Radio New Zealand National. 2015-11-25. 00:00-23:59.

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Year
2015
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274525
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Audio
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Rights Information
Year
2015
Reference
274525
Media type
Audio
Item unavailable online
Series
Radio New Zealand National. 2015--. 00:00-23:59.
Duration
24:00:00
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:

25 November 2015

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

Including: 12:06 Music after Midnight; 12:30 Insight (RNZ); 1:15 Primary People (RNZ); 2:05 The Forum (BBC); 3:05 The Night Book, by Charlotte Grimshaw, read by Michael Hurst (10 of 12, RNZ); 3:30 Diversions (RNZ); 5:10 Witness (BBC)

===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 Wednesday 25 November 2015
BODY:
Russian jet shot down by Turkey on Turkey-Syria border; More than half of US states say they'll reject Syria refugees; Academic questions police restrictions on data; Fox Glacier rescue team set to try to recover more bodies; Jury retires in Chris Cairns perjury trial; MSD admits shortage of emergency housing; Snap election called in Vanuatu after weeks of uncertainty.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 30'46"

06:07
Sports News for 25 November 2015
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'02"

06:10
Nato crisis meeting after Russian jet shot down over Turkey
BODY:
Nato officials are currently in emergency talks after Turkey shot down a Russian jet which it claims had penetrated its airspace near the Syrian border.
Topics: conflict
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 4'09"

06:19
Early business news for 25 November 2015
BODY:
Wall Street is flat.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'19"

06:25
Morning Rural News for 25 November 2015
BODY:
News from the rural and farming sector.
Topics: rural, farming
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 4'00"

06:38
Anti IS alliance stumbles as Turkey downs Russian jet
BODY:
The complicated crisis in Syria has become even messier overnight after Turkish jets shot down a Russian warplane, claiming it had strayed from Syria into Turkish airspace.
Topics: conflict
Regions:
Tags: Turkey, Russia, warplane, Syria
Duration: 3'47"

06:41
Protests ahead of Paris talks on climate change
BODY:
Greenpeace kicked off a week of protests ahead of world leaders meeting in Paris to talk about climate change.
Topics: climate
Regions:
Tags: Greenpeace
Duration: 4'08"

06:44
Wellington airport confident it will find a long haul airline
BODY:
Wellington Airport is highlighting a new report which says extending the city's runway could bring in an extra 2-billion dollars over forty years.
Topics: transport, economy
Regions:
Tags: Wellington Region
Duration: 2'29"

06:50
NZIER picking growth to pick up in 2016
BODY:
The outlook for the economy looks positive and growth will head back towards three percent, according to the Institute of Economic Research's latest quarterly predictions.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'07"

06:51
Cavalier expects return to acceptable profitability in 2017
BODY:
Shares in carpet manufacturer Cavalier rocketed by 34 percent yesterday, after it said was back on course to profitability.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'51"

06:52
Tower confirms loss on extra quake costs
BODY:
Insurance company Tower is looking to commercial alliances and the Pacific to give it a boost as it looks to resolve the remaining Canterbury earthquake claims that tipped it into a loss.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'29"

06:54
Rangatira keeps eye out for purchases
BODY:
The investment firm, Rangatira, says it is keeping its eyes open for further acquisitions of companies with good growth prospects.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'34"

06:56
Retailers say weak dollar is driving up costs: prices will rise
BODY:
The industry association, Retail New Zealand, expects prices to begin creeping up over the next three to six months, as the weaker New Zealand dollar begins to flow through into imported goods.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'42"

06:58
Morning markets for 25 November 2015
BODY:
Wall Street is flat, with nervous investors seeking low-risk assets after Turkish jets shot down a Russian warplane near the Syrian border.
Topics: business, economy, conflict
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'34"

07:07
Sports News for 25 November 2015
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'57"

07:11
Russian jet shot down by Turkey on Turkey-Syria border
BODY:
NATO officials are holding an emergency meeting after a Russian jet was shot down by Turkey on the Turkey-Syria border.
Topics: conflict
Regions:
Tags: Russia, Turkey, jet
Duration: 5'36"

07:19
More than half of US states say they'll reject Syria refugees
BODY:
Now to Washington where Barack Obama has welcomed the French president Francois Hollande to Washington DC with a promise the United States will stand united with France to defeat terrorism.
Topics: conflict
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 5'29"

07:22
Academic questions police restrictions on data
BODY:
The country's leading researcher on gangs says he's being muzzled by the police who've blocked him from getting basic information.
Topics: conflict, identity, education
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 6'49"

07:27
Fox Glacier rescue team set to try to recover more bodies
BODY:
The rescue team, trying to get the three remaining bodies off the Fox Glacier crash site, are desperately hoping the weather will allow them to do so today.
Topics: weather
Regions:
Tags: Fox Glacier crash
Duration: 1'59"

07:35
Jury retires in Chris Cairns perjury trial
BODY:
Cairns has been on trial in London for the past seven weeks for lying under oath about match-fixing during a libel case in 2012.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: Chris Cairns
Duration: 2'10"

07:38
MSD admits shortage of emergency housing
BODY:
The Ministry of Social Development has admitted there is a shortage of emergency housing while the Prime Minister says the Government is doing the best it possibly can.
Topics: housing
Regions:
Tags: Ministry of Social Development
Duration: 5'12"

07:42
Snap election called in Vanuatu after weeks of uncertainty
BODY:
A snap election has been called in Vanuatu after weeks of uncertainty following the jailing of a quarter of the country's MPs.
Topics: Pacific, politics
Regions:
Tags: Vanuatu
Duration: 2'53"

07:46
Former Police Commissioner questions rule of law in Fiji
BODY:
Speaking from South Africa, Fiji's former police commissioner says he was obstructed from doing his job, none of his suggested changes were implemented and he believed the military had too much power.
Topics: politics, Pacific
Regions:
Tags: Fiji military
Duration: 3'55"

07:49
Wellington's runway extension could bring in 2-billion dollars
BODY:
A new report into the runway extension at Wellington Airport says it could bring an extra 2-billion dollars into the country.
Topics: transport, economy
Regions: Wellington Region
Tags: Wellington Airport
Duration: 3'35"

