Āku Hapa! For Reo Māori Learners Needing A Giggle - Out Now On MĀORI+
He reo hapa e taea te whakatika, he reo ngū e kore e taea.
You can correct broken language, but you can’t correct language that is not spoken.
- Te Korou Whangataua

Brand new to Māori+, Āku Hapa! is unlike any cooking show you’ll ever watch. Hosts James Dansey (Ngāruahine, Te Arawa, Ngāti Tūwharetoa) and Eda Tang (Ngāi Haina) chop, squeeze and stumble their way through a recipe, speaking only te reo Māori. The catch? Their vocabulary is limited, much like the many learners of te reo Māori across the motu.
It’s not a coincidence that the name means both ‘my dinner’ and ‘my mistakes’. Although the spoken reo won’t always be perfect, the English subtitles, which are direct translations, will show when mistakes are made. The cheeky duo who met in their reo Māori class at Te Wānanga o Aotearoa lighten the overwhelming emotions that can come with language revitalisation and acquisition.
Dansey began his reo Māori haerenga in 2017, after his daughter was born. Learning te reo Māori had been a lifelong desire but one riddled with whakamā (shame) and confusion. “We’re asked in reo classes to ‘tohaina atu rā tēnei reo ki ngā whaitua’, to ‘tūwhitia te hopo’ and to ‘nau mai ngā
hapa’,” says Dansey. “Āku Hapa is our attempt to use our fledging reo to embody these with kindness and humour!”
This pilot episode featuring award-winning investigative journalist Paula Penfold (Ngāi Pākehā) as the manuhiri is just a taste of what’s to come. The guests invited to eat the kai are all learners of te reo Māori and share their experiences with whatever level of reo is within them. It’s unpredictable, delirious, and a little bit naughty, but it ultimately models the non-linear nature of learning, offering a comforting watch in a bitesized format.
"I began my haerenga reo Māori as a kind of apology to my children, Ben and Māia (Ngāti Kahungunu),” says Penfold. “We didn't put them through kōhanga reo or kura kaupapa, and I regret that. I regret not helping them reclaim their language. So this, for me, is a way of trying to atone for that, and hoping that maybe, one day, I can kōrero Māori with my future mokopuna."
"But it is not a linear journey: there can be times when your confidence propels you forward to speak up loudly, and other times when you feel a complete numpty failure. It was a relief to hear kaiako say all the time, ‘nau mai ngā hapa’, that the classroom is a wāhi haumaru and in order to get better at the reo you have to keep on speaking the reo, which will inevitably mean mistakes, and that is ok."
Tang grew up speaking Cantonese at home and learning Mandarin after school. “Because I don’t have a whakapapa relationship with te reo Māori, I won’t ever know the feeling of carrying the trauma of having your language, your whakaaro, intentionally and systemically alienated from you. What I do know with my ancestral tongue, is that the fear of failure can stop me from speaking my ancestral tongue completely.”
The pilot of Āku Hapa! is now available on Māori+ and is supported by Te Māngai Pāho. ENDS
We acknowledge the support of Te Māngai Pāho, the Māori Broadcast Funding Agency, in promoting the Māori language and culture through funding for Māori-language programming on radio, television, and digital media. We also thank Whakaata Maori for the platform support.
Key Personnel
Host/co-writer - James Dansey
James Dansey is an experienced musician (The Sneaks, Spring Break, Thee Golden Geese) music editor (Ru-Paul's Drag Race Downunder, The Great Kiwi Bakeoff) and feature film composer (Gary of the Pacific, Timeslow). He is obsessed with re-planting Te Reo Māori firmly back into his whānau, starting with himself and his tamāhine Awhi!
Host/co-writer - Eda Tang
Eda Tang is a writer and journalist whose work has featured on Stuff NZ, The Spinoff, Ensemble and The D*List. She is passionate about language revitalisation and is capturing bilingual oral histories of Cantonese elders on their experiences of Cantonese heritage in the context of assimilation.
Production Company
The Raro Dog is a boutique film production company that has a focus on kaupapa Māori and Pasifika. With experience working and documenting Māori and Pasifika creatives and artists, the company has been producing their own content and external content for clients, from commissioned short documentaries, to event motion graphics, music videos and online content. therarodog.co.nz
Aku Hapa credits:
Host/Writer/Composer/Sound mix - James Dansey (Ngāruahine, Te Arawa, Ngāti Tūwharetoa) Host/Writer/Editor - Eda Tang (Ngāi Haina)
Director - Robert George (Ngāti Kuki Airani, Te Arawa and Ngāti Awa)
Producer - Petrina Togi-Sa'ena (Ngāti Hamoa, Ngāti Pākehā)
Executive Producer - Kathleen Mantel (Ngāti Kahungunu)
Poutiaki Reo - Mārena Mane (Ngāi Te Rangi, Ngāpuhi, Ngāti Whātua ki Kaipara, and Ngāti Tangahoe) Production Company - The Raro Dog
Camera operator - Tristan Petueli
Food stylists and consultants - Fiona Smith, Ginny Grant
Production assistant and Te Reo support - Tania Watene (Ngāti Hine, Ngāti Whātua, Ngāti Mahuta, Tainui, Ngāti Maniapoto, Ngāti Porou)