm PICS AUS D1C1 AUS D1C2 AUS D2 AUS D2 - Packing shed |
AUS D1C1 [00:00:55] WILL:
Morning. [00:01:08] WILL: So, this is a
nice, brisk morning. VO: These young backpackers are about to start a day’s work
picking apples. AUS D1C1 [00:04:38] WILL: So, when did you find out that you were picking here? [00:04:43] EVERYONE: Yesterday. [00:04:50] HARRY: It's all pretty last minute what
farms we get put onto. VO: Many fruit and vegetable farms in Australia rely on
cheap foreign labour to harvest their crops. |
EXT – APPLE FARM – DAY WILL joins the a
group of backpackers as they wait to start their shift on the farm PICS AUS D1C1 |
AUS D1C1 [00:15:36] TIM: Morning. [00:15:38] WILL: Morning VO: The man who lined up the work for them is local
contractor Tim Priest. [00:24:40] TIM: You're the idiot that wore shorts. Like seriously. I've got thermals on and everything. [00:04:00] HARRY: (Laughing). I saw that it was going to be 20 degrees and
so I wore some shorts. VO: The backpackers are all on one year working visas. [00:38:31] TIM: four on each tractor and i'll take
you up and get you started VO: Doing farm work like this helps them earn the chance to
extend their visas for another year. [39:54] WILL: would you call this the daily commute? VO: And helps farmers stay afloat |
EXT. – APPLE ORCHARD – DAY WILL interviews TIM PRIEST in the orchard PICS AUS D1C1 |
AUS D1C1 Will (01:20:13): How many
workers have you got Tim (01:20:16): We've got
about 50 on still. Yeah. Um, cause we're at the tail
end of the season. It sort of slowed down a little
bit Will: (01:16:23) so why don't
you get local Australians to do this job? Tim: (01:11:30) They're just
not motivated enough to be honest. /// (01.11:55) Whereas with the
backpackers// every day there's work, they'll be at
work Will: (01:16:33) So we're a
lazy bunch. Tim: (01:12:04) Um, locals
are hopeless honestly. VO: Fruit picking is hard labour. It’s poorly
paid... yet it takes some skill and care. [01:21:36] TIM: they’re pretty good but just be careful
there are a few bruises on them VO: In Australia, finding good workers is a perennial
problem. VO: I’d assumed the pandemic would
have made things worse for Tim. VO: After all, you can’t really
work from home as an apple picker. Tim: (01:02:07) Well it was
actually positive because before the Coronavirus, like we were struggling to
get enough pickers and then as soon as the Corona virus hit, like I could
have been putting on maybe 300 people a day if I had the work for them. Like,
cause everyone in Sydney and Melbourne obviously were losing their jobs in
hospitality and that sort of stuff. And you know, first basically then the
next natural step that we're taking was to start
looking for farm work. SO WITH A SUDDEN INFLUX OF PEOPLE SEEKING FARM WORK TIM STRUGGLED TO PLACE BACKPACKERS IN JOBS AND THEN, THERE WAS A NEW KIND OF DISCRIMINATION Tim: (01:05:56) quite a few
farmers who pretty much told us they only want local people. |
CRASH into news report UPSOT CLIP: BondiBackpackers FB CLIP: 9 News Sydney - Bondi now Sydney's coronavirus hotspot |
NEWS SOT: Police are
cracking down on foreign backpackers accused of spreading coronavirus through
Sydney’s eastern suburbs. VO: As infections spread across Australia, partying
backpackers became national news. NEWS SOT: Bondi is a
coronavirus hotspot. “We’ve seen cases among backpackers, particularly
related to parties and so on.” |
INT - CAR - DAY WILL and BEN drive in a car,
chatting. PICS AUS GOPRO CAR AUS GOPRO CAR POV AUS D1 DRONE [17:30] Orange AUS D2 [0:00] Orange GVs |
VO: It seems backpackers everywhere were tainted by the
actions of a few AND THESE GUYS FOUND THEMSELVES AS GOOD AS EXILED AUS GOPRO CAR [00:01:00] WILL: so what are your thoughts about
Orange? [00:01:03] BEN: It seems like a nice place I have to say [00:01:28] WILL: And what have the locals been like to you? [00:01:32] BEN: Mixed reviews, we haven't really
met that many. Some have been nice. But the first day we arrived // we felt
like we'd just walked into some really wrong place because someone said to us
"f-ing backpackers" ..
