RNZ National. 2016-05-12. 00:00-23:59.

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Year
2016
Reference
288215
Media type
Audio
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Rights Information
Year
2016
Reference
288215
Media type
Audio
Item unavailable online
Series
Radio New Zealand National. 2015--. 00:00-23:59.
Categories
Radio airchecks
Radio programs
Sound recordings
Untelescoped radio airchecks
Duration
24:00:00
Credits
RNZ Collection
RNZ National (estab. 2016), Broadcaster

A 24-hour recording of RNZ National. The following rundown is sourced from the broadcaster’s website. Note some overseas/copyright restricted items may not appear in the supplied rundown:

12 May 2016

===12:04 AM. | All Night Programme===
=DESCRIPTION=

Including: 12:05 Music after Midnight; 12:30 Discovery (BBC); 1:05 The Thursday Feature (RNZ); 2:05 The Cultural Frontline; 3:05 Closed, Stranger by Kate de Goldi read by Scott Wills (11 of 12, RNZ); 3:30 NZ Books (RNZ) 5:10 Witness (BBC) 5:45 The Day in Parliament

===6:00 AM. | Morning Report===
=DESCRIPTION=

RNZ's three-hour breakfast news show with news and interviews, bulletins on the hour and half-hour, including: 6:16 and 6:50 Business News 6:18 Pacific News 6:26 Rural News 6:48 and 7:45 NZ Newspapers

=AUDIO=

06:00
Top Stories for Thursday 12 May 2016
BODY:
Yet another dog attack - this time a nine month old baby girl is taken to Dunedin hospital with serious injuries. The Coroner releases his report into four suicides by teenage girls in the Hastings suburb of Flaxmere. Anne Tolley says government agencies failed and wel ask former top news chiefs what they think about plans for a merger of Fairfax and NZME.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 32'25"

06:06
Sports News for 12 May 2016
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'52"

06:13
Senate meeting over Brazil president Dilma Rousseff's future
BODY:
Brazil's impeachment debate is back on, with Senators currently deciding on the fate of president Dilma Rousseff
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: Brazil, Dilma Rousseff
Duration: 5'25"

06:18
Fears planned media merger will leave the public worse off
BODY:
The possible merger of the two largest media companies in New Zealand has provoked alarm among some in the industry.
Topics: media
Regions:
Tags: NZME, Fairfax
Duration: 2'31"

06:20
Early Business News for 12 May 2016
BODY:
A brief update of movements in the financial sector.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 2'14"

06:26
Morning Rural News for 12 May 2016
BODY:
News from the rural and farming sector.
Topics: rural, farming
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 4'04"

06:40
Tolley says Flaxmere suicides highlights failings
BODY:
A coroner's report on the deaths of four teenage girls in the Hastings suburb of Flaxmere has criticised the lack of coordination among government agencies.
Topics: health, politics
Regions: Hawkes Bay
Tags: suicide, teenagers, CYF
Duration: 3'18"

06:44
Changes imminent for trans-Tasman netball competition
BODY:
It's almost certain Australia will pull the plug on the trans-tasman netball competition in its current form.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags: netball
Duration: 3'15"

06:51
SkyCity share issue raises questions
BODY:
SkyCity Entertainment's plan to raise more than a quarter of a billion dollars through a share issue to fund future development has raised as many questions with analysts as it's answered.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: SkyCity Entertainment
Duration: 1'42"

06:53
Question marks over appetite for NZ media company
BODY:
The prospect of New Zealand once again having a media company listed on the stock exchange is drawing a guarded reaction from investors.
Topics: business, media
Regions:
Tags: NZME, Fairfax
Duration: 3'14"

06:56
Real Estate Institute agrees with RBNZ's view on housing
BODY:
The head of the Real Estate Institute says the Reserve Bank is right to take a wait-and-see approach to imposing additional lending restrictions on house market investors.
Topics: business, economy, housing
Regions:
Tags: Reserve Bank, RBNZ
Duration: 1'43"

06:57
Morning markets for 12 May 2016
BODY:
Wall Street is weaker today amid corporate earnings reports, including Walt Disney - which disappointed.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 56"

06:58
Business briefs
BODY:
The national carrier, Air New Zealand, is to put on an extra weekly service between Auckland and Buenos Aires over the peak summer period to cope with growing demand.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 30"

07:07
Sports News for 12 May 2016
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'34"

07:11
Baby seriously injured in dog attack in Dunedin
BODY:
A baby is in Dunedin hospital this morning with serious injuries after being attacked by the family's dog.
Topics: health
Regions: Otago
Tags: dog attack
Duration: 3'49"

07:14
Welfare agencies failed to prevent teen girl suicides
BODY:
A coroner's report on the deaths, of four teenage girls in the Hasting's suburb of Flaxmere, over a 13 month period, has criticised the lack of coordination among government agencies.
Topics: health, politics
Regions: Hawkes Bay
Tags: CYF, suicide, teenagers
Duration: 4'03"

07:19
Media merger a 'major step backwards'
BODY:
A former editor in chief at Fairfax says the company's potential merger with APN's New Zealand arm, NZME, is a major step backwards for journalistic integrity.
Topics: media
Regions:
Tags: NZME, Fairfax
Duration: 6'20"

07:26
RBNZ looks for Govt help with new house price curbs
BODY:
Three years after introducing loan to value ratio restrictions, the Reserve Bank is looking around for further measures to control Auckland's overheated housing market.
Topics: housing, economy
Regions:
Tags: Reserve Bank, RBNZ, house prices
Duration: 5'32"

07:35
Opposition MPs put the boot in the PM
BODY:
Opposition MPs are putting the boot into the Prime Minister after he got kicked out of the House yesterday.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: John Key
Duration: 2'48"

07:39
Queen's comments raise questions over China-UK relations
BODY:
The Queen's comments about Chinese President's visit to London might have strained diplomatic relations between China and the UK.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: UK, Queen
Duration: 3'54"

07:43
Wgtn council votes to keep closer tabs on investment fund
BODY:
Wellington City Council has voted to increase oversight over a controversial economic development fund criticised as a secret slush fund.
Topics: politics
Regions: Wellington Region
Tags: Economic Initiatives Development Fund, Wellington City Council
Duration: 5'19"

