RNZ National. 2016-05-30. 00:00-23:59.

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Year
2016
Reference
288233
Media type
Audio
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Rights Information
Year
2016
Reference
288233
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:

30 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 Grievous Bodily by Craig Harrison read by John O'Leary (12 of 15, RNZ); 3:30 Science (RNZ); 5:10 To the Max by Mark Inglis (5 of 10, 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 30 May 2016
BODY:
An Auckland law firm's connection to the corrupt former prime minister of Kazakhstan is revealed in the Panama Papers. Bill English is accused of wasting taxpayer money on consultants as he tries to sell state housing and firefighters in Wellington worry they could be prosecuted for running red lights on their way to emergencies.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 30'17"

06:06
Sports News for 30 May 2016
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'18"

06:10
Minister defends industry owned company
BODY:
The Minister for Primary Industries is defending putting a seafood company in charge of monitoring fishing boats.
Topics: environment, politics
Regions:
Tags: MPI, Trident Systems
Duration: 3'11"

06:13
Indianapolis 500 now underway
BODY:
The 100th running of the Indianapolis 500 is underway.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'35"

06:16
Firefighters in fear of running red lights
BODY:
The lawyer for a volunteer fireman charged with careless driving says his client's case is making other responders paranoid of red lights and slowing down the time it takes them to get to emergencies.
Topics: law
Regions:
Tags: fire engines
Duration: 2'38"

06:21
Early Business News for 30 May 2016
BODY:
A brief update of movements in the financial sector.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 2'29"

06:26
Morning Rural News for 30 May 2016
BODY:
News from the rural and farming sector.
Topics: rural, farming
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 4'10"

06:39
Government "wasted" $29 million on state house sell-off
BODY:
Labour says the government has wasted taxpayer money by spending 27 million dollars on consultants for the state house sell-off.
Topics: politics, housing
Regions:
Tags: consultants
Duration: 4'22"

06:43
Panama Papers - exiled Kazakhstan PM
BODY:
The Panama Papers show the family of an exiled Kazakhstan Prime Minister convicted of corruption is using a New Zealand company to hide the ownership of a 15-million dollar London home.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: Panama Papers, Azekhan Kazhegeldin
Duration: 1'40"

06:45
First All Blacks squad of 2016 named
BODY:
The first All Blacks squad of 2016 has been named.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags: All Blacks
Duration: 2'11"

06:50
NZ companies waste billions each year
BODY:
New Zealand companies are throwing away billions of dollars a year on pointless, unproductive and unnecessary administration according to a study released this morning.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: productivity
Duration: 2'40"

06:53
Tax changes could be a disincentive for staff share schemes
BODY:
A tax specialist says proposed changes aimed at simplifying the way employee share schemes are taxed could end up saddling shareholders with a big tax bill somewhere down the road.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: tax, Staples Rodway
Duration: 1'56"

06:55
Jim Parker in Australia
BODY:
As our man in Sydney, Jim Parker, reports, the debate in the prolonged election campaign is not about surpluses but who's got the bigger deficit.
Topics: business, politics
Regions:
Tags: Australia
Duration: 1'55"

06:58
Morning markets for 30 May 2016
BODY:
Wall Street ended higher on Friday after Janet Yellen's comments and revised figures for economic growth.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 47"

06:58
Week ahead May 30-June 3
BODY:
Another solid week of events and activity.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 42"

06:59
Business briefs
BODY:
The Australian newspaper is suggesting the chief executive of Fonterra Theo Spierings is about to leave the co-operative.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 16"

07:07
Sports News for 30 May 2016
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'25"

07:11
Panama Papers - exiled Kazakhstan PM
BODY:
The Panama Papers show the family of an exiled Kazakhstan Prime Minister convicted of corruption is using a New Zealand company to hide the ownership of a 15-million dollar London home.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: Panama Papers, Azekhan Kazhegeldin
Duration: 6'36"

07:18
Bill English rejects $27 million consultancy claim
BODY:
The Finance Minister Bill English says it's incorrect that 27 million dollars has been spent on consultants for the government's sell-off of state houses.
Topics: politics, housing
Regions:
Tags: consultants
Duration: 5'09"

07:23
More complaints surface into Dame Sian Elias' livestock
BODY:
The Canterbury regional council is looking into even more complaints about Dame Sian Elias' livestock.
Topics: environment
Regions: Canterbury
Tags: Dame Sian Elias', Hugh Fletcher
Duration: 3'21"

07:26
Fire case sets a 'dangerous precedent'
BODY:
Some firefighters rushing to emergencies in Wellington are now stopping at red lights for fear they might be prosecuted if they crash into someone.
Topics: law
Regions:
Tags: fire engines
Duration: 3'41"

07:34
Independent expert says DoC's funding has been cut
BODY:
An independent expert says the official Budget documents show the Department of Conservation's funding has been cut.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: DOC, Department of Conservation
Duration: 7'35"

07:41
Six new players in All Blacks squad
BODY:
There are several new players, a couple of recalls and a surprise or two among the 32 named yesterday in the All Blacks squad for next month's series against Wales.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags: All Blacks
Duration: 3'17"

07:46
Man wanting to be deported fears he will die
BODY:
A man wanting to be deported to New Zealand fears he will instead die of a heart attack, blocked from leaving Australia because he's a witness in a murder trial.
Topics: crime
Regions:
Tags: Australia
Duration: 3'28"

07:50
Leaders debate kicks Australian election campaign into gear
BODY:
People smuggling, superannuation and the national economic plan were all part of last night's Australian election leaders' debate.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Australia
Duration: 3'14"

07:53
Showdown looming between the govt and Akl Council
BODY:
A showdown is looming between the government and Auckland Council over the desperate state of housing in the city.
Topics: politics, housing
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags:
Duration: 6'38"

