RNZ National. 2016-01-23. 00:00-23:59.

Rights Information
Year
2016
Reference
288105
Media type
Audio
Item unavailable online

This content is for private viewing only. The material may not always be available for supply.
Click for more information on rights and requesting.

Ask about this item

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

Rights Information
Year
2016
Reference
288105
Media type
Audio
Item unavailable online

This content is for private viewing only. The material may not always be available for supply.
Click for more information on rights and requesting.

Series
Radio New Zealand National. 2015--. 00:00-23:59.
Categories
Radio airchecks
Radio programs
Sound recordings
Untelescoped radio airchecks
Duration
24:00:00
Broadcast Date
23 Jan 2016
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:

23 January 2016

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

Including: 12:05 Music after Midnight (RNZ); 12:30 Laugh Track (RNZ); 1:05 From the World (BBC); 2:05 NZ Live; 3:05 The Virgin and the Whale, by Carl Nixon, read by Deana Elvins (4 of 10, RNZ); 3:30 The Week (RNZ); 4:30 Global Business (BBC); 5:10 Witness (BBC); 5:45 Voices (RNZ)

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

The Wild Man of the Mountains, by David Somerset, told by Patrick Smythe; Scrap - Tale of a Blonde Puppy Ep 7, by Vince Ford, told by Kip Chapman; McGinty's Friend, by Diana Noonan, told by Robyn Malcolm; Marama Whoppa and the Butterfly Cookies, by Apirana Taylor, told by Apirana Taylor & others; Pohutukawa, by Sandra Morris, told by Miriama McDowell; The Pirates and the Nightmaker part 9, by James Norcliffe, told by Dick Weir

===7:10 AM. | Country Life===
=DESCRIPTION=

Memorable scenes, people and places in rural New Zealand (RNZ)

===8:10 AM. | Saturday Morning===
=DESCRIPTION=

A mixture of current affairs and feature interviews, until midday (RNZ)

=AUDIO=

08:12
Burt Reynolds: movies, money and mistakes
BODY:
Kim Hill talks to Burt Reynolds, who was Hollywood's biggest box-office star from 1978 to 1982, an unparalleled run. Now 79, he has written his autobiography: But Enough About Me.
EXTENDED BODY:
In his heyday Burt Reynolds was huge.
He was Hollywood's biggest box-office star from 1978 to 1982, an unparalleled run following his starring role in Smokey and the Bandit.
He had money, and mansions, and wives - including the famous Loni Anderson, who he divorced in 1993.
But his money went in various ways including bad investments and bad marriages.
He says he feels, in a way, like a man whose house was blown away in a hurricane - his possessions have gone, but he's thankful to be alive (despite a flurry of online hoaxes announcing his death).
Kim Hill talks to Burt Reynolds, who is now 79, about his life, career and his autobiography: But Enough About Me.
Topics: author interview, business, health, media, money
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 42'55"

09:05
Andrew Butler: determining death
BODY:
Kim Hill talks to litigator Andrew Butler, one of New Zealand's leading experts on our Bill of Rights. He acted for Lecretia Seales, who went to the High Court last year in an attempt to win the right to choose how and when she died.
EXTENDED BODY:
Andrew Butler is a litigator, and partner at Russell McVeagh. He is one of New Zealand’s leading experts on our Bill of Rights, and co-author of New Zealand Bill of Rights Act: A Commentary.
He acted for Lecretia Seales, who went to the High Court last year in an attempt to win the right to choose how she died.
Butler talks to Kim Hill about the case and the issues surrounding it.
(Public submissions on MP Maryann Street's petition, requesting “That the House of Representatives investigate fully public attitudes towards the introduction of legislation which would permit medically-assisted dying in the event of a terminal illness or an irreversible condition which makes life unbearable”, close on 1 February.)
Topics: disability, health, law, politics
Regions:
Tags: death, euthanasia, Lecretia Seales, Catholic, Ireland
Duration: 31'16"