07:53
Labour accuses Treasury of failing to practise what it preaches
BODY:
Labour's finance spokesperson is calling the finance minister a hypocrite.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: finance
Duration: 4'45"

08:07
Sports News for 25 November 2015
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'59"

08:10
Russia advises its tourists not to travel to Turkey
BODY:
Russia has advised its tourists not to travel to Turkey after the downing of a Russian jet on the Turkey-Syria border.
Topics: conflict
Regions:
Tags: Russia, Turkey, jet, Syria
Duration: 3'31"

08:15
France and US agree to step up strikes on IS militants
BODY:
Francois Hollande and Barack Obama, have agreed to step up strikes in Syria and Iraq to target Islamic State militants after the deadly attacks in Paris.
Topics: conflict, politics
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 5'35"

08:20
Australian PM says Islamic State 'fundamentally weak'
BODY:
In his first national security statement as Australian Prime Minister, Malcolm Turnbull has declared Islamic State is fundamentally weak - with more Twitter accounts than soldiers.
Topics: politics, conflict
Regions:
Tags: Australia, Malcolm Turnbull
Duration: 3'00"

08:23
Is NZ getting greener?
BODY:
New Zealand is becoming a more green-conscious country.
Topics: climate, environment, energy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'57"

08:26
Todd Blackadder's final crusade
BODY:
Canterbury rugby is heading into uncharted territory after losing two of their most experienced players and now their coach.
Topics: sport
Regions: Canterbury
Tags: Canterbury Crusaders
Duration: 3'36"

08:30
Markets Update for 25 November 2015
BODY:
A brief update of movements in the financial sector.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 44"

08:36
VNZMA Producers won't commit to broadcast Maori award
BODY:
Maori musicians who complained about the exclusion of the Maori Album Award from the television broadcast of the Vodafone New Zealand Music Awards have met with the show's producer.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 3'55"

08:40
Labour leader in Canberra today to lobby MPs
BODY:
The Labour Party leader, Andrew Little, is in Canberra today hoping to convince Australian MPs that New Zealanders living there are getting a raw deal.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Canberra
Duration: 3'57"

08:44
ETS review does not include agriculture
BODY:
The Emissions Trading Scheme is up for review, but controversially the Government has left agriculture out of the discussion document.
Topics: politics, rural
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 3'16"

08:47
NZ's newest airline cuts service a month after launch
BODY:
The country's newest airline has cut its Dunedin to Queenstown service, just one month in.
Topics: transport
Regions:
Tags: Kiwi Regional Airlines
Duration: 4'01"

08:52
Fate of Christchurch camp ground to be decided soon
BODY:
The fate of a Christchurch City Council owned camping ground damaged in the 2011 earthquakes, will soon be known.
Topics: housing
Regions: Canterbury
Tags: South Brighton Holiday Park
Duration: 3'16"

=SHOW NOTES=

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

Current affairs and topics of interest, including: 10:45 The Reading: An Awfully Big Adventure, by Jane Tolerton (13 of 15, RNZ)

=AUDIO=

09:08
Are consumers getting a bad deal from insurance brokers?
BODY:
Are consumers getting a bad deal from those selling them insurance and other financial products, and will proposed changes to legislation address the most common complaints?

EXTENDED BODY:
The government has this morning released an options paper on overhauling the Financial Advisors Act.
There have been complaints the system is too confusing for consumers, and that some insurance brokers are receiving excessive up front commissions which can lead to the illegal practice of "churning" - where the broker encourages clients to change insurers regularly, so the broker can continue to receive the high commission. This also leaves clients vulnerable to having claims turned down due to accidental "non- disclosure" after being switched from one insurer to another by an adviser.
Paul Goldsmith is the Commerce and Consumer Affairs Minister.
Submissions close on 29 January for part 3 of the paper, and 26 February for parts 1 and 2.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: insurance, finance
Duration: 21'11"

09:30
Why NZ Shouldn't Copy Asia on High Stakes Testing
BODY:
Dr. Yong Zhao, an internationally acclaimed scholar, author, and speaker, says the best lessons from Asian education systems in places like Shanghai, Hong Kong, Korea and Singapore, do not relate to what helped them achieve their high flying status, but to what they are turning to.
He's been presenting his latest research "lessons that matter: What should we learn from Asia's school systems," at the Global Education Leadership Partnership (GELP) event which is being hosted by New Zealand for the first time ever.

EXTENDED BODY:
Despite superb rankings on international league tables Asian educators are now shunning traditional teaching methods like rote learning, homework and exams.
Dr. Yong Zhao says the best lessons from Asian education systems in places like Shanghai, Hong Kong, Korea and Singapore, do not relate to what helped them achieve their high flying status, but to what they are turning to.
He spoke to Nine to Noon 's Kathryn Ryan
Dr. Zhao has been presenting his latest research "lessons that matter: What should we learn from Asia's school systems," at the Global Education Leadership Partnership (GELP) event which is being hosted by New Zealand for the first time ever.
The event, Building Future Learning Systems: Ngā Kāwai Hono - where the web of relationships and virtual connections meet, brings together global education system leaders committed to working and learning together to transform education systems so that every learner can develop the skills and knowledge they need to survive and thrive in the 21st century. His paper fits into one of the themes of the event which is looking at cultural frameworks - his is from an Asian perspective.
Dr. Yong Zhao is an internationally acclaimed scholar, author, and speaker. He is the presidential chair and director of the Institute for Global and Online Education in the College of Education at the University of Oregon.
Topics: education, politics
Regions:
Tags: testing
Duration: 15'42"

09:48
Australia correspondent Bernard Keane
BODY:
Bernard Keane looks at Malcolm Turnbull's national security statement yesterday and how different his handling of terrorism is to Tony Abbott's - pointedly saying "gesture and machismo" won't help.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Australia
Duration: 10'51"

