RNZ National. 2016-05-09. 00:00-23:59, [New Zealand connections to 'Panama Papers' revealed].

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Year
2016
Reference
288212
Media type
Audio
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Rights Information
Year
2016
Reference
288212
Media type
Audio
Item unavailable online
Series
Radio New Zealand National. 2015--. 00:00-23:59.
Categories
Radio airchecks
Radio programs
Sound recordings
Untelescoped radio airchecks
Duration
24:00:00
Credits
RNZ Collection
RNZ National (estab. 2016), Broadcaster

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

09 May 2016

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

Including: 12:05 Music after Midnight; 12:30 At the Movies with Dan Slevin (RNZ); 1:05 Te Ahi Kaa (RNZ); 2:30 NZ Music Feature (RNZ); 3:05 Closed, Stranger by Kate de Goldi read by Scott Wills (8 of 12, RNZ); 3:30 Science (RNZ)

===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 Monday 9 May 2016
BODY:
New Zealand's place at the heart of a tangled web of secretive companies and trusts used by rich South Americans to manage their wealth has been revealed in a selection of documents from the so called Panama Papers. The author of a new report on climate change says Solomon Islanders forced to flee their homes because of rising sea levels have had zero help from the international community. More than 70 people have been killed in Afghanistan after two buses and a fuel tanker have collided in a fiery crash.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 33'04"

06:05
Sports News for 9 May 2016
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'11"

06:09
New Zealand's role in tax haven industry revealed
BODY:
The extent of this country's involvement in the global tax haven industry is revealed in 61,000 documents selected from the Panama Papers trove leaked from law firm Mossack Fonseca.
Topics: business, law, economy
Regions:
Tags: Panama Papers
Duration: 2'12"

06:17
Journalist detained on Manus Island wants compensation
BODY:
A Kurdish Iranian journalist detained on Manus Island in Papua New Guinea says he wants compensation from the Australian government for holding him prisoner for political purposes.
Topics: law, media, refugees and migrants, Pacific
Regions:
Tags: Manus Island, Papua New Guinea, Australia, Iran, journalist
Duration: 3'04"

06:20
Early Business News for 9 May 2016
BODY:
A brief update of movements in the financial sector.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'21"

06:26
Morning Rural News for 9 May 2016
BODY:
News from the rural and farming sector.
Topics: rural, farming
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 4'25"

06:38
New details about NZ's role in tax shelter industry
BODY:
New Zealand is at the heart of a tangled web of secretive shelf companies, and obscure trusts being used by well heeled South Americans to organise their private wealth, business affairs, and channel their funds around the world.
Topics: business, law, politics
Regions:
Tags: Panama Papers, tax, tax haven, New Zealand
Duration: 4'31"

06:43
Investigating the Panama Papers
BODY:
Seven journalists, 11 million documents, one week, and countless searches have shed light on New Zealand's role in the murky affairs detailed in the Panama papers.
Topics: business, law, politics, media
Regions:
Tags: Panama Papers, tax, New Zealand, journalism
Duration: 3'36"

06:43
Solomon Islanders displaced by rising waters
BODY:
A scientist who has discovered startlingly high rates of sea level rise in the Solomon Islands due to climate change says inhabitants displaced by rising waters are getting no assistance from the international community.
Topics: climate, science, Pacific
Regions:
Tags: Solomon Islands, climate change
Duration: 2'05"

06:50
NZ bank profits seen as likely to remain under pressure
BODY:
New Zealand's biggest banks are likely to continue to see profits under pressure as the low interest rate environment and weak dairy prices are expected to continue for sometime.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: banks, economy, dairy
Duration: 2'49"

06:54
Jim Parker in Sydney
BODY:
Over the Tasman now with the latest from our correspondent, Jim Parker.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: Australia
Duration: 1'01"

06:55
Tuk-Tuk taxi service takes off in Dunedin
BODY:
In the age of Uber and high speed travel, a Dunedin student is going against the flow with a business ferrying passengers by bicycle.
Topics: business, economy, transport
Regions: Otago
Tags: Dunedin, Tuk-Tuk
Duration: 2'36"

06:58
Week ahead
BODY:
On the economic front, tomorrow we have the ANZ Truckometer and electronic card transactions for April, as well as the government accounts for the nine months ended in March.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 18"

06:59
Morning markets for 9 May 2016
BODY:
Wall Street stocks rebounded late in the session on Friday to close near the day's highs, despite disappointing United States labour market data.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 45"

07:07
Sports News for 9 May 2016
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'09"

07:10
New Zealand's part in the Panama Papers
BODY:
New Zealand's place at the heart of a tangled web of secretive companies and trusts used by rich South Americans to manage their wealth has been revealed in a selection of documents from the so called Panama Papers.
Topics: business, economy, law, politics
Regions:
Tags: Panama Papers, tax, Mossack Fonseca
Duration: 10'42"

07:21
Tax expert weighs in on NZ's role in Panama Papers
BODY:
Robin Oliver is a former Deputy Commissioner of Policy at Inland Revenue and now a director, and tax advisor, at Oliver Shaw
Topics: business, economy, law, politics
Regions:
Tags: Panama Papers, tax, Mossack Fonseca
Duration: 9'27"

07:35
Author says disconnect on climate change
BODY:
The author of a new report on climate change says Solomon Islanders forced to flee their homes because of rising sea levels have had zero help from the international community.
Topics: climate, Pacific
Regions:
Tags: Solomon Islands, climate change, coastal erosion
Duration: 3'28"

07:38
Fiery explosion in Afghanistan kills 73
BODY:
More than 70 people have been killed in Afghanistan after two buses and a fuel tanker have collided in a fiery crash.
Topics: transport
Regions:
Tags: Afghanistan, Bus, Fuel Tanker, crash, accident
Duration: 3'16"

07:41
Economy will be a key battleground in Australian election
BODY:
This morning the Australian Governor-General will dissolve both houses of Parliament and send voters to the polls on July the second.
Topics: politics, economy
Regions:
Tags: Australia, government, election
Duration: 3'27"

07:45
Canada's raging wildfire could 'burn for months'
BODY:
Canadian authorities are warning a raging wildfire in Alberta could burn for months.
Topics: environment
Regions:
Tags: fire, Canada, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Fort McMurray
Duration: 5'35"

07:50
Lower Hutt mum petitions to allow kids to ride on footpaths
BODY:
A Lower Hutt mum is asking Parliament to change the law to allow children under the age of 14 to ride their bikes on the footpath.
Topics: law, transport, life and society
Regions: Wellington Region
Tags: bikes, Footpath, Lower Hutt
Duration: 4'06"

