https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/CU2412/S00137/quote-of-the-year-opens-for-voting.htm
|
| ||
Quote Of The Year Opens For Voting |
||

The list was put together by Te Kunenga ki Pūrehuroa Massey University speech-writing specialist Dr Heather Kavan and a panel who narrowed down over 70 nominations, from comedic one-liners to heartfelt utterances.
The public has until midnight on Wednesday 18 December to vote for their favourite, and the winner will be announced before Christmas. Cast your vote on the Massey University website here.
This year’s nominations included many quotes from sports stars. These ranged from speed climber Julian David showing his Instagram followers his mattress at the Olympic village to the Black Ferns meeting King Charles at Buckingham Palace.
“Usually we don’t include more than one quote about a single event, but the Black Ferns’ encounter with the King inspired us to break protocol,” Dr Kavan says.
The chosen quotes are Ruby Tui’s comment to King Charles that the palace garden was big enough for three rugby fields and Ayesha Leti-I’iga’s reflection on asking the King for a hug ‒ she thought he needed it more than she did.
King Charles appeared to enjoy the conversation, disclosing that the Buckingham Palace garden is covered with goose droppings and that he once got a broken nose while playing rugby. He described the group hug as “very healing.”
The highest number of nominations was for Prime Minister Christopher Luxon’s declaration that he is “wealthy and sorted.” Luxon made the remark in an interview with Heather du Plessis-Allan about the sale of his Wellington flat. The words did not land as he intended, sparking amused public reactions and allegations of tone-deaf leadership, earning him the nickname ‘Mr Wealthy and Sorted.’
Despite the high number of nominations for Prime Minister Luxon’s quote, it is often the quiet contenders that surge into the lead, Dr Kavan says. This happened last year when a quote from Cyclone Gabrielle rescuers overtook the highly nominated “Up the Wahs!”
This year’s quiet contender may be a quote from beloved cockatoo Pepper, who was bird-napped from Staglands Wildlife Reserve. Pepper was sold to an unsuspecting man, who, on learning about the theft, brought her to the nearest police station.
At the Porirua station, officers were almost certain Pepper was the missing bird, but she was initially tight-lipped. However, when her Staglands carers arrived, she chirped her signature phrase, “Hello Darling!” - confirming her identity. Staglands owner Sarah Purdy said Pepper’s excitement was clear as she continued saying “Hello Darling!” and other phrases throughout the night.
In addition to the public vote, Quote of the Year has a new category: the Freddie Award for quotes that make their splash in a year after they were said.
The award was sparked by a remark Resource Minister Shane Jones made in Parliament in December last year: “If there is a mining opportunity and it’s impeded by a blind frog, goodbye Freddie.”
The one-liner might have been forgotten (or frog-otten) but it inspired this year’s ‘Save Freddie’ rallying cry at pro-environment protests and even featured in the title of a scholarly article by Professor Jonathan Boston of Te Herenga Waka Victoria University of Wellington.
Vote for your favourite quote of 2024 on the Massey University website: https://www.massey.ac.nz/about/quote-of-the-year-voting-form/
Voting closes at midnight on Wednesday 18 December. The winner will be announced before Christmas.
Home Page | Culture | Previous Story | Next Story
Copyright (c) Scoop Media