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:
21 September 2016
===12:04 AM. | All Night Programme===
=DESCRIPTION=
Including: 12:06 Music after Midnight; 12:30 Insight (RNZ); 1:15 Country Life (RNZ); 2:05 The Forum (BBC); 3:05 Classical Music by Joy Cowley read by Peta Rutter (15 of 15, RNZ); 3:30 Diversions (RNZ); 5:10 Witness (BBC); 5:45 The Day in Parliament
===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 Wednesday 21 September 2016
BODY:
UN suspends aid convoys in Syria, Ban ki Moon reveals frustration in final address to UN, Trident responds to electronic monitoring concerns, Industry body says fish dumping is not systemic problem, Greens: its possible to have sanctuary & respect Maori rights, Spike in gambling problems in Indian community, Immigration NZ confirm fraud cases involving Indian agent, Acclaim Otago: govt changes to ACC "in the right direction", Christchurch mayor declares asset sales off the table, George Bush senior is apparently voting for Clinton
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 37'21"
06:06
Sports News for 21 September 2016
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'53"
06:20
Early Business News for 21 September 2016
BODY:
A brief update of movements in the financial sector.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'29"
06:22
Morning Rural News for 21 September 2016
BODY:
News from the rural and farming sector.
Topics: rural, farming
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 4'54"
06:39
Obama underlines need for diplomatic solution to Syria crisis
BODY:
President Obama underlines the need for a diplomatic solution to the Syria crisis in his final speech to the UN
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: conflict, Syria, religion, military
Duration: 1'53"
06:41
Kermadec talks now about Government stability
BODY:
The Deputy Prime Minister, Bill English looks set to replace the Environment Minister as the lead Minister on talks with the Maori Party over the Kermadec marine sanctuary
Topics: environment, economy, politics, te ao Maori
Regions:
Tags: fisheries
Duration: 2'34"
06:48
New computer programme recognises Te Reo
BODY:
A new computer programme that can recognise Maori being spoken is helping broadcasters measure te reo content.
Topics: te ao Maori, media
Regions:
Tags: te reo Maori, broadcasting
Duration: 3'20"
06:49
Fonterra profit tipped to head to $800m
BODY:
As farmers struggle with low dairy prices at the farmgate, the co-operative, Fonterra, is expected to report a bumper full-year result, tomorrow
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 59"
06:50
Christchurch mayor declares asset sales off the table
BODY:
Christchurch Mayor Lianne Dalziel takes asset sales off the table in debate with challenger John Minto.
Topics: politics
Regions: Canterbury
Tags: Regional council, Christchurch
Duration: 3'30"
06:53
Arvida buying three villages for $66 mln
BODY:
Aged care company Arvida says it's on the look out for more businesses to acquire as smaller operators come on the market.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: aged care
Duration: 1'22"
06:55
NZ financial services company vulnerable to ethical lapses
BODY:
New Zealand financial services companies are vulnerable to the same kind of ethical lapses in judgement as those that have led to major industry and corporate failures according to an industry study.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: industry
Duration: 1'26"
07:06
Sports News for 21 September 2016
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'32"
07:10
UN suspends aid convoys in Syria
BODY:
UN suspends aid convoys in Syria after attack; from New York RNZ political editor Jane Patterson says foreign ministers meeting at the UN are reporting some advances in preserving fragile truce.
Topics: conflict
Regions:
Tags: Syria, United Nations
Duration: 3'57"
07:14
Ban ki Moon reveals frustration in final address to UN
BODY:
UN Secretary General despairs at violence in Syria in his final address to the UN, declaring Syria and its backers have blood on their hands.
Topics: conflict
Regions:
Tags: Syria, United Nations
Duration: 2'22"
07:16
Trident responds to electronic monitoring concerns
BODY:
Trident ceo says there is no conflict of interest fishing companies own surveillance
Topics: business, environment, food
Regions:
Tags: fisheries
Duration: 5'51"
07:27
Industry body says fish dumping is not systemic problem
BODY:
Inshore Fisheries CEO says no evidence to support 50 percent of fleet would be put out of business if fish dumping stoppped.
Topics: environment, business, food
Regions:
Tags: fisheries
Duration: 5'10"
07:28
Greens: its possible to have sanctuary & respect Maori rights
BODY:
Green Party says it supports the Kermadec sanctuary and the mana of iwi, saying the Government needs to resolve the impasse over possible breaches of treaty rights.
Topics: politics, business, te ao Maori
Regions:
Tags: fisheries
Duration: 7'11"
07:36
Spike in gambling problems in Indian community
BODY:
There's been a spike in the number of Indians seeking help for harmful gambling and many of them are believed to be foreign students trying to make ends meet.
Topics: crime, education
Regions:
Tags: gambling
Duration: 2'57"
07:43
Immigration NZ confirm fraud cases involving Indian agent
BODY:
Immigration NZ confirms three cases of confirmed fraud involving the Indian education agent, Vinod Kumar Sharma
Topics: education
Regions:
Tags: immigrant students
Duration: 1'01"
07:44
Acclaim Otago: govt changes to ACC "in the right direction"
BODY:
The Government says it will make it easier for injured people to appeal againt Accident Compensation Corporation decisions.
Topics: politics, health
Regions:
Tags: accident, ACC
Duration: 4'26"
07:55
George Bush senior is apparently voting for Clinton
BODY:
Who'd have thunk it? President George H.W. Bush is reportedly planning to vote for Hillary Clinton in the US presidential election.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: United States, election
Duration: 3'44"
07:58
Attack on Craig 'unconscionable', his wife says
BODY:
Colin Craig's wife Helen has told a court the attack on her husband over his relationship with his former press secretary was unconscionable and lacked any regard for the truth.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Scandal, court
Duration: 3'02"
08:06
Sports News for 21 September 2016
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'30"
08:13
Outrage at UN after aid convoy attacked in Syria
BODY:
As UN continues debating the conflict in Syria, Iraq's prime minister thanks New Zealand for training its troops.
Topics: politics, conflict
Regions:
Tags: Syria, United Nations
Duration: 5'34"
08:18
Christchurch mayoralty rivals Dalziel and Minto debate issues
BODY:
We talk to Christchurch mayoralty candidates, the incumbent Lianne Dalziel and her challenger, the veteran activist John Minto.
