Radio New Zealand National. 2015-05-12. 00:00-23:59.

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Year
2015
Reference
274328
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Audio
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Rights Information
Year
2015
Reference
274328
Media type
Audio
Item unavailable online
Series
Radio New Zealand National. 2015--. 00:00-23:59.
Duration
24:00:00
Broadcast Date
12 May 2015
Credits
RNZ Collection
Radio New Zealand National, Broadcaster

A 24-hour recording of Radio New Zealand 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 2015

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

Including: 12:05 Music after Midnight; 12:30 Spectrum (RNZ); 1:05 From the World (RNZ); 2:05 Frank Sinatra - A Voice in Time; 3:05 The Captive Wife, by Fiona Kidman (14 of 15, RNZ); 3:30 An Author's View (RNZ); 5:10 Witness (BBC)

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

Radio New Zealand's three-hour breakfast news show with news and interviews, bulletins on the hour and half-hour, including: 6:18 Pacific News 6:22 Rural News 6:27 and 8:45 Te Manu Korihi News 6:44 and 7:41 NZ Newspapers 6:47 Business News 7:42 and 8:34 Sports News 6:46 and 7:34 Traffic

=AUDIO=

06:00
Top Stories for Tuesday 12 May 2015
BODY:
ACC levies are being cut but opposition parties say the delay is a government con job. A new report says the gulf between Auckland and the rest of the country is growing wider and no helping hand for owners of quake risk buildings in Wellington.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 33'26"

06:06
Sports News for 12 May 2015
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'54"

06:10
Salvation Army calling for cross-party support
BODY:
The Salvation Army is calling for cross-party action to stamp out a growing inequality between New Zealand's regions and uban centres.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: inequality, Mixed Fortunes report
Duration: 2'21"

06:13
National shuts down debate over MPs investment properties
BODY:
The National Party has shut down debate over its MPs investing in the Auckland housing market.
Topics: housing, politics
Regions:
Tags: register of pecuniary interests
Duration: 1'50"

06:17
Pacific News for 12 May 2015
BODY:
The latest from the Pacific region.
Topics: Pacific
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'37"

06:20
Canada's Conservatives suffer upset in Alberta
BODY:
While the British Conservative Party won a surprise overall majority, its Canadian counterpart has suffered a shock defeat in Alberta's provincial election.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: Canada, politics, Alberta provincial election
Duration: 2'12"

06:23
Morning Rural News for 12 May 2015
BODY:
News from the rural and farming sectors.
Topics: rural, farming
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 4'02"

06:27
Te Manu Korihi News for 12 May 2015
BODY:
Māori are likely have permanent representation on two of the Taranaki Regional Council's powerful standing committees by the end of the year; A new report released today reveals that Māori who live in regional areas such as Northland and Gisborne are getting what it describes as a 'bad deal'; A business specialist believes the Middle East is an untapped market for Māori companies.
Topics: te ao Maori
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 3'28"

06:40
Greens say Government should cut ACC levies now
BODY:
The Green Party says the Government could cut ACC levies immediately, but it won't because it wants to make its books look good.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: ACC
Duration: 2'19"

06:42
Govt pours cold water on calls for property-owner assistance.
BODY:
The Building and Housing Minister, Nick Smith, is all but ruling out a large-scale payout for Wellington property owners who can't afford to bring their buildings up to the earthquake code.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: earthquake code, buildings
Duration: 1'54"

06:48
Pace of consumer spending is expected to ease
BODY:
The pace of consumer spending is picked to ease in coming months as households start to feel the impacts of the dairy price crunch.
Topics: farming, business
Regions:
Tags: dairy prices, consumer spending
Duration: 1'48"

06:50
NZD falls
BODY:
The New Zealand dollar has fallen after more economists bet the Reserve Bank would cut the official cash rate as early as June.
Topics: business, money
Regions:
Tags: New Zealand dollar, NZ dollar
Duration: 32"

06:51
Strong house prices drive down buying sentiment
BODY:
More people think it's a bad time to buy a house, despite expectations of lower interest rates and prices.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: house buying
Duration: 1'13"

06:52
Power price rebundling by electricity retailers
BODY:
The body which represents electricity lines companies is also looking at sending customers more than one bill for their power.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: power prices, Electricity Networks' Association
Duration: 1'53"

06:54
Calls to remove Australia's wine tax rebate
BODY:
Australia's winemakers are stepping up their efforts to end what they describe as a "perverse" and "absurd" subsidy for the New Zealand industry, but their plans aren't expected to succeed.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: winemakers, Australia
Duration: 2'08"

06:56
Sportsground.co.nz started to fill gap
BODY:
A lack of online resources for finding out about school weekend sports matches led Hawke's Bay entreprenuer, Mike Purchas, to set up sportsground.co.nz in 2007.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: Sportsground.co.nz
Duration: 2'24"

06:59
Morning markets for 12 May 2015
BODY:
Wall Street is mixed as investors' attention turns back to Greece's financial situation.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 34"

07:07
Sports News for 12 May 2015
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'01"

07:11
Government accused of manufactured crisis at ACC
BODY:
Labour is considering widespread change to the way ACC is funded, and may revert to a pay as you go scheme rather than fully funding the scheme into the future.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: ACC levis
Duration: 3'12"

07:14
Labour leader says fully funded ACC is not needed
BODY:
We spoke more with Andrew LIttle earlier this morning - he describes the latest government proposals as 'dishonest and manipulative.'
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: ACC levis
Duration: 6'44"

07:21
Tornado strikes Taranaki town
BODY:
A tornado has hit the small northern Taranaki town of Urenui, damaging the roof of a petrol station.
Topics: weather
Regions: Taranaki
Tags: tornado, Urenui
Duration: 2'36"

07:24
Report says disadvantaged NZ regions get a bad deal
BODY:
A new report is warning New Zealand's regions are getting a bad deal, and the disadvantages faced by those living there are growing.
Topics: economy
Regions:
Tags: Mixed Fortunes report
Duration: 3'08"