07:50
Temperature's rising atop Mt Ruapehu
BODY:
The central North Island's sleeping giant Mt Ruapehu has been stirring in recent weeks and vulcanologists have just raised their alert level by a notch
Topics: science, environment
Regions: Waikato
Tags: Mt Ruapehu
Duration: 2'51"

07:53
Murder accused knew things only killer could have known
BODY:
The Crown says murder-accused Kamal Reddy told undercover police officers information that only the killer could have known.
Topics: crime
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: Kamal Reddy
Duration: 3'55"

07:57
Weather - batten down the hatches
BODY:
The message from the MetService is to batten down the hatches as wild weather bears down.
Topics: weather
Regions:
Tags: storms
Duration: 1'27"

08:07
Sports News for 12 May 2016
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'30"

08:13
Flaxmere - everyone needs to lift their game
BODY:
A Flaxmere man working to reduce family violence says families and the community need to look to themselves, not government agencies, to solve problems in the Hastings suburb.
Topics: health, politics
Regions: Hawkes Bay
Tags: CYF, suicide, teenagers
Duration: 6'13"

08:19
Economist says income gap for mortgages has some merit
BODY:
Financial experts are divided over the Reserve Bank's suggestion that it might introduce debt-to-income ratio restrictions.
Topics: housing, economy
Regions:
Tags: Reserve Bank, RBNZ, house prices
Duration: 3'19"

08:24
Fairfax/NZME merger to create 'biggest single upheaval'
BODY:
Digital start-ups, and small online-only media players appear poorly placed to step into any void created by a proposed merger of two New Zealand's industry heavyweights.
Topics: media
Regions:
Tags: NZME, Fairfax
Duration: 4'59"

08:29
What will a merger mean for the regional newspapers?
BODY:
Listening to that is Roy Pilott -- a former editor at the Taranaki Daily News, which is owned by Fairfax.
Topics: media
Regions:
Tags: NZME, Fairfax
Duration: 3'45"

08:33
Markets Update for 12 May 2016
BODY:
A brief update of movements in the financial sector.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 52"

08:39
First UK anti-corruption summit to get underway
BODY:
World leaders are arriving in the UK for tomorrow's anti-corruption summit, just days after Prime Minister David Cameron labelling Afghanistan and Nigeria 'fantastically corrupt.'
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: UK, corruption
Duration: 3'10"

08:42
NZ netballers likely to play Australians less in coming years.
BODY:
It now seems certain Australia will pull the plug on the trans-Tasman netball competition in its current form.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags: netball
Duration: 4'27"

08:46
Manus Island detainees free to come and go
BODY:
The Ministry of Immigration in Papua New Guinea says all asylum seekers detained on Manus Island are now free to come and go from the processing centre.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: Papua New Guinea, PNG, Manus Island
Duration: 2'36"

08:51
Govt urged not to short-change compulsory addiction treatment
BODY:
Addiction experts have told MPs a planned law change allowing drug addicts and alcoholics to be detained for up to eight weeks for treatment will not work without more funding.
Topics: health, law
Regions:
Tags: addictions, drug addicts, alcoholics
Duration: 2'38"

08:53
Heart of Dunedin to pump new life into George Street
BODY:
Retailers in Central Dunedin are launching a new business group tonight to push for more attention and spending on the city's main shopping strip.
Topics: business
Regions: Otago
Tags: retail, Dunedin
Duration: 3'15"

=SHOW NOTES=

===9:06 AM. | Nine To Noon===
=DESCRIPTION=

Current affairs and topics of interest, including: 10:45 The Reading: Where the Rekohu Bone Sings by Tina Makereti read by Maria Walker, George Henare and Kura Forrester (14 of 15, RNZ)

=AUDIO=

09:08
Big changes in transtasman netball
BODY:
The end of netball's ANZ Championship is expected to be confirmed in a joint Netball New Zealand and Netball Australia announcement early next week. What will this mean for the sport in this country? Margaret Foster is a former Silver Fern player and coach.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags: netball
Duration: 9'29"

09:18
Calls for offenders to be screened for neurodisability
BODY:
Neurodisabilities can range from learning differences like dyslexia, through to Foetal Alcohol Syndrome Disorder, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder and Autism Spectrum Disorder. Research suggests that people with neurodisabilities are highly over-represented in prisons. Today a forum in Wellington, hosted by the Dyslexia Foundation, brings together representatives from the Justice Department, Police and a range of government ministries to explore the common and shared characteristics of neurodisabilites and why they may make people vulnerable when they come into contact with police or the courts. We speak to Chair of the NZ Institute for Educational and Developmental Psychologists Rose Blackett and Eleanor Bensemann, who raised her grandson who has FASD.
EXTENDED BODY:
Amidst calls for inmates to be screened for neuro-disabilities, a woman has told Nine to Noon how her grandson, who suffers from Foetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder, was jailed as a teenager.
Eleanor Bensemann raised her grandson, who was born with Foetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) and another intellectual disability.
At 19 he has already spent eight months in prison.
Research suggests that people with neuro-disabilities are highly over-represented in prisons. Neuro-disabilities include learning differences like dyslexia, through to Foetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD), Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and Autism Spectrum Disorder.
Ms Bensemann told Nine to Noon as a child her grandson appeared to be "perfectly normal".
"He was a very cute, lovely little boy.
"As he grew older... schooling became quite difficult for him, but we still didn't really think that there was anything wrong."
He was not diagnosed with FASD, and another intellectual disability, until he was 10 years old, which was also when Ms Bensemann's husband, who was her grandson's main caregiver, died from Motor Neurone disease.
"Then I was left as a solo parent to raise him, and his behaviour became very very difficult."
She said it was hard to get help for her grandson because agencies were used to dealing with children who had been abused.
There was evidence that if children were diagnosed early and given support, then it was possible to avoid them getting into trouble with the police, Ms Bensemann said.