Topics: politics
Regions: Canterbury
Tags: mayor, election, Christchurch
Duration: 16'03"
08:29
Markets Update for 21 September 2016
BODY:
A brief update of movements in the financial sector.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 55"
08:37
Hundreds stand for DHBs but who knows what they stand for?
BODY:
Almost four hundred people are standing for District Health Boards but their invisibility is something some want to change.
Topics: health, politics
Regions:
Tags: health board, election
Duration: 3'13"
08:39
Fonterra raises its forecast payout to farmers by 50 cents.
BODY:
Fonterra raises its forecast payout to farmers by 50 cents to $5.25 a kilo of milk solids passing the break even point for by 20 cents .
Topics: business, farming
Regions:
Tags: Fonterra
Duration: 1'28"
08:44
Researcher relieved with police's turnaround on data collection
BODY:
A leading researcher on gangs, Jarrod Gilbert, is impressed with the police's turnaround on how it releases data after he was previously blocked from having access
Topics: law
Regions:
Tags: gangs, police
Duration: 4'08"
08:49
MPI misled in dam funding bid, says report
BODY:
The Ministry of Primary Industries was misled in a funding bid for a Wairarapa dam, an independent report has found.
Topics: politics, environment
Regions:
Tags: environment, dam, funding
Duration: 2'54"
08:51
Neighbourhood reeling after 3 Australians die car crash
BODY:
The neighbours of an Australian family who were killed in a horrific car crash in Huntly on Monday are shocked by their deaths.
Topics: transport
Regions:
Tags: crash
Duration: 2'47"
08:55
A cup of coffee and a korero on offer at New Plymouth cafe
BODY:
A cup of coffee with your Te Reo is helping people take Maori language out of the classroom and into the community in New Plymouth.
Topics: life and society, te ao Maori
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 3'42"
=SHOW NOTES=
===9:06 AM. | Nine To Noon===
=DESCRIPTION=
Current affairs and topics of interest, including: 10:45 The Reading: Going Up is Easy by Lydia Bradey, with Laurence Fearnley. A life lived on the edge - quite literally. The riveting account of the controversial first ascent of Everest without supplementary oxygen by NZ mountaineer Lydia Bradey. (Part 8 of 10, RNZ)
=AUDIO=
09:08
UN aid convoy attacked in Aleppo
BODY:
The ceasefire in Syria is over after the deadly airstrike on a humanitarian aid convoy near Aleppo in Syria yesterday.An estimated 20 civilians including a senior official of the Syrian Arab Red Crescent were killed in the attack, which destroyed 18 of the 31 trucks in the convoy. Kathryn Ryan speaks to Dr Ahmed Tarakji, President of the Syrian American Medical Society, an aid agency which treated 2.6 million people in Syria and refugees in neighbouring countries last year alone.
[image:82595:full]
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: Syria, aid, United Nations
Duration: 13'21"
09:22
Tim Bale on the UK Labour leadership contest
BODY:
Kathryn Ryan talks to Tim Bale, Professor of Politics at Queen Mary University of London, about the contest for the leadership of the UK Labour party - set to be resolved this weekend.
EXTENDED BODY:
The leadership of the UK labour party is set to be decided this weekend when Labour party members, affiliated trade union supporters and other registered supporters vote.
Jeremy Corbyn, who surprised many last year when he won the leadership having started as a rank outsider, is facing a challenge from Shadow Minister for Wales, Owen Smith.
After the UK voted for Brexit earlier in the year, many within the Labour party criticised Mr Corbyn for his unenthusiastic backing of the Remain camp.
Dozens of his frontbench team have walked out since Hilary Benn was sacked on 26 June, saying Mr Corbyn cannot win a general election.
At least one poll suggests Labour rank and file voters regard the new Conservative leader Theresa May more favourably than they do Mr Corbyn.
But Mr Corbyn has vowed to carry on, and leads Mr Owen in most polls.
What does all this mean for the future of the British Labour party?
Tim Bale, professor of politics at Queen Mary University London and author of the recent book The Conservative Party: From Thatcher to Cameron believes that Labour will lose the next general election in 2020, and probably 2025, putting them out of power for two decades.
He says Mr Corbyn is almost certain to win at the weekend and if he then goes on to loose badly at the next general election the party could well split.
“Jeremy Corbyn is not a normal politician. A normal leader, faced with the fact that three quarters of his MPs don’t want him in the position, would have stepped down by now.
“He wants to turn the Labour Party into something very, very different.”
He says Mr Corbyn and his supporters want the Labour Party, once a centrist, parliamentary force, to change into a radical socialist, social movement.
“A party that does politics very, very differently.”
Prof Bale doubts whether, given Britain’s first past the post system, that kind of party will win general elections in the UK.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: UK
Duration: 13'00"
09:38
National Park Superintendent Tammy Duchesne
BODY:
A senior figure in the US National Parks service is visiting this week to exchange ideas with iwi and DOC officials about the environmental issues facing parks around the world. Superintendent Tammy Duchesne talks to Kathryn Ryan about her job and working with 20 thousand others in the organisation looking after 401 sites.
EXTENDED BODY:
A senior figure in the US National Parks service is visiting this week to exchange ideas with iwi and DOC officials about the environmental issues facing parks around the world. Superintendent Tammy Duchesne talks to Kathryn Ryan about her job and working with 20 thousand others in the organisation looking after 401 sites.
Read an edited excerpt of the interview below:
What are the pressures on the service itself? It’s interesting that you talk about these different components of this kind of heritage protection, because there are the wide open expanses, then there might be areas that are urban or bordering urban areas and there are a lot of pressure for land, for water and resources. Is that a pressure that you’re having to resist?
Absolutely. I manage two national historical parks in Hawaii. One is called Kaloko-Honokōhau the other one is Puʻuhonua o Hōnaunau National Historical Park and the northern park is quite interesting, it was actually established after an outcry from the native Hawaiian community, who saw a lot of their land being really taken over by some resort developments, hotels and they were really concerned about having their space so they could practise their culture and the area with which they identified would remain protected.
So the way that this park got started was this group of citizens who actually wrote to their Congresswoman Patsy Mink and they asked that this area be preserved. And through their outcry they were able to preserve Kaloko-Honokōhau, which was then a national landmark. They were able to turn that into a national park in 1978 and what they saw in it was that it was a kipuka, which means that it was an area that was spared of lava flow, so it’s a metaphor, but now the park is 600 marine and 600 terrestrial acres and there is development all around the park.
