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Pauline Hanson’s Please Explain hits the big screen—why everyone will be talking about it this Australia Day

TV & Movies

Pauline Hanson’s Please Explain hits the big screen—why everyone will be talking about it this Australia Day

  • Maan
  • By Maan
1761791572594.png Pauline Hanson’s Please Explain hits the big screen—why everyone will be talking about it this Australia Day
Politics, popcorn, and Pauline—coming this Australia Day. Image source: Please Explain

What began as a small-scale political experiment has grown into one of Australia’s most talked-about cultural flashpoints.


Pauline Hanson’s Please Explain animated series has divided audiences, sparked legal drama, and ignited fiery national debates.


Now, it’s making the leap from social media screens to the big screen—with a feature film debut set for Australia Day.




The timing is no accident.


In fact, it’s a calculated move that reflects the series’ unapologetic approach to poking the bear of Australian identity and politics.


From YouTube roots to Hollywood lights, this is the unlikely journey of a cartoon classroom that became a cultural juggernaut.



The series follows Hanson—voiced by herself—as a teacher lecturing a class of politicians, turning current events into lessons that double as political commentary for the One Nation party.


What started as a modest investment has snowballed into one of the party’s biggest publicity machines.


Some episodes have surpassed the views on Hanson’s previous most popular uploads, including her maiden speech, with one episode clocking more than 260,000 views.


The party’s YouTube channel experienced a 338 per cent surge in subscribers during campaign periods, reaching 50,000 followers.


Its animation style channels the irreverence of South Park, featuring caricatures like Barnaby Joyce with a beetroot head and Scott Morrison strolling in late wearing a Hawaiian shirt and lei.


But beneath the absurdist humour lies a finely tuned political strategy aimed at shaping public perception through laughter.




'It started small, as a lot of these things do, and now we have half a million people tuning into the show per week.'

One Nation spokesman, news.com.au




The series’ rise has been far from smooth.


One episode drew formal complaints from the Australian Electoral Commission after falsely depicting Labor MPs plotting to boost their votes using fake postal ballots.


The platforms later removed the episode following the complaint, fuelling further debate about censorship and political misinformation online.


More recently, Hanson faced legal threats from Robert Irwin’s lawyers over an episode criticising Queensland’s Labor government, which also featured Irwin and cartoon favourite Bluey in unflattering portrayals.


Hanson refused to back down, declaring: 'I can confidently say we won't be taking the episode down... This episode highlighted the struggles many Queenslanders are facing due to serious failures of the Miles Labor state government.'



For many Australians over 60, this latest controversy has a familiar ring to it.


From Max Gillies’ political impersonations to The Chaser’s biting stunts, satire has long been part of the national political DNA.


Ironically, Hanson herself once fought against it, securing an injunction to block ABC from airing a satirical song by comedian Simon Hunt’s alter ego, ‘Pauline Pantsdown’, in the late 1990s.


Now, she finds herself at the centre of the very genre she once tried to silence.


Dr Stephen Mill from the University of Sydney warned that such portrayals might ‘further undermine the legitimacy and effectiveness of mainstream legislative politics’—a concern that resonates amid record-low trust in government.




Despite its high profile, Please Explain runs on a surprisingly lean budget.


Each episode costs roughly $11,000 to produce, funded through party resources and crowdfunding efforts.


Supporters have chipped in through donations and purchases from One Nation’s online store, including branded gin, rum, and vodka.


The series is produced by Melbourne’s Stepmates Studios, best known for the Seven Network cartoon Regular Old Bogan.


The partnership has proved mutually beneficial—Stepmates gained national attention, while One Nation gained sleek, professionally produced propaganda wrapped in humour.



Choosing Australia Day for the film’s release was no coincidence.


For Hanson, the date represents ‘the most important day of the year’, though it remains deeply painful for many First Nations communities who see it as the beginning of colonisation.


It’s a move that perfectly encapsulates the series’ ethos—using entertainment and controversy to amplify political messages that might otherwise go unheard.


Whether that’s clever marketing or calculated provocation depends entirely on where you stand politically.