Her grandson was eventually sentenced to two years under the Intellectual Disability (Compulsory Care and Rehabilitation) Act.
"That was not a great time for him and he has been in and out of the justice system ever since."
During this time authorities decided he did not have an intellectual disability, so all his support was taken away. He ended up in prison after becoming homeless.
FASD was not by itself recognised as a disability in New Zealand, Ms Bensemann said. Another intellectual disability was also needed to make him eligible for support.
"A lot of these kids don't have ... a diagnosed intellectual disability and they get no support whatsoever, or help.
"And their parents are just screaming out for help and they don't get it, because they don't fit the criteria.
"The system, I feel, just doesn't know how to deal with people. Prison isn't appropriate, but there is no other choice really."
She said people like her grandson's suffered symptoms included acting without thinking of the consequences, poor control of emotions, being easily lead and susceptible to peer pressure, and desperately wanting to fit in. This made them susceptible to being recruited by gangs.
NZ Institute for Educational and Developmental Psychologists chair Rose Blackett said police and the courts should screen offenders with neuro-disabilities, and more resources were needed for agencies who dealt with people with the condition the issue.
She said the structure and biological makeup their brains meant they were not capable of making reasonable decisions.
"(They) are being set up to fail within a system."
The Dyslexia Foundation is hosting a forum today to bring together representatives from a range of government ministries to explore the shared characteristics of neuro-disabilities, and why they make people vulnerable when they come into contact with police or the courts.
Read other RNZ coverage:
Topics: health, law, disability
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 19'19"

09:38
Mothers fighting violent extremism
BODY:
Edit Schlaffer is a social scientist and author, based in Vienna, who is behind a global movement to get women fighting violent extremism… starting in their own families. The NGO she set up in 2002, Women without Borders, has been actively recruiting mothers and sisters in areas where extremism is rife, to recognise the signs that their family members may be getting involved in extremist movements, so they can try and intervene.Mothers School Against Extremism, has trained 1400 mothers outside of Europe to provide information on the role of the Internet in spreading extremism and helping them understand why - and recognise when - teenagers are vulnerable to recruitment.
Topics: law, politics
Regions:
Tags: terror, terrorism, Women without Borders, Sisters Against Violent Extremism, Mothers School Against Extremism
Duration: 10'12"

09:50
UK correspondent Jon Dennis
BODY:
London's new Mayor Labour candidate Sadiq Khan & outfall for Conservatives candidate, Scots Nationalists win third term in Scottish elections, and PM says Britain outside EU will be less safe.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Sadiq Khan, Zac Goldsmith, Nicola Sturgeon, Scots Nationalists, UK
Duration: 9'06"

10:08
Melati and Isabel Wijsen say bye bye to plastic bags in Bali
BODY:
Teenage sisters Melati and Isabel Wijsen are on a mission to ban plastic bags on Bali - and they're succeeding. The girls recently gave a TED talk and are getting attention from around the world, with other environmental groups wanting to follow their lead.
EXTENDED BODY:
Teenage sisters Melati and Isabel Wijsen are on a mission to ban plastic bags on Bali - and they're succeeding.
Distressed by seeing discarded shopping bags on Bali’s beaches, in the sea, and even in rice paddies, two sisters decided to do something about it.
Aged 10 and 12 at the time, Melati and Isabel Wijsen decided to started Bye Bye Plastic Bags. They got a team together, started petitions and beach cleanups, and decided they needed to get the attention of the Governor of Bali.
The trouble was, despite writing to him almost every day, he wouldn't respond. Undeterred, Melati and Isabel went on a hunger strike, and within days they had their meeting. What's more, the governor committed to a plastic-bag free Bali by 2018.

The girls recently gave a TED talk and are getting attention from around the world, with other environmental groups wanting to follow their lead.
Topics: environment, politics
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 31'20"

10:40
Book review - Girls on Fire by Robin Wasserman
BODY:
Reviewed by Charlotte Graham, published by Hachette.
Topics: books
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 5'57"

11:08
New technology with Sarah Putt
BODY:
Sarah Putt discusses technology battles in and out of court, Oracle vs Google, Facebook vs Periscope and Amazon vs YouTube.
Topics: technology
Regions:
Tags: Oracle, Google, Facebook, Periscope, Amazon, YouTube
Duration: 14'57"

11:24
Nathan Mikaere-Wallis on teenage drinking
BODY:
Parenting expert Nathan Mikaere-Wallis on teaching teens to be responsible around alcohol.
EXTENDED BODY:
School ball season is just around the corner, and this week several organised after-ball parties have been cancelled. How can parents teach their children to be responsible around alcohol?
Nathan Mikaere Wallis talks with Lynn Freeman about teenagers and drinking:
Read an edited snapshot of their conversation
What is the impact of alcohol on the teenage brain?
Nathan Mikaere Wallis: That’s really bad news, unfortunately. In the last 10, 15 years – especially in the last 10 – we’ve learnt that it has way more of an impact than we previously thought. Before brain scans – 10 years ago - we thought your brain, your actual skull, doesn’t grow after the age of 10 to 12. We thought the brain was fully grown by about 12.
We thought adolescence was just psychological changes. But it’s only with MRI scans we’ve been able to see (in the last 10 years) that it’s biological and physiological. We don’t have an adult brain at 12 - it’s closer to mid-20s before we have an adult brain. While alcohol is not very damaging to an adult brain at all, it turns out to be really damaging to a teenage brain so it’s causing lots of concern.
The binge drinking culture that we have in New Zealand – adults and teenagers alike – that must be even more damaging to brain development.
Nathan Mikaere Wallis: Absolutely, because the normal amount of drinking in New Zealand would be considered alcoholic drinking in other parts of the world. When you’re asked in Europe what’s the socially acceptable number of drinks you can have in one evening, the average number comes back in the research as being three. I always think three drinks is enough to dance and do karaoke, so what is the fourth drink for?
If you ask in New Zealand how many drinks are considered acceptable… the number comes back as 13, on average. So that binge drinking culture does expose us to way more danger.
In an ideal world we would try and keep teens alcohol-free, but that’s not going to happen. So is it best for parents to negotiate with their teenager a safe amount of alcohol for them to drink and a safe way of drinking alcohol?
Nathan Mikaere Wallis: That’s the conclusion I’ve come to. I’ve had five teenagers now - I’ve talked one of them into not drinking until they’re 18. With the other ones… a harm minimisation approach seems to work best. There’s a whole lot more risks when they sneak out than when they do it under negotiation…
That’s where the really dangerous stuff happens. In lots of ways things remain relatively tame until one in the morning because old people like you and I are out until [then]. The really dangerous stuff starts after that. If they’ve snuck out they do jump right into the deep end of that. You’re also not negotiating how much they’re drinking or what rate they’re drinking when they’re doing it all behind your back.
Some people will have more tolerance – the male/ female difference, the weight difference. What’s right for one young person is not going to be right for the next young person. It’s a little bit of a guessing game, isn’t it, at the start?
Nathan Mikaere Wallis: It is, although it doesn’t have to be that confusing. It’s really just weight – the huge one parents have to think about. Probably weight is the only one that has to impact on their decision making.
A question from Julie: "Our 16 year old asks why can’t she have wine when we do, at dinner? Do you have an opinion on how or whether we should include our 16 year old children in our meal-linked habit?”
It’s a question I get asked a bit. Let’s go straight to the research – the research tells us that the earlier you have alcohol with your child, the more likely they are to have a drug and alcohol issue. The common New Zealand thing that that parent might be thinking ‘If I have alcohol with the child at dinner time we’re being like they are in France’ so we’re modelling good attitudes towards alcohol’ but the reality is we’re not in France and they don’t binge-drink in France. When they give children alcohol in France they water it down, they have lemonade and sherry. You’re not at risk in France like you are in New Zealand.
In New Zealand the earlier you have alcohol with your child, you’re validating the use of alcohol. So those children who’ve had a wine with mum and dad, they’re more likely to abuse alcohol outside of the home. I would consistently be saying ‘I understand that teenagers are going to drink because it’s part of the culture. I would rather you didn’t because of the damage it’s doing to your brain. It’s not something I would encourage. Certainly I’m not going to give you wine with your meal because you’ve got a teenage brain and wine is poison to your brain’.
It’s not poison to my brain – as an adult – so I’ve got no problems being what they might think is a hypocrite and having a glass of wine myself and saying no to the 16 year old. Because the reality is when you’re over 21 alcohol doesn’t really do damage to your brain. Under 21, certainly 18, it really is doing damage, it really is a poison.
Nathan Mikaere Wallis is the founder of X Factor Education in Christchurch. He was formerly with the Brain Wave Trust and has been a lecturer at the Christchurch College of Education, lecturing in human development, brain development, language and communication and risk and resilience.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: parenting, teenagers
Duration: 18'26"

