ABC's 'You Can't Ask That' producer reveals the most UNCOMFORTABLE question he ever had to ask their guests: "It felt insensitive"
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ABC's 'You Can't Ask That' producer reveals the most UNCOMFORTABLE question he ever had to ask their guests: "It felt insensitive"
Over the course of seven seasons, the ABC show 'You Can't Ask That' has provided misunderstood and marginalised Australians with a voice by putting them in the position of having to answer some of the most difficult and in-depth questions imaginable.
The most recent season of the show includes guests such as bogans, gay men, models, porn stars, and people who have experienced postpartum depression, juvenile detention, dependency and addiction to prescription drugs, and dementia.
Here in this article, the co-creator and producer of the show has revealed one of the most uncomfortable questions that he's had to put to guests on the show.
Kirk Docker, who hails from Sydney and has worked on the show for seven seasons and counting, has recently disclosed the most "uncomfortable" and "confronting" questions he has ever been expected to ask their guests on the show.
There is almost no topic that hasn't been explored, from asking bogans "what's with the mullet?" to investigating how people with dementia go about their daily lives — practically leaving no stone unturned.
He admitted that certain subjects such as postpartum depression, juvenile detention, and suicide, are, quite understandably, more challenging to discuss than others.
You Can't Ask That producer Kirk Docker, behind the scenes. Credit: ABC.
In the episode about dementia from the seventh season, Mr Docker said that the question he asked one of the guests was the one that made him feel the 'most uncomfortable'.
The question that was asked was, "Do you want to kill yourself before you become a vegetable?", which Mr Docker referred to as an 'insensitive' question.
"This person knows that they're deteriorating and the idea of calling them a vegetable, which is what they are going to become, and that you ultimately want to end your life before you become this thing that no one wants, that's the most horrible thought," he said in an interview with ABC.
Fortunately, the guests took the question in stride and laughed it off. They continued their conversation by discussing the final stages of their lives and whether or not they would be interested in euthanasia if it were an option.
This response brought to Mr Docker's attention that people possess an "incredible resilience" within them.
"I'm often wowed by people, by their honesty, by what they've experienced, by how full-on some people's lives are and how they still have the courage to get up and keep going," he said.
According to Mr Docker, the show's guests and their stories are always treated with respect on his show, despite the fact that it has a rather blunt and straightforward tone.
The guests are not coerced into opening up about their pasts; rather, they are encouraged to discuss what they have been through. The interviewees are also given the opportunity to bring up anything that they do not want to be aired on the show before the interview is over.
You Can't Ask That airs on ABC TV every Wednesday night at 9 o'clock, and the entire series is available to watch on iview. What the show's trailer below:
Credit: ABC TV & iview.