07:27
Salvation Army report identifies disadvantaged NZ regions
BODY:
And listening to that was the Economic Development Minister Steven Joyce.
Topics: economy
Regions:
Tags: Mixed Fortunes report
Duration: 6'44"

07:38
Government urged to look at other measures
BODY:
The local authority road safety group says the Government should consider slowing down its investment on roads of national significance and instead spend more on safety measures to reduce road fatalities.
Topics: transport
Regions:
Tags: roads, road fatalities
Duration: 3'06"

07:41
Associate Minister of Transport on reducing road toll
BODY:
The associate transport minister, Craig Foss was listening to that.
Topics: transport
Regions:
Tags: roads, road fatalities
Duration: 7'18"

07:48
EU asks UN to back military action against smugglers.
BODY:
The European Union has asked the United Nations for backing to take military action against migrant smugglers.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: European Union, migrant smugglers
Duration: 4'20"

07:56
Govt pours cold water on calls for property-owner assistance
BODY:
A large-scale payout for Wellington property owners who can't afford to bring their buildings up to the earthquake code has been ruled out.
Topics: environment, politics
Regions: Wellington Region
Tags: earthquake code
Duration: 3'02"

08:07
Sports News for 12 May 2015
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'18"

08:11
Govt cuts to ACC levies too harsh
BODY:
Labour leader, Andrew Little, says ACC should consider changing its funding model back to the way it was.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: ACC
Duration: 6'22"

08:18
Report finds small town NZ suffering
BODY:
Small town New Zealand is suffering, with few work opportunities and low household incomes according to a Salvation Army report released this morning.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Mixed Fortunes report
Duration: 6'45"

08:25
British media laps up Prince Harry's NZ tour
BODY:
Prince Harry's tour of New Zealand is being lapped up by the British media, with widespread coverage of everything from his appearance at Stewart Island's pub quiz, to his comments on love and marriage.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: Prince Harry, UK
Duration: 3'38"

08:29
Markets Update for 12 May 2015
BODY:
A brief update of movements in the financial sector.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 1'00"

08:38
Govt rejects Wgtn building owners' bid for quake work fund
BODY:
The Government is ruling out handouts for owners of buildings in Wellington facing massive bills for earthquake strengthening.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: earthquake code
Duration: 3'48"

08:41
Motor racing legend: Education, not speed restrictions
BODY:
As authorities continue to grapple with the aftermath of a horror weekend on the roads, one road safety advocate is warning that the focus needs to be on more than just speed.
Topics: transport, politics, education
Regions:
Tags: road speeds, driver training
Duration: 4'10"

08:46
The age of the smart watch affects the exam room
BODY:
The arrival of smart watches that can access the internet has led Massey University to ban students from wearing them during exams.
Topics: education
Regions:
Tags: smart watches
Duration: 1'58"

08:50
Te Manu Korihi News for 12 May 2015
BODY:
A new report released today reveals that Māori who live in regional areas such as Northland and Gisborne are getting what it describes as a 'bad deal'; Māori are likely have permanent representation on two of the Taranaki Regional Council's powerful standing committees by the end of the year; A business specialist believes the Middle East is an untapped market for Māori companies.
Topics: te ao Maori
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 3'07"

08:53
Australia's budget is revealed today
BODY:
Australia's budget hasn't even been unveiled and already it's been labelled a horror story by some commentators.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: Australia, budget
Duration: 3'49"

08:57
Scotland's Military Tattoo returns to the capital
BODY:
The Royal Edinburgh Military Tattoo - usually held at Edinburgh Castle in front of a 220-thousand strong crowd - is returning to Wellington next year.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: Royal Edinburgh Military Tattoo
Duration: 2'16"

=SHOW NOTES=

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

Current affairs and topics of interest, including: 10:45 The Reading: The Global Gardener, by Michael Scott (2 of 10, RNZ)

=AUDIO=

09:08
MSD urged to adopt predictive tool to identify at risk children
BODY:
The Social Development Ministry is stopping short of implementing a predictive risk assessment tool that can identify children at risk of abuse. MSD commissioned Auckland economist Professor Rhema Vaithianathan to develop the model which uses data about children and their families to identify those at risk of physical, sexual or emotional abuse before the age of two. Professor Vaithianathan says MSD has decided against implementing the tool in the way it was intended, and says it is unethical. Dorothy Adams is Acting Deputy CEO of Organisational Solutions for the Ministry of Social Development.
Topics: health, economy, science
Regions:
Tags: predictive modelling
Duration: 33'43"

09:42
Govt announces cuts to ACC levies
BODY:
Managing Director of actuaries and investment firm Eriksen & Associates, which evaluates the liabilities of funds like ACC.
Topics: economy, business
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 10'34"

09:52
US Correspondent Steve Almond
BODY:
The NFL deflategate scandal. The Apple watch. Late night television shows.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: USA
Duration: 6'47"

10:06
Actor Mark Mitchinson on bypassing traditional TV channels
BODY:
For New Zealand actors, those great roles can be hard to come by, so Mark Mitchinson created his own. He and writer/director Justin Harwood recently completed the second season of their acclaimed web series, The High Road. He talks to Kathryn about bypassing the traditional television model for local drama, and also his two breakthrough roles. In the television drama Bloodlines, he played Dunedin-based Psychiatrist Colin Bouwer, who murdered his wife Annette by slowly poisoning her. He then played gunman Jan Molinaar who was at the centre of a siege in Napier in 2009 after shooting a policeman and a neighbour. The producers of The High Road have even released a fictional hit single and accompanying music video "Ain't Got No Money (And I Don't Care)" from The Queens fictional 1979 album "Golden Handshake".
EXTENDED BODY:

Top left and right: Mark Mitchinson as Colin Bouwer in Bloodlines. Bottom left: Mark Mitchinson as Jan Molinaar in Siege. Bottom right: Mark Mitchinson as Terry Huffer in the web series, The High Road.
For New Zealand actors, those great roles can be hard to come by, so Mark Mitchinson created his own. He and writer/director Justin Harwood recently completed the second season of their acclaimed web series, The High Road.
He talks to Kathryn about bypassing the traditional television model for local drama, and also his two breakthrough roles. In the television drama Bloodlines, he played Dunedin-based Psychiatrist Colin Bouwer, who murdered his wife Annette by slowly poisoning her. He then played gunman Jan Molinaar who was at the centre of a siege in Napier in 2009 after shooting a policeman and a neighbour.
The producers of The High Road have even released a fictional hit single and accompanying music video Ain’t Got No Money (And I Don’t Care) from The Queens fictional 1979 album “Golden Handshake”.