Just recently there was a proposal to put in 5000 homes, three schools and a hospital directly upslope of the park, so that would mean there would be the need for water extraction, there would be pollution of the water, it could threaten night skies, it could threaten noise, it would just be a real impact to the park.
How do you win the battle between people saying people need houses and what do you say in response about other things that people need?
Again the park preserves a settlement from the 900s and it has great archaeology sites. The park was established to preserve, interpret and perpetuate native Hawaiian culture, so when we received the park in 1978, it is our job through the Organic Act to keep the park as it was, and that means the same species, the same water quantity and quality, so we have to be vigilant about monitoring.
When a proposal comes in that proposes to extract as much water as is already being used, we have great concerns because that already threatens the species that live in our park, which threatens the ability for our community to practise their culture. In our legislation it actually says that the park will work with other entities including state and local government to protect the air and water quality and quantity around the park. So even though it is our mission to preserve and to protect and to work with state agencies to have this good system of air and water quality management, as you know, it’s hard when people want to build affordable homes. There is an outcry. So what I say is that we believe that we can do things responsibility if there is proactivity, planning and we work together.
You talked about that ability to bring everybody on board. How have you seen it happen in different places in different ways?
Well it’s challenging. In the same way you said, if there is over extraction or overuse, that could hurt our coral reefs. Coral reefs are a big generator of economic livelihood, so we believe that we are trying to do a lot of education to convince people that it doesn’t have to be and/or. We can’t have really responsible and strict and healthy preservation measures that also allows for healthy management.
It’s a new paradigm and it scares people, because water has never previously… on the island I live on, it’s not really managed right now, water. It’s more of a free-for-all state. So the idea of water permits and any type of legislation or regulation, people feel is really contentious and federal over reach and it’s really impeding on their rights.
So it’s about having a conversation many times and just really being a good listener and just really trying to allow people to understand that you’re not trying to say no development, but there has got to be a way for thoughtful, responsible, proactive development. We want people to be able to come to the table with the tools to be able to make good management systems.
Topics: environment
Regions:
Tags: DOC, parks, heritage sites, US
Duration: 13'35"
09:52
Australia correspondent Peter Munro
BODY:
Today Peter Munro covers what the Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has been up to during his trip to New York where he's taking part in a UN summit on refugees.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Australia
Duration: 7'54"
10:06
Crash predictor Ann Pettifor: 'We're no longer citizens, we're customers'
BODY:
Kathryn Ryan speaks to Ann Pettifor - one of the few economists who correctly predicted the 2008 global economic crash. Ann was also one of the leaders of a successful campaign to cancel 100 billion dollars worth of debt owed to by some of the world's poorest nations to some of the richest. She is currently the director of the left wing economic think tank Policy Research in Macroeconomics or PRIME.
EXTENDED BODY:
One of the few analysts to correctly predict the 2008 global financial crash says we need to start worrying about the economic attempts to turn citizens into consumers.
UK economist Ann Pettifor was also one of the leaders of the Jubilee 2000 debt campaign that successfully pushed to cancel $100 billion worth of debt owed by some of the world's poorest nations.
Ms Pettifor, the director of left-wing economic think tank Policy Research in Macroeconomics, has been in New Zealand to deliver public lectures on the current state of the financial world.
Speaking to Nine to Noon today, she said many of the current issues facing the world came from attempts by economists and the finance sector to 'marketise' society and to "turn us all into customers for everything".
"We're no longer citizens, we're no longer workers, we're customers, all along the line. And all of our relationships must, they argue, be marketised.
"They're also turning us into 'rentiers', so when we rent out our house as part of Airbnb, or we rent out our car as part of Uber, we are learning that with the ownership of an asset, it becomes possible, almost effortlessly, to earn rent."
She said the global economy was increasingly about earning rent from money, property and any other assets people owned.
"We are using up everything we have to earn a bit more money, and that is partly because the way the system is geared, and those who do have assets are able to earn rent on those assets, whether it's interest rates or whatever, and those without assets are poor, and those people are cross, they are very cross."
Ms Pettifor said people were feeling increasingly desperate due to low wages and salaries.
"I'm not against people using Airbnb, and I understand why they are doing it, and the reason they are doing it is because they are getting poorer, because they cannot live on their existing income, because we don't pay wages or salaries that allow people to live a decent life. So they have to supplement that, with all of these additional marginal activities.
"That's what's wrong with the way we have allowed the markets to take control of our economies and for the invisible hand to decide who gets what, is those who are left behind - and the left-behinders voted for Brexit, the left-behinders are voting for Trump, and they're voting for Le Pen, the fascist in France - we need to worry about that."
Related
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: debt, sustainability
Duration: 38'56"
11:07
Book review - Homo Deus
BODY:
Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow by Yuval Noah Harari. Reviewed by Phil Vine, published by Harvill Secker.
Topics: books
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 6'23"
11:14
Music feature of the week: Don McGlashan
BODY:
Charlotte Ryan features the music of veteran singer/songwriter Don McGlashan, who tours New Zealand next month with Shayne Carter.
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags: Don McGlashan
Duration: 19'20"
11:33
Xanthe White: Gardening guru
BODY:
Landscape designer Xanthe White has dedicated her latest book to the basics for every garden - healthy soil. She joins Kathryn Ryan to talk about her The Good Dirt and shares her tips for making sure your soil is pristine and how to get the best out of it. Her 20 years working around the world has helped to shape this book and its stunning images.
EXTENDED BODY:
Landscape designer Xanthe White has dedicated her latest book to the basics for every garden - healthy soil. She joins Kathryn Ryan to talk about her The Good Dirt and shares her tips for making sure your soil is pristine and how to get the best out of it. Her 20 years working around the world has helped to shape this book and its stunning images.
Read an edited excerpt of the interview below:
What are the organisms in healthy soil that you just want to leave be?
The soil that we want to grow a healthy garden as part of an ecology, as part of a whole cycle, like the relationship between wood and earth and mulch… even as you look at a tree, most of it is actually living underground. So what’s happening under there the more we scrape off, it’s alive. It’s got bacteria, it’s got fungus, it’s got all of these different things happening and when you scrape it back and push it to the side, you’re taking away all of that. It’s like healthy probiotics in your tummy. All of that delicate little ecology that’s beneath. And it’s our eco system too. Healthy food is healthy soil. It’s all part of it. Layering it up and letting it grow itself is where the magic lies.