07:56
Solar company files legal complaint against Unison's solar tax
BODY:
A solar panel supplier has asked the Electricity Authority to stop a Hawke's Bay lines company imposing an extra charge on customers who install solar panels.
Topics: energy
Regions: Hawkes Bay
Tags: solar, Electricity Authority, Unison Energy, Solar City
Duration: 3'19"

08:06
Sports News for 9 May 2016
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'30"

08:10
Past comments of Key and Woodhouse about tax havens
BODY:
New Zealand is at the heart of a tangled web of secretive shelf companies, and obscure trusts being used by well heeled South Americans to organise their private wealth, business affairs, and channel their funds around the world.
Topics: politics, law, business, economy
Regions:
Tags: tax, Mossack Fonseca, Panama Papers
Duration: 7'37"

08:18
Donald Trump talks taxes for wealthy Americans
BODY:
Donald Trump has conceded he personally wouldn't mind paying higher taxes.
Topics: politics, economy
Regions:
Tags: tax, America, election
Duration: 5'36"

08:25
Young people worried about privacy issues
BODY:
They may be inclined to live online, but young people are more concerned about privacy than the rest of the population.
Topics: life and society, internet
Regions:
Tags: privacy, Online Privacy
Duration: 5'23"

08:30
Markets Update for 9 May 2016
BODY:
A brief update of movements in the financial sector.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 1'02"

08:36
Community must raise 2 million for Akaroa hospital replacement
BODY:
Akaroa will get its hospital back five years after it was damaged by earthquake, but only if the local community spends two-and-a-half million dollars on it.
Topics: health, politics
Regions: Canterbury
Tags: hospital, Akaroa, Banks Peninsula, Canterbury District Health Board
Duration: 3'18"

08:39
Schools hunt for winter sport coaches
BODY:
High schools' winter sport season is starting but some of the teams will be kicking off without a coach.
Topics: education, sport
Regions:
Tags: Secondary School Sports Council, Coaches, School Sports
Duration: 3'27"

08:42
Reality of regional living
BODY:
New Zealand's regions are being eyed as affordable alternatives for cashed up Aucklanders.
Topics: life and society, business
Regions:
Tags: regions, jobs, house prices
Duration: 3'34"

08:42
Steven Adams set to become NZ's highest paid athlete
BODY:
The 22 year old star New Zealand basketballer Steven Adams is on the verge of becoming the country's highest paid athlete.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags: basketball, Oklahoma City Thunder
Duration: 3'40"

08:51
Untidy Cantabrians making Christchurch waterways dirty
BODY:
Dumped mattresses, tv sets and building materials were just some of the items that thirteen hundred volunteers collected from Christchurch's river banks and estuary edge on Saturday.
Topics: environment, life and society
Regions: Canterbury
Tags: Christchurch, litter, dumping, The Mother of all Cleanups
Duration: 3'16"

08:54
Phil Kafcaloudes with news from Australia
BODY:
Time to chat to our Melbourne correspondent Phil Kafcaloudes.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Australia, Melbourne, elections
Duration: 4'43"

=SHOW NOTES=

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

Current affairs and topics of interest, including: 10:45 The Reading: Where the Rekohu Bone Sings by Tina Makereti read by George Henare and Maria Walker (11 of 15, RNZ)

=AUDIO=

09:09
The Panama Papers New Zealand connection
BODY:
A coalition of journalists from RNZ and One News - along with journalist and author Nicky Hager has spent last week poring over the Panama Papers to uncover New Zealand's role in setting up shelf companies for the Panamanian Law Firm, Mossack Fonseca. Nine to Noon speaks to Nicky Hager, RNZ's Jane Patterson and Adrian Sawyer, a Tax professor from Canterbury University.
Topics: business, law, politics, media
Regions:
Tags: Panama Papers, Mossack Fonseca, tax, journalism
Duration: 27'51"

09:36
The mid-life crisis... it's real
BODY:
A new study out of the University of Greenwich has found that nearly one in four people aged 40 to 59 do go through an emotional upheaval at this time of life. Psychology senior lecturer Dr Oliver Robinson talks to Kathryn about why people struggle at this time of their lives, and why he believes there's a silver lining.
EXTENDED BODY:
We’ve all heard of it. It's usually caused by angst over aging, career progression or relationships and leads to the purchase of a sports car or motorbike or starting an affair – so the cliché goes.
But nearly one in four people aged 40 to 59 do go through an emotional upheaval at this time of life, a new study has found.
Psychology senior lecturer Dr Oliver Robinson and his colleagues at the University of Greenwich interviewed more than 900 people aged 20 and over. The good news – he says – is that there is an upside to the midlife crisis. The bad news? Many older people are prone to the late-life crisis. Oh, and there's also quarter-life crisis.
Oliver Robinson talks with Kathryn Ryan about why people struggle in mid-life and reveals the silver lining.
Read an edited snapshot of the conversation:
Does [the mid-life crisis] take a predictable form?
Oliver Robinson: For women and for men, the prevalence of mid-life crisis is really rather similar. I think there’s a stereotype that men tend to go through it more than women, but actually women slightly more than men report them. And they relate to some of the things that we may intuitively associate with that. In the UK, the average age for divorce is early 40s and indeed when women describe midlife crisis, they describe often an event surrounding a divorce or break-up. For men it often revolves around the increasing pressure of work and feeling like you’re in a job that you don’t actually want to be in, but you’ve progressed up the ladder and it’s too late to jump off.
What is typically the way people respond or experience this?
Oliver Robinson: The reason why this press release went out and got global coverage was that we found this silver lining to crisis – that people have an emotionally difficult time during it, but… [There was] a very robust finding that people who reported they were currently going through a mid-life crisis were particularly curious about all kinds of things – curious about themselves, other people, the world, things they were hearing and seeing, about knowledge. And it was almost as though the crisis had somehow piqued their curiosity, even though it was a difficult time. So we see that as the silver lining of midlife crisis – it makes you open to new things again.
What is the secret to navigating it, then? Is it completely about your mind set?
Oliver Robinson: It certainly is normal and it certainly isn’t anything to run away from. It’s about the very natural tendency in mid-life to want novelty again. Because, as human beings, we don’t tend to change bit by bit. We tend to kind of get in a rut, get in a routine, and then suddenly feel the urge for newness and for change again. Crisis is all about that. It’s sort of a time of change. Grasping things you used to be interested in again and grasping new things that you’ve never done before. So I think there are healthy and unhealthy reactions to that. The unhealthy reaction would be something like an affair – that’s a way of experiencing novelty, but it can be in a way which destroys the most important parts of your life. My view is that the healthy way of moving through it is to explore in a way which is about keeping the key commitments of your life and the things that you hold most dear intact, but then opening up again, becoming young again, opening up to fun, silly, new, unpredictable things which… Maybe it’s outside of your work or your relationship. What one definitely doesn’t want to do is just to close up and not follow that exploratory instinct. Follow it, but follow it in a way where you’re going to have fun and grow.
Topics: life and society, science
Regions:
Tags: Mid-life Crisis
Duration: 12'00"