08:07
Sports News for 30 May 2016
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'22"

08:11
Trout poacher unrepentant despite jail time
BODY:
A man who spent six months in prison for stealing trout is unrepentant and says he won't apologise for trying to feed his family.
Topics: crime, te ao Maori
Regions:
Tags: poaching, trout
Duration: 3'45"

08:15
Warning that suicide stats don't tell full picture
BODY:
The former chief coroner says current statistics don't give a complete picture of the number of people who commit suicide.
Topics: life and society, law
Regions:
Tags: suicide
Duration: 4'45"

08:20
Minister says fishing industry not self-regulating
BODY:
The Minister for Primary Industries is defending putting a seafood company in charge of monitoring fishing boats.
Topics: environment, politics
Regions:
Tags: MPI, Trident Systems
Duration: 3'17"

08:23
Should Zika force the Olympics to be moved?
BODY:
One hundred and fifty top health professionals from around the world have written an open letter calling for the Rio Olympics to be moved or postponed because of the Zika virus.
Topics: health
Regions:
Tags: zika virus
Duration: 2'39"

08:26
Start of a new era for the All Blacks- Elliot Dixon
BODY:
One of the latest players set to don the black jersey for the first time says he's excited to be part of a new era for All Blacks rugby.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags: All Blacks
Duration: 4'21"

08:31
Markets Update for 30 May 2016
BODY:
A brief update of movements in the financial sector.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 1'07"

08:36
NZME and Fairfax say journalism relies on merger
BODY:
Media juggernauts NZME and Fairfax say their quality of local and regional news depends on a merger.
Topics: business, media
Regions:
Tags: NZME, Fairfax
Duration: 7'21"

08:44
Schools struggling to recruit blame Auckland's housing crisis
BODY:
Schools in Auckland say the city's overheated property and rental markets are making it hard for them to attract staff.
Topics: education, housing
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 4'36"

08:56
Phil Kafcaloudes with news from Australia
BODY:
Time to chat to our Melbourne correspondent Phil Kafcaloudes.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Australia
Duration: 3'35"

=SHOW NOTES=

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

Current affairs and topics of interest, including: 10:45 The Reading: Fitz - The colonial adventures of James Edward Fitzgerald by Jenifer Roberts (1 of 10, RNZ)

=AUDIO=

09:08
Clinical trials, why NZ needs to play catch-up
BODY:
Cancer experts are warning New Zealand could be putting itself at a ten year disadvantage with leading edge cancer treatment, unless it ups its involvement in clinical trials. Cancer specialists say the rate at which genomics medicine is advancing means not actively taking part, and letting other countries do the running, could put patients here at risk. Nine to Noon speaks to Professor Michael Findlay, the head of the Discipline of Oncology at the University of Auckland's School of Medical Sciences and Chris Jackson, the clinical director of the Cancer Society of New Zealand
Topics: health
Regions:
Tags: cancer
Duration: 24'17"

09:35
Modern judges and what they need to know
BODY:
With different kinds of specialist courts such as drug courts and the Rangatahi court - which uses the traditional values of tikanga Maori with young Maori offenders - judges need to have more knowledge of what goes on in communities. Professor Greg Reinhardt is the director of the Australasian Institute of Judicial Administration, based at Melbourne's Monash University and is at the forefront of innovations for the justice system in Australia and New Zealand and how courts operate.
Topics: law
Regions:
Tags: law, courts, judges, judiciary, Greg Reinhardt, Australasian Institute of Judicial Administration, AIJA
Duration: 12'04"

09:48
Africa correspondent Debora Patta
BODY:
On kidnapped Chibok girls.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: Africa
Duration: 11'29"

10:07
Dr Tim Malloy - a new perspective on life
BODY:
Dr Tim Malloy is a rural GP and part-time farmer who over the years has attended multiple quad bike accidents on farms in his area - helping to save victims' lives. But in January this year - Dr Malloy found himself deep in a ditch, seriously injured, with his 500cc quad bike on top of him. He talks to Kathryn about his recovery, physically and mentally, and returning to work with a new perspective on life and his profession.
EXTENDED BODY:
In January this year, rural GP and part-time farmer Dr Tim Malloy suddenly found himself deep in a ditch with his own 500cc quad bike on top of him.
After attending multiple quad bike accidents as a GP, Dr Malloy’s own accident left him with 15 fractured ribs, sustained collapsed lungs, massive burns to his abdomen and renal failure.
Dr Malloy is now back working part-time as a doctor. He talks with Kathryn about his recovery and his new perspective.
Listen to Dr Tim Malloy on Country Life (8 April 2016)
Interview highlights
Dr Tim Malloy: If you’ve seen the movie Hunt For The Wilderpeople you’ll understand the type of environment I live on. That formed quite a considerable portion of the setting of the movie… The settlers house (in Hunt For The Wilderpeople) is on my land.
I was mustering in a paddock that I don’t normally muster in. I was driving through the paddock and I knew there was a waterway, a ditch, ahead of me. I turned and rode my bike along the side of the ditch and made an error of judgement in which my front right wheel fell down the edge of the ditch in a little dip, which then threw me off the bike and in the ditch itself and the bike slowly rolled on top of me.
Fortunately it avoided my head and landed on my chest. So my greatest immediate threat with breathing, for which I was struggling very significantly. I didn’t reflect on anything further at that point, just getting my breath. I tried pushing the bike, which was a waste of time. I achieved nothing. And I tried to wriggle into a better position to see if I could breathe more easily, which possibly helped a little. But to be frank, breathing was a major problem. I had nowhere to go and I knew that. It wasn’t looking good at that point.
My first thought was how the hell am I going to get out of this scenario? I was not too distant from a road, but it was a country road that people don’t normally walk along. My bike, at this stage, was still running and I was also aware of a new risk to me as I felt the heat of the wheel, which was starting to heat up from the engine heat and also from the heat of the day as the day became hotter and hotter – don’t forget this is the middle of summer. I could feel it starting to burn into the side of my abdomen. That started to become increasingly uncomfortable.
I started to try and time my breathing so I could have sufficient breath to yell for help… Fortunately, the motor eventually stopped after about three hours and I could hear a chainsaw in the background. So I had the thought that if I could hear the chainsaw maybe he could hear me. I deliberately timed my yelling for help to the times when the chainsaw stopped, hoping that he would take his earmuffs off.
Fortunately for me - I’m told after the event – he must have done so and he called the owner of the property next to mine, who came home to the farm and went for a ride on his quad bike and found me in the paddock... The sheer exhilaration of his presence is something I will recall for a long time to come.
I’m significantly more positive about where I’m headed now. A trauma of this nature affects you in lots of different ways. The sense of guilt that I had around the stupidity of my actions, the impact on my family, the waste of the resources, the fact that I left my colleagues in the lurch to have to cope with my absence, these sorts of feelings… I’ve worked my way past them.
The loss of empowerment that comes with the vulnerability… is something that each of us adjusts to differently. I guess it’s my male macho upbringing or something, but I did not cope well with being disempowered and so dependent on others, as well as I thought I might or as well as I hoped. That disempowerment remains a continuing frustration. It affects you in lots of ways. This rollercoaster has been an important experience in terms of not just myself, but my knowledge and understanding of others in similar trauma.
As a GP of 30-odd years’ experience, I’d like to think I kind of knew this anyway, but the experience has reinforced for me some of those important values that patients have. That disempowerment, that vulnerability that you are in the hands of your carers and the critical important role health providers have in terms of keeping you informed, keeping you engaged in your own care and really just communicating with you at the level of a human being.
Topics: health, rural
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 28'04"

