Episódios
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Crusaders chief executive Colin Mansbridge is ruling out sacking coach Rob Penney mid-season, despite the team sitting at the bottom of the table. In league, the Warriors' wheels are wobbling heading into their rare home game on Anzac Day. Kiwi swimmer Lewis Clareburt is joining the chorus of disapproval over the leniency of a group of Chinese competitors who failed a drug test. And Scott Dixon pays a special tribute to motorsport icon Sir Colin Giltrap, after his first win of the Indycar season.
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Stats NZ figures in the year to January show more than 250,000 people arrived in New Zealand. Massey University Professor Paul Spoonley says the volume of arrivals has contributed a significant net gain of more than 131,000. He joins us to discuss the record levels of migration, the challenge for processing visas, and the government's response. Professor Paul Spoonley is Distinguished Professor Emeritus and Honorary Research Associate in the College of Humanities and Social Sciences at Massey University.
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A Health New Zealand/Te Whatu Ora commissioned report warns of extreme pressure on New Zealand's aged care sector.
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Stuff's Southland Editor Che Baker looks at Invercargill Mayor Nobby Clark's apology for his interview with comedian Guy Williams.
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Elisabeth Easther reviews Girl of the Mountains by Trish McCormack published by Glacier Press
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British construction worker Nick Stride was working in Moscow in 1998 to help build the British embassy there.
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Ron looks at the US$95b of military assistance approved for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan, which passed with broad bipartisan support.
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The Government is planning to spend billions of dollars on new roads under a transport plan proposed last month.
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A leading youth advocate is concerned young people sent to boot camps will come out the other end without crucial support.
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An inquiry into the response to last year's catastrophic North Island storms that killed 15 people has found the country's emergency management system is not fit for purpose.
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Bill McKay discusses the history of the classic layout of a kitchen, and its connections to pre-Nazi Germany.
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The Muriwai Deli is a permanent fixture in the West Auckland community, but it wasn't always that way.
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Dale Husband is a long time broadcaster and Radio Waatea presenter hosting a Maori focused current affairs programme. Liam Hehir is a Palmerston North lawyer, political commentator and a National Party member.
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Rangiora High School's building project includes a return to single-cell classrooms.
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Cynthia Morahan reviews Loving My Lying, Dying, Cheating Husband by Kerstin Pilz published by Affirm Press
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Growing up in an American Navy family, Alex Kerr lived in many places including Italy, Hawaii and Washington DC.
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Seamus discusses the fire in Copenhagen, Denmark which saw the iconic spire of the 400-year-old former stock exchange building topple.
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Out with the lawn and in with the food.
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Incoming rules for freedom campers have left rental companies feeling confused.
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Owners of earthquake-prone buildings will now have a four year extension on the requirement to strengthen or demolish.
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