Jacinda Ardern 'creepy' 60 Minutes interview sparks anger
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An Australia TV interview with New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern in which she was called "attractive" has been widely criticised as "creepy".
In an interview on current affairs show 60 Minutes, veteran reporter Charles Wooley said he was "smitten" by the PM.
He also asked Ms Ardern, who recently announced she is pregnant, when her baby was conceived.
60 Minutes later defended itself, saying it was showing the "human side" of its interviewees.
But Ms Ardern told reporters that she was "not fazed" by the line of questioning.
"It's fair to say that I couldn't recall there being anything from the interview that particularly stood out to me," she said on Monday.
'Cringeworthy'
The 60 Minutes interview was a profile of Ms Ardern, who, at 37, became New Zealand's youngest prime minister in over a century in October last year.
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"I've met a lot of prime ministers in my time, but none so young and not so many so smart, and never one so attractive," said Mr Wooley in his opening.
He also focused much of the interview on Ms Ardern's pregnancy.
"One really important political question that I want to ask you, and that is what exactly is the date that the baby's due?" he asked her and her partner, Clarke Gayford.
"It's interesting how much people have been counting back to the conception date," he then added.
Ms Ardern responded by saying the baby was conceived when the "election was over", but that they did not "need to get into those details".
In another clip taken from the same interview, Mr Wooley was also seen expressing surprise when Mr Gayford - who will be the full-time carer for the baby - said he did the laundry at home.
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The interview was slammed by many on social media, with some calling it "creepy".
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Australians have also been apologising for Mr Wooley.
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But when asked about the furore in a press conference on Monday, Ms Ardern said she was "not fazed".
The question about when her child was conceived should be "put under the heading of 'too much information'," she said.
'Orwellian' backlash
60 Minutes later defended its coverage in a statement sent to New Zealand media.
"60 Minutes reporters have always asked the tough questions which the public has been wanting to hear, while also showing the human side of these individuals that we rarely get to see," said a spokesperson in the statement.
Mr Wooley "came away from his interview with Jacinda Ardern in awe of her poise, intelligence and everyday charm, which was reflected in the full story", the spokesperson said.
60 Minutes reporter Mr Wooley similarly defended the interview, calling the social media backlash "Orwellian".
"I think you got to be so careful with newspeak and thought crime and everything else, we suffer the same thing in Australia," Mr Wooley told radio network NewsTalk ZB.
He said he did not regret the interview but added that his wife had accused him of "gushing".
'I am not the first woman to multi-task'
Ms Ardern announced her pregnancy in January this year. It will make her the second elected world leader to give birth while in office. She will be taking six weeks of maternity leave before going back to work.
"I am not the first woman to multi-task. I am not the first woman to work and have a baby - there are many women who have done this before," she said at the time.
Baby questions have dogged her throughout her political leadership.
On her first day as opposition leader, she was controversially asked in an interview whether she had made "a choice between having babies and having a career".
Ms Ardern replied that such a question was "totally unacceptable in 2017".
"It is a woman's decision about when they choose to have children and it should not predetermine whether or not they are given a job or have job opportunities," she said.
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