RNZ National. 2016-09-04. 00:00-23:59.

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Year
2016
Reference
288330
Media type
Audio
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Rights Information
Year
2016
Reference
288330
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:

04 September 2016

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

Including: 12:05 Music after Midnight; 12:30 Te Wherowhero by Pei Te Hurunui Jones (RNZ); 1:05 Our Changing World (RNZ); 1:45 Go Ahead Caller (RNZ) 2:05 Heart and Soul (RNZ); 2:35 Hymns on Sunday; 3:05 Meeting Dad by Jane Seaford told by Loren Horsley; 3:30 Te Waonui a Te Manu Korihi (RNZ); 4:06 Met Service Coastal Weather Forecast (RNZ) 4:30 Science in Action (BBCWS); 5:10 Mihipeka: Time of Turmoil by Mihipeka Edwards (12 of 14, RNZ)

===6:08 AM. | Storytime===
=DESCRIPTION=

Orangucat Moves In, by Louise Gould, told by Miranda Harcourt; Doggie, by Maria Samuela, told by Fiona Collins; The Trouser Ball Trick, by Pauline Cartwright, told by Ross Jolly; The Island, by Diana Noonan, told by Rima te Wiata; Jellybean, by Tessa Duder, told by Helen Jones; The Kuia and the Spider, by Patricia Grace, told by Peter Kaa; Mary Dell's Plane Tree, by David Somerset, told by Donna Akersten

===7:10 AM. | Sunday Morning===
=DESCRIPTION=

A fresh attitude on current affairs, the news behind the news, documentaries, sport from the outfield, politics from the insiders, plus Mediawatch, the week in Parliament and music
7:32 The Week in Parliament
An in-depth perspective of legislation and other issues from the house
8:10 Insight
An award-winning documentary programme providing comprehensive coverage of national and international current affairs
9:06 Mediawatch
Critical examination and analysis of recent performance and trends in New Zealand's news media (RNZ)

=AUDIO=

07:08
John Maynard and Mark Stewart - The Postbox Problem
BODY:
Wallace talks to the president of the Southern District of the Postal Workers Union Aotearoa, John Maynard, and NZ Post's Mark Stewart about why post boxes are disappearing from our streets and whether this will have an impact on voting in the upcoming local elections.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: New Zealand Post, Post boxes, Local Body Elections
Duration: 10'22"

07:20
Stephen Jacobi - G20 in China
BODY:
The G20 - a grouping of 20 of the world's largest economies - are meeting in China this weekend. Leaders of 19 countries and a representative from the European Union are gathering to discuss the state of the world and debate how best to give their sluggish economies a rev up. Former diplomat and business consultant Stephen Jacobi gives his take on what might come out of the world's highest powered talkfest.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: G20
Duration: 9'13"

07:30
The Week In Parliament for 4 September 2016
BODY:
In the one select committee during this week's adjournment, the Local Government and Environment Committee hears submissions from grumpy mayors and local body politicians on the sweeping new powers for the Local Government Commission in the Local Government Act 2002 Amendment Bill. Another National MP's member's bill drawn from the ballot attracts scorn from the Opposition and a move by ACT MP David Seymour to have it included in the Statutes Amendment Bill to be debated next week. Education Minister, Hekia Parata, faces questions from Opposition MPs trying to unravel the implications for the education system in her Education (Update) Amendment Bill which she says contains the biggest changes to the sector in 27 years.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 14'46"

07:47
Local Body Elections- Southland
BODY:
Each week we will visit a region in New Zealand to find out what the big issues are in the upcoming local body elections. This week we speak to Southland Times reporter Briar Babbington.
Topics: politics
Regions: Southland
Tags: Local Body Elections, Southland
Duration: 9'16"