09:52
Europe correspondent Seamus Kearney
BODY:
Europe correspondent Seamus Kearney discusses the latest news, including protests in Greece and Poland.
Topics: life and society, politics
Regions:
Tags: Europe, Greece, Poland
Duration: 8'10"

10:06
The dementia facility disguised as a village
BODY:
Many people with severe dementia spend their last months and years in a hospital environment which bears little connection to the lives they used to lead. But at a specially designed village near Amsterdam in the Netherlands, advanced dementia patients live in apartments inside a village that has a supermarket, hair salon, gallery, theatre and restaurants. One of its founders is Yvonne van Amerongen visited New Zealand
EXTENDED BODY:
Many people with severe dementia spend their last months and years in a hospital environment which bears little connection to the lives they used to lead. But at 'Hogeweyk' near Amsterdam, advanced dementia patients live inside a village that has a supermarket, hair salon, gallery, theatre and restaurants.
But at a specially designed village near Amsterdam, advanced dementia patients live in apartments inside a village that has a supermarket, hair salon, gallery, theatre and restaurants.
Hogeweyk has everything that would make people believe they are in a normal environment – but it has only one entry and exit that connects to the outside world.
The apartments are even furnished to suit the style and period the client closely identifies with – cosy, upmarket, Indonesian style (for those who lived in the former colony), 1950s or modern and urban.
The cutting-edge facility is all about creating normalcy for its occupants and all the staff – including the supermarket workers and hairdressers – are trained to deal with dementia patients.
Kathryn Ryan talks with one of the founders of Hogeweyk, Yvonne van Amerongen, who recently visited New Zealand.
Read an edited snapshot of the conversation:
Yvonne van Amerongen: I was one of the members of the management team of a very traditional nursing home… In 1992 we said to each other ‘What we are offering people living with a severe dementia is not what we would like for our parents or ourselves or our friends. We often said that to ourselves after coffee... and we’d just go on with daily work as usual and nothing changed. So at that time our managing director said ‘We have to sit down and talk about this because we don’t feel we have a good product for people that live with us, but we do it all the time’.
So we sat down one day. I always tell people we sat down somewhere in a restaurant, ten in the morning till ten in the evening, and at the end of the day we knew what we were going to do. We didn’t know how we were going to do it, but we did know, well, what it should be. What we have now in the Netherlands is what we were thinking about at that time.
What was the basic of the model? A benevolent neighbourhood? A removal of dangers and real-world complications?
Yvonne van Amerongen: No, the basic is that people with dementia have confusion in their brain because of dementia, but in an institute in a traditional nursing home, what they meet is more confusion. Because we say to them ‘This is where you live’, but it doesn’t look, it doesn’t smell, it doesn’t taste like home. It doesn’t look like a place to live, it looks like a hospital. It feels like a hospital.
And people with dementia do not understand that. Well, you can explain. It’ll last five minutes or half an hour, maybe two hours. But then that question will be there again. And we said people with severe dementia need to recognise their environment as a normal place to be. And we said that’s not what we’re offering them, so we should offer the people that live with us a normal life, a normal environment. And that’s the start.
Yes, but what kind of normal? How did you design something that would be normal for people with severe dementia?
Yvonne van Amerongen: It’s normal as people over the age of 84 in the Netherlands would have... We built Hogeweyk in the tradition of our region. So when people from New Zealand come over they wouldn’t recognise it as normal houses, no, because it’s Dutch. What we offer these people are normal houses with a front door, living room, kitchen, bedrooms, bathroom, some place to sit outside. A normal house where normal things happen – all meals are prepared according to how you like your meals… you have a birthday party, you watch television, the house is cleaned, the laundry is done – very normal daily things.
Topics: life and society, health
Regions:
Tags: dementia, care, Elderly Care, Hogeweyk, The Netherlands, Village
Duration: 25'58"

10:35
Book Review with Chris Gallavin
BODY:
In Dark Places: Confessions of Teina Pora and an Ex-Cop's Fight for Justice by Michael Bennett, published by Paul Little Books
Topics: books
Regions:
Tags: book review
Duration: 8'46"

11:07
Political commentators Mike Williams & Matthew Hooton
BODY:
Political commentators Mike Williams & Matthew Hooton discuss the weeks political news including the latest revelations and fall out from the Panama Papers and pre budget announcements.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Mosack Fonseca, tax, Panama Papers
Duration: 21'48"

11:32
Cooking Kangaroo with Kelli Brett
BODY:
Marsupial meat is on the menu today, we're cooking Kangaroo with Kelli Brett. The Australian foodie has crossed the ditch to edit Cuisine Magazine. A recent project has been editing a book - called Australia Cooks, which showcases the best of the country's produce. Kelli has recipes for lasagne, dumplings and a salad using kangaroo.
Topics: food, life and society
Regions:
Tags: kangaroo, meat, cooking, Australia
Duration: 13'25"

11:47
Urbanist Tommy Honey
BODY:
Alternative living spaces including boats, cars and even a plane!
Topics: housing, life and society
Regions:
Tags: Alternative living spaces
Duration: 11'55"

