Author Topic: Channel Seven to air Ben Cousins documentary - Aug 25-26  (Read 25117 times)

Offline TigerLand

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Re: Channel Seven to air Ben Cousins documentary
« Reply #45 on: August 13, 2010, 01:41:40 PM »
I agree 100% with Demtriou, Channel 7's promotion of it makes me sick.

I think the public will get a pretty good indication that the Documentary will be aired soon they don't need to ram it down the throats of families in prime time, at least keep some of the more "private" clips out of the ads. This just fuels the fire of 50 year old parents who put society and there kids in cotton wool.
Go Tigers!

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Re: Channel Seven to air Ben Cousins documentary
« Reply #46 on: August 13, 2010, 03:28:26 PM »
 :rollin

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Channel Seven to air Ben Cousins documentary
« Reply #47 on: August 13, 2010, 06:31:07 PM »
Ch 7 news said Cousins' doco will be screened over two nights Wednesday August 25 and Thursday August 26 prior to round 22.

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Channel Seven to air Ben Cousins documentary - Aug 25-26
« Reply #48 on: August 16, 2010, 06:39:47 PM »
As speculation about Cousins' future reaches fever pitch, Channel 7 is pushing to extend its documentary deal with Cousins.

The confronting Cousins story Such Is Life will run in two one-hour parts next week, but Seven is also keen to lock Cousins in for a tell-all interview.

It is understood that no mention of an exclusive interview was made when Seven agreed to pay a significant six-figure sum for the documentary.

Now, Seven may be prepared to pay extra to get Cousins, his father Bryan and perhaps a drugs specialist to feature in a round-table interview.

If talks are successful, Seven would show an hour of Such Is Life from 8.30pm on Wednesday, August 25, but treat viewers to a two-hour blockbuster the next night.

The second part of the documentary would screen from 8.30pm, followed by another hour of Cousins reflecting on the documentary and his career.

Under that scenario, the second hour would run into first hour of The Footy Show on rival Channel Nine.

Sources have confirmed the Michael Gudinski-produced documentary is still being massaged, with the final two minutes likely to be filled by the events of this week.

The documentary is an in-your-face look at Cousins' battle with drugs.

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/d-day-as-ben-cousins-meet-with-tigers/story-e6frf9jf-1225905600814

Offline 3rogerd

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Re: Channel Seven to air Ben Cousins documentary - Aug 25-26
« Reply #49 on: August 16, 2010, 09:17:37 PM »
i wonder if they recreate scenes like some
of those docu-dramas, perhaps the scene
where he has to swim in the Swan River

Run Ben Run...was living in perth at the time
its lucky the cops didnt catch him. :shh

i believe the doctor paid a visit. :lol

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Channel Seven to air Ben Cousins documentary - Aug 25-26
« Reply #50 on: August 20, 2010, 10:08:41 PM »
Ch 7 is going to milk Cuz's doco for all its worth next week.

Bryan Cousins and Plough on Gameday (Sunday)
Bryan Cousins on Today Tonight (Monday)
Cuz doco pt 1 (Wednesday)
Cuz doco pt 2 with Bryan Cousins interviewed again following the doco (Thursday)
Richmond vs Port - Cuz's farewell game (Sunday)


Tonight at half-time Hamish McLachlan said in the doco Cuz admits he was using drugs since he was 17.

Offline one-eyed

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Hard road for Ben Cousins (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #51 on: August 21, 2010, 03:01:16 AM »
Hard road for Ben Cousins
Mike Sheahan
Herald Sun
August 21, 2010


BEN Cousins signs off his coming documentary, Such is Life, with the message: "I've had to learn life's lessons the hard way."

The show, subtitled The Troubled times of Ben Cousins, is a harrowing story of how a young man with the world at his feet lost his way, almost destroying himself and his family in the process.

It will be shown on the Seven Network next Wednesday and Thursday nights.

The 2005 Brownlow Medal winner talks with remarkable candour about a long-running drug problem, describing his story as one of "drug addiction and chronic relapses".

During the introduction, he says: "I hope this documentary can send a powerful message to young people."

It will.

Members of his family and those close to him talk openly and emotionally about their frequent fears for his life.

One of his sisters, Melanie, said tearfully she didn't know at one point whether the family would lose Ben or their father, Bryan, a WAFL champion and former Geelong footballer, through stress.

The self-made documentary includes extensive footage and interviews dating back to early 2008.

Cousins openly admits to his addiction, describing it as a reflection of his obsessive personality and his search for inner peace.