What are the different soil types and what do you do with each of them?
You could go into millions of different types of soil, but what a gardener needs to know is basically, look at clay, fertile soils, sand, gravel and then modified soil, so a situation where you’ve got totally artificial soil. Lots of people have gardens in pots these days. Those are your main situations that you’re dealing with. They’re all based on the particle size of the soil. When you’ve got really fine soils, like a clay, it’s difficult to get water movement through that soil and it is also difficult to get water to move out of that soil and we all know that water is the key to all life. When you are in a sandier or gravel soil, the difficulty is in growing organic matter in that soil, so if you think about soil quite simply as these particles that the flow of water through and a build-up of organic matter through, is essential, then it’s actually quite easy to understand your own garden.
Do you water soil, or are you watering the plant?
I believe that there are certainly situations you need to water, like when you are establishing a new garden, particularly when you have planted it further towards the heat of summer, but I am quite resistant to irrigation systems. I have found more through my years of maintenance and building many gardens, we have more problems with overwatering, than we do of under watering. You really want your plants to grow and get their roots down deep and you want that mulch and moisture. You want a garden that is full of plants. Ideally green mulch is the best. A full, overflowing abundant garden is the best way to keep it healthy, so I think watering should be done very carefully and selectively and throwing a whole lot of water on a garden isn’t ideal.
Topics: author interview, books
Regions:
Tags: gardens, soil
Duration: 14'44"
11:48
Arts commentator Courtney Johnston
BODY:
South Island galleries celebrate Doris Lusk's centenary; an artist goes to court to prove he is who he says he is; and Italy gives all its18 year olds 500 Euros to spend on the arts.
Topics: arts
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 10'53"
=SHOW NOTES=
09:05 UN aid convoy attacked in Aleppo
[image:82572:half]
The ceasefire in Syria is over after the deadly airstrike on a humanitarian aid convoy near Aleppo in Syria yesterday.An estimated 20 civilians including a senior official of the Syrian Arab Red Crescent were killed in the attack, which destroyed 18 of the 31 trucks in the convoy. Kathryn Ryan speaks to Dr Ahmed Tarakji, President of the Syrian American Medical Society, an aid agency which treated 2.6 million people in Syria and refugees in neighbouring countries last year alone.
A video taken from the scene by activists from the search and rescue group, The White Helmets.
09:20 Tim Bale on the UK Labour leadership contest
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Kathryn Ryan talks to Tim Bale, Professor of Politics at Queen Mary University of London, about the contest for the leadership of the UK Labour party - set to be resolved this weekend.
09:30 National Park Superintendent Tammy Duchesne
[image:82472:full]
A senior figure in the US National Parks service is visiting this week to exchange ideas with iwi and DOC officials about the environmental issues facing parks around the world. Superintendent Tammy Duchesne talks to Kathryn Ryan about her job and working with 20 thousand others in the organisation looking after 401 sites.
09:45 Australia correspondent Peter Munro
Today Peter Munro covers what the Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has been up to during his trip to New York where he's taking part in a UN summit on refugees.
[image:82469:half] no metadata
10:05 Predicting the Crash: Ann Pettifor
Kathryn Ryan speaks to Ann Pettifor - one of the few economists who correctly predicted the 2008 global economic crash. Ann was also one of the leaders of a successful campaign to cancel 100 billion dollars worth of debt owed to by some of the world's poorest nations to some of the richest. She is currently the director of the left wing economic think tank Policy Research in Macroeconomics or PRIME.
10:35 Book review - Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow by Yuval Noah Harari
Reviewed by Phil Vine, published by Harvill Secker
10:45 The Reading
Going Up is Easy by Lydia Bradey with Laurence Fearnley (Part 8 of 10)
11:05 Music feature of the week: Don McGlashan
[image:41112:half]
Charlotte Ryan features the music of veteran singer/songwriter Don McGlashan, who tours New Zealand next month with Shayne Carter.
11:20 Xanthe White, Gardening Guru
Landscape designer Xanthe White has dedicated her latest book to the basics for every garden - healthy soil. She joins Kathryn Ryan to talk about her The Good Dirt and shares her tips for making sure your soil is pristine and how to get the best out of it. Her 20 years working around the world has helped to shape this book and its stunning images.
[gallery:2457]
11:45 Arts commentator Courtney Johnston
[gallery:2487]
South Island galleries celebrate Doris Lusk's centenary; an artist goes to court to prove he is who he says he is; and Italy gives all its18 year olds 500 Euros to spend on the arts.
===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 21 September 2016
BODY:
Iraq welcomes New Zealand's help in the fight against Islamic State. Faulty hip implant patients want to sue the device's maker.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 15'30"
12:17
Forecast payout adds nearly a billion to economy - ASB
BODY:
Fonterra's higher forecast payout to farmers is likely to add nearly a billion dollars to the economy.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: dairy price
Duration: 1'40"
12:19
Kathmandu's full year profit rises 64 percent on improved sales
BODY:
Kathmandu Holdings has beat its own expectations with a strong full year profit, up nearly two-thirds on the year earlier.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: Kathmandu Holdings
Duration: 1'36"
12:21
NZ Super Fund returns dented by fickle markets
BODY:
The New Zealand Superannuation Fund has made less than 2 percent on its investments in the year to June, reflecting the slump in returns from global share markets.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: New Zealand Superannuation Fund
Duration: 1'36"
12:22
More records for migration and tourism
BODY:
As you may heave heard in the news - the number of people coming to New Zealand to live, study and work has rebounded to record highs.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: migration
Duration: 1'09"
12:23
Midday Markets for 21 September 2016
BODY:
For the latest from the markets we're joined by Don Lewthwaite at First NZ Capital.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 2'12"
12:25
Business briefs
BODY:
The Accident Compensation Corporation is looking for feedback on a proposal to cut levies by 10 percent.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: ACC
Duration: 36"
12:26
Midday Sports News for 21 September 2016
BODY:
The veterans Maria Tutaia and Anna Harrison have returned to the Silver Ferns squad for the four test Constellation Cup series against Australia next month, despite both still carrying injuries.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'59"
12:34
Midday Rural News for 21 September 2016
BODY:
News from the rural and farming sectors.
