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The Detail

English, News, 1 season, 1291 episodes, 6 days, 5 hours, 38 minutes
About
The news, explained. Join Sharon Brettkelly & Emile Donovan every weekday as they make sense of the big stories with the country’s best journalists and experts. Made possible by RNZ & NZ On Air. Produced by Newsroom. Listen on RNZ National at 6.30pm Monday-Thursday.
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The Thames Valley rugby team that outshone the Auld Mug

The most celebrated victory of New Zealand's incredible sporting weekend may have been the one at a small rugby ground in Te Aroha
10/24/202422 minutes, 18 seconds
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A push to make stalking illegal in New Zealand

A new bill to criminalise stalking could be here by the end of the year. Here's what it might look like.
10/23/202420 minutes, 59 seconds
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Manawanui wreck the unwanted guest at CHOGM

The wreck of the Manawanui is leaving an oily sheen on the water, and taking the shine off the job of hosting world leaders including the King
10/22/202425 minutes, 27 seconds
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The Official Cash Rate is down, but are you up on the impact?

The OCR goes up to bring inflation down. So now that the OCR is falling, what does it mean for inflation - and what does that mean for New Zealanders? 
10/21/202419 minutes, 45 seconds
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When being colourblind backfires

Is the government's new directive that public services should be prioritised on the basis of need, not race, a championing of equity - or has it just removed a vital tool from decision-makers?
10/20/202422 minutes, 20 seconds
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The twilight of the movie superhero age

It's superhero saturation at the box office with Batman's offsiders claiming screen time without Batman.
10/18/202423 minutes, 26 seconds
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Featherston, a fairy tale of reinvention

In the space of a decade the Wairarapa town of Featherston has reinvented itself, from a broken down P-plagued problem place, to a vibrant reading centre
10/17/202422 minutes, 54 seconds
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The good, the bad and angry of the flourishing menopause industry

Coaches, gels, health supplements, and even pyjamas. Menopause has become a marketing opportunity
10/16/202422 minutes, 20 seconds
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At Wellington Games Week, a lucrative but fickle business

New Zealand's booming video game industry reaches for $1 billion exports in the next few years
10/15/202424 minutes, 18 seconds
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Protecting our fishers from conservation efforts

New Zealand is making Australia look good when it comes to new efforts to save the world's biodiversity and protect its oceans
10/14/202424 minutes, 47 seconds
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When the rules on sexual and violent offenders fall down

This article contains sensitive material including the discussion of sexual violence Extended supervision orders should keep tabs on serious offenders, but sometimes they're not granted - and sometimes they don't work
10/13/202424 minutes, 13 seconds
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How artificial intelligence could be a leap forward for brain disease detection

Developers of AI that could detect brain injuries and disease say it's just a tool, not a replacement for health experts
10/11/202423 minutes, 8 seconds
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Christchurch's furious food fight

Christchurch's cash-starved arts centre needs to boost its budget, but city businesses are turning up their noses at its request to bring in revenue-generating food trucks
10/10/202422 minutes, 17 seconds
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The fast track to nowhere

Critics are asking if the 149 projects on the government's fast-track list are real schemes, or just unfunded dreams
10/9/202424 minutes, 55 seconds
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Boom or bust in the sawmill industry

Winstone has shut down two mills, citing high electricity costs, but in Kawerau, Sequal sawmill is scaling up to meet demand
10/8/202424 minutes, 33 seconds
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Covid fatigue ignores a very real problem

Long Covid sufferers feel they've been abandoned by health authorities and the government, left to struggle alone with the after-effects of the pandemic
10/7/202422 minutes, 17 seconds
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Warnings that crackdown on nangs will make them more dangerous

Recreational use of nitrous oxide has been reclassified. Some experts say it's an overcorrection.
10/6/202424 minutes, 7 seconds
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One for the language lovers

Join Alexia Russell, Tim Murphy and Jeremy Rees in a look at the words we find the most confusing, satisfying, irritating, beautiful, and just plain revolting
10/4/202423 minutes, 25 seconds
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Fears of privatisation by stealth in an overwhelmed healthcare system

The risk of an increasingly privatised healthcare system is deeply inequitable care, and some fear we could be moving toward a US model
10/3/202424 minutes, 41 seconds
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The billion dollar Du Val empire that didn't exist

The founders of Du Val portrayed a lifestyle of extreme wealth. The company's investors and contractors look set to pay the price.
10/2/202424 minutes, 25 seconds
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Auckland Airport's new mall another irritant for airlines

Mānawa Bay may be a winner so far for owners Auckland Airport, but the new mall hasn't won any friends from people who have to get through the crowds to work
10/1/202421 minutes, 59 seconds
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Dunedin Hospital's low place in our infrastructure must-haves list

Critics want to see the workings behind the new Dunedin Hospital rebuild figure of $3 billion, questioning the number, and saying it's essential long-lasting infrastructure
9/30/202424 minutes, 36 seconds
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Guam locals pay the price for US security

The tiny island of Guam is America's shield against Chinese moves in the Pacific, but that comes at the expense of its people
9/29/202425 minutes, 35 seconds
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Tupperware's bankruptcy unleashes the plastic memories

In spite of the lifetime guarantee, Tupperware hasn't been able to push its quality products through the barrier of quick, cheap storage solutions online
9/27/202423 minutes, 41 seconds
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Slow moves to fix fast fashion

The New Zealand fashion industry is facing serious long term problems, including the influx of cheap, shoddy clothing; economic headwinds; and way too much waste
9/26/202424 minutes, 6 seconds
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The lobbyists, the minister, and the mystery document

Where there's cigarette smoke there's controversy, and Associate Health Minister Casey Costello has courted plenty of it
9/25/202424 minutes, 32 seconds
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NZ's role in a tricky Pacific peace

Sir Don McKinnon on New Zealand's key role in bringing peace to Bougainville over the last 30 years
9/24/202424 minutes, 42 seconds
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America's Cup in Barcelona: less 'biffo' but just as much drama

The America's Cup drama is heating up, with a challenger likening Team New Zealand's style in Barcelona to a communist state
9/23/202423 minutes, 32 seconds
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Gang search clause a step too far

The move to give police search powers in private homes to look for gang insignia has raised a mass of red flags with law makers
9/22/202424 minutes
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A new exhibition breathes life into Te Reo Māori documents

Auckland City Library takes visitors on a trip back in time with a display that includes the first efforts to write down the Māori language
9/20/202424 minutes, 36 seconds
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The language of forensic science

In crime dramas, forensic science is the hero. In real life, we need context.
9/19/202423 minutes, 28 seconds
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How NZ is failing at HPV cancer prevention

Every year, 600 people are diagnosed with HPV-related cancers that could be prevented with a free vaccine
9/18/202421 minutes, 29 seconds
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The modern beauty pageant

Beauty pageants are back, but the days of catwalks, high heels and bikinis have been consigned to the past
9/17/202422 minutes, 59 seconds
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East Coast forestry industry facing the axe

Post-cyclone slash caused destruction across the East Coast, but can the region survive without the forestry industry?
9/16/202421 minutes, 26 seconds
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More strike action coming from ambulance staff

St John ambulance staff have voted to strike again this month after rejecting their latest pay offer. They say they're at breaking point
9/15/202423 minutes, 42 seconds
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It Ends With Us ends with drama

The highly anticipated film adaptation of the best-selling novel It Ends With Us has gone viral, but not for what plays out on screen
9/13/202424 minutes, 18 seconds
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Police assurances of public safety after bus driver attacks

Attacks on bus drivers in Auckland are increasing but police and AT say confirmation bias and media reports have contributed to a feeling that things are much worse than they really are
9/12/202421 minutes, 35 seconds
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Paedophile priests dumped in the Pacific

The Pacific Islands served as a perfect hiding place for priests accused of sexual abuse. Some didn't stop when they got there.
9/11/202424 minutes, 9 seconds
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Decision time on Auckland's shorelines

Auckland Council is developing Shoreline Adaption Plans covering 3,200 kilometres of coastline, as our shores are battered by wilder weather
9/10/202421 minutes, 21 seconds
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Hope for the end of the hurt in construction

After an incredibly tough 2024, those in construction-related industries see the dark clouds starting to lift
9/9/202423 minutes, 12 seconds
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Hope for the end of the hurt in construction

After an incredibly tough 2024, those in construction-related industries see the dark clouds starting to lift
9/9/202423 minutes, 12 seconds
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The great slanging match that is the US election

The US election is a dog-eat-dog, no-holds-barred fight between two people who couldn't be more different to each other
9/8/202423 minutes, 13 seconds
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Brokenwood - the international hit with a kiwi accent

Brokenwood's Tim Balme talks to Amanda Gillies about the New Zealand drama series watched worldwide.
9/6/202421 minutes, 36 seconds
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SIS report spells out the threats facing New Zealand

A new report from the SIS aims to help New Zealanders recognise the risks to our security
9/5/202423 minutes, 43 seconds
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Child support roulette

Child support arrears and penalties sit at nearly a billion dollars. That's comparatively good news, according to the tax department.
9/4/202423 minutes, 58 seconds
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Inching forward on infrastructure

It's hoped a new infrastructure body will lead to a more sensible pipeline of projects than the current stop/start political rollercoaster  
9/3/202423 minutes, 10 seconds
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The death of a Te Araroa tramper has experts on alert

New Zealand tramps are a major draw for international tourists. Not all of them are prepared for the dangers our tracks have in store.
9/2/202423 minutes, 10 seconds
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Downed tools leave Auckland's Seascape an empty shell

On Auckland's skyline, the country's largest residential tower sits unfinished and exposed to the elements. 
9/1/202424 minutes, 22 seconds
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The great Kiwi OE isn't dead, just different

Young Kiwis are heading overseas in record numbers, but are finding that the traditional London OE looks different than it did for earlier generations
8/30/202422 minutes, 47 seconds
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Lydia Ko's Cinderella story

How top athletes like Lydia Ko can pull themselves out of their performance slumps to rise again
8/29/202422 minutes, 50 seconds
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Eight days into eight months - how NASA astronauts got stuck on the International Space Station

US astronauts Sunita Williams and Barry Wilmore won't be returning to Earth until February, after NASA decided it couldn't risk bringing them back on a potentially-faulty Boeing Starliner  
8/28/202424 minutes, 47 seconds
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Waiheke's housing at a tipping point

Holiday homes sit empty while local families live in cars and on deteriorating boats.
8/27/202424 minutes, 4 seconds
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Why booming demand for weight loss drug Ozempic is causing problems in New Zealand

The volume of people taking the new and effective weight loss drugs has grown so big that it's shrinking food portions in the US
8/26/202422 minutes, 26 seconds
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The crime of being intellectually disabled

The case of 'Jay', held indefinitely without charge for 18 years, is raising questions of how we treat our intellectually disabled community
8/25/202424 minutes, 34 seconds
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The Mpox virus explained

A more deadly strain of Mpox has ventured beyond African borders, but even though it will arrive here some time, there's no need to panic
8/23/202423 minutes, 44 seconds
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The austerity argument

Is New Zealand going through a bout of austerity ... or are we just in a funk after being battered by a parade of bad economic numbers?
8/22/202423 minutes, 19 seconds
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A deep dive into police bias

Internationally ground-breaking research from inside the police force has quantified the difference between how Māori and Pākehā are treated when it comes to law
8/21/202424 minutes, 31 seconds
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Modifying our gene modification laws

The government announced a reversal to laws that effectively banned gene modification technology in New Zealand. Proponents of the change say it will save lives
8/20/202423 minutes, 53 seconds
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Green lights for open banking

The new wave of open banking takes a step forward this week with the release of two Commerce Commission decisions
8/19/202424 minutes, 14 seconds
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Truth, lies, or something in between?

What was in the infamous Hobson's Pledge advertisement in the Herald that has sparked outrage and boycotts?  
8/18/202423 minutes, 44 seconds
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All the small things

Capturing the health of a piece of bush, and figuring out what predator pests are around, often comes down to the state of its smallest inhabitants 
8/16/202423 minutes, 14 seconds
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Questions of evidence over new benefit sanctions regime

Researchers into poverty are asking the government where the evidence is that its new benefit sanction regime will work.  
8/15/202423 minutes, 53 seconds
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The high cost of our energy crisis

The worsening energy crisis threatens businesses, Kiwi households, and New Zealand's international reputation   
8/14/202424 minutes, 14 seconds
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Flying into Olympic-sized sustainability issues

The Olympics has sustainability as one of its three pillars, but it's accused of making big environmental promises without following through
8/13/202424 minutes, 29 seconds
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Growing opposition says repealing Section 7AA will harm children

The coalition government is sticking to its guns on a promise to repeal Section 7AA of the Children's Act, despite expert testimony condemning the move.  
8/12/202423 minutes, 49 seconds
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Call to arms for plasma

Plasma is labelled liquid gold, but it's worth more than that 
8/11/202424 minutes, 39 seconds
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The business of tradwives

These 'traditional' influencers don't talk about politics, but all the markers of conservative ideologies are there
8/9/202423 minutes, 40 seconds
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Privacy protection and data challenges

Fears that New Zealanders are losing control of their private information are behind moves to improve data sovereignty
8/8/202423 minutes, 20 seconds
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Laptop stickers, lapel badges and bullying

Gerry Brownlee has been publicly criticised over his inaction, in a move that breaks with Parliamentary convention 
8/7/202424 minutes, 10 seconds
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Medals for mums

There's been a sea change in high performance sport that's seeing Olympic-class mums take the podiums in Paris 
8/6/202423 minutes, 52 seconds
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Devastation as suicide prevention charity closes

A life-saving charity that works with men and their mental health in Tairawhiti has shut, a victim of funding struggles
8/5/202423 minutes, 13 seconds
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Turbulence for flying's green goals

Reality has intruded on our national airline's climate targets, and it's backed down from some lofty aims
8/4/202424 minutes, 38 seconds
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The 'huge playground' of AI music generation

It's been called a revolution as big as electricity or the motorcar - artificial intelligence is changing the creation of music. 
8/2/202422 minutes, 47 seconds
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When an algorithm is your boss

Artificial intelligence is driving the expansion of the gig economy, but with growth comes growing pains.
8/1/202423 minutes, 49 seconds
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Political donors now on the radar

More transparency around political donations paints a clearer picture of which parties are coming out on top financially.
7/31/202421 minutes, 2 seconds
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O Canada! We thought you were so nice

A short history of spying in sport, from deep sea dives to high flying drones
7/30/202423 minutes, 5 seconds
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Robots with lasers, killing weeds

AgResearch's Map and Zap device is a glimpse of a future without herbicides
7/29/202423 minutes, 39 seconds
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Imagining a better school system for New Zealand

A raft of changes is coming to the education sector. Will they fix the problems, or just crush creativity?   
7/28/202423 minutes, 42 seconds
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Re-writing the timeline of the universe

The most powerful telescope mankind has sent into orbit is opening up our understanding of how life began
7/26/202424 minutes, 28 seconds
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They came fourth

The anguish, frustration, and feeling of unfinished business when highly-driven athletes come fourth at an Olympic Games 
7/25/202424 minutes, 2 seconds
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Secrets of state and faith-based care, finally revealed

The Royal Commission of Inquiry into Abuse in Care has finally been released. What will its real impact be?
7/24/202424 minutes, 43 seconds
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Knocking ageism on the head

We're being urged to re-think our attitudes towards ageing, as our population gets more and more top heavy.   
7/23/202424 minutes, 17 seconds
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New paths to home ownership

Housing affordability has plagued New Zealand for decades. What needs to change?
7/22/202421 minutes, 27 seconds
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The doctor won't see you now

The very public woes of a Lower Hutt GP clinic represent a wider malaise in primary care 
7/21/202424 minutes, 10 seconds
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Samoa gets its first monolingual dictionary

A Samoan-only dictionary has been years in the making. Now, it's here.   
7/19/202424 minutes, 3 seconds
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A tale of two mayors

Two years into their mayoral terms, the civic leaders of Wellington and Auckland have pushed through controversy, opposition and calls for their resignation
7/18/202425 minutes, 19 seconds
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The tax man is coming for you

It you're actively avoiding your tax obligations, expect the spotlight of an auditor to shine brightly on your books
7/17/202422 minutes, 42 seconds
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Lean times in the food industry

As diners tighten their economic belts, the restaurants that used to feed them are fending off collapse.
7/16/202422 minutes, 57 seconds
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It's not easy being Green

Questionable conduct, personal tragedy, and a changing of the guard: the internal of the Green Party.
7/15/202423 minutes, 44 seconds
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Lulu Sun's path from Te Anau to Wimbledon

New Zealand has a new tennis star. It's no surprise she's from Te Anau.   
7/14/202422 minutes, 25 seconds
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Fifty years of Dungeons & Dragons

Players of this complex and very social game have been fighting monsters and weaving fantastical stories for half a century now
7/12/202423 minutes, 56 seconds
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America's space wars are our space wars

The US is rallying its allies to bring it up in a battle straight out of science fiction - a war in space
7/11/202423 minutes, 22 seconds
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New body for a fresh start in sport

A new body that has a broad remit to make sure sport is fair and safe has been a long time coming, but it's here now   
7/10/202424 minutes, 11 seconds
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Brokering peace in the Middle East

A ceasefire deal over Gaza has been on the table since June. So why are Israel and Hamas still at war?
7/9/202423 minutes, 30 seconds
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Auckland gambling conference aims to break a habit

As gambling gets more sophisticated, researchers are planning a counter-attack using smart technology.
7/8/202423 minutes, 45 seconds
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Tauranga's democratic comeback

After four years of commissioners, Tauranga is set to elect a mayor and councillors. Can they avoid a repeat of the previous mess? 
7/7/202424 minutes, 36 seconds
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Music for mega-churches

Christian - or worship - music is probably bigger than you think, and its appeal to the young and isolated is undeniable 
7/5/202425 minutes, 14 seconds
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The strange story of Julian Assange

The Julian Assange saga has been going on for so long that most of us have probably forgotten how it started
7/4/202420 minutes, 10 seconds
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Boot camps are back, needed or not

What we know, what we don't, and what the evidence says, about whether boot camps work.
7/3/202423 minutes, 22 seconds
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New Zealand's unwelcome sign

Shirking our fair share - why hasn't New Zealand upped its game when it comes to welcoming refugees?
7/2/202424 minutes, 17 seconds
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New Zealand's failing government infrastructure

What happens when upgrades to key pieces of infrastructure are put on the back burner
7/1/202424 minutes, 35 seconds
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The beginning of the end for news at TV3

Part 2:  It's Newshub's final week on air, and reporter Adam Hollingworth looks back at its battle to beat TVNZ. Where it succeeded and where it failed.
6/30/202424 minutes, 16 seconds
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Newshub's Mike McRoberts: "The end is hard to accept."

As Newshub enters its final week, reporter Adam Hollingworth talks to current and former staff about the new division's early days and key events in its 35 year history  
6/28/202421 minutes, 10 seconds
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Government rebates for game developers

Why the most profitable sector of the entertainment industry will get handouts from the government.
6/26/202423 minutes, 22 seconds
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The invisible hand of immigration policy

New Zealand shares travellers' private data with four other countries. Here's the story of how one reporter found out
6/25/202424 minutes, 26 seconds
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A long fight to tell the story of New Zealand Wars in te reo

After years of development and funding rejections, Ka Whawhai Tonu hits cinemas this weekend   
6/24/202422 minutes, 50 seconds
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Scrutiny Week's scoreboard

What did we get out of Scrutiny Week? A look at what emerged from dozens of hours of questioning over the government's spending priorities
6/23/202424 minutes, 40 seconds
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How to beat the Spotify algorithm

It's not perfect, but Spotify is still the dream platform to serve up your favourite (or soon to be favourite) tunes.   
6/21/202424 minutes, 39 seconds
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The deletion of the dating app

Love won't really happen when you least expect it if you don't get out from behind your screen and meet people in real life
6/20/202424 minutes, 2 seconds
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The benefit system that holds the poor in poverty

Debt owed to government agencies by the country's poorest residents adds up to more than three billion dollars, and there's no easy solution
6/19/202424 minutes, 52 seconds
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Northland's railway to nowhere

The drive through one section of Northland is notable for the kilometres of concrete sleepers stacked up by the rail lines, but no work is going on and there are no trains
6/18/202424 minutes, 23 seconds
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The blissfully boring British election

A leader who continues to shoot himself in the foot, a country with more problems than answers; and an election without any fire or brimstone
6/17/202423 minutes, 51 seconds
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The oil and gas storm

Will the oil and gas ban reversal bring much-needed international investment , or just stymy efforts to combat climate change?
6/16/202422 minutes, 2 seconds
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For university students, the cost of living crisis continues

Budget 2024 will bump funding for universities, but students will likely be the ones footing the bill
6/14/202423 minutes, 58 seconds
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The post-Covid hangover

It's been nearly two years since New Zealand shook off its Covid isolation, but the populace is far from content
6/13/202424 minutes, 6 seconds
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Multiple inquiries into data misuse at Te Pāti Māori

Three sets of allegations, three inquiries: The Detail talks to the journalist who broke the Te Pāti Māori data breach stories  
6/12/202424 minutes, 29 seconds
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Calls for a Māori parliament

A separate parliament could boost Māori representation. What exactly would that look like? 
6/11/202423 minutes, 49 seconds
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NZ football's time to shine

Alex Paulsen's move to the Premier league headlines a terrific purple patch for the sport 
6/10/202423 minutes, 39 seconds
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Fact checking Artificial Intelligence

Generative AI is currently the worst you will ever use - and that's good news, says one expert.
6/9/202423 minutes, 27 seconds
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Behind Boy in the Water

What motivates a journalist to spend years fighting for justice for someone they don't even know? 
6/7/202424 minutes, 58 seconds
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MAFS NZ's pulling power

Married at First Sight NZ- the reality show that indulges your worst instincts as a person
6/6/202424 minutes, 30 seconds
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Auckland crime - Just Another Fake Allegation?

Is Auckland city a crime-ridden nightmare, or is it a perception caused by more apartment-dwellers congregating on the streets?
6/5/202423 minutes, 12 seconds
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Cutting strings in the Pacific

The push for independence is still alive in the Pacific but it's getting messy
6/4/202423 minutes, 11 seconds
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Our turbulent skies

Injuries and a death on a recent Singapore Airlines flight have highlighted issues with severe turbulence 
6/3/202422 minutes, 39 seconds
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NZ Olympic athletics squad in good shape for Paris

Finally New Zealand is leaving the Snell and Walker era behind, with a new generation of record-breaking athletes on the scene
5/31/202425 minutes, 14 seconds
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A sour taste for beekeepers

Dramatic pictures of diseased beehives going up in flames have spotlit issues with the apiculture industry
5/30/202422 minutes, 41 seconds
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The Red Sheds, in the red

Will a shake-up in leadership at The Warehouse give the company what it needs to survive? 
5/29/202424 minutes
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A crisis at Kāinga Ora

Is Kāinga Ora, the government's social housing arm, a total mess or a 'stonking financial success'?
5/28/202422 minutes, 25 seconds
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Destroying the seabed for green reasons

New Zealand has three live seabed mining issues right now, and what they have in common is a startling lack of information on how damaging their activities will be   
5/27/202424 minutes, 21 seconds
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New name, old gangs, same policing

The new specialised National Gang Unit is being described as the same policing with a different name.
5/26/202423 minutes, 57 seconds
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Taiwan's democratic challenge to China

In 2024 more voters than ever in history are heading to the polls, but one of the most extraordinary elections happened this week 
5/24/202425 minutes, 52 seconds
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French claws in the Pacific

Kiwi holiday makers have been air-lifted from New Caledonia, but what kind of mess have they left behind?
5/23/202424 minutes, 26 seconds
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The deal with charter schools

Former charter schools are expressing caution about David Seymour's revival plans
5/22/202423 minutes, 46 seconds
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Changing the building blocks of reading

Out with Reading Recovery; in with structured literacy. There's a big change coming for New Zealand's young readers 
5/21/202423 minutes, 39 seconds
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The attention economy and influencing of influencers

Do influencers and celebrities with large social media followings have a responsibility to speak out on political and other issues? 
5/20/202422 minutes, 23 seconds
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Pacific leaders concerned over RSE exodus

Does New Zealand have a responsibility to address a problem it's created by snapping up seasonal workers from the Pacific?
5/19/202420 minutes, 26 seconds
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When body positivity becomes problematic

It's one thing to be encouraged to accept your body, no matter what size it is. But some 'fat activists' have gone too far in encouraging self-love  
5/17/202422 minutes, 37 seconds
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A bold call from experts on drug legalisation

Our current drug laws are harmful, according to a group of experts who want to see the Misuse of Drugs Act overhauled 
5/16/202423 minutes, 24 seconds
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Keeping New Zealand's lights on

Energy experts doubt New Zealand will ever get to 100 percent renewable, and say incentives and rewards are the answer to bridging the gap
5/15/202424 minutes, 16 seconds
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RBNZ's cash trials and digital currency

We're never going to let go of our notes and coins - so the Reserve Bank is not only looking at digital currency for the future, it's also trialling cash services for small towns
5/14/202423 minutes, 44 seconds
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Fanning the sparks of dying languages

There are five Pacific languages listed as endangered by UNESCO. What's the point of reviving them?
5/13/202423 minutes, 28 seconds
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New Zealand's retirement extremes

New Zealand's aged care sector faces huge inequities - while the flashiest ever has just opened in Auckland, many in smaller towns are closing
5/12/202424 minutes, 13 seconds
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When body positivity morphs into toxic masculinity

The body positivity movement started for women but in a warped sort of equality, men now appear to be just as miserable about their looks
5/10/202424 minutes, 27 seconds
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Diversity shrinking with the media landscape

A journalism cadetship programme promised to transform New Zealand's newsrooms. But then the media landscape shrank
5/9/202418 minutes, 11 seconds
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Levels of litigation rising with economic hardship

There's evidence New Zealanders are getting more trigger-happy when it comes to using courts to stamp down on competition
5/8/202423 minutes, 18 seconds
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A controversial driving exam - put to the test

There are traffic jams at the young end of driver licencing and fear and trepidation at the other end. 
5/7/202425 minutes, 44 seconds
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The mutant bird flu lurking on our borders

New Zealand has so far managed to dodge the H5N1 virus, but it's becoming increasingly concerning to scientists, and it's on our doorstep
5/6/202422 minutes, 19 seconds
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The great stadium debate

Are stadiums a joyful symbol of a thriving city - or a wasteful excess draining ratepayer finances? 
5/5/202424 minutes, 10 seconds
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The dope Olympics is sport on steroids

Steroid use will be out in the open at the Enhanced Games, and testosterone won't be banned. But is it taking away from the sport?
5/3/202422 minutes, 3 seconds
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A cliffhanger for Shortland St

Fans fear Shortland Street's 32 years of soapy drama could be coming to a close if TVNZ's cost-cutting knife hovers over it for too long   
5/2/202425 minutes, 28 seconds
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Why our quality of death is slipping

A vital part of our healthcare - palliative care - has been sidelined by our health system, largely because we don't like to talk about dying
5/1/202423 minutes, 12 seconds
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We have an emergency emergency

A new review of New Zealand's response to crisis is blunt about the inaction of the past, and sceptical that much will change in the future
4/30/202423 minutes, 18 seconds
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The problems with the Fast Track Approvals Bill

The new fast-track approvals bill has been described as 'government by amateurs', with no checks and balances
4/29/202423 minutes, 25 seconds
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Powering ahead with green hydrogen

It's hoped a new GNS Science lab can crack open the door to cheaper green hydrogen production 
4/28/202423 minutes, 54 seconds
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Great Barrier's thriving media scene

On Great Barrier Island the media landscape is bucking the national trend - it's flourishing 
4/26/202424 minutes, 14 seconds
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Life Amidst Death: a soldier's view

When our Gallipoli soldiers landed at the historically significant site they occasionally paused to admire the sunsets, birds and flowers; and to souvenir treasures
4/25/202424 minutes, 5 seconds
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Quake rules in for a shake-up

The government's hit pause on strict new building regulations over earthquake strengthening, and even its usual opponents are happy with the move 
4/23/202423 minutes, 37 seconds
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The de-railing of New Zealand

KiwiRail's future could be veering more towards mothballs than mega-ferries, but the government's not sending out any hints
4/22/202422 minutes, 48 seconds
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Breaking barriers on sexual assault figures

New technology available to abuse victims aims to change the figures on unreported sexual assaults.
4/21/202424 minutes, 51 seconds
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From a library basement comes a fashion history

From harem pants to scandalous hemlines, Auckland Library's latest exhibition showcases what we wore in the 1950s through 1990s
4/19/202421 minutes, 12 seconds
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How the coolest capital is shrinking

The government's back-office public service job cuts are adding to Wellington's woes   
4/18/202424 minutes, 18 seconds
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Pharmac's perpetually stretched budget

Secret lists and capped budgets - how does Pharmac make its drug buying choices?
4/17/202423 minutes, 13 seconds
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The dark side of the beauty industry

The beauty industry in New Zealand is a wild west devoid of regulation, and the price people are paying can take the form of scars, burns and infections.
4/16/202423 minutes, 20 seconds
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School principals on the truth behind truancy

Government fixes for truancy need to look at why kids aren't coming to school, rather than just shaming schools for their numbers.
4/15/202424 minutes, 30 seconds
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The empty surgical hospital that could be slashing waiting lists

The lights are on, the beds are ready, but no patients have stepped inside a brand new $320 million surgical hospital built on Auckland's North Shore. 
4/14/202421 minutes, 17 seconds
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On the frontline of Victim Support

A Victim Support worker on what it's like to support victims on their worst days.
4/12/202423 minutes, 9 seconds
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NZ's foreign policy sea-change

New Zealand is edging away from our long-held Independent Foreign Policy and towards old allies, and navigating it all is an old hand.
4/11/202423 minutes, 26 seconds
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Demolition by neglect for our heritage buildings

The heritage building debate: A balance between saving our history and building our future.
4/10/202421 minutes, 55 seconds
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The rates conversation

Coming soon to an inbox or letterbox near you is something shocking - your next rates bill.
4/9/202422 minutes, 24 seconds
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Measuring poverty just got harder

Two fact-finding projects on children and poverty are under attack by public service cost cutting. 
4/8/202423 minutes, 16 seconds
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Fuming over transport policy

The plan to get Kiwis moving - as long as it's along a motorway - has public transport experts fuming 
4/7/202422 minutes, 37 seconds
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The food ranking system past its use-by date

Using the health star-rating for packaged food should be simple, but it's not
4/5/202424 minutes, 45 seconds
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The downward spiral of Ruapehu's commercial infrastructure

Snow season is fast approaching but the North Island's only commercial skiing mountain has an uncertain future
4/4/202423 minutes, 6 seconds
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Turbulent times for NZ rugby

On the field and off, rugby is fighting to keep the game alive
4/3/202424 minutes, 11 seconds
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Rubbing out the rainbow

The line between freedom of expression, and suppression of other people's freedoms
4/2/202421 minutes, 56 seconds
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The disability ministry funding debacle

Service cuts from the disability ministry caused panic and stress. How did it all go wrong?
4/1/202424 minutes, 5 seconds
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The diplomatic dance with problematic China

China has been caught spying on us. Forty billion dollars in trade might explain why it took three years and the support of two friends to announce.
3/27/202423 minutes, 33 seconds
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India's Gloriavale and the Kiwi women there