"I'll always regret what I've put my family through," Cousins says.

"There's a lot of shame and regret. People wonder why I haven't broken down or shed a tear (in public). My tears are something that I hold close to me; they're for me and my family."

The documentary, seen by the Herald Sun, shows Cousins taking drugs several times. But the gun footballer says he never took performance-enhancing drugs.

Cousins, a fanatical trainer at the height of his brilliant career with West Coast, said he rewarded himself at the end of a hard week or month with a drug binge.

His attitude was summed up by a statement early in the first episode: "They expect you to live like a priest all week and fight like the devil all weekend.

"At the end of a block (of training) ... I was going to absolutely annihilate and launch into as much drugs as I could."

He admitted taking drugs as early as 17 or 18.

"It just opened a gateway for me and very quickly it became an obsession," he says. "Cocaine was my drug of choice."

His father said: "He thought he was bulletproof."

Cousins talks of benders lasting six days.

He recalls a time in Melbourne after West Coast's 2006 premiership win that ended with police intervention: "I don't think I'd had any sleep for six nights ... a lot of cocaine, a lot of ice."

When confronted by police, he gave his name to a policewoman. He was so tired and haggard, she didn't believe him.

He ripped his shirt open, bared his torso and said: "Well, I was (Ben Cousins) six days ago."

One of the many interesting elements of this compelling program was the impact of St Kilda's decision to abandon plans to draft him late in 2008 after his enforced year out of football.

"(Coach) Ross Lyon came to Perth and presented me with a St Kilda No. 9 guernsey (his number at West Coast).

"I'd really started to warm to the idea of becoming a Saint (joining his friend and former West Coast teammate Michael Gardiner)."

Long-time manager Ricky Nixon said Cousins could barely speak after being told St Kilda had decided against drafting him.

Cousins says in the documentary: "It was just life-sapping." He spent almost a week in bed, barely bothering to eat.

"I had grave fears for him," his father said.

Cousins, the last person to see former West Coast champion Chris Mainwaring before he died, described the death of his friend and mentor as "a tragic accident".

"I left him in a good state."

Such is Life is a must-see program in which Cousins, his family and those close to them speak with extraordinary openness and honesty.

It's a story of a young man's battle with drugs and the unconditional love of a family.

It is the story of a life-saving bond between a father and his son.

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/hard-road-for-ben-cousins/story-e6frf9jf-1225907998440

Offline one-eyed

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Ben Cousins film inspires panel discussion TV show (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #52 on: August 24, 2010, 02:13:39 AM »
Ben Cousins film inspires panel discussion TV show
Michael Warner
Herald Sun
August 24, 2010


CHANNEL 7 is cashing in on this week's Ben Cousins drugs documentary with a live round-table discussion planned for Thursday night.
 
The one-hour program will air immediately after episode two of the tell-all Such is Life documentary in a head-to-head battle with Channel 9's The Footy Show.

Panellists include former Richmond coach Terry Wallace, AFL football operations manager Adrian Anderson, Cousins' father Bryan, Tigers chief executive Brendon Gale, psychologist Michael Carr-Gregg and the  Mike Sheahan. Cousins - facing a race against time to overcome a hamstring injury before his farewell AFL match on Sunday - will not take part.

Episode one of the Cousins documentary will be aired across the country at 8.30pm tomorrow. It's shaping as a ratings bonanza for Seven, which paid an undisclosed six-figure sum for the rights.

The Michael Gudinski-produced film details Cousins' long battle with drugs and his return to footy through rehabilitation.

"It has been incredibly brave of the family to open up and tell their courageous and emotional story," Seven Melbourne general manager Lewis Martin said. "This expert panel will help families start a conversation about the challenges of addiction (and give) critical advice from experts on how to handle related issues."

Nine is believed to be planning a Cousins expose on The Footy Show.

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/special-reports/ben-cousins-film-inspires-panel-discussion-tv-show/story-fn5ko0pw-1225909130245

Offline wayne

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Re: Channel Seven to air Ben Cousins documentary - Aug 25-26
« Reply #53 on: August 24, 2010, 08:43:57 AM »
Tonight at half-time Hamish McLachlan said in the doco Cuz admits he was using drugs since he was 17.

My old manager was a WA boy and said that Cousins got started on drugs as soon as he got to West Coast.
And you may not think I care for you
When you know down inside that I really do

Offline Smokey

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Re: Ben Cousins film inspires panel discussion TV show (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #54 on: August 24, 2010, 09:07:23 AM »

CHANNEL 7 is cashing in on this week's Ben Cousins drugs documentary with a live round-table discussion planned for Thursday night.
 