10:37
Book review - Two Decades Naked by Leigh Hopkinson
BODY:
Reviewed by Naomi Arnold, published by Hachette.
Topics: books
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 6'59"

11:07
Political commentators Matthew Hooton and Mike Williams
BODY:
The Budget's short honeymoon, and forecasts for growth and dairy price recovery... really?
Topics: politics, farming, rural
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 23'55"

11:34
A taste of inner city gardens
BODY:
We're making the most of the bounty from inner city gardens, including backyard honey. Sarah Adams is an urban agriculture adviser at Wellington City Council which has just opened its sixteenth community garden in Wellington's Bond Street and Cenna Lloyd an apiarist from Local Flavour Urban Honey Co.
EXTENDED BODY:
Wellington City Council which has just opened its 16th community garden in Wellington's Bond Street.
Kathryn Ryan talks with urban agriculture adviser Sarah Adams and Cenna Lloyd, an apiarist from Local Flavour Urban Honey Co.
Topics: food, environment
Regions:
Tags: community gardens
Duration: 12'54"

11:47
Off the beaten track with Kennedy Warne
BODY:
Kennedy Warne is in the Philippines where he has been looking at coral bleaching
EXTENDED BODY:
Today Kennedy Warne is in the Philippines, where he has been roaming a few of the country's 7100 islands. He reports back on the coral bleaching he has seen, and what is being done to save the coral reef around the Philippines.
Read an edited excerpt from the interview below:
KENNEDY: When we last spoke you asked me about coral bleaching, but I hadn’t seen it then. I sure have seen it now. I was diving off the island of Palawan, the very western-most of the Philippines’ main islands. There the water temperature was 31 degrees and when the temperature does reach the low 30s, bleaching is inevitable and it is indeed like swimming through a coral graveyard. This particular episode of bleaching is caused by El Nino, but the expectation that El Ninos, instead of being a one in six- or seven-year event, will start to become an annual event as the seas steadily warm.
The great tragedy here is that the hundred million Filipinos, and of course that is just one of the countries that make up this area called the Coral Triangle, these people rely on fish and they largely rely on reef fish, so the demise of the reef is going to be a great human tragedy and a huge environmental tragedy, given the vast number of creatures that rely on coral reefs. While I’ve seen spectatular creatures, from tiny multi-coloured sea slugs to the whale sharks that I was diving with just a couple of days ago, the shadow that looms over these things is the loss of reef.
So I’ve seen the bleaching and then perhaps even worse than that, yesterday I was diving in an area that is kind of the Philippines’ Great Barrier Reef really - or that’s the way they bill it, not nearly as big as the Great Barrier Reef but still a very impressive expanse of reef and seeing the impact of dynamite fishing. As fish become harder to catch, people become cleverer at catching them and more desperate. What is still quite prevalent here, though banned for several years, maybe decades, it’s highly illegal. But desperate fishermen will still use this technique. They fill a bottle, maybe a beer bottle full of fertiliser and sticking a blasting cap in the top, they then whack this blasting cap with a rock, count to three, and then throw it in the water, like a hand grenade. The impact of this blast just destroys reefs and stuns fish. Of course they’re just after the fish, but when you dive on a reef that has been blasted, and I’m talking basically every square metre is demolished, there’s very little still left alive on these reefs and it’s a great tragedy, but it’s understandable because these people are desperate for food and poor and they will resort to these kind of measures.
KATHRYN: There are some excellent restoration projects under way, are there?
KENNEDY: Philippines had three very bad typhoons in a row, about 2012, 2013, 2014 and they also had a big impact in some areas, removing about 80% of the hard corals in some places. I was diving off a lovely little island called Siquijor and the locals have teamed up with NGOs – coral reef specialists to do some rehabilitation and how they do it is they set a little hut. Little stands, with angled slabs of concrete and they angle them at 45 degrees which turns out to be the best angle for coral to settle and then they spread plastic netting (the kind you might see around a construction site) and they spread that across the rubble of the coral and then they attach living fragments of coral with cable ties.
So I was down there, tying on pieces of coral to that coral mat and it’s wonderful to see. Little new corals growing, little fish hiding amongst them underneath the map and this is a way to kick start the restoration of a reef in marine sanctuaries where they know the coral will be protected and have a chance to grow and perform its important role of being a fish habitat and nursery.
The marine protected areas strategy is that you devote ‘No take’ areas so that beyond, the fishermen have a chance to catch whatever flows out of that sanctuary. You really notice, particularly in a place like the Philippines that the circulation systems are very complex and very considerable, so the export of fish larvae and mollusc and sea urchin larvae is… this is what can restore and replenish the lost reef. It’s a real gamble as to whether the sanctuaries are big enough to counteract the heavy over-exploitation elsewhere.
Topics: environment
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 12'06"