While Hanson has expressed hope for a streaming giant to pick up the adaptation, none have publicly shown interest.


For now, distribution remains limited to One Nation’s YouTube channel and occasional segments on Sky News Australia.


A University of New South Wales report labelled the series ‘far-right’, a description Hanson rejected, underscoring the polarised debate surrounding its content.


Ultimately, the film’s success will hinge on whether viewers can separate humour from ideology—a distinction growing harder to maintain in today’s fractured media landscape.


Whether you see Please Explain as bold political innovation or manipulative propaganda, one thing is clear—it has changed how Australian politics is packaged and consumed.


Come Australia Day, the cartoon classroom steps into the cinema spotlight…and the nation will once again be forced to decide where it stands.





What This Means For You


What started as a small online project has evolved into a full-blown media phenomenon, with Please Explain now attracting hundreds of thousands of viewers each episode.


Along the way, it’s faced its share of controversy—from Electoral Commission complaints to legal threats from Robert Irwin’s lawyers—yet it continues to thrive.


Each episode reportedly costs around $11,000 to produce, funded through party resources and crowdfunding, showing just how invested supporters have become.


And with its Australia Day film release timed to stir debate, it’s clear Pauline Hanson’s team knows how to keep Australians talking.


Whether you find it entertaining or infuriating, there’s no denying that Please Explain taps into the same mix of humour, politics, and national pride that’s long defined the Aussie spirit.




While political satire like Please Explain shines a light on how humour shapes public opinion, real-world policy changes can have an even greater impact on daily life.


As leaders debate culture and identity on screen, others are making decisions that affect health, care, and financial wellbeing off it.


If you’re curious about how recent government changes could influence these areas, the next story offers a closer look.


Read more: New Minister for Ageing: What It Means for Older Australians’ Health, Care and Finances





Do you think satire like Please Explain helps political discussion—or just makes it harder to take politics seriously?

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Pauline Hanson has been misunderstood on many occasions because she has not explained herself very well. I heard her first speech in parliament and then it was deliberately misquoted by the media making her sound ignorant. If people would try to understand what she is saying most of them would agree that she is thinking of the people not just herself.
Ah! So, many just don’t understand her?
So, her statements just… accidentally sound racist? She is misunderstood, not malicious? She is thinking of the people… only if the people are exactly like her? Where can I get a copy of that ‘dumb dictionary’ so that I can better understand the gibberish?
 
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Pauline Hanson has been misunderstood on many occasions because she has not explained herself very well. I heard her first speech in parliament, and then it was deliberately misquoted by the media making her sound ignorant. If people would try to understand what she is saying most of them would agree that she is thinking of the people not just herself.
Most of those commenting here would not have read that. I did at the time, and the lies and misrepresentations were what started my realisation that politics in this country was going down the drain.
 
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Ah! So, many just don’t understand her?
So, her statements just… accidentally sound racist? She is misunderstood, not malicious? She is thinking of the people… only if the people are exactly like her? Where can I get a copy of that ‘dumb dictionary’ so that I can better understand the gibberish?
Tell the truth: have you read the speech in full? If so, you'll be able to give me chapter and verse on anything she she said that was racist.
 
Tell the truth: have you read the speech in full? If so, you'll be able to give me chapter and verse on anything she she said that was racist.
Well, that would be rather tiresome. How about you tell me what part of “I believe we are in danger of being swamped by Asians. … They have their own culture and religion, form ghettos and do not assimilate” I should not consider as offensive?
 
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To think that Pauline Hanson has any followers blows my mind, she comes out with some pretty weird and most times ridiculous stuff but as this is a country where there is freedom of speech the only thing we can do is feel pity for her.
I do not have tongue in cheek with my reply to you.
I am so pleased you have nothing to do with Pauline and her one nation and most of all her very clever cartoon.
You see to have humour such as they have and then read your trips you honestly would not come up to half way to partake.
You obviously do not keep up with the news, but then one needs a brain to partake, YOU would then learn that this lady has lifted her ratings. Pray tell us what you feel about Barnaby and other followers with a decent IQ following?
To think that i had to stoop to reply to you makes me crawl, but I feel so strongly of how stupid you are.
 