(laughs) [00:02:04] WILL: wow, that's not very welcoming. [00:02:06] BEN: Not very welcoming, no. |
EXT - SHOWGROUNDS - DAY BEN tells WILL about his
experience of camping in the showgrounds PICS AUS D1C2 [00:50:21] arriving AUS D1C2 [00:51:21] showgrounds 01:02:34:22 - good tap close up |
VO: Ben and his friends first camped on a farm where they
were working. VO: But when the pandemic struck, the farmer asked them to
leave. AUS D1C2 Ben: (56:49) So this is where we arrived, uh,
after getting kicked off the farm. Um, we just arrived, kind of set up camp
the eight of us, just in a small circle. VO: Orange doesn’t have a
backpackers’ hostel, so with nowhere to go, they were given permission to
pitch their tents at the showgrounds in town. Will: (57:09) And what kind
of amenities did you have here? Ben: (57:10) We had very
little, I have to say we just had running water. Ben: (53:13) no toilets.
No shower. Though. So we kind of kind of like
leaning under these taps just to kinda get a little
bit of a water shower going. Um, and then we'd have
about half an hour walk into town to go to the toilet or we'd take the car if
there was enough of us. Will: (53:25) That's dire. Ben: (53:27) very
disappointing. VO: Some locals tried to scare them off
by honking their horns and yelling verbal abuse as they drove past. One morning, the group woke up to find
their water had been cut off. FARM CONTRACTOR TIM CAME TO THE RESCUE AND FOUND THEM A
HOUSE TO SHARE 01:02:04:01 Will: i must say after a hard day of
picking apples, to come back here and wash under a tap. Ben: horrendous THIS TREATMENT WAS ENOUGH TO MAKE SOME OF THE BACKPACKERS CONSIDER
GOING HOME. AND IF AUSTRALIA RUNS LOW ON BACKPACKERS, FARMERS WILL
STRUGGLE TO PICK THE NEXT CROP OF FRUIT AND VEG |
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EXT - BUSH - DAY WILL walking through the bush PTC -
AUS D2 [01:41:51]-[01:43:54] -
AUS D2 JOEL DRONE |
VO. GERMANY ALSO RELIES ON FOREIGN WORKERS TO GET ITS FOOD
OUT OF THE FIELDS AND INTO SUPERMARKETS. BUT IT DOESN’T HAVE A READY SUPPLY OF WILLING BACKPACKERS. VO: EACH YEAR, ABOUT 300,000 SEASONAL FARM WORKERS FROM
EASTERN EUROPE COME TO GERMANY BUT AS COVID-19 KICKED OFF, THE GOVERNMENT BANNED THEM FROM
ENTERING THE COUNTRY. FARMERS WERE LEFT TO WATCH THEIR CROPS AND LIVELIHOODS
WITHER IN THE FIELDS |
EXT - MOUNTAIN TOP - DAY WILL makes a phone call -
AUS D2 -
AUS D2 JOEL DRONE |
VO: I can’t go to Germany, so a
local filmmaker is filming the other end of this phone call. |
GERMANY |
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TITLE 1: GERMANY
PICS: drone |
phone ring sound
continues |
EXT – ASPARAGUS FARM – DAY Farmer JAN, standing in his asparagus field, speaks to WILL on the phone. PICS GERMANY 300420 GERMANY 050520 AUS D2 DRONE |
JAN: good morning from Germany WILL: Hello Jan WILL: GERMANY 300420 - 00:21:28:16: H VO: Jan is an asparagus farmer WILL: AUS D2 [1.46.55] so how has
covid-19 affected your operation ? Jan: GERMANY 300420 [00:23:24] /// This year due to the
Corona pandemic it has been an extreme challenge, EACH YEAR JAN RELIES ON ROMANIAN WORKERS, WHO IN THE LEAD UP
THIS HARVEST, WEREN’T ALLOWED IN BUT FACING BACKLASH THE GOVERNMENT DID A BACKFLIP AND OPENED
THE BORDERS AND THERE WAS A RUSH TO GET WORKERS HERE Jan: [00:38:32] /// busses couldn't
cross the Hungarian or Austrian borders [00:39:01] the only possibility we
had was to fly people in and obviously the costs to charter an entire plane
are vastly different than when people travel with a bus. |
V LIB 100420 RTV HEALTH
CORONAVIRUS GERMANY HARVEST WORKERS |
VO: JAN CHARTERED A PLANE FOR HIS WORKERS at a huge personal
cost VO: An extreme measure for unprecedented times. BUT HE’S STILL VASTLY UNDERSTAFFED |
EXT – ASPARAGUS FARM – DAY Farmer JAN, standing in his asparagus field, speaks to WILL on the phone. PICS GERMANY 300420 GERMANY 050520 AUS D2 |
Jan GERMANY 300420 -
[00:39:31] and normally we have 350 seasonal workers but this we are
missing 200, and that means for us that we have to