=SHOW NOTES=

09:05 Clinical trials, why NZ needs to play catch-up
Cancer experts are warning New Zealand could be putting itself at a ten year disadvantage with leading edge cancer treatment, unless it ups its involvement in clinical trials. Cancer specialists say the rate at which genomics medicine is advancing means not actively taking part, and letting other countries do the running, could put patients here at risk. Nine to Noon speaks to Professor Michael Findlay, the head of the Discipline of Oncology at the University of Auckland's School of Medical Sciences and Chris Jackson, the clinical director of the Cancer Society of New Zealand
09:20 What modern judges need to know
With different kinds of specialist courts such as drug courts and the Rangatahi court - which uses the traditional values of tikanga Maori with young Maori offenders - judges need to have more knowledge of what goes on in communities. Professor Greg Reinhardt is the director of the Australasian Institute of Judicial Administration, based at Melbourne's Monash University and is at the forefront of innovations for the justice system in Australia and New Zealand and how courts operate.
09:45 Africa correspondent Debora Patta
10:05 Dr Tim Malloy - a new perspective on life
[image:64661:full]
Dr Tim Malloy is a rural GP, and part time farmer, and someone who, over the years, has attended multiple quad bike accidents on farms in his area - helping to save victims' lives. But in January this year - Dr Malloy found himself deep in a ditch, seriously injured, with his 500cc quad bike on top of him. He talks to Kathryn about his recovery, physically and mentally, and returning to work with a new perspective on life and his profession.
10:35 Book review - Two Decades Naked by Leigh Hopkinson
reviewed by Naomi Arnold, published by Hachette
10:45 The Reading
Fitz by Jenifer Roberts, read by Owen Scott. Part 6 of 10.
11:05 Political commentators Matthew Hooton and Mike Williams
11:30 A taste of inner city gardens
We're making the most of the bounty from inner city gardens, including backyard honey.
Sarah Adams is an urban agriculture adviser at Wellington City Council which has just opened its sixteenth community garden in Wellington's Bond Street and Cenna Lloyd an apiarist from Local Flavour Urban Honey Co
[gallery:2074]
11:45 Off the beaten track with Kennedy Warne
Kennedy Warne is in the Philippines where he has been looking at coral bleaching
[gallery:2072]

=PLAYLIST=

Artist: Avalanche City
Song: Little Fire
Composer: Baxter
Album: We are for the Wild Places
Label: Warner
Played at: 9.29

Artist: The Beatles
Song: Blackbird
Composer: McCartney
Album: The White Album
Label: Parlophone
Played at: 10.34

Artist: Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings
Song: Long time, Wrong Time
Composer: Gastlegum
Album: Give the People What They Want
Label: Daptoneq
Played at: 11.30

===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 30 May 2016
BODY:
Inland Revenue ducks key questions on the latest New Zealand Panama Papers claims; An industry leader warns the government's insulation scheme may leave many low income families out in the cold.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 15'03"

12:17
Stride Property's full-year net profit rises 34%, rents up 21%
BODY:
The commercial office, retail and industrial properties investor, Stride, has seen its full-year net profit rise by more than a third, reflecting increased property values and rents.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'09"

12:18
Hellaby Holdings' earnings expected to take a hit
BODY:
The diversified investment company, Hellaby Holdings, says its full-year earnings will be below previous guidance due to volatility in the oil and gas sector.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'49"

12:20
Research indicates NZ and Australian housing markets are one
BODY:
Economists have been pondering the implications of some research suggesting that the New Zealand and Australian housing markets are one in the same.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'54"

12:22
NZ companies waste billions each year
BODY:
New Zealand companies are being urged to review and rethink their administrative systems to save time and money.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'10"

12:24
Midday Markets for 30 May 2016
BODY:
For the latest from the markets we're joined by Brad Gordon at Macquarie Private Wealth.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'06"

12:26
Business in brief for 30 May 2016
BODY:
Sealegs turns a profit; Turners reports higher pre-tax profit; Moa Group cuts full-year losses on improving sales.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'11"

12:27
Midday Sports News for 30 May 2016
BODY:
Rio Olympic hopes come crashing down for BMX silver medallist Sarah Walker.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'45"

12:35
Midday Rural News for 30 May 2016
BODY:
News from the rural and farming sectors.
Topics: rural, farming
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 9'03"

