The surprise hit was the Maori Party candidate, Te Hira Paenga, who managed to endear himself to a room in which only about five people were on the Te Tai Tokerau roll with a combination of youthful exuberance and humour. His speech got the biggest cheer of the night. The audience was predominantly National but they also adopted the underdog, cheering good-naturedly when Penny Bright was introduced as reward for her triumph in defying the force of Ryan and getting into the debate. She fought Ryan's law and she won.
There were moments of pantomime in which the audience hollered instructions on what the main players should do next. They booed while trying not to move their lips so Ryan couldn't detect them. They quibbled when they thought Ryan should intervene, and they quibbled when she did intervene and they thought she shouldn't have. When she bailed at the end, it was a democratic vote by the audience that brought proceedings to a close, freeing them to go and have a cup of tea.
It was a reminder that the echo chamber of social media is no replacement for old-fashioned campaigning meetings.
Social media was always going to play a big part in this election. Yet for all its virtues, its main contribution so far has been to give disproportionate voice to a few largely anonymous players. Part of this is seen in the defacing of billboards, apparently spurred on by a Facebook page set up to showcase "modifications" made to National Party billboards. Some have been humorous, such as the replacement of Working for New Zealand to Twerking for New Zealand.
But others are not. The effigy burning was borderline. Anti-semitic slogans painted on Key's billboards are in another league altogether and the despicability and reach of them has been amplified by social media.
Then there are the politicians. In an apparent bid to out-shock-and-awe each other, the minor parties have had a massive amount of coverage so far. We've had Harre sulking about Key's description of Kim Dotcom as a sugar daddy. We've seen Act's Jamie Whyte apparently forgetting who his real foes are and instead getting into a contretemps with Race Relations Commissioner Dame Susan Devoy. Key's description of Dotcom as Harre's sugar daddy was a legitimate sledge in the political context. I've used it myself to refer to Hone Harawira and Dotcom back before Harre came on the scene.
The "F*** John Key" chanting at Internet-Mana events is little more than political rambunctiousness, given the word does not have the same shock factor it once did. New Zealand First leader Winston Peters' off-colour pun on Chinese names was indeed off-colour, but should it really have got more attention than Labour's health policy announced the same day which affected hundreds of thousands of New Zealanders? On one level the attempts to vilify Key twerk out for both Key and his rivals.
The Internet-Mana alliance wants the fringe vote, which such things appeal to. Key wants the mainstream voters, who will look at the shenanigans of the Internet-Mana followers with some distaste and think twice about whether they really want them to have any influence in government.
The bad news for Labour is that it is wandering off in its Vote Positive orbit while all the focus is on just how dirty the campaign is getting. This allows it to claim immunity from blame for the dirty tricks, but also means it has been starved of attention.
For those sick of watching an election campaign unfold through a frenzy on social media there is a remedy. Get off Twitter and go down to a public meeting. That way lies democracy, or at least a few good-natured one-liners.