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Saturday Morning with Jack Tame

English, Talk, 1 season, 2368 episodes, 5 days, 11 hours, 19 minutes
About
Jack Tame’s crisp perspective, style and enthusiasm makes for refreshing and entertaining Saturday morning radio on Newstalk ZB. News, sport, books, music, gardens and celebrities – what better way to spend your Saturdays?
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Michael Morpurgo: Author discusses his newest book 'Cobweb'

Michael Morpurgo is a literary treasure.  The author of War Horse and Private Peaceful, he’s written around 150 books, loved particularly among children and young people.  He’s returned with yet another novel, Cobweb following a little dog heading to London in the aftermath of Britain’s triumph at Waterloo.  Morpurgo told Jack Tame that much like many of his stories, Cobweb was inspired by a friend of his who walked 250 miles from the West Coast of Wales to London on a drovers’ road.   Drovers’ roads are the paths farmers would use to bring their livestock from their farms to the market, as back before vehicles and public transport became common, walking was the only way to reach the big cities.   While researching drovers’ roads, Morpurgo realised that their stories, and the stories of drovers’ dogs in particular, aren’t well known.  “And I thought, that's a story that mostly no one knows, so why don't you tell it? Tell that tale? So that's what I did.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/19/202416 minutes, 33 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: Gout and the study finding it's primarily caused by genetics

A painful form of arthritis, gout is the second most common form affecting New Zealanders.   A major international study involving around 2.6 million people, has revealed that genetics are a major cause, not lifestyle choices.   Dr Bryan Betty joined Jack Tame to run through the study, what gout looks like, and how it impacts people.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/19/20246 minutes, 7 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Kimbra - Idols & Vices (Vol. 1)

Kiwi musical icon Kimbra is back with another album.   Idols & Vices (Vol. 1) is a collaborative album, featuring the likes of BANKS, Dawn Richard, DRAM, Skrillex, and Sahtyre, and while Kimbra doesn’t stray too far from her experimental pop sound, there is more R&B and hiphop influences in this work.  Music Reviewer Estelle Clifford joined Jack Tame to give her thoughts on the release.  “It grows on me day by day, this album.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/19/20246 minutes, 22 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Kingmaker and The Valley

Kingmaker: Pamela Harriman's Astonishing Life of Power, Seduction, and Intrigue by Sonia Purnell   When Pamela Churchill Harriman died in 1997, the obituaries that followed were predictably scathing – and many were downright sexist. Written off as a mere courtesan and social climber, her true legacy was overshadowed by a glamorous social life and her infamous erotic adventures. Much of what she did behind the scenes – on both sides of the Atlantic – remained invisible and secret. That is, until now: with a wealth of fresh research, interviews and newly discovered sources, Sonia Purnell unveils for the first time the full, spectacular story of how she left an indelible mark on the world today.  At age 20 Churchill’s beloved daughter-in-law became a “secret weapon” during World War II, strategically wining, dining, and seducing diplomats and generals to help win over American sentiment (and secrets) to the British cause against Hitler. After the war, she helped to transform Fiat heir Gianni Agnelli into Italy’s ‘uncrowned king’ on the international stage and after moving to the US brought a struggling Democratic party back to life, hand-picking Bill Clinton from obscurity and vaulting him to the presidency.  Picked as Ambassador to France, she deployed her legendary subtle powers to charm world leaders and help efforts to bring peace to Bosnia, playing her part in what was arguably the high-water mark of American global supremacy.  There are few at any time who have operated as close to the center of power over five decades and two continents, and there is practically no one in 20th Century politics, culture, and fashion whose lives she did not touch, including the Kennedys, Truman Capote, Aly Khan, Kay Graham, Gloria Steinem, Ed Murrow, and Frank Sinatra. Written with the novelistic richness and investigative rigor that only Sonia Purnell could bring to this story full of sex, politics, yachts, palaces and fabulous clothes, KINGMAKER re-asserts Harriman’s rightful place at the heart of history.  See Less      The Valley by Chris Hammer   Nell Buchanan and Ivan Lucic are back – and Nell is thrown into her most emotionally fraught investigation yet.  A controversial entrepreneur is murdered in a remote mountain valley, but this is no ordinary case. Ivan and Nell are soon contending with cowboy lawyers, conmen, bullion thieves and grave robbers.  But it's when Nell discovers the victim is a close blood relative that the past begins to take on a looming significance.  What did take place in The Valley all those years ago? What was Nell's mother doing there, and what was her connection to troubled young police officer Simmons Burnside? And why do the police hierarchy insist Ivan and Nell stay with the case despite an obvious conflict of interest?    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/19/20245 minutes, 34 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Hill Country Adventures in Sri Lanka

"Savouring Sri Lanka’s Central Highlands is an adventure to relish. Swathed in lush jungle greens, pepper-potted with shapely hills and anchored by a gloriously soothing lake at its heart, the seduction is fast and sweet in the gateway city of Kandy. The very name Kandy conjures visions of splendour and mystique. It’s a city that proudly keeps its legends, traditions and folklore alive." "Another huge highlight was visiting the storied Geragama Tea Factory. Located close to Kandy, this is one of your classic old-school tea factories, specialising in long leaf tea for over 120 years. They do a great job in chronicling the rise of Ceylon Tea and how the nation remains one of the world’s top five tea producers." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/19/20249 minutes, 38 seconds
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Dougal Sutherland: Worrying yourself sick - the impact of stress on physical health

Have you ever been so anxious that your stomach started hurting? In addition to its well-known impacts on mental health, stress can also make people feel physically ill—and a new study could help explain why.   Although it’s fairly common knowledge that the gut “talks” to the brain by releasing hormones into the bloodstream, this recent study showed the relationship going back the other way: from the brain to the gut to the immune system.   Researchers have found that removing key glands (called Brunner’s glands) in mice, which line the walls of the small intestine, triggered inflammation and increase the chance of infection. Similar thing happens in humans who’ve had tumours removed in their gut.   It seems that removal of these glands leads to a reduction in gut bacteria which triggers inflammation and subsequent pain.   When the researchers took a closer look at these glands, they discovered a connection to the vagus nerve that goes from the base of the brain to the internal organs, influencing digestion, blood pressure, and even memory and mood. Fibers that connect to Brunner’s gland lead directly to a region of the brain known as the amygdala, which plays a key role in emotion and the stress response.   Researchers found that when mice are under chronic stress their glands shut down—causing gut bacteria to dwindle and intensifying inflammation.   The take home message: being under mental stress can lead to a painful stomach! It highlights the importance of monitoring your stress levels and keeping good gut bacteria.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/19/20247 minutes, 23 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Timing is Everything: Fluffy Bums

Passionvine Hoppers came up in conversation a week or so ago: a nuisance for gardeners, especially in the warmer north (but more and more a pain-in-the-South as well!).  I also remember that Aucklanders often called them lacy-winged moths. Shows you that entomological knowledge has always been slow to sink in up there in the North Island.   They are certainly not moths, these critters belong to a totally different insect order: the Homoptera, or sap-sucking bugs. Yes, these are some of the insects you can legitimately call “bugs” in entomological parlance.   LIFE CYCLE:   Eggs hatch in October – the timing relates to warmth in spring.   The tiny fluffy bums (“nymphs”) suck sap from a wide variety of host plants and slowly grow bigger and bigger. They also become nimbler and can hop greater distances as they grow larger in spring.   Late in spring (December onwards) the Fluffy Bums will moult their last moult and turn into a winged adult Passionvine Hopper.    One nymph of passion vine hopper (fluffy bum) and three winged adults in summer.  They will still suck sap from your favourite plants – they will also continue excreting sticky honeydew all over the plants and leaves below.   (And as we all know, honeydew is a perfect place for sooty mould to grow – black, ugly fungal material that looks as if a miniature fire has burnt your plants).  This is also the time for mating and female Passionvine Bugs will lay eggs in the autumn. They prefer to insert the eggs in thin branches, leaving a patterned oviposition site, which keeps the eggs in good nick during the winter months   CONTROL and PREVENTION:   Keep an eye on the new fluffy bums hatching in your garden right now! Those tiny nymphs often congregate in large flocks at the ends of new growth; they are still very feeble in their movement and won’t be able to escape a cloud of fly-spray aimed at them on a wind-still morning.  Small, young nymphs  Spray these young passionvine hoppers in October with a good dose of fly-spray.  In autumn there is a second chance for control: spot the new egg-sites on thin twigs and tendrils, cut these off and burn them in the fireplace (Fried Eggs!).  Eggs laid in thin twigs and curly tendrils    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/18/20243 minutes, 6 seconds
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Full Show Podcast: 19 October 2024

On the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast for Saturday 19 October 2024, uniquely talented author Michael Morpurgo joins Jack to discuss his love for fact within fiction, a memorable discussion with Roald Dahl, and the intriguing inspiration behind his new children's novel Cobweb.  Jack discusses team loyalty and his pride in wearing blue to Auckland FC's first match.  Chef Nici Wickes shares a quirky tip to ensure the icing of your Hummingbird cake stays light and fluffy.  And, in her new album, Kiwi musician Kimbra is circling back to her collaborative ways. Music reviewer Estelle Clifford delivers her verdict on the resulting sound.  Get the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast every Saturday on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/18/20241 hour, 57 minutes, 8 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Amazon's forays into nuclear power and election night broadcasting

Amazon is joining other top tech firms with a foray into nuclear power   This deal is to explore the development of small modular nuclear reactors. AI needs massive amounts of computing power, and that requires electricity. Virginia's power demand is already growing 5% YOY and is expected to be double 2024’s level in 15 years.   In addition to that, Amazon is part of a $500 million financing round in a private company opening four small nuclear plants in the West.   The WSJ called it a "renaissance" of nuclear power. The approach seems to be a little different this time though - with smaller plants rather than large sites. The larger sites run billions of dollars over budget and years behind schedule. These companies want to make sure they have the power when they need it.     And, Amazon will now also be delivering election night news   Their Amazon Prime Video Service will host a live broadcast of the results hosted by former NBC broadcaster Brian Williams. It's the first time the streamer has got into the news game. It says coverage will be an “informative, accessible and non-partisan presentation", which will reference third-party news sources across all political affiliations. Maybe the idea is for Brian Williams will be our guide to all the information being presented?    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/18/20243 minutes, 40 seconds
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Tara Ward: Rivals, The Diplomat, The Office Australia

Rivals  David Tennant and Aidan Turner star in the small-screen version of Jilly Cooper’s novel set in 1980's England about a rivalry between two powerful men that takes over their lives (Disney+).   The Diplomat   British consul Laura Simmonds and her Barcelona colleague Alba Ortiz fight to protect British nationals in trouble in the Catalan city. Their diplomatic skills are stretched to the limit by the cases that walk through the Consul's doors (Neon). The Office Australia   Hannah Howard is the managing director of packaging company Flinley Craddick. When she gets news from Head Office that they will be shutting down her branch and making everyone work from home, she goes into survival mode, making promises she can’t keep in order to keep her “work family” together. The staff of Flinley Craddick indulge her and must endure Hannah’s outlandish plots as they work toward the impossible targets that have been set for them (Prime Video).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/18/20244 minutes, 53 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: The Return, Merchant Ivory

The Return   After 20 years away, Odysseus washes up on the shores of Ithaca, haggard and unrecognizable. The king finds much has changed since he left to fight in the Trojan War. His beloved wife, Penelope, is a prisoner in her own home and hounded to choose a new husband. Their son faces death at the hands of suitors who see him as an obstacle in their pursuit of Penelope and the kingdom. Odysseus is no longer the mighty warrior his people remember, but he must face his past to save his family.      Merchant Ivory   Archival footage and interviews provide insight into the partnership, both professional and personal, between director James Ivory and producer Ismail Merchant.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/18/20248 minutes, 2 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Hummingbird Cake

I make a few versions of the mighty hummingbird cake but this is an easy, light, manageable version. I like to describe this cake as a banana cake that goes on a Jamaican holiday.   Serves 8-10      Ingredients    1 ½ cups plain flour   ¾ cups brown sugar    ½ cup desiccated coconut    1 heaped tsp cinnamon   ½ tsp each baking powder and baking soda   2 medium eggs   ¾ cups oil – I used grapeseed oil    2 ripe bananas, mashed – about 2 bananas   1 cup crushed pineapple + ¼ cup juice      Brown butter cream cheese icing    100g butter   250g full fat cream cheese   1 – 1 ½ cup icing sugar     Method  Heat oven 180 C. Grease and line a 23cm cake tin.    Take two bowls. In one put all the dry ingredients – flour, sugar, coconut, spices and raising agents. Whisk together.    In the second bowl, beat together eggs, oil and bananas. Pour this mixture into the dry ingredients, add the crushed pineapple and the juice and stir to combine.    Scrape batter into the tin and bake for 45-55 mins or until a skewer inserted comes out clean. Rest for 10 mins then turn out onto a cooling rack and cool completely.       Make the icing  Melt butter in a small pot until it splutters. Keep cooking until the spluttering subsides – 4-6 minutes – then it will begin to foam and brown. Cook, watching carefully, until it is browned and gives off a wonderful nutty aroma. Cool completely.    Beat cream cheese and browned butter and add the icing sugar gradually. Beat until smooth.    Split the cake through the middle and fill with half the frosting, using the remaining for the top of the cake. Serve and eat!    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/18/20247 minutes, 51 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Comet 2023 A3 and thoughts of the past and future

