Avsnitt
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Our comedians look back on some of the funnier stories of the past week, including the case of the man who wrote his will on the back of a frozen fish packet, deemed valid by a UK court.
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RNZ sports journalist Joe Porter discusses the All Blacks team named to play Italy this weekend
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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Georgina updates us on the latest events in Te Whanganui a Tara
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Carole Beu of the Women's Bookshop in Auckland reviews Molly by Rosalie Ham published by Macmillan
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Lech Blaine grew up in Queensland, the youngest in a busy family of seven, his parents: working class publicans in small country towns.
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Ed White is a correspondent with the Financial Times based in Shanghai.
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Top New Zealand rally driver Emma Gilmour has come back from a bad accident in Europe to take an overall third place in this year's New Zealand Rally Championship.
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An Australian law firm is preparing a class action against major cruise lines on behalf of thousands of passengers including New Zealanders, over lax onboard gambling rules.
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Film and TV correspondent Chris Schulz joins Susie to talk about Say Nothing, which is a mini-series based on four decades of The Troubles in Northern Ireland, based on the book by Patrick Radden Keefe. He'll also look at new movie Gladiator II, and National Geographic's Endurance details the incredible work that was done to locate Ernest Shackleton's ship from his ill-fated 1915 expedition to Antarctica.
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Wellington speech and language therapist Christian Wright talks with Susie about developing comprehension in toddlers and when to be concerned.
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Technology commentator Bill Bennett looks at Australia's proposed 'duty of care' laws that would force online giants to take preventative action on mental health harms. Roblox is to give more controls to parents over their child's activity, after the gaming platform was accused of making it easy for its young users to be groomed. Two undersea cables in the Baltic have been cut - how, and how dependent are we on such infrastructure? And a Polish radio station has replaced human presenters with AI.
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Che Baker discusses recent updates in Southland including the $2.2 million government loan to boost acquaculture in the region.
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Quentin Johnson reviews Fifty Ships that Changed the Course of History by Ian Graham published by Exisle Publishing.
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Achieving a flow state at work is rare, temporary and unclear as to how to achieve it, according to American psychologist and author Daniel Goleman.
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Correspondent Matthew Parris shares the latest news from the UK.
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From stunning auroras and the brightest comet seen from Earth in decades, we look back at a year in space.
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Research by the outdoor pursuits programme Outward Bound has found most teenagers and young people want to spend less time online.
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Cocaine use is up, the price of meth is down and for the first time, more people vape nicotine than smoke tobacco, according to an annual Drug Trends Survey.
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Science correspondent Allan Blackman looks at a new analysis of Uranus and its five biggest moons that's found it might not be as sterile as first thought.
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From the mid-50s to early 1960s parts of Australia played host to the UK's nuclear ambitions. It had a major impact on Aboriginal communities close by.
- Visa fler