08:12
Insight: Beacon for the Homeless Closes its Doors
BODY:
Sharon Brettkelly looks at Te Puea Marae's experience as an emergency housing provider.
EXTENDED BODY:
Te Puea Marae's winter programme for the homeless has been hailed a success after it sheltered 181 people in the last three months, including more than 100 children.
It has been a beacon for families living in cars, garages and on streets and put the spotlight on homelessness and the emergency housing crisis.
But its chairman, Hurimoana Dennis, says it cannot continue, as it relied on the generosity of hundreds of volunteers, some of whom put their lives on hold to help give destitute people a new start.
Johnboi Kukutai stands in front of a sign that says "Tumanako Way", on a small lane behind Te Puea Marae in Mangere, south Auckland.
Tumanako means hope, and for three months the lane connected the tiny portable cabins that have housed nearly 200 people, the makeshift offices for social workers and government agencies like Work and Income and Housing New Zealand and the marquee tent turned into a dining room.
Mr Kukutai, who has lived at the marae for five years and been one of the leaders of the Manaaki Tangata programme, woke one morning soon after the marae opened its door to people without homes, to find to one of the kaumatua blessing the sign.
"You've got the social services team, you've got the accommodation team, you've got the clothing, the food, you've got the cooking team and also our marae admin team. In between there are all walks of life. For me that's what Tumanako is, a walk of life."
They were all part of the tiny temporary village where hundreds of volunteers crossed paths in their tireless efforts to give the homeless they called "whānau" a new start.
Some came to work at 7am and went home at 10pm. They cooked for up to 200 people a day, they folded and stacked clothes that filled dozens of bags, they sorted the 20,000 cans of food and thousands more packets of dried food.
Marae chairman Hurimoana Dennis told guests at last week's closing ceremony that more than 1200 volunteers came from all over the country.
"I walked into the kitchen one day and everyone in that kitchen was Pākehā and I say that with the utmost respect. It was the mums from Remuera and Ponsonby who came in to cook our kai.
"What I can say is we've had every possible ethnicity come to this marae. The Sikh Indian community, the Haitian community, the churches cooking our dinner, our lunches. Everybody here is a volunteer, nobody gets paid.
"Yes we had our fights we had our differences but we got good at managing them. Get over it, move on"
Every second day, Mere Kahikomene travelled nearly 20km from the other side of Auckland to work in a small, dark room, sorting through the boxes of donated toiletries including bars of soap, toilet paper, band aids and tissues. She even made a shelf for gifts.
"Some of the rawa kore [homeless] might have a birthday then we'd give them a gift if they were here. There's every basic need that the rawa kore weren't getting out there. They couldn't even really afford to buy sanitary pads because they were using newspaper and that's sad."
She cried at the thought the programme was finishing but was already planning to help at Manurewa Marae, which has started a four-nights-a-week programme, called Po Marie (good night).
"I get something out of it, its so uplifting, the wairua, the spirit is so awesome."
Jenny Nuku has been in charge of Manaaki Tangata's finances and has a record of every item that has been donated. In her office on Tumanako Way, which she shared with Johnboi Kukutai and other volunteer administration staff, she had stacks of exercise books filled with written lists of food and a growing database of every person and business that had donated.
"We hope to publicly thank everyone. The generosity from people and local businesses, regional businesses, national business, it's just been unreal. I truly can't explain. Within the first week of operation, we had $30,000 in our account after we opened a new bank account for Manaaki Tangata, and we just could not believe it."
The marae committee had agreed it would cover costs like utility and medical bills for whānau but cash donations of more than $100,000 meant the marae's own financial contribution was "just a drop in the bucket", she said.
Donations came in from around the world after an Al Jazeera story about the marae.
"We had as far as Europe, Australia and it wasn't just New Zealanders. The interest has been just too far and wide that I couldn't name every country.
"We didn't even know what was in the media because we were here from morning till night. It was only when other people came in and told us what they'd seen on TV. We were just so focused on what we had here."
Sometimes carloads of volunteers would come to help and she did not have the heart to turn them away, she said. Many volunteers worked long hours but none were paid.
"That's what Manaaki Tangata's about. You don't want to be glorified and paid at the same time, all you want to do is help those people. We didn't understand the politics behind it because we had all these people, some very destitute. And all we wanted to do was for them to get confidence in themselves and lucky a lot of the children were the angels of pulling their parents together."
She felt the marae made a small difference but there were many thousands more who needed help.
"But you see the different faces, the different stories, the sadness and then the happiness with two days."
When George Marshall wasn't at his full time job working with people with disabilities, he dedicated his time off to the marae in the "food shop" he nicknamed Pak'n'Save.
"We've just about got everything you would buy in a normal shop. We also have a container out on the road that's full of food.
"It's been an enjoyable experience and the families that come through, they're just great. They've been in here helping me stack shelves, unpack boxes while they're waiting to find homes.
"The people that I've met are just amazing. They are just in unforeseen circumstances but they're not sitting around and expecting people to do everything for them. They're helping to help themselves."
"I was actually blind to the whole homeless thing until I came here and then I realised 'oh, those fullas that I've seen parked up at night-time, they had no homes to go to and that's how blind I was to the whole thing. Now I'll go knock on their window, 'are you all right?'"
While the marae's programme has ended, the problem is not fixed - with more stories emerging in recent days at a nationwide homelessness inquiry being run by Labour, the Greens and the Māori Party.
If you want to find out more about the Cross Party Homelessness Inquiry visit http://www.homelessnessinquiry.co.nz/
Watch the closing ceremony for the programme at Te Puea Marae:
Related
Topics: te ao Maori, housing, politics
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: Te Puea Memorial Marae, homeless
Duration: 28'39"