09:35
Johanna Emeney: medical humanities
BODY:
Kim Hill talks to Johanna Emeney a poet whose doctoral thesis in creative writing explores the emerging field of medical humanities, investigating the work of New Zealand poets on medical themes, alongside her own collection about her mother's cancer.
Topics: arts, author interview, health, law, life and society, spiritual practices
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: poetry, death, euthanasia, Jenny Bornholdt, cancer, adoption
Duration: 22'56"

10:05
Sufjan Stevens: illness, death and faith
BODY:
Kim Hill talks to songwriter and performer Sufjan Stevens, whose latest album, Carrie & Lowell, was inspired by the death of his mother. He and his band will play those songs and selections from his career, at the New Zealand Festival and Auckland Arts Festival in March.
EXTENDED BODY:
American songwriter and performer Sufjan Stevens is one of the most acclaimed American popular musicians of the last ten years.
His latest album, Carrie & Lowell, was inspired by the death of his mother Carrie and was hailed as one of the best recordings of 2015.
Carrie, who struggled with addiction and mental illness and left the family early in Sufjan's life, died in 2012.
He says that the process of writing some of the music for his new album was somewhat traumatic, and ran parallel to his experiences of grief an loss.
"There was an attempt for me to make sense of this experience and to kind of interpret it and analyse and evoke it in music in hopes that it would somehow give meaning or explanation, or help relieve some of this loss I felt."
But as he tells Kim Hill, it didn't really work out like that at all.
Sufjan and his band will play songs from his new album and selections from his career, at the New Zealand Festival and Auckland Arts Festival in March.
Topics: arts, health, music, spiritual practices
Regions:
Tags: insomnia, death, Carrie Stevens
Duration: 28'41"

11:05
Mike Dickison: 15 years of Wikipedia
BODY:
Kim Hill talks to Dr Mike Dickison, Curator of Natural History at the Whanganui Regional Museum, and volunteer editor for the free encylopedia Wikipedia, which recently celebrated its 15th birthday.
Topics: books, education, internet, media, science, technology
Regions: Taranaki, Whanganui
Tags: wikipedia, Jimmy Wales
Duration: 28'56"

11:45
Children's Books with Kate De Goldi: three beautiful books
BODY:
Kim Hill talks to writer Kate De Goldi about The Right Word; Roget and his Thesaurus by Jen Bryant and Melissa Sweet, Enormous Smallness; a story of e e cummings by Matthew Burgess, illustrated by Kris Di Giacomo, and The Singing Bones by Shaun Tan.
Topics: arts, books, education, history, language, life and society
Regions:
Tags: Jen Bryant, Melissa Sweet, Matthew Burgess, Kris Di Giacomo, Shaun Tan, Roget, e e cummings, Grimm brothers
Duration: 16'08"

11:55
Listener Feedback to Saturday 23 January 2016
BODY:
Kim Hill reads messages from listeners to the Saturday Morning programme of Saturday 23 January.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 7'29"

=SHOW NOTES=

8:12 Burt Reynolds
From 1978 to 1982, Burt Reynolds was Hollywood’s biggest box-office star. His films include Deliverance (1972), The Longest Yard (1974), Smokey and the Bandit (1977), and the comeback film Boogie Nights (1997), for which he was nominated for an Academy Award. Now 79, Reynolds has written his autobiography, with Jon Winokur: But Enough About Me (Echo Books).
[image:57908:full]
9:05 Andrew Butler
Andrew Butler is a litigator, and partner at Russell McVeagh. He is one of New Zealand’s leading experts on our Bill of Rights, and co-author of New Zealand Bill of Rights Act: A Commentary. He acted for Lecretia Seales, who went to the High Court last year in an attempt to win the right to choose how she died. (Public submissions on MP Maryann Street's petition, requesting “That the House of Representatives investigate fully public attitudes towards the introduction of legislation which would permit medically-assisted dying in the event of a terminal illness or an irreversible condition which makes life unbearable”, closes on 1 February.)
[image:57911:quarter]

9:35 Johanna Emeney
Dr Johanna Emeney is a poet whose debut collection, Apple and Tree, was published in 2011. She teaches creative writing at Massey University’s Auckland campus, and co-facilitates the Michael King Young Writers Programme. She will visit the University of Auckland’s Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences this March to talk to third-year students, as she has done for the past two years. Her doctoral thesis in creative writing, through Massey’s School of English and Media Studies, explores the emerging field of medical humanities, investigating the work of New Zealand poets on medical themes, alongside her own collection about her mother’s cancer treatment, Family History, which she hopes to publish later this year.