The Gloriavale offshoot in India is home to Kiwi women and children. A former member of the sect says getting them out of there is urgent
3/26/202422 minutes, 19 seconds
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Fiscal holes as a political weapon

Are fiscal holes a real issue, or an easy headline?
3/25/202422 minutes, 35 seconds
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Green money dries up

Today from The Detail: When the money dries up, gains made by a wave of Covid-inspired funding are likely to be lost.
3/24/202423 minutes, 50 seconds
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How manga moved West

The Japanese art forms that have shaped more of the West's story telling than you may realise 
3/22/202423 minutes, 43 seconds
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The power balance

In the wake of a change in the way power bills are calculated, The Detail helps you understand the bottom line.
3/21/202422 minutes, 46 seconds
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The sea ice factories of Antarctica

A team of New Zealand scientists has just returned from studying the sea ice factories in Antarctica, in a joint expedition with Italy
3/20/202423 minutes, 24 seconds
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A promise to overhaul the Holidays Act, again

The Holidays Act is complex and has led to years of problems. But fixing it seems just as challenging. 
3/19/202423 minutes, 2 seconds
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New target for police asset seizures

The proceeds of crime laws have traditionally been used to target gangs and drug dealers. Now police have their eyes on a new target, and that's left businesses feeling vulnerable.
3/18/202424 minutes, 19 seconds
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David Seymour's attack on red tape

A sector that's had rules piled upon it is welcoming moves to cut the red tape  
3/17/202423 minutes, 57 seconds
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A tuneful life

The Detail's Davina Zimmer discovers she's sitting across from a quiet music legend.
3/15/202423 minutes, 37 seconds
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Voting rights for the Samoan diaspora

Critics of a new electoral law in Samoa say it could allow overseas voters to decide elections.   
3/14/202418 minutes, 53 seconds
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Auckland Council's rubbish move

Auckland Council is calling it a 'bin optimisation drive', but residents say the move to remove their litter receptacles is rubbish 
3/13/202424 minutes, 20 seconds
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Immigration New Zealand's perfect storm

A review into a new visa category that sparked more problems than it solved is scathing about Immigration NZ's processes and systems.
3/12/202424 minutes, 27 seconds
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Haka, sport and politics

A haka incorporating barbs aimed at the Government has rekindled a decades old debate over sport and politics.
3/11/202424 minutes, 12 seconds
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Getting our money lending right

The laws that govern our money-lending landscape are in for another shakeup.
3/10/202423 minutes, 45 seconds
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A cool solution to drink dilution

All ice is not created equal, and the ice created by Conor Whale is top-shelf stuff.
3/8/202424 minutes, 26 seconds
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Incubating a space industry

Auckland University's new space centre will soon take control of a satellite that detects the world's worst methane emitters.
3/7/202422 minutes, 54 seconds
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The diamonds, the divas and the drama of the Oscars

Hollywood's red carpet is getting rolled out for its premier event, the Oscars, for the 96th time this weekend
3/6/202421 minutes, 24 seconds
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Mould, mushrooms and musty classrooms

An Auckland school for some of our most vulnerable children is crumbling, and any hopes for a rebuild have just been dashed by the government's moves to halt school property developments. 
3/5/202424 minutes, 44 seconds
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Olympic hopefuls plan for Paris 2024

The first of our athletes to wear the silver fern in Paris have been announced 
3/4/202423 minutes, 22 seconds
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Rare disorders aren't unusual enough to ignore

One in 17 New Zealanders have what's termed as a rare disorder. March is the month to highlight their lives and struggles.
3/3/202420 minutes, 48 seconds
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The death of the magazine

Magazines are facing extinction by internet. Are they special enough to save? 
3/1/202420 minutes, 43 seconds
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The Newshub bombshell with a whopping blast range

It was a skin-of-your-teeth operation from the start, and Newshub's 35 year old life looks to be ending with multi-million dollar losses presided over by off-shore owners 
2/29/202424 minutes, 20 seconds
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Why we leap

Leap year is all about matching the seasons to time. It's just a construct, but try telling that to February 29th babies.
2/28/202420 minutes, 54 seconds
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Drugs, tests, and rock'n'roll

At festivals, a volunteer-based service runs quality-control on illegal drugs.
2/27/202423 minutes, 17 seconds
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The Waitangi Tribunal's losing battle

What is the point of the Waitangi Tribunal if it doesn't have the power to stop a government that appears to be acting against the interests of Māori? 
2/26/202423 minutes, 16 seconds
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Go home, stay home

Four years after the first lockdown, the way we work has changed.
2/25/202422 minutes, 27 seconds
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Pioneering kiwi research for hydrocephalus patients

A life-changing diagnostic device tested on sheep in New Zealand is about to be trialled on humans 
2/23/202423 minutes, 30 seconds
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Building back better after a disaster

Good, fast and on-budget infrastructure building shouldn't have to wait for disaster situations to swing into action.
2/22/202424 minutes, 28 seconds
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War and headlines

Conflict and coverage - why some conflicts dominate headlines for months, then suddenly get ignored    
2/21/202422 minutes, 7 seconds
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World-first climate action in NZ's top court

The Supreme Court has agreed to hear a case against some of New Zealand's biggest polluters in what some describe as judicial activism
2/20/202422 minutes, 49 seconds
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Chipping away at childhood obesity

Researchers are making some headway tackling a problem that New Zealand has a shameful record in - childhood obesity. 
2/19/202421 minutes, 56 seconds
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A bridge not far enough for Auckland

We're back to where we were in 1969 when it comes to easing congestion over Auckland's harbour 
2/18/202424 minutes, 13 seconds
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The music wars that muted TikTok

The ripples of a war in the music industry spread far further than just ruining Gen Alpha's TikTok time. 
2/16/202424 minutes, 21 seconds
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Kane Williamson, king of the cricket pitch

Kane Williamson is the world's number one batsman right now, but what he brings to the Black Caps is worth far more than runs on the board.
2/15/202423 minutes, 24 seconds
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The investment fund aiming to fix the housing crisis

A $90 million housing fund promises to tackle the Bay of Plenty's housing crisis  
2/14/202423 minutes, 50 seconds
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The legal battles of Donald Trump

The convoluted legal troubles of former -- and maybe future -- US President Donald Trump are playing out in court rooms across America 
2/13/202423 minutes, 23 seconds
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Thinking too big over infrastructure

Critics say the government's plan to speed up infrastructure projects puts too much power in the hands of one person.
2/12/202420 minutes, 44 seconds
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Swift101: The study of Taylor

Two AUT academics are taking their Taylor Swift obsession to the next extreme at a Swiftposium in Melbourne, ahead of the star's Australian tour
2/11/202423 minutes, 59 seconds
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The slip story that gets worse at every turn

Homes suspended over landslides; lives suspended by bodies that can't or won't help 
2/8/202423 minutes, 8 seconds
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Fresh blood for our donor service

Around 10,000 new donors could flood into the New Zealand Blood Service after a long-standing restriction is lifted. But if another ban is re-visited that number could rise further
2/7/202420 minutes, 29 seconds
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Democracy in danger when lies go unchecked

When politicians fail to call out a lie by one of their own, it can have a dampening effect on democracy 
2/6/202422 minutes, 55 seconds
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Our Search and Rescue heroes

When the text comes, these volunteers down tools to help strangers in their hour of need. But their numbers are shrinking.
2/4/202423 minutes, 22 seconds
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Temu is hard sell on steroids

It's spending billions on advertising and draws shoppers in with its questionable tactics. But how can you resist Temu when it's so cheap?
2/1/202422 minutes, 23 seconds
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The electric revolution, with or without discounts

Government levers to increase electric car ownership have worked, and now EVs have a toe in the market it looks like even higher user charges won't stop them
1/31/202423 minutes, 45 seconds
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The Treaty of Waitangi - articles, principles, changes

There's growing fear and anger from Māori over moves by the coalition government to revisit the rules around the Treaty of Waitangi.
1/30/202422 minutes, 51 seconds
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A young person's place is in the House

Young politicians around the world are disproving the adage that wisdom comes with age.
1/29/202423 minutes, 41 seconds
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Auckland's rain-soaked recurring nightmare

A year on from the devastating Auckland Anniversary Weekend storms, the evidence of them remains all over the city
1/28/202423 minutes, 28 seconds
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The Year in Detail

The Detail's co-hosts Sharon Brettkelly and Tom Kitchin, and producer Alexia Russell, roll through the highlights of nearly 300 podcasts and long reads in 2023
12/14/202325 minutes, 8 seconds
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The Christmas display elves of Queen St

Every Christmas Auckland's big department store creates joy and delight for children in Queen St. We meet the people behind the displays.
12/13/202319 minutes, 31 seconds
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A crossroads for netball

As Netball in New Zealand gears up to mark its centenary, strong headwinds are appearing on the horizon. 
12/12/202324 minutes, 20 seconds
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Saving South Dunedin from going under

South Dunedin is one of New Zealand’s most densely populated areas but it is also one of the lowest lying. Coming up with ways to save it from repeated flooding is becoming urgent.
12/11/202322 minutes, 11 seconds
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Sliding backwards on human rights

A 75 year old UN declaration still holds sway over New Zealand's legislation and conduct. But the Human Rights Commission sees threats around the corner. 
12/10/202323 minutes, 33 seconds
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Long Read: The grief bird

By Ellen Rykers: The bittern’s eerie, booming call sounds like a lament, a tangi ringing across the marshes. Now, the birds themselves are in trouble
12/8/202324 minutes, 53 seconds
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COP28's chaotic talkfest on climate change

It's unclear if commentators at COP28 are holding their breaths to see what the Dubai conference will deliver, or because the oil producing country is blanketed in haze. 
12/7/202322 minutes, 16 seconds
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The alcohol conundrum

What's wrong with being a functioning alcoholic? And when booze has such a high visual profile in our society, why is there so much judgement when people fall foul of their own limits? 
12/6/202322 minutes, 5 seconds
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Bulldozing through environmental laws

At a time when severe weather events are wrecking the environment, contractors on small building sites ignoring the rules are adding to the problem. 
12/5/202323 minutes, 17 seconds
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What's the fuss over pseudoephedrine?

After a 12-year ban that was completely ineffective in stopping the manufacture of methamphetamine, the government is going to allow pseudoephedrine products to be sold over the counter again. 
12/4/202321 minutes, 57 seconds
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When choice fatigue hits charitable giving

So many crises, and so many charities to deal with them. Donor confusion has been increasing, which is why eight New Zealand-based organisations have linked up to cut administration costs and get the money to where it's needed most.
12/3/202323 minutes, 10 seconds
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Long Read: The Crewe Murders

By Kirsty Johnston: The murder of Harvey and Jeannette Crewe in their Pukekawa farmhouse in 1970 remains New Zealand’s most infamous cold case.
12/1/202327 minutes, 10 seconds
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The insincere marketing that goes from woke to woke-washed

Some big brands have taken big steps backwards with their images, just as they thought they were jumping on a bandwagon of progressive thought and inclusivity.  
11/30/202321 minutes, 48 seconds
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Judith Collins becomes the minister for everything

Spies, space and science form just part of the new domain for battle-hardened politician Judith Collins. 
11/29/202323 minutes, 35 seconds
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Disbelief as a smokefree generation slips away

Anti-smoking researchers are promising a healthy fight against the new government's moves to repeal world-first legislation on tobacco sales.
11/28/202322 minutes, 57 seconds
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The deep tech sector dreaming up ways to save the planet

A look inside an Auckland building that's an incubator for the deep tech sector, aimed at finding solutions for some of the world's biggest carbon-emitting materials.
11/27/202323 minutes, 5 seconds
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Google: The monopoly we don't want to live without

Google is the big, intrusive company that we welcome into our lives with open arms because of the way it helps us through our daily lives. Will a ruling from the US say it's gone too far?
11/26/202323 minutes, 14 seconds
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Long Read: Weighing the Booker Prize shortlist

By Jeremy Rees: I read every book shortlisted for the most prestigious literary award in the world. Here's what I found.
11/24/202324 minutes, 23 seconds
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New Zealand's meth flood

Meth dealers in New Zealand are driving increasingly sophisticated and profitable operations, so much so that police now call them "criminal business entities". 
11/23/202323 minutes, 10 seconds
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The smothering weed spreading fast and far

Auckland's aquatic backyard and prime fishing grounds are weed-deep in trouble from exotic caulerpa, a fast-spreading algae that smothers everything in its path. 
11/22/202323 minutes, 34 seconds
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Striking gold hits obstacles

Conservation groups, prepare for battle – we're likely to see more mining applications as the country's new chief executive promises economic benefits from going underground. 
11/21/202322 minutes, 30 seconds
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Divorce, remarriage, inheritance, and outdated laws

Family disputes are getting increasingly complex and costly to unravel. There's agreement on updating the law, but actual changes have stalled. 
11/20/202323 minutes, 9 seconds
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The problems driving congestion charges

If congestion charges work to break up gridlock, why don't we have them in place by now?
11/19/202323 minutes, 56 seconds
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Long Read: The Badjelly Chronicles

By Gemma Gracewood: How New Zealand developed an unique obsession with the baddest witch in all the world.
11/17/202326 minutes, 1 second
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K-Pop dances its way across the globe

K-Pop is about dance moves and perfectly presented superstars as much as it is about the music. The phenomenon's Kiwi fans love it for that. 
11/16/202323 minutes, 37 seconds
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Wellington's microfractures and macrofinances

Seismic cracks and new earthquake-related infrastructure rules are causing havoc with Wellington City Council's budgets and long term planning.
11/15/202322 minutes, 43 seconds
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NZ's screen industry wants a slice of the Netflix pie

New Zealand's $3 billion screen industry could shrivel up without some drastic improvements in funding. One solution is to ask the big streamers to cough up. 
11/14/202323 minutes, 10 seconds
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Pandemic pets now left to their own devices

Covid lockdowns have left us with a legacy of unwanted and increasingly dangerous dogs.
11/13/202321 minutes, 31 seconds
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The quiet inquiry

New Zealand's inquiry into how we handled the pandemic has already spoken to hundreds of people of all persuasions, but the work is definitely taking the hush-hush approach.
11/12/202324 minutes, 15 seconds
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Long Read: Loss of Incidental Connections

By Susan Strongman: Retired and living alone in Hamilton, Mum ticks a lot of the boxes that put her at risk of loneliness.
11/10/202322 minutes, 41 seconds
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Libraries fight to survive under tight council budgets

When councils cut their budgets, it's always libraries that have the spotlight put on them. As staff hours and numbers are cut, librarians are overcoming their reluctance to whisper about the value of their services. 
11/9/202322 minutes, 16 seconds
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Incomplete science deals blow to Ārepa

A kiwi health drink with some unique ingredients has been making a splash. But after it promised too much in its marketing it's been slapped down by food authorities.
11/8/202320 minutes, 7 seconds
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Why are we waiting?

Is our MMP electoral system slow and cumbersome, or fair and democratic? 
11/7/202322 minutes, 45 seconds
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Fear and trauma from a world away

A Jewish and a Palestinian man both find they’ve been naïve in believing New Zealand to be a safe haven from hatred and abuse.
11/6/202324 minutes, 51 seconds
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Ka kite for Māori Health Authority?

The clock is about to be wound back on Labour's Māori health initiative despite pleas that it should be given more time to prove its worth.
11/5/202323 minutes, 7 seconds
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Long Read: The straight and narrow

By Bill Morris: Ploughing-the epitome of the colonial 'civilising' of land-is as fundamental to this country's history as war and rugby. Perhaps it's not surprising that we make a sport out of it.
11/3/202323 minutes, 19 seconds
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Supie's sidelined, so what's next?

Introducing more competition into the grocery sector will be one of the first, and trickiest, tasks facing the new government.
11/2/202322 minutes, 33 seconds
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Convenient cities become conspiracy targets

How did a vision to make cities more liveable become twisted into a totalitarian dystopia?
11/1/202322 minutes, 46 seconds
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Gang crackdown about to rev up

The new government is vowing to take a hard line with gang members, including those with tattoos showing gang affiliations.
10/31/202324 minutes, 49 seconds
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Ditching the dye

Grey hair and wrinkles are finally becoming something to celebrate.
10/30/202322 minutes, 24 seconds
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The gaming games

Esports players say their sport is more than just time on the couch with a joystick – we have a national team, and it’s heading to global games at the end of the year.
10/29/202324 minutes, 17 seconds
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Long Read: The MethaneSAT saga

By Eloise Gibson: How did New Zealand come to invest $29 million in a Bezos-backed methane satellite space plan?
10/27/202324 minutes, 27 seconds
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Making the Planet less Lonely

The book that was for many years a travellers’ bible turns 50 this year. But with instant information available anywhere, how will Lonely Planet keep up?
10/26/202321 minutes, 30 seconds
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A brainy comic collaboration

The power and potential of comic books is being realised with a new project at Auckland University. 
10/25/202323 minutes, 47 seconds
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Student radio's cupboards are bare

Once the juggernaut of student radio, Auckland's 95bFM is resorting to a fundraising concert to try to clear debt in an age when every commercial station is struggling for funds.  
10/24/202322 minutes, 32 seconds
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Pacific MPs in short supply for this government

Political representation from the Pasifika community has been lost in an ocean of white faces and blue suits. Does it matter? 
10/23/202321 minutes, 51 seconds
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Long Read: There and back again

By Kate Evans: Humans have been puzzling over the mysteries of animal migration and navigation for centuries.
10/20/202320 minutes, 26 seconds
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Otago's extreme student initiations

Hazing rituals at Otago University are getting more extreme, with even those all in favour of the student culture asking if they've gone too far. 
10/19/202323 minutes, 50 seconds
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The West Coast's surprising shade of blue

Few pundits flagged the West Coast, birthplace of the Labour Party, to be part of the big blue swing this election.
10/18/202323 minutes, 12 seconds
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Israel v Hamas: The war without end

Why do experts have very little hope for a peaceful solution in the Middle East?
10/17/202325 minutes, 43 seconds
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Election '23: The hangover

There's a lot we still don't know after election day. Here are the answers to those lingering questions from Saturday night. 
10/16/202323 minutes, 27 seconds
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Covid: Still here, still deadly

It's the unwelcome guest that no one wants to talk about – Covid-19 may be below the radar now, but it hasn't gone away and is likely to claim 1,000 Kiwi lives this year. 
10/15/202322 minutes, 55 seconds
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Long Read: Is film criticism a blessing or a curse?

By Tony Stamp: The art of criticism is being threatened by a new wave of social media-savvy disruptors.
10/13/202318 minutes, 23 seconds
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Behind the polling booths

From preparations that begin two years out, to a double vote count after the polls close, our elections are a massive logistical exercise. 
10/12/202323 minutes, 38 seconds
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The storm over a washed-out walkway

It's one of the most unique and beautiful short walkways in the country, but time has expired on the gentlemen's agreement that let the public through. 
10/11/202321 minutes, 41 seconds
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Warkworth's seamless manufacturing change

Sir Russell Coutts has leased his SailGP manufacturing factory to Rocket Lab – and his specialist carbon composite workers are part of the deal. 
10/10/202322 minutes, 56 seconds
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Our messy migration

Self-serving, messy, and directionless. With record numbers pouring into the country, our immigration policies are under the microscope – and they don't stand up to scrutiny. 
10/9/202324 minutes, 6 seconds
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When breathing kills

Air pollution is the invisible killer behind one in every 10 deaths in New Zealand. There's no safe level of it, but it's an easy issue to ignore. 
10/8/202323 minutes, 33 seconds
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Long Read: Tairāwhiti's Trauma

By Aaron Smale: On the slow destruction and devastating impact of the pine industry on Tairāwhiti.
10/6/202325 minutes, 29 seconds
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A garden for soul food

When living space is tight, a community garden gives residents a place to breathe.
10/5/202322 minutes, 1 second
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Hope and false hope for Alzheimer's sufferers

Scientists have worked out how brain cells die in Alzheimer's disease, but there's caution over starting the celebrations just yet.
10/4/202322 minutes, 29 seconds
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Disability is this year's forgotten issue

Few parties have policies on disability issues this election. How can disabled people ensure their voices are heard?
10/3/202322 minutes, 27 seconds
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The Voice of confusion

It's just a "moderate, tiny proposal" over indigenous representation, but Australia's The Voice referendum has caused huge uproar.  
10/2/202322 minutes, 33 seconds
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A sometimes summer of sun

A change in our three-year La Niña weather pattern will turn the tables on our summer – but don't think El Niño isn't also without its issues. 
10/1/202323 minutes, 42 seconds
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Long Read: The food lobby in Aotearoa

By Guyon Espiner: How the food industry throws its weight – and its money – around in sport, politics, nutrition, and education.
9/29/202325 minutes, 29 seconds
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Torn apart by war, kept apart by bureaucrats

The only chance 18-year-old Afghan refugee Arezo Nazari has of bringing her parents to New Zealand is through the government – and so far, three ministers have turned her down. 
9/28/202323 minutes, 15 seconds
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Helping or harming? Our modern mental health conversations

A multi-billion dollar industry has sprung up around mental health and wellness. Have the efforts to raise awareness been too successful? 
9/27/202324 minutes, 51 seconds
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Making our drinking water safe

The cryptosporidium outbreak in Queenstown highlights the challenges of providing a clean water supply.  Why is it so difficult to make our drinking water safe?
9/26/202323 minutes, 48 seconds
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Recycling the wrong ideas about climate change

Recycling is not the beginning nor end when it comes to climate change. In fact, it comes way down the list of things you can personally do to help save the planet. 
9/25/202322 minutes, 50 seconds
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Tiny homes, big problems

There are a lot of good reasons to downsize to a tiny home. But there are just as many problems in getting started. 
9/24/202324 minutes, 14 seconds
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Long Read: Make voting sexy again

By Nadine Anne Hura: If those with the least wealth and privilege understood how much power they held, their votes could really could make a difference.
9/22/202321 minutes, 51 seconds
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A bright idea for Naseby

The entire community of Naseby has decided to turn down the lights – and reach for the stars.
9/21/202323 minutes, 54 seconds
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When a 'wasted vote' isn't wasted

If you're disinterested, despondent or deflated by the election campaign and its daily parade of pointless behaviour, here's why you shouldn't miss your opportunity to exercise a little strategy in order to try and engineer a result. 
9/20/202323 minutes, 2 seconds
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Tarras locals gear up for a fight over airport

Christchurch Airport says it's premature to try and stop a new airport that's only just having the groundwork laid; but Tarras locals know what they don't want. 
9/19/202326 minutes, 22 seconds
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Spinning the numbers while ignoring the threats

Politicians are spending the election campaign weaving all sorts of financial figures into a cloth that suits their narrative – but there's another issue on the horizon that would overshadow everything. 
9/18/202323 minutes, 27 seconds
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The burning question on rubbish

Mass incineration could be a great solution to New Zealand's increasingly scarce landfill space – or it could be a step backwards environmentally. 
9/17/202323 minutes, 1 second
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Long Read: Turning the tide

A team of New Zealanders and Tongans have just carpeted a remote Tongan island with poisoned bait, hoping to eradicate rats.
9/15/202322 minutes, 4 seconds
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Liam Lawson's Formula One breakthrough

New Zealand's tenth Formula One driver is a 21-year-old from Pukekohe.
9/14/202323 minutes, 31 seconds
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The dark twists and crazy turns of Whangārei's big cat park

The lions and tigers are ready to roar again as Whangārei's Kamo Wildlife Sanctuary re-opens it doors on Saturday. But the park has a troubled past – and its future is uncertain.
9/13/202322 minutes, 41 seconds
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Landlords versus tenants

There are horror stories on both sides of the landlord/tenant divide, but how do the laws of the country ensure a fair balance between the rights of both? 
9/12/202323 minutes, 1 second
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Gender equality: Are we there yet?

Three exciting world cups on New Zealand soil have boosted coverage of women's sport stratospherically – and women are now far more visible in public life. When can we say these 'firsts' are normal?
9/11/202323 minutes, 1 second
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Winston Peters rides again

Gone in 2020, washed up and out of the political scene? Not just yet. Assumptions over the demise of Winston Peters and New Zealand First have ignored the old adage – never rule him out. 
9/10/202323 minutes, 50 seconds
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Long Read: What happened to Wellington – Live?

By Janhavi Gosavi: Once the shining example for community pages, many followers are growing concerned by its new owner's approach.
9/8/202326 minutes, 16 seconds
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The most privileged chair in sport

We're about to get an earful of commentary as the Rugby World Cup kicks off. What's it like to sit in the big chair at the biggest games?
9/7/202324 minutes, 20 seconds
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Policing in a new era of crime

New Zealand's criminal landscape is changing, and our police force is having to make adjustments.
9/6/202323 minutes, 9 seconds
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New Poseidons zoom in on illegal fishers

New Zealand's new Poseidon P-8A has clocked its first official mission: a multi-national operation north-west of Fiji to catch illegal fishing boats.
9/5/202323 minutes, 44 seconds
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Our Pasifika Rugby World Cup teams

The Tongan, Samoan and Fijian rugby teams have made huge strides on the world stage. What can we expect from them this World Cup?
9/4/202322 minutes, 9 seconds
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Quest for answers over three year old's death

Paul Jones hasn't let up in his drive to get answers over his three year old son's death – but in spite of multiple investigations, the truth appears to be no closer. 
9/3/202321 minutes, 33 seconds
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Long Read: Our renewable power struggle

By George Driver: Millions of panels could soon be erected across thousands of hectares of the country as an unprecedented solar-farm boom begins.
9/1/202324 minutes, 2 seconds
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The renaissance of girl power

The pop culture dollar is being laid down on Barbie and Taylor Swift, as young women not in the market for a mortgage splash their joy around. 
8/31/202322 minutes, 50 seconds
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India's high-science, low-cost space programme

After India's successful landing on the south pole of the moon, there's hope the West will stop seeing the country as a land of "snake charmers and elephants". 
8/30/202322 minutes, 17 seconds
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Villa Maria: The dismantling of a legacy

The saga of Villa Maria wines involves valuable land, an iconic brand, legal action and millions of dollars in dispute. 
8/29/202323 minutes, 43 seconds
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Backsliding in the battle against pest species

Conservation projects across the country risk losing progress as money gets tighter and budgets are slashed. 
8/28/202322 minutes, 20 seconds
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Tough times brewing for the craft beer industry

They say beer is recession-proof, but two of the country's well-known craft breweries are facing an uncertain future.
8/27/202322 minutes, 30 seconds
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Long Read: The new Golden Age of rail

By Theo Macdonald: Long-distance rail travel is in for a revival in New Zealand — eventually. And you don’t have to be a nostalgia buff, trainspotter or climate-action protester to see why.
8/25/202327 minutes, 2 seconds
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Migrant worker advocates alarmed by increasing calls for help

Advocates for migrant workers are alarmed as more and more people come to them for help, because the jobs they've been promised haven't eventuated.
8/24/202323 minutes, 57 seconds
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Theatre's back, but can it continue to thrive?

Audiences are returning to theatres, but the future is uncertain for university-level theatre education.
8/23/202322 minutes, 31 seconds
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After a summer of cyclones, are we ready for a summer of wildfires?

Scenes of mass destruction in Greece and Hawaii have shown us just how serious wildfires are.
8/22/202324 minutes, 26 seconds
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Who should teach kids about sex and relationships?

Most parents find it awkward to talk about, but who should take the lead when it comes to educating kids about sex and relationships?
8/21/202321 minutes, 8 seconds
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The last NZ company weaving our wool

The Detail visits New Zealand's last commercial wool weaver, Inter-Weave, to find out how they're helping keep the wool industry alive.
8/20/202324 minutes, 15 seconds
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Long Read: Weaponised

By Kate Evans: With each generation, predators and prey refine their aggressive weapons and defensive armour.
8/18/202322 minutes, 30 seconds
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The future will be riskier – how will insurance keep up?

When a natural disaster destroys your home, who should foot the bill? The government, private insurers, or you? 
8/17/202323 minutes, 21 seconds
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Off or on? The debate over GST on fruit and veg

It's popular with the voters, but not with the experts. The Detail takes a closer look at the debate about Labour's GST plans.
8/16/202323 minutes, 36 seconds
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Is fish the new farming frontier for New Zealand?

The government has a goal to grow aquaculture to a $3 billion-a-year industry. But red tape – and red flags – stand in the way.
8/15/202320 minutes, 53 seconds
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Capitalising on New Zealand's football fever

The FIFA World Cup has captured the attention of plenty of New Zealanders. How do we keep them interested, and invested, in women's football once the tournament's over?
8/14/202321 minutes, 35 seconds
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Why don't we talk about postnatal depression?

Maternal mental health is another one of those hidden "women's issues" that we don't talk about enough. Now it's in the spotlight for the most awful of reasons. 
8/13/202323 minutes, 51 seconds
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Long Read: What happened when two young Jehovah’s Witnesses quit the church

By Anusha Bradley: After leaving the Jehovah’s Witnesses, Brad Miller and Cassie Dean were cut off from almost everyone they’d ever known.
8/12/202338 minutes, 59 seconds
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Taking the public pulse with political polls

The polls are showing a tight race between the two major parties as we inch closer to October's election. But can we trust them?
8/10/202323 minutes, 23 seconds
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How NZ's paid parental leave stacks up

We like to think we're pretty progressive, but can New Zealand do more to support parents in the workplace?
8/9/202321 minutes, 43 seconds
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Public private partnerships and big infrastructure projects

The Detail weighs up the pros and cons of public private partnerships in big infrastructure projects.
8/8/202322 minutes, 56 seconds
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The woes of wool

Wool was once the backbone of our agriculture industry, but now farmers are struggling to make a buck from it. What happened?
8/7/202322 minutes, 35 seconds
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The new therapeutic products law: What is it?