11:49
Viewing with Paul Casserly
BODY:
TV and Film writer Paul Casserly on The Bachelor's sweary, uncomfortable, and glorious end, and the slow moving magic of British nerd-comedy The Detectoritsts (DVD release).
Topics: arts, media
Regions:
Tags: The Bachelor, The Detectorists
Duration: 11'28"

=SHOW NOTES=

09:05 Big changes in transtasman netball
The end of netball's ANZ Championship is expected to be confirmed in a joint Netball New Zealand and Netball Australia announcement early next week. What will this mean for the sport in this country? Margaret Foster is a former Silver Fern player and coach.
09:20 Calls for offenders to be screened for neurodisability
Neurodisabilities can range from learning differences like dyslexia, through to Foetal Alcohol Syndrome Disorder, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder and Autism Spectrum Disorder. Research suggests that people with neurodisabilities are highly over-represented in prisons. Today a forum in Wellington, hosted by the Dyslexia Foundation, brings together representatives from the Justice Department, Police and a range of government ministries to explore the common and shared characteristics of neurodisabilites and why they may make people vulnerable when they come into contact with police or the courts. We speak to Chair of the NZ Institute for Educational and Developmental Psychologists Rose Blackett and Eleanor Bensemann, who raised her grandson who has FASD.
09:30 Mothers fighting violent extremism
Edit Schlaffer is a social scientist and author, based in Vienna, who is behind a global movement to get women fighting violent extremism… starting in their own families. The NGO she set up in 2002, Women without Borders, has been actively recruiting mothers and sisters in areas where extremism is rife, to recognise the signs that their family members may be getting involved in extremist movements, so they can try and intervene.Mothers School Against Extremism, has trained 1400 mothers outside of Europe to provide information on the role of the Internet in spreading extremism and helping them understand why - and recognise when - teenagers are vulnerable to recruitment.

09:45 UK correspondent Jon Dennis
London's new Mayor Labour candidate Sadiq Khan & outfall for Conservatives candidate,
Scots Nationalists win third term in Scottish elections, and PM says Britain outside EU will be less safe.
10:05 Balinese campaigning teen sisters Melati & Isabel Wijsen
Balinese Teenage sisters Melati and Isabel Wijsen are on a mission to ban plastic bags on their island.
[image:67653:full] no metadata
Distressed by seeing discarded shopping bags on beaches, in the sea, and even in rice paddies, the girls decided to do something about it. They got a team together, started petitions and beach cleanups, and decided they needed to get the attention of the Governor of Bali. The trouble was, despite writing to him almost every day, he wouldn't respond. Undeterred, Melati and Isabel went on a hunger strike, and within days they had their meeting with the Governor. What's more, he commited to a plastic-bag free Bali by 2018. The girls recently gave a TED talk and are getting attention from around the world, with other environmental groups wanting to follow their lead.
10:35 Book review - Girls on Fire by Robin Wasserman
reviewed by Charlotte Graham, published by Hachette
10:45 The Reading
Where The Rekohu Bone Sings by Tina Makereti (Part 14 of 15)
read by Maria Walker, George Henare and Kura Forreste
11:05 New technology with Sarah Putt
Sarah Putt discusses technology battles in and out of court, Oracle vs Google, Facebook vs Periscope and Amazon vs YouTube
11:25 Parenting with Nathan Mikaere-Wallis
[image:10787:half]
Parenting expert Nathan Mikaere-Wallis on teaching teens to be responsible around alcohol. Send in your questions.
11:45 Viewing with Paul Casserly
TV and Film writer Paul Casserly on The Bachelor's sweary, uncomfortable, and glorious end, and the slow moving magic of British nerd-comedy The Detectoritsts (DVD release)

===Noon | Midday Report===
=DESCRIPTION=

RNZ news, followed by updates and reports until 1.00pm, including: 12:16 Business News 12:26 Sport 12:34 Rural News 12:43 Worldwatch

=AUDIO=

12:00
Midday News for 12 May 2016
BODY:
The Law Commission says battered women and other victims of family violence who kill their abusers should find it easier to claim self-defence if proposed changes to the law are made. The police say a dog biting a baby in Dunedin yesterday was an accident and her injuries are not serious.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 15'30"