08:40
The New Torchlight List - Jim Flynn's Search for the Best Modern Authors
BODY:
Episode 1 - The Need to Read Jim Flynn is a world expert on human intelligence, and the author of many ground-breaking books on intelligence, philosophy and politics. He says he came from a poor family and owes all his success to reading great books. So the Emeritus Professor of Politics at Otago University was disturbed to find that fewer and fewer adults and young people are reading for pleasure. Reading, he says, sharpens the mind helps us understand the world. Many are willing to try books recommended to them, so Jim Flynn read and rated 400 books, mostly written by modern novelists - his findings are published in The New Torchlight List - In Search of the Best Modern Authors. In this series, Wallace quizzes Jim Flynn on his picks and takes him to task - but the stoic 82-year-old claims no credentials as a literary critic - he just loves to read a good book.
Topics: author interview, books
Regions:
Tags: Jim Flynn, intelligence, The New Torchlight List - In Search of the Best Modern Authors
Duration: 14'10"

09:40
Melissa Bubnic - Boys Will Be Boys
BODY:
Award-winning Melbourne playwright and screenwriter, London-based Melissa Bubnic's latest script is a socio-political commentary on sexism and power in the world of high finance, inspired by a conversation with Cate Blanchett. Boys Will Be Boys opens at Q Theatre in Auckland on September 8.
Topics: arts
Regions:
Tags: theatre, Melissa Bubnic, Boys Will Be Boys
Duration: 20'57"

10:06
Matt Vickers - Lecretia's Law
BODY:
The husband of Lecretia Seales, Matt Vickers, joins Wallace to talk about her legacy - Lecretia's Law - and why it's important for the future of terminally ill New Zealanders.
Topics: life and society
Regions:
Tags: Matt Vickers, Lecretia Seales, Physician Assisted Dying
Duration: 17'41"

10:28
Michelle Walshe and Justin Pemberton - Chasing Great
BODY:
The directors of the Richie McCaw documentary, Chasing Great, discuss the film, the reaction to it, and what Richie himself thinks about it.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags: Chasing Great, New Zealand film, Richie McCaw, Michelle Walshe, Justin Pemberton
Duration: 20'55"

10:59
Simone Chua and Renzo Larriviere - Art and Alzheimer's
BODY:
Australian light artists Simone Chua and Renzo Larriviere talk about their interactive sculpture installation piece which explores the subject of dementia.
Topics: arts
Regions:
Tags: Light Installation, Simone Chua, Renzo Larriviere, Alzheimer's awareness
Duration: 9'52"