10:08
Are your ears itching?
BODY:
If a doctor gives you a sugar pill and tells you it will make your headache feel better and it does, that's called the placebo effect. But what happens if they tell you the pill will make your headache worse? The nocebo is the evil twin of the placebo and it's thought to be responsible for everything from wind turbine syndrome, to electro-sensitivity, to some instances of gluten intolerance. Auckland University psychologist Dr Keith Petrie has recently been awarded the Mason Durie Medal for his studies of placebos, nocebos and other ways patients' perceptions of illness can affect their health.
EXTENDED BODY:
If a doctor gives you a sugar pill and tells you it will make your headache feel better and it does, that's called the placebo effect. But what happens if they tell you the pill will make your headache worse?
The nocebo is the evil twin of the placebo and it's thought to be responsible for everything from wind turbine syndrome, to electro-sensitivity, to some instances of gluten intolerance.
Auckland University psychologist Dr Keith Petrie has recently been awarded the Mason Durie Medal for his studies of placebos, nocebos and other ways patients' perceptions of illness can affect their health.
Listen to Dr Petrie's interview with Nine to Noon's Kathryn Ryan:
He told Nine to Noon that, while most people are more familiar with the placebo effect, which is responsible for a percentage of the total benefits of prescription drugs, fewer people know as much about the nocebo effect.
"The nocebo effect applies to real drugs and real treatments as well, due to our expectations that we may get negative effects," he said.
"We can get negative effects due to the treatment but also due to our expectations of getting symptoms.
"[When] we tell someone a pill's going to help them, people will then switch from focusing on their symptoms and how sick they feel to signs of improvement and how well they're feeling.
"Our brains tends to be very susceptible to expectations and influences in terms of noticing things that we want to notice, and at the same time focusing on negative things as well."
Watch a video explaining the nocebo effect:
Dr Petrie said another example of how the nocebo effect worked was when people believed rumours, and even stories in the media, that then negatively influenced them.
"Mass pyschogenic illness is one extreme example, where some will get sick in a closed social circumstance such as a school, a factory or even an airport.
"If someone falls down dramatically, other people around them will start noticing symptoms - and soon a kind of a wave of non-specific symptoms will take over and people can get quite dramatically sick quite quickly."
Pills, rumours - and wine
Dr Petrie said the placebo effect worked in the same subliminal way, and both also came into play with how different products were branded or how much they cost.
"You see that not only in pills but with bottles of wine, for example if you tell people this bottle is $45 rather than $10 people will report that it's more pleasurable to drink.
"The pleasure centre in their brain lights up more than if you tell them it only costed $10."
The placebo and nocebo effects were helping medical students understand why some patients did not like taking their medication, he said.
"We often forget about the ideas that the patient has about their illness, and the ideas that a patient has about their medicines," Dr Petrie said.
"Both of those things can really either improve the power of a drug, or work against it, and in particular [when they] believe they're going to get side effects or have concerns about medicines, they're generally not going to take them.
"That's probably the main problem facing medicine today - low adherence."
Dr Petrie said doctors have known for quite some time about how the placebo effect could make their patients feel relaxed, and how it affected their outcomes.
"We know from placebo studies that those doctors who show empathy and concern have a much better response to treatment."
He said, over his 20 years of teaching at Auckland Medical School, students were now much more engaged and interested in that side of medicine.
"I think the generation that's coming through medical school now are much more sophisticated in terms of their understanding of those interpersonal aspects, and because of that their treatments actually will become more effective."

Topics: health
Regions:
Tags: nocebo, placebo, alternative medicine, allergies, gluten, wind turbine, wind farm, WiFi
Duration: 23'35"

10:30
Calm urged after Russian jet shot down by Turkey
BODY:
NATO's secretary general has called for calm and de-escalation after Turkish jet fighters shot down a Russian military jet yesterday. Turkey and its NATO allies say the Sukhoi 24 bomber trespassed on Turkish airspace and failed to turn back despite a warning. That version of events has been rejected by Russia, with President Vladimir Putin saying there will be "serious consequences" for what he described as a stab in the back by "the accomplices of terrorists". The aircraft crashed on the Syrian side of the border and at least one of the two pilots was shot dead by rebels after ejecting. Nine to Noon speaks to Washington correspondent, Simon Marks, who's been following developments closely.
Topics: conflict
Regions:
Tags: Syria, Russia, Iraq, Turkey, Su 24, jet fighter
Duration: 12'27"

10:44
NZ Literature Review: The Gentleman's Club by Jen Shieff
BODY:
Published by Mary Egan Publishing. Reviewed by Louise O'Brien, co-editor of the quarterly review, New Zealand Books.
Topics: books
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 4'14"

11:05
Music of Adele with Marty Duda
BODY:
With the release of her third album, 25, Adele has become the biggest recording artist on the planet…at least for now. 25 is the third in a trilogy of sorts that began with her debut album, 19, released in 2008 and its hugely popular follow-up, 21, from 2011. The London-based singer seems to have effortlessly conquered the music world setting sales records on both sides of the Atlantic. Her new single, Hello, has everyone talking, especially after her performance on Saturday Night Live.
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags: Marty Duda, music, Adele
Duration: 23'58"

11:30
Social enterprise - AMP Scholarships Award winner
BODY:
Charles Leota is a PE teacher who taught himself to code and has now created a pair of computer programmes he hopes will help more than 70 thousand dyslexic children in New Zealand. The apps, called My Kete and Ezy Essay, allow students to take their exams digitally and read what they've written back to them - without the cost of dedicated teacher aids or reader/writers. Charles just recently won a 10 thousand dollar AMP Scholarships Award for his invention, money which he plans to invest in developing his software further.
Topics: technology
Regions:
Tags: My Kete, Ezy Essay, Charles Leota
Duration: 17'29"

11:48
Science commentator, Siouxsie Wiles
BODY:
Last week was worldwide antibiotic resistance week with the prestigious medical journal the Lancet publishing new research on the a new form of antibiotic resistance to the last class of antibiotics. Science commentator Dr Siouxsie Wiles explains what this new finding means for us here in New Zealand and debunks some of the common misperceptions people have about antibiotic resistance. She also takes a look at the science of tasting and how fires have a weekly cycle!
Topics: science
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 12'17"