harvest a smaller area, we couldn't harvest everything Will AUS D2 (01:49:06) So your
salary is essentially sitting in the paddock in front of you. Are you
stressed? Jan: [50:31] Every day is very stressful /// I am permanently stressed [51:30] /// [49:00] when we couldn't harvest we would wouldn't have any income and no income
means after two hard years of drought the end of the company Will US D2 (01:48:46) So why not
Germans? Why use Eastern Europeans and Romanians to do this work? Jan: [00:44:24] It's
a very hard job, it is very physically demanding, and for the Germans the
motivation isn't the same as the Romanians, and the motivation is money. In
Germany we have a different living standard /// Germans have become somewhat
comfortable and don't really want to do the kind of
work |
EXT – ASPARAGUS FARM – DAY See workers in the field, then
meet ANTON PICS GERMANY 300420 GERMANY 050520 |
VO: Even the Romanians agree that picking the humble
asparagus isn’t for everyone… ANTON [1:24:01:21] It’s
hard work. It’s very hard work but they are used to
working – and the majority are from the countryside. |
EXT – FARM – DAY Various of Romanians working, then
ANTON organising his people on the farm and on the bus PICS GERMANY 300420 GERMANY 050520 |
VO: Anton is the Romanian supervisor on the farm. VO: AFTER ARRIVING BY PLANE, ANTON AND HIS CO-WORKERS ARE IN 14 DAYS OF
QUARANTINE VO: The Romanians work the field and must remain distanced
from other farm workers VO: But some of the new rules are apparently hard to follow. JAN GERMANY 300420 [00:15:21] We
have to take care that everyone on the bus is always
wearing their mask, JAN [00:16:33] you're allowed to earn some money,
we're allowed to earn some money, and we can't risk that because we're
sitting in the bus and don't have a marks on |
EXT - ACCOMMODATION BLOCK - DAY ANTON give an interview outside of
his workers’ accommodation block PICS GERMANY 300420 |
VO: The workers are being housed in an isolated old Army
barracks VO: For quarantine reasons our filmmaker can’t
go inside, so Anton meets him outside LUKE GERMANY 300420
[02:44:52:00]: How is it to live ANTON [02:44:58:22]: The conditions LUKE: [2:46:41:22] Why do you come to
Germany for this work? ANTON [2:46:56:10]: To help German
agriculture! (laughs). For
money /// ANTON [03:00:59:13]: I don’t
want to exaggerate..///
it’s... double... triple... considerable! VO: Anton and his colleagues are feeding Germany… but this
work also helps them feed their families back in Romania. LUKE [2:58:39] How do you feel now
that Germany sees Enterhaffer [seasonal workers] as
so important? ANTON [2:59:00] My heart fills with
pride! I’m proud to be a Romanian who is praised,
because we didn’t use to be! |
TITLE 1: AUSTRALIA PICS: big farm landscapes |
music change |
EXT – APPLE ORCHARD – DAY WILL and farmer FIONA walk and
talk in the apple orchard PICS AUS D2 AUS D1 DRONE AUS D2 JOEL DRONE |
VO: Back on the apple orchard, I meet the boss. AUS D2 - WILL: (09:09) So how many,
how many acres do you, do you run here? FIONA: (09:11) ah 250 acres
of apples and cherries. VO: Fiona Hall has worked this property IN NSW for twenty
years. WILL: (09:37) And, and how would you, how would you describe the season this
far? FIONA: (11:09) It's been
tough cause we've had big water issue problems, enough water storage. Our
bores went dry and beginning of this season we actually ran
out on this farm of water. VO: in the packing sheds, social distancing is another
headache to contend with |
INT – PACKING SHED – DAY WILL interviews FIONA in the
packing shed PICS: AUS D1C2 |
[00:34:27] WILL: So what have we got in here? [00:34:27] FIONA: We're packing Pink Lady's today. [00:36:00] W: And how many people do you have working in this space now? [00:36:04] F: Around 20 here today. 15 - 20 is usually for our apples. Come
cherry time in our cherry shed, we'll probably put
between 70 and 90. [00:36:17] W: 70 and 90? Wow. [00:36:28] W: [00:36:33] F: Impossible. It's a very tight shed.