[image:57912:third]
10:05 Sufjan Stevens
Songwriter and performer Sufjan Stevens is one of the most acclaimed American popular musicians of the last ten years. His latest album, Carrie & Lowell, was inspired by the death of his mother and was hailed as one of the best recordings of 2015. Stevens and his eight-piece band will play that album, and selections from his career, at the New Zealand Festival (6 and 7 March) and Auckland Arts Festival (8 March).

[image:57909:quarter]
11:05 Mike Dickison
Dr Mike Dickison is Curator of Natural History at the Whanganui Regional Museum, and was a guest on the Saturday programme in 2014, discussing the museum’s moa collection, 3D scanning project, and the illicit trade in moa bones. He is also a volunteer editor for the free encylopedia Wikipedia, which recently celebrated its 15th birthday.

11:45 Children’s Books with Kate De Goldi
Kate De Goldi’s most recent novel is From the Cutting Room of Barney Kettle (Longacre), and the stage adaptation of her 2012 book, The ACB with Honora Lee, will debut at Circa Theatre (27 February to 26 March) as part of the New Zealand Festival. She will discuss two narrative non-fiction books, and an adaptation of Grimm fairy tales:
The Right Word; Roget and his Thesaurus by Jen Bryant and Melissa Sweet (Eerdmans Books);
Enormous Smallness; a story of e e cummings by Matthew Burgess, illustrated by Kris Di Giacomo (Enchanted Lion Books); and
The Singing Bones by Shaun Tan (Allen & Unwin).
This Saturday’s team:
Producer: Mark Cubey
Wellington engineer: Carol Jones
Auckland engineer: Adrian Hollay
New Plymouth engineer: Robin Martin
Research by Infofind

=PLAYLIST=

Artist: Eric Weissberg and Steve Mandell:
Song: Duelling Banjos
Composer: Arthur Smith
Album: Deliverance (Original Soundtrack)
Label: Warner, 1972
Broadcast: 8:55
Artist: Sufjan Stevens
Song: Death With Dignity
Composer: Sufjan Stevens
Album: Carrie & Lowell
Label: Asthmatic Kitty, 2015
Broadcast: 10:10
Artist: Sufjan Stevens
Song: Carrie & Lowell
Composer: Sufjan Stevens
Album: Carrie & Lowell
Label: Asthmatic Kitty, 2015
Broadcast: 10:20
Artist: Sufjan Stevens
Song: I Want to Be Well
Composer: The Age of Adz
Album: Sufjan Stevens
Label: Spunk, 2010
Broadcast: 10:40
Artist: Sufjan Stevens
Song: Casimir Pulaski Day
Composer: Sufjan Stevens
Album: Come On Feel the Illinoise
Label: Spunk, 2005
Broadcast: 10:50
Artist: David Bowie
Song: Lazarus
Composer: David Bowie
Album: Blackstar
Label: Columbia, 2016
Broadcast: 11:40

===12:11 PM. | This Way Up===
=DESCRIPTION=

Exploring the things we use and consume. Some content may offend (RNZ)

=AUDIO=

12:01
This Way Up Part 1
BODY:
The Dorito Effect, causes of cancer, and repurposing old drugs for cancer treatment.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 49'15"