=SHOW NOTES=

09:05 Review of Financial Advisors Act
The government has this morning released an options paper on overhauling the Financial Advisors Act.
There have been complaints the system is too confusing for consumers, and that some insurance brokers are receiving excessive up front commissions which can lead to the illegal practice of "churning" - where the broker encourages clients to change insurers regularly, so the broker can continue to receive the high commission. This also leaves clients vulnerable to having claims turned down due to accidental "non- disclosure" after being switched from one insurer to another by an adviser.
Paul Goldsmith is the Commerce and Consumer Affairs Minister.
Submissions close on 29 January for part 3 of the paper, and 26 February for parts 1 and 2.
09:30 Why NZ Shouldn't Copy Asia on High Stakes Testing
Despite superb rankings on international league tables Asian educators are now shunning traditional teaching methods like rote learning, homework and exams. Dr. Yong Zhao says the best lessons from Asian education systems in places like Shanghai, Hong Kong, Korea and Singapore, do not relate to what helped them achieve their high flying status, but to what they are turning to.
Dr. Yong Zhao is an internationally acclaimed scholar, author, and speaker. He is the presidential chair and director of the Institute for Global and Online Education in the College of Education at the University of Oregon.
He's been presenting his latest research "lessons that matter: What should we learn from Asia's school systems," at the Global Education Leadership Partnership (GELP) event which is being hosted by New Zealand for the first time ever.
09:45 Australia correspondent Bernard Keane
Bernard Keane looks at Malcolm Turnbull's national security statement yesterday and how different his handling of terrorism is to Tony Abbott's - pointedly saying "gesture and machismo" won't help.
[image:27410:half] no metadata
10:05 Are your ears itching?
If a doctor gives you a sugar pill and tells you it will make your headache feel better and it does, that's called the placebo effect. But what happens if they tell you the pill will make your headache worse? The nocebo is the evil-twin of the placebo and it's thought to be responsible for everything from wind turbine syndrome, to electro-sensitivity, to some instances of gluten intolerance. Auckland University psychologist Dr Keith Petrie has recently been awarded the Mason Durie Medal for his studies of placebos, nocebos and other ways patients perceptions of illness can affect their health.
10:30 NZ Literature Review: The Gentleman's Club by Jen Shieff
Published by Mary Egan Publishing
Reviewed by Louise O'Brien, co-editor of the quarterly review, New Zealand Books
10:45 The Reading: An Awfully Big Adventure by Jane Tolerton
New Zealand Works War One veterans tell their stories (Part 13 of 15)
11:05 Music of Adele with Marty Duda
With the release of her third album, 25, Adele has become the biggest recording artist on the planet…at least for now. 25 is the third in a trilogy of sorts that began with her debut album, 19, released in 2008 and its hugely popular follow-up, 21, from 2011. The London-based singer seems to have effortlessly conquered the music world setting sales records on both sides of the Atlantic. Her new single, Hello, has everyone talking, especially after her performance on Saturday Night Live.
TRACKS
Artist: Adele
Song: Chasing Pavements (3:30)
Composer: Adele Adkins - Eg White
Album: 19 (2008)
Label: XL
Artist: Adele
Song: Rolling In The Deep (4:48)
Composer: Adele Adkins - Paul Epworth
Album: Live At The Royal Albert Hall (2011)
Label: XL
Artist: Adele
Song: When We Were Young (4:51)
Composer: Adele Adkins - Tobias Jesso Jr
Album: 25 (2015)
Label: XL
Bonus Track:
Artist: Adele
Song: Send My Love (To Your Lover) (3:43)
Composer: Adele Adkins - Max Martin - Shellback
Album: 25 (2015)
Label: XL
11:20 Charles Leota
Charles Leota is a PE teacher who taught himself to code and has now created a pair of computer programmes, My Kete and Ezy Essay, which he hopes will help more than 70 thousand dyslexic children in New Zealand. Charles recently won a 10 thousand dollar AMP Scholarships Award for his invention and says he plans to spend the money on developing his software further.
11:45 Science commentator, Siouxsie Wiles
Last week was worldwide antibiotic resistance week with the prestigious medical journal the Lancet publishing new research on the a new form of antibiotic resistance to the last class of antibiotics. Science commentator Dr Siouxsie Wiles explains what this new finding means for us here in New Zealand and debunks some of the common misconception people have about antibiotic resistance. She also takes a look at the science of tasting and how fires have a weekly cycle!

=PLAYLIST=

Artist: Leon Bridges
Song: Better Man
Composer: Bridges
Album: Coming Home
Label: Columbia
Time: 0930

===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 25 November 2015
BODY:
A restaurant near Nelson has been fined more than 90 thousand dollars for paying its workers less than the minimum wage, and then falsifying evidence when investigated. And United States officials say Turkish pilots warned a Russian warplane it was violating Turkish airspace before shooting it down on the Syrian border
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 15'15"

12:16
Fonterra needs to stay the course - Spierings
BODY:
The chief executive of dairy giant Fonterra says the company needs to stick to its plans and not be distracted by global issues as it looks counter weak prices and uneven demand.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: Fonterra
Duration: 1'33"

12:19
Trilogy's first half profit triples, while sales double
BODY:
Skin care and fragrance products company, Trilogy International, says its first half net profit has more than tripled, while sales are more than twice that of the year earlier.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: Trilogy International
Duration: 1'15"

12:20
Orion Health sees strong growth in recurrning revenue
BODY:
Health software provider, Orion Health, has made a first half net loss of 27 million dollars, while revenues are up more than a quarter on the year earlier.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: Orion Health
Duration: 1'58"

12:22
ERoad H1 posts modest maiden H1 profit
BODY:
Traffic management software company, ERoad, has posted a profit of about 610-thousand dollars, for the six months to September, as it spends to develop products and break into new markets.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: Eroad
Duration: 1'13"

12:23
Hallenstein sales up, margins down
BODY:
Clothing retailer Hallenstein Glassons says sales for the first quarter of the new financial year are up just over three percent on last year but its profit margins are starting to be squeezed.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: Hallenstein Glassons
Duration: 27"

12:23
Midday Markets for 25 November 2015
BODY:
For the latest from the markets we're joined by Melika King at Craigs Investment Partners
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'21"