People have to work close together [00:40:29] W: Do you think we've truly felt the
effects of COVID in operations like this? [00:37:31 F: I think the effects of COVID is still to come for us as far as
labour that we will require in a few months’ time. |
EXT – APPLE ORCHARD – DAY Various backpackers respond to
WILL’S questions PICS AUS D1C1 AUS D2 |
VO: FIONA NEEDS UP TO 90 WORKERS COME SUMMER HARVEST, BUT
SHE’S CONCERNED BACKPACKERS WILL HAVE LEFT BY THEN, WITH NO NEW ARRIVALS TO
FILL THEIR PLACES AUS D1C1 Florian: (51:33) treat them
like eggs, otherwise we don't get paid. VO: Apple season ends in a few days… and so does the work
for NOW VO: these guys are only making about 70 dollars a day VO: And with no jobs in the cities and limited farm work
available, they’re facing some tough decisions AUS D2 Love (01:08:45): I've had thoughts
about going back home /// (01:08:27) we haven't been
able to save up money at all really. /// (01:11:13) as of right now,
things are looking pretty grim AUS D2 German girl (01:15:39): if I have to go
and if I don't find another job, then I will go home, but /// (01:15:11) I don't really want
to go home because /// (01:15:24) because I think
in Germany the situation is way worse than it is here. Will: (51:54) this kind of
fruit picking work. Would you do this in Germany? Florian: (51:59) Probably not.
No. No. vo: Almost a third of all backpackers have left the country
since the start of the coronavirus outbreak, a concerning statistic for Fiona |
EXT – FARM HOUSE – DAY WILL interviews FIONA at her farm house PICS: AUS D1C2 |
Will: (32:21) the season's
almost over. Are you, are you worried that you won't
get these workers back later in the year? Fiona: (32:29) Yes. Worried
that these guys will go, but also the ones that were due to come in ///
(10:26) will not be available, you know, so, um, our biggest worry will be
going into the next, the next crop /// (19:30) it could be really scary. I mean, it's
going to be, there'd be nothing more devastating than having a beautiful crop
of cherries and you can't get, can't get them harvested. VO: Getting fruit off the tree is only half the problem.
Once picked, it needs to be sold VO: But the pandemic has disrupted global freight and supply
lines VO: And that’s a big concern for
producers like Fiona Fiona (15:18): If we don't have an export
market for our cherries and come cherry season, |
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ARCHIVE EXPLAINER ON
FOOD SUPPLY ISSUES Archive needs -
grounded planes -
closed ports -
shipping -
travel bans -
closed businesses -
third world hunger/markets/food -
poor workers -
|
AUSTRALIA’S CONCERNS ARE NOT ABOUT FOOD SECURITY. WE PRODUCE MORE FOOD THAN WE CONSUME BUT THE WORLD FOOD PROGRAMME PREDICTS THAT 265 MILLION
PEOPLE COULD BE PUSHED TO ACUTE FOOD INSECURITY BECAUSE OF COVID-19 But it’s about access to food...
and the ability to buy it, rather than farming. |
TITLE 1: SYDNEY |
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EXT – CITY FARM – DAY WILL interviews food expert ALANA MANN PICS AUS D3 FS7 AUS D3 A7S LIB 120520 RTV HEALTH CORONAVIRUS PHILIPPINES CLIP: DZRH NEWS twitter
video On-screen attribution: @dzrhnews LIB 290420 RTV HEALTH CORONAVIRUS
AUSTRALIA URBAN FARMS.MP4 |
UPSOT: Alana and Will walk n
talk VO: Associate Professor Alana Mann
is a key researcher in the University of Sydney’s Environment Institute. Alana: I think that a lot of people who
are already living in countries where food insecurity is a major problem, are
going to be the big victims of covid. (10:09) What's
happened in countries, like for example, the Philippines, there's been a
serious crackdown VO: Richer nations are less likely
to go hungry, but COVID has exposed some cracks in the production process. Meaning some food is going to waste
as it gets stuck in the supply chain. Alana (21:54): I think what COVID has really
exposed in terms of global food chains is the fact that they are not very
resilient and that they're also very much geared around this just in time
ideology that really means that you don't want to be able to, or you don't
want to have to store food for a long time. You want the food to come from
the port, go directly to the supermarket shelves and then to the consumer ///
(24:11) and when you have a very long and complicated supply
chain like that, it's very easy for things to go wrong
BUT IF FARMERS’ LIVELIHOODS ARE