=SHOW NOTES=

09:05 The Panama Papers New Zealand connection
A coalition of journalists from RNZ and One News - along with journalist and author Nicky Hager has spent last week poring over the Panama Papers to uncover New Zealand's role in setting up shelf companies for the Panamanian Law Firm, Mossack Fonseca. Nine to Noon speaks to Nicky Hager, Adrian Sawyer a tax professor from Canterbury University and RNZ 's Political Editor Jane Patterson.
09:20 The mid-life crisis - it's real
[image:67785:half] no metadata
A new study out of the University of Greenwich has found that nearly one in four people aged 40 to 59 do go through an emotional upheaval at this time of life. Psychology senior lecturer Dr Oliver Robinson and his colleagues interviewed more than 900 people aged 20 and over. He talks to Kathryn about why people struggle at this time of their lives, and why he believes there's a silver lining.
09:45 Europe correspondent Seamus Kearney
10:05 Yvonne van Amorengen from Hogeweyk, the dementia facility disguised as a village
For many people with severe dementia their last months and years will be lived in a hospital environment, with little connection to the lives they used to lead. But at a specially designed village near Amsterdam in the Netherlands, advanced dementia patients live in apartments inside a village that has a supermarket, hair salon, gallery, theatre and restaurants.Hogeweyk has everything that would make people believe they are in a normal environment - but with only one entry and exit that connects to the outside world.The apartments are even furnished to most suit the style and period the patient closely identifies with - cosy, upmarket, Indonesian style (for those who lived in the former colony), 1950's or more modern and urban. One of its founders is Yvonne van Amerongen visited New Zealand
[gallery:1948]
10:35 Book Review - In Dark Places: Confessions of Teina Pora and an Ex-Cop's Fight for Justice by Michael Bennett
reviewed by Chris Gallavin, published by Paul Little Books
10:45 The Reading
Where The Rekohu Bone Sings by Tina Makereti (Part 11 of 15)
read by Maria Walker, George Henare and Kura Forrester
11:05 Political commentators Mike Williams & Matthew Hooton
11:30 Cooking Kangaroo with Kelli Brett
[gallery:2003]
Marsupial meat is on the menu today, we're cooking Kangaroo with Kelli Brett. The Australian foodie has crossed the ditch to edit Cuisine Magazine.Previously she hosted the ABC radio show 'The Main Ingredient with Kelli Brett' which won the World's Best Food and Wine Radio Program award at Le Cordon Bleu World Food Media Awards. A recent project has been editing a book - called Australia Cooks, which showcases the best of the country's produce. Kelli has recipes for lasagne, dumplings and a salad using kangaroo.
11:45 Urbanist Tommy Honey
Alternative living spaces including boats, cars and even a plane!

=PLAYLIST=

Artist: Lawrence Arabia
Song: The Listening Time
Composer: Milne
Album: The Sparrow
Label: HONORARYBEDOUIN 706060
Time: 09.45am

Artist: Jack Johnson
Song: You and Your Heart
Composer: Johnson
Album: To the Sea
Label: BRUSHFIRE 382883
Time: 10.30am

Artist: Regina Spektor
Song: Fidelity
Composer: Spektor
Album: Begin to Hope
Label: SPIRE promospektor
Time: 11.30am

===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 9 May 2016
BODY:
The extent of New Zealand's role in the Panama Papers is revealed. Jobs could go in the closure of a Silver Fern Farms processing plant.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 15'03"

12:17
Air NZ settles cargo claim
BODY:
The national carrier, Air New Zealand, has settled a civil compensation claim in the United States related to alleged fixing of air cargo prices.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: Air New Zealand
Duration: 1'15"

12:18
Augusta Capital buys NZME House building complex
BODY:
The property syndicate and investor, Augusta Capital, plans to buy a couple more new Auckland office buildings, including NZME House, for more than 88 million dollars.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: Augusta Capital
Duration: 1'55"

12:20
Some manufacturers feeling pinch more than others
BODY:
Some manufacturers are feeling the pinch more than others, with confidence levels falling.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: manufacturing
Duration: 1'35"

12:22
2degrees responds to media speculation
BODY:
New Zealand's third-largest telecommunications provider insists it has no need to seek a sharemarket float to raise money to complete its network.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: 2 Degrees
Duration: 53"

12:22
Mixed response to Australian budget
BODY:
Over the Tasman now and there's mixed views about the the latest budget in Australia.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: Australia
Duration: 55"

12:23
Midday markets for 9 May 2016
BODY:
For the latest from the markets we're joined by James Malden at Macquarie Private Wealth.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 2'31"

12:26
Midday Sports News for 9 May 2016
BODY:
Team New Zealand have overcome a disastrous start to win the final race and with it the regatta at the latest America's Cup world series event in New York.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'25"

12:33
Midday Rural News for 9 May 2016
BODY:
News from the rural and farming sectors.
Topics: rural, farming
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 8'58"

=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=

13:14
Emergency housing funding 'user pays'
BODY:
The Government will put 41.1 million dollars over four years towards emergency housing. The Social Development Minister, Paula Bennett, made the announcement at the Wellington Night Shelter this morning ahead of the government's budget later this month. She says the money will go towards an additional 3000 places in homeless shelters nationwide. RNZ's reporter, Catherine Hutton, explains what the announcement means.
Topics: housing
Regions:
Tags: emergency housing
Duration: 6'37"

13:21
Weldon's departure "A classic case of corporate self destruction"
BODY:
Massey University expert in Change management and governance, Bill Kirkley is writing an academic case study based on Mark Weldon's tumultuous reign at Mediaworks. He describes Mr Weldon's recent resignation as "a classic case of corporate self destruction".
EXTENDED BODY:
Massey University expert in Change management and governance, Bill Kirkley is writing an academic case study based on Mark Weldon's tumultuous reign at Mediaworks. He describes Mr Weldon's recent resignation as "a classic case of corporate self destruction".
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: Mediaworks, Mark Weldon
Duration: 13'16"

13:34
Tech companies are increasingly dictating what we see on-line
BODY:
Why the chronological feed is dying, and tech companies are increasingly dictating what people consume and when. Since we all started using the internet, the information we've got through twitter, facebook, Instagram, blogs and other sites is usually chronological, it comes in a feed and we tend to see the most recent posts at the top. But that kind of time based sorting is on its way out in favour of the curated feed. The problem is, who is curating it? RNZ's head of Digital Glen Scanlon is in the middle of a redesign of RNZ's website amid a rapidly changing digital environment.
Topics: media, internet, technology
Regions:
Tags: curated feeds
Duration: 8'53"

13:43
Favourite album
BODY:
The Eagles of Death Metal; Heart On.
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 15'26"

14:08
TV review - Phil Wallington
BODY:
'Mastermind' , 'The Bachelor' and '60 Minutes'.
Topics: media
Regions:
Tags: television
Duration: 11'32"

14:20
Books - Mary McCallum
BODY:
'Seelenbinder: the Olympian who defied Hitler' by James McNeish and 'Lost and Gone Away' by Lynn Jenner.
Topics: books
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 8'39"

14:29
Music - Dianne Swann
BODY:
Song writer Jimmy Webb. Jason Isbell. Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers.
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 17'34"