Topics: arts
Regions:
Tags: television, local content
Duration: 30'41"

10:39
Book review: 'Sanctuary: The Discovery of Wonder'
BODY:
Paul Diamond reviews 'Sanctuary: The Discovery of Wonder' by Julie Leibrich, published by Otago University Press.
Topics: books
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 5'41"

11:09
Business commentator Rod Oram
BODY:
Business commentator Rod Oram discusses Foodstuffs new CEO; and the economics of coal, in light of Solid Energy's latest job cuts.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 12'12"

11:25
Amnesia - waking up in the future - Naomi Jacobs
BODY:
In 2008, British woman Naomi Jacobs went to bed one night, she was a 32-year-old mother. When she woke the following morning, her world had changed. She didn't recognise her home, nor her 10-year-old son. She had a new persona, believing she was a teenage schoolgirl living in 1992. The diagnosis was dissociative amnesia. And so began her journey to piece her life back together. She has written a book about her astounding experience, called I Woke Up in the Future, published by Macmillan.
EXTENDED BODY:

In 2008, British woman Naomi Jacobs went to bed one night, she was a 32-year-old mother. When she woke the following morning, her world had changed. She didn't recognise her home, nor her 10-year-old son. She had a new persona, believing she was a teenage schoolgirl living in 1992. The diagnosis was dissociative amnesia. And so began her journey to piece her life back together. She has written a book about her astounding experience, called I Woke Up in the Future, published by Macmillan.
Topics: books
Regions:
Tags: Amnesia, memory, Naomi Jacobs
Duration: 19'20"

11:45
Media commentator Gavin Ellis
BODY:
Media commentator Gavin Ellis discusses the re-litigation of the Lundy trial by North & South and The Listener, the Matthew Sinclair story revisited. Gavin Ellis is a media commentator and former editor of the New Zealand Herald. He can be contacted on gavin.ellis@xtra.co.nz
Topics: media
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 14'28"

=SHOW NOTES=

09:05 MSD urged to adopt predictive tool to identify at risk children
The Social Development Ministry is stopping short of implementing a predictive risk assessment tool that can identify children at risk of abuse.
MSD commissioned Auckland economist Professor Rhema Vaithianathan to develop the model which uses data about children and their families to identify those at risk of physical, sexual or emotional abuse before the age of two. Professor Vaithianathan says MSD has decided against implementing the tool in the way it was intended, and says it is unethical. Dorothy Adams is General Manager of Insights for the Ministry of Social Development.
09:30 Government announces cuts to ACC levies
Jonathan Eriksen is the Managing Director of actuaries and investment firm Eriksen & Associates, which evaluates the liabilities of funds like ACC.
09:45 US Correspondent Steve Almond
US Correspondent Steve Almond reports on deflation - not economic, but a scandal involving deflated footballs being used in an NFL play-off game.
10:05 Actor Mark Mitchinson on bypassing traditional TV channels and taking New Zealand content to audiences directly via the web
For New Zealand actors, those great roles can be hard to come by, so Mark Mitchinson created his own. He and writer/director Justin Harwood recently completed the second season of their acclaimed web series, The High Road.
He talks to Kathryn about bypassing the traditional television model for local drama, and also his two breakthrough roles. In the television drama Bloodlines, he played Dunedin-based Psychiatrist Colin Bouwer, who murdered his wife Annette by slowly poisoning her. He then played gunman Jan Molinaar who was at the centre of a siege in Napier in 2009 after shooting a policeman and a neighbour.

Top left and right: Mark Mitchinson as Colin Bouwer in Bloodlines. Bottom left: Mark Mitchinson as Jan Molinaar in Siege. Bottom right: Mark Mitchinson as Terry Huffer in the web series, The High Road.
The producers of The High Road have even released a fictional hit single and accompanying music video Ain’t Got No Money (And I Don’t Care from The Queens fictional 1979 album “Golden Handshake”.
10:35 Book review: 'Sanctuary: The Discovery of Wonder' by Julie Leibrich
Published by Otago University Press. Reviewed by Paul Diamond.
10:45 The Reading: 'The Global Gardener' by Michael Scott
A Gardening Travelogue that moves from vegetables in Scotland, to grass in California, and a trans-Tasman garden in Wellington, meeting quirky characters along the way. Told by a botanist who describes himself as having 'a dynamic and romantic relationship with flora and fauna'. Michael Scott was born in New Zealand and lives in Gloucestershire, England where he strives to formulate practical action plans to preserve and revere the natural world. (2 of 10, RNZ)
11:05 Business commentator Rod Oram
Business commentator Rod Oram discusses Foodstuffs new CEO; and the economics of coal, in light of Solid Energy's latest job cuts.
11:20 Amnesia – waking up in the future – Naomi Jacobs
In 2008, British woman Naomi Jacobs went to bed one night, she was a 32-year-old mother. When she woke the following morning, her world had changed. She didn't recognise her home, nor her 10-year-old son. She had a new persona, believing she was a teenage schoolgirl living in 1992. The diagnosis was dissociative amnesia. And so began her journey to piece her life back together. She has written a book about her astounding experience, called I Woke Up in the Future, published by Macmillan.
11:45 Media commentator Gavin Ellis
Media commentator Gavin Ellis discusses the re-litigation of the Lundy trial by North & South and The Listener, the Matthew Sinclair story revisited.
Gavin Ellis is a media commentator and former editor of the New Zealand Herald. He can be contacted on gavin.ellis@xtra.co.nz