11:06
Dame Silvia Cartwright - Life and Influences
BODY:
Former Governor General Dame Silvia Cartwright was New Zealand's first female district court judge, first female high court judge and one of three international judges on the Cambodian War Crimes Tribunal. In the latest of our occasional series: Influential Kiwis talk about the influences she joins Wallace to talk about the individuals, books, writers and events that have influenced her ideas.
EXTENDED BODY:
Dame Silvia Cartwright joins Wallace to talk about the individuals, books, writers and events that have influenced her ideas.
Former Governor General Dame Silvia Cartwright was New Zealand's first female district court judge, first female high court judge and one of three international judges on the Cambodian War Crimes Tribunal.
This is the latest episode of the occasional series Influential Kiwis Talk about the Influences. Check out the others below:

Sam Hunt
John Kirwan
Roger Hall
Geoff Chapple
Dame Jenny Shipley
Bunny McDiarmid
Sir Tipene O'Regan
Wystan Curnow
Helen Kelly
Garth McVicar and Kim Workman
Jock Phillips
Alan Gibbs

Topics: law, crime
Regions:
Tags: Silvia Cartwright, Governor General, Cambodia
Duration: 52'20"

=SHOW NOTES=

[image:80261:third]
7:08 John Maynard and Mark Stewart - The Postbox Problem
Wallace talks to the president of the Southern District of the Postal Workers Union Aotearoa, John Maynard, and NZ Post's Mark Stewart about why post boxes are disappearing from our streets and whether this will have an impact on voting in the upcoming local elections.
7:20 Stephen Jacobi - G20 in China
[image:80259:quarter]
The G20 - a grouping of 20 of the world's largest economies - are meeting in China this weekend. Leaders of 19 countries and a representative from the European Union are gathering to discuss the state of the world and debate how best to give their sluggish economies a rev up. Former diplomat and business consultant Stephen Jacobi gives his take on what might come out of the world's highest powered talkfest.
7:32 The Week in Parliament
7:47 Local Body Elections- Southland
Each week we will visit a region in New Zealand to find out what the big issues are in the upcoming local body elections. This week we speak to Southland Times reporter Briar Babbington.
8:12 Insight: Beacon for the Homeless Closes its Doors
As Te Puea Marae steps back from providing emergency housing for the homeless, Sharon Brettkelly speaks to the last families being given help and the volunteers who have been giving their time. She explores whether this is the model that should be used more or whether the state should be doing more.
8:40 The New Torchlight List - Jim Flynn's Search for the Best Modern Authors
Episode 1 - The Need to Read
[image_crop:15979:full]
Jim Flynn is a world expert on human intelligence, and the author of many ground-breaking books on intelligence, philosophy and politics. He says he came from a poor family and owes all his success to reading great books. So the Emeritus Professor of Politics at Otago University was disturbed to find that fewer and fewer adults and young people are reading for pleasure. Reading, he says, sharpens the mind helps us understand the world. Many are willing to try books recommended to them, so Jim Flynn read and rated 400 books, mostly written by modern novelists - his findings are published in The New Torchlight List - In Search of the Best Modern Authors. In this series, Wallace quizzes Jim Flynn on his picks and takes him to task - but the stoic 82-year-old claims no credentials as a literary critic - he just loves to read a good book.
9:06 Mediawatch
How burglary hit the headlines this week- and raised questions about freedom of information. Also: Do bleeps and asterisks really make swear words less offensive?; how the media went mad over drone-delivered pizza; and how the machines made a mess of the news at Facebook.
Produced and presented by Colin Peacock and Jeremy Rose.
9:40 Melissa Bubnic - Boys Will Be Boys
[image_crop:15976:full]
Award-winning Melbourne playwright and screenwriter, London-based Melissa Bubnic's latest script is a socio-political commentary on sexism and power in the world of high finance, inspired by a conversation with Cate Blanchett. Boys Will Be Boys opens at Q Theatre in Auckland on September 8.
[image:80297:quarter]
10:06 Matt Vickers - Lecretia's Law
The husband of Lecretia Seales, Matt Vickers, joins Wallace to talk about her legacy - Lecretia's Law - and why it's important for the future of terminally ill New Zealanders.