It's been decades in the making, but there will be major changes to the way we regulate medicines, medical devices and natural health products. 
8/6/202323 minutes, 41 seconds
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Long Read: Immaculate

By Dave Hansford: Meet New Zealand's lawn addicts, who can be found in the weekend perfecting their 'outdoor carpet'.
8/4/202322 minutes, 14 seconds
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The charismatic kākāpō is booming, but its friends need help

Having kākāpō in the North Island wilderness again is an historic win for our native manu, but conservationists say other species are at risk of falling through the cracks.
8/3/202322 minutes, 53 seconds
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The perilous state of the Far North's roads

The Far North's roads are in a perilous state – and the fix-up job is mammoth in scale.
8/2/202324 minutes, 21 seconds
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The feud between our two big weather forecasters

MetService and NIWA are both government agencies. Why are they competing with one another?
8/1/202324 minutes, 28 seconds
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Taking flight: The post-pandemic travel boom

Thinking about booking that long-awaited overseas trip? International travel is back and bigger than ever.
7/31/202321 minutes, 40 seconds
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Banks' endless battles with scammers

Bank scams are rising exponentially, so much so that $183 million has gone out of New Zealanders' accounts over the last year. 
7/30/202324 minutes, 1 second
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Long Read: The Gloriavale employment case

By Jean Edwards: Raised to be meek and submissive in a world dominated by men, six former Gloriavale women have won an extraordinary legal victory.
7/28/202317 minutes, 2 seconds
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The home detention solution

After Auckland's CBD shooting the knives were out for home detention sentences – but is it the justice system we should be pointing at, or is the problem more deeply-rooted?  
7/27/202323 minutes, 8 seconds
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KiwiSaver as a slush fund

It's their own money – so why shouldn't hard-up students be allowed to use their KiwiSaver when faced with the tough task of coming up with a bond for their rental? 
7/26/202321 minutes, 47 seconds
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When a graphic warning is not enough

Should the media be self-censoring its court reporting of the Dickason triple murder trial as the gory details unfold? 
7/25/202322 minutes, 2 seconds
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A sporting empire starts to crumble

Victoria's decision to pull out of hosting the 2026 Commonwealth Games after a budget blowout shines light on the huge amount of money it takes for these sporting extravaganzas.
7/24/202321 minutes, 8 seconds
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Setting prisoners up for failure

There's a silent sentence faced by prisoners just out of jail – one that makes it hard for them to get back on their feet without resorting to crime again.
7/23/202322 minutes, 25 seconds
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Long Read: Procurement Without Purpose

By Nikki Mandow: The government spent $51.5 billion of taxpayer money on buying stuff last year. The criteria for how they spend it have had a shake-up.
7/21/202327 minutes, 5 seconds
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The zing zazz factor in a slogan

As the political parties reveal their slogans for the election campaign, we look at who and what makes a catchphrase sing,
7/20/202321 minutes, 13 seconds
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Healthy Homes remain an uphill battle

There are five basic standards to be met before landlords can get their Healthy Homes tick. Why do so many seem to be slipping through the cracks? 
7/19/202322 minutes, 38 seconds
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The dangers of our productivity slide

New Zealand's slow slide into poor productivity isn't just a cultural quirk – it means we miss out when it comes to competition and trade opportunities.
7/18/202323 minutes, 40 seconds
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Social media's new revolution

Two decades after Facebook.com changed our lives, social media is going through another big upheaval. 
7/17/202324 minutes, 4 seconds
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The power of a well-designed uniform

Whether it's a corporate refresh with more cultural considerations, or a new version of a sporting uniform steeped in history, what our high profile teams wear matters. 
7/16/202321 minutes, 13 seconds
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Long Read: The Flames of Our Shame

By Max Rashbrooke: While the fatal fire at Loafers Lodge has reinforced calls for greater scrutiny of boarding houses, the warning signals have been around for years.
7/14/202322 minutes, 47 seconds
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Matariki's link in a chain of star stories

We call this star cluster Matariki – but the Seven Sisters myth is told all over the world, in startlingly similar fashion. Could it be our oldest story?
7/12/202322 minutes, 49 seconds
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Ukraine's cluster bombs will leave a hideous legacy

The US is sending cluster bombs to Ukraine in a move it hopes will shorten the war – how do they work, and why has the move prompted an uproar from human rights workers? 
7/11/202323 minutes, 31 seconds
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Safe or septic – Japan's nuclear wastewater dumping

Japan has made assurances the wastewater it's dumping in the Pacific is safe – but not everyone is convinced. 
7/10/202322 minutes, 40 seconds
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Heroes in the spotlight at White Island trial

The WorkSafe prosecution over the Whakaari eruption begins today – and some of the heroes of that dreadful day are in the spotlight.
7/9/202323 minutes, 29 seconds
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Long Read: Bone Hunters

By George Driver: An ancient lake bed in St Bathans is revealing New Zealand's mysterious past.
7/7/202322 minutes, 41 seconds
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Why city centres are going car-free

Auckland, Dunedin, and now Wellington – does pedestrianisation solve problems, or create them?
7/6/202323 minutes, 3 seconds
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'A slow-moving disaster': Rotorua lakes full to bursting

Months and months of heavy rain means many of the lakes around Rotorua are reaching levels not seen in 50 years, flooding nearby boat ramps, playgrounds and properties.
7/5/202322 minutes, 12 seconds
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The impact of the Hollywood writers' strike on NZ

Hollywood writers have been striking for three months' now – and there's no resolution in sight. Half a world away, the strike's having an impact on the screen industry here in New Zealand, too.
7/4/202325 minutes, 43 seconds
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What it takes to get a road back open

Storms and cyclones have caused major disruptions on state highways across the country this year. What's involved in fixing them up to get them back open?
7/3/202323 minutes, 40 seconds
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'Set up to fail': The alternative education problem

These programmes are the last resort for kids who can't cope in mainstream schools – but barely any leave with NCEA qualifications.
7/2/202321 minutes, 10 seconds
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Long Read: Guilt, Part I: Murder in Paeroa

By Ryan Wolf: Speculation still swirls about the unsolved 2012 murder of pizza shop owner Jordan Voudouris.
6/30/202327 minutes, 41 seconds
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The cancer-causing dangers in our workplaces

New Zealand's first-ever Carcinogen Survey has found alarming numbers of people are exposed to cancer-causing agents in their work. What can we do about it?
6/29/202321 minutes, 27 seconds
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Kicking the single-use plastic habit

This weekend, the next phase of New Zealand's ongoing fight against single-use plastics comes into effect. But do we need to re-think our attitudes towards all waste?
6/28/202322 minutes, 16 seconds
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What just happened in Russia?

Was the weekend of chaos a failed coup, or did the man once known as 'Putin's Chef' just snap, condemning himself to exile?
6/27/202321 minutes, 9 seconds
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Life under the shadow of Ruapehu Alpine Lifts

A government bail-out will keep the skifields open this winter, but businesses have been living with a question mark over Ruapehu's long-term future for months.
6/26/202322 minutes, 32 seconds
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A tale of two gang towns

A huge Mongrel Mob tangi in Ōpōtiki has thrown up some stark contrasts in the way different towns deal with gangs.
6/25/202323 minutes, 57 seconds
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Long Read: Strange Days on Lake Rotomahana

By Tim Bollinger: Once New Zealand’s very own wonder of the world, the Pink and White Terraces were destroyed in a single night of volcanic destruction.
6/23/202322 minutes, 38 seconds
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The waitlist algorithm that morphed into a political weapon

MPs have spent much of the week debating the merits - or otherwise - of an algorithm that takes into account ethnicity to help prioritise patients waiting for elective surgeries. 
6/22/202324 minutes, 11 seconds
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The oil disaster waiting to happen

Experts say this sunken shipwreck could be a disaster bigger than the Rena. Why hasn't anything been done to prevent it?
6/21/202323 minutes, 30 seconds
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Tracking the guns

The missing piece of New Zealand's firearms reforms falls in place this weekend – a long-called for registry which will tell us who owns what, and where guns go when they're sold. 
6/20/202321 minutes, 48 seconds
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What it's like to be a high school teacher in New Zealand

Tens of thousands of secondary teachers have walked off the job this year in a fight for better pay and conditions. Just how bad is it?
6/19/202322 minutes, 59 seconds
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Where to next for a Kermadec ocean sanctuary?

It was announced to great fanfare in 2015, but years of negotiations have failed to secure an agreement over a Kermadec ocean sanctuary.
6/18/202322 minutes, 35 seconds
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Long Read: Homeward Bound

By Veronika Meduna: Moriori await the final return to the Chatham Islands of human remains recovered from institutions around the world.
6/16/202326 minutes, 36 seconds
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Sports fans and the uncomfortable questions about sportswashing

Is it becoming harder to be a sports fan, as sportswashing continues its creep into more codes and competitions?
6/15/202323 minutes, 24 seconds
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The hidden hazards in scrap metal yards

A recent fire at a scrap metal yard in Auckland has put the spotlight on increasing hazards in the industry.
6/14/202324 minutes, 50 seconds
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Behind the story: Mr Lyttle Meets Mr Big

When all other avenues have failed, Mr Big stings can help the police ensnare their suspect - but can their use be justified?
6/13/202323 minutes, 21 seconds
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Preparing for the big quake on the Alpine Fault

New research on the South Island's Alpine Fault is helping communities prepare for the next big quake.
6/12/202321 minutes, 4 seconds
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First, a smoke-free generation – next, a vape-free one?

New Zealand's a world-leader with its smokefree laws, but can it do the same when it comes to vaping?
6/11/202323 minutes, 21 seconds
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Long Read: How Mike Wahrlich became 'the juggler'

By David Cohen: The death of Mike 'the juggler' Wahrlich in the Loafers Lodge fire prompts Cohen to examine Mike's past.
6/9/202320 minutes, 41 seconds
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Men without a safe place to call home

How do some of society's most vulnerable people – men in particular – fall into insecure housing?
6/8/202322 minutes, 54 seconds
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The university funding shortfall with no easy fix

Universities across the country are facing funding shortfalls. But philanthropy is unlikely to help them make up the difference.
6/7/202322 minutes, 51 seconds
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The places where bilingual is the norm

While New Zealand debates the merits of bilingual signage, Wales and Ireland have been using it for decades.
6/6/202321 minutes, 4 seconds
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Counting the benefits of big events

The country's been promised big economic benefits from co-hosting the FIFA Women's World Cup. But do the figures stack up?
6/5/202323 minutes, 5 seconds
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Long Read: The Preppers Next Door

By Tom Doig: Doig's first question about doomsday preppers was: “What if they’re crazy?” His second question was: “What if they’re right?”
6/2/202322 minutes, 25 seconds
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What next for NZ's big emitters?

NZ Steel's done a deal with the government that'll cut its carbon emissions. Will the country's other big emitters follow their lead?
6/1/202323 minutes, 43 seconds
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How do zoos keep taonga safe?

Zoo Miami's treatment of Paora the kiwi sparked outrage across the country, but how does Aotearoa treat other countries' national treasures?
5/31/202322 minutes, 40 seconds
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This election year, we need to brace ourselves for AI

National's AI-generated attack ads are just the tip of the iceberg. Could AI turn this election upside down?
5/30/202323 minutes, 52 seconds
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'They get sold a dream': When big returns don't eventuate

Suspected investment scams are on the rise and authorities are worried some of our most vulnerable communities are falling victim to them.
5/29/202322 minutes, 52 seconds
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The wallabies threatening a national park

Wallabies are hopping closer to one of our most precious national parks. Have we got the tools to stop them in their tracks?
5/28/202323 minutes, 59 seconds
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Long Read: Talofa and Ni Hao

By Ollie Neas: In Samoa, there are mixed feelings about Chinese influence and the nation’s growing indebtedness to the superpower.
5/26/202323 minutes, 2 seconds
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Mānuka: The buzz that a word makes

The Australians have beaten us again - this time, in the long-running fight over mānuka honey.
5/25/202322 minutes, 53 seconds
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Loafers Lodge and the lessons for higher density housing

In the push to get more people living in higher density housing, have our fire and building regulations been left behind?
5/24/202323 minutes
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Greedflation: Is it inflation, or are businesses just greedy?

Greedflation: It's the latest buzzword in economics – is it behind soaring company profits? 
5/23/202324 minutes, 9 seconds
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Preparing for the winter illness wave

Winter illness season is upon us. Can the health system cope with the inevitable increase in demand that comes with it?
5/22/202322 minutes, 21 seconds
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The India dilemma

A relationship with India is one that requires a great deal of homework and hard work - something New Zealand has shied away from.
5/21/202323 minutes, 17 seconds
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Long Read: How To Save A Life

By Ellen Rykers: Fifteen years ago, Search and Rescue foresaw a crisis – its volunteers were aging, and the job is hard physical work.
5/19/202322 minutes, 26 seconds
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Why local councils want to sell their assets

Auckland Council could cash out $2 billion worth of shares in the airport - and it's not the only council considering asset sales to balance the budget.
5/18/202320 minutes, 22 seconds
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The stand-off between a philanthropist and Victoria University

A dispute over how a $10 million research grant gets used has exposed the tension between academic freedom and university funding.
5/17/202324 minutes, 13 seconds
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Money or morals? Team NZ, Saudi Arabia and sportswashing

Sparks are flying over Team New Zealand's decision to hold a pre-America's Cup regatta in Saudi Arabia.
5/16/202323 minutes, 18 seconds
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Music: Where the money comes from

Touring, funding, streams, royalties, merch - making a living as a local musician can be a rollercoaster.
5/15/202320 minutes, 22 seconds
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A different way of learning

It's dubbed the school with no rules. Hobsonville Point Secondary School does things differently - and it's proving to be a success.
5/14/202323 minutes, 56 seconds
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Long Read: The Teenage Animal

By Kate Evans: Just like humans, animals go through ‘wildhood’—a time of experimentation, creativity, danger and learning.
5/12/202319 minutes, 50 seconds
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Abbey Caves and NZ's tragic outdoor education history

The death of a student at Abbey Caves has brought back memories of another outdoor education tragedy - the Mangatepopo canyoning disaster.
5/11/202320 minutes, 20 seconds
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DIY testing for STIs?

The Covid-19 pandemic made self-testing with RATs a household convenience - could we do the same with testing for sexually transmitted infections?
5/10/202323 minutes, 21 seconds
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Lives treated lightly

New Zealand's cavalier attitude towards workplace safety is taking a grim toll - largely on young men involved in dangerous trades. 
5/9/202324 minutes, 3 seconds
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How KiwiRail got off track

Commuter chaos in the capital, trains grinding to a halt in Auckland - what's going on at KiwiRail?
5/8/202324 minutes, 21 seconds
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The mahi bringing birdsong back to Aotea's forests

It's no easy task trying to rid Aotea Great Barrier Island of feral cats, rats and other pests.
5/7/202319 minutes, 21 seconds
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The Detail's Long Read: Come Together

By Eric Trump: Is co-housing a wiser use of resources and a counter to societal ills like loneliness?
5/5/202322 minutes, 42 seconds
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Banding together to protect Aotea's precious seabirds

The Detail heads to Aotea Great Barrier Island to meet up with conservationists working to protect one of the island's precious seabirds - the tākoketai.
5/4/202322 minutes, 8 seconds
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The single parent stigma that should be consigned to history

A new report has found single parents still face stigma and discrimination. As The Detail finds out, if things don't get better, it'll be children who suffer.
5/3/202322 minutes, 26 seconds
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Inside the government's school lunches programme

Ka Ora, Ka Ako was launched in 2019 to help families facing food insecurity - is it doing its job?
5/2/202322 minutes, 48 seconds
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Tax: Weighing up what's fair and what's next

Tax is inherently values-based - what one person thinks is fair could be unfair to someone else. Is that why changing the system is so hard?
5/1/202324 minutes, 24 seconds
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King Charles III's coronation: A day of pomp and glory

Heavy is the crown that fits the King's head - and the weight of centuries of tradition will also cloak Charles III on the day of his coronation.
4/30/202323 minutes, 9 seconds
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The Detail's Long Read: Counting the Beats

By Garth Cartwright: Meet Grant Gillanders, the man painstakingly working his way through New Zealand’s entire popular music back catalogue.
4/28/202319 minutes, 21 seconds
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Gore grief: The trouble at the Gore District Council

A council paralysed, a mayor and a chief executive not speaking to each other - what's going on in Gore?
4/27/202323 minutes, 43 seconds
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Stock trading: Why NZ farmers import and export animals

New Zealand livestock has a top-class reputation internationally. Exports by sea are banned, so how else do we send animals offshore?
4/26/202323 minutes, 41 seconds
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The nurses ditching NZ for a better life in Oz

More than 5000 New Zealand nurses are registered to work in Australia. What's so good about life on the other side of the Tasman?
4/25/202324 minutes, 50 seconds
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Anzac Day: Stories of war, loss, peace and discovery

Very few WWII veterans remain, but Auckland War Memorial Museum says if anything, there's been a surge of interest in looking at our wartime history.
4/23/202323 minutes, 16 seconds
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The Detail's Long Read: This Little Piggy Went to Europe

By Gregor Thompson: the rags-to-riches story of the kunekune pig, New Zealand’s cutest ambassador.
4/21/202318 minutes, 7 seconds
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Chaos on the Cook Strait

Getting across the Cook Strait has been a logistical challenge over the last few months. The Detail looks at why the ferries have become so unreliable.
4/20/202322 minutes, 52 seconds
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How we plan for New Zealand's next big disaster

We're a country prone to natural disasters - but are some areas better prepared than others? 
4/19/202325 minutes, 23 seconds
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FIFA Women's World Cup lighting up local clubrooms

Thirty-two teams, 64 games, tens of thousands of fans filling stadiums, two billion tuning in on television - the FIFA Women's Football World Cup is going to be massive.
4/18/202322 minutes, 38 seconds
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The price pain of supermarket shopping

Grocery bills are going up and up - is it possible to do your weekly shop without visiting the supermarket?
4/17/202320 minutes, 7 seconds
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Cycleways and their image problem

Critics call them "gold-plated cycleways", but as The Detail finds out, there's more to these infrastructure projects than meets the eye.
4/16/202323 minutes, 4 seconds
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The Detail's Long Read: The Tarras Airport dogfight

The dogfight over Tarras Airport: Opposition to plans for a new airport in the South island is intense and building.
4/14/202323 minutes, 36 seconds
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Owning the story from start to finish

Who has the right to tell someone's story? The Detail takes a closer look at the concept of story sovereignty.
4/13/202326 minutes, 16 seconds
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Scams falling through the regulatory cracks

Scams are seemingly on the rise - and they're becoming increasingly elaborate. But who takes action against the scammers?
4/12/202323 minutes, 40 seconds
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Construction under stress

Building and construction companies are being liquidated at twice the rate of the also-beleaguered hospitality industry. 
4/11/202323 minutes, 25 seconds
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Why is Antarctic sea ice vanishing?

In the last two years, the ice around Antarctica has been at record lows - and that's just the tip of the iceberg. 
4/10/202323 minutes, 42 seconds
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Dunedin Hospital rebuild: Will it live up to expectations?

Dunedin was promised a brand spanking new hospital - but will cutbacks compromise it?
4/5/202321 minutes, 32 seconds
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Warkworth satellite spat shines light on science underfunding

In a paddock north of Auckland lies a unique piece of infrastructure that's exposed the short-sighted nature of scientific funding in New Zealand. 
4/4/202323 minutes, 30 seconds
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Why there's no comparison between pensions in France and NZ

Paris is a burning rubbish tip as residents protest plans to raise the retirement age to a level that would still be below ours. Why aren't we agitating for change? 
4/3/202323 minutes, 54 seconds
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The core of karakia

Is the push-back against karakia out of order? A look at why some councils don't want it, and why they should use it. 
4/2/202321 minutes, 6 seconds
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The Detail's Long Read: Jungle Warfare

Jungle Warfare by Ellen Rykers: Auckland is the weediest city in the world - but its citizens are fighting back.
3/31/202323 minutes, 21 seconds
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The new food baddie on the block

Evidence is piling up that the prevalence of our packaged food offerings is not just damaging our health, but shortening our lives. 
3/30/202323 minutes, 11 seconds
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Parker's visit poses plenty of questions

Posie Parker's fleeting visit to New Zealand has put the debate over free speech back in the spotlight.
3/29/202324 minutes, 16 seconds
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Balancing our alliances

Australia has drawn closer to traditional allies the US and UK by inking its nuclear submarine deal. Meanwhile our foreign minister's just returned from China where some delicate diplomacy has been deployed. 
3/28/202322 minutes, 29 seconds
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Assessing Labour's record on climate action

Labour came to power promising to take climate change seriously - has it done that?
3/27/202322 minutes, 30 seconds
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Co-governance at the coalface

Co-governance is alive and well in many organisations across the country - how does it actually work?
3/26/202322 minutes, 2 seconds
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The Detail's Long Read: What's Up With ADHD?

What's Up With ADHD? by Mirjam Guesgen: ADHD diagnoses in adults have quadrupled in New Zealand in the past 10 years. What's behind it?
3/24/202325 minutes, 2 seconds
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A storm in a lolly jar? The pineapple chew controversy

A Levin chocolate maker is in hot water over potentially misrepresenting its products. Why?
3/23/202323 minutes, 23 seconds
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Behind the story: Lobbying and the backdoor of our democracy

The Detail talks to RNZ's Guyon Espiner about his series on the murky world of lobbying.
3/22/202323 minutes, 31 seconds
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Cyclone Gabrielle: Why many in Muriwai can't move on

The Detail goes to Muriwai to find out how residents are putting their lives back together after Cyclone Gabrielle.
3/21/202324 minutes, 28 seconds
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Catching a fair ride

Independent taxi drivers asking for sky-high fares are causing headaches for the wider taxi industry. 
3/20/202320 minutes, 36 seconds
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Does it pay to be a top author?

How hard is it for New Zealand authors to make a living from their craft?
3/19/202325 minutes, 8 seconds
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The Detail's Long Read: Immortal Bangers and Me

Immortal Bangers and Me by Shayne Carter: The legendary musician recounts his experience playing with the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra.
3/18/202323 minutes, 57 seconds
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SailGP hits the water in Christchurch

Fast-paced and full of action - SailGP is finally making its debut in New Zealand.
3/16/202320 minutes, 31 seconds
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Preventing a communications blackout in the next big disaster

No landlines, no cellphone coverage, no internet - everything went down in Gabrielle, how do we stop it from happening again?
3/15/202322 minutes, 43 seconds
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The questions over government contractors and consultants

Government spending on consultants and contractors is back in the news - but what are they actually paid to do?
3/14/202319 minutes, 33 seconds
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Silicosis: How engineered stone is killing tradies

Engineered stone is a kitchen and bathroom designer's dream - but it can come with a heavy cost for people working with it.
3/13/202324 minutes, 18 seconds
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Putting trees back into the urban jungle

Why do we need more tree cover in our urban environments? The Detail finds out.
3/12/202321 minutes, 40 seconds
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The Detail's Long Read: At the Mercy of the Ice

At the Mercy of the Ice by Ellen Rykers: a story of dramatic survival on the Antarctic ice in the summer of 1972.
3/10/202323 minutes, 30 seconds
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After the storms, what is the future of insurance?

A summer of devastating storms has put the spotlight on the role of insurance - and insurance companies - in society.
3/9/202324 minutes, 53 seconds
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Cyclone Gabrielle's impact on New Zealand's 'fruit bowl'

Cyclone Gabrielle has devastated fruit and vegetable crops in New Zealand's fruit bowl: Hawke's Bay.
3/8/202322 minutes, 11 seconds
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Ashley Bloomfield, the public service and political neutrality

In the wake of the Rob Campbell saga, Sir Ashley Bloomfield talks to The Detail about why political neutrality in the public service is so important. 
3/7/202324 minutes
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The toxic world of the manosphere

Some young men are being sucked into a toxic world online, full of sexism, misogyny and fear. Warning: This episode contains descriptions and discussion of gender-based and sexual violence.
3/6/202323 minutes, 30 seconds
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Mapping the infrastructure underground

Turns out some of our essential underground infrastructure is hard to find. How do we better map it to prevent unnecessary outages?
3/5/202323 minutes, 58 seconds
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The Detail's Long Read: Roald Dahl and the Big Fat Fuss

Roald Dahl and the Big Fat Fuss by Madison Hamill: Is changing offensive language in classic texts ever justified?
3/3/202320 minutes, 36 seconds
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How the Breakers got back to winning ways

After a few seasons in the doldrums, the Breakers are into the NBL grand final.
3/2/202323 minutes, 23 seconds
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Keeping kids in school

Truancy has hit the headlines - how are schools trying to keep kids in the classroom?
3/1/202320 minutes, 14 seconds
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Gangs unite to speak up on abuse in care

The Detail talks to two of the people who helped bring gang members together to share their stories at the abuse in care inquiry.
2/28/202323 minutes, 10 seconds
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The strippers fighting for better work rights

Fines, unreasonable rosters and restrictive contracts - strippers are laying bare the realities of working in their industry.
2/27/202323 minutes, 4 seconds
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Diversity in sport: Why the first openly gay All Black matters

Why was it such a watershed moment for a former All Black to come out as gay?
2/26/202323 minutes, 32 seconds
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The Detail's Long Read: In Our Defence

In Our Defence by Pete McKenzie: The defence force is spending up billions, but not on personnel's languishing wages or housing. Now, its ranks are thinning.
2/24/202321 minutes, 46 seconds
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Protecting the night sky

So many creatures thrive in the dark - do we need better protection against light pollution?
2/23/202324 minutes, 12 seconds
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Cyclone Gabrielle: On the ground in Hawke's Bay

The cyclone may be gone, but the damage remains. Locals tell The Detail their stories of picking up the pieces.
2/22/202322 minutes, 16 seconds
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Younger audiences slip away from local media

Research shows 15-24-year olds are switching off from the likes of TVNZ and RNZ and reaching for TikTok and YouTube. Can they be brought back?
2/21/202322 minutes, 23 seconds
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Forestry's uncertain future on the East Coast

Cyclone Gabrielle has once again highlighted the problem of forestry slash and the damage it does.
2/20/202324 minutes, 28 seconds
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The pilot, the rebels and West Papua's independence struggle

How did a Kiwi pilot get caught up in a rebel group's demands for West Papua's independence from Indonesia?
2/19/202322 minutes, 51 seconds
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The Detail's Long Read: On Fiordland

A Fiordland double feature with writing by Heidi Bendikson and Vaneesa Bellew: the dangers facing the crown jewel of Aotearoa's national parks.
2/17/202322 minutes, 48 seconds
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China after the end of 'zero Covid'

The Detail talks to journalist Chen Liu about returning to China after three years of border closures.
2/16/202323 minutes, 12 seconds
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Census 2023: Getting the count right

There are high hopes that improvements made to this year's Census will result in a better turnout than 2018.
2/15/202320 minutes, 2 seconds
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Minor parties: Will they have a major impact?

Newsroom's political editor Jo Moir and RNZ's deputy political editor Craig McCulloch join The Detail to size up the minor parties as election year gets underway.
2/14/202323 minutes, 33 seconds
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Cyclone Gabrielle: What makes this storm so unique?

Cyclone Gabrielle is causing chaos across vast areas of the North Island - what makes it so different to the average summer storm?
2/13/202322 minutes, 8 seconds
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Youth vaping: New regulations too little too late?

It's safer than smoking, but how worried should we be about teens taking up vaping?
2/12/202321 minutes, 37 seconds
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The Detail's Long Read: A Clean Sweep?

A Clean Sweep? by Kate Evans: we are the only nation still trawling in the South Pacific. Can the practice be fixed, or should it be phased out entirely?
2/10/202324 minutes, 24 seconds
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Missing the messenger? Communication and the Auckland floods

The Detail looks at how Auckland's mayor handled the flooding crisis, as another storm looms.
2/9/202322 minutes, 44 seconds
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Broken roads: Who pays to fix the damage?

Roads up and down the country have taken a hammering after a summer of storms - who pays the repair bill?
2/8/202320 minutes, 19 seconds
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Are foreign students coming back?

The pandemic smashed the international education sector - but are foreign students returning to our shores?
2/7/202318 minutes, 44 seconds
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The air force's new flying machines

The air force's decades-old Orions have been retired. The Detail finds out more about the planes that'll replace them.
2/6/202323 minutes, 12 seconds
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The Detail's Long Read: The School Away From School

The School Away From School by Bill Morris: incredible stories of change from the New Zealand Correspondence School in its 100th year.
2/3/202323 minutes, 46 seconds
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Can a sponge city really prevent flooding?

In the aftermath of Auckland's flooding, there's been plenty of talk about sponge cities - but what are they?
2/2/202324 minutes, 6 seconds
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Can the egg shortage be cracked?

Omelettes, quiches and even the mighty pavlova are off the menu - The Detail looks at why eggs are in such short supply.
2/1/202318 minutes, 54 seconds
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Auckland floods: The Titirangi street teetering on the edge

The Detail is on the ground in west Auckland, surveying the damage from last week's record-breaking rainfall.
1/31/202320 minutes, 10 seconds
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Carmel Sepuloni: What does it take to be deputy PM?

Who is Carmel Sepuloni - and why was she Labour's pick for deputy prime minister?
1/30/202320 minutes, 34 seconds
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Ukraine aid work: How dangerous is it?

The death of New Zealander Andrew Bagshaw in Ukraine has underlined the dangers of humanitarian aid efforts in a war zone.
1/29/202323 minutes, 45 seconds
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The Year in Detail: 2022

Natural disasters, economic turmoil, and injustices in the justice system - The Detail recaps the big stories from this year.
12/15/202226 minutes, 27 seconds
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How the case of Baby W made global headlines

The case of Baby W ended up in the international spotlight - how did it happen?
12/14/202223 minutes, 10 seconds
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Rebuilding a broken city

It's more than a decade since the Canterbury earthquakes, but how far has the Christchurch rebuild come?
12/13/202221 minutes, 33 seconds
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Making a dent in Tākaka's housing shortage

The Detail catches up with the man with a grand plan to solve Tākaka's afforable housing shortage.
12/12/202224 minutes, 8 seconds
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AI's new frontier: Works of art and human-like chatbots

Artificial intelligence continues to seep into our daily lives, but what are the ethical implications of it?
12/11/202223 minutes, 47 seconds
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Nelson's long, sodden road to recovery

The Detail heads to Nelson to survey the damage left behind by a massive storm four months ago.
12/8/202223 minutes, 9 seconds
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Are our Olympians actually employees?

A group of top athletes is taking an employment case against High Performance Sport - why?
12/7/202224 minutes, 24 seconds
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Cutting the cloth: What it takes to make clothes in New Zealand

It was once one of the nation's biggest industries. Now this Christchurch clothing factory is among the last of its kind.
12/6/202223 minutes, 13 seconds
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Franz Josef: The tourist town bouncing back, with a new problem

The pandemic turned it into a ghost town, but Franz Josef is bouncing back and is as busy as ever.
12/5/202224 minutes, 23 seconds
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China's Covid protests: What happens next?

The most dramatic protests in a generation - The Detail looks at the growing dissent in China over Covid-19 restrictions.
12/4/202224 minutes, 16 seconds
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Are we in for another Covid summer?

Summer has arrived, but with our restrictions largely kicked to the curb and a soup of different variants at play, what can we expect from Covid-19 case numbers?
12/1/202222 minutes, 20 seconds
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When New Zealanders get into trouble overseas

If you're arrested or detained overseas, who do you call for help back home - and can they really help you?
11/30/202223 minutes, 11 seconds
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The problem with entrenching party policy

Could entrenching part of the Three Waters legislation set a dangerous precedent?
11/29/202224 minutes, 42 seconds
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Do prized artworks need more protection?

In private hands, iconic New Zealand treasures can be sold off, hidden away, or even destroyed. 
11/28/202223 minutes, 53 seconds
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New Zealand says Xin Chao to trade with Vietnam

What do closer trade ties with Vietnam mean for New Zealand?
11/27/202218 minutes, 54 seconds
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How old is old enough?

How do governments and societies decide when you're old enough for certain rights and privileges?
11/24/202224 minutes, 40 seconds
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The inconvenient tooth about a trip to the dentist

Why does it cost so much to look after our teeth?
11/23/202223 minutes, 7 seconds
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The stoush in Te Urewera that's about more than just huts

The removal of back country huts in Te Urewera has brought tensions simmering within Tūhoe to the surface.
11/22/202222 minutes, 13 seconds
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NZ's prehistoric past at risk of crumbling away

A dwindling workforce and tricky legal territory is putting the world of fossil hunting on shaky ground.
11/21/202222 minutes, 30 seconds
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COP27 and the fraught reality of climate change negotiations

Delegates from almost 200 countries have been meeting in Egypt for COP27 - how do we measure their success or otherwise?
11/20/202222 minutes, 55 seconds
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How a huge cryptocurrency exchange failed

The convoluted story of two intertwined companies which has sent the value of cryptocurrencies plummeting.
11/17/202223 minutes, 15 seconds
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MeToo and the music industry - what's changed?

