Avsnitt
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Last week when Shaun Johnson was in the studio, we were discussing retirement.
Not mine, but that’s of growing fascination to me these days.
When do you know? If you aren't getting cancelled, or run out of town, or falling apart, how do you know?
John Key famously had nothing left in the tank.
Johnson was explaining it was important for him to go out when he decided, not when he was dropped. The TV stuff he now does was something he was interested in, but didn’t know how it would unfold.
Johnson at 34 years old seemed young enough.
I look at people like Tom Brady in his mid 40's. One more season, one more chance at greatness, and he goes out a hero with another Super Bowl win.
I look at Aaron Rodgers, who has signed at Pittsburgh this year. He looks like he has gone a season too long. He looks like he is looking for work, when he should really be looking for life after football. Maybe this season will make a fool of me, but I doubt it.
But all of that pales in comparison when it comes to Nico Porteous. He is walking away from his snow sports career at 23 years old.
He doesn’t want to use the word retirement, but equally he won't be at the Olympics anymore.
As our most successful ever snow sport athlete, it is over. He also doesn’t know what he is going to do, or what his future looks like. But he has enjoyed videos and production so maybe that’s a path.
How do you decide that at 23 years old?
How do you know that it's right?
Who advises you? How do you know they're right?
Having spent your entire life aiming for the one big thing, sporting excellence, how do you pull the cord when you have, if you want, years to go?
Are you one of those people who can walk away from that level of exhilaration and success and not look back? Is now knowing what's next part of the thrill?
Will you keep the scrapbook of memories? Will you tell your kids or grandkids about the halfpipe? Will they ask how come Dad can do flips on skis when they first go to Cardrona?
What a big call with so much ahead of him. Or was what he did plenty? Is that a good way to see life?
I admire him. Is he reckless? Could be. Maybe he is an insightful genius. Either way, I admire him.
At 23 years old I would have tortured myself, and probably still wouldn’t have done what he has.
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Ian Foster was one of the more polarising All Blacks coaches in recent memory.
He took the helm after the superb record of Sir Steve Hansen, and during his time there were constant discussions surrounding his job security.
During his tenure he had a win rate of 70% and lost New Zealand the number one world ranking, but at the same time, he won 4 Bledisloe Cups, 4 Freedom Cups, and 3 Rugby Championships, as well as coming within a point of winning the Rugby World Cup.
Foster is still in the coaching game over in Japan, but in the meantime, he’s written a book called ‘Leading Under Pressure’, that tells the story of his time with the All Blacks.
He told Mike Hosking he had never intended to write a book, but felt it was an important story to tell.
“A lot of the feedback we got is that people actually saw a team go through a journey over those four years,” he said.
“I just felt that I almost owed it to my management team and a lot of my leading players to actually tell the story of the journey of that particular team.”
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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On the Mike Hosking Breakfast Full Show Podcast for Tuesday 17th of June, we have good news around the number of families moved out of emergency housing and where they've gone. Small hint - it's not to cars or the streets.
At 23 years old, Nico Porteous has decided he wants to retire from the Olympics, at the peak of his prime. He joined the show to delve into his decision.
Former All Blacks coach Ian Foster has a new book out about leadership and his time in the top job, so he's on to talk all things pressure.
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A growing number of New Zealanders perceive China as a threat.
A new report from the Asia New Zealand Foundation surveyed 2,300 locals between November and December, with an additional poll in March.
It shows New Zealanders' perception of China as a threat rose from 28% to 40% over four months.
Jason Young, Director of Victoria University’s NZ-China Research Centre, told Mike Hosking the big jump in threat perception happened in March, just after Chinese Navy conducted exercises in the Tasman Sea.
He says that New Zealand has seen China and its military grow, but its military has always been very far away, and coming into the Tasman changed that.
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Nico Porteous is walking away from competitive free skiing, retiring at age 23.
The Kiwi Olympian has admitted his 2022 Olympic gold and 2018 bronze in the freeski halfpipe have contributed to his decision.
He told Mike Hosking he set out with a number of goals when beginning his career at age 12, and he’s now achieved those goals.
“I feel as if the ‘more, more, more’ mentality can often lead to doing damage or leaving a sour taste in your mouth,” Porteous said.
“So I just wanted to call it.”
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Israel’s operation against Iran is expected to "take weeks, not days", as tension escalates between the countries.
224 Iranians and 24 Israelis have been killed since hostilities began after Israel's initial attack on Friday.
Features editor at Jewish News Syndicate, Steve Linde told Mike Hosking Israel has a few days to try to end this, before they alienate the world and go too far.
He says Israeli Prime Minster Benjamin Netanyahu is trying to change the face of the Middle East by realigning forces for and against Iran, while the Americans want to strike a deal diplomatically.
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The Government's confident it's getting on top of youth vaping, with more rules coming in today.
New rules come in today including stricter advertising restrictions for vape retailers and a ban on disposable vapes.
It's in an effort to clamp down on youth vaping, with around 10% of teenagers currently regular vapers.
Associate Health Minister Casey Costello told Mike Hosking she believes we'll see further declines in youth vaping.