14:47
Ballet - Deidre Tarrant
BODY:
The Wizard of Oz.
Topics: arts
Regions:
Tags: ballet
Duration: 5'10"

14:52
Theatre - Raewyn Whyte
BODY:
New Zealand Dance Company tour 2016.
Topics: arts
Regions:
Tags: dance
Duration: 3'37"

15:08
White House correspondent Mark Landler on Obama, Clinton, Sanders and Trump
BODY:
The secret rivalry between US President Barack Obama and his former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. We talk to Mark Landler, the White House Correspondent for the New York Times about his book, Alter Egos: Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, and the Twilight Struggle Over American Power.
EXTENDED BODY:
According to New York Times White House correspondent Mark Landler, two words describe the relationship between US president Barack Obama and his former Secretary of State (who now wants his job)… it’s complicated.
It is never easy when formal rivals join the same team, and Landler saw the tension first-hand while covering the State Department during Clinton's time as Secretary of State.
In his new book Alter Egos: Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, and the Twilight Struggle Over American Power Landler reveals how the president and his chief diplomat – whose views of America's role in the world are often opposing - worked together.
Read an edited snapshot of their conversation:
Why did Obama offer Hillary Clinton this job and why did she take it?
Mark Landler: Well, he had a couple of reasons. One was when he was elected, if you remember, the country was in the midst of a fairly terrible financial crisis and a recession that was verging on a depression. And he knew that he was going to have very little time in his first year, at least, to devote to foreign policy and travelling the world. He had also come in after eight years of George W Bush when our relationships with many of our allies and other countries were at a really low point.
So he was looking for a very high-visibility person who had her own stature, in this case Hillary Clinton, to basically go around the world and mend a lot of fences and rebuild the US's reputation at a time when he really couldn’t do it himself because he was so preoccupied at home. And then beyond that, by naming his chief political rival as a member of his own cabinet, he effectively took her out of the mix for a challenge four years later. She would have been a very major opposition voice in his own party had he left her in the senate.
So there was sort of a political reason and a strategic reason. On her part I think it was as simple as she still had ambitions for higher office and he thought that being Secretary of State would remove her from the political fray, but give her a very high-profile position. I think the prospect of going back to the Senate after an unsuccessful presidential bid has, generally, been an unhappy thing for people who’ve done it. John McCain went back after losing to Barack Obama in 2008 and, by all accounts, had a very rough few years.
There were colourful moments, with the two of them working together. Can you tell us what happened at the Copenhagen Climate Summit?
Mark Landler: This was an occasion in December 2009… and this meeting went very badly. There was a great disagreement. The developing economies – China, India, South Africa – were just simply not willing to make the kind of commitments that Europe and the US were seeking from them. So [Hillary]Clinton had gone rather reluctantly to this meeting and as soon as he got there she realised it was a disaster. So she called back to the White House and asked President Obama to get on a plane and come.
His aides didn’t want him to go, because they thought it was a loser and they basically thought he was diverting himself from important work at home. Be he flew out and got there, and the two of them holed up in a coffee shop and she briefed him on what was going on.
Then he decided that the thing to do was to confront these developing economies directly. As it happened, they were all meeting in a conference room down a long hallway. They didn't want the US to be in the room, in fact, they had locked the door and were meeting themselves.
[So] Clinton and the president marched off down in the direction of that conference room. When they got there a Chinese security agent was waving them away. And Obama basically just gate-crashed, walked right into the room in the middle of the meeting and said to the Prime Minister of China “Mr Wen, can we talk?”
And the two of them sat down and over the course of 45 minutes negotiated an agreement that in hindsight looked rather weak, but at least it saved this summit meeting from total collapse… It was an important moment for the two of them because it was the first time they’d really been in the trenches together working on a major diplomatic problem. And I think they emerged from this experience with more trust in each other and more of an appreciation of each other’s personal style.
Why do so many voters dislike Hillary Clinton?
Mark Landler: It's partly the accumulation of 25 years of negative stories about her. It’s partly the persistent feeling that she isn’t quite on the level. It’s partly the fact that she has racked up a huge amount of money spending to banks like Goldman Sachs. It’s partly the recent scandal you may have heard about involving her email account, where she did all her email on a personal account in a server that she housed in the basement of her home in New York, rather than the State Department system – which fuels the suspicion on the part of many people that she’s not quite transparent and trustworthy.
These are issues that she’s wrestled with as long as she’s been a public figure – so we’re talking 20 or 25 years.
Under the onslaught of negative advertising and criticism from either Bernie Sanders, or certainly Donald Trump, in the coming months it constantly drives home these messages. The only thing she has going for her is that Donald Trump has even higher unfavourables than she does.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: US, Mark Lander
Duration: 22'26"

15:30
From Slavery to Steelpan – NZ's Freedom Music
BODY:
Trinidad and Tobago are the birthplace of the steelpan with origins in the drumming traditions from Africa - originally developed to help tolerate the inhumane practices of slavery in the 1700s. NZ's first Caribbean Orchestra are busting out the colour and sounds. Lynda Chanwai-Earle meets the band, gets taught steelpan drumming and joins them at their Carnival Night in Auckland .
EXTENDED BODY:
"You beat steelpan, you don't beat up steelpan" - Camille Nakhid