10:28 Michelle Walshe and Justin Pemberton - Chasing Great
[image:80295:full]
The directors of the Richie McCaw documentary, Chasing Great, discuss the film, the reaction to it, and what Richie himself thinks about it.
10:49 Simone Chua and Renzo Larriviere - Art and Alzheimer's
[image:80382:full]
Australian light artists Simone Chua and Renzo Larriviere talk about their interactive sculpture installation piece which explores the subject of dementia.
11:05 Dame Silvia Cartwright - Life and Influences
[image_crop:16111:full]
Former Governor General Dame Silvia Cartwright was New Zealand's first female district court judge, first female high court judge and one of three international judges on the Cambodian War Crimes Tribunal. In the latest of our occasional series: Influential Kiwis talk about the influences she joins Wallace to talk about the individuals, books, writers and events that have influenced her ideas.

=PLAYLIST=

Artist: Trip To the Moon
Song: As Far As
Composer: Tom Ludvigson, Trevor Reekie
Album: A Traveller’s Tale
Label: Southbound
Broadcast Time: 0837
Artist: Sun Kill Moon
Song: Pray For Newtown
Composer: Mark Kozelek
Album: Benji
Label: Caldo Verde Records
Broadcast Time: 1026
Artist: Nina Simone
Song: Strange Fruit
Composer: Allen
Album: Gold (Compilation)
Label: Mercury
Broadcast Time: 1130
Artist: Maria Callas
Song: Un bel di, vedremo (Madame Butterfly)
Composer: Puccini
Album: Maria Callas - La voix du siecle
Label: EMI
Broadcast Time: 1150

===12:12 PM. | Standing Room Only===
=DESCRIPTION=

It's an 'all access pass' to what's happening in the worlds of arts and entertainment 1:10 At the Movies with Simon Morris A weekly topical magazine programme about current film releases and film-related topics. (RNZ) 2:05 The Laugh Track

=AUDIO=

12:16
Archaeologist Katharine Watson
BODY:
"People often think that archaeology only happens in Egypt, or England, or somewhere with 'really old stuff'. But it happens in New Zealand, and recently it's been happening a lot in Christchurch." That's from the website of local archeologist Katharine Watson who heads the Underground Overground consultancy. Katharine tells Lynn Freeman what she and her team have learned about early Christchurch from what they've uncovered from damaged and destroyed buildings, and the land under them.
Topics: history
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 22'24"

12:40
Reviving the Christchurch Arts Centre
BODY:
André Lovatt returned to Christchurch in 2012 to manage the $290m, seven-year long restoration of The Arts Centre. He's also a member of Heritage New Zealand. André tells Lynn Freeman about chairing Regenerate Christchurch, set up to lead the city's post-quake regeneration when the Canterbury Earthquake Authority was wound up in April.
Topics: history
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 16'57"

13:32
Contemporary Christchurch - exhibition reflects changing city
BODY:
The 'Contemporary Christchurch' exhibition has recently opened at the Centre of Contemporary Art (CoCA), bringing together 13 local artists who've created their works sometime in the past three years. It was a tough job getting it down to such a small number. The panel of selectors started with a list of hundreds. Jamie Hanton was one of the selectors. He talks to Lynn Freeman about putting the exhibition together, along with one of the artists he selected, photographer Deagan Wells.
Topics: arts
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 11'14"

13:47
Jeeves and Wooster - from the West End to New Zealand
BODY:
P G Wodehouse was one of the most entertaining of English writers. His characters - Jeeves, Bertie Wooster, Lord Emsworth and the rest - are comedy classics. He was loved equally by the public and the critics. But translating his books to stage or screen is harder than it looks, though a new West End production, about to tour here shortly, may have pulled it off. Star and writer of Jeeves and Wooster Perfect Nonsense, Robert Goodale talks with Wodehouse fan Simon Morris.
Topics: arts
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 10'01"