12:17
Z Energy full-year profit rises
BODY:
The fuel retailer, Z Energy, has reported a sharp rise in its full-year net profit, driven by gains from the Marsden Point refinery and cheap oil.
Topics: business, economy, energy
Regions:
Tags: Z Energy, profit, fuel
Duration: 2'26"

12:19
Xero makes full-year loss with spending on global expansion
BODY:
The accounting software company, Xero, says its full-year net loss is up nearly 19 percent, but says it's heading towards break even.
Topics: business, economy, technology
Regions:
Tags: Xero
Duration: 1'53"

12:21
Manufacturing activity perks up to best in three months
BODY:
The BNZ-Business New Zealand Performance of Manufacturing Index rose a seasonally adjusted 1-point-8 points in April to 56-point-5, its best level in three months.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: BNZ, manufacturing
Duration: 2'01"

12:23
Nuplex lifts profit expectations, sees progress on takeover
BODY:
The resins manufacturer, Nuplex, has raised its full-year profit expectations by as much as 11 percent.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: Nuplex, manufacturing, Resins
Duration: 45"

12:24
Midday Markets for 12 May 2016
BODY:
For the latest from the markets we're joined by Bryan Shepherd at Macquarie Private Wealth
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 1'55"

12:26
Midday Sports News for 12 May 2016
BODY:
Julian and Ardie Savea, Cory Jane, Victor Vito and Chris Eves have been outed as the players who missed a Hurricanes team curfew while in South Africa and will now miss Saturday's Super Rugby game against the Queensland Reds.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags: Premier League, Rugby Leage
Duration: 2'30"

12:33
Midday Rural News for 12 May 2016
BODY:
News from the rural and farming sectors.
Topics: rural, farming
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 9'13"

=SHOW NOTES=

===1:06 PM. | Jesse Mulligan, 1–4pm===
=DESCRIPTION=

An upbeat mix of the curious and the compelling, ranging from the stories of the day to the great questions of our time (RNZ)

=AUDIO=

13:10
Tami Neilson wins self-managed artist award
BODY:
New Zealand songstress, Tami Neilson, took out the self-managed artist award last night at the MMF Music Managers Awards, in Auckland.
EXTENDED BODY:
Country singer Tami Neilson took out the self-managed artist award last night at the MMF Music Managers Awards, in Auckland.
She joined Jesse in the studio and performed Cry Over You
Tami says being self-managed is a sort of necessity for her.
“You do it because you sort of have to in the beginning and you have to be kind of scrappy and hustle a lot when you’re a self-managed artist and build your profile.”
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags: MMF Music Managers Awards
Duration: 9'30"

13:20
John Edwards, Privacy commissioner on Privacy week issues
BODY:
More than half of the complaints the Privacy Commissioner receives each year are about access to personal information.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: privacy, Privacy week
Duration: 10'38"

13:31
Shark scientist - Riley Elliot
BODY:
He's New Zealand's own 'shark man'. Riley Elliot travels the world swimming with sharks. And he's giving talks from today at the New Zealand Boat Show.
Topics: environment, science
Regions:
Tags: sharks, New Zealand Boat Show, ocean
Duration: 9'28"

13:41
Favourite Album
BODY:
Lyle Lovett- "Live in Texas"
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags: country music
Duration: 19'03"

14:08
Money with Mary Holm
BODY:
Today Mary Holm discusses diversification
Topics: economy
Regions:
Tags: money, finance, investment
Duration: 25'11"

14:47
Alexandre Tortoriello
BODY:
Alexandre Tortoriello discusses the process of impeachment for Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff.
Topics: politics, sport
Regions:
Tags: Brazil, Olympics
Duration: 12'27"

15:08
Masterpieces: Michael Fitzgerald on colonial history
BODY:
Michael Fitzgerald, Te Papa's curator of colonial history, is retiring this month, after 46 years at Te Papa and its predecessor institutions. He is steeped in New Zealand's history from military to social history. Recently he was one of the curators of Te Papa's Gallipoli exhibition. He talks about some of his favourite objects from the Te Papa colonial history collection
EXTENDED BODY:
Michael Fitzgerald, Te Papa's curator of colonial history, is retiring this month, after 46 years at Te Papa and its predecessor institutions. He is steeped in New Zealand's history from military to social history. Recently he was one of the curators of Te Papa's Gallipoli exhibition.
He talks about some of his favourite objects from the Te Papa colonial history collection
Topics: history
Regions:
Tags: Te Papa, Colonial history
Duration: 19'36"

15:27
The Expats: Sally Warring
BODY:
Originally from Ashburton, Sally Warring is finding fame with an instagram account which is documenting single cellular life in New York. The project, which is her hobby, is blurring the lines between science and art and has attracted more than 30 thousand followers.
Topics: science, life and society
Regions:
Tags: New York, Ashburton, parasites
Duration: 12'17"

15:50
The Panel pre-show for 12 May 2016
BODY:
Your feedback, and a preview of the guests and topics on The Panel.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 9'44"

15:50
The Panel pre-show for 12 May 2016
BODY:
Your feedback, and a preview of the guests and topics on The Panel.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 9'44"

=SHOW NOTES=

1:10 Tami Neilson: being a self managed artist
The country singer took out the self managed artist award last night at the MMF Music Managers Awards, in Auckland. She joined Jesse in the studio, and performed a song for us.
[embed] https://youtu.be/jByWDU_63ts
1:25 Accessing your personal information
More than half of the complaints the Privacy Commissioner receives each year are about access to personal information.
John Edwards says while larger agencies have processes in place regarding the storing and protection of individual's personal information - there remains a real problem with smaller ones, such as clubs, societies and small businesses.
It is privacy week and John Edwards has designated today - Right To Know Day, and has released an on-line tool to help people request information held about them by different agencies.
1:35 Riley Elliott: the joys of swimming with sharks
Riley Elliot is known as New Zealand's shark man. He travels the world swimming with sharks.
1:40 Favourite album: Lyle Lovett Live in Texas
2:10 Money with Mary Holm
Today Mary Holm discusses diversification
2.30 The Reading
3:10 Masterpieces: Michael Fitzgerald on colonial history
Michael Fitzgerald, Te Papa's curator of colonial history, is retiring this month, after 46 years at Te Papa and its predecessor institutions. He is steeped in New Zealand's history from military to social history. Recently he was one of the curators of Te Papa's Gallipoli exhibition.
He talks about some of his favourite objects from the Te Papa colonial history collection
[gallery:2004]
3:25 The Expats: Sally Warring, from Ashburton to NYC
Originally from Ashburton, Sally Warring is finding fame with an instagram account which is documenting single cellular life in New York. The project, which is her hobby, is blurring the lines between science and art and has attracted more than 30 thousand followers.
Here's just some of her very popular instagram pictures of single cell organisms in her adopted city.
[gallery:2016]
Sally, who is also a PhD candidate in biology talks to Jesse from New York
3:30 Following the progress of a Royal Albatross Chick through Royal Cam
A few months ago the Department of Conservation put a camera on a royal albatross nest - and since then, thousands of people have been tuning in to royalcam, as it's known, to check on the progress of the fluffy white albatross chick.
[embed] https://youtu.be/Gwy2IjA7z-I
To find out more about these enormous birds and about the royalcam chick, Alison Ballance heads along to Taiaroa Head, at the end of Otago Peninsula, to meet longtime albatross ranger Lyndon Perriman.
From Our Changing World.
3:45 The Panel Pre-Show