A rare celestial object has made an appearance in the skies over New Zealand.  Comet C/2023 A3 hasn’t been seen in our skies in for 80,000 years, and with the length of its orbital period, it’s not going to be seen again by anyone alive today.  Kevin Milne caught sight of A3 passing by on Wednesday, and it got him thinking about the last time it passed by, and the next time it’ll show up.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/18/20246 minutes, 28 seconds
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Jack Tame: I never thought I'd support Auckland in anything

I never thought I would support Auckland in anything.    I mean —duh— I’m from Christchurch. When I was a kid, it was a given that Aucklanders were nothing more than latte-swilling, overpriced-haircut-donning, ostentatious-sports-car-driving primadonnas.   My parochialism isn’t the only force working against Auckland City FC. When the brand-new club kicks off in its very first A-League match this evening, it faces the unique challenge that comes from trying to launch a new team and a new club in a competition which is already well-established.     Think about it. Most of the teams we support in sporting competitions have either been around since the competition’s inception or have built up a fan base over many decades.   I support the Crusaders because I was born and raised in Christchurch and when Super Rugby was established, they were everyone-in-my-life’s team.   I support Liverpool because when I was 6 or 7 and watched football highlights on the news, I asked Dad what English club we supported and stuck with that.    The Warriors inspire my loyalty because for all the highs and the lows —so many lows— they have endured for thirty years and never really shaken that underdog status. And they’re the New Zealand Warriors. Not the Auckland Warriors. So we’re good.    Theoretically at least, it’s a bit harder to inspire loyalty in a team that arrives late to the party. Especially when that team is the third Auckland-based professional football club to compete in the Australian top league. RIP the Auckland Kingz and the New Zealand Knights.    Also, I really love the Wellington Phoenix fan culture. And the club has been playing so well! Maybe I’m wrong, but there’s a risk that any rivalry in a Kiwi derby could feel a little forced, at least early on.    But, for all of that, Auckland FC has one massive dynamic working in its favour. People in the 09 are so ready for a proper football team. You see it every time the Phoenix play at Eden Park. You see it at All Whites games. You see it on the sidelines of how many thousand junior football games on Saturday mornings. Sure, it may take a few seasons to deepen the well of loyalty, but you would be hard-pressed to find a city or a market on Earth that isn’t hungrier for a team to support.    And so tonight, I’ll be there. One of more than 20,000 at a sold-out Go Media stadium. I must have a dozen friends attending. Some have already bought season passes.    You can hold the fancy haircut. Hold the latte. But I’ll be proudly crossing the Rubicon and dressed in blue. And if in years to come anyone should question my loyalty to AFC, well, at least I can say I was there from day one.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/18/20244 minutes, 1 second
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Donna Hay: Chef and food writer on her culinary career and new book 'Too Easy'

One of the most famous foodies in the Southern Hemisphere, Donna Hay is one of the Queens of Cooking.   She’s known for her minimalistic approach to food styling, fresh and vibrant ingredient choices, and grounded recipes for busy people still interested in eating well.  Her latest book ‘Too Easy’ offers an array of delicious dishes like one-pan undone lasagna, crunchy chipotle chicken traybake, and sticky pork belly that won’t leave you slaving away over a stove for hours.  When it comes to her recipes, Hay seeks a quicker path from A to B.  “The one-pan undone lasanga, I realised I hadn’t cooked my children lasagna in a very, very long time, because even on the weekend, Jack, I’m not coming home and layering up all of that deliciousness and taking two hours out of my life for it to be consumed by two very hungry boys in a matter of minutes.”  “I guess it's just life that kind of dictates what, what I'm gonna try and twist and turn into a great recipe.”  LISTEN ABOVE    Donna Hay’s One-pan Undone Lasagne   If you love everything about lasagne except the time it takes to make it, then this is for you. This is not a traditional recipe for lasagne – it’s more for those wanting all the comforting gooey yumminess of lasagne but in an instant. Try it – you’ll love it!    Ingredients  2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil  1 brown onion, finely chopped  3 cloves garlic, crushed  600g (1 lb 5 oz) beef mince  1 litre (34 fl oz) good-quality beef stock  3 x 400g (14 oz) cans crushed tomatoes  2 tablespoons chopped oregano leaves  sea salt and cracked black pepper  250g (9 oz) fresh lasagne sheets, cut into 5cm x 21cm (2 in x 8½ in) strips  ¼ cup (5g/⅛ oz) chopped basil leaves, plus extra leaves to serve  mascarpone cheese topping  350g (12½ oz) mascarpone  1 cup (80g/2¾ oz) finely grated parmesan, plus extra to serve  1 x 125g (4½ oz) fresh mozzarella, drained and sliced    Method  Heat a large deep ovenproof frying pan over medium–high heat.    Add the oil and onion and cook for 5 minutes or until soft and golden. Add the garlic and beef and cook for 6 minutes, stirring, until the beef is well browned. Add the stock, tomatoes, oregano, salt and pepper and bring to the boil.   Reduce the heat to medium and simmer for 35–40 minutes or until the mixture has reduced by roughly one-third. The mixture should still be quite saucy.   Add the lasagne sheets, a few at a time, and gently stir to combine. Cook, stirring occasionally, for 3 minutes or until the pasta softens. Remove from the heat and stir through the basil.    Preheat oven grill (broiler) to high.    To make the mascarpone cheese topping, combine the mascarpone, parmesan and pepper. Top the lasagne with small spoonfuls of mascarpone mixture and mozzarella. Grill for 10–12 minutes or until the lasagne is golden and bubbly.   Finish with extra basil and parmesan to serve. Serves 6     Cook’s note: If you have dried lasagne sheets, pop them into boiling water for 30 seconds or until pliable, drain and use as you would fresh sheets. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/12/202412 minutes, 41 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Coldplay - Moon Music

Dubbed the “most ‘Coldplay’ Coldplay album,” Moon Music is the band’s 10th album, and potentially one of their final ones. Chris Martin has confirmed that there’s a concrete plan for two more albums after this, before the band shuts up shop.  Estelle Clifford joined Jack Tame to give her thoughts on the band’s latest release.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/12/20246 minutes, 12 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Blue Hour, Unfiltered: My Incredible Decade in Formula 1

The Blue Hour by Paula Hawkins   An isolated Scottish island, accessible to the mainland only twelve hours a day. A famous (some might say infamous) artist whose notoriously unfaithful husband disappeared after visiting her twenty years ago. A present-day discovery that intimately connects three people and unveils a web of secrets and lies.  Welcome to Eris: an island with only one house, one inhabitant, one way out. Unreachable from the Scottish mainland for twelve hours each day.  Once home to Vanessa: A famous artist whose notoriously unfaithful husband disappeared twenty years ago.  Now home to Grace: A solitary creature of the tides, content in her own isolation.  But when a shocking discovery is made in an art gallery far away in London, a visitor comes calling.  And the secrets of Eris threaten to emerge....     Unfiltered: My Incredible Decade in Formula 1 by Guenther Steiner   Formula 1 sensation Guenther Steiner, author of the number one bestseller Surviving to Drive, takes readers into the heart of his ten years running Team Haas, packed with hilarious stories and unprecedented insight into the world of elite motorsport.  Fasten your seatbelts as Formula 1's favourite underdog, Guenther Steiner, takes you on a wild ride through his ten years at Team Haas.  From the first seeds of his idea to establish a new F1 team to the challenges of funding and building that team from the ground up, Guenther shares the real story of the origins of Team Haas, immerses readers in the high and lows of its first decade on the grid, and opens up about his departure from the team at the end of 2023.  As Guenther recalls his proudest achievements and the many, many disasters he has faced, he takes readers behind the scenes, into the pit lanes and garages, and out on to the circuits of the world's greatest race tracks. We spend time with drivers, mechanics, executives, sponsors, commentators and fans, and take in many personal moments too, all the while grappling with the big challenges and small details that keep the wheels of a Formula 1 team turning.  Told in his inimitable style, packed with hugely entertaining stories, outspoken opinions and unvarnished truths, this is Guenther at his very best – insightful, opinionated and completely unfiltered.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/12/20244 minutes, 8 seconds
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Mike Yardley: World Heritage and Wildlife in Sri Lanka

"After savouring Sri Lanka’s western coast, the nation’s famed cultural triangle serves up a bevy of World Heritage ancient treasures in the heart of the island. Travelling with On the Go Tours, we farewelled the city buzz of Colombo and drove east for several hours to Dambulla, home to the spectacular Dambulla Rock Temple. Sri Lanka has a long history of the presence and practice of Buddhism and this sprawling cave complex is quite the treasure-chest. The Dambulla temple is not only one of the oldest sites for Buddhist monasticism, but it has served as a pilgrimage site for twenty-two centuries. The massive cave temple complex is unique in Southeast Asia because monks carved the caves out from rock, towering 160 metres above the surrounding plains. There’s more than 80 caves across the site, but the major attractions are spread over five caves which contain statues and paintings of Buddha and his life." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/12/20248 minutes, 13 seconds
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Kate Hall: Stopping litter in New Zealand's oceans

Our oceans are filled with a variety of things: sea creatures, plants, algae, coral, rubbish. Some things belong there, and some don’t.  Since ‘Litter Intelligence’ began back in 2018, citizen scientists have picked up, counted, and weighed over 621,000 individual pieces of litter from coastal survey areas across Aotearoa, more than 75% of which is plastic.   Sustainable Coastlines has launched their ‘Trash Species of Aotearoa New Zealand’ campaign, and Kate ‘Ethically Kate’ Hall joined Jack Tame to discuss the most common species, and chat about the ways we can keep them from filling our oceans.  Key Litter Species facts:  Scollipop (lollipop sticks): 8,301 sticks recorded in Litter Intelligence coastal litter surveys. Lots near kids' playgrounds!   Gutterfish is part of the construction waste family, which makes up more than 20% of the litter removed from Litter Intelligence coastal survey sites, by weight.   Blue snackeral is from the food wrappers family, which Litter Intelligence data tells us has been collected a colossal 39,013 times.   Pauarade features a plastic bottle top, one of the most common items collected in surveys we find an average of 18 for every 1,000m2 of coastline.   Smoki (cigarette butts and filters) are the 8th most common trash species found in Litter Intelligence beach surveys, with the data reporting over 18,890 collected to date.  For more information visit the Sustainable Coastlines site here.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/11/20247 minutes, 57 seconds
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Full Show Podcast: 12 October 2024

On the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast for 12 October 2024, culinary legend Donna Hay joins Jack to discuss what inspires her these days compared to ten years ago, and shares tips on cooking for a house full of hungry teenage boys.  Jack examines the difficulty of learning a new language at middle age.  Film reviewer Francesca Rudkin considers how small-budget kiwi film ‘A Mistake’ somehow landed A-List Hollywood star Elizabeth Banks.  Elon Musk hosted his robo-event, complete with new products and designs. Tech expert Paul Stenhouse dishes on the new taxis, vans and... humanoids.  And Kevin Milne and Jack celebrate how kiwi music legends Crowded House can sell out London's O2 arena, but still return to our smaller home-grown venues for their kiwi audiences.  Get the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast every Saturday on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/11/20241 hour, 57 minutes, 9 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Feeding your plants?

There are three reactions to the concept of “feeding your plants”:   1) Plants feed themselves through Photosynthesis (you don’t need to feed your plants!)  2) They’ll pick up elements in the soil that they need for growth and development, nobody feeds the plants in a native forest.  3) What’s scientifically needed for our gardens is a soil test that indicates which chemical elements are lacking in soil.  This is about the Science of Fertilisers.  This is the time of the year when soil temperatures are great for plant growth. Roots work over-time to extract minerals, dissolve them in water and transport them through the phloem bundles to the leaves of plants, where photosynthesis puts it all together and creates carbohydrates and chemicals that allow cell-elongation (growth).   Plants use three main elements for bulk growth “food”: Nitrogen, Phosphorous, and potassium (K), which are generally known as NPK (their chemical symbols).   N is used to make the green stuff: leaves and chlorophyll (LAWNS, LETTUCE, SPINACH, HEDGES).  P is good for root development and plant health (CARROTS, PARSNIPS, POTATOES, etc).  K (potash) is for sex: flowers and fruits (TOMATOES, APPLES, STRAWBERRIES, FLOWERING PLANTS).  Other elements needed for plant functioning are needed in much smaller quantities:   Mg (Magnesium), S (Sulphur), Ca (Calcium), Cu (Copper), Fe (Iron), Zn (Zinc), Mn (Manganese), and a heap more of those minor “trace elements”.  There are a few different types of fertilisers:   1) “General” Fertiliser – for general growth: usually something like N-P-K 7-3-6 or 12-4-13 (note how Phosphorus is usually less than the N and K).  2) Potato fertiliser: N-P-K 3-9-6, also good for carrots and parsnips.  3) Tomato or rose fertiliser - usually higher in potash (K): N-P-K 3-4-9. This helps to stimulate flower and fruit growth.  Of course, you can always use the general fertiliser (which tends to be highest in Nitrogen) and simply add a few handfuls of Superphosphate (P) if you grow root crops, or handfuls of Sulphate of Potash (K) if you want to up the dose of K (potash) for flowers and fruit.   Organic fertilisers usually have lower concentrations of elements, and they are often less prone to fertiliser run-off into water courses. Chicken poo (a “Natural” organic fertiliser) has a high content of Nitrogen which can burn plants – I would always send it through a cycle of composting before use.  These are very general comments on how to use fertilisers; some plants require a bit more detailed knowledge or would benefit from changing fertiliser regimes in different times of the year (Cymbidium orchids have a green-growth phase to make leaves in spring and summer – followed by a flower bud initiation in autumn and flowering in winter).   I use General fertiliser on my young tomatoes to get them growing up and create a strong climbing vine, before the flower buds are formed.   Once they start flowering, I assist the plants with more potash to keep on making fruit – I just switch to a higher potash fertiliser such as Wet&Forget’s Seaweed Tea.   Dog Pee fertiliser   Most homeowners let their dogs use the backyard as their own personal toilet. Urine is very high in Nitrogen. Too much nitrogen will burn the grass and create yellow patches after sensational, dark green growth (a dog will usually come back to the same patch – territorial “marking”).   The concentration of nitrogen in the dog’s urine depends on the type of dog, its sex, and what the animal eats. Larger dogs will pee more and cause more damage. Female dogs also tend to cause more damage than males because they squat and urinate in one concentrated patch whereas the males spray their urine over a larger area and in much smaller doses each time. Finally, diets high in protein can increase the concentration of nitrogen in the urine since protein breaks down to release nitrogen compounds.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/11/20246 minutes, 11 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Villa Maria Cellar Selection Merlot Cabernet Sauvignon