Aotearoa's first Caribbean steelpan orchestra ''beat out'' the sound and colour with their 6th Carnival Night.
The Caribbeanz Southern Stars Steelband performed at the Fickling Centre in Mt Albert with lots of homemade rum punch, Carib cuisine favourites like slow cooked chicken, limbo dancing, mas' bands and much more.
People come from as far as Northland and Hamilton to celebrate their Carnival Nights and awards go to the most flamboyant costumes.
Steelpan music history
Camille Nakhid is an associate professor at Auckland's University of Technology during the day and band co-founder and MC by night.
I'm at her home to learn how to play pans from band members Trinidadian Sandie Bowden, along with eldest to youngest band members; 80-year-old Ros Demas and Westlake Boys High School student Nicholas Garner who, at 14 and an impressive height, plays the huge bass drums.
For them the pan is more than just an instrument, it's at the heart of Caribbean culture.
Camille and Sandie explain that Trinidad and Tobago are the birthplace of the steelpan.
Originally developed to help tolerate the inhumane practices of slavery in the 1700s, the musical instrument - the only one invented in the 20th century has its origins in the drumming tradition of the African groups that now reside in these islands.
The two most southerly islands in the chain of Caribbean islands, Tobago and Trinidad, are located just off the north coast of South America. The two islands (originally one country) were inhabited by the indigenous Carib and Arawak Amerindian tribes.
In 1498 the Spanish invaded and colonised until 1797 - under the mistaken belief that gold reserves existed, leading to the near decimation of the indigenous peoples and a demand for a new labour force.
For two centuries after 1618 Africans were taken from the African continent and worked as enslaved labour on the sugar plantations in the Caribbeans.
Africans' Shango religion beat drums to help them tolerate the inhumanity of slavery.
In 1797 when the Spanish surrendered the islands to the British, the new rulers feared that the drums and native languages were being used to inspire rebellion so they banned both.
Eventually, by 1881 the British permitted a celebration without drums that ultimately became Mardi Gras - brought over by the French in the 18th Century. The Africans used songs known as Calypso to satirize the French plantations owners. The masquerades and masks from Mardi Gras have evolved into the costumes that are an essential part of Carnival.
The banning of African drumming led to the use of bamboo - cut in different lengths to produce different sounds and 'Tamboo bamboo' bands until police banned this too because rival bands would use them as weapons. However, the drums continued to beat in secret on the island of Trinidad to maintain the practice of the Shango religion.
Poverty forced people to trial a variety of metal objects such as garbage can covers, biscuit tin lids and milk cans to create musical sounds.
Slavery ended in 1833 with the Emancipation Bill and East Indians were brought in as indentured labourers to replace African labour.
How the drum is made
During World War Two the American bases in Trinidad and Tobago created a demand for oil using 55-gallon drums - discarded by the oil refineries the drums became the source of musical instruments.
Cut to different lengths the drums could produce scales of sound from soprano to bass and indenting the surfaces of the drum lids created a range of musical tones.
Social stigma still remained with this very popular instrument among youth but independence in 1962 and the recognition of the steelpan as the national instrument of the islands meant the pan players became global musical ambassadors.
Steelbands today range in number from 4 players to vast orchestras with over 300 pans. Memorising parts rather than reading music makes the steel pan an immediately accessible instrument and all types of music can be played.
Created in 2005 by a small group of Caribbean Islanders living in Auckland that included Camille, Aotearoa's first Caribbean orchestra came about when the few steelpan players in the country realised there was no steelpan band with a full complement of pans.
The group got start-up funds and a large set of steelpans were purchased from Trinidad and Tobago for nine players.
During Carnival Night the warm-up act consists of a dozen students from Bream Bay College in Ruakaka, Northland. They're the only secondary school in NZ with a steelpan band after an inspirational workshop with Camille and Musical Director Leticia de Klerk (aka Tish). Leticia conducts Steelbands in Schools workshops through Boosted.
"You can't play them and not be happy" - Scott Brown, Music Teacher Bream Bay College, Ruakaka

Jamaican Rum Punch:
Ingredients:
21/2 cups pineapple
21/2 cups orange juice
1 cup 151 Proof Rum (e.g Bacardi)
½ cup dark Rum
¼ cup coconut flavoured Rum
¼ cup lime juice
3 Tbs grenadine syrup
1 orange sliced
1 lime sliced
1 lemon sliced
Stir pineapple juice, orange juice, 151 proof rum, dark rum, coconut-flavored rum, lime juice, and grenadine syrup together in a punch bowl. Float orange slices, lime slices, and lemon slices in the punch. Serve chilled on ice.
Topics: music, history, arts, identity
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: Caribbean Islanders
Duration: 23'47"

15:46
The Panel pre-show for 9 May 2016
BODY:
Your feedback, and a preview of the guests and topics on The Panel.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 13'15"

=SHOW NOTES=

1:10 First song: Burn the Witch - Radiohead
1:20 Emergency housing funding 'user pays'
The Government will put 41.1 million dollars over four years towards emergency housing. The Social Development Minister, Paula Bennett, made the announcement at the Wellington Night Shelter this morning ahead of the government's budget later this month. She says the money will go towards an additional 3000 places in homeless shelters nationwide. RNZ's reporter, Catherine Hutton, explains what the announcement means.
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1:25 Weldon's departure "A Classic case of Corporate self destruction"
Massey University expert in Change management and governance, Bill Kirkley is writing an academic case study based on Mark Weldon's tumultuous reign at Mediaworks. He describes Mr Weldon's recent resignation as "a classic case of corporate self destruction".
1.35 Tech companies are increasingly dictating what we see on-line
Why the chronological feed is dying, and tech companies are increasingly dictating what people consume and when
Since we all started using the internet, the information we've got through twitter, facebook, Instagram, blogs and other sites is usually chronological, it comes in a feed and we tend to see the most recent posts at the top.
But that kind of time based sorting is on its way out in favour of the curated feed. The problem is, who is curating it?
RNZ's head of Digital Glen Scanlon is in the middle of a redesign of RNZ's website amid a rapidly changing digital environment.
1:40 Favourite album - The Eagles of Death Metal; Heart On
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2:10 The Critics
Today on The Critics - Television producer and journalist Phil Wallington makes a critical analysis of what's going on in his industry,
Fiction writer and poet Mary McCallum takes a look at new books
Singer / Songwriter and member of The Bads duo Dianne Swann has some musical memories for us.
And we'll review two dance performances via Theatreview.Org, Diedre Tarrant was at the opening night of New Zealand Ballet's WIZARD OF OZ in Wellington and Raewyn Whyte will tell us about the New Zealand Dance Company's current tour - they are still to play Napier, Wellington and New Plymouth.
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3:10 White House correspondent Mark Lander
The secret rivalry between US President Barack Obama and his former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. We talk to Mark Landler, the White House Correspondent for the New York Times about his book, Alter Egos: Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, and the Twilight Struggle Over American Power.
3:35 Voices: From Slavery to Steelpan
Trinidad and Tobago are the birthplace of the steelpan with origins in the drumming traditions from Africa - originally developed to help tolerate the inhumane practices of slavery in the 1700's.
NZ's first Caribbean Orchestra are busting out the colour and sounds.
Lynda Chanwai-Earle meets the band, gets taught steelpan drumming and joins them at their Carnival Night in Auckland:
3:45 The Panel Pre-Show