Topics: rural, farming
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 8'35"
=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=
13:12
World leaders to meet at UN to discuss superbugs
BODY:
World leaders are holding a summit on the dangers of super bugs at the United Nations this week. But is it already too late?
EXTENDED BODY:
Scientists have been warning about the serious risk of super bugs and antibiotic resistance for decades.
The UK’s chief medical officer has repeatedly warned of an 'antibiotic apocalypse'.
And it may already be upon us with a growing number of potentially fatal infections now resistant to antibiotics.
Now world leaders are holding a summit on the problem at the United Nations this week - but is it too late?
Professor Kurt Krause from Otago University's biochemistry department is an expert in antibiotic resistance.
He says antibiotic resistance in the community only started to show quite recently.
“A decade ago the antibiotic resistance problem got more serious, a lot of bugs that before were only resistant in the hospitals were showing to be resistant in the community.
“That’s when things started to change.”
We have also tended to use antibiotics thoughtlessly. Antibiotics are unusual because the very use of them leads to more bug resistance.
“If you give poison to something that doesn’t actually kill it, it will get stronger and adapt.”
Professor Kurt Krause says he now sees patients who have been on antibiotics for several months.
The problem is pharmaceutical companies don’t make them anymore, and with good economic reasons.
“It costs between $700 million to $1 billion to make them, then you only use them for 2 weeks at a time.”
And if a bacteria becomes resistant to the new antibiotic, its clinical use is limited.
Prof Krause says the traditional free market, capitalist approach to drug development may no longer be the answer.
Topics: health, science
Regions:
Tags: antibiotic resistance
Duration: 15'42"
13:28
All Right? Christchurch
BODY:
The Canterbury recovery is heading into its seventh year, but just how well are people in the region feeling?
EXTENDED BODY:
The Canterbury recovery is heading into its seventh year, but just how well are people in the region feeling? The latest Canterbury Wellbeing Survey and Canterbury Wellbeing Index, has just been released and it says life for many is improving, but the impacts of the quakes are still being felt.
Dr Lucy D'Aeth is from the All Right? Campaign, and is public health specialist at the Canterbury District Health Board.
Topics: health
Regions: Canterbury
Tags: mental health
Duration: 10'11"
13:38
Lyttelton Making Kai Famous
BODY:
A Lyttelton restaurateur is aiming to make New Zealand food famous. Giulio Sturla, is the owner of Roots restaurant and his campaign, ConversatioNZ, is aiming to put our kai on the world stage.
EXTENDED BODY:
A Lyttelton restaurateur is aiming to make New Zealand food famous.
Giulio Sturla, is the owner of Roots restaurant and his campaign, ConversatioNZ, is aiming to put our kai on the world stage.
Topics: food
Regions: Canterbury
Tags:
Duration: 8'49"
13:48
Favourite album
BODY:
The West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band, chosen by Paul Kean.
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 12'00"
14:08
Music Critic: Kate Robertson
BODY:
Kate has collaborative new music from Australian musician / producer Ta-ku and Wafia Al-Ribabi, known professionally as Wafia. She is also picking a track to play from the new Carly Rae Jepsen EP "Side B"
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 16'26"
14:25
Bookmarks with Roseanne Liang
BODY:
Filmmaker Roseanne Liang first came to notice with Banana in a Nutshell, a documentary based on her own life and cross-cultural romance with a European Kiwi. It won a number of awards, including SPADA New Filmmaker of 2005. Then she turned the doco into a movie My Wedding and Other Secrets, a somewhat autobiographical romantic comedy. Today she speaks to Jesse Mulligan about her latest project and discusses her favourite music, movies, TV shows and books.
EXTENDED BODY:
2:20 Bookmarks with Roseanne Liang
Filmmaker Roseanne Liang first came to notice with Banana in a Nutshell, a documentary based on her own life and cross-cultural romance with a European Kiwi.
It won a number of awards, including SPADA New Filmmaker of 2005. Then she turned the doco into a movie My Wedding and Other Secrets, a somewhat autobiographical romantic comedy.
Today she speaks to Jesse Mulligan about her latest project and discusses her favourite music, movies, TV shows and books.
Topics: arts, movies
Regions:
Tags: Roseanne Liang
Duration: 34'59"
15:08
The man who debunks conspiracy theories
BODY:
Mick West is a science writer and is dedicated to the art of debunking wild theories that circulate online and helping other people do the same, with his website, Metabunk.
EXTENDED BODY:
The Russians have poisoned Hillary Clinton, Elvis Presley is alive and well. The Malaysia Airlines plane that disappeared in the Indian Ocean is the same one as was shot down over the Ukraine.
These are just a few of the many conspiracy theories that flourish in the echo chamber of the internet.
Mick West is a science writer and is dedicated to the art of debunking wild theories that circulate online and helping other people do the same, with his website, Metabunk.
His passion for debunking comes from a concern that real problems are being ignored because science is ignored.
“The aim of debunking is two-fold it’s identifying the things that are wrong, and communicating why they’re wrong.”
He says one of the most distasteful, and ubiquitous theories, doing the rounds concerns mass casualty events.
“It’s the idea that people are crisis actors and being paid by the government to pretend that their children have died.
“There are actual families in Sandy Hook who have been approached by people who accuse them of being actors, accuse them of having fake children, and these are people whose children were actually killed.”
He says on the conspiracy spectrum the most extreme are those who think everything is a lie.
“Everything you see in the media has been faked and everything you have been taught about history is also fake.
Every single mass casualty event is going to have that theory attached to it.”
Mick says such people get deeper and deeper into their conspiratorial thinking.
"They go into a pit where they can’t actually believe they’re not being lied to."
He says true believers can't back down because seeing the flaws in a theory challenges their world view, so they "double down" on their beliefs.
There’s a very small, but significant, number of people who still think the earth is flat,” he says.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: conspiracy theories
Duration: 23'24"
15:47
One Quick Question for 21 September 2016
BODY:
We find the answers to any queries you can think up.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 5'51"
15:54
The Panel pre-show for 21 September 2016
BODY:
Your feedback, and a preview of the guests and topics on The Panel.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 5'58"
=SHOW NOTES=
1:10 First song
1:15 World leaders to meet at UN to discuss superbugs dangers
[image:68903:full]
Scientists have been warning about the serious risk of super bugs and antibiotic resistance for many years ...