=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=

13:15
The Solar energy debate
BODY:
Back in March, Jesse spoke with the Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment, Dr Jan Wright, who was saying electric cars help combat climate change, but solar panels do little. She was backing a report by Concept Consulting, and it caused quite a lot of chatter.
EXTENDED BODY:
Back in March, Jesse spoke with the Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment, Dr Jan Wright, who was saying electric cars help combat climate change, but solar panels do little. She was backing a report by Concept Consulting, and it caused quite a lot of chatter.
We got a lot of texts and emails from fans of solar energy, criticising the report as narrow, simplistic and flawed.
It was the first of three reports by the company, and looked at the environmental impacts of solar. Reports on emissions and economic impact are due in the next few months.
In response to the report, New Zealand solar power company, Solarcity, has released its own findings.
The report is called The value of solar energy to NZ: How Concept Consulting Got it Wrong. The company says it's clear the argument that rooftop solar harms the disadvantaged, simply isn't true.
Topics: energy, environment
Regions:
Tags: solar energy, Solarcity
Duration: 7'17"

13:25
Extent of coral death at Great Barrier Reef revealed
BODY:
Scientists estimate that mass bleaching, has on average, killed thirty five per cent of corals on the Great Barrier Reef.
EXTENDED BODY:
Scientists from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies in Queensland have completed diving and aerial surveys of 84 reefs and say there is at least some bleaching at 93 per cent of individual reefs.
But even worse, 35 per cent of corals have died in the northern and central sectors of the reef.
It's the first confirmation of how much coral has died since mass bleaching began when sea surface temperatures soared earlier in the year.
Jesse speaks with one of the scientists involved in the research, Dr Mia Hoogenboom from the College of Marine & Environmental Sciences.
Topics: environment, science
Regions:
Tags: Great Barrier Reef, Queensland, Australia
Duration: 8'48"

13:35
Making it easier to travel with a disability
BODY:
Kimberly Graham was always a keen traveller, and wanted to continue after having her son, who has Cerebral Palsy and relies on a wheelchair for mobility.
EXTENDED BODY:
Kimberly Graham was always a keen traveller, and wanted to continue after having her son, who has cerebral palsy and relies on a wheelchair for mobility. She found that even after researching the accessibility of places she wanted to take her family, there would often be barriers once she got there. So she decided to do something about it herself, and set up a travel information company, Oyster Accessible Travel, catering specifically for people with disabilities.
Kimberly Graham joined Jesse Mulligan in the studio.
Topics: disability
Regions:
Tags: cerebral palsy, wheelchair, mobility, holiday, Oyster Accessible Travel
Duration: 10'26"

13:42
Favourite Album - Sex Pistols
BODY:
Sex Pistols: Never Mind the Bollocks.
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags: Sex Pistols, Never Mind the Bollocks
Duration: 18'06"

14:10
TV review with Alex Casey
BODY:
Alex Casey reviews tv shows: Lady Dynamite, Happy Valley, Singstar Karaoke and Game of Thrones.
Topics: media
Regions:
Tags: Lady Dynamite, Happy Valley, Singstar Karaoke, Game of Thrones
Duration: 12'40"

14:20
Book review with Pip Adam
BODY:
Today Pip Adam reviews the books: "A Briefcase, Two Pies and a Penthouse" by Brannavan Gnanalingam published by Lawrence and Gibson; and "Mislaid" by Nell Fink published by Ecco/Harper Collins.
Topics: books
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 6'53"

14:27
Music review with Colin Morris
BODY:
Colin Morris reviews releases from Jesse Wilde and Gregory Porter.
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags: Jesse Wilde, Gregory Porter
Duration: 17'48"

14:45
Theatre review with Michael Gilchrist
BODY:
Michael Gilchrist reviews The Magic Flute, a New Zealand Opera production. It is an opera in two acts by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart with the Libretto by Emanuel Schikaneder. Directed by Sara Brodie and conducted by Wyn Davies.
Topics: music, arts
Regions:
Tags: The Magic Flute, opera
Duration: 5'10"

14:50
Theatre review with Lindsay Clark
BODY:
Lindsay Clark reviews the Court Theatre production of "Educating Rita", by Willy Russell, directed by Yvonne Martin.
Topics: arts
Regions: Canterbury
Tags: theatre, Educating Rita
Duration: 4'59"

15:10
The Last of the Nazi Hunters
BODY:
Nazi war criminals who fled Germany at the end of World War II are dying of old age and so are the men and women who hunted them across the generations. Former Newsweek foreign correspondent Andrew Nagorski says their full stories can now be told for the first time. His new book, The Nazi Hunters is an account of post-war justice after the Holocaust.
Topics: conflict, politics, history, identity, inequality, author interview
Regions:
Tags: Second World War, Nazi leaders, Nuremberg, The Nazi Hunters, holocaust, Old Age, Germany
Duration: 25'49"

15:30
Heart of the Tiger - NZ's first female Indian police officer
BODY:
Leaving behind an abusive arranged marriage as a teenage bride in North India Constable Mandeep Kaur struggled as a single mother in a foreign country to become New Zealand's first Indian female police officer.
EXTENDED BODY:
Ethnic Liaison Officer Constable Mandeep Kaur thinks that New Zealand is a more accepting and tolerant country than Australia. 12 years ago Mandeep escaped to Australia from an abusive marriage in India. She struggled there as a single mother with two children and no English. Then she came to New Zealand and it got easier.
It was so powerful, so empowering... The weight had been lifted. I could be myself you know? - Mandeep Kaur

Constable Mandeep Kaur is taking me on her beat in West Auckland but first, at the Henderson Police Station we look at photographs from another lifetime.
She shows me an image of her as a beautiful but uncertain 16 year old, dressed and decorated as a prize, for a photograph that her arranged husband would approve her from. "My journey starts as a woman from a child. I have two beautiful grown up kids from that marriage [they're grown up now and I'm very proud of them], but unfortunately the marriage didn't do well."
In India we don't have social support. I had to either stay with my parents or with my in-laws. So I lived with my parents. I asked my mum 'What if I can [study] overseas?' She said 'Don't even think it. Your father won't approve it' - Mandeep Kaur