=PLAYLIST=

JESSE MULLIGAN 1- 4pm
Monday May 9th
JESSE'S SONG:
ARTIST: Radiohead
TITLE: Burn The Witch
COMP: Thom Yorke, Jonny Greenwood, Colin Greenwood, Ed O'Brien, Philip Selway
ALBUM: A Moon Shaped Pool
LABEL: XL
FAVOURITE ALBUM:
ARTIST: Eagles of Death Metal
TITLE: Wannabe in L.A.
COMP: Jesse Hughes, Josh Homme
ALBUM: Heart On
LABEL: Downtown
ARTIST: Eagles of Death Metal
TITLE: Now I'm a Fool
COMP: Jesse Hughes, Josh Homme
ALBUM: Heart On
LABEL: Downtown
ARTIST: Eagles of Death Metal
TITLE: Solo Flights
COMP: Jesse Hughes, Josh Homme
ALBUM: Heart On
LABEL: Downtown
ARTIST: Eagles of Death Metal
TITLE: Secret Plans
COMP: Jesse Hughes, Josh Homme
ALBUM: Heart On
LABEL: Downtown
MUSIC CRITIC: Dianne Swann
ARTIST: Glen Campbell
TITLE: Witchita Lineman
COMP: Jimmy Webb
ALBUM: Wichita Lineman
LABEL: Capitol

ARTIST: Jason Isbell
TITLE: Children of Children
COMP Jason Isbell
ALBUM: Something More than Free
LABEL: Southeastern Records
ARTIST: Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
TITLE: Refugee
COMP: Tom Petty, Mike Campbell
ALBUM: Damn the Torpedos
LABEL: MCA
ADDITIONAL MUSIC:
ARTIST: Dave Dobbyn
TITLE: Long Way Across Town
COMP: Dave Dobbyn
ALBUM: Anotherland
LIVE: Sony BMG
THE PANEL - HALF TIME SONG:
ARTIST: Bon Jovi
TITLE: Livin' On A Prayer
COMP: Jon Bon Jovi, Richie Sambora, Desmond Child
ALBUM: Slippery When Wet
LABEL: Mercury

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

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

=AUDIO=

15:46
The Panel pre-show for 9 May 2016
BODY:
Your feedback, and a preview of the guests and topics on The Panel.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 13'15"

16:03
The Panel with Raybon Kan and Duncan Greive (Part 1)
BODY:
What the Panelists have been up to. There's been a trading halt on shares of APN the parent company of the Herald and a chain of radio stations. Tax expert Mark Keating joins the Panel for a discussion about round-2 of the Panama Papers. A spraypaint vigilante on the West Coast is paintings over offensive Wicked campervan slogans.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 25'34"

16:05
The Panel with Raybon Kan and Duncan Greive (Part 2)
BODY:
A Canadian survey's found 20% of Canadians pray everyday. What the Panelists Raybon Kan and Duncan Greive have been thinking about. Sociologist Paul Spoonley talks about the growing number of elderly Chinese immigrants brought here under family reunification provisons but are being left alone. A group of homeless people have set up camp outside one of Christchurch's exclusive stores Ballantynes. A top-ranking US military official has told Newshub that America is considering sending a ship to mark the Royal New Zealand Navy's 75th anniversary in November.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 25'29"

16:07
The Panel Intro
BODY:
What the Panelists have been up to.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 5'36"

16:12
APN share halt
BODY:
There's been a trading halt on shares of APN the parent company of the Herald and a chain of radio stations.
Topics: media
Regions:
Tags: APN
Duration: 1'59"

16:15
Panama Papers 2
BODY:
Tax expert Mark Keating joins the Panel for a discussion about round-2 of the Panama Papers.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Panama Papers
Duration: 13'13"

16:29
Wicked vigilante
BODY:
A spraypaint vigilante on the West Coast is paintings over offensive Wicked campervan slogans.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: Wicked campervan
Duration: 4'18"

16:35
Talking to God
BODY:
A Canadian survey's found 20% of Canadians pray everyday.
Topics: spiritual practices
Regions:
Tags: prayer
Duration: 3'36"

16:39
Panel Says
BODY:
What the Panelists Raybon Kan and Duncan Greive have been thinking about.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 6'11"

16:44
Elderly immigrants home alone
BODY:
Sociologist Paul Spoonley talks about the growing number of elderly Chinese immigrants brought here under family reunification provisons but are being left alone.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: immigrants, Chinese
Duration: 8'45"

16:53
Homeless camp in Christchurch CBD
BODY:
A group of homeless people have set up camp outside one of Christchurch's exclusive stores Ballantynes.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: begging
Duration: 5'30"

16:58
Top official indicates US Navy visit
BODY:
A top-ranking US military official has told Newshub that America is considering sending a ship to mark the Royal New Zealand Navy's 75th anniversary in November.
Topics: politics, defence force
Regions:
Tags: US
Duration: 1'01"

=SHOW NOTES=

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

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

=AUDIO=

17:00
Checkpoint with John Campbell, Monday 9th May 2016
BODY:
Watch Monday's full programme here.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 00"

17:08
Auckland southern motorway lanes closed
BODY:
A truck carrying a digger struck the Penrose overbridge early this afternoon, closing all but one lane of the southern motorway and causing severe congestion.
Topics: transport
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: traffic jam
Duration: 1'52"

17:10
Papers reveal involvement of rich in trusts
BODY:
The Panama Papers have thrown up how far the world's rich will go to shield their involvement with the opaque trusts created for them in New Zealand.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Panama Papers
Duration: 3'13"

17:13
PM responds to Panama accusations, events
BODY:
This afternoon, Prime Minister John Key took to the Beehive theatrette to respond to events, revelations and accusations of the day relating to the Panama Papers in his weekly post-Cabinet press conference.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Panama Papers
Duration: 3'56"

17:16
Will the Panama Papers hurt the National party?
BODY:
Will the allegations linked to the Panama Papers have an adverse effect on John Key and the National party? John Campbell went to Mossack Fonseca to find out.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Panama Papers
Duration: 4'45"

17:22
Winston Peters calls for 'tax haven' inquiry
BODY:
Following the release of the Panama Papers, NZ First leader Winston Peters has called for a Commission of Inquiry into what he says is New Zealand's role as a tax haven.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Panama Papers
Duration: 6'48"

17:30
Tattooed woman found critically injured by roadside
BODY:
A police investigation is underway after an unknown woman with a distinctive tattoo of a rose was found severely injured on the side of a road north of Auckland.
Topics: crime
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags:
Duration: 1'24"

17:33
Evening Business for 9 May 2016
BODY:
News from the business sector including a market report.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 2'19"

17:36
Dunedin doctors complain about food on offer for staff
BODY:
Doctors working at Dunedin Hospital are fed up with the food being served in the staff kitchen, since Compass meals took over the meals contract.
Topics: health
Regions: Otago
Tags: meals, Compass meals
Duration: 3'52"