=PLAYLIST=

Artist: The Lumineers
Song: Ho Hey
Composer: Schultz / Fraites
Album: The Lumineers
Label: Dualtone
Broadcast time: 10:37
Artist: Sean James Donelly
Song: Little Pieces
Composer: Donelly
Album: Saint John Devine
Label: Round Trip Mars
Broadcast time: 11:22

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

Radio New Zealand 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 2015
BODY:
Labour demands half a billion dollars of ACC levies are cut right away. The potential for interest rate rises appears to be scaring off more prospective property buyers.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 15'28"

12:17
Diligent's 1st quarter revenue up 19%, profit up 59 percent
BODY:
Diligent Board Member Services says its quarterly net profit has more than doubled - rising 59 percent to 3-point-1 million US dollars.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'25"

12:19
CHH formally considers IPO
BODY:
The wood products company, Carter Holt Harvey, could list on Australasian stock markets as early as July, after formally announcing it's considering a share float.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 46"

12:21
Truckometer sends mixed signals on the economy
BODY:
The latest traffic report has mixed signals about the economy. ANZ Bank's Truckometer, which measures the traffic flow on certain roads to provide a snapshot of how the economy is doing, indicates that growth has slowed in April, while the light traffic index indicates the economy is speeding along.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'20"

12:24
Midday Markets for 12 May 2015
BODY:
For the latest from the markets we're joined by Bryan Shepherd at Macquarie Private Wealth.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'19"

12:26
Midday Sports News for 12 May 2015
BODY:
NZ sevens coach makes S.O.S call for injury replacement.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'48"

12:35
Midday Rural News for 12 May 2015
BODY:
News from the rural and farming sectors.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 8'07"

=SHOW NOTES=

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

Information and debate, people and places around NZ

=AUDIO=

13:10
Your song - Forevermore
BODY:
Richard from Breaker Bay in Wellington nominates Forevermore by Chris de Burgh.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 12'29"

13:20
TV Review with Phil Wallington
BODY:
Phil Wallington reviews Lost and Found, a local production on TV3;Our Girl, a BBC drama, TV1; and Body Shockers on TV3.
Topics: media
Regions:
Tags: television
Duration: 13'08"

13:35
Music with Zac Arnold
BODY:
Zac's music today includes Polydactyl by Wellington producer Wywy Brix from his new album Clear Liquorice, and Intoxicated Man, a Sere Gainsbourg cover by Mick Harvey.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 11'18"

13:45
Books with Mary McCallum
BODY:
Mary MacCallum reviews new releases and some new publishing presses.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 9'30"

13:55
Web review with Ele Ludeman
BODY:
Ele reviews online cards that express real feelings and a blog called Days of the Year, which informs us of strange and funny days and celebrations.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 3'33"

14:10
Killing dolphins
BODY:
New research has just been published on the impact of 'drive-hunting' dolphins in the Solomon Islands.
Topics: environment
Regions:
Tags: dolphins
Duration: 9'53"

14:20
Self Drive
BODY:
Google's self-driving cars have been in 11 traffic accidents since it began experimenting with the technology six years ago.
Topics: transport, technology
Regions:
Tags: self drive cars
Duration: 8'47"

14:45
Feature album - Breakaway
BODY:
Following on from the announcement that the reality TV show American Idol is coming to an end, our feature album today is from Kelly Clarkson, the most successful American Idol in the history of the show.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 12'56"

15:10
Classic rock photographer - Henry Diltz
BODY:
Think of any of big albums from the 60s and 70s:The Mamas & The Papas, the Eagles, and Jackson Browne and chances are photographer Henry Diltz took the picture for their album cover.
EXTENDED BODY:
Think of any classic album from the 1960s and '70s and chances are the photo on the cover is one taken by Henry Diltz. His photos were used by The Mamas & The Papas, The Eagles, The Doors, Jackson Browne, James Taylor...and the list goes on. Diltz tells Afternoons with Simon Mercep he is an accidental photographer, taking pictures of his friends and neighbors. “People didn’t see me as a photographer. I was their friend doing my hobby,\” Diltz says, ”I didn’t work for record companies. I didn’t even think of myself as a professional."
His pictures were used on more than 200 album covers, the cover of Life Magazine and he was the official photographer at Woodstock. He’s now the co-owner of the Morrison Hotel Gallery and manages his archive of 400,000 photographs.
It all began in 1969. Three friends of his, Graham Nash, Stephen Stills and David Crosby, discovered their unique sound. They needed some pictures for publicity, so they drove around west LA and came across an old house with couch out front. “They jumped out and we took some pictures” Diltz says. The image is on the cover of their first album. “After we took the photo, they decided to call themselves Crosby, Stills and Nash. And yet in the picture they’re backwards, the order is Nash, Stills, Crosby” says Diltz. They tried to go back to retake the picture in the right order. “The house was gone. It was a pile of sticks, bulldozed to the back of the lot. It became a parking lot. It reminds me of that Joni Mitchell song - Paved Paradise and put up a Parking Lot”.
Henry Ditlz became a photographer by accident. In the 60s, he played banjo in a group called The Modern Folk Quartet. They toured the country in a motor-home. “We pulled into a second hand store in Michigan and we all ran in to spend a little pocket money on something we didn’t need. There was a table full of used cameras and one of the fellas in the group got one and I said: ‘hey I’ll get one too’. ” Diltz remembers.
He took the camera home to Laurel Canyon in the Hollywood Hills. His neighbors included Joni Mitchell, David Crosby, Linda Ronstadt, Mamma Cass and so many legends from the 60’s and 70’s. “You could hear guitar coming out of every house. There was a lot of socializing. People were very excited about music. They started writing songs together. It was quite a renaissance, a flowering of singer songwriters.”
When the Eagles needed a cover for their second album, Desperado, in 1973, they called on Henry Diltz. He rented cowboy costumes for the band and took them to a ghost town. “They had guns and blank ammunition and we played cowboys all day. They were shooting each other and falling in the dirt and having a great time like a bunch of kids and I photographed the whole thing and we got our album cover."
James Taylor’s manager called Henry Diltz in 1969 looking for some simple shots of his client for publicity. “We took some photos in his living room and I said we need to go out somewhere” Diltz says. He took James Taylor to the home of a friend who had some sheds and barns in the backyard. “He was this big tall fellow and he leaned on this post. And my job was really to take publicity pictures which meant all black and white because newspapers couldn’t run colour. He looked so great leaning there I picked up my colour camera and took a few shots thinking to myself, I’ll show these in my slideshow. The manager saw the color ones and that became the album cover (for Sweet Baby James). It’s an accidental album cover” Diltz reveals.
So many of Diltz’s famous photos were moments in time that could never be recreated. For example, the classic Morrison Hotel album by The Doors. The album had no name yet. One of the band members had seen this cheap hotel in downtown LA and suggested it for a photo shoot. “It was a derelict hotel. Winos would drink a lot and then sleep it off in this hotel for $2.50." When Diltz came back with the group the young man at the front desk said they couldn’t take any pictures without the owner’s consent. When he went upstairs, they made their move. “I said run in there guys, quick go stand in the window. They jumped behind the window just the way you see them. We took one roll of film, five minutes and that was it."
As the official photographer at Woodstock, Henry Diltz was onstage taking pictures, just eight feet away when Jimi Hendrix famously played the National Anthem. “It was so eerie. That guitar solo echoed out through the morning mist and bounced off the mountains around and came echoing back again.”
There is one person Diltz never got a chance to photograph. John Lennon. “To me being a photographer is like having a passport into people’s lives. It’s not so much that I would have loved to have trained my camera on his face and pushed a button. I would have loved to have been next to him and gotten to hang out with him a little bit."
Follow Afternoons on Twitter @AfternoonsRNZ
Topics: music, arts
Regions:
Tags: rock, photography
Duration: 24'16"