Villa Maria Cellar Selection Merlot Cabernet Sauvignon   Why I chose it:   This wine was selected by Gimblett Gravels’ winemakers as one of the top reds from 2022.  A hearty red at a mouth-watering price.  2022 was an average vintage, but this is a well below average price   Can be enjoyed now or stored in a cool place and enjoyed in 5 or 6 years time   A versatile wine that appeals to a wide range of tastes   What does it taste like?    A fresh and fruity red with dark berry and plum flavours and a seasoning of spicy oak. Moderately intense. A delicious wine that makes me reach for a second glass.   Why it’s a bargain:            Punches well above its weight   Where can you buy it?          Whiskeyonline, Auckland $16.99  Vitis Cellars, Auckland $113.64 (12 bottles)  Blackmarket.co.nz $113.94  Check your supermarket shelves  What’s a good food match?   Barbecued steak.  Drink now or later?   Now if you like bright, fresh and fruity flavours, in five years if you prefer more mellow and slightly savoury reds.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/11/20243 minutes, 59 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Elon Musk unveils taxis, vans, and humanoids at "We, Robot" event

Elon Musk's “We, Robot” event saw taxis, vans, and humanoids  Elon says it will be "the biggest product ever" calling them an “autonomous assistant, humanoid friend".    He gave us a glimpse into a future. At the party robots danced, served cocktails, and chatted with guests with a voice that sounded like a human. It's cadence and tone were offputtingly normal. When an event attendee told Optimus he was doing a good job, the robot looked up in acknowledgement, then said “You wanna get a photo?” and made a peace sign with its hand.  In a video they were watering plants, collecting packages, cleaning the kitchen after dinner, unloading groceries and unwinding with a board game with the family’s kids.  The marketing materials said they're designed to take on the dangerous and boring tasks in your life. The lofty goal is to have them ready to sell by the end of 2025, with a price-tag of somewhere around USD$30,000.    They unveiled a robocab with two seats, no steering wheel, and is controlled through a large touchscreen mounted on the dashboard. And then there's the robovan, which looks like a futuristic Airstream caravan who's worst enemy may be a speedbump.         LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/11/20244 minutes, 54 seconds
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Tara Ward: Disclaimer, Sweetpea, The Restaurant That Makes Mistakes

Disclaimer  When an intriguing novel appears at the bedside of a journalist whose career has been built on revealing transgressions, she is horrified to realise she's a key character in a long-buried story, one that exposes her darkest secret (Apple TV+). Sweetpea   Rhiannon Lewis doesn't make much of an impression - people walk past her in the street without a second glance. That is until she is pushed over the edge and loses control, and Rhiannon's life transforms (Neon). The Restaurant That Makes Mistakes  A second season of the local series about a group of volunteers with young onset dementia as they navigate the highs and lows of running a fine-dining restaurant under the guidance of renowned chef Ben Bayly (TVNZ+ from Monday 14 October).   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/11/20245 minutes, 27 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: A Mistake, The Outrun

A Mistake   A talented surgeon's life unravels when a new public reporting system for surgeons' performance is introduced. Her colleagues distance themselves, and even her partner, a hospital nurse, abandons her.     The Outrun   After living life on the edge in London, Rona attempts to come to terms with her troubled past. She returns to the wild beauty of Scotland's Orkney Islands where she grew up, hoping to heal.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/11/20247 minutes, 22 seconds
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Nici Wickes: How to get out of a cooking rut

Bored of making the same old recipes? Is cooking becoming more of a chore? You might be stuck in a rut. Fortunately, Nici Wickes has some advice on how to pull yourself out and get back into the swing of things.  She recommends checking out cookbooks or magazines for some new recipes, eating out or trying new restaurants for some inspiration, and of course, taking a look to see what interesting things may be tucked away in your cupboards.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/11/20246 minutes, 35 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Perplexors at the supermarket

Supermarket collectable schemes are a dime a dozen these days, with most franchises running a collectable promotion every year. Most buy into the scheme, collecting the stickers or cards and trading them in for a free product, but there are some out there who pass on them.  To Kevin Milne it feels like these people are just throwing away money, and wonders why people would pass on a free container or two.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/11/20247 minutes, 49 seconds
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Jack Tame: Learning a new language is humbling but so rewarding

As someone who considers themself at least semi-literate, with the benefit of a reasonable education and at least a passing interest in the world, I can confirm there is nothing quite so humbling in middle-age as learning a new language.    At short notice, I’m hoping to briefly visit a Latin American country for my work in a few weeks’ time, and in preparation this week I downloaded a few apps and subscribed to podcasts to try and re-up my Spanish.   My history with Spanish is one of big surges and even bigger retreats.    I studied it until seventh form at high school. I wasn’t very good but at least I learnt a few nouns and could ask some basic questions.    But when I moved to New York as a 24-year-old I decided to learn Spanish in a way I never had when I was a teenager. I moved to a Latin neighbourhood. I did thrice-weekly lessons on Skype, just speaking with a tutor friend in Mexico’s south.    After a few months of studying, I decided to visit her.     “Estoy excitado,” I said, trying to express my excitement at the impending trip. My tutor laughed and explained that’d just informed a conservative Catholic mother that I was horny.    “Gaah... estoy tan embarazada!” I blushed.    She bent over in laughter again. Turns out embarazada is not embarassed. Embarazada is pregnant.     It’s amazing what immersion will do though. When I visited Chiapas, I’d collapse in bed, exhausted at the end of every day from 12-hours of speaking. But after just a few weeks, I could swear I was just starting to dream in Spanish. That’s when you know it’s sticking.   Then, though. Oof. An almighty retreat. I fell out of lessons and Spanish fell out of my head. I eventually moved home and studied Māori, which I absolutely loved, but which has a similar vowel sound to Spanish. Often over the years when I’ve reached for the word, I’ve pulled a noun from the wrong language. And now, I’m embarrassed to admit that although my wife is Persian, in Farsi I can’t even say hello.   There are some people though, for whom language comes easier than others. I’m good with sound and speaking with false confidence but very poor with grammar. My brother is much more studious, but I swear he also just gets grammatical structure. It’s like he sees the matrix when he’s studying language.    I’m fascinated by people who can speak many languages. There’s a New Zealander named Harold Williams, who basically no one has ever heard of, who is considered one of the greatest polyglots in history. He was the foreign editor for The Times in London and spoke as many as 58 languages. As a lad in Christchurch in the late 1800s, he described having a ‘brain explosion’ when he was about seven-years-old. He bought himself the New Testament in every language his bookshop could order and taught himself that way.    Our historic comfort in our majority monolingualism is one of the great faults of New Zealand culture. It’s sloppy. Insular. It’s embarrassing to visit poor neighbourhoods in poor countries and realise that despite the relative lack of educational opportunities, kids can speak more languages than many or most of us can. It’s wonderful to see the revitalisation of te reo Māori, but New Zealand must still be one of the most monolingual developed countries on Earth.    So, here we go again. Like trying to start a lawnmower that’s been sitting in the shed for fifteen years, I’m pulling at the starter cord and pleading the engine to fire.    “The cat likes to sleep.”   “I would like to buy a ticket for the train.”   It’s so humbling to go so far back. Embarazada, even. And yet still so rewarding when you feel something stick. Excitado!   That’s the thing about language. More than vowels and consonants, it is the front door to culture, a gate to a whole new World.    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/11/20245 minutes, 45 seconds
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Rena Owen: Kiwi Actress on her career, 'Taki Rua Theatre – Breaking Barriers'

Rena Owen has cemented herself in New Zealand’s pantheon of film and television greats.  The award-winning actress has a packed acting career, with roles in everything from Once Were Warriors, to Star Wars, to Whina, to Shortland Street.   She stars in productions that create lasting legacies, conveying stories from the culture and history of New Zealand, and her latest work follows suit.  Taki Rua Theatre – Breaking Barriers tells the story of what became the unofficial Māori theatre company, an ensemble of artists breaking barriers, shattering cultural norms, and pioneering a bicultural partnership.  Owen joined Jack Tame to discuss the significance of the theatre, her acting career, and her upcoming film roles.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/5/202416 minutes, 4 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Louis Baker - Medicine

Kiwi soul musician Louis Baker has released his third EP, Medicine his first work as sole producer.   The EP reflects the bond Baker has with his craft, allowing him to connect with himself and communicate with the world.   Estelle Clifford joined Jack Tame to give her thoughts on this new release.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/5/20245 minutes, 31 seconds
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Mike Yardley: The sights of Sri Lanka's Colombo and Galle

"Sri Lanka has loomed large on my bucket-list for quite some time. Nicknamed the Pearl of the Indian Ocean, I’ve just ventured to the teardrop-shaped island nation for the first time and it smashed my expectations. Over the course of a week, I savoured Sri Lanka’s colourful cities, vibrant cuisine, ravishing landscapes, astonishing World Heritage treasures and glorious wildlife, which were all seamlessly stitched together by On the Go Tours and their Colombo, Caves and Kandy group tour." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/5/20249 minutes, 48 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Intermezzo and The Siege

Intermezzo by Sally Rooney   Aside from the fact that they are brothers, Peter and Ivan Koubek seem to have little in common.  Peter is a Dublin lawyer in his thirties—successful, competent, and apparently unassailable. But in the wake of their father’s death, he’s medicating himself to sleep and struggling to manage his relationships with two very different women—his enduring first love, Sylvia, and Naomi, a college student for whom life is one long joke.  Ivan is a twenty-two-year-old competitive chess player. He has always seen himself as socially awkward, a loner, the antithesis of his glib elder brother. Now, in the early weeks of his bereavement, Ivan meets Margaret, an older woman emerging from her own turbulent past, and their lives become rapidly and intensely intertwined.  For two grieving brothers and the people they love, this is a new interlude—a period of desire, despair, and possibility; a chance to find out how much one life might hold inside itself without breaking.   For two grieving brothers and the people they love, this is a new interlude – a period of desire, despair and possibility – a chance to find out how much one life might hold inside itself without breaking.        The Siege by Ben Macintyre   Britain’s best-selling historian writes the first definitive account of the famous televised SAS storming of the Iranian embassy in London in 1980.  On April 30, 1980, six heavily armed gunmen burst into the Iranian embassy on Princes Gate, overlooking Hyde Park in London. There they took 26 hostages, including embassy staff, visitors, and three British citizens. A tense six-day siege ensued as millions gathered around screens across the country to witness the longest news flash in British television history, in which police negotiators and psychiatrists sought a bloodless end to the standoff, while the SAS – hitherto an organisation shrouded in secrecy – laid plans for a daring rescue mission: Operation Nimrod.  Drawing on unpublished source material, exclusive interviews with the SAS, and testimony from witnesses including hostages, negotiators, intelligence officers and the on-site psychiatrist, bestselling historian Ben Macintyre takes readers on a gripping journey from the years and weeks of build-up on both sides, to the minute-by-minute account of the siege and rescue.  Recreating the dramatic conversations between negotiators and hostages, the cutting-edge intelligence work happening behind-the-scenes, and the media frenzy around this moment of international significance, The Siege is the remarkable story of what really happened on those fateful six days, and the first full account of a moment that forever changed the way the nation thought about the SAS – and itself.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/5/20245 minutes, 5 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Interesting stats from the latest Census data dump

Stats NZ has released the latest data from the Census, giving fresh insights into the lives of people across the country.  Kevin Milne has been taking a look at the latest numbers and there’s a couple things he found interesting, and some he wasn’t surprised by at all.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/5/20248 minutes, 22 seconds
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Dougal Sutherland: Working from Home and the advantages of a hybrid model