Well, that would be rather tiresome. How about you tell me what part of “I believe we are in danger of being swamped by Asians. … They have their own culture and religion, form ghettos and do not assimilate” I should not consider as offensive?
gosh how many years ago was that? give your memory a rest ..iot.
 
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I do not have tongue in cheek with my reply to you.
I am so pleased you have nothing to do with Pauline and her one nation and most of all her very clever cartoon.
You see to have humour such as they have and then read your trips you honestly would not come up to half way to partake.
You obviously do not keep up with the news, but then one needs a brain to partake, YOU would then learn that this lady has lifted her ratings. Pray tell us what you feel about Barnaby and other followers with a decent IQ following?
To think that i had to stoop to reply to you makes me crawl, but I feel so strongly of how stupid you are.
hahaha...Say What? Where is that gibberish dictionary...need to translate.
 
Oh please! For 30 years I've been reading comments describing her as 'a fish and chips shop owner' and many other unflattering epithets.

She's a victim of the elitism that's taken over politics in this country and I for one want nothing to do with it!
your choice and guess what i am fairly sure her party would not touch you with a barge poll. after all they are quite fussy on who is a member. you miss the boat. by the way it is 29 years.
 
gosh how many years ago was that? give your memory a rest ..iot.
I believe that was from the speech in question! Speak of ..iot!
 
hahaha...Say What? Where is that gibberish dictionary...need to translate.
you can't even reply with sense. i knew it would be above your intellect.
 
you can't even reply with sense. i knew it would be above your intellect.
hahaha...go have a chat with the 'opossums' - fool,
 
Well, that would be rather tiresome. How about you tell me what part of “I believe we are in danger of being swamped by Asians. … They have their own culture and religion, form ghettos and do not assimilate” I should not consider as offensive?
I've discussed this very thing with another SDC member some weeks ago. The unfortunate disparagement of Asians certainly did her no good and I agree that those words were wrong and should never have been spoken. I realised I'd forgotten that after I posted it and went off to do other stuff.
 
your choice and guess what i am fairly sure her party would not touch you with a barge poll. after all they are quite fussy on who is a member. you miss the boat. by the way it is 29 years.
You know, you really are a sad little person. Your reply sounds exactly like something a Year 8 mean girl would say in the belief that they're being too, too, terribly witty! 😂
 
Oh please! For 30 years I've been reading comments describing her as 'a fish and chips shop owner' and many other unflattering epithets.

She's a victim of the elitism that's taken over politics in this country and I for one want nothing to do with it!
come on do not stop with the fish and chip part, keep going with your many unflattering epithets. she is a victim of the likes of you. not very smart.
 
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You know, you really are a sad little person. Your reply sounds exactly like something a Year 8 mean girl would say in the belief that they're being too, too, terribly witty! 😂
seeing i am a year 8 i will keep away from 7's
 
I've discussed this very thing with another SDC member some weeks ago. The unfortunate disparagement of Asians certainly did her no good and I agree that those words were wrong and should never have been spoken. I realised I'd forgotten that after I posted it and went off to do other stuff.
this is both of you from a year 8. there is an old saying, not a polite one.
neither of you know shit from clay.
 
Ladies and gentlemen there’s a granny Biffo 🥊 🥊
In aisle 8 come one come all. 🥊
 
Ladies and gentlemen there’s a granny Biffo 🥊 🥊
In aisle 8 come one come all. 🥊
I’m not involved this time. I’ve said what I wanted to earlier and that it. ☺️
 
No one looks down on her because she has had a tough life or shops at Target, after all who cares? I simply can’t stand her wobbly voice, I always wonder whether she’s about to cry. More importantly, I’m not impressed with her political views.
I always feel she is about to cry as well, or very nervous, I wonder how she`ll present with her new cartoon!!
 
your choice and guess what i am fairly sure her party would not touch you with a barge poll. after all they are quite fussy on who is a member. you miss the boat. by the way it is 29 years.
Not fussy if they recruit the Barnaby!
 

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