15:45
The Panel pre-show for 12 May 2015
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Your feedback, and a preview of the guests and topics on The Panel.
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Duration: 13'27"

21:06
Medical Maggots for Wound Healing
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Maggots are used by hospitals and veterinary clinics to treat chronic ulcers and wounds, often as a last resort, and are bred in an insectary in Upper Hutt
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By Ruth Beran
For Neville Keen, the decision to use medicinal maggots was the right one.
I’d do it again tomorrow,” says Neville. “Being a diabetic you haven’t got many alternatives. I’m pleased I done that because I’ve still got my foot. I didn’t end up with gangrene.

Neville had a diabetic ulcer on the side of his heel which was treated with maggots four times. The maggots were encapsulated on the wound with a dressing for up to 72 hours.
“Larvae therapy is cheap, it’s quick, it’s effective, and it doesn’t harm good tissue because they only work on dead tissue. It’s non-invasive and it’s very safe practice,” says Judy Geary, Clinical Manager, District Nursing Services at Gore Hospital where maggots have been used over the past three years to treat 20 to 30 people. It can also be faster than some other options like surgical debridement which uses tools like scalpels.
The maggots work by debriding or cleaning the wound with an enzyme they exude, they also disinfect the wound, and their mouth hooks stimulate and rough up the wound bed which encourages the healing process.
“They’ve got chitinous, quite hard little mouth parts so when these are moving across the surface of the skin, they’re helping to create some blood flow and that also helps with the re-granulation of tissue,” says entomologist Dallas Bishop who breeds the medicinal maggots in her insectary in Upper Hutt near Wellington.
She breeds European green blowfly (Lucilia sericata) and each female fly is capable of laying 200 eggs in an egg batch. The flies’ wire cages, are wrapped with cheesecloth, and Dallas will put a piece of liver into the cage overnight and then collect and process the eggs laid on it.
In order to use them for medicinal purposes, the eggs are put in a solution of 50% bleach for three minutes, which helps the eggs separate.
They are then transferred into a solution of 2.5% formalin for three minutes which sterilises the surface of the eggs.
The eggs are put onto commercially supplied blood agar plates overnight, and will normally hatch within 18 to 24 hours. Dallas will then put 30 to 50 hatched larvae onto transportation media in 50ml sterile plastic containers. Holes are put into the lid of the containers which is covered with a sterile, breathable dressing. At this point the larvae are only about 1 to 2mm long. These containers are couriered to hospitals and veterinary clinics (where they are used mainly on horses) around the country.
The treatment is often used as a last resort, and patients are given some pain relief for the irritation that the larvae cause on the wound as they move over exposed nerve endings. “It’s certainly not an invasive procedure, there’s no scalpels involved,” says Dallas.
When asked why the treatment isn’t being used more commonly, district nurse Sonia Richardson says: “I think it’s just being able to think outside the square and accept a treatment that’s an old treatment but new I suppose, just to progress those wounds.”
Dallas says she would used the treatment herself:
If it was me and I didn’t have any other options, yeah I think it would be a good treatment, I’d certainly give it a go.

Topics: science, health
Regions:
Tags: medical, medicinal, maggots, treatment, ulcers, wounds, flies
Duration: 25'17"