=PLAYLIST=

JESSE MULLIGAN: AFTERNOONS & THE PANEL 1- 5pm
Thursday May 12th
JESSE'S SONG:
ARTIST: Tami Neilson
TITLE: Cry Over You
COMP: Tami Neilson
ALBUM: Dynamite!
LIVE: RNZ Auckland
FAVOURITE ALBUM:
ARTIST: Lyle Lovett
TITLE: Penguins
COMP: Lyle Lovett
ALBUM: Lyle Lovett Live in Texas
LABEL: MCA
ARTIST: Lyle Lovett
TITLE: Nobody Knows Me
COMP: Lyle Lovett
ALBUM: Lyle Lovett Live in Texas
LABEL: MCA
ARTIST: Lyle Lovett
TITLE: What Do You Do?
COMP: Lyle Lovett
ALBUM: Lyle Lovett Live in Texas
LABEL: MCA
ARTIST: Lyle Lovett
TITLE: Church
COMP: Lyle Lovett
ALBUM: Lyle Lovett Live in Texas
LABEL: MCA
THE PANEL - HALF TIME SONG:
ARTIST: David Bowie
TITLE: Loving the Alien
COMP: David Bowie
ALBUM: Tonight
LABEL: EMI

===4:06 PM. | The Panel===
=DESCRIPTION=

An hour of discussion featuring a range of panellists from right along the opinion spectrum (RNZ)

=AUDIO=

15:50
The Panel pre-show for 12 May 2016
BODY:
Your feedback, and a preview of the guests and topics on The Panel.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 9'44"

16:06
The Panel with Lisa Tamati and Andrew Clay (Part1)
BODY:
What the Panelists Lisa Tamati and Andrew Clay have been up to. The Finance Minister has confirmed there will be no tax cuts factored into this years Budget. Vanessa Caldwell of the National Committee for Addiction Treatment discusses why some addicts need to be forced into rehab. Public health expert Michael Baker talks about the Harvard study which is predicting a global Zika disaster arising after the Rio Olympics.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 23'18"

16:07
The Panel with Lisa Tamati and Andrew Clay (Part 2)
BODY:
An update of New Zealand UFO sightings has been released. Is it co-incidence it comes at the same time that NASA announces over 1200 new plants have been identified. What the Panelists Lisa Tamati and Andrew Clay have been thinbking about. Is Queenstown able to cope with even more tourists? We ask the managing director of the Queenstown Accomodation Centre Allan Bailey. The chair of the NZRFU Brent Impey says he wants to see more women in the boardroom. The euthanasia issue widens after a woman had help ending her life after not being able to recover from the effects of sexual abuse.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 26'27"

16:08
Panel Intro
BODY:
What the Panelists Lisa Tamati and Andrew Clay have been up to.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 6'31"

16:14
No tax cuts
BODY:
The Finance Minister has confirmed there will be no tax cuts factored into this years Budget.
Topics: politics, economy
Regions:
Tags: tax
Duration: 3'17"

16:18
Compulsory rehabilitation for addicts
BODY:
Vanessa Caldwell of the National Committee for Addiction Treatment discusses why some addicts need to be forced into rehab.
Topics: law, health
Regions:
Tags: rehab, addiction
Duration: 8'06"

16:25
Harvard study's dire Zika warning
BODY:
Public health expert Michael Baker talks about the Harvard study which is predicting a global Zika disaster arising after the Rio Olympics.
Topics: sport, health
Regions:
Tags: Rio, Olympics, Zika
Duration: 5'11"

16:34
More planets more aliens?
BODY:
An update of New Zealand UFO sightings has been released. Is it co-incidence it comes at the same time that NASA announces over 1200 new plants have been identified.
Topics: life and society
Regions:
Tags: aliens, UFOs
Duration: 3'49"

16:37
Panel Says
BODY:
What the Panelists Lisa Tamati and Andrew Clay have been thinking about.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 5'56"

16:44
Tourism NZ encouraging off-peak tourists
BODY:
Is Queenstown able to cope with even more tourists? We ask the managing director of the Queenstown Accomodation Centre Allan Bailey.
Topics: life and society, business
Regions: Otago
Tags: tourism, accomodation, Queenstown
Duration: 7'51"

16:52
Call for women in rugby boardrooms
BODY:
The chair of the NZRFU Brent Impey says he wants to see more women in the boardroom.
Topics: sport, inequality
Regions:
Tags: rugby, women, NZRFU
Duration: 5'21"

16:57
Euthanasia for mental pain
BODY:
The euthanasia issue widens after a woman had help ending her life after not being able to recover from the effects of sexual abuse
Topics: health, life and society
Regions:
Tags: euthanasia, mental health
Duration: 2'17"

17:09
Queenstown workers forced out of housing
BODY:
Queenstown residents are being forced out of the town due to low service industry wages and soaring rents, with some opting to live in garages and cars, or share rooms with strangers.
Topics: housing, economy
Regions: Otago
Tags: Queenstown, Accomidation crisis, wages
Duration: 5'05"

=SHOW NOTES=

===5:00 PM. | Checkpoint===
=DESCRIPTION=

RNZ's weekday drive-time news and current affairs programme

=AUDIO=

17:00
Checkpoint with John Campbell, Thursday 12th May 2016
BODY:
Watch Thursday's full programme here.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 00"