12:26
Business briefs
BODY:
Industrial property landlord, Property For Industry, says it's sold a non-core Auckland property for 10 million dollars
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 35"

12:27
Midday Sports News for 25 November 2015
BODY:
The Australian opening batsman David Warner knows Trent Boult will be a huge loss to the Black Caps if the swing specialist is ruled out of the day-night Test in Adelaide this week.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'29"

12:35
Midday Rural News for 25 November 2015
BODY:
News from the rural and farming sectors.
Topics: rural, farming
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 7'52"

=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=

13:09
First Song
BODY:
Blackstar' - David Bowie.
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags: David Bowie
Duration: 10'16"

13:18
Funny Business - Jimmy Carr
BODY:
He is one of the world's funny men. He is hardly off the tele in the UK and more than one-and-a-half million people have seen him perform live. He is the outrageous stand-up comedian, Jimmy Carr. And he is coming to New Zealand soon.
Topics: arts
Regions:
Tags: comedy, Jimmy Carr
Duration: 12'06"

13:30
Shira The Giraffe On The Move - Dr James Chatterton
BODY:
Auckland Zoo's two-year-old giraffe is on the move today. Shira began a three-day voyage starting her journey from Auckland to Christchurch this morning. She is being relocated to Orana Wildlife Park, as part of a breeding programme.
Topics: environment
Regions: Auckland Region, Canterbury
Tags: Auckland Zoo, Giraffe
Duration: 6'55"

13:37
Sound Archives 'The Blizzard' - Sarah Johnston
BODY:
One hundred years ago this week, the New Zealanders still grimly hanging onto the slopes of Gallipoli, were dealt yet another blow. After enduring a summer of searing heat, with vast swarms of flies and the dysentery they brought, the northern winter arrived in force. From November 26 to 28, 1915, a vicious snow storm lashed the Gallipoli peninsula bringing further misery. In archival radio interviews recorded in the 1950s and 60s, Gallipoli veterans talked about what they came to call 'The Blizzard'. Sarah Johnston, from the radio archives of Nga Taonga Sound and Vision is here to tell us about it.
Topics: weather, history
Regions:
Tags: Nga Taonga Sound and Vision, Gallipoli, blizzard, Wwi
Duration: 8'11"

13:45
Favourite Album
BODY:
American Beauty - Grateful Dead.
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags: Grateful Dead, American Beauty
Duration: 13'27"

14:07
Coastal Projections - Rick Liefting
BODY:
Waikato Regional Council is working on an online tool to help people see the impacts of projected sea level rise scenarios.
Topics: environment, technology
Regions: Waikato
Tags: sea levels
Duration: 5'25"

14:12
Road Map - Te Horo
BODY:
Today's Roadmap takes us 65 kilometres north from Wellington, to the sunny Kapiti Coast. Between Waikanae and Otaki lie the small but spunky communities of Te Horo and Te Horo beach, which between them have 650 residents. The climate is ideal for growing and the proximity of Wellington and Palmerston North invites commuters with a hankering for country life.
Topics: life and society
Regions: Wellington Region
Tags: Kapiti Coast, Te Horo
Duration: 46'30"

15:06
Technology and Innovation
BODY:
Our technology correspondent Paul Brislen is here to mark Windows' 30th birthday, discuss in-car technologies and introduce us to our Innovator Of The Week. Paul is also happy to answer your questions.
Topics: technology
Regions:
Tags: Windows
Duration: 22'37"

15:29
Country Life preview - Carol Stiles
BODY:
Carol Stiles from Country Life joins us from Hamilton to tell us what is coming up on the programme this weekend.
Topics: rural
Regions:
Tags: Carol Stiles
Duration: 4'01"

15:35
NZ Society for Wed 25 November 2015
BODY:
Beaujolais Nouveau – is both a wine and an event. It’s celebrated around the world on the third Thursday in November – and New Zealand is the first in the world to have a taste. The wine is made from Gamay grapes in the Beaujolais region in France and it’s a celebration of the first wine from the year’s harvest.
This year was different though, with the French community around the world deeply affected by the recent terror attacks in Paris.
Amelia Nurse attended the Wellington Alliance Française event at CQ Hotel where around 100 people gathered to share their stories and taste the new wine.
EXTENDED BODY:
Beaujolais Nouveau – is both a wine and an event. It’s celebrated around the world on the third Thursday in November – and New Zealand is the first in the world to have a taste. The wine is made from Gamay grapes in the Beaujolais region in France and it’s a celebration of the first wine from the year’s harvest.
This year was different though, with the French community around the world deeply affected by the recent terror attacks in Paris.
Amelia Nurse attended the Wellington Alliance Française event at CQ Hotel where around 100 people gathered to share their stories and taste the new wine.
Beaujolais Nouveau 1997/2015
The last time I had a glass of Beaujolais Nouveau was in Toronto in about 1997. I knew the idea of it was to celebrate the first new wine of the year and that part of the tradition was colourful labels designed specially each year. What I didn’t expect was for it to be disgusting. Undrinkable. I was quite disillusioned.
Remembering that experience I decided to do some research on the wine before attending this year’s event in Wellington. Here’s what I discovered:
The wine varies enormously from year to year. This past summer was exceedingly hot in the Beaujolais region in France – which made the grapes sweeter and darker, resulting in the most full bodied wine since 1947. Normally, it’s as close as a red wine will get to being a white wine, which is why it’s served chilled. It’s also almost completely devoid of tannins (the bitter and astringent aspect of many wines such as Shiraz) due to the quick process of extraction and fermentation called carbonic maceration.
The region itself is only 55 kms long and 14 kms wide, yet it boasts over 4000 vineyards which produce 12 types of wine.
Because it’s sold in the same year as its harvested it’s referred to as “vins primeurs” and more generically as young wine. And under the Appellation d'origine contrôlée (AOC) regulations, it’s one of only 55 wines in France that are allowed to produce Nouveau wines. AOC also stipulates that the gamay grapes are hand-picked - the only region where this is the case outside of Chapagne.
The drinking of these sorts of wine is not uncommon in France but it wasn’t until the 1960s and 70s that exports really took off. Some people think this was a clever marketing stunt to offload a great deal of only moderate quality wine early in the season. Then traditions developed around it – things like uncorking the first bottle at 12:01 am on the third Thursday of November, and the preceding race to get the new bottles distributed - reputedly at times by elephant and even hot air balloon.
The wine is relatively low in alcholol (around 10%) and traditions around the world involve getting together with friends, music and good food, and drinking rather alot of it. In the Beaujolais region alone there are there are over 100 festivals each November – and countless celebrations around the world. Approximately half the wine each year is sold in France but it’s also popular in the US, Japan and Germany. And of the wine produced in the region, Beaujolais Nouveau account for half of the wine produced each year – around 65 million bottles.
So on Thursday 20 Novemeber, Le Beaujolais Nouveau est Arrivé in Wellington at the Alliance Française event.
For French people around the world, and particularily in Paris this year, this was an opportunity to come together and remember the people killed in the terror attacks the previous week. And though the Wellington event was perhaps more subdued than usual, it was still very much a celebration with great food and music. And… the wine was wonderful!