12:15
The Dorito Effect
BODY:
In his book 'The Dorito Effect: The Surprising New Truth About Food and Flavor' (Simon and Schuster) Mark Schatzker looks at how the flavour of our food has changed, and how the industry that makes and uses artifical flavourings has proved so successful at getting us to eat more than we should.
EXTENDED BODY:
Wouldn't life be so much easier if healthy eating just meant seeking out foods with good flavour?
According to author Mark Schatzker that's how we survived in days gone by. Flavour is the key way to detect useful chemicals that we needed, like a GPS system for navigating our way to the food we required to stay healthy way before the arrival of processed foods.
In his book The Dorito Effect: The Surprising New Truth About Food and Flavor (Simon and Schuster) Schatzker looks at how the flavour of our food has changed, and how the food industry uses artificial flavourings to make us eat more.
Topics: food, science, health
Regions:
Tags: artificial flavourings, taste, flavour
Duration: 20'51"

12:35
Cancer - causes and treatments
BODY:
Sarah Allinson of Lancaster University has reviewed two recent but contradictory studies in the journals Nature and Science looking at the causes of cancer. So how much is down to lifestyle choices and environmental factors versus plain bad luck. Meanwhile Dr Pan Pantziarka of the ReDo Project is searching for new cancer treatments by repurposing old drugs. He's just published a study that reveals how diclofenac, an anti-inflammatory also known by the brand name Voltaren, has significant anti-cancer properties.
EXTENDED BODY:
Cancer is New Zealand's single biggest cause of death, killing some 8,500 people each year, with more than 20,000 new cases reported annually.
Cancer affects us all – which is why a study published in the journal Science early in 2015 grabbed our attention. In it the authors said that most cancers aren't preventable and are simply a case of "bad luck".
Then just a few weeks ago a study published in the journal Nature contradicted the 'bad luck' theory finding that lifestyle and external factors like smoking and sunlight played a greater role in determining whether or not a person would get cancer than luck!
So what does cause cancer – does bad luck play a part or is it chiefly down to lifestyle choices and environmental factors? Sarah Allinson from Lancaster University has just reviewed the two studies.
Meanwhile Dr Pan Pantziarka of the ReDo Project is looking for new ways to treat cancer by repurposing old drugs. He has just published a study that reveals that diclofenac, an anti-inflammatory also known by the brand name Voltaren, has significant anti-cancer properties.
Simon Morton checks in with Sarah Allinson and Dr Pan Pantziarka.
Why most cancer isn't due to 'bad luck'
By Sarah Allinson, Senior Lecturer at Lancaster University
A study published in Science in early 2015 reported that most cancers aren’t preventable and are simply a case of “bad luck”. A year on, however, and a study published in Nature has come to the opposite conclusion: that external factors such as tobacco, sunlight and human papilloma virus play a greater part in whether or not a person gets cancer.
So what does cause cancer: bad luck, or avoidable lifestyle choices and environmental factors?
Why bad luck?
The “bad luck” study, by Tomasetti and Vogelstein from Johns Hopkins University, was based on two facts.
First, it is not the case that cancer is equally likely to occur in all the various organs and tissues of the body. Some cancers, such as colon cancer, are relatively common, while others, such as bone cancer, are much rarer for reasons that the study aimed to discover.
Second, various types of tissues have different numbers of dividing cells, called stem cells, which serve to replace cells that have become old or damaged. How often these divide varies depending on where in the body they are located and how often the cells need to be replaced.
According to one school of thought, cancer arises when stem cells go out of control.
Every time a cell divides in two, it needs to make an accurate copy of its entire DNA. This copying process is usually accurate but mistakes can occur leading to spontaneous random mutations in the new cells. When mutations occur in genes that keep cell division under control, their tumour-suppressing job is prevented. The result is cancer.
Tomasetti and Vogelstein proposed that every time a cell divides the random inaccuracy in DNA copying could result in a cancer-causing mutation. If individual cells divide more frequently, or if there are more cells dividing overall, then there is an increased chance of such mutations occurring.
They looked at the behaviour of stem cells from various tissues, and in particular the number of stem cells and how often they divide in a human’s life. Based on how these numbers vary for different tissues, they inferred that the risk of developing a particular type of cancer was closely related to the number of times stem cells have divided in that tissue. This reflects the “intrinsic risk” that frequent DNA copying carries.
Why environment?
In the more recent study, researchers at Stony Brook University (SBU) in New York took another look at the data used by Tomasetti and Vogelstein. They noted that even when you take into account the total number of stem cell divisions, some cancers were still more likely to occur than others. More common cancers, they inferred, must have some additional external cause, such as the environment, lifestyle or genetic makeup.
When they re-analysed the data on this basis they found that for many cancers, including some of the most common ones, such as lung and liver cancers, less than 10% of the risk was traceable to random copying errors.