17:09
Queenstown workers forced out of housing
BODY:
Queenstown residents are being forced out of the town due to low service industry wages and soaring rents, with some opting to live in garages and cars, or share rooms with strangers.
Topics: housing, economy
Regions: Otago
Tags: Queenstown, Accomidation crisis, wages
Duration: 5'05"

17:14
Queenstown council CEO acknowledges housing issue
BODY:
Queenstown Lakes District Council Mike Theelen says there's no doubt that housing affordability is a pressure point in Queenstown and they're doing what they can to increase supply, quickly.
Topics: housing, economy
Regions: Otago
Tags: Queenstown, Accomidation crisis, wages
Duration: 4'20"

17:18
Almost 700 youth held in police cells in five years
BODY:
In the last five years, almost 700 children and young people brought to the attention of Child Youth and Family have been placed in a police cell because there's been no bed for them in alternative care.
Topics: crime, law
Regions:
Tags: Child Youth and Family, police cells, children
Duration: 9'23"

17:29
Hospital-smartphone link a NZ first for Waikato patients
BODY:
In the last five years, almost 700 children and young people brought to the attention of Child Youth and Family have been placed in a police cell because there's been no bed for them in alternative care.
Topics: health, technology
Regions: Waikato
Tags: DHB, smartphones, doctors
Duration: 3'25"

17:35
Evening Business for 12 May 2016
BODY:
News from the business sector including a market report.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 3'05"

17:38
Proposed law change supports family violence victims
BODY:
A woman who kills her abuser while he sleeps may be able to argue she acted in self-defence, under a radical law change recommended by the Law Commission.
Topics: crime, law
Regions:
Tags: abuse, family violence, murder, self defence, Law Commision
Duration: 3'36"

17:41
Trump attempts to rally Republican support
BODY:
As Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton battle it out for the Democratic nod, presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump is trying to work out how to garner support from his party. McKay Coppins joins Checkpoint.
Topics: politics, author interview
Regions:
Tags: America, election, BuzzFeed
Duration: 5'07"

17:47
Glass sheets fall off Wgtn apartment building
BODY:
It is still unknown what caused large sheets of glass to fall off a high-rise building in central Wellington this morning, smashing onto the road and footpath.
Topics: life and society, politics
Regions: Wellington Region
Tags: building, safety, glass
Duration: 2'22"

17:49
Sports News for 12 May 2016
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags: rugby, hurricanes
Duration: 6'25"

17:55
Club gobsmacked over OIA charge for chopper info
BODY:
The Federated Mountain Clubs has been forced to get its begging bowl out to ask for public support to pay for it to seek more information on DOC's decision to increase daily helicopter landings on a Southern Alps glacier.
Topics: law, politics, transport
Regions:
Tags: The Federated Mountain Clubs, helicopters, DOC, official information
Duration: 3'50"

18:09
Tourist numbers continue to surge
BODY:
The government is looking at charging international visitors more for facilities to help pay for infrastructure under pressure from the surge in tourists.
Topics: business, life and society, politics
Regions:
Tags: tourism, TRENZ tourism conference, charging
Duration: 3'36"

18:13
Queenstown housing crisis on the rise
BODY:
Eleven people are sharing one flat in Queenstown, in a situation that is becoming increasingly common in the South Island tourist destination.
Topics: life and society, economy
Regions: Otago
Tags: Queenstown, housing
Duration: 5'19"

18:18
Police cells not worst option for CYF children
BODY:
Former foster child and CYF worker Daryl Brougham speaks to Checkpoint about the revelations that almost 700 children and young people have been placed in police cells due to a lack of alternative options.
Topics: life and society, law, crime
Regions:
Tags: CYF, police, Cell, children
Duration: 4'23"

18:22
Anti-corruption summit held in London
BODY:
An anti-corruption summit is taking place in London over the coming days. New York Times' UK Correspondent Stephen Castle joins Checkpoint to discuss the talks.
Topics: politics, law
Regions:
Tags: UK, Corruption Summit
Duration: 3'51"

18:26
Public meeting to be held after EQC settlement
BODY:
A public meeting will be held in Christchurch tonight for homeowners to discuss how a recent EQC settlement will affect them, which will require EQC to repair quake-damaged houses to 'as new' standard.
Topics: politics, law
Regions: Canterbury
Tags: EQC settlement, Christchurch, EQC Action Group
Duration: 3'27"

18:50
Today In Parliament for 12 May 2016 - evening edition
BODY:
Only one question about tax havens and foreign trusts and Revenue Minister, Michael Woodhouse, claims to have answered it already - several times. Finance Minister, Bill English, faces Labour questions about housing and so does Building and Housing Minister Nick Smith. In the committee rooms, the Primary Production Committee is briefed on the hemp industry.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 5'06"