Topics: food
Regions:
Tags: France, wine, arts, environment, life and society, identity
Duration: 8'40"

15:45
The Panel pre-show for 25 November 2015
BODY:
What the world is talking about with Jesse Mulligan, Jim Mora and Zara Potts.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 13'24"

=SHOW NOTES=

1:10 First Song
'Blackstar' - David Bowie.
1:15 Funny Business - Jimmy Carr
He is one of the world's funny men. He is hardly off the tele in the UK and more than one-and-a-half million people have seen him perform live. He is the outrageous stand-up comedian, Jimmy Carr. And he is coming to New Zealand soon.
1:25 Shira The Giraffe On The Move - Dr James Chatterton
Auckland Zoo's two-year-old giraffe is on the move today. Shira began a three-day voyage starting her journey from Auckland to Christchurch this morning. She is being relocated to Orana Wildlife Park, as part of a breeding programme.
1:35 Sound Archives 'The Blizzard' - Sarah Johnston
One hundred years ago this week, the New Zealanders still grimly hanging onto the slopes of Gallipoli, were dealt yet another blow. After enduring a summer of searing heat, with vast swarms of flies and the dysentery they brought, the northern winter arrived in force. From November 26 to 28, 1915, a vicious snow storm lashed the Gallipoli peninsula bringing further misery. In archival radio interviews recorded in the 1950s and 60s, Gallipoli veterans talked about what they came to call 'The Blizzard'. Sarah Johnston, from the radio archives of Nga Taonga Sound and Vision is here to tell us about it.
1:40 Favourite Album
American Beauty - Grateful Dead.
2:20 Roadmap - Te Horo
Today's Roadmap takes us 65 kilometres north from Wellington, to the sunny Kapiti Coast. Between Waikanae and Otaki lie the small but spunky communities of Te Horo and Te Horo beach, which between them have 650 residents. The climate is ideal for growing and the proximity of Wellington and Palmerston North invites commuters with a hankering for country life.
3:10 Technology And Innovation
Our technology correspondent Paul Brislen is here to mark Windows' 30th birthday, discuss in-car technologies and introduce us to our Innovator Of The Week. Paul is also happy to answer your questions.
3:25 Country Life Preview - Carol Stiles
Carol Stiles from Country Life joins us from Hamilton to tell us what is coming up on the programme this weekend.
3:35 New Zealand Society
Beaujolais Nouveau is both a wine and an event. It's celebrated around the world on the third Thursday in November - and New Zealand is the first in the world to have a taste.
3:45 The Panel Pre-Show
What the world is talking about with Jesse Mulligan, Jim Mora and Zara Potts.

=PLAYLIST=

Wednesday 25 November
OPENING SONG:
ARTIST: David Bowie
TITLE: Blackstar
COMP: Bowie
ALBUM: Blackstar
LABEL: Columbia
FEATURE ALBUM:
ARTIST: Grateful Dead
TITLE: Friend of the Devil
COMP: Garcia, John Dawson, Hunter
ALBUM: American Beauty
LABEL: Warner
ARTIST: Grateful Dead
TITLE: Sugar Magnolia
COMP: Bob Weir, Hunter
ALBUM: American Beauty
LABEL: Warner
ARTIST: Grateful Dead
TITLE: Ripple
COMP: Garcia, Hunter
ALBUM: American Beauty
LABEL: Warner
ROADMAP:
ARTIST: The Andrew London Trio
TITLE: Two Words
COMP: London
ALBUM: Middle Class White Boy Blues
LABEL: Andrew London
ARTIST: Fat Freddy's Drop
TITLE: 10 Feet Tall
COMP: Fat Freddy's Drop
ALBUM: Bays
LABEL: Fat Freddy's Drop
ARTIST: Wayne Mason
TITLE: Sense Got Out
COMP: Mason
ALBUM: Sense Got Out
LABEL: Ode
HALFTIME:
ARTIST: The Beatles
TITLE: Norwegian Wood
COMP: Lennon,McCartney
ALBUM: The Beatles: Selections From 1962-1966 & 1967-1970 [Sampler]
LABEL: Apple

===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 25 November 2015
BODY:
What the world is talking about with Jesse Mulligan, Jim Mora and Zara Potts.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 13'24"

16:05
The Panel with Peter Elliott and Andrew Clay (Part 1)
BODY:
What the Panelists Peter Elliott and Andrew Clay have been up to. An update on the situation at Lambton Quay in Wellington. Al Gillespie of the University of Waikato on what the downing of a Russian fighter jet by Turkey could lead to. And Major Campbell Roberts of the Salvation Army talks about what those on low incomes are meant to do with the government pushing for market rents.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 23'39"

16:06
The Panel with Peter Elliott and Andrew Clay (Part 2)
BODY:
A booked called Norwegain Wood: Chopping, Stacking and Drying Wood the Scandanavian Way - is a surprise best seller. What the Panelists Peter Elliott and Andrew Clay have been thinking about. A yoga class at the University of Ottawa has been cancelled because of "cultural issues". John Sinclair talks about teaching yoga in prisons. We embrace Diwali and Chinese New Year. Why be apologetic about Christmas? And The Australian senator who wants NZ to become part of Australia,
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 27'06"

16:07
The Panel Intro
BODY:
What the Panelists Peter Elliott and Andrew Clay have been up to.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 5'02"

16:11
Lambton Quay
BODY:
The latest on the situation at Lambton Quay in Wellington.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'51"

16:14
Turkey's strike against Russia
BODY:
Al Gillespie of the University of Waikato on what the downing of a Russian fighter jet by Turkey could lead to.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: Turkey
Duration: 11'01"

16:26
The squeeze on Social Housing
BODY:
Major Campbell Roberts of the Salvation Army talks about what those on low incomes are meant to do with the government pushing for market rents.