=SHOW NOTES=

1:10 Your Song
Forevermore by Chris de Burgh. Chosen by Richard Scales of Breaker Bay
1:20 The Critics
TV - Phil Wallington
Books - Mary McCallum
Music - Zac Arnold
Online - Ele Ludeman. Cards that express real feelings. Limerick Day. Mums on top has 50 things to do with a cardboard box. Author Peter H Reynolds posts irregularly on his blog at The Stellar Café and paid a lovley tribute to his mother last week
2:10 Dolphin hunting in the Solomon Islands - Professor Scott Baker
A new study on the impact of 'drive-hunting' dolphins in the Solomon Islands has recently been published. In 2010, the Earth Island Institute was able to negotiate a moratorium on the practice with dolphin hunting tribes. But the agreement fell apart in 2013 and the ensuing hunt, which began in January, saw more than 1,500 dolphins killed in the space of a few months. Professor Scott Baker is an Associate Director of the Marine Mammal Institute at Oregon State University and adjunct professor at the Auckland University.
2:20 Google's self-driving cars - John Simpson
Google's self-driving cars have been in 11 traffic accidents since it began experimenting with the technology six years ago. And reports say that four of the nearly 50 cars being tested in California have been involved in accidents since September. John Simpson is privacy project director of the nonprofit Consumer Watchdog. He's been campaigning for accident records to be made public.
2:30 NZ Reading - The Conductor
Shostakovich is inspired to write a fascist march while ditch digging for the Home Guard. Nikolai has arranged for his young daughter Sonya to leave Saint Petersburg by train but she has to leave her precious cello behind and Nikolai fears for her
2:45 Feature album
Kelly Clarkson "Breakaway" 2004
3:10 Feature Interview - Henry Diltz
Think of any of big albums from the 60's and 70's: The Mamas & The Papas, the Eagles, and Jackson Browne and chances are photographer Henry Ditlz took the picture for their album cover. He photographed Paul and Linda McCartney for a Life magazine cover and a young Michael Jackson too. He captured an era of Rock and Roll and now talks to University students about his work and the music of their parents
3:35 Our Changing World - Maggots!
In World War I the efficacy of maggots as a treatment was noted, and nearly 100 years later they are being used to clean chronic ulcers and wounds in hospitals and veterinary clinics around New Zealand
Stories from Our Changing World.
3:45 The Panel Pre-Show
What the world is talking about. With Jim Mora, Noelle McCarthy, David Farrar and Josie Pagani

MUSIC DETAILS
MONDAY MAY 11
YOUR SONG:
ARTIST: Chris de Burgh
TITLE: Forevermore
COMP: Chris de Burgh
ALBUM: Home
LABEL: Ferryman Productions
FEATURE ALBUM:
ARTIST: Kelly Clarkson
TITLE: Since U Been Gone
COMP: Martin Sandberg/Lukasz "Dr. Luke" Gottwald
ALBUM: Breakaway
LABEL: RCA
ARTIST: Kelly Clarkson
TITLE: Behind These Hazel Eyes
COMP: Kelly Clarkson/Sandberg/Gottwald
ALBUM: Breakaway
LABEL: RCA
ARTIST: Kelly Clarkson
TITLE: Because Of You
COMP: Clarkson/David Hodges/Ben Moody
ALBUM: Breakaway
LABEL: RCA
ARTIST: Kelly Clarkson
TITLE: Breakaway
COMP: Matthew Gerrard Bridget Benenate Avril Lavigne
ALBUM: Breakaway
LABEL: RCA
THE PANEL:
ARTIST: Pete Seeger
TITLE: We Shall Overcome
COMP: Carawan, Hamilton, Horton
ALBUM: Pete Seeger: We Shall Overcome
LABEL: COLUMBIA

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

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

=AUDIO=

15:45
The Panel pre-show for 12 May 2015
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Your feedback, and a preview of the guests and topics on The Panel.
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Duration: 13'27"

16:00
The Panel with Josie Pagani and David Farrar (Part 1)
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What the Panelists Josie Pagani and David Farrar have ben up to;Wellington weather;Hairy question;Prince Harry; Auckland housing.
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Duration: 21'29"

16:10
Panel Intro
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What the Panelists Josie Pagani and David Farrar have ben up to.
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Duration: 4'27"

16:12
Wellington weather
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Our two Wellington based Panelists have braved the wild weather to join us today.
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Duration: 58"

16:16
Hairy question
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A Christchurch schoolboy is staying off school after it insisted he shave. His mother says it's his body to do with as he likes. She's turned to lawyer Jol Bates who represented Lucan Battison when he refused to have a hair cut to meet school requirements. We talk to Jol Bates about the striking similarities.
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Duration: 7'35"

16:20
Prince Harry
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Prince Harry's in the country - what do we get out of a Royal tour?
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Duration: 2'00"

16:26
Auckland housing
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New lending rules are on the horizon, a new peer-to-peer housing lender is on the horizon and Standard and Poors is seeing a crash on the horizon.
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Duration: 6'00"

16:30
The Panel with Josie Pagani and David Farrar (Part 2)
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Panel says; Polls, opinions and real debate; Quaxing; terrorism.
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Duration: 25'13"

16:35
Guy Carawan
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Guy Carawan is dead at the age of 87. He was a middling sort of folk singer and social-justice advocate, and his great moment of inspiration was when he adapted the African-American spiritual `'We Shall Overcome" into a unifying anthem of the 1960s civil rights movement.
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Duration: 2'31"

16:40
Panel says
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What the Panelists Josie Pagani and David Farrar have been thinking about.
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Duration: 3'47"

16:43
Polls, opinions and real debate
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Is inaccuracy in political polls because people are afraid to express their true opinions? And is debate about a range of issues actualy discouraged?
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Duration: 8'42"

16:45
Quaxing
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The evolution of a word. The origins of the term "quaxing" comes from Auckland City Councillor Dick Quax and has a transport-related meaning.
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Duration: 2'38"

16:55
Terrorism
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Australia says Canberra could be the next terrorist target, while New Zealand's Andrew Little says we don't need to worry so much.
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Duration: 7'28"

=SHOW NOTES=

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

Radio New Zealand's two-hour news and current affairs programme

=AUDIO=

17:00
Checkpoint Top Stories for Tuesday 12 May 2015
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Adult with hunting boys did not have firearms licence;Pawn shop-accused 'wild, possessed';Work visa changes to fuel Christchurch rebuild;Royal fever in Christchurch;Australian Budget: $450m to fighting homegrown terrorism;Possible tornado hits North Taranaki town.
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Duration: 23'18"

17:06
Adult with hunting boys did not have firearms licence
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Police have revealed that the adult with a 15 year old boy killed in a hunting accident on Sunday did not have a firearms licence.
Topics: life and society, environment
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Tags: recreation, hunting
Duration: 4'49"