 Although Working from Home might have been new for many of us under Covid, research in the area has been going on for decades. This international research, combined with studies carried out in New Zealand over the past 4 years, notably by Prof Jarrod Harr at Massey Uni, is pretty clear that from a wellbeing and productivity perspective the hybrid model of working is better than working in the office 100% or working from home 100%. Hybrid working gives the best of both worlds – 2 or 3 days in the office and 2 or 3 days at home.  Advantages of hybrid working include:   An increased sense of autonomy for workers – you have some choice over when/where/how you work. Higher levels of autonomy are associated with higher levels of wellbeing.  Less stress and better work-life balance.  You still get the advantage of social interactions when in the office.  Working from Home 100% of the time isn’t ideal – people report higher rates of low mood and loneliness. Also, higher rates of burnout, possibly due to not having clear stop/start times. Working from the office 100% of the time reduces autonomy and has poorer work-life balance.  The disadvantage of the hybrid model is not everyone’s job allows them to work from home for 2-3 days per week and these people see others as getting a perk they don’t have.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/4/20247 minutes, 3 seconds
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Full Show Podcast: 5 October 2024

On the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast for Saturday 5 October 2024, award-winning actress Rena Owen joins Jack to discuss the 30-year anniversary of Once Were Warriors, gearing up for the live action Moana, and the role of Māori theatre throughout her career.  Jack shares his love for maps and the remote, extreme, curious places he's drawn to when studying them. He considers the chances of a visit to Diego Garcia following the news that sovereignty of the island will be passed to Mauritius.  Sally Rooney's highly anticipated fourth novel is Booktok’s latest obsession – with influencers vying for advance copies and the book becoming something of a commodity. Book reviewer Catherine Raynes shares her thoughts on Intermezzo's literary merit.  How does Joker: Folie à Deux match up to the critical and commercial juggernaut of the first Joker film? Film reviewer Francesca Rudkin delivers her verdict.  And man-in-the-garden Ruud Kleinpaste joins Jack in studio to chat planting before the dry season sets in - plus, brings a special guest.  Get the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast every Saturday on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/4/20241 hour, 39 minutes, 46 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Planting before the dry season sets in

It’s already getting dry in Canterbury, and I still need to do a lot of planting in order to save us from starvation. Juuls has planted Christmas spuds. Seed potatoes: “chitted” (meaning the “eyes” have started to run out) and the plants are doing well – shooting up in their large tubs on the deck. Every week or so we carefully add some soil on top of the stuff that’s already there, so that the main stem will produce more and more potatoes.   This is Julie’s “spud race” for the spring challenge at her work.   Potato fertiliser always has a bit more “P” (Phosphate) in it to encourage root growth and tuber growth. Jersey Bennes and such early varieties are probably the best to use before Christmas.   Potato-Tomato Psyllid   I don’t want to play Russian Roulette with this pest: it damages potatoes and tomatoes, so I prefer to keep potatoes well away from my tomato tunnelhouse.  It’s called Biosecurity!  Tomatoes   Should have been sown now in seed-raising mix and transplanted outside when the frost danger is over; in the tunnelhouse I don’t have that problem, so can bang them in as soon as they are 20cm tall with good roots.    I’ve got my favourite line up: Tigerella, Sweet 100, Black Krim, Artisan Blush, etc, plus some new stuff I uplifted from the Kings Seed Catalogue.    Initially feed them with general fertiliser and start using tomato/Rose fertiliser when flowers develop the new fruit – Seaweed Tea (Wet&Forget)  Broad beans are another must in our garden – I was lucky to have them survive the winter and self-seeded in the coldest months of the year   The related French beans need to be sown too – do a row every month or so, so keep the supply coming during summer and into autumn!   If you’ve never tried growing Witlof (endive) try sowing it now.      During spring and summer, you grow the root system sturdy and large. In late autumn harvest the roots and bury them in a tub with sandy soil in a dark spot (under the house). The roots will sprout these white and delicious chicons which taste wonderful and bitter; recipes everywhere! Even the French like them.  I usually keep up with my lettuce (COS!) and spring onions but will need to plonk in the peas and beans ASAP before the summer sun creates havoc.   These crops have a habit to grow in just about any soil condition. As long as they have good light and are not kept too dry.   Liquid fertiliser seems to be the best way to keep ’em happy, and when I chuck Seafood Soup and Seaweed Tea on them they shoot up with vapour trails   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/4/20246 minutes, 25 seconds
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Lisa Dudson: How to handle sudden money

People often fanaticise about sudden wealth – a windfall of money large enough to solve any problem.   But a large sum of money falling into your lap can be complicated and confusing to handle.  Lisa Dudson joined Jack Tame for a chat about the best way to handle sudden wealth so you don’t wind up losing it all.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/4/20245 minutes, 37 seconds
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Tara Ward: Joan, Last Days of the Space Age, Brilliant Minds

Joan  Joan Hannington, a fiery and uncompromising woman in her 20s, is a devoted mother to her 6-year-old daughter, Kelly, but is trapped in a disastrous marriage with a violent criminal named Gary. When Gary goes on the run, Joan seizes the opportunity to create a new life for herself and her daughter. Adopting new identities and making new acquaintances along the way, Joan becomes a masterful jewel thief. She embarks on a thrilling, high-stakes journey that challenges her every limit, driven by her desire to create a secure home (Neon).     Last Days of the Space Age    In 1979, a power strike threatens to plunge the region into darkness in Western Australia, while the city hosts the Miss Universe pageant and the US space station, Skylab, crashes just beyond the city's suburbs (Disney+).     Brilliant Minds  Dr. Oliver Wolf is an eccentric but incredibly gifted neurologist who suffers from a rare condition that gives him a unique perspective on care, fueling his mission to change the way the world sees his patients. After his unusual methods result in his dismissal, he takes his unconventional approach to a new hospital: Bronx General, where he leads a team of bright young interns in tackling some of the world's most puzzling psychological cases. With their help, he must also challenge his own personal and social limitations by navigating all the expectations, politics and complicated relationships that come with the job (Neon).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/4/20244 minutes, 52 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: US Couple's blocked from suing Uber after using Uber Eats, CNN begins rolling out a paywall

A couple has been blocked from suing Uber for a car crash because they used Uber Eats   When you use Uber Eats you agree to a new set of Terms which state that you must use private arbitration to settle matters, rather than going to court. So, when the NJ couple got into a bad crash while in an Uber ride, a court says the Uber Eats clauses applied. They say they never recalled seeing that box, and also say their daughter used the Uber Eats account to order a pizza. The court said the mother had given her daughter the authority to sign the agreement when she handed over her phone.    Disney has done the same thing recently – initially arguing that a wrongful-death lawsuit because of an allergy at a theme park restaurant should be thrown out of court because of a Disney+ agreement the person had.   What does that mean when you sign up for a fast food app? Or use a business' website to perform services?  It’s a good reminder that the fine print is important. CNN, the US's largest news website, started rolling out its paywall   CNN's CEO was instrumental in rolling out the New York Times paywall - which is one of the most successful in the industry. Just like the NYT, only the most heavy users will initially be prompted to pay $3.99 a month for access. Those who just browse a few articles won't see any changes yet. One of CNN's Anchors said in an interview there were 300 people at each convention - so covering those large scale events isn't cheap! They need to develop new digital revenue streams that can offset declines in legacy TV.  CNN reached 117 million unique visitors in August across its website and apps. Its TV audiences' median age is 67 years old. The Times has roughly 10 million digital subscribers.        LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/4/20243 minutes, 40 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Joker: Folie à Deux and Will and Harper

Joker: Folie à Deux Struggling with his dual identity, failed comedian Arthur Fleck meets the love of his life, Harley Quinn, while incarcerated at Arkham State Hospital.    Will and Harper   When Will Ferrell finds out his close friend of 30 years is coming out as a trans woman, the two decide to embark on a cross-country road trip to process this new stage of their relationship in an intimate portrait of friendship and transition.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/4/20247 minutes, 40 seconds
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Margo Flanagan: Eggplant and Avocado Whip from Two Raw Sisters' 'More Salad'

You’re going to love this avocado whip. Double the recipe so you can enjoy it as a dip for corn chips and/or crudités, on toast, or dolloped in tacos. Use whatever herbs you have on hand. We love using rocket and/or coriander.  Margo Flanagan of Two Raw Sisters offers up a recipe for Eggplant and Avocado Whip from their new cookbook ‘More Salad’ - now available in stores.  Ingredients   2 eggplants, cut into bite-sized   chunks   3 tablespoons cooking oil   1 teaspoon sea salt   Avocado Whip   1 avocado   1 cup chopped fresh herbs   1⁄4 cup extra virgin olive oil   2 tablespoons hulled tahini   2 garlic cloves, crushed   juice of 1 lemon   1⁄2 teaspoon sea salt   100 g (3 1⁄2 oz) feta, crumbled   1⁄4 cup chopped fresh herbs   2 tablespoons dukkah   1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil     Method  Preheat the oven to 200°C (400°F).   Toss the eggplant chunks on a baking tray with the cooking oil and salt. Roast for 25–30 minutes.   While the eggplant is cooking, make the avocado whip.   Process all the ingredients in a blender until smooth. (Alternatively you can use a stick blender.)   To assemble the salad, spoon all the avocado whip onto a flat, round plate. Use the back of a spoon to distribute it evenly around the plate. Arrange the eggplant chunks on top. Sprinkle over the feta, then the herbs and dukkah.  Drizzle the olive oil over just before serving.   Leftovers will keep in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 2 days.   Extracted from More Salad by the Two Raw Sisters. Photography © Food: Margo Flanagan and Lifestyle: Susannah Blatchford. RRP$49.99. Out 10 September 2024. Published by Allen & Unwin NZ. LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/4/20244 minutes, 12 seconds
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Jack Tame: Mysterious locations and places of intrigue

You know my idea of fun?    You’re expecting me to say sex, drugs, and rock ‘n’ roll, wild parties, cocaine-fuelled late-night debauchery! Guilty as charged... that sounds like a bit of me.    But no, my idea of fun is a map.    I’ve got a huge, detailed one on my wall. Winkle triple projection, Pacific-centred, of course. I can wile away hours, whole afternoons, intercontinental flights, just staring at a map.  And when you stare at a detailed map, you’re drawn to curiosities. To extremes. And naturally of course you’re drawn into imagining or fantasising what those places might be like in-person, rather than simple a coordinate on your wall.    There are three remote, extreme, curious places on Earth I’ve always fantasised about seeing. One is La Rinconada, the highest permanently populated town in the World. It’s in the Peruvian Andes, a grim, freezing mining town with a violent crime problem and where a slab of the residents may or may not have mercury poisoning. It’s higher than Everest Base Camp. And if YouTube is anything to go by, it is about as far from a few nights at Denarau as it’s possible to be.    The next are the Kerguelen Islands, aka the Desolation Islands, a vast 7000km2 archipelago in the sub-Antarctic. It’s home to amazing wildlife and a few dozen French scientists. And it’s huge! The main island is 150km long and 120km wide. Have you ever heard of it? It’s one of the most remote places on Earth.   And my final isle of intrigue is Diego Garcia. My Dad first told me about it as a kid. Imagine a point in the middle of the Indian Ocean, below India and about halfway between Tanzania and Bali.    For decades, Diego Garcia has been home to one of the most mysterious and secretive military bases on the planet. Its strategic location, its military runway, its fleet of long-range bombers and its ability to reload submarines with weapons make it hugely important to the U.S and the U.K.   But that only came about by a brutal history.    Although Diego Garcia had no indigenous population, enslaved people were brought there to work on coconut plantations, and over several centuries developed their own language and culture. In the 1960s, the Brits decided to kick them out. In order to develop the military base, they forcibly evicted all of the local population to Mauritius and the Seychelles.    For decades since, Mauritius has fought for the island and its surrounding archipelago. Chaggosians, as people from the Chaggos Islands are known, have fought to return to their home.    But I’ve always assumed I would never be able to go. The island is rumoured to be a CIA black site. According to a recent BBC report, only three journalists have ever visited. One pretended to have a boat problem and was only there for an hour and half. Another stopped to refuel in a Presidential plane. The most recent visitor had to agree to incredible restrictions on her reporting, was barred from numerous areas and accompanied by minders at all times.   But yesterday came news from Diego Garcia. After years of terse negotiations and an ongoing legal dispute regarding a group of Tamil asylum seekers being detained on the island, the U.K and Mauritius announced sovereignty of Diego Garcia and the other Chaggos Islands will be passed to Mauritius.    Will it mean the Chagossians can return? Probably not. Under the deal, the long-range bombers, submarines, and the base will remain for at least the next century.    Its official status might have changed, but for those of us who trace the atoll across the World on our office wall, Diego Gacia will be no more accessible, and no less mysterious. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/4/20244 minutes, 58 seconds
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Finn Andrews: The Veils Frontman on headlining at the World of Music, Arts and Dance festival, teaming up with classical musicians

The World of Music, Arts and Dance Festival has all the ingredients for a good time – food, dancing, arts, and an incredible line-up of local and international artists. English/Kiwi rock band The Veils were announced this week in the first line-up of acts to headline next year’s WOMAD festival. The enigmatic indie band have a reputation for their intense live performances, and they’ll be teaming up with a few classical musicians for their performance at the festival. Frontman Finn Andrews told Jack Tame that it’ll be a “pretty raucous affair”. He said that working with classical musicians gives them the option to lean into the extremes.  “It kinda just intensifies that even more. I think it's gonna be really full on and really quiet and intimate as well.”  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/28/202411 minutes, 33 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Snow Patrol - The Forest is the Path

Their first album release in six years, ‘The Forest is the Path’ is Snow Patrol’s eighth studio album, coming after 2018’s ‘Wilderness’.  While promoting the album on X, vocalist Gary Lightbody described the work as a “new beginning”.   “We honour the past, deeply. But while we honour the past we also want to cherish the present and look to the future. So this is the beginning of something, and we are so excited to share it with you all.”  Music Reviewer Estelle Clifford joined Jack Tame to give her thoughts on the release.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/28/20246 minutes, 22 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: We Solve Murders and Here One Moment