CONTINUALLY PUT UNDER STRAIN; WILL WE ALWAYS BE SO LUCKY? Will: (12:54) would it be easy for Australia to become complacent? Alana: (13:00) I think complacency is a major factor because I think
that aside from everybody's panic over toilet rolls, I didn't
hear the same panic around food stuffs. Alana: (47:45) You know,
where Australia does have a problem, not so much in our farms but in our
supermarkets /// (43:04) they are
actually bringing prices down, down, down, as they like to say. But that also
brings farmers income down /// (47:09) that farm gate price that
the farmers get is what will enable them also to be resilient in difficult
times. They also need to have savings so that they can weather covid or the drought or whatever the next crisis is. |
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VO: Coming up… VO: The UK is calling up a citizen
army… but are the Brits up to the backbreaking farm work? 1.27.48 JASON I never thought I'd ever be in the
field gathering this lovely crop. Never. But I'm
very thankful for it. Very thankful. |
TITLE 1: ENGLAND TITLE 2: Suffolk PICS:: UK CARD 1 & 2 or file |
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ENGLAND + GFX ARCHIVE: UK farms under pandemic DRONE: FARM FILE VISION > UK FARM SHOTS > UK FARM DRONE
> -
DJI_0194.MP4 -
DJI_0200.MP4 UK CARD 2 starts with foreign workers SUPER: GEORGE EUSTICE, UK Environment Secretary Prince Charles video SUPER: Charles, Prince of Wales Attribution: @clarencehouse LIB 210420 RTV HEALTH CORONAVIRUS
BRITAIN FARMING -
2.02 Pick for Britain archive |
Like Australia, England is a prosperous country. But food wise, it only produces half of what it consumes. Vo: It’s
not only reliant on food imports, but also foreign labour. VO: And before the pandemic, Brexit
was ALREADY causing labour shortages from Europe. VO: Now coronavirus travel bans have made the situation
critical. FILE SOT: (1:20) But one thing is clear,
and that is that this year we will need to rely on British workers to lend a
hand to help bring that harvest home." “This is why that great movement of the second world war -
the land army - is being rediscovered in the newly created pick for Britain
campaign. VO: Pick for Britain is an
initiative to get everyday Brits working on farms
DURING WORLD WAR TWO -
WHEN MEN WENT OFF TO WAR 80,000 WOMEN WERE RECRUITED TO WORK ON FARMS.
AND THE WOMEN’S LAND ARMY BECAME A SOURCE OF NATIONAL PRIDE VO: NOW - The National Farmers Union
says 70 to 80 thousand workers are needed to harvest the country’s crops. –
FILLING THE GAP LEFT BY EUROPEAN WORKERS VO: IF THE GAP CAN’T BE FILLED
homegrown fruit and vegetables risk rotting in the fields, AND FARMERS RISK
GOING BUST |
EXT – MOUNTAIN TOP – DAY Farmer BRUCE KERR in the field PICS UK CARD 1 UK CARD 2 -
US D2 -
AUS D2 JOEL DRONE |
UPSOT: UK CARD 1 (01.57) BRUCE - Not as hot as last week but it's certainly going to be warmer. 2.01 MAN IN BLUE - Better than rain 2.02 BRUCE - Better than rain VO: Again, we’ve
got a local filmmaker covering this of us UPSOT phone VO: British asparagus farmer Bruce Kerr IS GIVING LOCAL
WORKERS A GO |
EXT – ASPARAGUS FARM – DAY BRUCE, standing in his asparagus
field, speaks on the phone to WILL PICS UK CARD 1 UK CARD 2 AUS D2 |
BRUCE: UK CARD 1 (16:55) it all came about with a tweet that we put out on Twitter, um,
asking for people to help /// (17:14) and within a matter of hours, well, probably minutes, we had,
um, huge response to that. /// (37:25) you know we thought we might get 20 or 30 responses and
we ended up with over 300, um, in that initial week W: wow! WILL [AUS D2] (02:03:15) So what kind
of people did you get from that call out? BRUCE (18:00): We've just got a very broad mix of, um, of people would have,
some of them have been furloughed from their jobs. /// (18:13) We've got two chefs /// (18:27) we've got some students /// (19:34) so there's a real variety of WILL [AUS D2] (02:03:43) Are they cutting the mustard? BRUCE: (18:46) Yeah, they're
going really well. Um, really good team spirit. Um,
and it's, it's working really well. WILL [AUS D2] (02:06:42) it, is it just about people finding jobs or
are there bigger motivations at play? BRUCE: (34:29) I think
there's a, there is a great, um, sense of people wanting to help the country
wanting to help the nation. /// (34:45) particularly if they're unable to go back to their
normal day to day working lives UK CARD 2 [00:13:11] PD.