What to believe?
The two studies have some things in common but differ substantially in their estimates of how much intrinsic and extrinsic risks contribute to cancer. Notably, the SBU team have backed up their argument with evidence that wasn’t included in Tomasetti and Vogelstein’s study.
First of all, the SBU team highlight the vast array of evidence that points to a substantial contribution of environmental factors and lifestyle choices to cancer risk. For example, it’s well-known that colon cancer is comparatively rare in Japan but that Japanese immigrants in the USA and their descendants have an even higher risk of getting colon cancer than European Americans.
The SBU team also looked at the types of mutations that various cancers carry. Some mutations are seen more often in tumours from older patients. This fits with the “bad luck” model, where the key factors behind cancer occurrence are the errors that accumulate each time a cell divides.
However, cancers also contain many other types of mutations that can occur because of specific carcinogens, for instance, the sunlight-triggered mutations in skin cancer. How often these cancer-causing changes occur depends much more on the amount of exposure a person has to carcinogens, rather than on age.
Finally, they also showed that the known error rate for copying DNA is not high enough to be the sole determinant for the risk of developing the cancers both teams examined.
Although we know what causes some types of cancer – such as smoking causing lung cancer – in many cases it’s more complicated than finding one simple cause. We are only just teasing apart many of the factors involved. While chance has a role in determining who gets cancer and who does not, it’s very clear that lifestyle, environment and our genes can change the odds considerably.
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article here.
Topics: health, science
Regions:
Tags: lifestyle, smoking, disease, medicine, cancer, oncology, treatments
Duration: 19'05"

13:01
This Way Up Part 2
BODY:
The modular laptop and technology news (Sky upgrade and Netflix VPN crackdown). Plus lazy ants and dirty Romans.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 51'46"

13:10
The modular laptop
BODY:
New Zealander Barry Vercoe was involved in the One Laptop Per Child project and he's now trying to put a low cost, modular, easily upgradeable laptop called INFINITY into classrooms closer to home.
EXTENDED BODY:
There have been many attempts at bridging the digital divide – from free broadband to community computer programmes and recycled laptops.
One ambitious approach to tackling this problem was One Laptop per Child – Nicholas Negroponte's plan to put a US$100 laptop into the hands of some of the most disadvantaged people on the planet. So far there are three million of these machines in homes and schools around the world.
New Zealander Barry Vercoe was involved in the One Laptop Per Child project and he's now trying to put a low-cost modular laptop called INFINITY into classrooms closer to home. The beauty of the Infinity is that it can be taken apart and upgraded cheaply and easily at home – even by a child. No more costly upgrades; music to many parents' ears!
Topics: technology, education, internet
Regions:
Tags: laptops
Duration: 11'39"

13:20
Tech News: Sky upgrade and Netflix VPN crackdown
BODY:
Technology news with Peter Griffin and the Sky upgrade gets mixed reviews, and Netflix threatens to crack down on the use of virtual private networks or VPNs.
Topics: technology, internet, media
Regions:
Tags: streaming, VPNs
Duration: 15'13"

13:40
Lazy ants
BODY:
Ants have got a reputation for being industrious insects with a good work ethic and a keen sense of community. But this reputation is inaccurate, according to Daniel Charbonneau of the University of Arizona.
EXTENDED BODY:
Ants have got a reputation for being industrious insects with a good work ethic and a keen sense of community. But this reputation is inaccurate, according to Daniel Charbonneau of the University of Arizona.
He's studied ant colonies and found out that a good proportion of the ants he was observing were lying about and generally being lazy!
Topics: environment
Regions:
Tags: ants, entomology
Duration: 7'29"