We Solve Murders by Richard Osman   Steve Wheeler is enjoying retired life. He does the odd bit of investigation work, but he prefers his familiar habits and routines: the pub quiz, his favourite bench, his cat waiting for him when he comes home. His days of adventure are over: adrenaline is daughter-in-law Amy’s business now.  Amy Wheeler thinks adrenaline is good for the soul. As a private security officer, she doesn’t stay still long enough for habits or routines. She’s currently on a remote island keeping world-famous author Rosie D’Antonio alive. Which was meant to be an easy job . . .  Then a dead body, a bag of money and a killer with their sights on Amy have her sending an SOS to the only person she trusts. A breakneck race around the world begins, but can Amy and Steve stay one step ahead of a deadly enemy?  Here One Moment by Liane Moriarty   Aside from a delay, there will be no problems. The flight will be smooth, it will land safely. Everyone who gets on the plane will get off. But almost all of them will be forever changed.  Because on this ordinary, short, domestic flight, something extraordinary happens. People learn how and when they are going to die. For some, their death is far in the future—age 103!—and they laugh. But for six passengers, their predicted deaths are not far away at all.  How do they know this? There were ostensibly more interesting people on the flight (the bride and groom, the jittery, possibly famous woman, the giant Hemsworth-esque guy who looks like an off-duty superhero, the frazzled, gorgeous flight attendant) but none would become as famous as “The Death Lady.”  Not a single passenger or crew member will later recall noticing her board the plane. She wasn’t exceptionally old or young, rude or polite. She wasn’t drunk or nervous or pregnant. Her appearance and demeanor were unremarkable. But what she did on that flight was truly remarkable.  A few months later, one passenger dies exactly as she predicted. Then two more passengers die, again, as she said they would. Soon no one is thinking this is simply an entertaining story at a cocktail party.  If you were told you only had a certain amount of time left to live, would you do things differently? Would you try to dodge your destiny?  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/28/20244 minutes, 24 seconds
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Kevin Milne: The Work From Home debate

Working from Home has been a topic of debate this week with the Government’s new directive on the subject.  Kevin Milne is a bit split on the issue, but there is one thing he’s clear on: surely propping up other businesses isn’t a valid reason to force people back into the office?  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/28/20248 minutes, 39 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Feasting on Singapore

"Singapore is so much more than just a steamy stopover between flights. It’s a sparkling melting pot of Southeast Asian culture, brimming with an ever-expanding arsenal of headline experiences. But alongside ticking off the likes of Gardens by the Bay and Marina Bay Sands, the Lion City’s biggest roar is reserved for the sizzling street food scene spilling forth in the hawker centre. Singapore’s harmonious multiculturalism and all its culinary influences positively sing on the plate. Come nightfall, Lau Pa Sat in downtown Singapore transforms into Satay Street, where a riot of meat on skewers and peanut sauce hold court." Read Mike's full article here.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/28/20249 minutes, 41 seconds
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Kate Hall: The mental health benefits of living sustainably

Sustainable living doesn’t just benefit the world around you, but it can also have benefits for mental health.   Kate ‘Ethically Kate’ Hall joined Jack Tame to run through a few of the benefits that come with living more sustainably.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/28/20247 minutes, 42 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Spring snow and bugs needing attention

Planting from now on is becoming a much better idea. The chances of frost have diminished, but there will be still possibilities of “Spring Snow”, if you get my drift.   If you’ve had a look at the plants in your local botanic Garden, you’ll find what will grow well at your place. In many frost-free areas I’m thinking of Ngutu Kaka (Kaka Beak). This is a native plant that will look red and just amazing. It’s one of those plants I have always wanted to grow, simply because it looks stunning with those flowers, and it attracts the nectivorous birds.  As an old Trustee of “Project Crimson” (do you remember that organisation?) I am certainly a proponent of the Genus Metrosideros, which is the group of trees, shrubs and plants related to pohutukawa. Metrosideros carminea is one of those native gems that will wake you up in spring. Just look at that colour!  Just inhale the smell, and look at the insects associated with this native gem.   And then there are the not-so-native Vireya. They are Rhododendrons of tropical origin. They smell and love warm climates. My favourite one is Vireya tuba.      Originally from the mountains of Papua New Guinea, it grows up to 2 meters high and needs protection from frosts (grew well for us in Auckland and will do fine on the frost-free port hills). And its smell is just divine!   Winter flowerings. Bright and beautiful, but a native beetle has woken up too:   Lemon Tree Borer (Oemona hirta) will be on the wing soon. Laying eggs on damaged citrus branches or on pruned wood of citrus and many other native shrubs and trees.  The beetle grubs will create tunnels and cause a heap of damage! No more pruning and keep an eye on those grubs that will create havoc on citrus and other host plants.   And then there is our codling moth (which arrived all the way from Europe, many, many years ago). Moths lay eggs after flowering of the apple trees (and crab apples, and walnuts!) Out of those eggs hatch very hungry codling moth caterpillars that will tunnel into the developing apple fruits, spoiling them.    Control and prevention:   There is a cool spray called Madex3, used by commercial apple growers that value organic treatments. This Madex3 is a virus that should be sprayed a week or so after apple flowering (in the next week or two!). The virus will only kill Codling moth – very targeted! And may need a second spray a month or so later.   It’s available from some of the more switched-on suppliers in NZ:   Farmlands, Horticentre Hawkes Bay and Richmond, GoodtoGrownz.co.nz, just look for Madex3.   It’s not a cheap pest control material, but it will last for years in your freezer. And if you cleverly share a 100 ml bottle with your neighbour or friend it is the best and safest method of keeping the caterpillars out of your pip fruit.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/28/20244 minutes, 13 seconds
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Full Show Podcast: 28 September 2024

On the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast for Saturday 28 September 2024, frontman of legendary rock band The Veils, Finn Andrews joins Jack to chat new music, regrouping, and looking ahead to WOMAD 2025.  Jack considers his take on working from home versus in the office.  Film reviewer Francesca Rudkin offers her take on Brad Pitt and George Clooney's return to the big screen in Wolfs.  Mike Yardley dishes on $5 Michelin-star offerings in Singapore.  And Lianne Moriarty is back with a brand-new novel, Here One Moment, which book reviewer Catherine Raynes gives her thoughts on.  Get the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast every Saturday on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/28/20241 hour, 56 minutes, 53 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: Abdominal Hernias

What exactly is an abdominal hernia?   - It’s where an internal part of body pushes through weak part of your abdominal wall muscle, creating a lump that often you can feel.  - It’s very common, more common in men but can occur in any age from babies to the elderly.  - There’s several different types:   - Inguinal: occurs in the groin and can sometimes cause lump in the scrotum.  - Femoral: occurs where abdomen joins leg.  - Umbilical: the front of the stomach often around the tummy button.  - Hiatus: where stomach pushes up into the chest.  - Incisional: over a surgery scar   What causes hernias?   - Lots of different things: being overweight, coughing or sneezing, constipation, pregnancy.  - Some people have weaker abdominal walls, and hernias can occur more easily.  - Occasionally caused by injury from lifting – in which case can be covered by ACC   What should you look out for and are they serious?   - Most people notice a bulging lump in their stomach or groin.  - You may occasionally notice discomfort when bending over or lifting things.  - Generally they are small, and if they pop out they can be easily pushed back in. - Over time they can become bigger and cause more discomfort and pain.  - Occasionally the bowel can twist and not be able to be pushed back in and become strangulated. This is serious and requires urgent medical help.     What do about them?   - Your GP will take a history and examine you to diagnose a hernia, they may order a U/S if unsure.  - If it’s minor and not causing problems, just watch and wait.  - However, if it’s causing pain and discomfort, they may recommend surgery.  - An operation to fix the abdominal wall with stitches or what is called mesh, it’s often a keyhole surgery.  - You can try to avoid them by eating food with fibre so you don’t become constipated, not putting on weight, and careful lifting with your knees instead of your back.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/28/20246 minutes, 10 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Meta's Orion glasses, Zillow's risk scores for house listings

Your next smartphone will be on your face   Meta showcased their "Orion" glasses which they believe will be the smartphone of the future. They'll allow you to see 'holograms' of information or avatars of friends and colleagues, as well as have instant voice access to AI. This version of the glasses is the best we've seen when it comes to being an attractive pair of glasses that are light weight and have a high-quality projection screen that it's actually useful.   There's a tonne of tech around these, including a wristband that can interpret your hand signals to interact with the holograms and take actions. These glasses are not ready for primetime - they're costing $10,000 to produce. Right now you can buy the Meta Ray-Ban sunglasses, which are getting an upgrade. You'll be able to ask the AI to tell you about things you can see, thanks to video recognition tools.    Will a wildfire take out your dream home? A major real-estate site will give you a forecast   Zillow is one of America's go-to real estate listing platforms. They were the leader in providing a "Zestimate" of what your home is worth and will now lead the way to educate buyers on the potential climate risks to be thinking about. By the end of the year there'll be a section on each listing to show a risk score for the potential for wildfires, flooding, extreme temperatures, high winds and poor air quality, as well as the potential cost of insurance over time. Of those new listings added in August - 16% were at major risk of a wildfire and 13% at major risk of flooding.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/27/20244 minutes, 43 seconds
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Tara Ward: Nobody Wants This, FROM, National Treasures

Nobody Wants This   An agnostic sex podcaster and a newly single rabbi fall in love, but can their relationship survive their wildly different lives and meddling families? (Netflix)    FROM   From the producers of Lost comes this tale of a nightmarish town that traps all those who enter. As the unwilling residents search for a way out, they must try to protect themselves from the terrifying creatures that come out at night (TVNZ+).   National Treasures   Explore NZ’s recent history - the wonderful, the hidden and the controversial. Join Scotty and Stacey Morrison, as they showcase unique historical objects and their personal stories. Made with the support of NZ On Air and Te Māngai Pāho (TVNZ+).  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/27/20246 minutes, 49 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Megalopolis and Wolfs

Megalopolis  A conflict between Cesar, a genius artist who seeks to leap into a utopian, idealistic future, and his opposition, Mayor Franklyn Cicero, who remains committed to a regressive status quo, perpetuating greed, special interests, and partisan warfare.  Wolfs  Hired to cover up a high-profile crime, a fixer soon finds his night spiralling out of control when he's forced to work with an unexpected counterpart.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/27/20249 minutes, 11 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Banana, walnut, and sultana loaf cake

Spring is a funny old time for fresh fruit. The apples and pears have been in cool store forever, rhubarb can be temperamental and scarce, and the berries and stone fruit are not nearly ready, so we’re left with the trusty banana.    I love my banana cake studded with walnuts and sultanas but you can also leave them out if you prefer.     Ingredients  125g butter, softened   ½ cup sugar   2 medium eggs   2 large, ripe bananas, broken into pieces   Drizzle of golden syrup or maple syrup   70g walnut pieces    ½ cup sultanas    2 cups self-raising flour    ½ tsp cinnamon    ¼ tsp baking soda   2 tbsps plain Greek yoghurt   Splash of milk if needed – see note   Method  Heat oven to 180 C. Grease and line a large loaf tin.   In a standing mixer, beat the butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Add the eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition.   Add a drizzle of golden/maple syrup, the banana pieces, walnuts and sultanas to the creamed mixture. Sift in the self-raising flour, baking soda and cinnamon and gently beat or stir to combine. Don’t over mix but make sure there are no remaining pockets of flour either. Stir in the yoghurt. If it’s too stiff a splash of milk might be useful too.   Scrape the batter into the tin. Bake for 45 minutes, or until a skewer comes out clean when placed in the centre. Leave to cool.     Note  Having made this loaf cake many times I can attest that sometimes the batter is a little stiff, other times not so. It’s likely due to the size of the eggs, the variance in the temperature of the butter or the thickness of whatever yoghurt I’m using. I aim for a dropping consistency so if it errs on the stiff side, stir in a splash of milk to make it more manageable.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/27/20245 minutes, 38 seconds
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Jack Tame: The Working from Home directive seems reasonable to me

My take on working from home versus working in the office is you can’t really say any one model is perfect for everyone in every business or workplace and every sector or industry. There are workplaces where working from home might be better than working from the office. There are workplaces where the traditional model holds true. And there are workplaces that’ll find themselves somewhere in between.  I work six days a week, and typically do five in the office and one at home. Newsrooms are noisy, distracting, slightly chaotic, open-plan environments. That’s why I love them! But I have to read a lot, and I have to process detail. Once a week, it is so good to escape the office and bury myself in detail at home, without the risk of being distracted every two minutes.  Maybe I’m giving the productivity argument too much credit. If the primary reason to get public servants to go into the office in-person is actually just to prop up Wellington businesses, it’s a pretty lousy reason. But I actually think the reaction to the government’s directive this week was a bit overblown. They didn’t say all public servants HAVE to work from the office every day. They just said working from home was not an automatic entitlement, and that arrangements would have to be agreed between employers and employees. Working from home arrangements should only be agreed when they don’t impact agency objectives. Am I missing something? That seems pretty reasonable to me. I don’t see anything about mandating. My read is it still allows for flexibility, so long as it doesn’t compromise the quality of an agency’s work.   And actually, this government is making a bit of a habit of issuing directives that don’t cost it a thing, but will be met with a similar reaction from a big slab of the public.  A prime example is the cellphone ban in schools. I’ve always supported it. I just think it’s common sense, and now even the opposition education spokesperson supports it, too.   And teacher-only days! Unions and schools might rightly be frustrated at any implication they’re wasting time or doing something that isn’t worthwhile. Many schools time their teacher-only-days for long weekends, and regardless, schools still have to be open for a specific number of days a year. Also, I think it’s a bit rich to suggest that teacher-only-days have a major impact on truancy.   But I for one was surprised to learn that under the current rules, teacher-only-days are only supposed to be held outside of term time. Is there really a compelling reason that shouldn’t be the case?   It’ll be a blow to morale for many teachers and schools. But that directive was all about parents. And I can tell you now, a vast majority of them are not going to marching in the streets to demand a return of mid-term teacher-only days. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/27/20244 minutes, 11 seconds
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Eagle-Eye Cherry: Swedish Musician on his NZ tour, love for performing, and classic hit 'Save Tonight'

As the son of jazz legend Don Cherry, Eagle-Eye Cherry seemed destined for a life in the creative arts. His song Save Tonight is a boneafide classic, storming the charts upon its release.  He leads a much more low-key life nowadays than he did back in the 90’s, but he’s still writing and performing live, and is set to visit New Zealand alongside the legendary UB40.  It’ll be the first time Cherry has visited the country, and he told Newstalk ZB’s Jack Tame he’s very much looking forward to it.  “It’s been on my bucket list for my entire life,” Cherry revealed.  “So I’m really excited to come there and get to play for my fans, and to get to hear UB40 live, which I’ve never done.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/21/202413 minutes, 3 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Should we encourage tipping in New Zealand?