The MeToo movement sparked calls for change in the music industry, but what's happened since then?
11/16/202223 minutes, 41 seconds
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Slippery slope? The future of skiing on Ruapehu

Will Ruapehu Alpine Lifts survive after being placed into voluntary administration, or is this the death knell for North Island skiing?
11/15/202222 minutes, 55 seconds
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When sex offenders go to rehab

The Detail looks at what happens when sex offenders go to rehabilitation - does it work?
11/14/202223 minutes, 56 seconds
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Banking the seeds of our precious plants

There are 37 native plant species listed as critically endangered - can a seed bank help save them from extinction?
11/13/202224 minutes, 25 seconds
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The disturbing rise of sorcery violence in PNG

A deep-seated belief in sorcery in parts of Papua New Guinea is resulting in more and more gender-based violence.
11/10/202223 minutes, 35 seconds
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Do big wheels belong on beaches?

When it comes to driving on beaches, some want vehicles banned, some want tougher rules - and others just want a free for all.
11/9/202222 minutes, 57 seconds
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The mortgage rate rollercoaster

It's a housing crisis of a different kind - house prices are falling and interest rates are rising.
11/8/202223 minutes, 14 seconds
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Spying on our sewage

Covid-19 put wastewater testing on our radar, but what else can this technology tell us about our lives?
11/7/202222 minutes, 34 seconds
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Labour's to-do list and the question of lasting reform

It's less than a year until the next election and Labour's still got a lot on its legislative agenda this term.
11/6/202222 minutes, 14 seconds
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What's the deal with nuclear power?

New Zealanders have been proudly nuclear free for decades, but do we really know what nuclear power involves?
11/3/202224 minutes, 13 seconds
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No more screen time for Auckland school rugby stars

Is the commercialisation of school sport doing more harm than good?
11/2/202223 minutes, 36 seconds
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Wayne Brown and controlling the message

Why isn't Auckland's new mayor Wayne Brown saying yes to more media interviews?
11/1/202224 minutes, 25 seconds
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Public transport's $1.3 billion ticketing facelift

Why has a national, integrated public transport ticketing system been so long in the making?
10/31/202219 minutes, 23 seconds
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Why are banks making big bucks?

Bank profits are set to crack $10 billion - is it too much, or are the banks just an easy target for criticism?
10/30/202223 minutes, 54 seconds
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Ruakura Superhub: Building Aotearoa's largest inland port

"In 20 years, it will be the epicentre of logistics in the North Island."
10/27/202224 minutes
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Making a point with a protest

What makes a successful protest - and how do you win others to your cause?
10/26/202224 minutes, 7 seconds
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The money or the morals - sport's sponsorship dilemma

Aussie netballers have been called 'ungrateful' and 'precious' by refusing to wear their mining company sponsor's logo on their dresses - a moral move that's cost them a $15 million deal. 
10/25/202223 minutes, 14 seconds
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The impossibility of ADHD

The case of the GP punished for throwing ADHD patients a lifeline has highlighted gaping holes in our system for those who are neurodivergent.
10/24/202223 minutes, 57 seconds
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Jayden Meyer: Why a teen rapist is doing time at home

Four counts of rape, one of sexual violation. How - and why - did the court reach a sentence of nine months' home detention?
10/20/202223 minutes, 31 seconds
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The Sheilah Winn saga: Much ado about funding

Was Creative NZ really cancelling the Bard?
10/19/202224 minutes, 14 seconds
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The cost of riding more marine heatwaves

We're in for another marine heatwave - but are we ready for the consequences?
10/18/202219 minutes, 42 seconds
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Climate change and our survival instincts

The news is filled with doom and gloom about climate change - is there any reason to be optimistic?
10/17/202224 minutes, 33 seconds
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Demystifying the world of political lobbying

Kris Faafoi's move into lobbying has raised eyebrows - is there a case for regulating the industry?
10/16/202223 minutes, 54 seconds
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The wild world of cheating in elite sport

A cheating scandal has rocked the chess world, but it's just the latest in a long list of sports cheats.
10/13/202224 minutes, 23 seconds
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Peter Ellis' faith finally repaid

The Detail talks to Newsroom's Melanie Reid about the years she's spent covering the Peter Ellis case.
10/12/202225 minutes, 59 seconds
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Kauri: The fightback against dieback

Kauri dieback disease is killing our giants of the forest - are we any closer to a cure?
10/11/202221 minutes, 44 seconds
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Taxing times: What's on the table for tax cuts?

A record tax take, a better than expected deficit - could tax cuts be on the table going into next year's election?
10/10/202225 minutes, 43 seconds
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The Ig Nobel Prize and the quirky side of research

Scientific research doesn't always have to be serious, but it should always make you think.
10/9/202222 minutes, 54 seconds
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The deadly remnants of a war that won't go away

What do we do about cleaning up the bombs left behind in the Pacific after World War II?
10/6/202226 minutes, 5 seconds
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What makes a dollar? Determining the value of a currency

Why are there so many rainclouds over so many of the world's currencies?
10/5/202223 minutes, 33 seconds
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Iran protests: Why the country's women are rebelling

They are the biggest protests in Iran for years - but will this women-led uprising force the regime to change?
10/4/202221 minutes, 18 seconds
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Slipping away: Can we keep fixing up after landslides?

Landslides can happen anywhere there is a slope, at any time. Can we stop them?
10/3/202222 minutes, 27 seconds
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How a murder case was unravelled by a police interview

The police need to solve crimes - but there are strict rules about how they obtain evidence. What happens when it goes awry?
10/2/202224 minutes, 11 seconds
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Why Chinese Language Week is causing angst

The heavy focus on Mandarin over Chinese Language Week is disappointing to many Chinese Kiwis.
9/29/202223 minutes, 25 seconds
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Why your caffeine fix is getting more expensive

The price of your flat white is going up. The Detail tries to find out why.
9/28/202222 minutes, 25 seconds
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The fragile magic of highly productive land

The government has just put new protections on highly productive land, the best of which makes up only one percent of our soil.
9/27/202223 minutes, 27 seconds
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What's going to change under King Charles III?

Now that the dust has settled after the Queen's death, what's next for Aotearoa and the monarchy?
9/26/202223 minutes, 28 seconds
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Local elections: Three races you should know about

Outside our bigger cities, Aotearoa's smaller centres are seeing stacked races and fraught local issues.
9/22/202226 minutes, 40 seconds
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Laura Fergusson closure leaves a gap that's hard to fill

The closure of the Laura Fergusson Trust's Auckland rehabilitation and respite facility came as a shock - what does it tell us about the state of disability support services?
9/21/202224 minutes, 25 seconds
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Putting women's rugby on the world stage

With the Rugby World Cup getting underway next month, The Detail takes a closer look at what it means for the women's game.
9/20/202222 minutes, 43 seconds
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Behind the story: Luck, loss and Lotto

The Detail talks to RNZ's Guyon Espiner about his investigative series on Lotto - have we bought into a dream that's turning into a nightmare?
9/19/202223 minutes, 54 seconds
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The councils pushing back on housing density rules

Christchurch is saying 'no' to the government's new housing density rules. Has the whole thing backfired?
9/18/202223 minutes, 14 seconds
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The anatomy of a pepeha

What makes a pepeha? As The Detail finds out, it's a deeply personal part of tikanga Māori.
9/15/202225 minutes, 1 second
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Who is British PM Liz Truss?

New British Prime Minister Liz Truss has a lot on her plate, but who is she and what does she stand for?
9/14/202222 minutes, 29 seconds
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True crime podcasts - a legal minefield

Podcasters can solve cold cases, but if they're not careful, they could face their own day in court.
9/13/202222 minutes, 57 seconds
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The dangers of working in New Zealand

At least two people have died at work every month since last January. Are our workplace whistleblowers up to the task?
9/12/202224 minutes, 12 seconds
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Pakistan flooding: Bearing the brunt of the climate crisis

Catastrophic flooding in Pakistan has displaced millions of people - why is the country so vulnerable to the impact of climate change?
9/11/202224 minutes, 9 seconds
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Mittens, move over: Aotearoa's most iconic animals

Mittens the cat may be cute, but Aotearoa has many animals far more worthy of immortalising in bronze.
9/8/202223 minutes, 42 seconds
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Kawerau Mill strike: The cracks that can't be papered over

Workers have been locked out, threatened with legal action and left without any means of income - and it's not the first time.
9/7/202221 minutes, 32 seconds
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Spontaneous memorialisation: Sharing our grief with the world

When Princess Diana died, millions were compelled to travel to her home and leave flowers. Why?
9/6/202224 minutes, 24 seconds
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War on weeds - could a wasp join the fight?

The Sydney golden wattle is causing havoc in coastal areas around the country. Could a tiny wasp be the answer to getting this invasive weed under control?
9/5/202224 minutes, 38 seconds
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The evolution of museums - returning what was taken

European museums are stacked with cultural treasures taken from their former colonies. New thinking could change that.
9/4/202225 minutes, 23 seconds
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School trustees: What happens when a board fractures?

It's one of the most significant democratic processes in the country, so why don't we know more about school board of trustee elections?
9/1/202223 minutes, 4 seconds
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Climate change and insurance: Weighing up the risk

With climate change-induced disasters becoming more frequent around the world, how do insurers weigh up the financial risks?
8/31/202222 minutes, 39 seconds
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Judging the great immigration reset

We've slowed immigration to a trickle to stave off infrastructure overload, but at what cost?
8/30/202222 minutes, 18 seconds
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The life of a backbench MP

Backbench MPs have been hitting the headlines in the last few weeks, but what do they actually do?
8/29/202223 minutes, 56 seconds
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Lost luggage: The realities of post-pandemic travel

International travel is back, but flyers beware - more and more bags are going missing in transit.
8/28/202222 minutes, 1 second
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Basketball star Brittney Griner: A pawn in Putin's war games

How is Vladimir Putin using the case of a jailed American basketball superstar to his advantage, amid the ongoing war in Ukraine?
8/25/202221 minutes, 45 seconds
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Landing an interview with Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelensky

How do you land an interview with the president of Ukraine? It turns out it takes months of planning, persuasion, good timing - and a healthy dose of luck.
8/24/202223 minutes, 38 seconds
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Local elections: What do we know about council candidates?

It's local election season - but how much do we really know about the candidates standing for council?
8/23/202223 minutes, 7 seconds
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Getting off a drowning island isn't easy

Sea level rise is already destroying people's homes across the Pacific. How do you move a whole island community?
8/22/202223 minutes, 33 seconds
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The Reserve Bank and the war on inflation

Why is the Reserve Bank facing flak from every angle over its economic handling of the pandemic?
8/21/202222 minutes, 41 seconds
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Catching climate change through the courts

Our highest appellate court is being asked to do what Parliament will not - hold companies liable for contributing to climate change.
8/18/202223 minutes, 1 second
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Foot-and-mouth: NZ's doomsday disease

Foot-and-mouth disease could topple the livestock industry. Can we keep it out?
8/17/202222 minutes, 30 seconds
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The food bank on the North Shore

Escalating food, fuel and housing prices are driving people everywhere to desperation - even on the North Shore.
8/16/202223 minutes, 5 seconds
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Party presidents: The power behind the politics

Political party presidents tend to stay out of the spotlight - but just how influential is their role?
8/15/202223 minutes, 10 seconds
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Artificial intelligence: Our dystopian future?

Major parts of our daily lives are controlled by artificial intelligence. What if it turns against us?
8/14/202224 minutes, 13 seconds
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Criminal responsibility: How young is too young?

New Zealand's age of criminal responsibility is lower than many other countries around the world - Amnesty wants the government to change that.
8/11/202224 minutes, 11 seconds
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Taiwan and China: How does the superpower showdown end?

Taiwan is a country with a complicated past, a complicated present and, in all likelihood, a complicated future. What happens next as tensions with China escalate?
8/10/202223 minutes, 48 seconds
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Search engine optimisation rules the web

When you search for something on the internet, why do you get the results you get?
8/9/202222 minutes, 57 seconds
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The member's bill aimed at our booze-soaked society

The multitude of ways that alcohol harms society have been well documented - but will Chlöe Swarbrick's new Bill have unpleasant side-effects?
8/8/202223 minutes, 41 seconds
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Firefighters' smouldering anger erupts

A dispute over pay has morphed into much more as our professional firefighters face long hours, stretched staff resources and failing equipment. 
8/7/202222 minutes, 2 seconds
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Why are we suspicious of centralisation?

From our water supply to our polytechnics, we're eschewing regional control for a more centralised approach. Why?
8/4/202222 minutes, 14 seconds
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Nurse practitioners 'part of the solution'

They're not GPs, but they do nearly as much as one. Can nurse practitioners help relieve healthcare stress?
8/3/202219 minutes, 15 seconds
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Are the Commonwealth Games still relevant?

The Games are cringy, insular, and a colonial hangover - but we still celebrate an opportunity to show off our athletes on the world stage.
8/2/202224 minutes, 18 seconds
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Knocking out concussion in youth sport

Thousands of Kiwi kids are concussed playing sport every year, but our rules for treating them aren't up to scratch.
8/1/202224 minutes, 10 seconds
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The Green Party's philosophical tug-of-war

Are the Greens better off as activists and agitators? Or is there strength in softening to the centre?
7/31/202224 minutes, 30 seconds
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The battle to keep theatre alive and relevant

In the digital age and the Covid era, how do you get people out to a play?
7/28/202223 minutes, 49 seconds
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The rest home nursing crisis that will only get worse

A surge of elderly New Zealanders will require rest home care at the same time as a crisis in aged care nursing. 
7/27/202220 minutes, 37 seconds
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Calling time on flat-out frightful student living

Two-thirds of students struggle to afford the very basics. Why aren't we doing anything about it?
7/26/202221 minutes, 42 seconds
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All Blacks find themselves in a media scrum

What happens when the balance between feeding public interest in the All Blacks and protecting the team's image blows up on you?
7/25/202222 minutes, 34 seconds
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Stemming the brain drain

With workers heading overseas to new horizons and greener pastures, what are employers doing to retain their staff?
7/24/202222 minutes, 18 seconds
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Drama behind the scenes at Film Commission

After only one year in the job, the head of the New Zealand Film Commission has been stood down over a conflict of interest involving public funding for his own TV series. What happened?
7/21/202224 minutes, 37 seconds
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Niue's cautious reopening to the world

For the last two-and-a-half years, Niue's been largely untouched by Covid-19. But that all changed when the first quarantine-free flight arrived from New Zealand.
7/20/202223 minutes, 18 seconds
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The boom and bust of our polytechs

On January 1, Te Pūkenga will take over the country's 16 polytechnics and industry training organisations. Can a mega-merger bring the sector financial security?
7/19/202222 minutes, 2 seconds
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How to fix Auckland's ghost CBD

A simple stroll down Queen Street will reveal more than 38 empty shop fronts. What happened to Auckland's main street, and how can we fix it? 
7/18/202224 minutes, 22 seconds
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Shopping for change: Busting the supermarket duopoly

How did New Zealand end up with just two big supermarket players - and can the government's changes really shake things up?
7/17/202223 minutes, 13 seconds
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Superpowers cast big shadow on Pacific forum

It's one of the most high-stakes Pacific Islands Forum in recent memory, but political power plays may be standing in the way of real progress.
7/14/202223 minutes, 42 seconds
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Growing pains: Our outdated adoption laws

Our almost 70-year-old adoption laws are under review and there are calls for changes to make it easier for adopted children to reconnect with their biological family.
7/13/202222 minutes, 46 seconds
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Paving the way to Australian citizenship

The new Australian prime minister is keen, so will Kiwis' rights across the Tasman finally be brought in line with Aussies' rights here?
7/12/202221 minutes, 24 seconds
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What makes a charity a charity?

The Supreme Court has ruled that Family First isn't a charity - so what actually are the rules about what is and isn't a charity? 
7/11/202221 minutes, 49 seconds
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Why are we still using the BMI?

The body mass index has well-known shortcomings, so why is it still being used?
7/10/202222 minutes, 46 seconds
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Getting the EU trade deal across the line

How hard was it to get a free trade deal with the European Union across the line? 
7/7/202223 minutes, 50 seconds
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New Zealand's food wastage problem

We're producing up to 150,000 tonnes of surplus food every year. The New Zealand Food Network steps up and takes it before it reaches what would've been its destination: landfill.
7/6/202224 minutes, 20 seconds
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Covid-19 isn't done with us yet

As winter really sets in, Covid-19 case numbers are back on the rise. Should health authorities be acting with more urgency?
7/5/202224 minutes, 16 seconds
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Competing in elite sport as a transgender woman

Elite sporting bodies worldwide are barring transgender women from competing if they've experienced male puberty, all in the name of fairness – but The Detail finds out that the science isn't that simple.  
7/4/202225 minutes, 11 seconds
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Crisis communications 101: How to deal with a PR disaster

When someone screws up and it hits the headlines, what actually happens when PR experts are called in to help them fix it?
7/3/202222 minutes, 47 seconds
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Taking the temperature on sick leave

We're told to stay home when we're sick – but for many workers, that's an almost impossible ask. Can employers be doing more?
6/30/202221 minutes, 32 seconds
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Why are asylum seekers treated differently to other refugees?

About half of the 400 people who arrive in New Zealand as asylum seekers every year end up being accepted as refugees - but why are they treated differently to people arriving through the quota system?
6/29/202223 minutes, 12 seconds
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Sportswashing and the rebel LIV Golf tournament

Sportswashing presents a myriad of ethical dilemmas for players and fans alike - and the rebel LIV Golf tournament is just the latest example.
6/28/202224 minutes, 28 seconds
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Counting our farming emissions

Twenty years ago, he thought human-induced climate change was a load of rubbish. Now, George Moss' dairy farms are leading the way in counting - and cutting - greenhouse gas emissions.
6/27/202223 minutes, 47 seconds
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Explaining the plasterboard shortage

The Detail takes a closer look at how the shortage of plasterboard - a critical building product - reached crisis point.
6/26/202223 minutes, 55 seconds
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Kriddles Roberts: Empowering the west Auckland community

Kriddles Roberts is doing everything she can to help people in need in west Auckland - The Detail heads along to one of her community events.
6/22/202222 minutes, 40 seconds
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Do we need to fear another recession?

It came as a surprise to economists, but GDP fell 0.2 percent in the March quarter - is New Zealand in for another recession? 
6/21/202223 minutes, 47 seconds
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Rotorua's emergency housing problem

It's one of our top tourist destinations, but Rotorua locals are worried about the proliferation of city motels being used for emergency housing – with no end in sight. 
6/20/202223 minutes, 50 seconds
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The warning you might get before the next big quake

Five seconds warning could be enough to take action to protect yourself in a major shake. Does New Zealand need an earthquake early warning system?
6/19/202222 minutes, 6 seconds
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Mallard's departure and his complicated legacy

Trevor Mallard is calling time on his parliamentary career. What's he achieved as Speaker of the House of Representatives?
6/16/202224 minutes, 21 seconds
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Are big projects doomed to be late and over-budget?

Transmission Gully, the Christchurch stadium, the Waterview Tunnel, the Wellington Town Hall - why do big infrastructure projects take longer and cost more than we expect?
6/15/202223 minutes, 11 seconds
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Are sanctions against Russia working?

It's three months since parliament unanimously passed the Russia Sanctions Act - but are sanctions against Russia over the war in Ukraine actually having an impact?
6/14/202224 minutes, 19 seconds
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Reading the signs: Why literacy rates are falling

We've got vast amounts of knowledge and information available to us at our fingertips - so why are literacy rates steadily declining?
6/13/202223 minutes, 26 seconds
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Pig problems and the debate over farrowing crates

Big changes to the way pigs are farmed are on the cards - is it possible to strike a balance between the views of farmers, vets and consumers?
6/12/202223 minutes, 54 seconds
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How hard is it to lure nurses to New Zealand?

Amid a global shortage of nurses, how does New Zealand lure health staff from overseas to fill our workforce gaps?
6/9/202223 minutes, 54 seconds
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What's behind Christchurch City Council's popularity slump?

Why has the Christchurch City Council's approval rating sunk to 42 percent? The Detail talks to Newsroom's David Williams.
6/8/202220 minutes
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HIV and the road to zero new infections

The number of people diagnosed with HIV in New Zealand is at its lowest since the 1990s - but what more need to happen to reach the goal of zero new infections by 2025?
6/7/202223 minutes, 22 seconds
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Done deal: Why has NZ Rugby teamed up with Silver Lake?

What does New Zealand Rugby's deal with Silver Lake actually mean for the game? The Detail finds out.
6/6/202224 minutes, 4 seconds
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The Queen's big platinum jubilee bash

The Queen officially celebrates her platinum jubilee this weekend, but does Britain's longest-reigning monarch maintain her relevance and popularity here in New Zealand?
6/2/202223 minutes, 45 seconds
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Lin Lang: A billionaire horse exporter's change in fortunes

How did billionaire Chinese businessman Lin Lang end up exporting thoroughbred horses from New Zealand to China - and why has the lucrative business come to a halt?
6/1/202220 minutes, 54 seconds
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The fight against mycoplasma bovis

New Zealand's on the brink of eradicating the devastating cattle disease mycoplasma bovis. But has it been worth it?
5/31/202220 minutes, 44 seconds
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Ardern in the US: Trade, tourism and talk shows

The Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern's high-profile trip to the United States is coming to an end. The Detail asks, what's in it for New Zealand, what's in it for the US, and where to next for the relationship?
5/30/202222 minutes
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Stop the presses? The rising cost of newsprint

Newsprint shortages, supply chain delays and soaring costs are making life even harder for newspaper publishers in New Zealand.
5/29/202223 minutes, 5 seconds
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Monkeypox: Do we need to be alarmed?

Monkeypox cases are steadily rising around the world, but do we need to be worried? Infectious diseases experts say the outbreak is cause for concern, but not alarm.
5/26/202223 minutes, 57 seconds
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Matatā: The town that had to retreat

A massive landslide swamped part of the Bay of Plenty town of Matatā in 2005. Seventeen years on, the managed retreat process is finally coming to an end.
5/25/202223 minutes, 17 seconds
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Can NZ hit its renewable electricity goal?

The government's set an ambitious target of hitting 100 percent of electricity generation from renewable sources by 2030 – but it is achievable? 
5/24/202223 minutes, 4 seconds
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All aboard? The cruise ship comeback

The maritime border is about to reopen and that means cruise ships will once again be visiting our shores. But will it be a return to the pre-pandemic status quo?
5/23/202222 minutes, 28 seconds
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The stench invading the homes of Bromley

It's six months since a fire tore through part of Christchurch's main wastewater treatment plant. But residents in neighbouring Bromley are sick of the resulting stench that's invaded their homes.
5/22/202222 minutes, 33 seconds
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Twenty years on from independence: New Zealand in Timor-Leste

At the turn of the millennium, the Timorese people voted for independence from Indonesia. Twenty years on, The Detail talks to New Zealanders who played a part in building a new democracy.  
5/19/202223 minutes, 13 seconds
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The complexities of pulling products from Russia

It's not illegal to send food products to Russia under New Zealand's sanctions regime, but many exporters are boycotting the market in response to the invasion of Ukraine. The Detail talks to one apple grower about what that means for business.
5/18/202216 minutes, 34 seconds
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Forgotten highway: Reviving a domestic coastal shipping service

Could a domestic coastal shipping service ease some of the country’s supply chain woes, get more heavy freight off the roads and help reduce emissions?
5/17/202222 minutes, 56 seconds
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Australian election: Is Scott Morrison's time up?

Australians go to the polls on Saturday - all the signs are pointing to a Labor victory, but can Scott Morrison defy the odds and keep the Liberal-National Coalition in power?
5/16/202223 minutes, 43 seconds
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What we know about the Tonga eruption, four months on

It was the biggest eruption the world had seen in decades, but there's still so much scientists are piecing together about what happened when Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha'apai blew.
5/15/202221 minutes, 6 seconds
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Do we really need to prepare for nuclear war?

Is New Zealand prepared for the impacts of a nuclear war or some other global catastrophe? With Russia's ongoing war in Ukraine, it's not beyond the realm of possibility.
5/12/202222 minutes, 59 seconds
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The neurodiversity gap in our workplaces

Estimates suggest up to 50 percent of neurodiverse people are unemployed. Could unforgiving work environments be keeping skilled people out of the workforce? 
5/11/202222 minutes, 46 seconds
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Co-governance: Time to get on with it?

What's the fuss about co-governance? As The Detail finds out, it's not a new concept and voters are being urged to get on board with it.
5/10/202223 minutes, 33 seconds
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Is it time to reconsider the rules on GMOs?

The Productivity Commission says New Zealand needs to take another look at its strict regulations on genetically modified organisms – or we could risk missing out on important innovations that improve our lives and the environment.
5/9/202224 minutes, 7 seconds
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The unfolding crisis in Sri Lanka

The Detail talks to Sri Lankan Kiwi and Newshub journalist Kethaki Masilamani about the crisis in Sri Lanka and the protests that seem to have united its long divided population.
5/8/202223 minutes, 31 seconds
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Trying to walk again

America's Cup sailor Simo de Mari's life changed in the most unimaginable way in March 2019. He tells The Detail about his mission to walk again after a freak accident at Omaha Beach. 
5/5/202223 minutes, 31 seconds
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Crossing the diplomatic line: When do ambassadors get expelled?

There have been calls for New Zealand to expel Russia's ambassador in response to the war in Ukraine. But is that the right diplomatic step to take?
5/4/202222 minutes, 58 seconds
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Being in debt to the government

More than half a million low income New Zealanders collectively owe the government $3.5 billion. Why do they owe so much? What's it for? And can they pay it back?
5/3/202222 minutes, 9 seconds
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What happens if you’ve got long Covid and can’t work?

Research suggests anywhere between 10 and 30 percent of people who get Covid-19 end up developing Long Covid. What happens if that impacts your ability to work?
5/2/202222 minutes, 56 seconds
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Kyung Yup Kim, China and NZ's extradition laws

A woman was killed in Shanghai in 2009. A New Zealand resident, Kyung Yup Kim, is accused of her murder. China wants him extradited - why is it taking so long?
5/1/202224 minutes, 6 seconds
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The cameras watching over us

All over the country, ratepayers are forking out millions of dollars for CCTV cameras. But are they actually making us any safer?
4/28/202223 minutes, 5 seconds
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Tokomaru Bay: The town that keeps on flooding

The Detail heads to Tokomaru Bay to find out how locals are faring after three major floods in less than a year - what's next for the East Coast township?
4/27/202222 minutes, 57 seconds
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Behind the story: David Farrier on Arise Church

Journalist David Farrier talks to The Detail about his reporting on serious allegations of emotional and physical abuse at one of the country’s biggest megachurches: Arise. 
4/26/202224 minutes, 25 seconds
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Explaining Putin’s grip on power

Why do the majority of Russians back the actions of their strongman leader Vladimir Putin? As The Detail finds out, the answer goes back centuries.
4/25/202221 minutes, 24 seconds
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Mapping the Irish in Aotearoa

Just how many New Zealanders have connections to Ireland? The Irish Embassy has been trying to find out, in a world-first mapping project.
4/21/202223 minutes, 19 seconds
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Paying for public transport

Public transport fares have been halved until the end of June, but to what extent are our bus and train trips already subsidised by the government and local councils?
4/20/202222 minutes, 14 seconds
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How will the three strikes law be judged?

The three strikes legislation is in the process of being repealed - how will history judge one of the most controversial justice reforms of recent years?
4/19/202224 minutes, 16 seconds
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Border reopening: What next for our immigration settings?

With the borders reopening, will immigration return to pre-pandemic levels, or does New Zealand need to re-think its reliance on migrant labour?
4/18/202224 minutes, 36 seconds
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Hitting the right balance on defence spending

Some countries are increasing their defence budgets as the war in Ukraine rages on. The Detail looks at whether New Zealand needs to follow suit.
4/13/202223 minutes, 15 seconds
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Cracking the final piece of the human genome puzzle

Scientists have finally finished mapping the human genome. The Detail looks at why it's taken so long and what it might mean for indigenous populations both here and around the world.
4/12/202223 minutes, 23 seconds
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Groundswell: Who are they and what do they want?

Groundswell says it advocates for farmers and rural communities - but what does it stand for and is its message getting through?
4/11/202223 minutes, 48 seconds
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Swear words and slurs - what's offensive on TV and radio?

Are New Zealanders' attitudes towards offensive language changing? A recent survey by the Broadcasting Standards Authority seems to suggest they might be.
4/10/202223 minutes, 36 seconds
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So long, Dr Ashley Bloomfield

Ashley Bloomfield's been a regular in our living rooms over the past two years. But how did a public servant become one of the most recognised faces of our Covid-19 response?
4/7/202225 minutes
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The urgent need for more GPs

New Zealand is facing a serious shortage of GPs - many family doctors will be hitting retirement age over the next decade and we're not training enough to replace them. 
4/6/202221 minutes, 19 seconds
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Where are all the women-run food companies?

Newsroom's Nikki Mandow decided to only eat food made by women or women-run companies for a week. It was a lot harder than she expected.
4/5/202223 minutes, 13 seconds
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Should NZ be worried about the China-Solomons security deal?

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has called the security deal between China and Solomon Islands "gravely concerning" - but does New Zealand really need to be worried?
4/4/202221 minutes, 34 seconds
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Democracy denied? Why commissioners replace councillors

Commissioners will stay on at Tauranga City Council until 2024 - are locals being denied their democratic rights or is more time needed to get the city back on track?
4/3/202221 minutes, 23 seconds
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'Best in history': The nail-biting Cricket World Cup

The White Ferns may not have made it into the final four, but the 2022 Cricket World Cup is being hailed as a success for the women's game.
3/31/202222 minutes, 18 seconds
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Behind the story: The secrecy around how we police the police

RNZ investigative journalist Guyon Espiner explains to The Detail the secretive the workings of our police watchdog, the Independent Police Conduct Authority. 
3/30/202223 minutes, 54 seconds
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Why now? Australia's u-turn on NZ refugee resettlement deal

Nine years after it was first put on the table, Australia has finally accepted New Zealand's offer to resettle refugees from its detention centres. The Detail asks - why now?
3/29/202222 minutes, 58 seconds
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Can we flood-proof our homes?

Extreme weather events, like last week's flash flooding in Auckland, are becoming more frequent. The Detail asks if there's anything more we can do to protect ourselves and our homes.
3/28/202223 minutes, 25 seconds
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Drive to Survive: How Formula 1 is winning over new fans

The Netflix series Drive to Survive has been a smash hit for Formula 1, but can motorsport here in New Zealand cash in on some of that success?
3/27/202221 minutes, 22 seconds
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Wellington's fluoride fail

How did Wellington Water fail to fluoridate much of its water supply for months on end - and why didn't it tell anyone?
3/24/202223 minutes, 24 seconds
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The limits on lawyers’ pro bono work

A bill intended to make it easier for employed lawyers to do pro bono work was voted down by Parliament, but are changes actually needed?
3/23/202220 minutes, 56 seconds
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How do we protect our youngest against Covid-19?