England's chief medical officer has repeatedly warned an 'antibiotic apocalypse' may already be upon us, with a growing number of potentially fatal infections now resistant to antibiotics
Now world leaders are holding a summit on the issue at the United Nations this week.
Professor Kurt Krause from Otago University's Biochemistry Department is an expert in antibiotic resistance and discusses the significance of this.
1:25 All Right? Christchurch
[image:82630:full]
The Canterbury recovery is heading into its seventh year, but just how well are people in the region feeling? The latest Canterbury Wellbeing Survey and Canterbury Wellbeing Index, has just been released and it says life for many is improving, but the impacts of the quakes are still being felt.
Dr Lucy D'Aeth is from the All Right? Campaign, and is public health specialist at the Canterbury District Health Board.
[image:82632:half]
1:35 Lyttelton Making Kai Famous
A Lyttelton restaurateur is aiming to make New Zealand food famous.
Giulio Sturla, is the owner of Roots restaurant and his campaign, ConversatioNZ, is aiming to put our kai on the world stage.
1:40 Favourite album: The West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band
2:10 Music Critic: Kate Robertson
Kate has collaborative new music from Australian musician / producer Ta-ku and Wafia Al-Ribabi, known professionally as Wafia. She is also picking a track to play from the new Carly Rae Jepsen EP "Side B"
[image:82590:third]
2:20 Bookmarks with Roseanne Liang
Filmmaker Roseanne Liang first came to notice with Banana in a Nutshell, a documentary based on her own life and cross-cultural romance with a European Kiwi.
It won a number of awards, including SPADA New Filmmaker of 2005. Then she turned the doco into a movie My Wedding and Other Secrets, a somewhat autobiographical romantic comedy.
Today she speaks to Jesse Mulligan about her latest project, the web series "Friday Night Bites" a weekly comedy set in Auckland, following 26 eclectic Friday nights in the lives of three co-habiting 20-something Kiwi-Asian women."
She also discusses her favourite music, movies, TV shows and books.
[image:82497:half]
3:10 Debunking Conspiracy Theories
The Russians have poisoned Hillary Clinton. Elvis Presley is alive and well. The Malaysia Airlines plane that disappeared in the Indian Ocean is the same one shot down over the Ukraine.
These are just a few of the many, many conspiracy theories that flourish in the echo chamber of the internet.
Mick West is a science writer and is dedicated to the art of debunking wild theories that circulate online and helping other people do the same, with his website, Metabunk.
3:35 Spoken Feature
3:45 The Panel Pre-Show
=PLAYLIST=
JESSE MULLIGAN AFTERNOONS:
1pm - 4pm
Wednesday 21st September 2016
JESSE'S SONG:
ARTIST: Marlon Williams
TITLE: After All
COMP: Marlon Williams
ALBUM: Marlon Williams
LABEL: iTunes
FAVOURITE ALBUM:
ARTIST: The West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band
TITLE: Shifting Sands
COMP: Baker Knight
ALBUM: Part One
LABEL: Reprise
ARTIST: The West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band
TITLE: Transparent Day
COMP: Bob Markley, Danny Harris
ALBUM: Part One
LABEL: Reprise
ARTIST: The West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band
TITLE: I Won't Hurt You
COMP: Bob Markley, Danny Harris, Michael Lloyd
ALBUM: Part One
LABEL: Reprise
MUSIC CRITIC - Kate Robertson:
ARTIST: Ta-ku and Wafia
TITLE: Love Somebody
COMP: Regan Matthews, Wafia Al-Ribabi
ALBUM: (m)edian EP
LABEL: iTunes
ARTIST: Carly Rae Jepsen
TITLE: Higher
COMP: Greg Kurstin, Claude Kelly
ALBUM: Emotion (Side B) EP
LABEL: Interscope
BOOKMARKS - Roseanne Liang:
ARTIST: Estere
TITLE: Reptilian Journey
COMP: Jordan Rakei
ALBUM: New Tracks 188
LABEL: NZOA
ARTIST: Phoenix Foundation
TITLE: Thames Soup
COMP: Samuel Flynn Scott, Luke Buda, Conrad Wedde, Tom Callwood, Will Ricketts, Chris O'Connor
ALBUM: Fandango
LABEL: Universal
THE PANEL:
ARTIST: Bryan Ferry
TITLE: Let's Stick Together
COMP: Wilbert Harrison
ALBUM: Let's Stick Together
LABEL: EG Records
===4:06 PM. | The Panel===
=DESCRIPTION=
An hour of discussion featuring a range of panellists from right along the opinion spectrum (RNZ)
=AUDIO=
15:47
One Quick Question for 21 September 2016
BODY:
We find the answers to any queries you can think up.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 5'51"
15:54
The Panel pre-show for 21 September 2016
BODY:
Your feedback, and a preview of the guests and topics on The Panel.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 5'58"
16:03
The Panel with Jonathan Krebs and Sue Wells (Part 1)
BODY:
Prime Minister John Key has sung Helen Clark's praises at the UN and urged for a ceasefire in Syria. Donald Trump jnr has tried to make a point about refugees using an analogy about Skittles - a simple one that anyone can understand? US reporter Susan Baldacci discusses the latest theories in the JonBenet Ramsay murder case.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 25'24"
16:05
The Panel with Jonathan Krebs and Sue Wells (Part 2)
BODY:
Marriage - should people stick at it more? What the Panelists Jonathan Krebs and Sue Wells want to talk about. Retirement and finding career options over 55. We talk to Kathryn Ennis-Carter about finding a job.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 24'19"
16:08
JK at the UN in NY
BODY:
Prime Minister John Key has sung Helen Calrk's praises at the UN and urged for a ceasefire in Syria.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 4'48"
16:13
Trump jnr Skittles analogy - a vote winner?
BODY:
Donald Trump jnr has tried to make a point about refugees using an analogy about Skittles - a simple one that anyone can understand?
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Trump
Duration: 6'15"
16:20
JonBenet Ramsay
BODY:
US reporter Susan Baldacci discusses the latest theories in the JonBenet Ramsay murder case.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: US, cold case
Duration: 12'14"
16:35
Brangelina split
BODY:
Marriage - should people stick at it more?