Should we be tipping in New Zealand?  The question has arisen once more with a new proposal to encourage the practice in the hospo sector.  Kevin Milne has been thinking about the proposal, and he’s not sure about the idea.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/21/20249 minutes, 18 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Adventures in the Atherton Tablelands, North Queensland

"Don’t you love it when you venture to new territory which knocks your expectations out of the park? I’ve just had such an experience when taking a cool change from North Queensland’s tropical coastline for a highlands escape. Just over an hour’s drive from Cairns, the Atherton Tablelands is a bucolic and woodsy delight, where elevated fertile farmland and ancient rainforests set the stage for rewarding outdoorsy exploration. As I made my way over the twists and turns of the Gillies Highway, a nonchalant Southern Cassowary briefly brought the road traffic to a grinding halt. These birds are not to messed with and I happily gave him the right of way as he intimately ambled past my gleaming rental car, casting an imperious glance my way, as if to say, “you’re in my territory, now”. After that brief brush with the birdlife – and thankfully no rental car damage, the warm embrace of Yungaburra soon shuffled into view, 750 metres above sea level." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/21/20248 minutes, 43 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Nelly Furtado - 7

Coming seven years after the release of her last album, ‘7’ is the 7th studio album by Nelly Furtado.   When announcing the album in July of 2024, Furtado said she had written “400-500 pieces of music in 4 years", fourteen of which were chosen for the album.  She likened the album to a collection, the songs being more like “random seashells that may be similar but not all alike”.  Estelle Clifford joined Jack Tame to give her thoughts on the release.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/21/20246 minutes, 5 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Frankie, The Life Impossible

Frankie by Graham Norton  Frankie Howe has lived a long life, her small flat is crammed full of art, furniture - and memories. Damian, her young carer, listens as she gradually tells him parts of her story - a story that takes us into a progressive, daring world of New York artists on the brink of fame, aspiring writers and larger-than-life characters.  Always just on the periphery, looking on, young Frankie is never quite sure enough of herself to take centre stage. But the outsider holds certain advantages, sees things others don't, can influence without drawing attention. And when the map has been lost, it's anyone's guess where you may end up, or the accidental choices you find you have made. Frankie discovers that life is not always the one we hope for, or the one others expect of us.  Travelling from post-war Ireland to the dazzling art scene of 1960s New York by way of London, Frankie is an immersive, decade-sweeping novel about love, bravery and what it means to live a significant life.    The Life Impossible by Matt Haig  “What looks like magic is simply a part of life we don’t understand yet…”  When retired math teacher Grace Winters is left a run-down house on a Mediterranean island by a long-lost friend, curiosity gets the better of her. She arrives in Ibiza with a one-way ticket, no guidebook and no plan.  Among the rugged hills and golden beaches of the island, Grace searches for answers about her friend’s life, and how it ended. What she uncovers is stranger than she could have dreamed. But to dive into this impossible truth, Grace must first come to terms with her past.  Filled with wonder and wild adventure, this is a story of hope and the life-changing power of a new beginning.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/21/20244 minutes, 27 seconds
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Full Show Podcast: 21 September 2024

On the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast for Saturday 21 September 2024, Eagle Eye Cherry joins Jack to discuss his bonafide classic track Save Tonight, his love for performing live, and what he's expecting for his first time ever touring in New Zealand.   Jack talks about how stiffer competition from across the ditch will help New Zealand's rugby improve too.   Chef Nici Wickes has the perfect recipe for new season asparagus, right as it is springing into stores.  Man of many talents, Graham Norton has a brand-new book out and book reviewer Catherine Raynes delivers her verdict.   And tech expert Paul Stenhouse explains why the US government is looking to force cars to have AM radio.  Get the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast every Saturday on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/21/20241 hour, 56 minutes, 58 seconds
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Dougal Sutherland: The benefits of 'dreamscrolling'

A new phenomenon has emerged: dreamscrolling.   The opposite of doomscrolling, dreamscrolling has people looking at dream purchases or things they’d one day like to own – houses being a common choice.  It even seems to have some benefits when done in the workplace, both to those doing it, and the organisation.  Dougal Sutherland reveals a couple of the key benefits it can have: - Dreamscrolling gives us that little psychological “hit” of joy, even if it’s about something imaginary! When we fantasize about the “what-if” it’s like, for a moment, we’re living our best life in that dream house – and it feels good.  - Overseas research has shown that dream scrolling can help some people with financial planning as it serves to motivate and inspire them to actively save for, or invest in, that thing they’re dreaming about. So it can help motivate us and change our behaviour for the future.  - At a time when many of us might be feeling a bit down in the dumps, particularly if you live in Wellington or work for the government, it’s probably not surprising that a good chunk of dreamscrolling happens at work. That might not be a bad thing though as the boost in positive mood you get can flow through to how you engage with your work and people around you. And it’s certainly better than doomscrolling!  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/21/20248 minutes, 8 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Native Bees and Mistletoe

A week or so ago, a wonderful kids book couriered its way to my front door. It’s a book about our native bees in Aotearoa, written by Rachel Weston. It’s titled “Kiwi Bees have tiny knees”.  How refreshing to finally read a book about our native bees, not the introduced pollinator from Tropical Africa which migrated through Europe and all the way to Asia. Our native bees are from Aotearoa and there are 28 species in our land, most of which have not been studied well at all!  After Spring has started this year (that will be from tomorrow morning 12:43 am onwards) I shall come back to this magnificent book in detail, simply because it deserves a lot more entomological attention.  For now, I will alert you to page 21: Clever little bees: Pollinating Mistletoe.  That simple line grabbed my attention immediately, and on the day I received the book I started a complete week of Mistletoe frenzy; and it is all to do with Gardening!  Our tiny bees pollinate mistletoe? For Real?  Rachel’s book has a QR Code on page 21 which allows you to see them at work, check out the video here.  A Leioproctus native bee (pretty small insect!) chews open the red mistletoe’s flower and harvests nectar and pollen. When it does the same trick with the next flower of the bunch, the pollen will fertilise that neighbouring flower.  Bellbirds and tui are probably the main pollinators of these mistletoes, but those tiny bees also contribute to the reproductive system. That is just as well, seeing our native birds might be locally under pressure from predators etc – so if bees can take over some of that pollination job from the birds, the mistletoe might have better chances for survival.  We have 8 species of Mistletoe in New Zealand (number 9 is presumed to be extinct), but browsing by possums and loss of habitat or host trees puts the species under pressure. Mistletoes are “parasitic” plants that live on their hosts and extract nutritious liquids from these host plants. This doesn’t seem to harm the host plants or trees in a major way.  Once the mistletoe started flowering (some have very small flowers, other species have beautifully coloured flowers that stand out!) the pollinators will be attracted and do their job. That leads to the formation of fertile mistletoe fruit (seed inside the small, juicy berry) that will draw in the bird species that enjoy those fruits.  As soon as they pick off their snacks, the birds may suddenly realise that the seed is surrounded by a seriously sticky glue. Some birds try to take the glue off their beaks by wiping the fruit and the seed over the branches of the host plant on which the mistletoe grew.  Some birds will have a go at swallowing the fruit and seed regardless, ending up defecating a very sticky poo that the bird will wipe off its “bottom feathers”, usually on the same branches that grew the mistletoe. And that is how Nature distributes the mistletoe through the landscape.  As gardeners, what can we learn from that?  A few years ago, I managed to adhere some green mistletoe seeds on a native host plant: kowhai!   It hasn’t flowered or seeded as yet but my neighbour is a few years ahead of the game and I got some seeds off him – now it’s all on!  Ileostylus micranthus seeds in abundance. The tiny green bits of growth are the flowers on this species.  I have stuck heaps of seeds all over the neighbourhood in an attempt to find out what kind of trees would work as hosts of this green mistletoe (Ileostylus micranthus). So far we know kowhai and divaricating Coprosmas (C. virescens), as well as apple, pear, peach, and plum!   The way to attach the sticky seeds is no surprise: the sticky seeds are squeezed out of the fruit and positioned on the "collar" of the branch. Tag it with some colourful wool or something like that, to keep an eye on progress for the next few years. I reckon this is the way to spread our native mistletoes back into their original habitat. There’s quite a bit of info on these plants on our internet: here and here. LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/21/20245 minutes, 28 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Wine Expert recommends Rimapere Baron Edmond de Rothschild 2024 Sauvignon Blanc

Bob's Best Buys: Rimapere Baron Edmond de Rothschild 2024 Sauvignon Blanc, Marlborough, $30  Why I chose it:                       - Top vintage - Best of Marlborough with a French accent - Sauvignon doesn’t get much better than this - Delicious now but no rush - It has great purity and power - Due to be released, but buy it while stocks last    What does it taste like?   A delicious sauvignon blanc with real finesse. Flavours are a medley of passion fruit, lime zest, guava, and a suggestion of feijoa. A vibrant and refreshing wine with appealing purity. It has a strong Marlborough signature with a subtle French accent.     Why it’s a bargain:   It’s not the cheapest sauvignon around, in fact as sauvignon goes it is moderately expensive, but is also very, very good. In my book it offers good value.    Where can you buy it?  It is just about to be released so check out your nearest fine wine retailer. When ordering in advance, don’t forget to enquire about a discount.    What’s a good food match?   The folk at Rimapere recommend pairing it with salads, white meats, or fish in sauce dishes. I can’t argue with that.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/20/20243 minutes, 25 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Microsoft partners with a nuclear plant to power AI, the US Government could force cars to have AM radio

How do we power the rise of AI?  The answer at the moment seems to be nuclear power. Microsoft has partnered with a shuttered nuclear power plant called Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania to bring back its Unit 1 facility. It was shut down in 2019 because of increased competition from cheaper sources such as natural gas, solar, and wind power.  Microsoft says it'll purchase all the power from the plant for 20 years. So, Constellation says it'll spend $1.6 billion to get it back up and running by 2028 – as long as the regulators allow it.   You may know the name Three Mile Island because of a nuclear meltdown at the "Unit 2" site, in 1979.  The US Government could soon force cars to have AM radio  With the rise of internet connected electric vehicles, AM radio has been phased out. Tesla, BMW and Volkswagen promised to remove AM radio saying the electric engines can interfere with the sound of AM radio.   Plus, why do you need it if you can stream Spotify, Pandora, or iHeart? Well, what happens if you're out of a coverage area? What happens if there's an issue with the communications systems? How do you get emergency information? Well, US lawmakers believe the answer was, and is, AM radio. It's got a huge coverage area, even in rural areas, and is integrated with emergency alerting systems. The AM for Every Vehicle Act was overwhelmingly approved by a house committee and will now go before the house for a vote and, if successful, will go to President Biden to sign.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/20/20246 minutes, 18 seconds
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Tara Ward: The Penguin, A Very Royal Scandal, Nightsleeper

The Penguin   Following the events of The Batman, Oz Cobb aka The Penguin seeks to fill the power vacuum left by Carmine Falcone’s death and finally give his mother the life he promised. But first, Oz must confront enemies new and old (Neon).    A Very Royal Scandal   Based on the real-life 2019 interview between Emily Maitlis and Prince Andrew over the scandalous accusations the Prince faced regarding his involvement with Jeffrey Epstein and Virginia Giuffre. A Very Royal Scandal follows the action of Maitlis and Prince Andrew in the lead-up to the interview, the event itself and the many questions left in its wake that would change their lives forever (Prime Video).    Nightsleeper  The overnight train from Glasgow to London is hacked. Passengers are trapped on board, including police officer Joe. As the train hurtles towards disaster, Joe manages to make contact with Abby, the cyber security director (ThreeNow).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/20/20244 minutes, 42 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Thelma and Marguerite’s Theorem