The one-hour program will air immediately after episode two of the tell-all Such is Life documentary in a head-to-head battle with Channel 9's The Footy Show.


But as usual the interstate viewers (in the northern states) don't get anything as topical as this.  We go from the "ratings bonanza" of Cousin's doco to 2 episodes of the market dominating "How I Met Your Mother".  Guaranteed to keep all the viewers interested in the Cousin's story from flicking over to the Footy Show on Nine.  ::)

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Channel Seven to air Ben Cousins documentary - Aug 25-26
« Reply #55 on: August 24, 2010, 02:41:31 PM »
Cuz on Nova this morning....

Cousins added the documentary had been extremely important for him as he came to terms with his addiction.

"The actual process of making the documentary has been a very cathartic experience," he said.

"The whole demise through drug addiction is very self absorbed, it is the journey inwards.

"To make this documentary was almost like the journey back, to take a couple of steps back and see not just my own development but the people around me.

"For the first time I was able to sit down and see the collateral damage - not so much the football club or football industry but the people around me.

"That was hard to do."

http://www.smh.com.au/afl/richmond-tigers/cousins-racing-against-clock-20100824-13ntt.html

Offline one-eyed

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Cousins - A champion of a far more important cause (Age)
« Reply #56 on: August 25, 2010, 02:15:37 AM »
A champion of a far more important cause
Drew Petrie
August 25, 2010

 
AS BEN Cousins bows out of AFL football, it's time to stop and thank him. Not just for a career full of on-field highlights and awards, but also for changing the players' working environment for the better.

Cousins was never picked up by the AFL's official drug-testing procedures, but after his year-long ban the industry went through a dramatic transformation. Football afforded Cousins a second chance, it supported him as he recovered from his addiction in the same way it would have if he had tested positive.

The competition's Illicit Drugs Policy (IDP), introduced in 2007, is all about identifying those in trouble and giving them assistance to deal with it.

Cousins has provided an unavoidable warning to all players and fans about the dangers and pitfalls of getting into a particular lifestyle and, in my opinion, that's been a real positive.

While we're talking about the IDP, I can understand why some players and athletes occasionally ask: Why us? Why are footballers and athletes subjected to random drug testing when other people - especially those in positions of authority and responsibility such as judges, doctors and teachers - don't have to?

A few years back, powers were introduced in Victoria that enabled the testing of police officers, and that was a positive step.

I completely support drug testing for players, but it does sometimes make you wonder why it is only players and athletes who are tested and so heavily scrutinised.

The AFL is not the only industry that has to deal with drug use. It's not uncommon to see stars in the entertainment industry, for example, struggle to deal with these issues.

As we mark the final week of Cousins's amazing career, it's important to remember that the AFL has made a deliberate decision to go down a path that leads to early identification and treatment.

I haven't seen the documentary that will screen on television tonight, but I have heard people say it shows that footy was the thing that saved him.

I think if you asked players they would say that they are glad he was able to come back, that footy supported him in his recovery instead of tossing him out onto the street.

There will be a range of views, of course, but how could you say it was a bad thing that Cousins was given a chance to rehabilitate on the job, among people who respect him, while doing something that gave him purpose?

When Cousins announced his retirement last week, everyone was pretty impressed by how he decided to bow out. I think it proved once and for all that the AFL, and the broader football community, did the right thing.

In 2008, the AFLPA also played a pivotal role in arguing that Cousins should not be expelled from the game. When the debate was at its highest point, the players' association said Cousins was in danger of being fed to the wolves at a time when football, and the community, should be supporting him.

There are some who would still say that he should have been expelled forever, but you would have to have a pretty hard heart to have watched that press conference last week and still thought that letting him play on was the wrong decision.

The IDP and the Cousins case means the players are now so much more aware of the dangers of drug use and the industry is better equipped than almost any other to deal with it.

The latest drug-testing results, released earlier this year, show that only a tiny fraction of players are testing positive, and the rate is coming down every year.

In 2005, 4 per cent of all tests were positive. Last year, that figure had dropped to 0.89 per cent, despite the fact the AFL had increased the amount of testing.

It's still too high, but it's definitely heading in the right direction.

Cousins has been an AFL champion, but he has also championed a much more important cause, and I applaud him for helping to make the AFL a better and much safer place, while being able to improve his health and wellbeing.

