RNZ NATIONAL. NINE TO NOON 18/06/2020

Rights Information
Year
2020
Reference
A306523
Media type
Audio
Item unavailable online
Ask about this item

Ask to use material, get more information or tell us about an item

Rights Information
Year
2020
Reference
A306523
Media type
Audio
Item unavailable online
Series
Nine to Noon
Place of production
New Zealand/Aotearoa
Categories
Radio
Production company
Radio New Zealand
Credits
Newsreader: Nicola Wright
Presenter: Kathryn Ryan

From nine to noon every weekday, Kathryn Ryan talks to the people driving the news - in New Zealand and around the world. Delve beneath the headlines to find out the real story, listen to Nine to Noon's expert commentators and reviewers and catch up with the latest lifestyle trends on this award-winning programme.

Nine To Noon for Thursday 18 June 2020:

9:07 Air crew rules - are they tough enough? 9:40 Frustration at 'bumbling' quarantine health officials 9:53 Surprise public perceptions of surrogacy: research 10:08 Footballer fights for deprived kids, controversy over race-based inquiry 10:15 Do you need animals to produce good meat? 10:40 Book review - Nothing to See by Pip Adam 11:09 The robots are coming, cyber attacks on the rise 11:30 Helping kids with homework - without doing it for them 11:45 Quiz, Doc Edge 2020, Da 5 Bloods, Perry Mason.

International air crew rules another weak link: epidemiologist
As the heat comes on the government over quarantine and managed isolation facilities, questions are being raised over the rules applied to international airline crew and the risk of bringing Covid-19 into the country. Under new health ministry guidelines, Air New Zealand international crew returning home after a trip of between two and seven days abroad are allowed to fly domestically to their homes to self-isolate for 48 hours, before having a virus test and awaiting test results. They are not required to quarantine or self isolate for 14 days as other international arrivals are. Kathryn talks with E Tu union's Head of Aviation, Savage, and University of Otago Medical School epidemiologist Sir David Skegg, who says the rules for international airline crew are a "weak link".

Frustration at 'bumbling' quarantine health officials
A visiting Australian woman, Mel Langsford talks to Kathryn about her frustration with bumbling health officials and the risk to her family during their 14 days isolating at an Auckland hotel, after arriving from Queensland. She says there were constant mixed messages and she was astounded when a child's birthday party was attended by passengers from different flights.

Surprise public perceptions of surrogacy: research
New research into public perceptions of surrogacy and the laws surrounding it have uncovered some surprising changes. Debra Wilson, Associate Professor of Law at the University of Canterbury, has led a three year research project with funding from the Law Foundation, to find out what the public thinks and whether attitudes are changing. Her research is being used to inform law changes in the United Kingdom and may impact on a private members bill in the ballot here. Debra Wilson says she was surprised by some of the findings, particularly regarding who the legal parents of the child should be.

Footballer fights for deprived kids, controversy over race-based inquiry
UK correspondent Matthew Parris looks at Manchester United footballer Marcus Rashford's campaign to extend the children’s food voucher scheme into the summer holidays, which forced a change in policy Boris Johnson's new appointee to lead a race-based deprivation inquiry, Munira Mirza, is causing some controversy, and Scotland's schools may go back in August without formal social distancing.

Do you need animals to produce good meat?
Meat designer Eric Schulze is the VP of Product & Regulation at Memphis Meats, the subject of documentary Meat The Future which screens as part of the Documentary Edge International Film Festival 2020. So can you really separate the animal from meat making and are we ready for the paradigm shift needed in the way we think about eating meat versus "clean meat"?
Doc Edge is nationwide and online this year from June 12 - July 5. Meat The Future screens Fri 19 June, 3pm and Thu 2 July, 1pm

Book review - Nothing to See by Pip Adam
Louise O'Brien reviews Nothing to See by Pip Adam, published by Victoria University Press.

The Reading
Fainting and the Fat Man by Vincent O'Sullivan, read by David McPhail. Part two of two.

The robots are coming, cyber attacks on the rise, election transparency
Technology correspondent Paul Matthews joins Kathryn to talk about how a massive transformation of the vocational education system might not prepare us for the changing future of work. He'll also look at the increase in cyber attacks, both on companies and individuals - and what can be done about it. Google and Facebook have announced their transparency tools for the upcoming New Zealand and US elections. But will they stop fake news?
Paul Matthews is chief executive of IT Professionals NZ.

Helping kids with homework (without doing it for them)
How can parents find the delicate balance between helping a child with their homework, and overhelping - or even doing it for them! Kathryn speaks with Monash University education lecturer Melissa Barnes, who has analysed more than 400 research studies on the topic.

Quiz, Doc Edge 2020, Da 5 Bloods, Perry Mason
Film and TV reviewer James Croot looks at Quiz, the TV mini-series starring Matthew MacFadyen about the army captain who cheated his way to win 'Who Wants to be a Millionaire?'. He'll review Spike Lee's new movie Da 5 Bloods, also share some Doc Edge picks for this year, and take a look at the revamped Perry Mason, starring Matthew Rhys.

https://www.rnz.co.nz/national/programmes/ninetonoon/20200618