Thelma   Thelma Post is a 93-year-old grandmother who loses $10,000 to a con artist on the phone. With help from a friend and his motorized scooter, she soon embarks on a treacherous journey across Los Angeles to reclaim what was taken from her.  Marguerite’s Theorem   When a brilliant mathematics student at France's top university presents her thesis, a mistake shakes the certainty of her planned-out life. She decides to quit everything and start over.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/20/20247 minutes, 18 seconds
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Jack Tame: This Bledisloe clash doesn't feel like much of a contest

Off the top of your head, where do reckon the Wallabies currently sit in the World rankings?   Sure, they’re behind us. They’re behind South Africa, of course. But they’re also languishing behind Scotland, behind Italy, would you believe.  According to World Rugby, the Wallabies of September 2024 are the ninth best national team in men’s rugby today. They only just squeak in ahead of Fiji.  When I was a kid, the Bledisloe felt like the biggest thing in rugby outside of a World Cup. It probably wasn’t, of course. Tests with South Africa were at least comparable, I guess, and Lions tours had their prestige. But I would get so worked up for Bledisloes because they always felt like anyone could win.   I still remember epic Bledisloe clashes. The John Eales era. George Gregan and that tackle, Jeff Wilson spilling the ball as he dived for the line, the Wallabies just holding on for Bledisloe glory.  But what happened? New Zealand Rugby’s had its issues, but arguably no country that plays rugby has experienced anything like the decline that Australia has experienced. Those epic Bledisloe clashes of the past are becoming ancient history. It’s 22 years since Australia last held the Bledisloe - we now have an elected Member of Parliament who has never seen the Wallabies win it.   And get this: according to the Australian Sports Commission, rugby is the country’s ninth-most-popular sport by participation. Aussie Rules has four times as many kids who play. Basketball is five times more popular. Rugby loses out to rock climbing and badminton.   There are a range of things that have likely contributed. The private school rugby culture in Australia has isolated the sport from a huge slab of the population. Concern over head knocks will have impacted participation. The domestic rugby competition was hollowed out and ultimately scrapped, which means the Super Rugby teams are the only real professional options for young players. The AFL has 18 teams. The NRL has 16 Australian teams. Super Rugby will now have just four. It’s telling that a city of five million couldn’t sustain a side. How many people in Melbourne didn’t even know the Rebels were a thing? And as a TV entertainment product, sorry, but the Brumbies vs the Force rarely compares to the thrill of the NRL.  All of this is not to diminish this evening’s game. And I’m certainly not hoping for a Wallabies win. But ultimately, it’s in our interests for Australian rugby to somehow work its way back into something akin to the force of the past. New Zealand rugby needs better competition from across the ditch. We need the spectre of potentially losing the Bledisloe! Maybe I’ll eat my words, but as much as I’ll enjoy the game this evening, right now... it doesn’t feel like all that much of a contest. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/20/20244 minutes, 16 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Asparagus Quiche

A quiche is a fabulous vehicle for asparagus and it makes a fabulous lunch or dinner.   Serves 4-6     Ingredients   1-2 sheets short crust pastry   5 large eggs   ½ cup grated cheese   ½ cup cream (can use milk)   ½ cup chopped parsley   ½ tsp sea salt   ¼ tsp black pepper   100g cold smoked salmon   5 spears asparagus, cut into 4cm lengths     Method  1.Preheat oven to 190 C and place a tray in to heat on the middle (or a little bit higher) rack.   2.Roll out the pastry to fit a 23cm loose-bottom tart tin. Press into tin, leaving any overhang as this will fall away when cooked. Prick all over with a fork. Chill for 15-30 minutes before baking for 15-18 minutes or until lightly golden.  Cool.   3.Sprinkle cheese over pastry case. Whisk eggs with cream to mix. Add in parsley, salt and pepper. Pour into pastry case. Sprinkle over cut asparagus and salmon bake for 35-40 minutes or until a slight wobble in the middle. Remove and cool to warm to serve.     Nici’s note  You can get away with blind baking pastry without the beans/rice if it is pricked all over, well-rested and chilled so that it doesn’t shrink.     Make it your own  Use feta instead of salmon.  Use drained tinned salmon or tuna in place of smoked salmon.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/20/20245 minutes, 2 seconds
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Troy Kingi: Kiwi Musician discusses his 10:10:10 project, 'Leatherman & the Mojave Green', National tour

Troy Kingi is a man on a well-documented mission, creating ten albums in ten different genres, over the course of ten years for his 10:10:10 project.  Through this project, Troy has carved a remarkable reputation for musical versatility.  In August, he released album number 8 in the project, Leatherman & the Mojave Green, a rock album that has brought him back to his roots.  Before getting to work on his final two albums, Kingi has found the time to squeeze in a tour of New Zealand.  Leatherman was recorded in Joshua Tree, a national park in California, and Kingi told Jack Tame that the choice to record there was him trying to rekindle the flame that got him into the industry in the first place.  “I was at a point where I was questioning all my directions, and back in the beginning, I’d just write for the loving of writing and things would flow the way they’d flowed. And I felt like I kind of lost that,” he told Tame.  “So actually going back to a genre of style that is probably the core of who I am, it was timely, it was like, perfect timing.”  He’s been touring the album around New Zealand since its release, with more shows still to come in Christchurch, Hamilson, Tauranga, Napier, and Gisborne.   More info on shows and tickets can be found here.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/14/202414 minutes, 56 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: TOI - Waves

Kiwi music collective TOI has released their newest album ‘Waves’, showcasing their signature sound of modern soul, old school funk, and R&B, along with a new experimental approach.   Estelle Clifford joined Jack Tame to give her thoughts on the new release.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/14/20246 minutes, 5 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Precipice and Billionaire, Nerd Saviour, King: Bill Gates and his Quest to Shape Our World

Precipice by Robert Harris  Summer 1914. A world on the brink of catastrophe.  In London, 26-year-old Venetia Stanley – aristocratic, clever, bored, reckless – is having a love affair with the Prime Minister, H. H. Asquith, a man more than twice her age. He writes to her obsessively, sharing the most sensitive matters of state.  As Asquith reluctantly leads the country into war with Germany, a young intelligence officer is assigned to investigate a leak of top secret documents – and suddenly what was a sexual intrigue becomes a matter of national security that will alter the course of political history.    Billionaire, Nerd Saviour, King: Bill Gates and his Quest to Shape Our World by Anupreeta Das  Few billionaires have been in the public eye for as long, and in as many guises, as Bill Gates. At first heralded as a tech visionary, the Microsoft cofounder next morphed into a ruthless capitalist, only to change yet again when he fashioned himself into a global do-gooder. Along the way, Gates forever influenced how we think about tech founders, as the products they make and the ideas they sell continue to dominate our lives. Through the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, he also set a new standard for high-profile, billionaire philanthropy. But there is more to Gates's story, and here, Das's revelatory reporting shows us that billionaires have secrets and philanthropy can have a dark side.  Drawing upon hundreds of interviews with current and former employees of the Gates Foundation, Microsoft, academics, nonprofits, and those with insight into the Gates universe, Das delves into Gates's relationships with Warren Buffett, Jeffrey Epstein, Melinda French Gates, and others, to uncover the truths behind the public persona. In telling Gates's story, Das also provides a new way to think about how billionaires wield their power, manipulate their image, and pursue philanthropy to become heroes, repair damaged reputations, and direct policy to achieve their preferred outcomes.  Insightful, illuminating, and timely, Billionaire, Nerd, Savior, King is an important story of money and government, wealth and power, and media and image, and the ways in which the world's richest people hold us in their thrall.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/14/20245 minutes, 10 seconds
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Ed McKnight: How many properties can an investor afford?

How many investment properties can the average investor afford to buy? It depends on income, but Ed McKnight has run some numbers. Plus, he answers the question of how much they really make.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/14/20245 minutes, 41 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Tropical delights in North Queensland

"Colourful, playful, sun-splashed Cairns enjoys the unique distinction of being cradled in tropical wonder. The gateway city straddles two World Heritage-protected treasures: the Great Barrier Reef and the Wet Tropics rainforest. I took a daytrip to the family-favourite destination of Fitzroy Island. Just 45 minutes from Cairns on the Fitzroy Flyer, this barefoot island getaway serves up a flavourful dabble with the Great Barrier Reef. The island is designated a National Park, in deference to its spectacular walking trails, rainforest, beaches and abundant marine life, in the calm sheltered waters. It’s jaw-dropping to think the island was previously connected to the mainland before the last Ice Age." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/14/20249 minutes, 8 seconds
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Full Show Podcast: 14 September 2024

On the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast for Saturday 14th September 2024, the man with a remarkable reputation for musical versatility, Troy Kingi joins Jack to chat album number 8 in his 10:10:10 series.  Jack ponders a social media ban for those under 16 years of age.  Spring is making itself known and chef Nici Wickes shares a deliciously creamy recipe perfect for moments of seasonal entertaining.  Can ice cream tub lids be recycled? Kate sets things straight about what can't be recycled through curbside bins.  Plus, Apple have released a surprising product - a hearing aid! Tech expert Paul Stenhouse discusses the tech-for-good.  Get the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast every Saturday on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/14/20241 hour, 56 minutes, 38 seconds
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Kate Hall: A refresher on recycling practices

After recycling was standardised in February, many people are still unaware they can't put any caps or lids in their curbside recycling bins.  A new scheme has recently launched, allowing people to bring their caps and lids into participating supermarkets to be properly recycled.  Kate ‘Ethically Kate’ Hall joined Jack Tame to give a refresher on recycling, and a bit of advice in how to make it easier.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/14/20248 minutes, 40 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Cool tools for the garden

I’ve been pretty busy in the garden, tunnel house, and grassy building site. That always seem to happen with me just before spring emerges – it’s a frantic time.    Spades  When you’re digging out flax or any plant, tree, shrub for that matter, some soil types make it difficult to get into with a regular spade. We had a rather dry late winter period with soil becoming pretty hard to open up.  My best investment for these conditions is my trenching spade:  A long and tapering blade that ends up with just 10 centimetres of bottom edge, easy to drive into the soil and allowing you to tackle the hard clay with a minimum amount of effort.  I tried to dig out large, old flax plants and the only way to do that is with a trenching spade – no contest!  Of course, as the name suggests, trenching spades were invented to create long narrow trenches for power lines of water pipes.   Why dig our more than you need to?    Weeding implements  We all know what a hoe is; a push or pull device that can cut plants off their roots. I am really simplifying the various hoes in existence – there are many different varieties, but the system is quite simple: you either push the blade through the top-layers of the soil, or you pull.  My favourite hoe is the one created by a Dutchman Jaap Sneeboer. I think he calls it “the Royal Hoe” – how Dutch is that!  It has a double attack ability: a regular pull hoe that is made from very sturdy metal, and a three-tine fork that can go deeper to remove rather sturdy roots. That fork is also brilliant for aerating the soil.  It’s a tall, and solid hoe that will do a multitude of jobs before you start sowing new seeds or planting new veges.    Cutting Flax leaves  Always a real pain in the bum. Flax leaves are so resistant to secateurs and knives.  I have them on the sides of our driveway and you can literally imagine how these long and resistant leaves always grow out over the drive...  The “knife” that works well is the Niwashi Flax knife and the Maruyoshi flax cutter (there are all kinds of models on the NZ market now). Make sure that you get a sturdy one that lasts for years.  It’s a mean tool! The curved blade has extremely sharp teeth that will go through flax leaves without any trouble at all. The teeth are angled towards the bottom and therefore will always work in a downward motion. Of course, they will also cut the leaves of Cabbage trees.     A Cultivator  This thing weeds, pulls out roots, and cuts out all the undesirables from within the rows of edibles and ornamentals, without accidentally hitting the desirables!  The Clark Cultivator was designed in Christchurch and is used as a hand-tool. The main blade emerges in a 90 degree angle and is super sharp.  It rips roots off the weeds and the pointy end can be manoeuvred with incredible accuracy. That pointy end is also very useful if you want to quickly dig a hole to transplant anything that needs a new position. It even allows you to create a perfectly straight line to sow some seeds  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/13/20243 minutes, 45 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Apple's new hearing aid and OpenAi's new "reasoning" AI

Apple released a surprising product this week... a hearing aid.  They were awaiting FDA approval, but today they got it, making it the first over-the-counter hearing aid software device to receive such approval.  It's more tech for good! Approximately 1.5 billion people around the world are living with hearing loss, according to the World Health Organization. The Apple Hearing Study revealed that 75% of people diagnosed with hearing loss haven’t received the assistive support that they need.  How does it work? You open the health app to take a hearing test from the comfort of home - it takes about five minutes. It builds an 'audiogram', just like what you'd get at the doctor's office, and uses this to personalize your hearing experience. If you struggle with high, mid, or low tones these will be boosted accordingly allowing you to hear conversations and the environment around you more clearly. It's designed for folks with mild to moderate hearing loss.  It's worth pointing out that AirPods could be a very successful company all on their own. Apple has sold tens of billions of dollars worth of them, and it's thought there are over 100 million users globally. Typically if someone has their AirPods in it signals 'leave me alone', but not anymore. So, should you, will you, talk to someone with AirPods in?    OpenAI's new AI can 'reason'.  Get set, we're entering a new phase of AI. Open AI's "o1", the first in a planned series of “reasoning” models that have been trained to answer more complex questions - and they say it can do it faster than a human can.  It's better at producing code and solving "multistep problems", but it's much slower and more expensive.  In the qualifying test for the International Mathematics Olympiad, the GPT-4o scored 13%, this new model scored 83%. In an online code competition, it reached the 89th percentile of participants.  The next model... Open AI says it will perform at the PhD level for physics, chemistry and biology tests.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/13/20244 minutes, 57 seconds
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Chris Schulz: Slow Horses, Wise Guy: David Chase and the Sopranos, Location, Location, Location NZ