Topics: housing
Regions:
Tags: waiting list
Duration: 4'48"

16:33
Your inner lumberjack
BODY:
A booked called Norwegain Wood: Chopping, Stacking and Drying Wood the Scandanavian Way - is a surprise best seller
Topics: life and society
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 6'09"

16:39
Panel Says
BODY:
What the Panelists Peter Elliott and Andrew Clay have been thinking about.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 5'19"

16:44
Cultural issues behind canning of yoga class
BODY:
A yoga class at the University of Ottawa has been cancelled because of "cultural issues"
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'35"

16:47
Yoga for prisoners
BODY:
Dr John Sinclair talks about teaching yoga in prisons.
Topics: health, crime
Regions:
Tags: yoga, prisons
Duration: 9'19"

16:57
What's wrong with Christmas?
BODY:
We embrace Diwali and Chinese New Year. Why be apologetic about Christmas?
Topics: life and society, spiritual practices
Regions:
Tags: Christmas
Duration: 2'42"

16:58
The Australian senator who wants NZ to become part of Australia
BODY:
We mentioned in passing yesterday the Australian senator who wants NZ to become part of Australia. Ian Macdonald. Today we learn that this is the bloke who chaired the parliamentary committee that recommended the new law leading to the detention and deportation of NZers.
Topics: law
Regions:
Tags: Australia
Duration: 39"

=SHOW NOTES=

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

RNZ's two-hour news and current affairs programme

=AUDIO=

17:00
Checkpoint Top Stories for Wednesday 25 November 2015
BODY:
Australia's Immigration Minister is refusing to budge on his policy of deporting New Zealand criminals, despite hearing today from Labour Party leaders from this country who made a firsthand plea for leniency. And two restaurant workers who often did 70-plus hour weeks, were kept under surveillance by a camera hooked up to the owner's house, and given a tongue-lashing when he thought they were slacking off.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 24'26"

17:07
Andrew Little lobbies Canberra for better rights for NZers.
BODY:
Australia's Immigration Minister is refusing to budge on his policy of deporting New Zealand criminals, despite hearing today from Labour Party leaders from this country who made a firsthand plea for leniency.
Topics: law, crime, politics
Regions:
Tags: Australia, criminals, deportation, Australian detention centres
Duration: 4'50"

17:12
Restaurant spied on foreign workers
BODY:
Two restaurant workers who often did 70-plus hour weeks, were kept under surveillance by a camera hooked up to the owner's house, and given a tongue-lashing when he thought they were slacking off.
Topics: law, crime
Regions: Nelson Region
Tags: workers, employment
Duration: 3'01"

17:15
Drone footage gives vital clues to glacier recovery teams
BODY:
A drone's shot footage just 25 feet above the crashed helicopter on the Fox Glacier, providing mapping vital for recovering the remaining bodies and the wreckage.
Topics: transport
Regions:
Tags: Fox Glacier, helicopter crash
Duration: 5'21"

17:21
Redcliffs school slated to close by 2017
BODY:
Christchurch's Redcliffs Primary School looks set to be closed down due to the risk of rockfalls, with the Education Minister today making an interim decision to shut it.
Topics: education, politics
Regions: Canterbury
Tags: Redcliffs Primary School, Christchurch
Duration: 3'32"

17:24
Cutting the size of Fonterra's board
BODY:
A proposal to cut the number of Fonterra's board members from 13 to nine has divided the co-operatives 10-thousand farmer shareholders.
Topics: business, farming
Regions:
Tags: Fonterra
Duration: 4'01"

17:28
Artworks go up in flames at Takaka house
BODY:
Hundreds if not thousands of artworks have gone up in flames at a Takaka artist's house.
Topics: arts
Regions:
Tags: Chris Finlayson, fire, Takaka
Duration: 1'23"

17:28
Artworks go up in flames at Takaka house
BODY:
Hundreds if not thousands of artworks have gone up in flames at a Takaka artist's house.
Topics: arts
Regions:
Tags: Chris Finlayson, fire, Takaka
Duration: 3'20"

17:34
Today's market update
BODY:
The chief executive of dairy giant Fonterra told this morning's annual meeting the company is focused on addressing weak prices and uneven demand and won't be distracted by risks in the Middle East, Europe and its key market in China.
Topics: economy
Regions:
Tags: Fonterra
Duration: 2'12"

17:36
Southern DHB put on notice over doctor training
BODY:
The Southern District Health board's has been put in notice by the Medical Council because it's faling to properly train new doctors starting at its hospitals.
Topics: health, politics
Regions:
Tags: Southern District Health Board
Duration: 3'27"

17:41
Auckland Housing Accord misses Year Two target
BODY:
The Housing Accord aimed at speeding up home construction in Auckland has fallen short of it's second year target - and next year's more ambitious goal is already being called a stretch.
Topics: housing
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags:
Duration: 3'31"

17:48
Police and Govt slated for muzzling access for researcher
BODY:
Criticism of the police and the Government is growing after a leading researcher on gangs was stopped from getting police data.
Topics: education, law
Regions:
Tags: Jarrod Gilbert
Duration: 3'04"

17:51
Police seek rescuer of pair at Piha
BODY:
The police want to find and thank two people who led the rescue of two young women swept away at Piha beach on Auckland's west coast.
Topics: life and society
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: Piha
Duration: 3'35"