14:30
Novelist Emma Neale's Billy Bird is a flight of fancy
BODY:
Dunedin writer Emma Neale imagines how and why a young boy would want to turn into a bird in her latest book Billy Bird, which is her sixth novel. She also has several award-winning poetry collections to her name.
Topics: arts
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 9'23"

14:33
Welsh/Indian poet Tishani Doshi - The Adulterous Citizen
BODY:
Born to Welsh and Indian parents, Tishani Doshi has explored her dual heritage in words, as a poet and essayist, and in dance. She's just been in New Zealand as a guest of Victoria University and The New Zealand India Research Institute and School of Languages and Cultures. In her most recent collection of poems and essays, The Adulterous Citizen, Tishani tells Lynn Freeman how she writes about her memories of Wales and India: so very different and neither feeling entirely like home.
Topics: arts
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 19'53"

14:50
Everybody Cool Lives Here
BODY:
A stage production at Circa involves a cast of intellectually disabled people. No Post on Sunday is put on by the troupe 'Everyone Cool Lives Here', and follows last year's production Wake Up Tomorrow. Former One in Five producer Mike Gourley checked it out.
Topics: arts
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 9'28"

=SHOW NOTES=

12:16 Archaeologist Katharine Watson
[image:80469:half]
"People often think that archaeology only happens in Egypt, or England, or somewhere with 'really old stuff'. But it happens in New Zealand, and recently it's been happening a lot in Christchurch." That's from the website of local archeologist Katharine Watson who heads the Underground Overground consultancy. Katharine tells Lynn Freeman what she and her team have learned about early Christchurch from what they've uncovered from damaged and destroyed buildings, and the land under them.
12:39 Reviving the Christchurch Arts Centre
[image:80395:third]
André Lovatt returned to Christchurch in 2012 to manage the $290m, seven-year long restoration of The Arts Centre. He's also a member of Heritage New Zealand. André tells Lynn Freeman about chairing Regenerate Christchurch, set up to lead the city's post-quake regeneration when the Canterbury Earthquake Authority was wound up in April.

1:10 At The Movies
Simon Morris reviews Ben Hur, Bad Moms and Theeb.
1:34 Contemporary Christchurch - an art exhibition reflects a changing city
The 'Contemporary Christchurch' exhibition has recently opened at the Centre of Contemporary Art (CoCA), bringing together 13 local artists who've created their works sometime in the past three years. It was a tough job getting it down to such a small number. The panel of selectors started with a list of hundreds. Jamie Hanton was one of the selectors. He talks to Lynn Freeman about putting the exhibition together, along with one of the artists he selected, photographer Deagan Wells.
[gallery:2439]
1:47 Jeeves and Wooster - from the West End to New Zealand
P G Wodehouse was one of the most entertaining of English writers. His characters - Jeeves, Bertie Wooster, Lord Emsworth and the rest - are comedy classics. He was loved equally by the public and the critics. But translating his books to stage or screen is harder than it looks, though a new West End production, about to tour here shortly, may have pulled it off. Star and writer of Jeeves and Wooster Perfect Nonsense, Robert Goodale talks with Wodehouse fan Simon Morris.
2:06 The Laugh Track - The Court Jesters
[image_crop:16122:third]
[image_crop:16120:third]
Christchurch's Court Jesters are celebrating over a quarter of a century of their long-running comedy improvisation show Scared Scriptless. Jesters manager Dan Pengelly and long-time jester Jared Corbin pick today's laugh tracks.

2:25 Welsh/Indian poet Tishani Doshi - The Adulterous Citizen
[image:80396:half]
Born to Welsh and Indian parents, Tishani Doshi has explored her dual heritage in words, as a poet and essayist, and in dance. She's just been in New Zealand as a guest of Victoria University and The New Zealand India Research Institute and School of Languages and Cultures. In her most recent collection of poems and essays, The Adulterous Citizen, Tishani tells Lynn Freeman how she writes about her memories of Wales and India: so very different and neither feeling entirely like home.