you a fan of asparagus? [00:13:12] jaz. yeah i love asparagus it's really good. but it did make your pee stink. [00:13:40] PD. what's the best thing
about the job and what's the worst thing [00:13:44] Jaz: the worst thing is the early mornings, definitely. the best thing is being outside. and
when it's sunny you can get a tan. VO: Bruce’s concern now is that once the lockdowns end, his
workers will go back to their normal jobs. VO: But for the moment, he’s
grateful. WILL [AUS D2] (02:09:45) and what
would it mean for you if you couldn't get those workers? BRUCE: (37:47) We would have
probably taken the decision that actually some of the fields, we just
wouldn't pick at all this year and we’d have left them to grow on for next
year. WILL: (42:26) Well, Lucky the Brits came through. Right. BRUCE: (42:30) Yeah.
Surprised even you Aussies, I'd expect? |
EXT – ASPARAGUS FARM – DAY JASON picks asparagus while
walking behind a tractor, answering questions from PD Olly PICS UK CARD 1 |
VO: One of the Brits that answered the call to work was
Jason UK CARD 1 1.21.45 OLLY - So Jason how long is your asparagus picking career lasted
so far? 1.21.49 JASON - I think it's about 3rd week in
now. Yeah so tough 3 weeks. 1.21.59 OLLY - Does it make you like asparagus more or less? 1.22.03 JASON - We respect it more. I've cooked
enough of it. VO: Jason’s a local chef and father of three who lost his
job due to the pandemic. VO: As a new asparagus picker, he’s
expected to walk up to six kilometres in a day and bend over about 20,000
times. 1.23.45 JASON - It took about 3 or 4 days for us to, for the body to
recuperate and realise hang on a minute there's different muscles being used
here, you know 1.27.15 JASON - So the bottom part of the back gets you really there. And underneath the top part of the legs,
underneath the cheeks. so you have a bit of a
stretch and carry on 1.27.48 JASON But I never thought I'd ever be in
the field gathering this lovely crop. Never. But I'm
very thankful for it. Very thankful. 1.28.05 OLLY -For the money or the experience? 1.28.07 JASON - I think both. You know there is uncertainty coming. WITH BRITAIN STILL FIGURING OUT HOW BREXIT WILL IMPACT
LABOUR SHORTAGES - AT LEAST THE PANDEMIC HAS GIVEN JASON SOME FAITH IN HIS
COUNTRY’S MOTTO – KEEP CALM AND CARRY ON 1.44.41 JASON - Experiencing this, this has proven to me it doesn't matter where you are, who you know and what age
you are. If it's needed I think Brits will come
together and get us through the Brexit, no problem. |
EXT – JASON’ HOME – DAY JASON plays ball with his son in
the backyard, answering questions from Olly PICS UK CARD 2 |
UPSOT [00:45:56] Jason: oh good save [00:46:39] Jason
"It's just nice winding down after the old asparagus picking. nice to be
upright." VO: JASON IS THANKFUL TO BE EARNING
A WAGE AND HELPING HIS COUNTRY - BUT asparagus picking doesn’t
pay as well as Jason’s old job AS A CHEF VO: His wife is also out of work. Jason (38:52): With the help of people that we know and we rent through, they've give us grace periods, otherwise we
would be, yeah, we'd be quite well in debt without a doubt. You know,You know, it's that raw
where you, you know, we focus on the children, making sure they're okay, um,
food on the table. But, uh, yeah, the little luxuries that you're
used to aren't there anymore. It makes you really appreciate the smaller
things in life and what, what, what counts in life and what's
important. [00:49:50] Jason:
"well done super star" |
run vision of all characters from
all countries in a final, wrap-up montage. |
IT’S NOT JUST APPLES FROM ORANGE AND
ASPARAGUS FROM EUROPE THAT HAS felt the brunt of the pandemic AND - AUSTRALIA IS NOW GOING INTO
BATTLE WITH CHINA OVER BARLEY TARIFFS AND BANS ON MEAT EXPORTS CORONAVIRUS IS IMPACTING US IN SO
MANY WAYS, BIG AND SMALL AND WE’LL CONTINUE TO FEEL IT AT
HOME, AT WORK, IN OUR WALLETS, AND ON OUR PLATES. |
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