17:12
Pawn shop-accused 'wild, possessed'
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The partner of a man charged with murdering two men at a south Auckland pawn shop says the accused looked wild and possessed after attacking them.
Topics: crime
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: murder
Duration: 3'52"

17:15
Work visa changes to fuel Christchurch rebuild
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Work visas for low skilled migrants are being extended from one year to three to help attract the 5000 construction workers needed for the Christchurch rebuild.
Topics: refugees and migrants
Regions: Canterbury
Tags: work visas, Christchurch
Duration: 3'36"

17:20
Royal fever in Christchurch
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Royal fever spread to Christchurch today; thousands of people crammed into the city's Cashel Mall to catch a glimpse of Prince Harry.
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Tags: Royalty, Prince Harry
Duration: 3'09"

17:23
Australian Budget: $450m to fighting homegrown terrorism
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To Australia, where the Government is about to release its Budget. And amid a plethora of cuts is one notable jump in spending, with 450 million Australian dollars extra to go on fighting homegrown terrorism.
Topics: politics
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Tags: Australia, budget
Duration: 4'50"

17:27
Possible tornado hits North Taranaki town
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A tornado hit the small North Taranaki town of Urenui in the early hours of this morning. it severely damaged some buildings and uprooted trees.
Topics: environment
Regions: Taranaki
Tags: tornado
Duration: 2'40"

17:33
Today's market update
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The New Zealand dollar is down ahead of a Reserve Bank of New Zealand statement tomorrow morning.
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Duration: 2'20"

17:35
Book claims bin Laden already captured by the Pakistan military
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Was the daring US raid on a Pakistani compound that killed Amerca's most wanted, a lie?
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Tags: terrorism
Duration: 5'31"

17:45
Northland leads way in extra house sales
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Northland is leading the way in how many extra houses are being sold.
Topics: housing
Regions: Northland
Tags: real estate sales
Duration: 3'18"

17:47
Ex-CIA sentenced to jail for leaking information
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A former CIA officer has been sentenced to 3 and a half years jail for leaking classified information to a journalist about a failed US mission to undermine Iran's nuclear weapons programme.
Topics: crime
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Tags: CIA, espionage
Duration: 4'00"

17:48
Te Manu Korihi for 12 May 2015
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A Maori artist is pushing for the National flag to display more symbols representing tangata whenua.
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Duration: 3'09"

17:55
Auckland graffitti artist wins international comp
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An Aucklander who had to 'paint on fast forward' has won an international graffiti competition in Tahiti.
Topics: arts
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Tags: graffitti, Tahiti
Duration: 3'32"

18:05
Sports News for 12 May 2015
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An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
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Duration: 2'40"

18:10
Gun deaths and poaching prompt fresh look at rules
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The deaths of two young hunters have prompted a new look by the Government at unsafe and illegal gun use.
Topics: rural
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Tags: illegal gun use
Duration: 3'53"

18:20
Business group of Chch rebuild propose visa changes
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Work visas for low skilled migrants are being extended and freed up to help attract the 5000 construction workers needed for the Christchurch rebuild.
Topics: Canterbury earthquakes, refugees and migrants
Regions: Canterbury
Tags: work visas
Duration: 5'31"

18:35
Could tax reform ease property owners quake woes?
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Proposed changes to the earthquake building code are re-igniting debate over tax breaks for property owers facing massive strengthening costs.
Topics: politics
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Tags: building code, tax
Duration: 4'32"

18:37
Antartica ice melting faster
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Too much ice in the Antarctic doesn't sound like a problem - but the lack of melt is making it harder for scientists to do their jobs.
Topics: weather
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Tags: Antarctica, ice
Duration: 3'25"

18:43
Thousands of dolphins killed by Solomon Island villages
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Thousands of dolphins are hunted in Solomon Islands each year for their teeth and marine scientists are worried the mass culls could wipe some species out.
Topics: environment
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Tags: dolphins, Carnage, brutality
Duration: 3'57"

18:46
Stewart Island school desperate for more students
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As we know Prince Harry had a great time on Stewart Island. If you saw that and thought life there is attractive, well here's your chance.
Topics: environment, education
Regions: Southland
Tags: Stewart Island, Prince Harry, Royalty
Duration: 3'07"

18:48
Te Manu Korihi for 12 May 2015
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A Maori artist is pushing for the National flag to display more symbols representing tangata whenua; The Global Asthma Network is desperately in need of funding to undertake asthma reasearch, which it says results in high death rates for Maori and Pasifika; A native American language expert has developed a smartphone app to promote First Nation languages, following the success of a Maori language app.
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Duration: 3'32"

18:53
Bands stretched to meet war commemorations
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New Zealand's military bands have had to turn down offers to play at some First World War Commemorations after funding cuts left them stretched.
Topics: music, defence force
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Tags: military bands
Duration: 2'51"

=SHOW NOTES=

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

Entertainment and information, including: 7:30 The Sampler: A weekly review and analysis of new CD releases (RNZ) 8:13 Windows on the World: International public radio features and documentaries

=AUDIO=

19:11
Our Own Odyssey : Ben Hancock
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Ben Hancock found himself on Isla de Barro Colorado, which is an island located in the man-made Gatun Lake in the middle of the Panama Canal.
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Wairarapa PhD student Ben Hancock spent ten months in Panama, mostly on Barro Colorado Island, which sits inside a man-made lake halfway along the Panama Canal.
He spent most of the time on a Smithsonian Institute facility studying birds, including toucans. But he also got to see a lot of ships pass in the night, and during the day too.
Topics: life and society
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Tags: odysseys, Isla de Barro Colorado, Panama Canal
Duration: 15'13"

20:40
NZ History
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Gavin McLean is a senior historian for the Ministry for Culture and Heritage. He discusses our structural relationship with cement and concrete.
Topics: history, life and society
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Tags: concrete, building, construction, footpaths
Duration: 17'14"

20:59
Nights Conundrum
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Clue 3
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Duration: 11"

21:59
Nights Conundrum
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Audio clue 4
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Duration: 49"

=SHOW NOTES=

7:10 Our Own Odysseys - Middle of the Panama Canal
Wairarapa PhD student Ben Hancock spent ten months in Panama, mostly on Barro Colorado Island, which sits inside a man-made lake halfway along the Panama Canal.
He spent most of the time on a Smithsonian Institute facility studying birds, including toucans. But he also got to see a lot of ships pass in the night, and during the day too.