17:40
Will extra money for emergency housing fall short?
BODY:
The Labour Party say plans to spend millions on emergency housing don't come close to addressing the issue of homelessness.
Topics: politics, housing
Regions:
Tags: emergency housing
Duration: 3'31"

17:43
Fort McMurray blaze covers 1600sqkm
BODY:
Fort McMurray officials say it may be years before the city returns to normal, and estimate that at least a fifth of homes have been destroyed by wildfires, which have now been burning for a week.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: Canada, fires
Duration: 2'01"

17:45
Weather slows Fort McMurray wildfire spread
BODY:
CBC National News reporter Briar reporter speaks to Checkpoint about the Fort McMurray wildfires from the cordon outside the city.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: Canada, fires
Duration: 1'50"

17:48
Sonny Tau pleads guilty to perverting justice
BODY:
The Ngapuhi leader Sonny Tau has pleaded guilty to having his son-in-law try to take the rap for killing kereru.
Topics: crime
Regions: Southland
Tags: Sonny Tau
Duration: 2'32"

17:50
Home support sector tell summit about fund woes
BODY:
Providers of home support services to more than 100,000 people say they've been gouged by underfunding and are stressed and strained across the sector.
Topics: health, politics
Regions:
Tags: home support
Duration: 3'31"

17:54
Student maps NZ highways in style of Underground
BODY:
A Christchurch Masters student has remapped New Zealand's highways in the style of the London Underground's famous maps.
Topics:
Regions: Canterbury
Tags: maps, Andrew Douglas-Clifford
Duration: 4'35"

18:08
Political Editor on PM response to Panama accusations
BODY:
The Prime Minister is trying to front-foot the Panama Papers controversy - promising to act if any significant problems are revealed through the documents or the review of disclosure rules. Political Editor Jane Patterson is in our gallery office.
Topics: politics, law
Regions:
Tags: Panama Papers
Duration: 5'33"

18:14
Foreign trusts skyrocket from 2006 to 2016
BODY:
In the last decade, the number of foreign trusts established in New Zealand has skyrocketed from nearly 2,000 in 2006 to over 10,000 today - though then - Minister of Revenue Peter Dunne says IRD did not inform him of the rising number.
Topics: politics, law
Regions:
Tags: Panama Papers
Duration: 1'58"

18:16
Cold case murder accused fingers "James"
BODY:
The man accused of a cold-case murder says "I didn't do it" .... "James" did.
Topics: crime
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: Kamal Reddy
Duration: 3'44"

18:20
TVNZ under fire over Hosking comments
BODY:
There are calls for state broadcaster TVNZ to apologise after it aired comments about Maori representation on its Seven Sharp programme that have been condemned as deeply offensive, sparking a social media storm.
Topics: te ao Maori, media
Regions:
Tags: TVNZ, Television New Zealand
Duration: 4'03"

18:24
Sir Mark Todd eyes up Rio Olympic medal
BODY:
New Zealand horse rider Sir Mark Todd fancies his chances at winning a sixth Olympic medal if he makes the Equestrian team to compete at the Rio Olympic Games in August..
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags: Mark Todd
Duration: 3'23"

18:27
Changing weather conditions will help firefighters
BODY:
Back to Fort McMurray in Canada now where it is hoped changing weather conditions will help firefighters get on top of the wildfire which has now been burning for a week.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: Canada, fires
Duration: 1'40"

=SHOW NOTES=

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

The stories behind the international headlines

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

RNZ's weeknight programme of entertainment and information

=AUDIO=

19:12
Who Bombed the Hilton? Australia's first major terrorist attack
BODY:
Award-winning filmmaker and historian, Rachel Landers has explored the unsolved mystery of the 1978 bombing of The Hilton Hotel on Sydney's George St -Australia's first act of terrorism.
Topics: crime, history
Regions:
Tags: 1978 bombing, Hilton Hotel, Sydney, terrorism
Duration: 22'14"

20:12
Nights' Science - Astronomy
BODY:
The large, slow rotation of Earth's axis called precession - former Mt John University Observatory superintendent Alan Gilmore raises our gaze to the bodies floating in space...
Topics: environment, science
Regions:
Tags: Earth, astronomy, Earth's axis, precession
Duration: 20'05"

=SHOW NOTES=

[image:67972:quarter] no metadata
7:12 The mystery behind Australia's first major terrorist attack
Award-winning filmmaker and historian Rachel Landers explores the mystery of the 1978 bombing of The Hilton Hotel on Sydney's George St in her book Who Bombed the Hilton?
7:35 Upbeat
British oboist Gordon Hunt is a professor at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama and Honorary Associate of the Royal Academy of Music. He's in New Zealand to direct the Christchurch Symphony Orchestra and play Mozart's Oboe Concerto in C major.

8:12 Nights' Science - Astronomy
What's up tonight? Jupiter! We'll take a quick tour of the current night sky with former Mt John University Observatory superintendent Alan Gilmore. Plus the large slow rotation of Earth's axis called precession.
[image:67970:third]
8:30 Window on the World
Unnatural Selection. Humans have been altering animals for millennia. We select the most docile livestock, the most loyal dogs, to breed the animals we need. This "artificial selection" is intentional. But as Adam Hart discovers, our hunting, fishing and harvesting are having unintended effects on wild animals. Welcome to the age of "unnatural selection".
9:30 Insight
China Free Trade Agreement. After travelling to China with the Prime Minister, RNZs political reporter, Demelza Leslie reports on what progress was made in getting a better free trade deal for New Zealand businesses.
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 At the Eleventh Hour
The Sounds of Memphis-Beale Street Caravan has Garage rock icon Jack Oblivian, with his uncompromising brand of Memphis rock and roll. From his work as a member of The Oblivians, his prolific stream of solo and side projects, to the many artists and bands that he's influenced, Jack O continues to generate enormous appreciation locally and abroad. Also we salute another lost original, Mississippi Bluesman L.C. Ulmer, who passed away early this year aged 87. He played with a haunting, rather unusual style from the deep delta, and worked all over the U.S. both as a travelling solo musician and a band leader.

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

International public radio features and documentaries

===9:30 PM. | Insight===
=DESCRIPTION=

An award-winning documentary programme providing comprehensive coverage of national and international current affairs (RNZ)

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

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

===11:06 PM. | Beale Street Caravan===
=DESCRIPTION=

David Knowles introduces the Memphis-based radio show with an international reputation for its location recordings of blues musicians live in concert (BSC)