2:40 Novelist Emma Neale's Billy Bird is a flight of fancy
[image:80397:third] no caption
[image:80399:quarter]
Dunedin writer Emma Neale imagines how and why a young boy would want to turn into a bird in her latest book Billy Bird, which is her sixth novel. She also has several award-winning poetry collections to her name.

2:50 Everybody Cool Lives Here: a theatre company with a big difference
[gallery:2437]
A stage production at Circa involves a cast of intellectually disabled people. No Post on Sunday is put on by the troupe 'Everyone Cool Lives Here', and follows last year's production Wake Up Tomorrow. Former One in Five producer Mike Gourley checked it out.
3:06 Drama at 3
Episode 7 of Phillip Mann's 'Wulfsyarn'.
3.30 Another case from the Police Files of New Zealand.

===3:04 PM. | None (National)===
=DESCRIPTION=

An epic futuristic tale of the tragic maiden voyage of the gargantuan strarship, The Nightingale, captained by the enigmatic and fatally flawed, Jon Wilberfoss. (Part 7 of 10, RNZ)

===3:35 PM. | None (National)===
=DESCRIPTION=

Classic radio crime drama from the Police files of New Zealand. (RNZ)

===4:06 PM. | None (National)===
=DESCRIPTION=

The End of Cash?
In the UK most payments now made do not involve cash. Rather than handing over notes and coins, most transfers are made electronically. South Korea's central bank has a target of eliminating cash by 2020 and many other countries want to reduce the amount of physical currency in circulation as it is quite costly. So is cash going to be a thing of the past? Owen Bennett Jones and his guests discuss the possibility of a truly cashless society. (BBC)

===5:00 PM. | None (National)===
=DESCRIPTION=

A roundup of today's news and sport

===5:11 PM. | None (National)===
=DESCRIPTION=

Inside the Osama Bin Laden Imam School
All over Pakistan a web of Imam schools are appearing to create Imams that propagate a purist understanding of Islam. Students dedicate eight years of their lives to the seminary after memorising the entire Koran. In return, they achieve ‘Imam’ status. Mobeen Azhar has been given access inside the controversial Jamia Hafsa madrassa in Islamabad to ask why so many parents are sending their children to these schools and what their children are taught. And, he hears the fears that the teaching the girls receive is simply fuelling a dangerous, fundamental Islamic fervour in the country. Mobeen joins lessons which are a heavy mix of housekeeping, theology, politics and Quranic recitation, and where students are taught that martyrdom should be aspired to and that the Pakistani government should be overthrown. (BBC)

===5:40 PM. | Te Manu Korihi===
=DESCRIPTION=

A round-up of the Māori news for the week with our Te Manu Korihi team (RNZ)

===6:06 PM. | Te Ahi Kaa===
=AUDIO=

Jerome Cvitanovich resumes his series about pākeha who work with the Māori language, education and customs. Mark Bradley came to New Zealand to play rugby and became 'obsessed' with te reo Māori. Today he is the principal of a Wellington-based Māori language school, Te Kura Kaupapa Māori o Nga Mokopuna.
=DESCRIPTION=

Exploring issues and events from a tangata whenua perspective (RNZ)

===6:40 PM. | Voices===
=DESCRIPTION=

Highlighting the activities and experiences of people with different backgrounds (RNZ)

===7:05 PM. | TED Radio Hour===
=DESCRIPTION=

A crafted hour of ideas worth sharing presented by Guy Raz (NPR)

===8:06 PM. | Sunday Night===
=AUDIO=
8:15pm
Prince Tui Teka
Part of a 1982 Pub interview.

9:15pm
Jodi Vaughan
From arriving in NZ to now.
=DESCRIPTION=

An evening of music and nostalgia (RNZ)

===10:12 PM. | Mediawatch===
=DESCRIPTION=

Critical examination and analysis of recent performance and trends in New Zealand's news media (RNZ)

===10:45 PM. | In Parliament===
=DESCRIPTION=

An in-depth perspective of legislation and other issues from the house.

===11:04 PM. | None (National)===
=DESCRIPTION=

An hour of music that's "shaken, not stirred" every week from the Underground Martini Bunker at Kansas Public Radio.