The hardest part is yet to come for Cousins, but he can be safe in the knowledge that the game he loves will always be there to support and look after him.

Such is Life: The Troubled Times of Ben Cousins, tonight, 8.30pm, Channel Seven.

http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/a-champion-of-a-far-more-important-cause-20100824-13qei.html

Offline one-eyed

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Cousins 'mourned' giving up drugs (Age)
« Reply #57 on: August 25, 2010, 02:17:48 AM »
Cousins 'mourned' giving up drugs
Dan Silkstone
August 25, 2010

 
 
Ben Cousins at training for Richmond this week. The former West Coast captain says his early on-field success led him to believe he could balance drugs and football. Photo: Pat Scala

BEN Cousins has spoken frankly about his drug addiction ahead of the airing of the Richmond onballer's documentary tonight, describing his battle with illicit drugs as ''a journey inward''.

Cousins revealed he had first experimented with hard drugs at age 17, saying he had quickly been fooled by his early on-field success into believing he could balance drugs and football.

''It did start out enjoyable but pretty quickly, especially later on in my drug use, it became quite self-destructive,'' he said. ''I became disillusioned with it and where it crossed over. And once it did, part of it was me turning on myself. I was out to wreck myself at a certain period of my life.''

Controversial footage of a drug-affected Cousins dancing in his underwear - shown ad nauseum to promote the documentary - was described by the player himself as ''just a night that got away from us''.

Cousins never tested positive for any drug under the AFL's testing regime and said yesterday that had reinforced his lifestyle, leading to a period of ''mourning'' when he had to finally give up drug-use. "I had got away with it. It reinforced consciously and subconsciously that I had a method that was working,'' he said.

The comments came during the Brownlow medallist's regular slot on radio station Nova FM ahead of the documentary's airing tonight and tomorrow and a possible farewell match against Port Adelaide on Sunday. That appearance remains in doubt with the former West Coast champion rated only a 50-50 chance to play because of hamstring soreness.

Cousins revealed yesterday he had not ''broken stride'' all week and did not know if he would be fit. ''I will have to prove my fitness at some stage whether that's Thursday, Friday or Saturday before Sunday's game,'' he said. ''I will do everything I can to get up. It is not like I have to worry about the next week, depending on if you re-tear something."

He later trained at Punt Road, away from the main group, and got through a series of light sprints and kicking drills.The club's marketing department is devising a series of measures to honour the 268-game veteran, whether he plays or not.

The Cousins documentary was the talk of Melbourne yesterday, with many inside football circles having already seen it. The Australian Drug Foundation - which had sharply criticised promotional clips of the film and cautioned the Seven Network against openly showing drug use - was treated to an early screening and briefing from Seven executives.

Chief executive John Rogerson said the film was compelling viewing. ''It's a very important documentary for parents to see, with some kids,'' he said. But Rogerson restated concerns that depiction of Cousins using drugs in the film could be damaging and meant the film should not be watched by unsupervised children nor by those younger than 15. ''This whole issue of celebrity status and Ben being an athlete really has the potential to glamourise the issue … I would have liked to have seen that minimised,'' he said.

Cousins rejected claims his film might glamourise drug use. "I have done a lot of things I am not proud of and I have tested my families' unwavering and unconditional support,'' he said. ''They tried everything … In no way is this documentary glamourising drug use. I sit here I am one of the lucky ones."

Coach Damien Hardwick said last week he hoped all Tiger players would watch the program but the playing group has not seen a preview and - with players having a day off today - will not watch it together.

Cousins says he had begun filming his life during his enforced year away from football as a form of catharsis. ''The bottom line is it has been done because I think it can have a real impact and help a lot of people,'' he said. The former Eagle said his approach to consuming methamphetamines during West Coast's glory years had been every bit as single-minded as his famous approach to football.

''I always had the same sort intensity even from the beginning,'' he said. ''I attacked my social life, recreational drug use, the same way I did my footy and everything. It was fraught with danger anyway. When you have to deal with certain things in part of everyday life that are difficult or whatever, it puts strains and pressures on you in ways you don't expect. It became an outlet a way for me, an escape for me, a way of dealing and coping with things."

Cousins said his predilection for drug abuse was so strong that without the sport to keep him motivated ''I would have ended up in rehab 10 or 15 years ago''.