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: marriage
Duration: 8'21"
16:43
Panel Says
BODY:
What the Panelists Jonathan Krebs and Sue Wells want to talk about.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 3'46"
16:47
Getting old
BODY:
Retirement and finding career options over 55. We talk to Kathryn Ennis-Carter about finding a job.
Topics: health
Regions:
Tags: aging
Duration: 11'48"
=SHOW NOTES=
===5:00 PM. | Checkpoint===
=DESCRIPTION=
RNZ's weekday drive-time news and current affairs programme
=AUDIO=
17:00
Checkpoint with John Campbell, Wednesday 21 September 2016
BODY:
Watch Wednesday's full programme here
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 00"
17:07
16 Westpac banks to close, First Union says
BODY:
At least 16 of 19 Westpac banks earmarked for closure will definitely close, First Union's Tali Williams tells Checkpoint.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: Westpac
Duration: 4'48"
17:12
UN Council needs to do more for Syria - John Key
BODY:
Prime Minister John Key has addressed the United Nations General Assembly, saying it has fallen short in its responsibility to Syria, which he said was "the most serious crisis of our time
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: UN
Duration: 3'22"
17:15
Political Editor Jane Patterson from the UN in New York
BODY:
RNZ Political Editor Jane Patterson is at the UN Headquarters in New York, where Prime Minister John Key addressed the UN General Assembly today. She reviews his speech for Checkpoint.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: UN
Duration: 3'08"
17:19
Milk price slump could be over after Fonterra lifts payout
BODY:
Fonterra's move to boost its farm-gate forecast by 50 cents has been welcomed by farmers, with Federated Farmers saying it will help morale.
Topics: farming
Regions:
Tags: milk price
Duration: 3'10"
17:22
First Union says Westpac closure will have huge impact
BODY:
First union Otago Southland Organiser Ken Young joins Checkpoint to discuss how the closure of Westpac's Ranfurly branch will affect staff and the community.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: Westpac
Duration: 6'54"
17:34
Evening Business for 21 September 2016
BODY:
News from the business sector, including a market report.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 3'04"
17:40
Row over Treaty of Waitangi settlement bills delay Parliament
BODY:
New Zealand First has been blamed for blocking the passing of five Treaty of Waitangi settlement bills this week but Winston Peters says that's balderdash.
Topics: politics, te ao Maori
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'29"
17:43
Conservative Party had concerns about allegations
BODY:
A court has been told that concerns about sexual allegations against Colin Craig were raised at every monthly board meeting of the Conservative Party after the last election.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Colin Craig
Duration: 4'17"
17:47
Proposal to enforce 'cat curfews' & limit numbers
BODY:
Councils around the country would be given the power to enforce 'cat curfews' and limit the number of furry felines people can keep, if a controversial proposal gets the go ahead.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: cats
Duration: 3'11"
17:50
Peace hikoi protests Waitara Lands Bill
BODY:
About 200 people have taken part in a peace hikoi in north Taranaki protesting against the Waitara Lands Bill which had its first reading in Parliament today.
Topics: politics, te ao Maori
Regions: Taranaki
Tags:
Duration: 3'45"
17:55
School students share messages for carjacking victim
BODY:
Classmates from a tiny school outside Masterton, Mauriceville School, have written cards and drawn pictures to send to Nancy Voon, the Auckland woman carjacked and attacked last week.
Topics: education
Regions: Wellington Region
Tags:
Duration: 4'57"
18:08
PM takes aim at UN Security Council over Syria
BODY:
Prime Minister John Key has taken aim at the United Nation's Security Council, calling for it to find a long term solution in Syria.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: UN
Duration: 1'20"
18:14
Westpac employees face job losses
BODY:
Many Westpac employees face uncertain futures after the bank announced it would close 19 branches in some of the country's smallest towns.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: Westpac
Duration: 2'34"
18:16
Mayors upset at Westpac bank closures
BODY:
Mayors across the country are learning Westpac branches in their towns are due to close. Otorohanga District Mayor Max Baxter joins Checkpoint.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: Westpac
Duration: 2'44"
18:19
Security officers at courts increasingly at risk
BODY:
Security officers at courts throughout the country are increasingly at risk, prompting Chief District Court Judge Jan-Marie Doogue to issue new security guidelines to judges
Topics: security
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 3'54"
18:23
Anne Tolley denies claiming official measure of homelessness
BODY:
The Social Development Minister has told Parliament she didn't tell a United Nations committee that New Zealand has an official measure of children who are homeless or live in poverty.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'52"
18:26
NZers happier than they were a year ago - survey
BODY:
According to a survey of 7000 Kiwis, 81 percent rate their quality of life positively while 19 percent say they're stuggling to make ends meet. Laura Bootham reports.
Topics: life and society
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 3'05"
=SHOW NOTES=
===6:30 PM. | None (National)===
=DESCRIPTION=
Highlighting the RNZ stories you're sharing on-line
Adam Cohen: the origins of eugenics
===6:55 PM. | In Parliament===
=DESCRIPTION=
===7:06 PM. | Nights===
=DESCRIPTION=
RNZ's weeknight programme of entertainment and information
=AUDIO=
19:12
John Thornley - Songs of the Spirit
BODY:
Methodist lay-preacher John Thornley with the fourth in his series exploring the spiritual side of songs. Tonight he examines Bob Marley's redemption song.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 17'01"
20:12
Standing Rock - Kingi Snelgar
BODY:
Maori indigenous rights lawyer Kingi Snelgar is on the ground at Standing Rock. He is involved in the Sioux Tribe protest against a North Dakota oil pipeline which recently resulted in a halt on construction.
EXTENDED BODY:
Māori indigenous rights lawyer Kingi Snelgar is on the ground at Standing Rock. He is involved in the Sioux Tribe protest against a North Dakota oil pipeline which recently resulted in a halt on construction.
The protest hit headlines when security guards working for the pipeline company Energy Transfer Partners tried to move some of those protesters on using pepper spray and guard dogs. That was about the time Kingi Snelgar arrived at the camp in the State of North Dakota.
Read an edited excerpt of the interview below:
What’s your role there?