7:30 The Sampler

=SHOW NOTES=

=AUDIO=

19:30
The Sampler for 12 May 2015
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This week in The Sampler Nick Bollinger reviews a new collaboration between poet Sam Hunt and guitarist David Kilgour; an album from Nick Cave-endorsed New York singer and harmonium player Shilpa Ray; and the album where Mumford and Sons plug in.
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Shilpa Ray. Photo by Eric Schuman.
This week in The Sampler Nick Bollinger reviews a new collaboration between poet Sam Hunt and guitarist David Kilgour; an album from Nick Cave-endorsed New York singer and harmonium player Shilpa Ray; and the album where Mumford and Sons plug in.
Topics: music
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Tags: music, music review, Mumford And Sons, Sam Hunt, David Kilgour, shlepa ray
Duration: 30'14"

19:30
The 9th by Sam Hunt with David Kilgour and the Heavy 8s
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Nick Bollinger reviews a new collaboration between poet Sam Hunt and guitarist David Kilgour.
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Nick Bollinger reviews a new collaboration between poet Sam Hunt and guitarist David Kilgour.
Six years ago, poet Sam Hunt and guitarist David Kilgour married their skills in the unusually lovely album Fallen Debris. But this time, rather than Kilgour singing Hunt’s words, Hunt takes the mic while Kilgour and band lay down some loose, atmospheric backings. The result is a bold, sometimes raucous, consistently passionate meeting between two masters of quite different crafts, whose work – though complete in itself - seems to find room for the other and, in doing so, creates something else again.
Songs Featured: : Rainbows & A Promise Of Snow, Wavesong, A New Plateau Song, When Morning Comes, Jerusalem Blues, The Gunner’s Lament
Listen to more from The Sampler
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Duration: 7'27"

19:30
Last Year's Savage by Shilpa Ray
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Nick Bollinger checks an album from the Nick Cave-endorsed New York singer and harmonium player Shilpa Ray.
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Nick Bollinger checks an album from the Nick Cave-endorsed New York singer and harmonium player Shilpa Ray.
Shilpa Ray is a New Yorker of Indian ancestry who accompanies her powerful voice with a harmonium – a traditional Indian pump organ. She also has a band who can rock hard or simmer slowly, while she delivers her biting, ironic odes to Johnny Thunders, Broadway and the various aspects of the modern world. Nick Cave is a long-time fan – she accompanied Grinderman on a tour of the American South in 2010 – but this looks like the year that everyone finds out just how good she is.
Songs Featured: Burning Bride, Pop Song For Euthanasia, Shilpa Ray On Broadway, Johnny Thunders Fantasy Space Camp, Sanitary I-Pad, Moksha, Hymn
Listen to more from The Sampler
Topics: music
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Tags: music, Shilpa Ray, music review
Duration: 12'57"

19:30
Wilder Mind by Mumford and Sons
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Nick Bollinger considers the "plugging in" of Mumford & Sons on their latest album.
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Nick Bollinger considers the "plugging in" of Mumford & Sons on their latest album.
For those who always suspected the neo-rustic trappings – the banjos and squeeze-boxes, not to mention the braces and woollen vests – were an affectation rather than a sign of deep folk roots, this confirms it. The voice is recognisable but with its electric guitars, bass, drums and mushy keyboards, could almost be a different band. But with songs that tread typically angst-ridden ground and a production that is accomplished yet generic, Wilder Mind does not show Mumford and Sons to be a band with an imaginative capacity for self-reinvention so much as one that can turn their unremarkable ideas into a marketable product, whatever the season.
Songs Featured: Tompkins Square Park, The Wolf, Ditmas, Monster, Snake Eyes, Believe
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Duration: 9'54"

7:30 The Sampler
A weekly review and analysis of new CD releases.
8:10 Windows on the World
International public radio documentaries - visit the Windows on the World web page to find links to these documentaries.
8:40 New Zealand History
A lucky guy whose job is also his hobby, Gavin McLean, is a senior historian for the Ministry for Culture and Heritage. He talks about our structural relationship with cement and concrete.
9:06 The Tuesday Feature: The War That Changed the World - Sydney: The Legend of Anzac
A distinctly Australian perspective on Gallipoli and the significance on ANZC Day. The Sydney discussion on the experience and legacy of WW1, from the BBC World Service Series: The War That Changed the World. In association with the British Council, BBC presenter Razia Iqbal and an Australian audience debate the role the 'legend of Anzac' played in the hundred year history of Australia since the first Anzac Day. With Marilyn Lake from the University of Melbourne, Bruce Scates of Monash University and theatre director and playwright Wesley Enoch, a relative of one Aboriginal WW1 soldier, Horace Thomas Dalton. (BBC)
5:00 The 5 O'Clock Report
10:00 Late Edition
A review of the news from Morning Report, Nine to Noon, Afternoons and Checkpoint. Also hear the latest news from around the Pacific on Radio New Zealand International's Dateline Pacific.
11:06 Global Village
A selection of world music along with jazz, rock, folk and other styles, artists and songs with world and roots influences chosen and presented by Wichita radio host Chris Heim (7 of 13, KMUW)

===9:06 PM. | None (National)===
=DESCRIPTION=

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

Radio New Zealand news, including Dateline Pacific and the day's best interviews from Radio New Zealand National

===11:06 PM. | None (National)===
=DESCRIPTION=

A selection of world music along with jazz, rock, folk and other styles, artists and songs with world and roots influences chosen and presented by Wichita radio host Chris Heim (7 of 13, KMUW)