Under-fives can't wear masks or get vaccinated against Covid-19 - are we doing enough to protect them from the virus?
3/22/202220 minutes, 25 seconds
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Teaching Aotearoa's history

The final curriculum for teaching Aotearoa's history in schools is out, but what will students actually learn and how will they learn it?
3/21/202222 minutes, 13 seconds
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Reporting from a war zone: the NZers on the ground in Ukraine

Newshub's Europe correspondent Lisette Reymer and cameraman Dan Pannett have witnessed some of the horrors of Russia's invasion of Ukraine first-hand. They talk to The Detail about what it's like reporting from a war zone.
3/20/202223 minutes, 34 seconds
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How Substack is changing the media game

With traditional media on the decline, could new publishing platforms like Substack be the key to keeping talented writers in gainful employment?
3/17/202223 minutes, 39 seconds
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The recipe for a cost of living crisis

The cost of food, petrol and rent is soaring, and inflation is at its highest level in 30 years - how did it come to this?
3/16/202222 minutes, 25 seconds
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How do NZ's sanctions against Russia work?

Parliament has passed historic legislation to impose sanctions against Russia over the war in Ukraine, but how do they actually work?
3/15/202224 minutes, 8 seconds
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On the Omicron frontline in south Auckland

South Auckland is once again bearing the brunt of a Covid-19 outbreak, but one Pacific health provider is doing everything it can to help whanau isolating at home.
3/14/202223 minutes, 45 seconds
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Pain at the pump: Why is petrol so expensive?

The price of petrol has skyrocketed to more than $3 a litre across most of the motu - is it going to keep going up?
3/13/202223 minutes, 45 seconds
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Who will be Auckland's next mayor?

Auckland will have a new mayor after the local elections later this year. The Detail talks to the three frontrunners for the job.
3/10/202224 minutes, 52 seconds
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'Radical change': The Northland meth rehab programme that works

An innovative meth harm reduction programme is transforming lives in Northland - why hasn't it been rolled out across the country yet?
3/9/202222 minutes, 18 seconds
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Manu Vatuvei's fall from grace

Manu Vatuvei was one of rugby league's biggest stars, but last week he was jailed for importing methamphetamine - what happened?
3/8/202222 minutes, 56 seconds
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Behind the story: The town that backed a child sex abuser

RNZ's Veronica Schmidt talks to The Detail about the wider issues raised by her recent investigation into a volunteer firefighter who sexually abused his young son - and the boy's mother's fight to be believed.
3/7/202224 minutes, 21 seconds
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Sustainable lithium extraction: Taupō's economic future?

Lithium is in hot demand around the world and a New Zealand company has come up a more sustainable way of extracting it. The Detail finds out more about what Geo40 is doing differently.
3/6/202223 minutes, 4 seconds
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How the Parliament protest was brought to an end

After 23 days, the occupation at Parliament was finally brought to a chaotic and violent end. The Detail talks to two reporters who were there as it all unfolded. 
3/3/202222 minutes, 9 seconds
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'What we don't want is World War III' - Clark on Ukraine

Former Prime Minister Helen Clark talks to The Detail about Russia's invasion of Ukraine: the background to the conflict, her impressions of Vladimir Putin and how it might end.
3/2/202224 minutes, 46 seconds
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The locals versus the helipads of the rich and famous

The increasing number of applications for helipads on Aotea Great Barrier Island is causing alarm among locals. But the current rules mean they don't have to be notified or consulted about them. The Detail's Sharon Brettkelly looks at why.
3/1/202222 minutes, 15 seconds
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How RATs change the Covid-19 testing game

The shift away from more sensitive PCR tests to rapid antigen tests marks a significant change in New Zealand's Covid-19 strategy. The Detail takes a closer look at what it means in the midst of the surging Omicron outbreak.
2/28/202222 minutes, 33 seconds
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Auckland City Mission's new home

A decade in the making, the Auckland City Mission's new building - HomeGround - has finally opened its doors. The Detail takes a look behind the scenes to find out what difference it will make for the city's most vulnerable people.
2/27/202222 minutes, 26 seconds
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Politicians and the protest at Parliament

The protest at Parliament has dragged into a third week - two top political journalists join The Detail's Emile Donovan to discuss how the country's political leaders have responded to the unprecedented situation.
2/24/202222 minutes, 15 seconds
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On the ground at the Parliament protest

The Detail's Sharon Brettkelly heads to the capital to see the occupation at Parliament first-hand, speak to protesters and tour their sprawling campsite on Parliament's front lawn.  
2/23/202223 minutes, 50 seconds
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The return of the big OE

With MIQ soon to be a thing of the past, young people who've put off international travel during the pandemic are planning their OEs - but what will that mean for employers?
2/22/202223 minutes, 32 seconds
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Can Raf Manji lead TOP into Parliament?

Does the new leader of The Opportunities Party Raf Manji have what it takes to get the party across the 5 percent threshold to get into Parliament at the 2023 election? 
2/21/202222 minutes, 42 seconds
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Film's digital screen revolution

Virtual production technologies and digital screens are set to change the way movies are made, but is New Zealand's film industry ready?
2/20/202223 minutes, 20 seconds
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Our Olympic snow queen Zoi

She's just 20 years old, but Zoi Sadowski-Synnott already has a full set of Olympic medals. How did she hit the top of her sport in such a short time?
2/17/202220 minutes, 32 seconds
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Covering the protest at Parliament

For more than a week, hundreds of protesters have been occupying the ground of Parliament - presenting challenges for the police, politicians and the journalists covering it.
2/16/202224 minutes, 18 seconds
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Breaking the silence on menopause

For the first time, women are starting to talk about menopause and employers are being warned to ignore it at their peril. 
2/15/202224 minutes, 23 seconds
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Joe Rogan - has Spotify bitten off more than it can chew?

The Joe Rogan Experience is one of the world's biggest podcasts, but does Spotify need to take greater responsibility for its content?
2/14/202223 minutes, 3 seconds
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The ban that wasn't - mining on conservation land

The government's unequivocal promise of a ban on mining on conservation land has not eventuated. What happened? 
2/13/202222 minutes, 55 seconds
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We need to talk about feral cats

Feral cats are killing our native birds, but the conversation about getting rid of them just isn't happening. 
2/10/202224 minutes, 44 seconds
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Why the 'team of $55 million' is in the public interest

The government's helping hand to an industry in trouble - the media - has more than the usual critics, most of them concerned about journalists being too scared to bite the hand that's feeding them. 
2/9/202223 minutes, 6 seconds
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Misplaced confidence - why NZers are drowning

New Zealanders are over-confident in the water, say surf lifesavers - something that's helped us to our appalling drowning statistics.
2/8/202223 minutes, 43 seconds
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An advocacy job too well done

Alarm bells are ringing over new legislation that could strip the power of the independent Children's Commissioner. 
2/7/202222 minutes, 37 seconds
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How realistic are Auckland's light rail plans?

At last a concrete plan for light rail in Auckland - but at an eye watering cost. What are the chances of this really happening? And is it the right option? 
2/3/202223 minutes, 13 seconds
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Ukraine is NZ's 'us too' moment

Diplomatic efforts to cool mounting tensions in Ukraine have come to nothing, and New Zealand's being told this is one we can't afford to sit back and watch. 
2/2/202224 minutes, 14 seconds
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Post-Covid tourism living on a strategy of hope

The battered tourism and hospitality industry is hanging on for better days - but some insiders say we're looking at a reset, not a bounce-back. 
2/1/202223 minutes, 50 seconds
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Getting Tonga on the line

Tonga is one of the world's riskiest places for communications - its undersea internet cable has broken for the second time in three years. What's the solution? 
1/31/202221 minutes, 29 seconds
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Boosting our chances of dodging disease

In the seemingly never-ending parade of covid-enforced changes, we are now queueing for a third vaccination. Here's why it's so vital, now that Omicron has entered the picture. 
1/30/202223 minutes, 34 seconds
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Our wild, weird year in sport

It's been a strange year for sport - again. We look back at the high - and low - lights of 2021. 
12/16/202124 minutes, 59 seconds
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Our second 'year like no other' - how we unravelled

For our American-Kiwi family, the start of 2021 here was better than the alternative in California. We take you through our second covid year, through their eyes. 
12/15/202123 minutes, 13 seconds
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Building blows - how much can the industry take?

How long can the construction industry keep taking the hits? A look at another year of disruption in building. 
12/14/202123 minutes, 51 seconds
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A new direction on domestic violence in NZ

New Zealand has a new domestic violence strategy - but is it more than bureaucratic talk and hot air? 
12/13/202121 minutes, 53 seconds
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A lot of talk, less action on climate change in 2021

It's been a year of developments in Climate Change discussions - but not a year of progress. 
12/12/202123 minutes, 49 seconds
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Muscling up and moving in on the ice

As summer flights head back to Antarctica, we look at the geopolitics of the land that no one owns, but everyone wants a piece of. 
12/9/202124 minutes, 8 seconds
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Global restraints force another look at coastal shipping

Global shipping restraints are putting New Zealand importers and exporters at risk. There's a solution, but it's not cheap, and it won't come as quickly as it's needed.
12/8/202122 minutes, 15 seconds
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Time to pay attention to our oceans

Coastal ecosystems are better than tropical rainforests when it comes to trapping carbon and at this year's big climate change conference they finally got some attention. 
12/7/202121 minutes, 4 seconds
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Unrest and riots in Solomon Islands

New Zealand forces are being sent to the Solomon Islands to help calm growing unrest in what is most definitely not a tropical tourist paradise. But the portents for a lasting peace are not good. 
12/6/202124 minutes, 7 seconds
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Global microchip shortage boosts niche business

A global shortage of microchips may not be good for your Christmas present list, but one New Zealand company is cashing in. 
12/5/202123 minutes, 43 seconds
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Struggle at the ski fields

Ruapehu's ski fields are under pressure - but unusually, this time it's not from natural forces. 
12/2/202122 minutes, 44 seconds
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The MLM scheme making money from money-traders

An international multi-level marketing scheme operating in New Zealand uses social media influencers to entice people to enter a complex financial world they know nothing about. 
12/1/202121 minutes, 49 seconds
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Is Luxon's face the one that will stick?

There's a new face at the head of the National Party - but he's the fifth new face since John Key resigned five years ago. Is his the one that will stick? 
11/30/202124 minutes, 14 seconds
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Tennis star Peng Shuai - caught up in Chinese politics

Is the mysterious disappearance of Peng Shuai – and her unconvincing 'reappearance' - a watershed moment in the Chinese chapter of the MeToo movement? 
11/29/202123 minutes, 19 seconds
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The hiccups in the housing intensification Bill

The new bipartisan bill on housing intensification was welcomed by all - until the detail was revealed. 
11/28/202123 minutes, 8 seconds
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The real price of comfortable retirement

Do we really need to be saving $809,000 per couple to retire comfortably? 
11/25/202124 minutes, 21 seconds
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Swimming in great white shark territory

After a long lockdown winter, swimming, sunshine and surf are here - but in some places, Great White sharks are also coming to a beach near you. 
11/24/202122 minutes, 6 seconds
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The weirdness of going back to normal

Outside the "hermit kingdom" of Aotearoa people are embracing a Covid rules-free world - but are things as back to normal as they seem? 
11/23/202124 minutes, 8 seconds
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Cowboy Bebop lets NZ show its range

Filmed under the twin shadows of both the pandemic and the Lord of the Rings, Cowboy Bebop is an Auckland film success story. 
11/22/202120 minutes, 49 seconds
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The stark reality of producing cheap chicken

Breeding fast-growing chickens for meat means top-heavy birds stumbling around in giant sheds. But New Zealand doesn't have an option to grow them slowly. 
11/21/202118 minutes, 15 seconds
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The life of a foreign seasonal worker

Covid has meant huge disruption for seasonal workers, but they're back now - if they ever left. What is it like for RSE workers who leave their families so they can feed them? 
11/18/202124 minutes, 21 seconds
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Our broken legal aid system

Our legal aid system - the one that is on a promise to fund justice for all, no matter their means - is in crisis. 
11/17/202124 minutes, 5 seconds
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The conflict that puts Kiwi covid woes into perspective

While we've been wrapped up in our Covid worries and woes, across the world in Africa a catastrophe of immense proportions is unfolding - putting our problems into stark perspective. 
11/16/202120 minutes, 46 seconds
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The Black Caps - still the best

So they didn't win the T20 final yesterday - but that's the third world cup final featuring the Black Caps in three years. They're our best side ever and there's not even a debate about it.
11/15/202122 minutes, 38 seconds
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Vaccinating children against Covid-19

Pfizer has developed a Covid-19 vaccine for 5-11 year-olds. Should New Zealand race in, or hold back on getting our children immunised? 
11/14/202123 minutes, 30 seconds
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Head injuries under the microscope

Head injuries in sport are being taken more seriously, especially as more women become professional. 
11/11/202123 minutes, 54 seconds
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The rugby legacy no player wants

No player signs up to play the game they love knowing that brain damage could be the long term result. 
11/10/202123 minutes
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The covid disruption symptom we need to get on top of - sleep

Covid lockdown disruption is being blamed for crazy sleep patterns, weird dreams and insomnia .... but sleep is vital to build up our immune systems and fight off the virus.
11/9/202122 minutes, 36 seconds
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The new type of giving

The shape of philanthropy is changing away from traditional giving, to a more strategic way of closing the massive gap between rich and poor. 
11/8/202123 minutes, 50 seconds
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Facebook's metaverse - is it real, or a smokescreen?

It's being seen as a distraction from controversy, but the metaverse is definitely on its way.
11/7/202123 minutes, 35 seconds
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Inflation - what it means; should we worry?

An economic indicator that hasn't made a splash in the headlines for quite some time is back - inflation. 
11/4/202123 minutes, 15 seconds
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Ministry for disabled has a big job to do

The invisible section of New Zealand society - disabled people - are finally getting their own ministry. It will have a massive task ahead of it. 
11/3/202121 minutes, 20 seconds
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Copyright laws are a hitch in the UK trade deal

A billion dollars in benefits for New Zealand - and a chance for the UK to show the world it still has friends. But our fresh free trade agreement has some hitches. 
11/2/202122 minutes, 53 seconds
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The Olympics of trade and industry

New Zealand has been at international trade fairs - now Expos - since they began in 1851. But are the multi-millions spent on getting there worth the benefits? 
11/1/202123 minutes, 22 seconds
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A tale of two Māori vaccination rollouts

Here's a tale of two communities when it comes to getting Māori vaccination rollouts right. 
10/31/202123 minutes, 46 seconds
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Why plain language is such an important skill

Nelson MP Rachel Boyack's plain language bill is a major continuation of the on-going fight against bureaucratese.
10/28/202121 minutes, 9 seconds
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Tearfund's naming and shaming misses the mark

Tearfund's annual name-and-shame of unethical fashion chains leaves out some important factors - such as clothing manufactured in New Zealand. 
10/27/202123 minutes, 59 seconds
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Today's politicians - the slings, the arrows, the death threats

A lot of people think being an MP is a cushy job with a great salary. But along with debate comes an increasing number of death threats, some of them very real. 
10/26/202123 minutes, 18 seconds
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Making money from milk - without cows

Dairy farmers under pressure to reduce their herd sizes could look at planting oats - diversifying and helping out a new industry at the same time. 
10/25/202123 minutes, 44 seconds
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Fighting over timber - the shortages hitting construction

Builders and other tradespeople have been struggling with empty shop shelves; weeks, sometimes month-long delays in delivery of essential materials and soaring costs. The issues are far from over. 
10/21/202122 minutes, 26 seconds
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The barriers before you even get to Customs

We are likely to see a total reassessment of international travel, and probably not just in the short term. Think vaccine passports and higher air fares just for starters. 
10/20/202122 minutes, 7 seconds
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Minding the Gap on equal pay

The battle for equal pay started 125 years ago and it's not over yet. A new campaign, Mind The Gap, hopes to address some of the issues. 
10/19/202122 minutes, 22 seconds
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The lowdown on rapid antigen tests

Rapid antigen tests have finally been approved for use in New Zealand. Critics say they're not accurate enough, but as we wave goodbye to an elimination strategy, we're going to need fast results.
10/18/202123 minutes, 33 seconds
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Hopefully, this is NOT how it ends

Bio-diversity is at a crossroads - can we not just stop things getting worse, but actually make them better? 
10/17/202123 minutes, 56 seconds
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Our throwaway society can't last forever

Grab the newest model, buy the latest thing, nothing is built to last. Often if you want something repaired - it can't be. Can we change all that? 
10/14/202122 minutes, 37 seconds
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Getting back on the plane - why it might never be the same

The impact of the pandemic has been apocalyptic on international air travel- but that's starting to change. 
10/13/202120 minutes, 49 seconds
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The older entrepreneur - making life better

Older entrepreneurs often have more altruistic motives, and are more likely to succeed in business - but they could do with some more support.
10/12/202122 minutes, 58 seconds
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25 years of MMP - is it working?

Twenty-five years ago today New Zealand held its first MMP election. How's that working out for us? 
10/11/202123 minutes, 32 seconds
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Our electricity market and your power bills

New Zealand's electricity market system is stacked up against the consumer when it comes to lower power prices. 
10/10/202122 minutes, 38 seconds
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The legacy of James Bond

As the 25th film in the franchise comes out, we look at why a James Bond movie is still a major cinema event after nearly 60 years on the screen. 
10/7/202123 minutes, 47 seconds
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The Pandora Papers reveal how the other half a percent lives

The Pandora Papers is the biggest data leak ever, and a startling insight into the way the other half a percent lives and structures their affairs. 
10/6/202123 minutes, 2 seconds
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Government subsidies more targeted in 2021

The money thrown at businesses during our first lockdown last year has been refined and is now more targeted - but accountants warn the government can't save every struggling company. 
10/5/202121 minutes, 51 seconds
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Family found, mystery continues

Thomas Phillips and his children are back home, safe, in what many saw as a miracle after 19 nights in the bush. But questions remain as to why he disappeared in the first place. 
10/4/202123 minutes, 12 seconds
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The godwits are arriving

The godwits are landing on New Zealand's coastal mudflats again - after incredible journeys from the other side of the world. 
10/3/202123 minutes, 54 seconds
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Buy now, regret later - when you can't pay on time

It's a great new way to get what you want upfront and pay later - but there are traps, and consumer advocates say the schemes need to be regulated. 
9/30/202121 minutes, 29 seconds
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What we don't know about Amazon's NZ plans

Amazon's plans to build giant data centres in New Zealand reveal very little detail. 
9/29/202123 minutes, 21 seconds
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The climate summit that could save our future

What is so vital about the Glasgow climate change summit that minister James Shaw weathered a public uproar? 
9/28/202124 minutes, 7 seconds
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The rules and rights when it comes to vaccinated work places

Employers trying to keep their workplaces safe are caught between four different conflicting laws and rights over compulsory vaccination - and they want some government guidance. 
9/27/202122 minutes, 32 seconds
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The schemes and dreams over reducing cow methane

Genetic manipulation, toilet training for cows, seaweed feed, vaccines ... millions is being spent on research to reduce the methane emissions from New Zealand's agricultural industry. 
9/26/202122 minutes, 2 seconds
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The paths much less travelled

We've used closed borders to explore our own country, but you can love a place to death - there are some places that are not only difficult to get to, but tourism is not encouraged.
9/23/202122 minutes, 28 seconds
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Why it's not awkward to be left out of AUKUS

Being left out of the new Australia, UK and US security pact was a blessing in disguise, according to one international relations expert - because it would have caused a domestic crisis if we'd been asked in. 
9/22/202122 minutes, 14 seconds
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Tracking the Far North's feral dogs of destruction

Packs of feral dogs have been causing heartbreaking stock losses throughout the Far North, and authorities are ill-equipped to deal with them. 
9/21/202121 minutes, 41 seconds
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When Name Suppression Plays Favourites

Name suppression has become a publicity-dodging exercise that just generates publicity. Why does this rule, that favours those who can afford a lawyer, still exist?
9/20/202123 minutes, 32 seconds
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Thirty years of climate change inaction

Our grim climate statistics could have been so much better if we'd veered down a path that was mapped out 30 years ago, instead of resting on our forestry laurels. 
9/19/202121 minutes, 22 seconds
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Muscling in on te reo Māori - the heft of a superstar

Lorde's surprise EP drop in te reo Māori prompted all the feels - from awe, wonderment and joy, to unease and accusations of cultural appropriation. 
9/16/202121 minutes, 3 seconds
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The yo-yoing fortunes of the darling of the stock market

The A2 Milk Company was the darling of the stock exchange, but a series of events have seen its fortunes yo-yo. 
9/15/202119 minutes, 6 seconds
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Keeping it real for kids on misinformation

The people behind the wildly successful porn campaign are back with an edgy series aimed at kids on fake news. 
9/14/202123 minutes
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Masking out the virus

Mask wearing is here to stay - we explain why that's long overdue.
9/13/202120 minutes, 9 seconds
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Why would you want to own a forest?

The difficulties of forestry ownership are many but the rewards for the persistent are great. 
9/12/202121 minutes, 31 seconds
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The Detail is coming back

The Detail will be back in action from Monday, September 13
9/10/202146 seconds
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The Detail in lockdown mode

The Detail will be switching to written explainers while our Auckland-based team is locked down in Level 4. Catch us on RNZ and Newsroom's websites. 
8/23/20211 minute
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Downplaying the arts at school

Changes planned for the NCEA art curriculum have teachers and the art world worried about the down-grading of the subject. 
8/19/202122 minutes, 58 seconds
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An ideological switch that led to our housing crisis

Data on housing is surreal if you own a home, depressing if you don't. How did we get to this stage? 
8/18/202122 minutes, 17 seconds
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Futility and despair in Afghanistan

In Afghanistan the Taliban is taking control again, even as US military planes leave the tarmac in Kabul. Now the war is being compared to Vietnam in its futility. 
8/17/202124 minutes, 10 seconds
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Immigration - who's in, who's out, who's waiting?

There's a queue for the queue - New Zealand's immigration process is a nightmare made worse by Covid-19 restrictions. We look at who's locked out, and why people we need are leaving the country
8/16/202122 minutes, 42 seconds
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MMA is the combat sport sweeping the world

Why is the world going mad for mixed martial arts? Sharon Brettkelly goes along to an Auckland gym to find out more. 
8/15/202122 minutes, 44 seconds
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How much climate catastrophe can one world absorb?

How much doom, gloom and catastrophising can the world take? We boil down the latest big climate change report. 
8/12/202121 minutes, 29 seconds
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Long Covid short on research

Between 10 and 30 percent of Covid patients go on to develop Long Covid, a crippling illness with up to 114 symptoms.  They're not happy with the level of research being conducted on it, so they're fundraising to do their own. 
8/11/202122 minutes, 22 seconds
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Arming the police - is it a step NZ wants to take?

Gangs with guns; the fatal shooting of an officer in West Auckland; a changing attitude from front line police on firearms. Should we be arming our force? 
8/10/202122 minutes, 20 seconds
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Greenwashing as a marketing tactic

Companies are increasingly claiming to be 'eco' - their products are good for the planet - but how true are these environmental claims? And how much is just greenwashing?
8/9/202122 minutes, 36 seconds
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There is a group guarding NZ's media freedom

Journalists in New Zealand don't tend to get shot or jailed for doing their jobs - but they do face some impediments in collecting information. That's when the Media Freedom Committee is watching. 
8/8/202122 minutes, 22 seconds
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Plans to close NZ's only oil refinery, Marsden Pt

Marsden Pt shareholders will vote today on a proposal to shut down New Zealand's only oil refinery, slashing hundreds of jobs. 
8/5/202122 minutes, 34 seconds
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Banning conversion therapy

Not many people would argue against legislation banning conversion therapy - but there is a lot of devil in the detail. 
8/4/202120 minutes, 59 seconds
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The issues with making Auckland's waterfront wondrous

Hundreds of millions has been poured into developing Auckland's waterfront, and there's more mega-funding to come. Is it being spent in the right place? 
8/3/202122 minutes, 47 seconds
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Why the government's muscling in on the water business

Crumbling pipes, polluted beaches, bugs in drinking water ... something has to be done about the nation's ageing water infrastructure. But is Three Waters the right solution? 
8/2/202122 minutes, 24 seconds
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Why New Zealand is importing coal by the shipload

How can New Zealand be importing massive amounts of coal when we are supposedly on a journey towards 100 percent renewable energy? The answers are complex. 
8/1/202123 minutes, 10 seconds
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The case against Uber - when is a contractor really a worker?

Unions are heading to the Employment Court taking action over Uber's drivers - asking the question when a 'contractor' is really a 'worker', and should be offered worker benefits. 
7/29/202122 minutes, 2 seconds
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An Olympic-sized argument over women's sport uniforms

Too short, too skimpy, badly designed, or just uncomfortable - women have for too long been on the receiving end of uniform rules where one size doesn't fit all. 
7/28/202122 minutes, 7 seconds
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The ethics and costs of saving wild animals

Why do New Zealanders get so invested in saving wild animals that strand themselves? Is it worth spending thousands on getting them back where they belong? 
7/27/202119 minutes, 19 seconds
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Tackling the plague of liquor stores

New Zealanders have very easy access to alcohol, and the choices are growing. But communities worried about the harm it's causing face big hurdles to stop liquor stores proliferating. 
7/26/202122 minutes, 38 seconds
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Looking towards Africa for trade

We've been told New Zealand needs to take some of those trade eggs out of China's basket - and Africa is looking wide open after nations signed a continent-wide pact. But there are difficulties. 
7/25/202120 minutes, 47 seconds
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Drawing a line under Auckland's America's Cup

Financially it was a lemon the moment Covid closed the borders - so how did Auckland do when it came to hosting the America's Cup? Was it worth it? And should we do it again? 
7/22/202123 minutes, 4 seconds
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The MIQ nightmare

Desperate kiwis are paying thousands for clever computer operators to get them a space in MIQ, because booking a spot is proving impossible for ordinary travellers. 
7/21/202122 minutes, 55 seconds
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Political moves pushing the path of Covid-19

Three closely aligned nations, three different political approaches, and three very different results when it comes to the path taken by the pandemic. 
7/20/202122 minutes, 16 seconds
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Taxing the big tech companies

Everyone has to pay their fair share of tax - but worldwide, the big tech multi-nationals have been getting away with paying far less than others. There are plans to change that.  
7/19/202122 minutes, 54 seconds
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The sky high cost of living in New Zealand

Inflation's hit a 10 year high, and although fuel and houses are largely to blame, the food that we grow in abundance is expensive. Why? 
7/18/202122 minutes, 16 seconds
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Wide open targets - the elderly and banking scams

Elderly people are being targeted by scammers in heart-breaking numbers. They rarely get their money back, and often they're too ashamed to admit to having been sucked in. 
7/15/202123 minutes, 46 seconds
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Splitting the difference - our divorce laws

Our divorce laws are 40 years old - and there's a renewed push to change them to reflect the realities of the 21st century. 
7/14/202122 minutes, 49 seconds
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Behind nurses' anger over wages

Nurses have more industrial action planned as frustration with shortages and pay boil over - what's behind the anger? 
7/13/202122 minutes, 19 seconds
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Our faltering hospitality model

The Restaurant Association has a long wish list for the government to help its labour shortage situation - but does it need to look internally at the wages and conditions of hospitality workers? 
7/12/202122 minutes, 24 seconds
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The science of beating the drug testers in sport

Is a sports world without doping an impossible aspiration? David Howman, director-general of the World Anti-Doping Agency, talks drugs and testing. 
7/11/202122 minutes, 21 seconds
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The Covid disaster hammering Fiji

While New Zealand and the Cook Islands are bubbling away, the Covid-19 situation in what used to be our biggest Pacific tourism destination, Fiji, is horrifying - and out of control. 
7/8/202123 minutes, 26 seconds
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The Covid Olympics are nearly here

The Tokyo Olympics might have been delayed a year but somehow it's still snuck up on us - here's the rundown on the New Zealand team. 
7/7/202122 minutes, 31 seconds
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Waste minimisation efforts slow to take hold

The consequences of a wasteful Kiwi lifestyle are getting harder to ignore. Our landfills are filling fast and it's getting more difficult to find new sites. We do have waste minimisation levers, but change is slow. 
7/6/202122 minutes, 26 seconds
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China is the relationship we don't understand

RNZ's Red Line podcast sees two journalists dip their toes into unknown waters - our carefully balanced relationship with China.  
7/5/202122 minutes, 33 seconds
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The booming problem of construction waste

The building boom is in full force - but with it comes an ugly side effect. Construction waste is an increasing problem. 
7/4/202122 minutes, 52 seconds
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The horror of Lake Alice

No one has ever been held to account for the decades of abuse and torture suffered by children at the Lake Alice psychiatric unit. Now, survivors have told their stories. 
7/1/202122 minutes, 24 seconds
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Re-learning history in Aotearoa

History won't be re-written, but it will be re-learned and taught under the new New Zealand history curriculum. 
6/30/202122 minutes, 5 seconds
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Leaving Gloriavale

After 50 years of a closed community on the West Coast, more and more people are leaving Gloriavale. 
6/29/202123 minutes, 19 seconds
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Dome Valley's tipping point

The Dome Valley dump has planning approval as Auckland hunts for its next rubbish disposal option - but the very real need for a new site is coming up against both environmental and intangible objections. 
6/28/202122 minutes, 13 seconds
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Barriers everywhere for disabled people

Unsuitable housing, carless city centres, cars parked on the footpath are issues that draw complaints from able bodied people - but if you're disabled they can have a dramatic impact on your life.
6/27/202121 minutes, 21 seconds
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The Day of the Vaccine

On Wednesday morning, at the same time as news filtered out of a positive Covid-19 case going on a tiki-tour of Wellington, an operation was being executed with military precision at a retirement village in the Auckland suburb of Remuera. The Detail's Emile Donovan went along to see how an operation like this is run; how residents are feeling about it; and talk about how the 70-plus demographic has first-hand experience of the difference a vaccine can make.
6/24/202122 minutes, 15 seconds
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Bringing back Winston

NZ First is the enigma of New Zealand politics. From positions of pivotal power in governments to periods in the political wilderness. The party's chances of a return to its glory days seem to rest, as they always do, with its long-time leader Winston Peters.
6/23/202121 minutes, 12 seconds
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Franz Josef fights for survival

The South Westland town of Franz Josef has survived floods and earthquakes but the lack of international tourists due to border restrictions has forced many of the town's businesses into closure or hibernation.  
6/22/202118 minutes, 44 seconds
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A modular solution to the housing crisis

There's a factory in Christchurch that could help solve the housing crisis by churning out modular homes - but a reluctance to adopt this building method means its future is unclear.  
6/21/202122 minutes, 9 seconds
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New Zealand's soaring space industry

There's so much happening in New Zealand's space industry it's hard to keep up. There's more to it than just Rocket Lab - it's bigger than the wine industry - and it's growing fast. 
6/20/202121 minutes, 43 seconds
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The minefield of portraying real life tragedy on screen

Action to stop a film being made before it's even clear what it will be about is a reflection of increased awareness about race, identity and place across the globe. 
6/17/202122 minutes, 42 seconds
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The secrecy and fuzziness around political donations

Our rules and regulations over political donations are fuzzy  - and most of our politicians are getting tripped up by them. Is it time to make those laws more transparent? 
6/16/202123 minutes, 4 seconds
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Small homes, big ambitions

It's not just the big cities suffering from affordable housing issues - but the more remote areas of the country are getting no help, even if they're willing to help themselves.
6/15/202122 minutes, 41 seconds
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Housing the mentally ill when the roof is caving in

In a time when the country is concentrating on well-being, our mental health facilities are crumbling and overcrowded. 
6/14/202122 minutes, 36 seconds
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SNAs - the green move that cuts farmers deep

Moves to protect New Zealand's biodiversity have West Coast farmers feeling under attack as they're dictated to over what they can do with their land. Are they carrying the can for the rest of us?  
6/13/202122 minutes, 50 seconds
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Speaking Kiwi - how our accents are changing

The New Zealand accent is a potpourri of international diversity, and it continues to evolve. 
6/10/202122 minutes, 23 seconds
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Is this the death of the post-match presser?