13:50
Dirty Romans
BODY:
The ancient Romans were at the front of the curve with their waste management and public sanitation systems. But Piers Mitchell at the University of Cambridge has discovered that they were still riddled with lice, nits, and worms.
EXTENDED BODY:
The Ancient Romans are credited with many illustrious inventions and technological advances in medicine, engineering, culture and construction. Aqueducts, concrete, newspapers, book binding, tourniquets, dipping medical equipment in hot water to sterilise it, the modern calendar... all down to those clever Romans!
The Romans were also at the front of the curve with waste management and public sanitation. A network of public baths, latrines and sewers and drains sprang up – but how clean did this actually make them? Piers Mitchell from the University of Cambridge has discovered that the Roman obsession with cleanliness didn't necessarily translate into better health – rhey were still riddled with all manner of lice, nits, and worms!
Topics: history
Regions:
Tags: Romans, hygiene
Duration: 11'07"

=SHOW NOTES=

===2:05 PM. | Music 101===
=DESCRIPTION=

Emma Smith presents the best songs, music-related stories, interviews, live music, industry news and music documentaries from NZ and the world

=AUDIO=

14:00
Music 101 Pocket Edition 70: Michael Hurley/ Le1f/Fire Festival
BODY:
Folk legend Michael Hurly, acting koi with Le1f and Fire Festival highlights.
EXTENDED BODY:
In the Music 101 Pocket Edition 70: Folk legend Michael Hurly, acting koi with Le1f and Fire Festival highlights.
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags: Music 101 Pocket Edition, Music 101 podcast
Duration: 53'36"

=SHOW NOTES=

Here's a pretty accurate musical run down of today's show

Michael Hurley
Since recording his debut album for Folkways in 1965, folk journeyman Michael Hurley has released over 25 albums, inspiring a new generation of artists like Devendrah Banhart, Lucinda Williams and Cat Power. In the country playing a run of shows with Kurt Vile, the 74-year-old folk perennial speaks with Trevor Reekie.
[image:57769:full]
The Sampler: JD McPherson
Nick Bollinger talks to Oklahoma rock’n’roller JD McPherson about his influences – from The Ramones to Shakespeare.
Fire! Festival
Auckland is currently playing host to Fire! festival, a showcase of avant-garde music that finishes in Auckland on Saturday, before one night in Waiatarua on Sunday. Featuring a variety of musical styles unified by an interest in improvisation and experimentation, Fire! Festival’s international draw cards are Fire! & Wildbirds and Peacedrums from Sweden. Tony Stamp sits down with members of both groups to discuss making music, and the art of improvisation.
[image:58000:full]
3–4pm
Masta Killa – Wu-Tang Clan
With nearly a quarter-century making music together, nine-strong Staten Island hip hop collective Wu-Tang Clan have amassed a back catalogue of six group LPs and 55 solo albums, while surviving fall-outs, an FBI investigation and the death of founding member Ol’ Dirty Bastard. The Wu form like Voltron at West Auckland’s Raggamuffin festival next month, the first time the Clan has played Aotearoa. Weeks out from his NZ visit, Masta Killa tells us what to expect.
[image:57771:full]
Le1f
Having spent his early 20s releasing mixtapes and producing for the likes of Das Racist, Le1f has become one of the strongest and most striking voices to come from New York’s underground in recent memory, a reputation cemented by the release of his debut LP Riot Boi. On a whistlestop visit to New Zealand, he checks in with Zac Arnold.
[image:57768:full]
Introducing: Baynk
[image:57766:full]
Gig Guide
4–5pm
Phil Collins Reassessed
Both extolled and vilified, Phil Collins is a divisive figure in pop music, his schmaltzy, synth-heavy power ballads sparking love and hate in equal measures. A decade after he announced his retirement, Collins is plotting a new tour and album. First though, he’s trawled his archives for the Take a Look at Me Now reissue series, with his 1981 album debut Face Value and 1993’s Both Sides first out the gate. Ahead of their release, Phil Collins talks to Sam Wicks about his polarising musical legacy.
[image:57767:full]
The Sampler: Savages – Adore Life
Nick Bollinger reviews the second album by all-female foursome Savages.

