Episódios
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Kennedy brings us up to date on some mid-winter happening, including Glenorchy's 'creatures of the night' fancy dress community dinner, and the annual Garden Bird Survey, now in its 18th year.
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Chris Smellie spent 50 years in the orcharding and horticulture business - but never thought to write a book about it until development came to his door. He grew apples in Huapai in north-west Auckland for twenty-four years, as well producing roses from a high-tech glasshouse and running a small vineyard. But in the 2000s he watched as row after row of trees were removed from orchards to make way for more houses. The industry migrated to different parts of the country - fruit producing areas we now know around Nelson, Hawke's Bay and Otago. It's prompted him to write a history of orcharding called Where Have All the Apples Gone? beautifully packed with lots of photos and ads from different decades - it's a juicy expose of the fruit industry's evolution and politics.
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A council survey has revealed that the people of Wellington don't trust their city council.
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Ivor Popovich has spent a decade working his way through the health system on a mission to become an ICU specialist.
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Banned pride event in Budapest grows into anti-Orban rally while protests in Venice force change of venue for the Bezos' wedding.
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Kiwi kids can now access Google's Gemini AI chatbot, now the company has made it available to the under-13s.
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A report into deaths from gender-based violence has found there's been no significant reduction in the number of victims between 2009 and 2022.
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Gareth Hughes is the Director of the Wellbeing Economy Alliance Aotearoa is a former Green MP and is no longer a member of any political party. Fletcher Tabuteau is a former NZ First MP from 2014 to 2020, former deputy leader of the party, and former Parliamentary Under-Secretary to the then Minister of Foreign Affairs Winston Peters and the then minister for regional development Shane Jones. He now works for lobbying and communications firm Capital Government Relations.
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Te Pukenga is in the process of being wound up, with individual polytechs around the country working to show whether they can stand on their own.
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The comedians chat about massaging orca whales, pork intestine coffee and honey chasing bears.
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Dana Johannsen discusses referees being abused in Horowhenua Kapiti and funding for Moana Pasifika.
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Jimmy Ellingham is a RNZ Checkpoint reporter based in Palmerston North.
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Leah McFall reviews Raising Hare by Chloe Dalton published by Canongate.
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A group of school students in the Nelson region have come up with a way to ease the financial load and make ball attire more sustainable.
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Making sure children see themselves reflected in books is a driving force for author and publisher David Riley, who calls himself The Reading Warrior.
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Ed White discusses how China is responding to the Iran-Israel conflict.
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The Retirement Navigator - as it's called - is being described as a one-of-a-kind tool for spending in golden years.
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Heavy rain, surface flooding and slips have forced more evacuations the top of the South Island, in the Tasman district.
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Film and TV reviewer Perlina Lau joins Kathryn to talk about new Netflix series Sirens, starring Julianne Moore as an enigmatic billionaire who may have trapped her young employee into a manipulative web. Playing Nice (Three) sees James Norton facing a parent's nightmare of their child being swapped at birth and Long Bright River (Three) is an American crime drama miniseries based on the 2020 book of the same name starring Amanda Seyfried. Perlina Lau is co-host of RNZ's Culture 101 programme
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It can be hard to avoid what's going on in the world right now, including for children. How can parents help their kids make sense of what's going on, without scaring them?
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