Tennis star Naomi Osaka's withdrawal from the French Open on mental health grounds may have cracked open the door for a change in the way we conduct post-match media conferences. 
6/9/202121 minutes, 15 seconds
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Why has the Wuhan lab leak theory re-emerged?

The Covid-19 Wuhan lab leak theory has re-emerged and appears to have sparked the curiosity of the US President. We look at why, and what the likelihood is of that being the case. 
6/8/202120 minutes, 39 seconds
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How vaping can be a smokefree weapon

Vaping has been touted as a game-changing tool to help smokers quit - but it also has its downsides.
6/7/202122 minutes, 54 seconds
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The slow-moving wheels of cycling infrastructure

Our big cities are supposed to be getting more cycling friendly - but progress is slow and there is a wall of road users who would rather bicycles just disappeared. 
6/3/202121 minutes, 3 seconds
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A grand plan for a company town

Sleepyhead manufacturer the Comfort Group has a grand plan to build a company town in a rural Waikato location. But is it really such a good idea?
6/2/202122 minutes, 21 seconds
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The need for Māori housing

There was a lot of money for Māori housing and infrastructure in the Budget - $730 million in total. But what is Māori housing, and how will the money be used? 
6/1/202123 minutes, 12 seconds
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Dissecting the sensation-seeking personality

Kiwi motor racing champion Scott Dixon is a sensation-seeker - but not an adrenaline junkie. Meet the man who looked inside his mind. 
5/31/202122 minutes, 32 seconds
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The strange (and sexist) language of cryptocurrency

How on earth do you explain cryptocurrency? Not even those with their head in the game really understand it all.  
5/30/202123 minutes, 31 seconds
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Operating in the dark - Waikato DHB's cyber nightmare

The cyber attack that took down Waikato DHB's health system and plunged it into chaos 
5/27/202123 minutes, 30 seconds
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Defective or incompetent? The James Hardie case

The massive James Hardie court case on now is the latest in decades of leaky building issues. 
5/26/202122 minutes, 34 seconds
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The changing room pervert who hid behind suppression rules

Uncovering the secret of how a pervert hid his criminal prosecution and became the boss of a crown entity. 
5/25/202124 minutes, 16 seconds
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The alpine hero with a dark past

Willi Huber was a champion of Mt Hutt's ski field developments, and a popular local. But it wasn't until he died that the full horror of his past was revealed. 
5/24/202124 minutes, 15 seconds
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An Olympics like no other - if it goes ahead

It's just nine weeks before the Tokyo Olympics are due to open - but if they go ahead, they'll look and sound very different to games in the past. 
5/23/202122 minutes, 15 seconds
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The threat hanging over our thriving gaming industry

New Zealand has a thriving gaming industry - it's a genuine career path and we have great talent. But a tax sweetener across the Tasman risks pulling the rug from underneath it all.  
5/20/202121 minutes, 38 seconds
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Wellington is getting short of good days

You can't beat Wellington on a good day - but Wellington's good days are getting few and far between. 
5/19/202123 minutes, 16 seconds
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Has the Christchurch Call made any progress?

Has the Christchurch Call made any progress or has the whole thing descended into a talk fest? 
5/18/202122 minutes, 14 seconds
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Laurel Hubbard - lifting for history

Laurel Hubbard is a reluctant trailblazer, a pioneer for transgender women - but all she wants to do is lift weights.
5/17/202124 minutes, 24 seconds
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What is He Puapua?

A look at what's in the aspirational He Puapua document, currently being used to stir racial disharmony. 
5/16/202123 minutes, 6 seconds
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Fair Pay Agreements bring a shift in industrial relations

Details have been released about arguably the biggest shift in industrial relations in 30 years - what are Fair Pay Agreements all about? 
5/13/202122 minutes, 34 seconds
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Trawling for the truth about fishing

A new Netflix programme - we're not calling it a documentary - is putting people world wide off eating fish. But how much of the message was massaged? 
5/12/202123 minutes, 24 seconds
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Making a side hustle work

Need an extra bit of cash? Here's a look at whether side hustles are worth it.
5/11/202121 minutes, 31 seconds
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Beneath the joyful job stats

The unemployment rate has defied the expectations of economists, banks and Treasury. Is it hiding the reality of the job situation, or did the wage subsidy save us? 
5/10/202121 minutes, 38 seconds
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Pay freezing out your traditional voter base

Labour's announcement of a public service wage freeze took everyone by surprise. Was it a party taking aim at its traditional support base, or a minister losing control of the narrative? 
5/9/202121 minutes, 40 seconds
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The hills are alive - with rabbits

Once again rabbits are on the verge of causing an ecological disaster in parts of New Zealand that will cost us hundreds of millions.
5/6/202121 minutes, 50 seconds
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Musing on mediocrity

Celebrate being average. After all, it's not terrible. 
5/5/202120 minutes, 57 seconds
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Treading a line between hate speech and free speech

 Long awaited reforms on hate speech have gone before Cabinet - and they're stirring up unease and discontent.
5/4/202122 minutes, 54 seconds
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The Rich List - with added philanthropy

The post-Covid rich list is different to NBR's previous yearly efforts. In 2021, ranking wealthy New Zealanders also means measuring what they give back. 
5/3/202122 minutes, 23 seconds
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Watching by remote as the 'invisible terrorist' hits India

The Covid-19 crisis in India is so bad it's been called the 'invisible terrorist'. It's also split families in New Zealand and is causing huge heartache. 
5/2/202122 minutes, 7 seconds
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The secrets of obituary writing

An obituary is about life, not death. Writing them is a special art. 
4/29/202122 minutes, 51 seconds
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Why it costs so much to build a house

Much has been said about New Zealand's construction costs contributing to our housing crisis. But there are reasons for soaring prices - and no easy solutions. 
4/28/202123 minutes, 54 seconds
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Are Amazon's tax funded benefits worth it?

Why do we pay mega-subsidies to international movie giants to come to New Zealand to film? Is it really worth it? 
4/27/202122 minutes, 30 seconds
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The legacy of the Waikeria Prison riots

The Waikeria Prison fires are out, the excitement's died down, the protesters charged. But that's not the end of the repercussions, with three inquiries underway and civil actions launched. 
4/26/202122 minutes, 31 seconds
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Our bold health system shakeup

The government's newly announced health plan heralds a massive change in the system. But commentators say its success depends on what's in the detail.
4/22/202122 minutes, 7 seconds
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Electoral upheaval in Samoa as vote makes history

 Nearly two weeks after voting, Samoans still don't know if their leader of 22 years will be ousted by his former deputy. 
4/21/202122 minutes, 44 seconds
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New moves in the never-ending battle against tobacco

A new skirmish in the war against tobacco aims to stub out a whole new generation of smokers.
4/20/202123 minutes, 34 seconds
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The road bumps in our vaccination rollout

Trans-Tasman quarantine-free flights are back on - as New Zealand's vaccination rollout's been described as shambolic, and Australia's as a failure. 
4/19/202123 minutes, 16 seconds
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The lasting, shameful legacy of the Dawn Raids

The Dawn Raids of the 1970s carry a shameful legacy to this day - and those who haven't forgotten, want an apology. 
4/18/202123 minutes
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Merging media - a commercial and publicly funded stew

The biggest shift in public broadcasting is being mulled over by a government-appointed group. But is such a unification desirable, or even necessary? 
4/15/202122 minutes, 45 seconds
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How Facebook's algorithm is changing the world

Facebook protests that its new algorithm that curates your newsfeed is just a mirror reflecting yourself back at you. If that's the case, says one digital expert, it's a funhouse mirror. 
4/14/202122 minutes, 45 seconds
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The battleground in paradise over a Waiheke marina

A marina at picturesque Kennedy Point on Waiheke Island is the scene of a massive battle - and work has started in spite of a looming Supreme Court decision. 
4/13/202122 minutes, 23 seconds
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Does a sex offender register really keep children safe?

No one would argue against a Child Protection Act -  but is a register for child sex abusers actually protecting children? 
4/12/202124 minutes, 2 seconds
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Anti-Asian sentiment in NZ - it's real, it's everywhere

The spotlight being shone on anti-Asian attacks in America is spilling over to New Zealand, and has highlighted the fact that such sentiments lurk beneath the surface here too. 
4/11/202119 minutes, 15 seconds
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The back-firing probability of rent controls

There's been much speculation that the recent housing announcement could prompt landlords who feel targeted to put up rents. Now there's counter-talk of rent controls. How would it work? 
4/8/202122 minutes, 48 seconds
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Managing China's theft of NZ's SunGold kiwifruit

Chinese growers are stealing the kiwifruit we stole from them in the first place, along with the varietal secrets New Zealand holds the rights to. Zespri has a novel plan to combat that. 
4/7/202121 minutes, 46 seconds
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Keeping Pasifika rugby talent

Pasifika rugby has been the world's poor cousin for too long. Could a new plan help retain players and see the island game thrive? 
4/6/202123 minutes
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Productivity, money and wealth - not all the same

New Zealand's "productivity" figures aren't great and are artificially inflated by rampaging house prices. Toss in wellbeing and the picture looks murky. 
4/5/202122 minutes, 21 seconds
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City bees and their rescuers

Sharon Brettkelly takes a trip with bee rescuer Jessie Baker to look at the urban beehives that are buzzing away on city rooftops. 
3/31/202123 minutes, 31 seconds
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The Speaker row - should Trevor Mallard step down?

Trevor Mallard, the arbiter of Parliament's house rules, is ironically not one to follow the rule book.
3/30/202124 minutes, 3 seconds
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Turning the taps on with fluoride

The decision over fluoridation of the country's water supplies has been handed over to the Director-General of Health. Why is this issue so divisive that it's been taken out of the hands of councils? 
3/29/202123 minutes
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The think tanks that help shape public policy

Under the surface of public discourse lurk a bunch of mysterious organisations who are major players in shaping public policy. 
3/28/202123 minutes, 13 seconds
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Science journalist Alison Ballance hangs up her boots

With more than a thousand conservation stories under her waterproof parka, science journalist Alison Ballance is retiring from RNZ's Our Changing World programme. 
3/25/202123 minutes, 51 seconds
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The next unfathomable currency - NFTs

NFTs - non-fungible tokens -are the latest crypto wonder. It seems unfathomable but people are willing to spend huge amounts acquiring them. 
3/24/202123 minutes, 38 seconds
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Tipping the scales in favour of first home buyers

Has the government managed to remove stumbling blocks for first home owners with its policy announcements yesterday? Or is the basic problem that houses are just too expensive? 
3/23/202122 minutes, 11 seconds
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NZ caught in a tech war between China and the US

The New Zealand technology sector is booming - but there are rocky shoals ahead. Among them, getting caught in a US-China tech war; and unwittingly contributing to human rights abuses. 
3/22/202122 minutes, 25 seconds
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Drinking (milk) to economic recovery

When the Chinese were told to drink milk to stay healthy and recover from the Covid-19 pandemic, New Zealand's dairy farmers celebrated. The Global Dairy Trade, explained. 
3/21/202120 minutes, 31 seconds
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Our America's Cup - the next steps

The champagne's been mopped up, the sailors are recovering from their victory celebrations - what's the next step for the America's Cup? 
3/18/202121 minutes, 5 seconds
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Imagining a monarchy-free Aotearoa

After the Markle Debacle and Andrew's murky associations, you couldn't blame Aotearoa for saying goodbye to the Crown. But what would a queen-free country look like constitutionally? 
3/17/202123 minutes, 10 seconds
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The Pharmac compromise

Pharmac's generic drug swap for epilepsy treatment saved $30 million over five years. But for some patients, the consequences were nightmarish.  
3/16/202122 minutes, 59 seconds
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Latin lovers mourn language loss

What's the point in learning a dead language like Latin? It's been struck off the NCEA list, but its loss will be mourned by many who say it lives on in everyday English, and it's vital to some professions. 
3/15/202121 minutes, 39 seconds
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Former MP now peddling dubious 'health' supplements

Fallen politician Jami-Lee Ross has turned his hand to selling "health" supplements with dubious benefits. It's an industry that's thinly regulated and barely policed. 
3/14/202121 minutes, 1 second
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Talking to the Prime Minister

Mike Hosking's made the most of Jacinda Ardern's decision to ditch him - spinning it as her running for the hills. But what gave him unfettered access in the first place, and did he abuse the privilege? 
3/11/202123 minutes, 31 seconds
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New Zealand's mills are in trouble

Our wood processing industry is in distress, largely run over by China's demand for raw logs to provide work for its own people and factories. Why isn't there more support for the few sawmills we have left? 
3/10/202122 minutes, 56 seconds
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Society on beyond Dr Seuss

Is the move to stop publishing six Dr Seuss books another example of cancel culture - or an acknowledgement that we've moved on from a more insensitive past? 
3/9/202122 minutes, 27 seconds
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The passion and pain over Māori wards

The subject of Māori wards on local bodies brings out both passionate support and angry opposition. 
3/8/202122 minutes, 47 seconds
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An end at last to the dirty politics saga

No one expected the level of intensity and brazenness used by a blogger, a former politician and a PR man in the saga that became known as "dirty politics". 
3/7/202123 minutes, 38 seconds
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Rules, messages, Covid and confusion

Someone broke the rules to put Auckland in Level 3 and there has been a clamour for punishment. But the situation isn't black and white. Is our covid messaging still appropriate? 
3/4/202124 minutes, 27 seconds
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Lockdown loneliness

Being locked down also means for many people being locked out of meaningful face to face interactions - for them, Level 3 is a tense and frustrating time. 
3/3/202122 minutes, 23 seconds
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When satellites become star pollution

Elon Musk's Starlink satellites are a wondrous sight - and also a slightly disturbing one. How many foreign objects can we fit into the night sky before they start crashing into each other?  
3/2/202122 minutes, 22 seconds
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NZ's declining birth rate is changing our world

New Zealand's plummeting birth rate means we have some serious planning to do. 
3/1/202123 minutes, 3 seconds
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How tasty is the My Food Bag IPO offer?

The My Food Bag IPO this week looks like a mouth watering offer - but the proof of the pudding is in the eating. 
2/28/202121 minutes, 25 seconds
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Jake Millar - an extraordinary life and a disappearing act

The story of young West Coast entrepreneur Jake Millar is an extraordinary one of tragedy, success, money, the high life, and now, a disappearance.
2/25/202123 minutes, 20 seconds
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Pacific unity is threatened in an ugly breakup

The Pacific Islands Forum is facing unprecedented disruption at a time when it's arguably needed the most, to present a united front on issues such as Covid and climate change. 
2/24/202121 minutes, 44 seconds
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Battling a rare disorder - and the health system

For those kiwis with rare disorders, it's a battle against the health system to get treatment.  
2/23/202122 minutes, 45 seconds
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Re-shaping resource management

After 30 years the Resource Management Act - the unwieldy, development-stopping, strangely inadequate environmental legislation - is being reformed. 
2/22/202121 minutes, 26 seconds
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Selling off our national game

Why would a massive international investment firm want a stake in New Zealand's national game? And what could change if a deal with Silver Lake goes ahead? 
2/21/202121 minutes, 35 seconds
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When Australia and New Zealand take opposite sides

Australia and New Zealand are supposedly cultural cousins, but this latest rift - over the return of a woman labelled a terrorist - shows we are drifting further and further apart. 
2/18/202123 minutes, 32 seconds
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Changing the bullying culture in sport

Reviews, resignations, recriminations - New Zealand sport is rife with bullying accusations, particularly against women and girls. What's being done to change the landscape? 
2/17/202122 minutes, 45 seconds
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Pulling the trigger on lockdown

What happens between the time when a lab worker finds a positive Covid-19 test in the community, and the Prime Minister announces another lockdown? 
2/16/202122 minutes, 57 seconds
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Why can't kiwi kids do maths?

New Zealand's school kids are failing at maths - and other subjects too. What are we doing about addressing our educational gaps? 
2/15/202121 minutes, 24 seconds
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Too important to lose? The Infratil story

New Zealand sharemarket darling Infratil is in danger of being lost offshore, to Australia's superfund. But is the company too important to lose? 
2/14/202123 minutes, 9 seconds
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Covid uncertainty over 2021 Polyfest sees top school pull out

Polyfest is the largest Pasifika dance festival in the world. But it takes huge amounts of time and money to prepare for it, and after two years of disruption, parents and schools are thinking twice about entering. 
2/11/202120 minutes, 7 seconds
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Waiting to speak at Waitangi

The debate about women speaking on the marae at Waitangi has lasted for years. There are customary rules, but it appears they are about to change.  
2/10/202123 minutes, 37 seconds
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The yacht race where millions of dollars sink

Taxpayers and ratepayers have sunk millions into helping stage the America's Cup - then Covid hit and no one came to the party. Have we gained anything for our outlay? 
2/9/202123 minutes, 11 seconds
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Uyghurs the casualty in NZ's trading partnership with China

New Zealand walks a trading tightrope with China - but by failing to bring up human rights issues, are we selling our souls for $32 billion a year? 
2/8/202121 minutes, 17 seconds
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Tracking a pandemic

An economist and analyst who plotted the path of the new Covid virus - and gave the government an early head's up - talks about how it unfolded and what's likely to happen next.  
2/4/202122 minutes, 31 seconds
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Google vs Australia - the world is watching

Google and Facebook are in a showdown with Australian lawmakers over payment for using the work of others. The world is keenly watching to see what will happen. 
2/3/202123 minutes, 1 second
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The climate and changes - what they mean for you

Are New Zealanders ready to take the bus? Give up their gas hobs? Plant more trees? If we're going to meet our international obligations, we'll have to be. 
2/2/202122 minutes, 58 seconds
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Waiting our turn for the Covid jab

New Zealand must wait its turn for Covid-19 vaccinations - but that's not necessarily a bad thing.
2/1/202120 minutes, 48 seconds
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Cleaning Auckland's beaches

When Auckland's Safeswim website lit up red after a downpour, residents were horrified. But are the city's beaches really a no go-zone, or are we being over-informed?
1/31/202121 minutes, 45 seconds
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The Detail's best of 2020

Wrapping up our year, with The Detail. 
12/17/202024 minutes, 6 seconds
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Lines and wine - a twisty turny story

The saga of Marlborough Lines and Yealands Wine involves legal action, a raid, secrets, lies, falsified documents, and millions in community money. This is what happened. 
12/16/202023 minutes, 29 seconds
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NZ Cricket has risen from the ashes

New Zealand cricket is in good shape, sharing the top of the honours board with Australia. But is it deserved? 
12/15/202021 minutes, 46 seconds
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Stress, lockdowns and changed eating habits

Covid lockdown changed our food habits - but possibly not in the way you think. 
12/14/202022 minutes, 13 seconds
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Yes, it's a housing crisis

We ARE in a housing crisis - and there are plenty of reasons for it. It's time for authorities to stop planning for 10 years ago and start looking forward.  
12/13/202024 minutes, 48 seconds
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The question of remains - how we bury our dead

The earth's short of space and that's affecting our customary expectations of how we bury our dead. 
12/10/202020 minutes, 36 seconds
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Tolerating child poverty as part of an economic strategy

We hear a lot about child poverty and lack of action on it - how bad is the situation really? 
12/9/202024 minutes, 14 seconds
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The spy club and international politics

Our Five-Eyes spy network has evolved from a surveillance agency to a political tool - and New Zealand is caught between old allies and new trading partners. 
12/8/202022 minutes, 46 seconds
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Making dangerous tourism safe enough

How do you make an adventure tourism venture safe when the main selling point is danger? 
12/7/202022 minutes, 1 second
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A glimpse into what went wrong in Christchurch

The findings of the Royal Commission into the Christchurch mosque shootings will be released tomorrow. But an extensive investigation that formed a submission into that inquiry is already out, and it foreshadows the result. 
12/6/202023 minutes, 27 seconds
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How Stuff's apology has resonated with Māori

Stuff this week issued a public apology for its portrayal of Māori - how significant was the move? 
12/3/202021 minutes, 34 seconds
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Coming soon - a long, hot, and possibly deadly summer

We could be in for a hellish wildfire season. Are New Zealanders prepared? 
12/2/202023 minutes, 21 seconds
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Giving up on Tauranga

Disharmony, an attempted coup, nasty texts, childish comments - what on earth has been going on at the fractured Tauranga City Council? 
12/1/202023 minutes, 15 seconds
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Managing diabetes without weapons

Diabetes is a massive health issue for New Zealand and disproportionately affects Māori and Pasifika. So why are we so far behind when it comes to using new drugs that improve treatment? 
11/30/202021 minutes, 47 seconds
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Sneaky, shady, shifty - supermarkets are under scrutiny

New Zealand's supermarket duopoly is being investigated by the Commerce Commission - but are the big two, too big to bring down? 
11/29/202020 minutes, 8 seconds
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Covid break gives us a chance for a tourism reset

The tourism industry has some big decisions to make, and it's had an enforced break to think about them. But with vaccines on the horizon we'd better hurry on policies that decide what type of visitors we want. 
11/26/202022 minutes, 24 seconds
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The distance from dementia that's holding back help

Support for people with dementia is reaching few of them - yet four in five New Zealanders have some connection to the disease. Dementia sufferers need a champion. 
11/25/202021 minutes, 15 seconds
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Is RCEP a door-opener or just another acronym to learn?

What's the big deal about the new trade deal we've signed up to? And didn't we already have one of those with the same players? 
11/24/202021 minutes, 50 seconds
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The Reserve Bank and the housing crisis

The Reserve Bank has been caught up in a political storm over the housing crisis. Is it really the Bank's fault that the levers it pulls have seen prices spiral out of control?  
11/23/202021 minutes, 20 seconds
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Covid mutations in mink - the repercussions

Denmark is looking at culling all of its 17 million mink after they were found to have a mutated form of coronavirus - how worried should we be about this development? 
11/22/202021 minutes, 26 seconds
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Female athletes urged to think about fertility and maternity - now

LockerRoom's Suzanne McFadden opens up about her ground-breaking series on top female athletes, maternity and fertility. 
11/19/202024 minutes, 56 seconds
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Leaving the beach front - a political and financial nightmare

Dealing with the political and financial repercussions of sea level rises is going to make political decisions over Covid look easy. There are billions of taxpayer dollars at stake in property bailouts. 
11/18/202022 minutes, 9 seconds
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Dementia research funding under threat

As dementia numbers soar and a cure remains elusive, one of the key organisations leading research into prevention and treatment is under threat. 
11/17/202023 minutes, 6 seconds
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Ombudsman's work is more than just about official information

Emile Donovan sits down with the man charged with keeping the country's civil servants in check. 
11/16/202022 minutes, 39 seconds
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The rise - and fall - and rise - of the Māori Party

Māori politics is a story of rapid rises and sudden falls - and this year the Māori Party is back  
11/15/202022 minutes, 47 seconds
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The sport saddled with problems

With Winston Peters gone from the political scene, why do we still need to indulge his pet portfolio of racing? We look at the health of the sector and progress of planned reforms. 
11/12/202019 minutes, 28 seconds
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John Key on Joe Biden and why he's good for us

Sir John Key dealt with Joe Biden when he was US vice-president. He gives The Detail an insight into the man.  
11/11/202020 minutes, 37 seconds
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Ambitious salmon farming plan hits drawbacks

The country's first open ocean fish farm could bring in billions - but the company behind it is running into objections, largely by locals not impressed by its levels of compliance elsewhere. 
11/10/202021 minutes, 22 seconds
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Why is Labour putting the brakes on its own political capital?

With the biggest political mandate in a long time, why is Labour holding itself back from treading a traditional - and bold - left-leaning path? 
11/9/202021 minutes, 56 seconds
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Should NZ copy Taiwan?

While New Zealand has successfully (for the most part) kept the pandemic at bay, Taiwan's done it without a strict lockdown and it's economy has actually grown. Today The Detail looks at how.
11/8/202022 minutes, 42 seconds
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Untapped resources - the arts and tech sectors' plea

As industries hand the new government their wish lists, we look at two sectors - arts and tech - that say they have plenty of untapped potential.
11/5/202023 minutes, 12 seconds
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Who is Nanaia Mahuta?

Many didn't pick her as the new Foreign Affairs Minister and she made headlines for being the first woman in the role on Monday. Today The Detail looks at Nanaia Mahuta's track record and just what she will bring to the job.
11/4/202021 minutes, 44 seconds
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Special votes are more important than you think

On Friday, the outcome of the special votes - nearly 20 percent of the overall vote - will be revealed. Here's what it could swing.
11/3/202021 minutes, 4 seconds
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The fraught and divided US election

Our election may be over but all eyes now turn to the US - who will prevail?
11/2/202022 minutes, 42 seconds
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Time for a Royal Commission into accident compensation

Former Prime Minister Sir Geoffrey Palmer wants a Royal Commission into ACC, saying the system that was a world-beater is now unjust.  
11/1/202023 minutes, 28 seconds
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The long overdue changing face of zoos

Auckland Zoo has been open for nearly 100 years - and it's come a long, long way in that time. But should we still be looking at captive animals these days? 
10/29/202020 minutes, 19 seconds
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The fall of our flashiest playboy, Eric Watson

New Zealand businessman Eric Watson is currently in a London jail, felled by a man with deeper pockets and a big score to settle. How did it come to this? 
10/28/202023 minutes, 20 seconds
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The rookie ACT MPs who might not be what you expect

ACT scored big on election night but it was a "bittersweet" victory - the party is still on the wrong side of power. So what will its nine new MPs do for the next three years? 
10/27/202022 minutes, 20 seconds
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NZ and the search for a Covid-19 vaccine

Developing a Covid-19 vaccine is arguably the number one priority of humanity right now. So how does New Zealand fit in? 
10/26/202020 minutes, 5 seconds
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The unacknowledged heroes of New Zealand's pacific war

The descendants of Pacific Island Coastwatchers just want to be part of the ANZAC story - but there's so little recorded about the men sent to remote areas with no resources, who then got no pensions or medical care. 
10/25/202019 minutes, 17 seconds
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Squeezing us in - the housing crisis is changing expectations

A growing population, cities straining at the edges, and everyone wants a back yard for the kids. Or do they? We may have reached the stage where a change of mindset is helping to house people. 
10/22/202021 minutes, 24 seconds
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Navigating Auckland's cone zone

Construction of Auckland's City Rail Link is well underway and don't local retailers know it. It's killing the heart of the city and turned it into a cone zone, the sound of construction replacing the ringing of tills. 
10/21/202021 minutes, 14 seconds
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The inquiry and the cover ups over abuse in state care

Journalist Aaron Smale talks about his deep-dive investigation into children abused in state care - and the roadblocks the Crown put up to stop the details getting out. 
10/20/202023 minutes, 54 seconds
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How has Sweden really tackled the Covid pandemic?

A lot has been said about Sweden's approach to tackling the Covid pandemic. Not a lot of it is true. 
10/19/202022 minutes, 54 seconds
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Goodbye Winston Peters - it was never dull

Winston Peters was the wild card of New Zealand politics for most of his long political career - cutting, brusque, combative, rude, funny - a contradiction. Now he's gone, and we look back. 
10/18/202023 minutes, 32 seconds
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Coming home

New Zealanders are coming home in droves in what's becoming known as the 'brain gain'. Who are they, why are they returning, and how long will they stay for? 
10/15/202022 minutes, 47 seconds
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Farmers have form filling issues with sustainability

Are farmers really intractable over freshwater regulations and climate change rules - or are they embracing environmental protections as the Prime Minister suggests? 
10/14/202021 minutes, 29 seconds
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Behind the scenes in coalition negotiations

Peter Dunne is the MP who's been involved in more coalition negotiations than any other - he takes us behind the closed doors to shine a spotlight on what happens after an MMP election. 
10/13/202023 minutes, 30 seconds
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Billy Te Kahika - the conspiracy theorist with a hidden following

Advance NZ's Billy Te Kahika has some strange ideas that it would be better to keep a lid on. So why has one of the country's top investigative reporters shone a spotlight on him?
10/12/202019 minutes, 58 seconds
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Where is the mental health support in New Zealand?

The alarming levels of New Zealanders with mental health issues is being described as a silent pandemic. What's being done to stem the tide? 
10/11/202024 minutes, 6 seconds
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Artists, arts grants, and Creative New Zealand

The Taxpayers' Union has generated a lot of heat but not much light when it comes to its digs at Creative NZ grants. We explore who they go to, and what the money is used for. 
10/8/202019 minutes, 24 seconds
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Time for a change of thinking on dyslexia

Dyslexia was recognised officially as a learning condition 13 years ago, but our attitudes towards children - and adults - who think differently have barely moved. Isn't it about time this changed? 
10/7/202022 minutes, 17 seconds
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Is renewable energy a victory or a diversion?

New Zealand's not far off achieving 100 percent renewable energy - but is that really our best bet for combating climate change? 
10/6/202022 minutes, 44 seconds
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Should we care that public debt is spiralling out of control?

At election campaigning time politicians have a lot to say about public debt and government spending. But how does it really affect ordinary people, and should we care about it? 
10/5/202022 minutes, 39 seconds
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Immigration - the political cold potato

The political narrative on immigration has flipped - with closed borders, the numbers have plummeted and the debate has dried up. But we have to talk about it at some stage.
10/4/202023 minutes, 6 seconds
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Fashion struggles in the Year of the Elasticated Pant

Locked up inside and working from home - it was a death knell to the high fashion industry. But one expert says some luxury brands may have closed their doors too quickly. 
10/1/202022 minutes, 53 seconds
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Protecting the past while preparing for the future

Wellington is trying to prepare for its projected population growth, but potential housing developments are being held up by debate over how to honour its heritage buildings. 
9/30/202019 minutes, 20 seconds
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Fruit picker shortage reaches new levels

It's the annual story - orchardists can't get fruit pickers at harvest time. Now with no immigrant workers the situation is even more dire. But there's a reason unemployed New Zealanders won't take up the jobs. 
9/29/202022 minutes, 22 seconds
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When politics and dating don't mix

Can you date, marry, or even just be friends with someone who holds the opposite political views to you? In the US that's generally a hard 'no' - here, it's a bit different. 
9/28/202022 minutes, 57 seconds
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Breaking down cannabis

As the cannabis referendum draws nearer, we have a look at the chemical make up of the substance there's been so much debate over.
9/27/202022 minutes, 23 seconds
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Making a mark in Auckland's growing film industry

In warehouses near motorways and on backlots in West Auckland, players who contract to the movie industry are making their mark - in business, and on the world. 
9/24/202023 minutes, 57 seconds
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Blurred lines - the police and facial recognition technology

Law enforcement organisations all over the world are tapping into increasingly sophisticated facial recognition tech - but the regulations on how it can be used are vague. 
9/23/202023 minutes, 46 seconds
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Why do we still ship livestock overseas?