"It was a long process getting a visa, a passport. I begged her to convince my dad. Finance was one of the big hurdles. I sell my assets from my dowry [to] contribute to my airfares to Sydney, accommodation and student fees."
She shows me another photograph of her with her two young children. The photos mark off the heartbreaking stages of her escape, her fight and her success.
"This photograph is of the day I'm leaving India. My daughter is eight and my son is six. They were not told I was going overseas. We were afraid my in-laws would try to take them from me." Constable Kaur spent three years away from her children while she studied and missed them everyday. But eventually she won the right through the Indian courts to bring her children to New Zealand.
When Constable Kaur was the eldest of two young girls and with no brother, her mother had regularly wished she had been a boy instead, saying 'if you were a boy at least you could have joined the army or the police'. It sparked a dream that would eventually come true.
After policing in Counties Manukau she has recently been promoted to be the Ethnic Peoples' Community Relations Officer for Waitemata District. In the police car she tells me more about working in West Auckland. It's a change from the heavily South Asian population in Counties Manukau where she had been predominantly policing to West Auckland (Waitemata) where there are many African youth.
Baljit Kaur (no relation) gives us a warm welcome when we arrive at the Waitakere Community Resource Centre. Constable Kaur is newly returned to the area where she lived, but as a police officer and an essential link between the police and community. "Mandeep's been a great asset - we have someone we can relate to within the ethnic communities. If Mandeep comes she can talk about anything - family violence - anything."
And someone else agrees. With our fast-changing demographics, Inspector Rakesh Naidoo explains how valuable Ethnic Liaison Officers like Constable Kaur are to both the police and our ethnic communities. "Mandeep's empathy, because she's able to understand the cultural challenges that face our families - in relation to victimisation - we find victims are more likely to approach people that can understand them, if they have the same language. Mandeep's experience and her own learnings have been very valuable for the police."
The Inspector says that the Constable is also a role model for Indian women.
Mandeep's example shows there may be many barriers you have to overcome. She had never swum before [her police training], never worn a swimming costume before, she was in her mid-thirties when she decided on a dramatic career change and she backed herself to do that - Rakesh Naidoo

We're back in the car and on our way to the Hari Krishna Temple in Kumeu. Upon arrival we're greeted with offerings of prasad by Aramiya Naidu, one of the founders and a priest at the temple. Constable Kaur tells me that the Holi Festival or Festival of Colours took place at the temple in February this year with 11,000 visitors in one day - enough for a police presence. "Many communities were part of this function, everyone enjoyed it. All four of us police officers were completely covered in coloured powder."
Mandeep Kaur wants to encourage more from the ethnic communities to join the force - especially women. "We need more ethnic liaison officers, saying 'You can do it'."
Topics: crime, spiritual practices, identity
Regions:
Tags: police, Indian New Zealanders, culture, Asia, India, Festival of Colours
Duration: 18'27"

15:45
The Panel pre-show for 30 May 2016
BODY:
Your feedback, and a preview of the guests and topics on The Panel.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 13'24"

=SHOW NOTES=

1:10 First song
1:15 The Solar energy debate
Back in March, Jesse spoke with the Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment, Dr Jan Wright, who was saying electric cars help combat climate change, but solar panels do little. She was backing a report by Concept Consulting, and it caused quite a lot of chatter.
We got a lot of texts and emails from fans of solar energy, criticising the report as narrow, simplistic and flawed.
It was the first of three reports by the company, and looked at the environmental impacts of solar. Reports on emissions and economic impact are due in the next few months.
In response to the report, New Zealand solar power company, Solarcity, has released its own findings.
The report is called The value of solar energy to NZ: How Concept Consulting Got it Wrong. The company says it's clear the argument that rooftop solar harms the disadvantaged, simply isn't true.
1:25 Extent of coral death at Great Barrier Reef revealed
Scientists from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies in Queensland have completed diving and aerial surveys of 84 reefs and say there is at least some bleaching at 93 per cent of individual reefs.
But even worse, 35 per cent of corals have died in the northern and central sectors of the reef.
It's the first confirmation of how much coral has died since mass bleaching began when sea surface temperatures soared earlier in the year.
[gallery:2075]
Jesse speaks with one of the scientists involved in the research, Dr Mia Hoogenboom from the College of Marine & Environmental Sciences.
1:35 Making it easier to travel with a disability
Kimberley Graham was always a keen traveller, and wanted to continue after having her son, who has Cerebral Palsy and relies on a wheelchair for mobility. She found despite doing research into the accessibility of places she wanted to take her family, there would often be barriers once she got there. So she decided to do something about it herself, and set up a travel information company, Oyster Accessible Travel, catering specifically for people with disabilities.
[gallery:2073]
1:40 Favourite album
2:10 The Critics
[image:69678:half]
3:10 The Last of the Nazi Hunters
Nazi war criminals who fled Germany at the end of World War II are dying of old age and so are the men and women who hunted them across the generations. Former Newsweek foreign correspondent Andrew Nagorski says their full stories can now be told for the first time. His new book, The Nazi Hunters is an account of post-war justice after the Holocaust.
3:35 Voices
Her dream as a girl was to wear a uniform; to become a police officer or to join the army. She left behind a life as an abused teenage bride in North India and struggled as a single mother in a foreign country with no English. She even learned to swim - all of this to become New Zealand’s first Indian female police officer.
In today's Voices, Lynda Chanwai-Earle goes on the beat with Constable Mandeep Kaur in West Auckland to learn more:
3:45 The Panel Pre-Show

