Current:Home > NewsJohn Oliver’s campaign for puking mullet bird delays New Zealand vote for favorite feathered friend -TradeWisdom
John Oliver’s campaign for puking mullet bird delays New Zealand vote for favorite feathered friend
View
Date:2025-04-15 19:07:43
WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — Vote checkers in New Zealand have been so overwhelmed by foreign interference that they’ve been forced to delay announcing a winner.
The contest is to choose the nation’s favorite bird and the interference is from comedian John Oliver.
Usually billed Bird of the Year, the annual event by conservation group Forest and Bird is held to raise awareness about the plight of the nation’s native birds, some of which have been driven to extinction. This year, the contest was named Bird of the Century to mark the group’s centennial.
Oliver discovered a loophole in the rules, which allowed anybody with a valid email address to cast a vote. So he went all-out in a humorous campaign for his favored bird, the pūteketeke, a water bird, on his HBO show “Last Week Tonight.”
Oliver had a billboard erected for “The Lord of the Wings” in New Zealand’s capital, Wellington. He also put up billboards in Paris, Tokyo, London, and Mumbai, India. He had a plane with a banner fly over Ipanema Beach in Brazil. And he wore an oversized bird costume on Jimmy Fallon’s “The Tonight Show.”
“After all, this is what democracy is all about,” Oliver said on his show. “America interfering in foreign elections.”
Forest and Bird said vote checkers had been forced to take an extra two days to verify the hundreds of thousands of votes that had poured in by Sunday’s deadline. They now plan to announce a winner on Wednesday.
“It’s been pretty crazy, in the best possible way,” Chief Executive Nicola Toki told The Associated Press.
New Zealand is unusual in that birds developed as the dominant animals before humans arrived.
“If you think about the wildlife in New Zealand, we don’t have lions and tigers and bears,” Toki said. Despite nearly nine of every ten New Zealanders now living in towns or cities, she added, many retain a deep love of nature.
“We have this intangible and extraordinarily powerful connection to our wildlife and our birds,” Toki said.
The contest has survived previous controversies. Election scrutineers in 2020 discovered about 1,500 fraudulent votes for the little spotted kiwi. And two years ago, the contest was won by a bat, which was allowed because it was considered part of the bird family by Indigenous Māori.
Toki said that when the contest began in 2005, they had a total of 865 votes, which they considered a great success. That grew to a record 56,000 votes two years ago, she said, a number that was surpassed this year within a couple of hours of Oliver launching his campaign.
Toki said Oliver contacted the group earlier this year asking if he could champion a bird. They had told him to go for it, not realizing what was to come.
“I was cry laughing,” Toki said when she watched Oliver’s segment.
Oliver described pūteketeke, which number less than 1,000 in New Zealand and are also known as the Australasian crested grebe, as “weird, puking birds with colorful mullets.”
“They have a mating dance where they both grab a clump of wet grass and chest bump each other before standing around unsure of what to do next,” Oliver said on his show, adding that he’d never identified more with anything in his life.
Some in New Zealand have pushed back against Oliver’s campaign. One group put up billboards reading: “Dear John, don’t disrupt the pecking order,” while others urged people to vote for the national bird, the kiwi. Oliver responded by saying the kiwi looked like “a rat carrying a toothpick.”
“For the record, all of your birds are great, and it would be an honor to lose to any of them when the results are announced on Wednesday,” Oliver said on his show. “The reason it is so easy for me to say that is that we aren’t going to lose, are we? We are going to win, and we are going to win by a lot.”
veryGood! (4)
Related
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Armie Hammer Not Charged With Sexual Assault After LAPD Investigation
- Ulta 24-Hour Flash Deal: Dry and Style Your Hair at the Same Time and Save 50% On a Revlon Heated Brush
- Ali Wong Addresses Weird Interest in Her Private Life Amid Bill Hader Relationship
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Turning Food Into Fuel While Families Go Hungry
- McCarthy says I don't know if Trump is strongest GOP candidate in 2024
- Beanie Feldstein Marries Bonnie-Chance Roberts in Dream New York Wedding
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- Ryan Seacrest named new Wheel of Fortune host
Ranking
- Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
- Judge Blocks Trump’s Arctic Offshore Drilling Expansion as Lawyers Ramp Up Legal Challenges
- The Man Who Makes Greenhouse Gas Polluters Face Their Victims in Court
- How Fossil Fuel Allies Are Tearing Apart Ohio’s Embrace of Clean Energy
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- Cancer drug shortages could put chemo patient treatment at risk
- Can air quality affect skin health? A dermatologist explains as more Canadian wildfire smoke hits the U.S.
- Rebuilding After the Hurricanes: These Solar Homes Use Almost No Energy
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Video: Covid-19 Will Be Just ‘One of Many’ New Infectious Diseases Spilling Over From Animals to Humans
Video: Covid-19 Will Be Just ‘One of Many’ New Infectious Diseases Spilling Over From Animals to Humans
Kendall Jenner Sizzles in Little Black Dress With Floral Pasties
Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
Grimes Debuts Massive Red Leg Tattoo
Weeping and Anger over a Lost Shrimping Season, Perhaps a Way of Life
Amanda Seyfried Shares How Tom Holland Bonded With Her Kids on Set of The Crowded Room