===5:11 PM. | Focus on Politics===
=DESCRIPTION=

Analysis of significant political issues presented by RNZ's parliamentary reporting team (RNZ)

===5:45 PM. | Tagata o te Moana===

Tagata o te Moana for 23 January 2016
Vanuatu holds a snap election, Concern the zika virus may cause malformed babies, Fiji gets a consignment of Russian arms, Challenges returning youths face in Tonga, Papua New Guinea is keen to boost tourism, Samoa is excited about a heavyweight boxing bout.

=DESCRIPTION=

Pacific news, features, interviews and music for all New Zealanders, giving an insight into the diverse cultures of the Pacific people (RNZI)

===6:06 PM. | Great Encounters===
=DESCRIPTION=

In-depth interviews selected from RNZ National's feature programmes during the week (RNZ)

===7:06 PM. | Saturday Night===
=DESCRIPTION=

An evening of requests, nostalgia and musical memories (RNZ)

=AUDIO=

=SHOW NOTES=

7pm – 8pm
Ewan MacColl & Peggy Seeger - Dirty Old Town
Jim Reeves - He’ll Have To Go
Deanna Durbin - Beneath The Lights Of Home
Tower Of Power - So Very Hard To Go
Andy Stewart - Auld Lang Syne
Hogsnort Rupert - Aunty Alice Bought Us This
Peter Dawson - Phil The Fluter’s Ball
Georgie Fame - Moondance
Brighouse & Rastrick Brass Band - The Floral Dance
The Puppini Sisters - Diamonds Are A Girl's Best Friends
Sheb Wooley - The Purple People Eater
Ben Sidran - Tangled Up In Blue
Ketty Lester - Love Letters
Gary Brooker and The London Symphony Orchestra - Homburg

8pm – 9pm
Neil Diamond - Pretty Amazing Grace
The Peddlers - Basin Street Blues
Jeff Lynne - Stormy Weather
Scott McKenzie - San Francisco (Be Sure To Wear Flowers In Your Hair)
The Staple Singers - Respect Yourself
Simon & Garfunkel - Old Friends, Bookends Theme
Glenn Frey - You Belong To The City
Perry Como - Some Enchanted Evening
The Kinks - Celluloid Heroes
Connie Dover - Cantus
Erroll Garner - Misty

9pm – 10pm
Etta James - Baby, What You Want Me To Do (live)
Joe Jackson - I Ain't Got Nothing But The Blues / Do Nothin' Till You Hear From Me
David Bowie - Let’s Dance
Elvis Presley - And The Grass Won’t Pay No Mind
Charlie Dore - Mr. Williams
Dinah Washington & Brook Benton - A Rockin’ Good Way
The 5 Keys - The Glory Of Love
Andy Williams - Music To Watch Girls By
Buddy Rich - Jumping At The Woodside
George Baker Selection - Morning Sky
Brian Eno - Taking Tiger Mountain
Cilla Black - Alfie

10pm – 11pm
Warren Zevon - Desperados Under The Eaves
Nina Simone - Suzanne
The Christians - Ideal World
Mark Knopfler - Going Home
Gray Bartlett - White Rabbit
Nick Cave and The Bad Seeds - Jubilee Street
Ry Cooder - Steel Guitar Heaven
Mary Coughlan - You Send Me
Madeleine Peyroux - The Summer Wind

11pm – 12pm Late Night Phil - a preview of Womad 2016
Sola Rosa - Don't Leave Home
Ester Rada - Monsters
Calexico - Crystal Frontier
Tami Neilson - Loco Mama
Ladysmith Black Mambazo - Vuka
Edmar Castaneda Trio - Colombian Dixie
John Grant - It Doesn't Matter To Him
Orange Blossom - Maria
Spiro - Marineville
The Jerry Cans - Iqaluit
47Soul - Don't Care Where You From
Thomas Oliver - Belfast

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