17:54
Family wait on beach for body of crab fisher
BODY:
Family and friends of an Auckland man presumed drowned off a Northland beach are keeping watch - in the hope the sea will return his body.
Topics: refugees and migrants
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: fishing, crabs, safety, Northland
Duration: 3'25"

18:07
Sports News for 25 November 2015
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 3'08"

18:12
Australian MPs accept it's not fair on NZers - Little
BODY:
Peter Dutton has stonewalled Andrew Little.
Topics: law, politics
Regions:
Tags: Australia, New Zelanders In Australia
Duration: 4'02"

18:16
MPs told lack of trust an insult to Cantabrians
BODY:
The Christchurch mayor and deputy mayor have delivered a hard-hitting submission to a select committee hearing on the Environment Canterbury Bill.
Topics: law, politics
Regions: Canterbury
Tags:
Duration: 3'39"

18:18
Minister rules against Redcliffs but school vows to fight
BODY:
Redcliffs school is vowing to fight to stay open in the face of the Education Minister this afternoon backing the move to close it.
Topics: politics
Regions: Canterbury
Tags: Redcliffs school
Duration: 4'06"

18:23
More than half back big cuts to Fonterra's board
BODY:
More than half of Fonterra's farmer shareholders have voted to cut the number of the company's directors by a third.
Topics: business, farming
Regions:
Tags: Fonterra
Duration: 3'23"

18:27
Courts hears pair stabbed over party music
BODY:
Court documents have shed more light on how a row over music at a party, ended with a man stabbing two members of his extended family, one in the back and the other fatally, almost a year ago.
Topics: crime
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: Rio Davis, Chevy Davis
Duration: 2'26"

18:33
Concerns in Australia as tensions escalate.
BODY:
The shooting down of a Russian warplane in Turkey has raised questions in Australia about the safety of their airforce which is operating in the same air space.
Topics: security
Regions:
Tags: Russian Warplane, Turkey, Australian Airforce
Duration: 4'13"

18:37
Maori legal needs still unmet
BODY:
Community Law says too many Maori are not getting the legal advice they need.
Topics: law, inequality, te ao Maori
Regions:
Tags: Community Law, Legal Advice
Duration: 2'27"

18:40
Toddlers pick up anti-fat views: study
BODY:
Otago University researchers say toddlers are picking up anti-obesity attitudes from their mothers.
Topics: health, inequality, education
Regions:
Tags: obesity, children, Otago University
Duration: 4'01"

18:44
Lawyers 'losing hope' for Nauru opposition MPs
BODY:
A lawyer for the Nauru opposition MP who can't leave the Pacific Island because his passport's been cancelled, says the country's justice minister is pursuing a personal vendetta.
Topics: politics, Pacific
Regions:
Tags: Nauru, Roland Kun
Duration: 3'36"

=SHOW NOTES=

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

Entertainment and information, including: 7:30 Spectrum: People, places and events in NZ (RNZ) 8:13 Windows on the World: International public radio features and documentaries 9:06 The Great Tennessee Monkey Trial, by Peter Goodchild The Scopes Trial over the right to teach evolution in public schools reaffirmed the importance of intellectual freedom as codified in America's Bill of Rights. The trial, in a small-town Tennessee courtroom in 1925, set the stage for ongoing debates over the separation of Church and State in a democratic society - debates that continue right to this day (F, LA Theatreworks)

=AUDIO=

19:12
The Dish On Doughnuts
BODY:
Deep-fried pieces of dough - Heather DeLancey Hunwick on the long and delicious history of doughnuts; her latest book Doughnut: A Global History...
Topics: food
Regions:
Tags: doughnuts.
Duration: 18'43"

20:40
The Overseas Correspondents - Brazil
BODY:
Editor of the International section of Estado de Minas, the main daily newspaper of Minas Gerais, Pablo Pires Fernandes reports from the Federative Republic of Brazil, pop. 201,032,714 (est. 2013)... dozens missing in BHP Vale Mine Disaster
Topics: life and society, politics, economy
Regions:
Tags: Brazil, mining disaster.
Duration: 13'39"

20:59
Conundrum Clue 5
BODY:
Listen in on Friday night for the answer
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 25"

21:59
Conundrum Clue 6
BODY:
Listen in on Friday night for the answer
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 33"

=SHOW NOTES=

NIGHTS on RNZ National
with skipper. Bryan Crump & navigator. Robyn Rockgirl Walker
On the show tonight (Wednesday)...
[image:53837:half]
7:12 THE DISH ON DOUGHNUTS
deep-fried pieces of dough - Heather DeLancey Hunwick on the long and delicious history of doughnuts; her latest book Doughnut: A Global History...
7:30 Spectrum - More than the baby blues
> New Zealand people and their stories
8:12 Windows on the World - Changing Climate Change: The Science pt 1 of 3
> international public radio documentaries
8:43 The Overseas Correspondents - BRAZIL
editor of the International section of Estado de Minas, the main daily newspaper of Minas Gerais, Pablo Pires Fernandes reports from the Federative Republic of Brazil, pop. 201,032,714 (est. 2013)... dozens missing in BHP Vale Mine Disaster

roster: Liat Collins (Jerusalem, Israel); Motoko Kakubayashi (Tokyo, Japan); Will Flockton (Brighton, England); Shoba Narayan (Bangalore, India); Silver Tambur (Tallinn, Estonia); Nida' Tuma (Ramallah, West Bank, Palestine); Eri Garuti (Saint-Genis-Laval, France & Italy); Pablo Pires Fernandes (Belo Horizonte, Brazil); Peggy Revell (Medicine Hat, Alberta, Canada); Lien Hoang (Ho Chi Minh City, Viet Nam); & Tabu Butagira (Kampala, Uganda)
8:59 conundrum clue 5
9:07 The Drama Hour - LA Theatre Works: The Great Tennessee Monkey Trial pt 2 of 2
9:59 conundrum clue 6
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 The Eleventh Hour - A Short History of Jazz - The 1960s
> jazzy jazz
... nights' time is the right time...

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

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

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

Norman Meehan guides listeners through the musical, social and personal history of jazz. Norman is an Associate Professor of Jazz at the NZSM and current head of the Jazz Department (1 of 4, RNZ)