She says Action for Smokefree data shows youth vaping rates have declined over the last three years.
However, she says New Zealand isn’t ready for a full crackdown, and Australia’s prescription only approach won’t work here.
She says Pasifika and Māori continue to have the highest smoking rates, and reducing availability for those who aren't engaging with the health system is problematic.
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The Government's work to tackle emergency housing appears to be paying off.
Only about 500 families remain in emergency housing after one year of the Government's Priority One policy.
It bumps families to the top of the social housing waiting list if they have dependent children and have spent more than 12 weeks in emergency housing.
Almost a thousand families with more than two thousand children have been moved from emergency housing motel rooms into homes, since the policy took effect
Housing Minister Chris Bishop told Mike Hosking they're well on the way to solving the problem.
He says under Labour's government, there were more than four-thousand families living in motels permanently.
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As much as we tried to celebrate last week's excellent economic numbers regarding the food and fibre, the bullishness of Fieldays, the boost in elective surgery and the boom in teacher numbers, what you can't ignore is the manufacturing read for April.
It hit a brick wall.
It fell over six points and is below the 50 point expansionary mark.
A couple of key things about that - while services and sentiment and spending figures have been bad manufacturing, for months now, has been on the increase each and every month. It has been above 50, it has been growing.
It has been a significant green shoot in the overall economic picture.
The other thing is employment. That is a sub category that had its biggest reversal in the history of the index.
What makes this worse? For those of you saying "oh, it will be Trump", the experts don’t think it is.
So the big question is, how much of it is the world? Remember the World Bank last week reduced global growth all over the place. So how much of it is the world vs how much of it is the U.S?
Has New Zealand Inc hit a tough spot?
For trainspotters it was suggested fairly far and wide at the time that April and May seemed to be an issue.
All the momentum that we felt we had at the start of the year had suddenly run out of puff.
These numbers would tend to suggest the vibe was real.
Ironically this week we get the GDP figures for Q1, that’s January, February and March, and the broad consensus is that we will have seen good growth. They think about 0.7% for the quarter.
If you annualised that out it gives you a number very close to 3%, which anyone would take in this troubled and turbulent world.
But we can't annualise it out, not with manufacturing numbers like this.
It might be short term. It may involve the Reserve Bank and that idea they had that things were a bit neutral and therefore not needing a gee up. They may well be hopelessly wrong.
Politically it’s a hole in the head the Government don’t need, because its not like they aren't pedalling fast.
But when one of your major economic reads that was good, now isn't, it doesn’t take an economics degree to recognise a big, fat, red flag.
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The Prime Minister has laid out his goals ahead of his visit to China.
Chris Luxon is about to leave for Shanghai with a business delegation, before making his way to Beijing to meet with President Xi Jinping.
Luxon says he also wants to broaden the countries' trade relationship with a focus on red meat, tourism and education.
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On the Mike Hosking Breakfast Full Show Podcast for Monday the 16th of June, the police are starting the ball rolling on putting bodycams on our frontline police.
The Prime Minister is gearing up to head to China but before that he pops in to talk the economy, balancing world egos and why we still have 10 sick days.
Andrew Saville and Jason Pine talk the F1, the Super Rugby semifinals and Auckland City getting pumped by Bayern Munich.
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The Government makes another step forward in upping Chinese visitor numbers, with a tweak to visa settings and processes.
From November, the Government will trial a visa waiver status for Chinese passport holders travelling from Australia, allowing them to visit for up to three months.
They must have a valid Australian visitor, work, student or family visa, with the trial lasting a year.
Immigration lawyer Arran Hunt says the number of Chinese visitors hasn't bounced back post-Covid, but believes this is a step in the right direction.
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The death toll continues to grow as the conflict between Israel and Iran escalates.
Israel's initial attack on Friday has triggered a response from Iran as the two countries exchange air strikes.
According to The Associated Press, at least 406 Iranians have been killed with 654 wounded compared to the Israeli death toll of 13.
Israeli Journalist, Gideon Levy told Mike Hosking this is bearable for the short term, but what is unbearable is if it goes on for months.
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Police Minister Mark Mitchell says told Mike Hosking that police bodycams would help clear up misconceptions in the field.
He says he was talking to a young constable who was coward punched and a body camera would've made for compelling evidence.
Police Commissioner Richard Chambers wants the cameras to be implemented after a decision was put off last year.
Police are still looking into ways to deal with transparency issues laid bare when new tasers for frontline officers didn't include a camera.
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US police have found a 'hit list' of names after they confronted the man who shot and killed Democrat Melissa Hortman and her husband in the state of Minnesota.
US correspondent Richard Arnold told Mike Hosking that the 57-year-old suspect got away - but police were able to search his vehicle.
He says they found a papers listing around 70 names of other targets - as well as anti-abortion material.
The gunman had also shot another Democratic senator and his wife in their home - they both survived.
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An increasing number of regional conflicts - as well as Donald Trump's tariffs, are threatening the global economy.
Westpac Group Chief Economist Luci Ellis told Mike Hosking that she believes the tariffs were economic self-harm.