=PLAYLIST=

JESSE MULLIGAN : AFTERNOONS 1- 4pm
Monday 30th
JESSE'S SONG:
ARTIST: Doe Paoro (feat. Son Little)
TITLE: Shadows
COMP: Sonia Kreitzer, Aaron Livingston
ALBUM: Single
LABEL: Download
FAVOURITE ALBUM:
ARTIST: Sex Pistols
TITLE: Problems
COMP: Paul Cook, Steve Jones, Glen Matlock, Johnny Rotten
ALBUM: Nevermind The Bollocks
LABEL: Virgin
ARTIST: Sex Pistols
TITLE: Pretty Vacant
COMP: Paul Cook, Steve Jones, Glen Matlock, Johnny Rotten
ALBUM: Nevermind The Bollocks
LABEL: Virgin
ARTIST: Sex Pistols
TITLE: Holiday in the Sun
COMP: Paul Cook, Steve Jones, Johnny Rotten, Sid Vicious
ALBUM: Nevermind The Bollocks
LABEL: Virgin
ARTIST: Sex Pistols
TITLE: God Save The Queen
COMP: Paul Cook, Steve Jones, Glen Matlock, Johnny Rotten
ALBUM: Nevermind The Bollocks
LABEL: Virgin
THE CRITICS: MUSIC with Colin Morris
ARTIST: Jesse Wilde & The Drive
TITLE: Ghost Town Road
COMP: Jesse Wilde, Rick Beresford
ALBUM: Ghost Town Road
LABEL: Wilde Records
ARTIST: Gregory Porter
TITLE: In Fashion
COMP: Gregory Porter
ALBUM: Take Me To The Alley
LABEL: Universal
ARTIST: Jesse Wilde & The Drive
TITLE: Fallin'
COMP: Jesse Wilde
ALBUM: Ghost Town Road
LABEL: Wilde Records
THE PANEL HALF-TIME SONG:
ARTIST: The Statler Brothers
TITLE: Flowers On The Wall
COMP: Lew DeWitt
ALBUM: Flowers On The Wall
LABEL: Columbia

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

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

=AUDIO=

15:45
The Panel pre-show for 30 May 2016
BODY:
Your feedback, and a preview of the guests and topics on The Panel.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 13'24"

16:05
The Panel with Barry Corbett and Jeremy Elwood (Part 1)
BODY:
Auckland traffic; Firefighters hesitant after charges laid; Decline in marriage and child poverty.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 23'11"

16:06
The Panel with Barry Corbett and Jeremy Elwood (Part 2)
BODY:
Panel says; Cancer and mobile phones; Are smartphones making us hyper?; Animals in zoos.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 26'38"

16:07
Panel Intro
BODY:
What the Panelists Barry Corbett and Jeremy Elwood have been up to.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 3'58"

16:10
Auckland traffic
BODY:
Matt Lowrie of the Transport Blog talks about Auckland rail, driverless cars and the Chinese idea of a flying bus.
Topics: transport
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags:
Duration: 8'53"

16:15
Firefighters hesitant after charges laid
BODY:
Lawyer Chris O'Connor discusses how volunteer firefighters have no support after one is charged over an intersection crash.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: fire fighters, firemen
Duration: 4'30"

16:20
Decline in marriage and child poverty
BODY:
Is marriage a protector against child poverty as claimed by Family First?
Topics: life and society
Regions:
Tags: marriage
Duration: 5'40"

16:35
I'd rather stay home
BODY:
Would you rather be at home than out socialising.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'53"

16:40
Panel Says
BODY:
What the Panelists Barry Corbett and Jeremy Elwood have been thinking about.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 6'50"

16:40
Cancer and mobile phones
BODY:
Telecommunications advisor Jonathan Brewer talks about the conflicting information around mobile phones and cancer.
Topics: health
Regions:
Tags: cancer, Cell Phones
Duration: 7'57"

16:45
Are smartphones making us hyper?
BODY:
Smartphone use is being blamed for making us act like we have ADHD.
Topics: health
Regions:
Tags: smartphones, ADHD
Duration: 1'44"

16:50
Animals in zoos
BODY:
Harambe the gorilla was shot after a child got into his enclosure. Was it the right thing to do? And Zuri the giraffe is travelling from Auckland to Wellington to a new enclosure.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 3'02"

16:55
Trump landslide predicted
BODY:
Donald Trump has proven commentators wrong throughout the presidential campaign. Will he win the presidency by a landslide.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Donald Trump
Duration: 4'46"

16:57
Stuck 4-wheel drives could've been freed
BODY:
Bulldozer contractor saya the 4-wheel drives stuck in snow on the Old Man Range didn't need to stay there until spring.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'16"

=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 30th May 2016
BODY:
Watch Monday's full programme here.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 00"

17:09
Panama Papers lead to anti-laundering law push
BODY:
Prime Minister John Key says as a result of the Panama Papers the Government is trying to get the second phase of anti-money laundering laws in place as fast as it can.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Panama Papers
Duration: 4'25"

17:13
Families to miss out on low-cost insulation
BODY:
Insulation providers say thousands of low income families will miss out on free or subsidised insulation after the Government slashed funding for its Warm-up programme.
Topics: health, energy
Regions:
Tags: insulation, low income families, Warm-up programme
Duration: 4'01"

17:17
Te Puea marae inundated with calls for help
BODY:
South Auckland marae Te Puea opened its doors to the homeless last week and has been inundated with calls for help both from social services and the homeless.
Topics: housing, health
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 3'41"

17:23
Alpine Adventures helicopters grounded for two weeks
BODY:
Safety concerns have led the Civil Aviation Authority to ground all Alpine Adventures helicopters, after a crash on Fox Glacier last year.
Topics: transport
Regions:
Tags: helicopters, Fox Glacier
Duration: 2'27"

17:27
Gorilla killing angers members of public
BODY:
After a 17-year-old gorilla was shot at Cincinnati Zoo when a child fell in its enclosure, thousands of people are outraged and have signed a petition criticising the zoo.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: Cincinnati Zoo, gorilla
Duration: 6'29"