I came initially to just here and be present and to learn and to offer my support and solidarity. I shared with people my background and some of the things that I have done. There is a legal team here, a group of eight to ten attorneys. Some are licensed, some are not licensed. I am not licensed.
The role that I have taken on is to be a human rights observer. That involves going to actions and observing the protectors in action and how they interact with police and just being an observer to ensure that they remain safe. I am also writing short statements. Basically reflections on some of the issues that come up and my suggestions on ways, from an international point of view, that we could change things.
For example, with the DOJ statement I just suggested that free prime form consent is the framework that should happen because the people here are a sovereign nation. Anything less than consent would undermine that sovereignty.
But I’m also a dishwasher. I’m also a woodcutter and I love just being here and meeting all of these different people and building an indigenous network, which is so important.
When you say sovereign nation, does that mean that the Sioux Nation has legislative powers in its territory? Its own laws?
They do, yes. It’s amazing to see. That was one of reasons why I wanted to come to the U.S. was to see that nation. They have their own police force, they have their own government, their own laws that are passed and their own territories over which they exercise jurisdiction.
And that was really fascinating to me, coming from New Zealand, where we’re all under the one system, and just to see how that works in action and the relationship between the indigenous nation, the state, the federal government. Of course it’s not always rosy, but it’s so powerful to see that kind of autonomy existing for the people here.
There’s autonomy, but isn’t there poverty as well?
Absolutely. I think that always tends to come with trauma that happens when there is confiscation and colonisation and when I was working in Pine Ridge. Pine Ridge for example is the poorest district in the United States and life expectancy is in the late 40s.
The unemployment rate is around 80-90 percent and it’s no mistake that people were put on these reservations because they’re the poorest, the least fertile territories. The amazing thing is that there is a strong spirit despite that history of oppression and colonisation. Real beauty and spiritual connection that I am just so impressed in awe of that the people here have maintained and I have been lucky that I have been able to come here and take part in this movement.
Isn’t there a temptation then to take compensation offer like what is offered for Black Hills. If it is several billion dollars, for a population of 40,000, to do that is a source of capital for the people.
Yeah, absolutely. I can totally understand the desire to take that money and use it to create jobs and better infrastructure, but being here and experiencing the people here, you can’t buy these sacred places from them, you can’t compensate them for the loss of their spiritual ways. Black Hills is a sacred place to them, this river is sacred, this water is sacred. For them that kind of connection can’t be bought. For me I think that is beautiful.
For me as an indigenous person, I think as a society it is important that we remember that money isn’t everything and to protect these kind of taonga, these treasures for future generations, we put things like money second to protecting these treasures for our future.
I think that indigenous perspective is so important to keep sharing around the world because we have so many environmental issues where I see that indigenous way of thinking is a key to protecting our planet and ensuring that we take care of it and there is a still a planet for our great-great grandchildren.
Topics: life and society, politics
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 23'17"
=SHOW NOTES=
[image_crop:17330:full]
7:12 John Thornley - Songs of the Spirit
Methodist lay-preacher John Thornley with the fourth in his series exploring the spiritual side of songs. Tonight he examines Bob Marley's redemption song.
7:30 At The Movies
Simon Morris reviews the sentimental remake of Disney's Pete's Dragon, and a rival animated hit, The Secret Life of Pets, plus, the film based on a very literary New Zealand novel, The Rehearsal.
[image:80877:full]
8:12 Standing Rock - Kingi Snelgar
Maori indigenous rights lawyer Kingi Snelgar is on the ground at Standing Rock. He has been involved in the Sioux Tribe protest against a North Dakota oil pipeline which recently resulted in a temporary halt on construction.
8:30 Window on the World
Car Crash Capital - India has some of the world's most dangerous roads. The government says almost 150,000 people died on them last year. Nowhere saw more crashes than the booming city of Mumbai. The carnage is relentless, affecting people at every level of society. We meet the Mumbaikers who are taking action. It is hoped there will be lessons in Mumbai for all of India. The country is in the midst of an historic road-building push. By 2020, Prime Minister Modi wants to pave a distance greater than the circumference of the earth.
9:07 The Drama Hour
Live 2 Air - Our play this week is a family drama set in the early days of the 21st century. As the political turmoil of an election campaign and demanding jobs swirls around them, a doctor and a journalist living somewhat separate lives, try to sort out the future and that of their 11-year-old daughter.
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 Inside Out
Nick Tipping hosts a journey through the jazz spectrum playing favourites, standards and new releases along the way. This hour features music from Joe Lovano, Dr Lonnie Smith & Chick Corea.
===7:35 PM. | At The Movies===
=DESCRIPTION=
A weekly topical magazine about current film releases and film related topics. (RNZ)
=AUDIO=
19:30
At The Movies for 21 September 2016
BODY:
On At The Movies, Simon Morris reviews the sentimental remake of Disney's Pete's Dragon, and a rival animated hit, The Secret Life of Pets. And he looks at the film based on a very literary New Zealand novel, The Rehearsal.
Topics: movies
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 22'46"
19:31
Pete's Dragon Review
BODY:
A boy and his invisible dragon. Starring Bryce Dallas Howard, Robert Redford and a Weta-created dragon called Elliot.
Topics: movies
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 6'15"
19:32
The Rehearsal Review
BODY:
Alison Maclean's adaptation of Eleanor Catton's novel about young love, scandal and theatre school.
Topics: movies
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 5'25"
19:33
The Secret Life of Pets Review
BODY:
An animated comedy for all ages, featuring the voices of Louis CK and Kevin Hart.
Topics: movies
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 6'17"
=SHOW NOTES=
===8:30 PM. | Windows On The World===
=DESCRIPTION=
International public radio features and documentaries
===9:06 PM. | None (National)===
=DESCRIPTION=
The Godwits Fly by Robin Hyde. "You were English and not English. It took me time to realise that England was far away" - so thinks Eliza Hannay in The Godwits Fly, dramatised for radio by Fiona Kidman from Robin Hyde's classic NZ novel. (2 of 3)
===10:00 PM. | Late Edition===
=AUDIO=
The woman who picked the global crash; a world summit on superbugs; and in Dateline Pacific - unexploaded bombs in Solomon Islands.
=DESCRIPTION=
RNZ news, including Dateline Pacific and the day's best interviews from RNZ National
===11:06 PM. | None (National)===
=DESCRIPTION=
(RNZ)