She says they still threaten the US economy and trade patterns will continue to change, but other countries aren't going to escalate.
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It's hardly a surprise, is it? Adrian looks at what Nicola is offering to run the place, packs a sad, and is off.
It’s a pathetic end to a tumultuous period in which we, the people who paid him, deserved an awful lot better.
The fact this information on the Orr resignation had to be dragged out of the bank by way of the Official Information Act, the rules of which were ignored as the bank failed to meet deadlines, shows you just what sort of place we are dealing with.
How you conduct yourself is critical. It's critical to all of us and even more critical the further up the totem pole you are.
There's nothing wrong with Adrian quitting if he genuinely believed the money being offered to run the bank wasn’t enough.
But you do it with some dignity.
You quit, you serve out your period, you offer reasons for you quitting and you move on with life.
In doing it that way you give us all an insight into what sort of human being you are. And in this case, you might well have been able to give us insight into how your organisation runs, what its thinking is, what the gap is between the bank and the Government and why you might be right, and they might be wrong.
It doesn’t have to turn into a scrap or a fallout. Just a series of adult ideas as to why people might see things at odds to each other.
If Covid taught us nothing else, it taught us the critical role of a central bank and what sort of people run it.
The way Adrian ran it is well documented and the general view held by many is widely traversed. But the sudden departure was another insight into why Adrian did things the way he did.
He is petulant. You don’t leave out of the blue and in silence. You don’t bail on hosting an international finance conference having said you were looking forward to it.
It's toys and sandpits with Adrian and then obfuscation from the bank when a few simple questions were asked.
If you can't conduct yourself, and the bank can't conduct themselves, with any great level of clarity, transparency and professionalism, is it any wonder the economy got run over the way it did?
Ol' Adrian won't be missed. But you would have hoped for something a bit more sophisticated on the way out.
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At the end of each week, Mike Hosking takes you through the big-ticket items and lets you know what he makes of it all.
Ryan Fox: 9/10
Living the dream by winning. It rarely gets better, and another chance at a big one over this weekend.
Greta Thunberg: 2/10
Not kidnapped, just fantastically annoying. She is a good example of where your annoyingness outweighs your effect on your cause.
Adrian Orr: 4/10
Local disappointment of the week is both him and the Reserve Bank over their petty mucking around over simple questions. When its petty at the top, it leads nowhere productive. They should be embarrassed.
The Warriors: 8/10
Can't stop winning. Another two points this weekend with the bye and two more after that against the Panthers. This is the journey to the promised land. This is our year.
Los Angeles: 3/10
Was that an overreaction looking for a skirmish, or what? You can only show us an intersection of a few hundred masked try hards and pretend it’s a "thing" for so long.
Businesses and franchises: 7/10
Record sales. We're selling businesses like hotcakes. That's got to be a good sign for confidence.
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The Census, and some of those numbers released this week, really are a treasure trove of not just fact and stats but, I would have thought, hope.
That astonishing move south, with the tens of thousands who have headed to the South Island and particularly Christchurch, is a framework for what the whole country could be.
A few choice decisions, a bit of get-up-and-go, a bit of cooperation and a bit of vision. There are parts of this country that clearly have it right and are clearly magnets in their own right.
Then there were stats around work. That very word "work" is a problem
It's reported as a negative. "More and more people are working longer", indicating you want to stop.
You want to stop of course because of the pension. You can stop anytime you like. There is no law around age and work.
But the stats and the reportage of work and age are increasingly out of date. As we live longer, of course we are going to work longer. Why wouldn’t we?
Work is actually good for us. Work is fun. Work is rewarding, financially and emotionally.
We are challenged by work. Work should not be a thing that you expect to end. It’s the same as health and fitness, or diet, or leisure.
50% of us are working between the ages of 65 and 69. A quarter of us are working between ages 70 and 74. Even 10% of workers are over 75.
And why not?
If you resent it and have to work, fair enough. If psychically you are knackered, sure, play bowls.
But the days of Grandad and a gold watch and one company for life and the company pension are long gone.
We need to break the psychological hold Superannuation has over us. It's not even a lot of money.
If it was lotto I'd get it. But it’s a bare minimum and it speaks, sadly, to this country's productivity and work ethic that too many are too reliant on it.
Working longer will actually lead to better health outcomes.
Hopefully the kids, who the Census tells us are working more as well with teenagers having never been more employed, will enter the workforce with a view that work is for life, because we see work for the good, not work for the drudgery.
If you happen to be working into your old age and doing it in the South Island, that’s not a bad life at all.
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India's set to lead an investigation into a plane crash in Ahmedabad, which has killed at least 290.
The Air India Boeing 787 Dreamliner crashed onto a doctor's hostel right after take-off, heading for London's Gatwick Airport.
According to the Telegraph, the last words from the pilot were 'Mayday, no thrust, losing power, unable to lift'.
US Correspondent Richard Arnold told Mike Hosking this is the first fatal crash by this particular Boeing model, of which there’s about a thousand in service around the world.
He says experts believe the black box should contain a significant amount of information about the crash, and no doubt Boeing and US safety inspectors will play some role in the investigation.
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- Visa fler