=SHOW NOTES=

===6:30 PM. | Worldwatch===
=DESCRIPTION=

The stories behind the international headlines

===6:55 PM. | In Parliament===
=DESCRIPTION=

===7:06 PM. | Nights===
=DESCRIPTION=

RNZ's weeknight programme of entertainment and information

=AUDIO=

19:12
Māori astronomy - Te Whānau Mārama
BODY:
"First the sun, then the moon, then the stars". Waikato University Professor Rangi Matamua shares Māori understandings of the night sky. He's curated the Waikato Museum's current exhibition Te Whānau Mārama: The Heavenly Bodies.
EXTENDED BODY:
"First the sun, then the moon, then the stars."
Next month just before dawn New Zealanders will celebrate Matariki – the Māori New Year – the rising of the star cluster known as Pleiades.
Professor Rangi Matamua is curator of a Waikato Museum exhibition about the history and meaning of Matariki - Te Whānau Mārama: The Heavenly Bodies. He shares Māori understandings of the night sky with Bryan Crump:
Read an edited snapshot of the conversation:
Tāne, the god of the forest, forced Rangi (Ranginui) the sky father and Papa (Papatuanuku) the earth mother apart. Why – having created a void between earth and sky – did Tāne then put stars in it?
Rangi: He was concerned that when he pushed Rangi and Papa apart that there was no light in the world. And this is a truncated version of the story. People say when he separated his parents light flooded into the world. Well, no. When he separated his parents it was still dark. There was no light. So he travelled to see his two siblings Tangotango and Wainui, who are the parents of Te Whānau Mārama, or the Family of Light. The children were the sun, the moon, all of the stars. Hinātore is a phosphorous light, Parikoikoi is a gloomy light, and the last child of the six was Hinerauāmoa, a petite star. He asked his siblings ‘The world is in darkness. Give me your children to adorn our father’s chest so light shines across the breast of our mother‘. They agreed, so he went through that journey to put them in the sky. That’s how Māori understand the origins of Te Whānau Mārama. Hence the name of the exhibition.
Did the stars and the moon come before the sun?
No, the sun is the oldest. The second oldest was the moon, the third was the stars. Then you have a phosphorous light, a gloomy light and a very small, petite star. Originally they were hung in the first house ever constructed on earth – a house called Hui-te-Rangiora. And Tāne took them from that house in a basket and carried them into the sky. Now, that basket where the stars were contained, it’s name was Mangaroa, or the great fish, the great shark. That’s the Māori name for the Milky Way. So when you look up into the night sky and look into the Milky Way – that massive dark pattern that runs through the middle of the sky – you’re actually looking back inside the basket and the stars are spilling on to the sides of the basket. That is looking back inside the mouth of a kete, or woven basket, that Tāne tipped upside down.
Topics: science, history, arts, te ao Maori
Regions:
Tags: Te Whaanau Maarama, stars, astronomy, Matariki
Duration: 17'17"

20:12
Nights' Culture - Jazz
BODY:
Editor, publisher and jazz fan Fergus Barrowman is in to spin some tracks, including a little Marsalis magic.
Topics: music, arts
Regions:
Tags: jazz, The Bill Charlap Trio
Duration: 21'15"

=SHOW NOTES=

[image:68308:full] no metadata
7:12 Te Whānau Mārama - Maori Astronomy
"First the sun, then the moon, then the stars". Waikato University Professor Rangi Matamua shares Maori understandings of the night sky. He's curated the Waikato Museum's current exhibition: Te Whaanau Maarama: The Heavenly Bodies.

7:35 At the Movies
Dan Slevin reviews Marvel Studios' latest Captain America: Civil War and Wellington labour of love, The Great Maiden's Blush. He also talks to U.S. critic Diana Drumm about the lack of opportunities for women film writers.

8:12 Nights' Culture - Jazz
Editor, publisher and jazz fan Fergus Barrowman is in to spin some tracks, including a little Marsalis magic
[image:68309:full] no metadata
8:30 Window on the World
China Family - Now that China has ended its One Child policy, one group of state employees may soon be out of a job - the country's hated population police. Lucy Ash visits a pilot project in Shaanxi province training former enforcers to offer advice and support to rural grandparents who are left rearing children while the parents migrate to jobs in the big cities. If successful, the scheme could be rolled out nationwide to redeploy an army of family planning workers and transform the life prospects of millions of rural children.

9:07 Our Changing World
Differences in immune system genes between Maori, Pacifica and Europeans, a swallowing robot, Shaun Hendy's new book 'Silencing Science', hand-rearing kakapo chicks, and #royalcam gives a privileged view on a royal albatross chick on the Otago Peninsula.
10:17 Late Edition
A round up of today's RNZ News and feature interviews as well as Date Line Pacific from RNZ International
11:07 Music 101 pocket edition
This week's Music 101 Pocket Edition, synth slumber pop quartet Yumi Zouma's first foray into the long player format. Experimental pop composer Leila Adu talks tech and tunes with Kirsten Johnstone, and Street Chant's Emily Edrosa is live in session and on location for New Zealand Music Month

===7:30 PM. | At The Movies===
=DESCRIPTION=

A weekly topical magazine about current film releases and film related topics

=AUDIO=

19:30
At the Movies for 12 May 2016
BODY:
Dan Slevin (filling in for Simon Morris) reviews Captain America: Civil War - the 13th entry in the Marvel Cinematic Universe series and Wellington labour of love The Great Maiden's Blush. He also talks to US critic Diana Drumm about her Twitter feed @FemaleCritics, which promotes film writing by women.
Topics: arts
Regions:
Tags: film
Duration: 23'46"

19:31
Captain America Civil War
BODY:
Dan Slevin reviews the 13th entry in the Marvel Cinematic Universe series, starring Chris Evans, Robert Downey, Jr. and Scarlett Johansson.
Topics: arts
Regions:
Tags: film
Duration: 5'53"

19:32
Female Critics with Diana Drumm
BODY:
Dan Slevin interviews US freelance film writer Diana Drumm about why it is getting harder for women to make a living writing about film - and what we can do about it.
Topics: arts
Regions:
Tags: film, gender
Duration: 9'20"

19:33
The Great Maiden's Blush
BODY:
Dan Slevin reviews Andrew Bosshard and Shane Loader's drama about two women stuck in a maternity ward together.
Topics: arts
Regions:
Tags: film
Duration: 5'18"

=SHOW NOTES=

Featured this week, Captain America: Civil War, the first film in 'Phase Three' of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, setting the scene for the next nine films over three years:
[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dKrVegVI0Us
Shane Loader and Andrea Bosshard’s new Wellington-based drama, The Great Maiden’s Blush follows two women from different backgrounds thrown together in a maternity ward:
[embed]https://vimeo.com/159834181
Dan Slevin also interviews US freelance film writer Diana Drumm about why it is getting harder for women to make a living writing about film - and what we can do about it. Dan also chats to US critic Diana Drumm about her Twitter feed promoting film writing by women, @FemaleCritics.
Links:

Female Film Critics on Twitter
Diana Drumm’s Letterboxd page
Variety’s article from late last year on the poor stats for female film critics – and how they are getting worse
The Women and Hollywood blog

===8:30 PM. | Windows On The World===
=DESCRIPTION=

International public radio features and documentaries

===9:06 PM. | Our Changing World===
=DESCRIPTION=

Highlights from the world of science and the environment, with Alison Ballance and Veronika Meduna

===10:00 PM. | Late Edition===
=DESCRIPTION=

RNZ news, including Dateline Pacific and the day's best interviews from RNZ National

===11:06 PM. | Music 101===
=DESCRIPTION=

Music, interviews, live performances, behind the scenes, industry issues, career profiles, new, back catalogue, undiscovered, greatest hits, tall tales - with a focus on New Zealand/Aotearoa (RNZ)