17:35
Evening business 30 May 2016
BODY:
News from the business sector, including a market report.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'23"

17:38
Police take stand on alcohol abuse at racecourses
BODY:
Punters at Upper Hutt's Trentham Racecourse and Riccarton in Christchurch will find their access to alcohol restricted as police take a stand on alcohol abuse and illegal alcohol sales.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: Trentham Racecourse, Riccarton Racecourse, alcohol restricted
Duration: 2'14"

17:41
Builders may quit if forced to guarantee their work
BODY:
As Housing Minister Nick Smith considers requiring builders to guarantee their work, some say this will lead to them dropping out of the sector.
Topics: housing
Regions:
Tags: building, construction, guarantee workmanship
Duration: 2'50"

17:44
Veterans poorly looked after, says Trump
BODY:
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump has told a biker's rally that illegal immigrants are better looked after in the United States than the country's own war veterans.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: United States, Donald Trump
Duration: 1'50"

17:45
New tobacco policy outcomes 'racist'
BODY:
Though she has supported increasing tobacco tax in the past, Associate Professor Dr Marewa Glover is speaking out against the government's proposed tax increases which will bring prices up to $30 a packet.
Topics: health
Regions:
Tags: tobacco tax
Duration: 4'40"

17:47
Crocodile snatches woman in Northern Queensland
BODY:
A New Zealand woman is feared dead after she was taken by a crocodile in the Daintree National Park in far north Queensland.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: Daintree National Park, Queensland, Australia, crocodile
Duration: 2'23"

17:50
Air NZ pulls out of Whanganui
BODY:
Air New Zealand is pulling out of Whanganui and scrapping flights from Blenheim to Christchurch.
Topics: transport
Regions: Northland, Marlborough, Canterbury
Tags: Air New Zealand, Whanganui, Blenheim, Christchurch
Duration: 3'13"

17:53
Zuri the giraffe goes on tour
BODY:
One-year-old giraffe Zuri is on a 650km long journey by road from Auckland to Wellington Zoo and is being pulled by a truck in a specially designed crate.
Topics:
Regions: Auckland Region, Wellington Region
Tags: Zuri, Giraffe, roadtrip
Duration: 2'39"

18:09
Brazilian politician used NZ company to hide wealth
BODY:
Disgraced Brazilian politician Eduardo Cunha has used a New Zealand company to hide his wealth in secret bank accounts, in the latest from the Panama Papers investigation.
Topics: economy, business
Regions:
Tags: Panama Papers, Eduardo Cunha, Brazil
Duration: 5'37"

18:18
Green & Labour MPs on how an Akld marae is coping with homeless
BODY:
Green Party MP Marama Davidson and Labour's Peeni Henare, the MP for Tamaki Makaurau who've both put in some hard work at Te Puea marae over the weekend.
Topics: te ao Maori, housing
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: Te Puea marae
Duration: 6'30"

=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=

19:20
Ancient Texts in the Otago Museum
BODY:
Assyriologist Prof Wayne Horowitz on the significance of 3500 year old cuneiform texts in the Otago Museum. He's the leader of the Cuneiform in Australia and New Zealand (CANZ) project, which aims to translate all cuneiform inscriptions in New Zealand and Australian collections.
Topics: history
Regions: Otago
Tags: cuneiform
Duration: 17'41"

20:10
Nights' Science - Toxicology
BODY:
Burning pain, itching, and numbness are what you have to look forward to if you run into the native nettle Ongaonga. Toxicologist Dr. Leo Schep tells us about this prickly plant.
Topics: health
Regions:
Tags: poison
Duration: 17'03"

=SHOW NOTES=

[image:70001:full]
7:12 Ancient Texts in the Otago Museum
Assyriologist Prof Wayne Horowitz on the significance of 3500 year old cuneiform texts in the Otago Museum.
He's the leader of the Cuneiform in Australia and New Zealand (CANZ) project, which aims to translate all cuneiform inscriptions in New Zealand and Australian collections.
7:35 Upbeat
Opera Etiquette. Are jandals and skinny black jeans appropriate attire for the opera? Can I boo at my favourite villain? I want to tweet, is that ok? We get the low-down on opera etiquette from Westie turned opera singer Wade Kernot who's on stage with New Zealand Opera's The Magic Flute.

8:12 Nights' Science - Toxicology
Burning pain, itching, and numbness are what you have to look forward to if you run into the native nettle Ongaonga. Toxicologist Dr. Leo Schep tells us about this prickly plant.
[image:69905:full]
8:30 Window on the World
Growing Malawi - Malawi, in Sub-Saharan Africa, is one of the world's poorest countries with its GDP nearly at the bottom of the global league table. Malawi desperately needs economic growth yet despite hundreds of millions of dollars of donor money which has poured into the country for decades, overall the impact on the ground has been disappointing - poverty levels remain stubbornly high, education standards and job opportunities pitifully low. But there is a rare piece of good news from Malawi: a new alliance between the private sector, a group of smallholder farmers and one of the country's biggest international donors - the European Union, is helping to run a sustainable sugar cane business and turn lives around.
9:30 Insight
Teresa Cowie asks if New Zealand can cope with rapidly growing tourism and the negative side effects it brings.
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 this evening has a mixed bag of blues and Americana.There's old time rockabilly-country from The Motel Mirrors, then The Memphis Ukulele Band do Elvis and Orbison.Following on is innuendo filled blues from Libby Rae Watson, and Terry "Harmonica" Bean with real old style Mississippi blues, and to wrap it up is more Motel Mirrors.

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

International public radio features and documentaries

=AUDIO=

=SHOW NOTES=

===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)