He said he had gradually increased his drug use, eventually becoming shocked at the level he could push his consumption to while still excelling on the field. ''I was assessed by people about how I was going in life by how good a football I was playing … if I was getting a kick that was enough, that was great.''

http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/cousins-mourned-giving-up-drugs-20100824-13qeh.html

Offline one-eyed

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Heath Ledger helped Ben Cousins battle drug addiction (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #58 on: August 25, 2010, 02:52:36 AM »
Tragic Hollywood star Heath Ledger helped Ben Cousins battle drug addiction

    * Aaron Langmaid
    * From: Herald Sun
    * August 25, 2010


TRAGIC Hollywood star Heath Ledger spoke regularly with Ben Cousins at the height of the troubled footballer's drug addiction.

Bryan Cousins revealed last night the late actor often rang him to discuss his son's addiction and had offered vital support to his son when he most needed it.

In a revealing television interview, Mr Cousins said counselling from the Ledger family - before and after Heath's death from an overdose of prescription drugs - had been an important source of support.

Bryan Cousins revealed last night the late actor often rang him to discuss his son's addiction and had offered vital support to his son when he most needed it.

In a revealing television interview, Mr Cousins said counselling from the Ledger family - before and after Heath's death from an overdose of prescription drugs - had been an important source of support.

Chat live from 8.15pm as the doco goes to air

"Heath was ringing and speaking to (his father) Kim about it and then Heath rang me a couple of times and was discussing Ben's issue," Mr Cousins said.

"And Heath and Ben developed a real good friendship, albeit over the phone and ultimately Kim's involvement with Ben became very significant because he became if you like the ... father figure instead of me."

Mr Cousins said Heath's death had rocked them as a family but made Ben realise he "wasn't infallible".

His comments came on the eve of the intimate Channel 7 documentary tonight that is expected to shed light on Cousins' darkest moments as a drug user.

Parents have been urged not to let children watch the program and have been warned to prepare for tough questions from teenagers.

Youth campaigners and drug and alcohol experts said the confronting footage of Cousins at his lowest point would be too much for kids - but OK for teens.

They hailed the inside account as an important tool in lifting the stigma associated with drug users.

It follows comments from Cousins yesterday, who said addiction was still a taboo topic in Australia.

"I liken drug use and drug addiction today to where mental health was 15 years ago. It was secret and wasn't looked upon with the same compassion that it is today," he said.

But youth campaigner Les Twentyman said children were unlikely to learn anything from it because of Cousins' celebrity.

"If you ask me he (Ben) hasn't paid a price and kids will see that," Mr Twentyman said.

"Nobody under 13 should see it.

"Any child who does watch it will see Cousins, as an elite athlete, a good looking person, despite what he's been through."

Mr Twentyman said Australia still lagged when it came to dealing with drug dependency.

"It's not about law and order," he said. "It's about a health issue and few people realise that."

But Cousins said he hoped the series would shed light on an issue few people talked openly about.

"I think it can have a real impact and help people who aren't given the same second chances or extended the same help that I have been," he said. "It has the capacity to break down stigmas associated with drug use."

Australian Drug Foundation CEO John Rogerson, who has already viewed the two-part series, said it would change attitudes.

"It will help us see users as having a health problem and who need our care and support," Mr Rogerson said. "Drug misuse doesn't discriminate. This guy's misuse of drugs almost stopped him doing what he loved most. He thought he had it under control but he didn't.

"You can't control it - and we need to stop judging users because of it."

Bryan Cousins admitted the documentary was confronting.

"I felt uneasy and shocked by what we were going to show and what it was showing Ben as, but we wanted to be as honest as we could," Mr Cousins said.

"That's what happened, that's how it affected us. Drugs are evil, the people who deal in drugs are evil and I despise them. But I haven't met a drug addict yet that I wouldn't go and hug and encourage them in their fight to overcome their issue."s

He said his greatest hope was that Ben would make the right decisions beyond his football career.

" I think if he can get through the next 12 months of his life and be in the same shape he is now I will be very very happy."

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/ben-cousins-film-inspires-panel-discussion-tv-show/story-e6frf9jf-1225909130245

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Channel Seven to air Ben Cousins documentary - Aug 25-26
« Reply #59 on: August 25, 2010, 03:04:44 AM »
"I would train and obsess and play good footy, and the thing that would get me through was I knew at the end of that I was going to absolutely annihilate and launch into as much drugs as I could."

Ben Cousins releases fresh footage from his documentary:

http://player.video.news.com.au/heraldsun/#dYl_l6vezu3isFdAJT5r24bVEbtDsMtr
« Last Edit: August 25, 2010, 03:58:34 AM by one-eyed »