MPI has slapped a temporary ban on live animal exports after the sinking of the Gulf Livestock 1. There are demands they cease all together but banning them completely is not that simple. 
9/22/202022 minutes, 51 seconds
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Repairing Auckland's iconic coathanger

One sudden gust of wind and traffic around New Zealand's biggest city goes into a chaotic meltdown. How long will it take to fix the Auckland Harbour Bridge and why can't it be faster? 
9/21/202021 minutes, 47 seconds
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The drama of the TV election debate

A look at the three elements that make up the TV election debate - the broadcaster, the moderator, and the politician. 
9/20/202022 minutes, 22 seconds
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A kiwi in California and a drama-filled 2020

Soaring temperatures, lockdown in a pandemic, a summer of riots and protests, a crazy election - and now raging wildfires. A kiwi in California details her drama-filled 2020. 
9/17/202022 minutes, 17 seconds
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Finally, a plan for abandoned Waiwera Hot Pools

The Waiwera Hot Pools closed more than two years ago for refurbishment and never reopened. Everyone assumed they were dead, but a new plan is bubbling to the surface. 
9/16/202021 minutes, 50 seconds
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Is Hamilton NZ's most beautiful city?

Hamilton is up for the prize of New Zealand's most beautiful city - and far from scoffing, one Auckland architecture expert says the crown would be well-deserved.  
9/15/202021 minutes, 54 seconds
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The goodies and baddies of the 1pm covid presser

The 1pm Jacinda and Ashley show has exposed the way journalists operate - and it's not pretty. Should they modify their behaviour now it's televised? 
9/14/202024 minutes, 35 seconds
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Avatar's producer on why he's made NZ home for now

Avatar producer Jon Landau talks to Sharon Brettkelly about making block-buster sequels in New Zealand - far away from home, during a pandemic. 
9/13/202024 minutes, 56 seconds
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Why do we have preferential entry into med school?

Debate around Otago University’s medical school makeup has raised the hackles of some students – so why do we have affirmative entry policies at our universities?
9/10/202022 minutes, 50 seconds
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How one iwi's treaty settlement is lifting up its people

Where does all that treaty settlement money go? We look at how one iwi is using it to lift the health and welfare of its people. 
9/9/202021 minutes, 15 seconds
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Televised school sport - great exposure, or breeding elitism?

The uproar over televising school sport, and the complicated mix of players clashing over who owns it. 
9/8/202022 minutes, 38 seconds
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The Covid stock market gamblers investing by app

This pandemic has brought out the amateur share traders and a new app is helping them invest - or is it gamble? - on the stock market.
9/7/202022 minutes, 27 seconds
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The kiwi company keeping Covid patients alive

The New Zealand company making the machines keeping Covid patients alive is cashing in big-time from the pandemic, but says it also feels huge responsibility. 
9/6/202021 minutes, 30 seconds
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Earthquake anniversary marks 10 years of disruption

It's 10 years since the first big Christchurch earthquake - and if you'd just started school then you're now ending your decade of education amidst a global pandemic. We meet two teens for whom disruption is normal.
9/3/202021 minutes, 16 seconds
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The unintended medical consequences of lockdown

The medical world is starting to look at some of the unintended consequences of lockdown - some of them positive, some more worrying. 
9/2/202022 minutes, 16 seconds
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Could boxes from China solve our housing problems?

Meet a developer who's trying to help solve the housing crisis by importing boxes from China.  
9/1/202022 minutes, 42 seconds
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Free food, free money and stimulating the economy

The whole world is facing a pandemic recession - so what are the off-beat measures some governments are taking to stimulate their economies? 
8/31/202022 minutes, 37 seconds
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How a digital inclusion policy is widening the inequality gap

New Zealand is powering on towards a digital future, in the face of a new report that reveals unexpectedly high numbers of people who don't have access to internet services. 
8/30/202023 minutes, 25 seconds
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Insight, spin and political commentary

Political commentators often light up the comments section, but how much of what they have to say is valuable insight, and how much is clutter and noise? 
8/27/202023 minutes, 19 seconds
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Covid-19: Where are the jobs for women?

Just because New Zealand's leader is a woman doesn't mean all is fine for women in the workplace - in fact, in this pandemic, things have got significantly worse. 
8/26/202022 minutes, 5 seconds
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The murky depths of water reform

Councils are wary about signing up to the Three Waters programme, aimed at improving drinking water, wastewater and stormwater. We discuss the fishhooks. 
8/25/202021 minutes, 21 seconds
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Sixteen - but not sweet enough to vote

You can legally drive, fly a plane, have sex or own a gun at 16 - so why can't you vote? Well, there's a campaign underway aimed at changing that. 
8/24/202022 minutes, 35 seconds
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Gloves that protect you at the cost of slavery

As a second Covid wave hits the country we are gearing up - but some of that PPE gear including gloves and masks could have reached New Zealand via slave labour factories in Asia. 
8/23/202023 minutes, 22 seconds
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How Singapore carried out its Covid-19 election

Our election date's been delayed for a month - but there's no guarantee we won't still be in lockdown on 17 October. How did Singapore manage to conduct its Covid election? 
8/20/202021 minutes, 18 seconds
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Our genome detectives helping to save the world

New Zealand scientists are playing a key role in genome testing being used trace coronavirus cases back to their sources.
8/19/202023 minutes, 18 seconds
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Rumour, regret, and damage that can't be undone

Dylan Reeve tracks down the source of the rumour that sparked vileness on the internet - and finds a young man full of regret and waiting for a call from police. 
8/18/202023 minutes, 18 seconds
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What's behind the management exodus at the CDHB?

Christchurch's health services are under siege and the DHB's financial issues have seen vital management team members leave. What is going on?   
8/17/202022 minutes, 22 seconds
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The harmful machines that work for public good

A lot of our problem gambling issues stem from pokie machines - but those same machines prop up a myriad of community groups. What's the solution?
8/16/202023 minutes, 1 second
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Rubbish responsibility - keeping stuff out of landfill

Reduce, re-use, recycle is taking on a new and more formal meaning with the government's product stewardship scheme. 
8/13/202020 minutes, 38 seconds
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The fear of going back

Ambiguity, uncertainty and unpredictability are three key indicators for stress, and Aucklanders in particular are going through all of those right now. A clinical psychiatrist has some sound advice. 
8/12/202019 minutes
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The other diseases NZ needs to crush

There are other diseases the country is battling that could do with big injections of money and effort, but they don't attack humans.
8/11/202021 minutes, 11 seconds
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How drastic are the new changes to tenancy law?

Long awaited changes to tenancy law have been made - are they really the landlord-killers that some make them out to be? 
8/10/202021 minutes, 17 seconds
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Kids have cut the binge drinking - and we don't really know why

Binge drinking in teenagers has dropped dramatically in the last 20 years - but it's not really about super-sizing screen time, and researchers don't really know what has happened. 
8/9/202023 minutes, 23 seconds
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NZ's moves towards becoming a tech hub

Auckland will host an international conference next year on cyber security, as the country tries to take advantage of its trusted reputation to make waves in the technology space. 
8/6/202022 minutes, 34 seconds
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What's lurking behind the four percent job figure?

How does a four percent unemployment figure gel with estimates that soon there will be whole neighbourhoods of people in south Auckland without work? 
8/5/202021 minutes, 58 seconds
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China's changing appetites - and why NZ must change

After China's succession of food scares, and post-Covid wariness, consumer demands there are changing. New Zealand can take advantage of that, or be left behind. 
8/4/202023 minutes, 13 seconds
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The science of transgender women in sport

The science on transgender women in sport, from the person whose scientific work informed World Rugby's controversial new proposed policy
8/3/202025 minutes, 35 seconds
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What you need to know about election 2020's referendums

New Zealanders are about to vote on two of the most polarising social issues of our time - how much do you know about the cannabis and end of life referendums? 
8/2/202023 minutes, 44 seconds
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Pleas for a Pacific travel bubble as tourist cash evaporates

In opting to protect their people from Covid-19 the Pacific islands are cut off from tourism income - and they're suffering badly as a result. 
7/30/202023 minutes, 49 seconds
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Polls, rogue polls and statistics

Was it really a 'rogue' poll? How do pollsters go about getting a real taste of what the electorate is thinking? We speak to two experts on the methodology behind the numbers. 
7/29/202023 minutes, 47 seconds
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The changing face of Rotary

The astonishing story of a young Māori woman who started life amongst gang culture, went through homelessness, got hooked on helping people and is now the president of the Waitakere Rotary Club. 
7/28/202021 minutes, 19 seconds
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Our crushing court backlogs

Covid-19 has complicated our court system, caused more stress for victims of crime, and failed the dictum that everyone has a right to a speedy trial.  
7/27/202022 minutes, 17 seconds
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The deep fake threat

Deepfakes, synthetic media - the latest and most advanced techniques to spread disinformation and deception. 
7/26/202022 minutes, 2 seconds
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NZ's big sporting controversies

Once again the America's Cup has erupted in scandal - but that's nothing new for the sport. Today we take a trip through some of the country's other big controversies, with rugby writing legend Phil Gifford. 
7/23/202023 minutes, 24 seconds
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What went so wrong with the Covid fight in Melbourne?

From today masks are mandatory in public in Melbourne and the adjacent Mitchell Shire as the city grapples with hundreds more Covid-19 cases every day. How did things go so badly wrong there?
7/22/202021 minutes, 51 seconds
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The tightrope of trade with China

Our biggest export market is changing post-Covid - and trading with China has always been a tightrope. What does New Zealand have to watch out for? 
7/21/202022 minutes, 54 seconds
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The high risk project pulling a town out of poverty

Sharon Brettkelly heads to the Bay of Plenty where a tiny iwi has managed to galvanise a community behind a high-risk aquaculture project - and is reaping the rewards. 
7/20/202023 minutes, 41 seconds
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Inside Oranga Tamariki - is it an organisation unravelling?

Half of them are leaving or they want to leave .... investigative reporter Mel Reid talks about the extraordinary feedback she's received from social workers to her stories on Oranga Tamariki.
7/19/202023 minutes, 21 seconds
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Stoat breakthrough could be the key to eradication

New Zealand scientist Dr Andrew Veale has mapped the stoat genome - a global breakthrough which may hold the key to eradicating the pest.
7/16/202021 minutes, 18 seconds
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The many sides of Judith Collins

She's tough, she's abrasive, and her political history is less than squeaky clean - but can Judith Collins rescue the National Party from a humiliating election defeat? 
7/15/202023 minutes, 39 seconds
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The fierce battle over Himalayan Tahr

The rules over the culling and hunting of Himalayan Tahr are causing consternation for both hunters and environmentalists.
7/14/202020 minutes, 45 seconds
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Borrowing to pay wages - St John ambulance needs treatment

St John Ambulance is paying wages on borrowed money - and that can't keep happening. Why don't we have a fully funded emergency service? 
7/13/202021 minutes, 47 seconds
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Two cultures, bonded over a shipwreck

This is a story about a Chinese shipwreck, the Māori guardians of the bones, and the documentary maker who's upset two cultures with his efforts to tell the tale. 
7/12/202022 minutes, 6 seconds
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The yellow sticker crunch - Wellington's earthquake strengthening problem

Making Wellington earthquake resilient involves billions of dollars, a tonne of anxiety and homeowners who've had it up to here with the yellow sticker nightmare.
7/9/202023 minutes, 56 seconds
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Our gutted music industry

New Zealand's music scene is starting to open up again, but without international acts, it's a limp back to normal. 
7/8/202022 minutes, 22 seconds
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Re-thinking society's attitude towards methamphetamine

Methamphetamine - or P - has been demonised as the destructive drug associated with violent crime. But that shameful label could be stopping addicts from seeking help. 
7/7/202022 minutes, 17 seconds
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How Covid has changed our spending habits

Our economy's taking a hit, our wallets are thinner - and this pandemic has also changed our direction of travel when it comes to spending. 
7/6/202022 minutes, 21 seconds
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Pornography awareness ad reaches millions around the world

A New Zealand-made ad featuring porn stars that encourages parents to talk to their children about what they're seeing on line has gone viral - and sparked a world-wide conversation. 
7/5/202022 minutes, 41 seconds
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Is NZ the best place in the world for women to play sport?

Three women's world cups to be played in New Zealand over the next three years - but how well does this country really do when it comes to equity in sport? 
7/2/202021 minutes, 45 seconds
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Schools stripped of international cash going back to basics

The Finance Minister says international students aren't coming back to NZ any time soon. How will schools that have come to rely on the money they bring in now going to cut their cloth to fit?
7/1/202022 minutes, 57 seconds
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From lockdown to recovery - tracking a small business during Covid

The Detail tracks a Christchurch small business owner from the shock of lockdown to re-opening and recovery.
6/30/202022 minutes, 36 seconds
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Clearing the streets of rough sleepers

Lockdown temporarily eliminated rough sleeping in New Zealand - but what's the long-term solution?
6/29/202021 minutes, 50 seconds
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What first time voters want to know

Elections are just around the corner - here's what you want to know but have been too embarrassed to ask.
6/28/202021 minutes, 33 seconds
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Our prison remand crisis

Remand prisoners are kept in a waiting room for danger - and they make up more than a third of the prison population. How did this situation turn into a crisis? 
6/25/202023 minutes, 19 seconds
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Max Abbott and more - sexual harassment at a top university

Much-lauded mental health expert Dr Max Abbott has resigned after being outed for sexual harassment. But his case is just the tip of what's going on. 
6/24/202023 minutes
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The minor parties - their place in our political arena

What's the point in voting for a party that is never going to take a seat in Parliament? Well, there are plenty of reasons, say our guests today. 
6/23/202021 minutes, 56 seconds
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Are Rocket Lab's enterprises in our national interest?

It's one of our most successful companies - but how much do we know about what Rocket Lab is carrying into outer space, and who it's carrying it for? 
6/22/202021 minutes, 12 seconds
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Using infrastructure to boost the economy

Infrastructure is such a boring word - but what's happening now to boost our economy through shovel-ready projects will change our quality of life. 
6/21/202023 minutes, 20 seconds
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Tackling New Zealand rugby's financial woes

Advertising deals down the drain, ticket sales from international games gone - why New Zealand rugby is in a fraught space financially. 
6/18/202022 minutes, 58 seconds
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Re-building our health system

The new Health and Disability Review is said to be the biggest shake up of the health system in a generation - so what was wrong with it in the first place? 
6/17/202022 minutes, 52 seconds
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Tearing down statues - and revisiting our histories

The statues are being torn down, and history re-written. Are we destroying the past, or correcting the record? 
6/16/202023 minutes, 52 seconds
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Trapped migrant workers - NZ's new underclass

New Zealand is developing a new underclass of desperate people - migrants who no longer have any work and can't get home; and temporary visa holders trapped outside the borders when they snapped shut. 
6/15/202022 minutes, 54 seconds
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What happened while you were sleeping in?

The world didn't completely stop while we were in lockdown. Here's a summary of what else happened while we were tuned to the 1pm Ashley and Jacinda show. 
6/14/202022 minutes, 45 seconds
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Why is it taking so long to install fishing cameras?

Cameras on fishing boats have been promised for years, and were due to roll out on 1000 vessels on 1 July - now they've been quietly put on ice, again. 
6/11/202024 minutes, 59 seconds
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Why Armed Response Teams struck the wrong note in NZ

Armed Response Teams are dead in the water, with the new police commissioner reading the room when it comes to arming Kiwi cops. 
6/10/202021 minutes, 54 seconds
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NZ's new internet laws - sensible censorship?

The World Wide Web is an international phenomenon with few rules, and no one stepping up as global sheriff. Can New Zealand's new internet legislation have an impact on its worst excesses without over-censorship? 
6/9/202020 minutes, 50 seconds
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The future of film in New Zealand

New Zealand's about ready to go back to the movies. Trouble is, what movies? And is this worldwide pandemic a chance to up our game in the industry? 
6/8/202023 minutes, 16 seconds
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Why superannuation is political kryptonite

The Super dilemma - how can New Zealand afford the weight of future pensions without raising the superannuation age? 
6/7/202022 minutes, 55 seconds
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An insight into George Floyd's world

An African-American pastor from George Floyd's community gives The Detail a special insight into what's happening there - and gives us hope for the future. 
6/4/202024 minutes, 9 seconds
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Why is Transmission Gully such a troubled project?

Why is it so hard to build a coastal bypass road north of Wellington? Transmission Gully has been in the planning stages for over a century - and it's hit more hiccups.
6/3/202020 minutes, 12 seconds
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The big Kiwi company hanging on to pandemic refunds

A company many consider a national icon is refusing to refund hundreds of millions of dollars in customer cash. Why is Air New Zealand holding on to airfares for cancelled trips?
6/2/202021 minutes, 22 seconds
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The health of our coastal waters is in peril

Efforts to protect our coastal waters from further degradation are piecemeal, slow and amount to a drop in an ocean of problems. How do we bring life back to the sea? 
6/1/202019 minutes, 37 seconds
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Battling lockdown fatigue

The Detail catches up with Sharon Brettkelly's sister and her family, still - after three months - in lockdown in California. So much has happened, and nothing has happened. 
5/31/202022 minutes, 1 second
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Changing our lives in a post-Covid world

How can New Zealand hang on to the silver linings of lockdown? The quiet, the lack of air pollution, the family bike rides, working from home, the kinder politics. Or will we quickly return to normal? 
5/28/202023 minutes, 25 seconds
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Women on boards - why NZ needs a kick

New Zealand is not as egalitarian as it likes to think it is when it comes to the boardroom. One of our top directors explains why we should introduce quotas for women; and an expert on the issue tells us why we shouldn't.  
5/27/202018 minutes, 41 seconds
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Tip-toeing around China

Aggressively expanding, and sensitive to diplomatic slights, China is making sure a good crisis is not going to waste.
5/26/202023 minutes, 20 seconds
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Mixed messages and confusion - travel after Covid

With many nations' borders still closed, global tourism is going to be slow to crank up. Who is leading the way and what are countries doing to entice back visitors? 
5/25/202023 minutes, 45 seconds
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What's up with Wellington?

Wellington is dealing with failing infrastructure and pandemic problems at a time when councillors are sniping at each other and the new mayor is losing his political battles. 
5/24/202020 minutes, 18 seconds
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Our contact tracing app - how effective will it be?

The government's finally introduced a contact tracing app, but questions remain over its effectiveness, how transparent the process has been, and inconsistencies involved.
5/21/202023 minutes, 23 seconds
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Why conspiracy theories thrive in times of crisis

Attacks on 5G cellphone towers around the world are based on rumours and theories that just aren't true. Why has this pandemic spawned so many widely-believed conspiracies? 
5/20/202022 minutes, 53 seconds
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Could a free-money-for-all scheme catch on here?

Pope Francis, Mark Zuckerberg, Bishop Desmond Tutu and Gareth Morgan all want it - a Universal Basic Income. What is it, and how would it work?
5/19/202023 minutes, 14 seconds
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The race for a Covid-19 vaccine

A couple of months ago people were predicting a vaccine for Covid-19 by April. Clearly that was never going to happen - and here's why. 
5/18/202022 minutes, 22 seconds
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Queenstown - pretty, empty

A look at Queenstown’s economic coronavirus bloodbath - and what it will take to recover. 
5/17/202023 minutes, 37 seconds
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Tauranga - the downsides of a population explosion

Tauranga is one of the fastest growing areas of New Zealand but with that is growing gang war and a massive rates hike.
3/26/202021 minutes, 21 seconds
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How a young white supremacist did a radical u-turn

Caleb Cain got lost in an internet world of white supremacism. What happened to get him to make such a radical u-turn that he's now preaching from the other side of the page? 
3/25/202021 minutes, 6 seconds
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The future of flying looks grim

Tourism and travel are in free fall. Our biggest export earner is dead. Will the industry ever fully recover? 
3/24/202018 minutes, 44 seconds
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Technology and the big shift to working from home

Just about anyone who's still working, is working from home. We look at the social and technical issues behind the big shift to your new "office". 
3/23/202022 minutes, 44 seconds
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The weekend warriors hit by heavy-handed doping laws

Is New Zealand's sporting watchdog being too heavy-handed in banning weekend warriors who take substances for vanity reasons? 
3/22/202020 minutes, 8 seconds
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China and Covid-19 - rewriting the facts

Have China's draconian powers of government enabled it to kick Covid-19 to the kerb? And can we believe the figures on the virus coming out of the country? 
3/19/202022 minutes, 38 seconds
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What happens to a family stuck together in quarantine?

Like millions in the Bay Area of California, Sharon Brettkelly’s sister and her family are in virtual lockdown. We Skype them to discover how they found themselves stuck in the house, and how they’re coping. 
3/18/202020 minutes, 22 seconds
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Keeping anxiety in check amidst uncertainty

How do you manage your anxiety in a time of uncertainty like now? And when does concern turn into irrational fear? 
3/17/202020 minutes, 54 seconds
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Is COVID-19 the iceberg that will sink the cruise ship industry?

Ships banned, quarantined, and shunned by the bug-phobic - is the coronavirus the iceberg that will sink the cruise industry? 
3/16/202022 minutes, 42 seconds
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Curiosity is killing the kea

Hugely intelligent, insatiably curious, kea are more endangered than kiwi - and their bold antics are partly why the alpine parrot's population is shrinking. 
3/15/202019 minutes, 49 seconds
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Kyle Jamieson goes into bat for mental health

Kyle Jamieson is the cricketer of the moment - he's in Sydney today for the first of the ODI's against Australia - but he's also been frank about his battles with mental health. 
3/12/202023 minutes, 17 seconds
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New Zealand's battle against wildlife smuggling

The country's first case of smuggled bear bile has gone through the courts - but it's far from the only example of trading in endangered wildlife New Zealand authorities are dealing with. 
3/11/202022 minutes, 31 seconds
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Did the millions raised for mosque victims actually get to them?

Millions of dollars from around the world were poured into funds for the victims of the March 15 mosque attacks - where has it ended up?
3/10/202023 minutes, 11 seconds
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What is the circular economy?

The concept of the circular economy has been around for many years, but this sustainable way of doing business is getting a boost from a new breed of environmentally aware consumers. 
3/9/202019 minutes, 22 seconds
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The gaming feature encouraging kids to gamble

Loot Boxes are the video version of bubble gum cards - you buy them while gaming, without knowing what prize you're going to get. But critics say they're opening a door for children to gamble. 
3/8/202022 minutes, 21 seconds
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The murky, confusing world of US political races

The US Democratic primary races are incomprehensible to most of us - so why are they so gripping? 
3/5/202019 minutes, 26 seconds
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Coronavirus and "moral panic"

The number of coronavirus deaths rank lowly compared to other big killers - so why did the first case of the illness in New Zealand cause panic? And why is it being called a 'moral panic'. 
3/4/202022 minutes, 43 seconds
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Where the big dry really hurts

Aucklanders can still turn on their taps during the drought but outside of the city supply, the north is counting every drop of water. 
3/3/202023 minutes, 2 seconds
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Is cancel culture repressing freedom of thought?

Is Peter Singer one of the world's most influential philosophers, or an intellectual pariah? 
3/2/202022 minutes, 28 seconds
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How vulnerable is NZ to extreme right populism?

Europe is seeing a rapid rise of extremist parties in government - in countries with similar political systems as ours. Why isn't that happening here? Or is it?
3/1/202022 minutes, 32 seconds
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Should we be expecting more from the SFO?

The Serious Fraud Office is once again investigating a headline-producing case. But is it prosecuting the right crimes - or just the ones it knows it will win? 
2/27/202021 minutes, 19 seconds
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Coronavirus - floods of information in a misinfodemic

The global health emergency that is the Coronavirus - or Covid-19 - has become a game changer for scientists around the world in terms of the speed of the response. But at the same time it's been termed a "misinfodemic". 
2/26/202023 minutes, 10 seconds
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The Millane murder case and its media storm

The murder case that sparked intense media interest here and around the world was actually not that hard to solve. Why did Grace Millane's death in particular spend so much time in the spotlight?
2/25/202022 minutes, 7 seconds
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Setting aside the Moriori myth

This month's Treaty settlement with Moriori does more than right wrongs - it sets the official record straight. 
2/24/202022 minutes, 1 second
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The city that soaks up water - can Auckland cope?

Aucklanders are breaking records for water usage - at the same time as the city breaks records for days without rain. How secure is the city's future water supply if these droughts continue?
2/23/202020 minutes, 27 seconds
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When we go to Mars

The prospect of humans landing on the Red Planet is possibly a step closer with the US President's State of the Nation speech in which he promises we will be going there.
2/20/202021 minutes, 11 seconds
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The secret deal that's causing a big stink in Mataura

The 10,000 tonnes of toxic waste causing anger and anxiety in Mataura - and the secret deal that saw it dumped there.
2/19/202020 minutes, 25 seconds
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Inside Immigration New Zealand

Sharon Brettkelly gets a rare look inside Immigration New Zealand as staff deal with increasing cases of fraud, and political clouds on the horizon. 
2/18/202023 minutes
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Kiwi immigrants on picking up their culture, generations on

The most common surname for babies born in New Zealand last year was Singh - evidence of new generations of immigrants. How are those children living a kiwi life without losing their own cultures? 
2/17/202017 minutes, 44 seconds
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Our gigantic e-waste problem

New Zealand produces some 80,000 tonnes of electronic waste every year - but we recycle less than two percent of it.
2/16/202020 minutes, 31 seconds
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The problem with the global game of rugby

South Africa's desire to leave the Southern Hemisphere competition reflects the problem with global rugby - the world is too big, and there's too much money in it. 
2/13/202022 minutes, 23 seconds
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Adesanya - on a hiding to nothing at the Halbergs?

The most googled person in New Zealand last year is up for a Halberg Award today - what do you know about Israel Adesanya, or his bloody and controversial sport? 
2/12/202020 minutes, 45 seconds
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A rapid escalation - NZ First's donations issue

The New Zealand First Party political donations furore has escalated quickly into the hands of the Serious Fraud Office.
2/11/202020 minutes, 15 seconds
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Another generation of unsustainable housing

New Zealand is building a new generation of unsustainable housing - tens of thousands of homes that will put out carbon emissions five times higher than levels set by the Paris agreement.
2/10/202021 minutes, 13 seconds
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Are we seeing a Te Reo Māori revival?

The aim of having one million New Zealanders speak basic te reo by 2040 might not be as impossible as it seems.
2/9/202022 minutes, 9 seconds
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What happened in Wuhan, the coronavirus ground zero?

How did an animal virus find such a deadly home in humans ... and what is life in coronavirus lockdown like? 
2/6/202022 minutes, 15 seconds
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Waitangi Museum tells the stories of a nation's birth

The Detail takes a guided tour of the Waitangi Museum, which houses a host of stories about the people who built Aotearoa.
2/5/202023 minutes, 50 seconds
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Brexit and you

Brexit has happened - and will be followed by 11 months of nothing really changing. What's next? And how will it impact on New Zealand? 
2/4/202022 minutes, 49 seconds
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Born into riches - the staggering extent of the Royal purse

Harry and Meghan might be Rexiting but there's no chance they'll be struggling to survive - thanks to generous pocket money from dad via the British taxpayer. Just how rich are the Royals? 
2/3/202022 minutes, 22 seconds
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Bringing down our horrific road toll

Road safety campaigners hope the drop in road toll deaths last year is the start of a turning point - but say the government needs to spend about twice as much as it's spending now on saving lives.
2/2/202025 minutes, 4 seconds
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Our Top 10 of The Detail this year

For our last podcast of 2019, we've chosen our Top 10 episodes and talk about why they made an impact
12/19/201921 minutes, 40 seconds
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How attempted censorship by Trump troops backfired

Author Rick Reilly has found himself the target of library activists who are hiding his book about how Donald Trump cheats at golf. But their censorship efforts have backfired. 
12/18/201924 minutes, 10 seconds
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Where in the world is our defence force?

Our Defence Force may be small but our troops are spread all over the world, sometimes in conflict zones that have left the headlines, and some places that are unexpected. 
12/17/201920 minutes, 11 seconds
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The big stars at Auckland's tiny tennis tournament

Auckland's ASB Classic is a minnow of tennis tournaments - so how does director Karl Budge lure some of the biggest names in the business to the end of the earth? 
12/16/201921 minutes, 58 seconds
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How to argue with your climate denier relatives this Christmas

Food, festivity ... and arguments with Uncle Trevor the climate change denier. Here's how to argue back this Christmas.
12/15/201920 minutes, 26 seconds
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The beauty and the menace of Whakaari

When news of Monday's explosion on Whakaari/White Island broke on Monday, The Detail's Sharon Brettkelly called home. 
12/12/201919 minutes, 41 seconds
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Where do editorial cartoonists draw the line?

Editorial cartoonists are treading a fine line when it comes to social commentary - as the Otago Daily Times discovered recently. Have times changed so much that cartoonists are now shackled? 
12/11/201921 minutes, 24 seconds
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Plastic poison - where do we start in cleaning it up?

Laced with toxic additives and finding its way into the food system - cleaning up the plastic problem is bigger than you think, but that doesn't mean we need to get rid of it all.   
12/10/201922 minutes, 6 seconds
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Bougainville hoping to swap a troubled past for future peace

The referendum results will be in before Christmas - will the beautiful island of Bougainville, with a violent and destructive past, is heading toward independence. 
12/9/201922 minutes, 17 seconds
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When Aotearoa heats up from below

When should we start getting worried when our volcanic fields start heating up - and which parts of Aotearoa are most vulnerable when it comes to an eruption?
12/8/201922 minutes, 12 seconds
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Does our explosion in imported shopping events have an expiry date?

New Zealand's seen an explosion of imported online shopping events - but are we pushing this retail trend too far? 
12/5/201921 minutes, 17 seconds
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The movie that takes a big Kiwi victory out of the picture

The Hollywood blockbuster Ford v Ferrari is "based on a true story" about the 1966 Le Mans 24 hour race - which was won by two Kiwis. But our sporting heroes have been scrubbed out of this version. 
12/4/201921 minutes, 33 seconds
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Why Samoa is being devastated by measles

Samoa's measles epidemic is exacting an horrific toll. Hospitals are overrun, health staff are exhausted, public gatherings have ceased, and the death toll continues to climb. 
12/3/201922 minutes, 56 seconds
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The different fates of Christchurch's Catholic and Anglican cathedrals

Both of Christchurch's big cathedrals were destroyed in the earthquakes. Their fates have been very different, and only one will rise again. 
12/2/201918 minutes, 33 seconds
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Christchurch has rebuilt - now it needs people

It's more than eight years since the earthquakes saw Christchurch crumble. Forty billion dollars has been poured into  rebuilding - but what's missing now, is people. 
12/1/201921 minutes, 2 seconds
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A Coroner's life of death

"The case has been sent to the Coroner ..." but what happens next? The country's Chief Coroner tells us, it's not like on TV. 
11/28/201920 minutes, 43 seconds
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What does the new sexual violence law hope to achieve?

Defence lawyers say a new sexual violence law will mean defendants won't get a fair trial. Why is this change being introduced and what does it hope to achieve? 
11/27/201921 minutes, 22 seconds
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Erebus and the aftermath - the fallout continues

Two years ago Stuff journalist Michael Wright started thinking about marking the 40th anniversary of the Erebus tragedy. The result is the six-part podcast White Silence, exploring the extraordinary events after the crash. 
11/26/201921 minutes, 38 seconds
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The confusing picture of television services in NZ

The TV landscape has changed beyond recognition - but there's a confusing picture over where your screen entertainment will be coming from in the future. 
11/25/201922 minutes, 7 seconds
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Shooting the messenger - when journalists raise drugs in sport

When an Irish journalist raised the possibility of a drug culture in South African rugby he was attacked by fans for wrecking a good news story. But reporters who raise this subject are usually right. 
11/24/201920 minutes, 44 seconds
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Our leaky buildings saga is a long way from sorted

The leaky buildings crisis was big in the 90s. We barely hear about it anymore, but the problem is actually growing - and leaky homes are still being constructed. 
11/21/201920 minutes, 28 seconds
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Will a new suicide plan bring down the numbers?

A former coroner is at the helm of the new Suicide Prevention Office - and she is talking openly about suicide. But is there a better plan in place to get our shocking figures down? 
11/20/201920 minutes, 29 seconds
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The battle over Ōwairaka is about more than trees

Protestors in Auckland are in a standoff with the Tūpuna Maunga Authority over the planned chopping of trees on Ōwairaka - but this is a dispute that goes beyond wildlife. 
11/19/201922 minutes, 31 seconds
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Why councils are asking for a fireworks ban

Nearly two weeks after fireworks is over we're still hearing them go off in the early hours of the morning. This year fireworks fires caused huge damage including on two Auckland maunga. Is it time to say goodbye to crackers?
11/18/201921 minutes, 30 seconds
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The tragic results of NZDF's failure to clean up after Bamyan

Stuff Circuit reporters Paula Penfold and Eugene Bingham on how they uncovered the deaths of seven children as a result of New Zealand's failure to clear explosive remnants from its former firing range in Afghanistan.
11/17/201925 minutes, 20 seconds
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The anger behind the OK Boomer viral meme

Chloe Swarbrick's 'OK Boomer' aside went viral, but there's a serious message to the older generation from millennials - we are sick of what you're doing to us, and to the planet. 
11/14/201921 minutes, 34 seconds
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Police Māori strategy a re-turning of the tide

The timing of the launch of the new Māori policing strategy - which has the same name of one launched seven years ago that achieved nothing - has raised eyebrows.
11/13/201918 minutes, 52 seconds
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How spitting into a tube can change your life

It's getting harder to keep secrets in our society - especially when a bit of saliva in a tube can reveal through DNA that your world is not what you thought it was. 
11/12/201922 minutes, 51 seconds
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Three years in, how realistic is our Predator-Free 2050 goal?

All over the country New Zealanders are making efforts towards the country's Predator-Free 2050 goal. We meet a couple bringing back kiwi through their trapping. 
11/11/201921 minutes, 52 seconds
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Questions over armed police patrols

Armed patrols in Auckland, Waikato and Canterbury are a fundamental change in policing - but is there any evidence they will help keep anyone safe? 
11/10/201919 minutes, 46 seconds
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Abuse inquiry just scratches the surface

The first two weeks of New Zealand's biggest ever inquiry - into abuse in state and faith-based care - finishes today. It's been revealing, shocking, and heartbreaking - and it's just scratched the surface. 
11/7/201922 minutes, 6 seconds
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Is Auckland's light rail plan off track?

The machinations over getting Auckland's light rail plan off the grounds are complex and twisting - could the whole plan fall off the tracks? 
11/6/201922 minutes, 2 seconds
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Is the Provincial Growth Fund making a difference?

Is the much-maligned Provincial Growth Fund making a difference in the regions? 
11/5/201920 minutes, 32 seconds
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Hope is fading for the Kiwi nurse missing in Syria

The Islamic State leader thought to have been holding Louisa Akavi hostage has been killed - but there is no sign of the Kiwi nurse. Hope is fading. 
11/4/201923 minutes, 20 seconds
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Understanding autism

There's growing understanding of what it means to be autistic, with famous faces talking openly about it and supermarkets like Countdown having a quiet hour. 
11/3/201921 minutes, 13 seconds
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The Tiwai Point aluminium smelter bluff

How real is the threat to close the Tiwai Point aluminium smelter, with the loss of 1000 jobs? 
10/31/201921 minutes, 8 seconds
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Funding two bodies to produce the same weather forecast

Why do two separate, government-funded bodies spend taxpayer money producing similar weather forecasts? 
10/30/201922 minutes, 40 seconds
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NZ in a flutter over Bird of the Year

Rigged voting, furious social media attacks - New Zealand's Bird of the Year competition brings out the claws. But this fun election has a serious message, and is helping to raise awareness about endangered species. 
10/29/201920 minutes, 58 seconds
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The festival organisers who now have to plan for disaster

Organisers of New Zealand's big cultural festivals have another item on their list of things to do - after March 15, security has become a major factor. 
10/28/201918 minutes, 56 seconds
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Wiring up an orchestra

How do RNZ engineers wire up an orchestra ready for radio play? With a lot of microphones, for a start.  
10/27/201921 minutes, 56 seconds
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Salvaging the SkyCity convention centre

It's taken days to put the SkyCity International Convention Centre fire out - but the salvage and repair job will take much, much longer.
10/24/201919 minutes, 31 seconds
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Where is NZ First heading next?

He's sucked up all NZ First's oxygen for decades - but Winston Peters admits he's not immortal. What does the party's future look like? 
10/23/201921 minutes, 22 seconds
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NZ's low unemployment rate is hiding huge inequity

New Zealand's low unemployment rate hides the fact that over half the people on a benefit are disabled or have health conditions, or are caring for someone in that situation. 
10/22/201919 minutes, 33 seconds
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Andy Foster is not just a Peter Jackson puppet

Wellington's Mayor-elect, whose majority is hanging by a thread, didn't just (probably) get there because he was partly bankrolled by Sir Peter Jackson. 
10/21/201922 minutes, 10 seconds
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Construction sector more confident than surveys reveal

Business confidence is trending down, but we're in the middle of a massive building boom. Are the surveys giving us the real picture on life in construction? 
10/20/201921 minutes, 14 seconds
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Impeachment moves against a president not above the law

People have been talking about impeaching Donald Trump virtually since he took the Presidential oath. What is different this time? 
10/17/201922 minutes, 37 seconds
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Whenuapai developer trumped by ministerial over-ride

The Defence Minister has intervened in a case with a property developer to allow the Whenuapai Air Base to continue engine testing, in spite of it exceeding noise limits. How did it come to this? 
10/16/201919 minutes, 27 seconds
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The drug testing dilemma - how we are getting around it

Drug testing volunteers who set up at festivals and events are treading a legal grey area, held up by politicians with morals. 
10/15/201921 minutes, 42 seconds
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Believe the hype - Japan has adopted rugby

Should we believe the Rugby World Cup's claims that the sport has taken over Japan? 
10/14/201922 minutes, 39 seconds
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Stats NZ mines your cellphone data - should you be worried?

Stats NZ has upped the ante when it comes to data collection - should we be worried? 
10/13/201920 minutes, 51 seconds
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Is it time for New Zealand to push through anti-slavery laws?

Is it time for New Zealand to enact laws covering modern day slavery? 
10/10/201921 minutes, 34 seconds
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The shocking story of what happens to refugees in Italy

The shocking story of what happens when refugees land in Italy, and the connection with your spaghetti Bolognese. 
10/9/201920 minutes, 59 seconds
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When fear dictates policy

A refugee policy that appears to have been based simply on fear has been reversed. 
10/8/201921 minutes, 27 seconds
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Excluded from an inclusion conference

The Power of Inclusion conference in Auckland was supposed to be an affirming event for a new generation - instead, young artists told organisers why they felt left out. 
10/7/201919 minutes, 57 seconds
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Forestry companies buying vast amounts of New Zealand's land

Journalist, Kate Newton breaks down her investigation into land ownership in Aotearoa.
10/6/201922 minutes, 41 seconds
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How New Zealand is adjusting to its ageing population

Is New Zealand keeping up with its ageing population; as the population grows older, how will we provide for them?
10/3/201922 minutes, 8 seconds
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Australia looking to sting back in battle over mānuka honey

Australian beekeepers are staking their claim over products branded as mānuka honey.
10/2/201922 minutes, 36 seconds
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Is workplace bullying on the rise - or just no longer acceptable?

Is workplace bullying on the rise - or have we finally realised that it's not acceptable? 
10/1/201923 minutes, 14 seconds
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The story behind the sex abuser at the sexual abuse inquiry

The story behind the discovery that a sex offender was attending meetings of survivors of sexual abuse. 
9/30/201923 minutes, 19 seconds
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The pardoning of Rua Kēnana - pacifist and prophet

Prophet and pacifist Rua Kēnana is to be pardoned - who was he, and how is this related to the government's announcement on teaching New Zealand history in schools? 
9/29/201920 minutes, 15 seconds
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Why global trade disruption is worrying our wine industry

Our $1.83 billion wine industry is being caught up in global trade wars that insiders describe as 'fundamentally concerning'. 
9/26/201921 minutes, 13 seconds
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Farmers down in the dumps - and dragging down the country

Rural confidence is at its lowest point in three years, with farmers saying they're under siege from all sides. 
9/25/201922 minutes, 58 seconds
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E-scooters - should we ban them or embrace them?

E-scooters have hit New Zealand's cities with a bang - often literally. Are they good news or bad news? And are they here to stay? 
9/24/201921 minutes, 53 seconds
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Sudden ditching of Te Papa North plan stuns Auckland

Years of planning for an Auckland arm of our national museum that would showcase much of the country's Māori and Pacific taonga have been dashed, in a decision that's stunned those behind it. 
9/23/201920 minutes, 48 seconds
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Changing names without changing places

People get fired up when it's suggested the name of their town is changed - so what's involved in re-naming a place? 
9/22/201922 minutes, 5 seconds
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New Zealand's rampant meth culture

New Zealand's demand for meth is rampant - and organised crime gangs are stepping up their efforts to get it into the country.
9/19/201921 minutes, 39 seconds
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Sophie Pascoe is the Michael Phelps of paralympians

Paralympic swimmer Sophie Pascoe is so good, the only person she has to beat is herself. 
9/18/201922 minutes, 3 seconds
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The gender equity report that shocked a bank

Westpac NZ, a bank proud of its equity record, has revealed shocking figures on its own gender pay gap. It's front-footing the issue but says it can't change things on its own. 
9/17/201922 minutes, 10 seconds
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What's behind south Auckland's recent crime spike?

What's going on in south Auckland that once again has its suburbs on the wrong side of news headlines? 
9/16/201920 minutes
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Pacific teams the have-nots of world rugby

They have all the flair in the world, look like they're having fun, and their fans are the most fervent - but in spite of being neighbours to the All Blacks, the Pacific teams are the have-nots of the Rugby World Cup. 
9/15/201920 minutes
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Taika Waititi is the toast of Toronto

Taika Waititi has been the talk of the Toronto International Film Festival for his film Jojo Rabbit - a controversial passion project that's being both lauded and slated.  
9/12/201921 minutes
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Labour's badly bungled sexual assault investigation

A look at the handling - or mis-handling - of sexual assault allegations within the Labour Party. 
9/11/201923 minutes, 51 seconds
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Why is Japan still slaughtering whales?

Japan has returned to commercial whaling for the first time in 30 years - but it's sticking to its own territorial waters. Is this why the world's gone quiet over it? 
9/10/201920 minutes, 26 seconds
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Eco-flying is far, far away

With 4.5 billion air passengers last year, and that number set to double in less than 20 years, how on earth are airlines going to help save the planet?
9/9/201922 minutes, 14 seconds
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Is post-truth politics creeping into New Zealand?

We've seen 'post-truth' politics flourish in the US and Britain - are New Zealand politicians also starting to adopt the tactic of 'alternative facts'?
9/8/201921 minutes, 34 seconds
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Getting rich from lending to the poor

How the government plans to crack down on people who are getting rich from lending to the poor. 
9/5/201919 minutes, 35 seconds
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Fighting over Kashmir

Kashmir is a region of snow capped mountains and idyllic landscapes - as well as barbed wire and army round-ups. Tension has risen again as India moves in on the nation's autonomy.  
9/4/201920 minutes, 19 seconds
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The silent health problems that cripple women

Tens of thousands of girls and women have to put up with chronic pain for years - because their issues are played down or deemed non-urgent.
9/3/201921 minutes, 34 seconds
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How exposed is New Zealand politics to foreign influence?

Can rich foreigners buy political influence in New Zealand? And are our rules over donations to political parties too easy to get around? 
9/2/201923 minutes, 28 seconds
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Swamp kauri plunder a tale of misadventure

The boom times for the controversial swamp kauri trade appear to be declining - just as a Northland environmental group wins a David and Goliath battle to stop the region being pillaged. 
9/1/201922 minutes, 57 seconds
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When tourist spots are so hot the residents get burnt

Imagine a bunch of tourists walking into your house uninvited. It's not unusual for the residents of Dunedin's Baldwin St, one of many overcrowded attractions in New Zealand and around the world. 
8/29/201922 minutes, 4 seconds
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Experiments with LSD

An Auckland scientist is planning a world-first study into the effects of micro-dosing a drug that entered notoriety in the 1970s - LSD.
8/28/201921 minutes, 10 seconds
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Local body boredom - why every council election is a fizzer

Local body candidate billboards are everywhere right now, but they don't necessarily translate into awareness. Why do so few people vote in an election that affects everyone? 
8/27/201921 minutes, 9 seconds
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Anti-environmental policies blamed for Amazon fires

There has been an 80 percent increase in fires in Brazil's Amazon jungle in the last year and president Jair Bolsonaro is being blamed.
8/26/201920 minutes, 15 seconds
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Is it time to re-visit our GE rules?

Are our genetic engineering rules keeping New Zealand safe - or holding us back? 
8/25/201921 minutes, 51 seconds
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We are forgetting the Holocaust

It used to be a prevalent part of history - six million Jewish people were killed in World War II's holocaust. But new polls show we are forgetting the facts. 
8/22/201920 minutes, 10 seconds
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Cracking open the secretive petrol retailing industry

High petrol prices in New Zealand is a merry go round of blame - will the Commerce Commission's new report lay open retailers' books and help drive prices down?
8/21/201922 minutes, 35 seconds
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How Big Pharma operates in New Zealand

Heartbreaking stories of cancer sufferers who need expensive and unfunded drugs abound. But some of those stories are helped into the spotlight by the drug companies that will also benefit. 
8/20/201922 minutes, 11 seconds
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The unlikely freedom fighters of Hong Kong

Hong Kong residents would prefer to concentrate on their business activities - but they realise they're losing their freedom to a Chinese government that's not remote enough for them, and they're angry about it.
8/19/201923 minutes, 17 seconds
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Banks behaving badly

Why do banks get away with behaving so badly? There's been a run of activity lately that raises questions about whose side your banker is really on.
8/18/201921 minutes, 5 seconds
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Why getting the census count right was so important

Getting the census right is important, not just for electoral boundaries but for a host of government funding decisions. Why has it been such a disaster this time around? 
8/15/201921 minutes, 11 seconds
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Gene editing scientist was no lone rogue

The Chinese scientist who shook the world by announcing he'd gene edited twin baby girls appears to have unfairly been labelled a rogue - it turns out he had a 60-strong circle of trust. 
8/14/201919 minutes, 58 seconds
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The ABCs of the OCR

Newsroom's Bernard Hickey explains the latest OCR drop, what it means, and predicts its direction a year out. 
8/13/201921 minutes, 58 seconds
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The Pacific's plastic catastrophe

Meet the man who is swimming through the Great Pacific Garbage Patch in an effort to draw the world's attention to the amount of plastic in the ocean.
8/12/201922 minutes, 39 seconds
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Shoots of discontent in the Green Party

The Green Party, in holding up the coalition government, has tasted real power - but some of the party's grass roots members don't like what's being done with it. 
8/11/201922 minutes, 15 seconds
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A golf star in the rough

Lydia Ko, superstar of golf, a few years ago had the world at her feet. Now she's in a slump, and that whole world has seen fit to pile on the criticism. 
8/8/201919 minutes, 8 seconds
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Aussies toughen up on deportees

Australia looks likely to toughen up even further on its deportation of New Zealanders who've committed minor crimes. But once they're "home" - the problems get worse. 
8/7/201921 minutes, 7 seconds
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Discomfort over Commission secrecy

Questions are being raised over the Royal Commission of Inquiry into the Christchurch mosque shootings - is it transparent and inclusive enough? 
8/6/201918 minutes, 47 seconds
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What's the point in trying to save a dying species?

Some of the species conservationists are trying to save seem determined not to survive. So why are we sinking hundreds of millions into trying to rescue them?
8/5/201921 minutes, 44 seconds
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Where Aotearoa lets its kids down

A new $42 million project is looking to address New Zealand's education inequality - a system where Māori are failing, and are "leaving their culture at the gate." 
8/4/201919 minutes, 12 seconds
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Peter Ellis and the Christchurch creche case

Peter Ellis has always vowed he was innocent of the child sex charges he was jailed for in 1993. Now he's dying of cancer - and the Supreme Court has given him leave to appeal his convictions. 
8/1/201919 minutes, 6 seconds
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Getting our heads around Facebook money

Facebook's new currency plans were barely more than a press statement before they came under fire from US lawmakers. Why do people hate the idea, and is it likely to fly? 
7/31/201921 minutes, 20 seconds
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How to sink $4.4 billion underground

The Detail today takes you underground to have a look at progress on New Zealand's first underground rail system. 
7/30/201919 minutes, 48 seconds
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Ihumātao explained

The history of Ihumātao is long, complicated and fraught - and there may not be any way of resolving the issue. 
7/29/201922 minutes, 11 seconds
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Planting a billion trees by 2028

How on earth is New Zealand going to get a billion trees planted by 2028? And why are some farmers campaigning against the scheme? 
7/28/201921 minutes, 2 seconds
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Absence of Instagram 'likes' is a change for good

A seemingly innocuous move by the social media platform Instagram of removing visible 'likes' could help lessen the pressure of those whose social media use is wrecking their mental health. 
7/25/201921 minutes, 54 seconds
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Britain's Trump is now its Prime Minister

Boris Johnson's been described as a mini-Trump and is disliked by his own colleagues - can Britain's new Prime Minister lead the UK out of EU as he promised? 
7/24/201919 minutes, 37 seconds
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Re-balancing history - Cook landing commemorations will be different

Fifty years ago a very British-style ceremony marked the bicentennial of Captain Cook's arrival in Aotearoa. This year for the 250th, Māori have found their voices and will tell their version of events. 
7/23/201922 minutes, 33 seconds
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The woman behind the women who won the World Cup

She took them from netball duds to darlings in 11 months - a look at Noeline Taurua, the out of the box coach behind the victorious Silver Ferns 
7/22/201918 minutes, 49 seconds
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Why we need school leavers to pick up a hammer

The prejudice that encourages kids to go to university at the expense of a career in the trades is harming our economy. 
7/21/201919 minutes, 15 seconds
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Coping with the plastic bag ban

There have been 130 complaints of businesses breaking the law, and supermarket customers now pay for their bin liners - how is the country coping with the plastic bag ban three weeks in? 
7/18/201922 minutes, 6 seconds
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Fifty years after the moon landing, the space race speeds up

Fifty years after the moon landings - during which the space race slowed to a crawl - exploration is speeding up again. 
7/17/201920 minutes, 57 seconds
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The heartbreak behind the immigration backlog

New Zealand wants people coming in to the country to do the work - but we don't want them to stay. 
7/16/201918 minutes, 31 seconds
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Māori plant flag over uplifted children

Māori say their anger over uplifted children is greater than the foreshore and seabed issue, and Oranga Tamariki can not continue this way.
7/15/201918 minutes, 19 seconds
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House prices are down but still out of reach

House prices are dropping, but they're still a long way off from being affordable. 
7/14/201922 minutes, 24 seconds
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The way we watch sport is changing

Have you worked out how you'll be watching the Rugby World Cup this year? Because the way sport is being delivered to our screens is changing. 
7/11/201920 minutes, 25 seconds
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Sean Marks, the influential Kiwi winning at US basketball

Sean Marks is the other New Zealander making big waves in the world's biggest basketball competition, and he's more influential than Steven Adams. 
7/10/201922 minutes, 52 seconds
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What's been stalling the drive to electric cars?

There's a new plan to tax gas guzzlers and give discounts on cleaner cars - but changing over to electric vehicles just isn't that easy. 
7/9/201919 minutes, 23 seconds
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Is it time to declare Matariki a public holiday?

Celebrations of Matariki seem pale in comparison to those for Chinese New Year and Diwali - why? And do we need to have a look at rearranging our public holiday schedule to mark it? 
7/8/201918 minutes, 53 seconds
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How multi-level marketing schemes don't work

MLMs - multi-level marketing schemes - are not illegal, but they often target vulnerable women and very few people make money out of them.
7/7/201923 minutes, 7 seconds
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Why businesses are lining up for the tick

It's a good time to be in the tick certification business in New Zealand - and now there's a new one: the Gender Tick. 
7/4/201920 minutes, 10 seconds
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Do you need to be popular to win an election?

Low personal polling for National Party leader Simon Bridges doesn't necessarily mean that replacing him before the election is a sure thing. 
7/3/201920 minutes, 56 seconds
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Watershed report on Māori health highlights racism

A watershed Waitangi Tribunal report backs claims the system is racist, finding the Crown has breached the Treaty in failing to give Māori control over a primary health system that works for them. 
7/2/201919 minutes, 18 seconds
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Lady in waiting - what's happening to the St James?

There's a piece of New Zealand's most important heritage locked behind hoardings on Auckland's Queen St. The St James Theatre is dying a death of neglect - but those who love the old lady haven't given up. 
7/1/201923 minutes, 45 seconds
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Auckland gears up for the America's Cup

It's now two years after the America's Cup was lifted in Bermuda - and two years before the next event is run in Auckland. How ready is the city?
6/30/201920 minutes, 55 seconds
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How NZ media plan to report the news but block the propaganda

How will New Zealand stop white supremacy ideology being broadcast from the dock when the man accused of the Christchurch mosque shooting is put on trial? 
6/27/201921 minutes, 59 seconds
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Iran - US tensions rising with no solution in sight

Tensions are escalating between Iran and the United States, and there doesn't appear to be an off-ramp. 
6/26/201919 minutes, 49 seconds
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What are the chances of the assisted dying bill passing?

Should desperately ill New Zealanders have the right to choose their own death? And if so, under what circumstances? David Seymour's End of Life Choice bill is back for a second reading today. 
6/25/201922 minutes, 39 seconds
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Sudan: The massacre you missed

Rihanna talked about it and Instagram turned blue - Sudan is the massacre where social media drove awareness more than mainstream media. 
6/24/201919 minutes, 34 seconds
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Paying for online news

The days when all your news was free on the internet are changing. The NZ Herald is now charging for premium content - and there are plenty of people willing to pay for good journalism.
6/23/201921 minutes, 59 seconds
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Has media-hating Trump killed a 90-year-old tradition?

It's more than 100 days since the last White House press briefing. Is this the end of a 90-year-old institution? 
6/20/201922 minutes, 55 seconds
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Who's on clean up duty after the West Coast rubbish washout?

The government has stepped in to clean up the vast West Coast rubbish spill, after local authorities ran out of cash to finish the job. But what's being done to stop it happening elsewhere? 
6/19/201921 minutes, 22 seconds
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Hong Kong protestors win their fight - for now

Hong Kong demonstrators have won their fight to stop a new extradition bill that would have allowed citizens to be tried for their crimes in China. But their mainland neighbour looms large and the battle isn't over.
6/18/201919 minutes, 18 seconds
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How will declaring a climate change emergency help us?

Auckland Council has joined five other New Zealand local bodies to declare a climate change emergency - but is this just lip service being paid in election year? 
6/17/201918 minutes, 55 seconds
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Swapping ciggies for vaping

Is the government swapping one bad habit for another by encouraging smokers to move to vaping, as a way of curing their addiction? 
6/16/201920 minutes, 48 seconds
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The astonishing rise of AOC

New York Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is sweeping through US politics like a hurricane. Her sharp use of social media means you've probably heard of her - so who is she? 
6/13/201920 minutes, 39 seconds
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1080: 'The answer is really clear'

Why does New Zealand use so much of the world's 1080, the controversial poison that environmentalists say we need to use more of, or lose our threatened bird species. 
6/12/201921 minutes, 8 seconds
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NZ's own stolen generation

Newsroom's Melanie Reid has been reporting on children and babies being taken by the state for two years. Now, footage taken by the families involved reveals the brutal reality of what really happens. 
6/11/201920 minutes, 28 seconds
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Should we believe the 5G hype?

5G is coming - what exactly is that, and will it be the revolution telcos would have you believe? 
6/10/201920 minutes, 18 seconds
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The Kim Dotcom saga is finally nearing an end

Kim Dotcom's seven year saga to avoid extradition to the United States for piracy crimes is finally coming to an end.
6/9/201920 minutes, 55 seconds
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Australian whistleblowers under attack through the media

Three police raids on journalists and newsrooms have called into question abuses of Australian law. 
6/6/201923 minutes, 3 seconds
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D-Day anniversary marks the beginning of the end

Popular culture tends to portray D-Day as an American event - but around 10,000 New Zealanders played a part in the landings 75 years ago today that changed the course of World War II.  
6/5/201920 minutes, 11 seconds
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What's happening with Auckland's port?

A giant car park occupies the most expensive real estate in New Zealand on Auckland's waterfront. Can we move the port - and should we?
6/4/201921 minutes, 11 seconds
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Gaming's potential gazillions

A $7.5 million injection into a University of Canterbury game lab is an indication of the staggering numbers the industry returns to the economy. 
6/3/201919 minutes, 29 seconds
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Risk taking and the pay gap

Researchers have revealed links between risk-taking girls and the gender pay gap. 
6/2/201916 minutes, 29 seconds
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What's all the fuss about Huawei?

Chinese tech giant Huawei is at the centre of a technology cold war, and now consumers have been dragged into it.
5/30/201919 minutes, 14 seconds
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What on earth is China's Belt and Road?

The world's super powers are on edge as China's trade policy projects increasingly dot the world map. 
5/29/201919 minutes, 17 seconds
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The evolving month of Kiwi music

With New Zealand radio stations now happy to play around 15 - 20 percent Kiwi artists, is it still necessary to have New Zealand Music Month? 
5/28/201922 minutes, 56 seconds
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The Wellbeing Budget

The world's first 'Wellbeing Budget' will be unveiled on Thursday - what is different about it, and how did it change the ways ministers pitched for money? 
5/27/201920 minutes, 30 seconds
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Can Kiwibuild be rescued?

The government's Kiwibuild scheme has had set back after set back. Can it be rescued? And is it still worthwhile? 
5/26/201916 minutes, 57 seconds
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Drugs and Money

Pharmac attracts a lot of flak for what it doesn't fund in the way of drugs - but it's also the envy of the world for its ability to negotiate down prices. Do we have the balance right? 
5/23/201920 minutes, 44 seconds
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Death in Japan

Two years after a New Zealand man died in a Japanese psychiatric institution, restrained under circumstances unheard of in most other developed countries, his family still has no answers and no resolution.
5/22/201920 minutes, 44 seconds
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Battle at Foulden Maar

Why an Australian resource firm is fighting to mine fossils to produce animal feed.
5/21/201918 minutes, 27 seconds
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No ordinary assignment

Young Muslim RNZ journalist Isra'a Emhail gives a special insight into what it was like covering the Christchurch mosque attacks - and seeing her own community torn apart. 
5/20/201916 minutes, 52 seconds
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It's all about the cow burps

What New Zealand is aiming for with its Zero Carbon Bill, and why our country is unique when it comes to dealing with methane-producing cows. 
5/19/201920 minutes, 24 seconds
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'Bishop' Brian Tamaki - what draws people to his pulpit?

The self-proclaimed Bishop continues to dominate our news cycles. His latest venture, the Man-Up Prison programme drew crowds of thousands outside parliament. 
5/16/201920 minutes, 42 seconds
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How will trade wars between China and the US end?

The two superpowers are facing off in a trade tariff war with dangerous consequences. 
5/15/201916 minutes, 37 seconds
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How would legalising cannabis work in New Zealand?

New Zealanders will soon cast their vote on if cannabis should be legalised. With parts of the US, Canada and Uruguay leading the debate - will we follow suit?
5/14/201917 minutes, 52 seconds
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Calling Christchurch from Paris

On Wednesday Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern will co-chair a meeting of world leaders and tech giants aimed at stopping extremism spreading online. But what will it really achieve? 
5/13/201918 minutes, 5 seconds
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Commander in Cheat

Donald Trump cheats at golf, and lies about his handicap. Why does it matter? Former Sports Illustrated writer Rick Reilly talks about the President he says is as rotten as a year-old banana.
5/12/201913 minutes, 36 seconds
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Smart phones: Why they're wrecking the economy

Smart phones have changed the world - and the global economy. Newsroom Pro's managing editor Bernard Hickey says billions of people are now carrying a deflationary engine in their pocket. 
5/9/201920 minutes, 7 seconds
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Why we're about to see a global pork shortage

African Swine Fever has slid under the radar in the west, but it's about to have a huge impact on pork prices around the world. 
5/8/201914 minutes, 42 seconds
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The Australian election

A beginner's guide to what looks like - from the outside - a chaotic and complicated Australian voting process. 
5/7/201919 minutes, 26 seconds
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Tomorrow's Schools

After 30 years of Tomorrow's Schools, the goverrnment's looking at a shake up that might just take us full circle. 
5/6/201911 minutes, 34 seconds
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Rebranding the Crusaders: The argument for it post-Christchurch terror attacks

After the Christchurch mosque attacks Canterbury rugby bosses have been forced to look at changing the famous franchise's name and branding, but Crusaders fans are dead set against it. Daily podcast The Detail looks at the argument in favour.
5/5/201917 minutes, 27 seconds
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Pike River: Rebecca Macfie on its 'extraordinary story'

In another blow for Pike River mine families, the long-awaited re-entry has been delayed. Daily podcast The Detail speaks to Rebecca Macfie about the incredible events since the deadly explosion.
5/2/201920 minutes, 3 seconds
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The Detail - The anti-vaccination conversation

There's been a resurgence in infectious diseases we thought we'd got rid of. The Detail speaks to a researcher studying who anti-vaxxers are, and how to win them back
5/1/201920 minutes, 30 seconds
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The Detail - Paula Penfold gets personal on abortion law reform

Journalist Paula Penfold tells The Detail why she decided to get personal when it came to abortion law reform.
4/30/201914 minutes, 15 seconds
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The Detail - What makes Sri Lanka's bombings different

The Detail's associate producer Kethaki Masilamani calls home to find out how the Easter Sri Lanka attacks were different to the violence of the past.
4/29/201912 minutes, 14 seconds
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The Detail - Investigating the alt-right

Far right groups have gone underground since the Christchurch attacks, but there's a fear they'll emerge stronger and more sophisticated.
4/28/201913 minutes, 57 seconds
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The Detail - coming soon

The Detail; a daily podcast helping you make sense of the news. Presented by Sharon Brettkelly and Alex Ashton. Debuts Monday April 29.
4/16/20191 minute, 24 seconds