Slow Horses   A dysfunctional team of MI5 agents and their obnoxious boss, the notorious Jackson Lamb, navigate the espionage world's smoke and mirrors to defend England from sinister forces (Apple TV+).    Wise Guy: David Chase and the Sopranos    Twenty-five years after it first debuted, The Sopranos remains a touchstone for prestige television. Featuring interviews with cast and crew, this two-part documentary delves into the psyche of renowned Sopranos creator David Chase (Neon).    Location, Location, Location NZ   Friendship ended with Kirstie and Phil, now Jayne Kiely and Paul Glover are your best friends. The local reboot of the iconic property series begins on TVNZ1 and TVNZ+ this Sunday night and promises a swagbag of nervous New Zealanders looking to make their property dreams a reality. Episode one takes viewers inside the notoriously chilled out housing market in Tāmaki Makaurau, where one buyer teases she is known to “dry wretch” when she gets nervous. If that’s not high stakes television, we don’t know what is.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/13/20246 minutes, 16 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Speak No Evil and Radical

Speak No Evil   A dream holiday turns into a living nightmare when an American couple and their daughter spend the weekend at a British family's idyllic country estate.    Radical    Sixth grade students at Jose Urbina Lopez Elementary are among the worst performing students in Mexico, with their world one of violence and hardship, not possibility. It might seem like a dead end, but it's the perfect place for new teacher Sergio Juarez to try something different.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/13/20248 minutes, 27 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Affordable entertaining - Creamy Chicken and Peas

This one pan wonder of a dish is perfect to serve a group – it’s full of fresh flavours but is creamy and comforting too.   Serves 4-6     Ingredients  3-4 free-range boneless skinless chicken breasts   Salt and pepper to season   1 tablespoon olive oil  2 tablespoons butter  1 leek or onion, finely sliced or diced  1 cup chicken stock  2 tablespoons lemon juice  3 garlic cloves, minced  ½ teaspoon chilli flakes   ¼ cup cream  1 ½ cups peas   2 tablespoons chopped parsley    Method  1. Remove tenderloin from chicken breasts. Slice each breast horizontally in half so you have two thinner pieces plus the tenderloin per breast. Sprinkle a pinch of salt and pepper on both sides of the chicken.   2. Heat oil in a large pan on a medium heat. Lightly brown chicken on both sides, about 2-3 minutes on each side. Remove the chicken to a plate. Add butter to the pan and add leeks or onions and cook gently until softened.    3. In a bowl mix stock, lemon juice, garlic and chilli flakes and pour this over leeks/onions. Bring to a rapid simmer and cook for 10 minutes or so. Add chicken back into the pan to heat through then pour over cream. At this stage it can be either placed over a gentle heat or popped into an oven heated to 180 C to cook for a further 6-8 minutes until sauce is thickened a bit.   4. Pour boiling water over frozen peas and let them sit for 5 minutes then drain. Add the peas to the pan in the final 2 minutes of cooking.    5. To serve, top with chopped parsley and a decent grind of black pepper and serve with some buttercrunch or cos lettuce.     Nici’s note   Adding the peas towards the end of cooking ensures they keep their vibrant green colour.     LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/13/20245 minutes, 52 seconds
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Jack Tame: Should we try banning social media for kids?

I’m a slave to social media and it drives me nuts.   I feel compelled to have Twitter and Facebook for work. Instagram for socialising. I wisely never touch TikTok because from all accounts, that’s the most addictive platform of the lot. But if I have to battle to stop myself from reflexively picking up my phone and checking the ‘gram, I can’t imagine how hard it is for the generations who’ve never known a world without smart phones.  Australia looks set to forge ahead with a ban on social media for young people. The South Australian government will ban it for kids under 14 and put the onus on the platforms to use age verification tools in making sure younger kids aren’t setting up accounts. 14 and 15 years olds will need explicit parental permission to access the likes of Snapchat, TikTok, Instagram and X.   But is that excessive? Is social media really comparable to booze or tobacco? And if it’s causing harm, is it really the state’s job to step in?   I’m a huge fan of the work of U.S Social Psychologist Jonathan Haidt, author of ‘The Coddling of the American Mind.’ He says that overprotection from parents and schools has caused young people to be less resilient than in the past. I think there’s a lot in that. But I also agree with him that a lot of social and psychological damage in young people stems directly from social media. No phones until high school and keep them off social media until they’re at least 16, he says. Don’t you think it’s crazy that social media executives openly admit they refuse to let their own kids use their platforms, while claiming it’s all good for everyone else’s?   I supported the phone ban in schools. I think it’s common sense. And in a way, this is the same: it’s a collective action problem. At the moment, parents know that if they let their kid on social media at a young age, even at 13, which is the stated age limit for many of the platforms, it’s potentially doing them harm. But if they deny their kid any social platforms, parents often feel the child runs the risk of being socially ostracised.   Easy to say this now, given our boy’s only seven, but I’d like to think if in the future it’s a binary choice between letting him access social media when he’s really young, or supporting him if he gets stick because some of his classmates are online and he’s not... well, I’d take the latter option. I guess I’m a bit old school and strict.   But regulation would mean a collective standard. The same rules across the board. And if we agree that an unregulated system isn’t doing our kids much good, perhaps it’s time to consider something different. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/13/20244 minutes, 7 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Unfounded accusations and repeated rhetoric

As Kevin Milne watched the US Presidential Debate this past week, one comment reminded him of a similar scaremongering scandal from his youth in Christchurch.  Donald Trump, in one of his tirades against immigration, accused Haitian migrants in Springfield of eating other people’s pets – an accusation with no basis or evidence, just like the one Kevin remembers from 1950s Christchurch.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/13/20249 minutes, 5 seconds
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Charlie Vickers: Australian actor on his role in the Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power, the twist identity reveal

The Lord of the Rings franchise is held very near and dear to many Kiwi’s hearts, and the brand-new retelling of the franchise has been nothing but popular upon it’s release.  The Rings of Power had an estimated 25 million viewers tune in for its Season 1 premiere, and it’s second season has begun.  It’s set thousands of years before the events of JRR Tolkein’s novels, with Middle Earth’s infamous villain inhabiting a flesh and blood body for the first time on screen.  Australian actor Charlie Vickers plays Sauron, a twist only revealed in the final episode of the first season, as his charismatic Halbrand was unmasked.  The twist was something of a surprise to Vickers as well, as he only found out after they had begun filming.  “I filmed the first two episodes of the show, not knowing I was playing Sauron,” he told Newstalk ZB’s Jack Tame.  “And then they called me into their office in Henderson and they said, you’re, so it turns out that Halbrand is Sauron.”  “I was left reeling, in a good way.”  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/7/202413 minutes, 3 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Protecting yourself from online scams

No matter how smart you are, you’re always at risk of getting caught by a scam. They’re on the rise lately, and even those who know all the signs and think they’ve taken all of the precautions are finding themselves on the sharp end of the stick.  Kevin Milne is rather familiar with scams and consumer affairs, but a recent incident had him cancelling his credit card as quick as possible.  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/7/20248 minutes, 1 second
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Estelle Clifford: Sabrina Carpenter - Short n' Sweet

Short n’ Sweet, Sabrina Carpenter’s latest album was an instant success. Released on August 23rd, it was her first album to top the Billboard 200 chart, and was the third biggest debut week for an album in the US in 2024.  It’s a 12 track album, mixing influences of country, rock, disco, and R&B with Carpenter’s signature pop style.   Estelle Clifford joined Jack Tame to give her thoughts on the release.  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/7/20245 minutes, 13 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Death at the Sign of the Rook and Safe Enough

Death at the Sign of the Rook by Kate Atkinson  The crumbling house - Burton Makepeace and its chatelaine the Dowager Lady Milton - suffered the loss of their last remaining painting of any value, a Turner, some years ago. The housekeeper, Sophie, who disappeared the same night, is suspected of stealing it.  Jackson, a reluctant hostage to the snowstorm, has been investigating the theft of another The Woman with a Weasel, a portrait, taken from the house of an elderly widow, on the morning she died. The suspect this time is the widow’s carer, Melanie. Is this a coincidence or is there a connection? And what secrets does The Woman with a Weasel hold? The puzzle is Jackson’s to solve. And let’s not forget that a convicted murderer is on the run on the moors around Burton Makepeace.  All the while, in a bid to make money, Burton Makepeace is determined to keep hosting a shambolic Murder Mystery that acts as a backdrop while the real drama is being played out in the house.    Safe Enough by Lee Child  From the world's number one thriller writer, twenty pulse-pounding short stories are collected for the first time in one edition, complete with an introduction from the author plus an exclusive brand-new short story featuring Jack Reacher and Maggie Bird from Lee Child and Tess Gerritsen.  I was the guy who always found a way.  I was the guy that couldn't be stopped.  A drug-dealing hit man unburdens his fears to a stranger. An overlooked rookie cop is assigned to the department’s file room. A ruthless killer only kills bad guys. A methodical bodyguard quits his job when he’s outsmarted. A military mission is planned to perfection...  Meticulously plotted and utterly compelling, these are intimate portraits of humanity at its best and worst. Each story is entirely distinct. And with their economical prose and unexpected twists, each could only have been written by the creator of Jack Reacher.    LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/7/20244 minutes, 10 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Kona Coast delights in Hawai'i

"After taking my fill of nature’s feisty features at Volcanoes National Park, the sun, the sand and the coastal draws of the Big Island were calling. The Kona Coast is a 100km long sweep along Hawai’i’s western coast, brimming with attractions and experiences that smashed my expectations. Lined with lava fields, coffee farms, and some of Hawaii’s most beautiful coastline, I wish I’d set aside more time on the Big Island to delve into its numerous delights. There are charms at every turn. The beating heart of the tourist scene is Kailua-Kona, the colourful and bustling town a short distance from Kona Airport. It incorporates Kailua Village which once a sleepy fishing village and retreat for Hawaiian royalty." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/7/20249 minutes, 25 seconds
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Full Show Podcast: 07 September 2024

On the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast for Saturday 7th of September 2024, star of the 'Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power’ series Charlie Vickers chats with Jack about what it's like to be Middle Earth's most infamous villain.  Bananagrams anyone? Jack ponders how astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams will pass their unexpectedly extended time in space.   Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice! 36 years on from the original, the Deetz family is back - Francesca Rudkin gives the details on just how the Burtonian spirit stacks up.  Lee Child moves away from his well-known character Jack Reacher in his brand-new book. Reviewer Catherine Raynes shares her thoughts on Child's storytelling skills.  Get the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast every Saturday on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/7/20241 hour, 57 minutes, 17 seconds
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Dougal Sutherland: Is the UK's 4-day working week really a good thing?

On the face of it the 4-day working week sounds like a good thing, but the devil is in the detail. Recently in the UK the government has indicated they may strengthen workers' rights to request this – however, it’s the right to request 40 hours compressed into 4 10 hour days, rather than 5 8-hour days. Although it might sound attractive at first, I’m not sure this is sustainable in the longer term, particularly for those who have family. If you include travel time, it could be that you end up being away from home from 7am – 7pm. Which would leave you Friday to recover and could ultimately lead to burnout.  A better option could be the 100/80/100 4-day working week: 100% of pay, 80% of time, 100% of productivity. Initially pioneered by NZ firm Perpetual Guardian and taken up by hundreds of organisations around the world – although interestingly very few in NZ.  It’s based on the idea that during a typical 5-day week there are only limited periods when we are productive – some estimate that it’s only about 30% of time. So, if we support people to be more focused and productive at work, we reward them with having to work less than they currently do. Global results are quite staggering:  - 25% increase in revenue  - 32% reduction in staff turnover  - 66% reduction in burnout  - 94% of organisations wanted to continue  It doesn’t involve everyone simply working 4 8-hour days – some people might work 5 days but shorter hours, some 3 days but longer hours. Every year the “deal” is put to workers – if we can keep productivity at 100%, we will pay you for 40 hours but you only have to work 32. If productivity drops, we go back to the 40-hour week. Great idea as it puts the solutions back into the hands of the staff who work in their own interests rather than having management dictate.     What can people do if they’re interested?  - Don’t buy into the idea that “it won’t work for us” —everyone says that— if your business needs to provide services 5 (or more) days per week then hand this problem over to the staff to figure out.  - Be prepared to do quite a bit of work beforehand e.g., how do you define productivity in your business, are you tracking people’s rates of burnout or wellbeing and if not, how will you do this?  - Likely to need some training too e.g., how to effectively run a meeting so that people’s time isn’t wasted.    LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/7/202410 minutes, 57 seconds
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Bryan Betty: The problem of prostate cancer

Why is prostate cancer a problem?  - It occurs in the prostate, a gland that sits below the bladder and produces fluid for semen.  - It’s the second highest cause of cancer death in men. 4000 are diagnosed a year, and 700 men die a year.  - Over time the number of people being diagnosed, and death rate is dropping due to increased testing.  - If you are diagnosed: 90% of men are alive after 5 years, and 90% alive after 10 years due to early treatment, and sometimes the cancer is slow growing.       Are there symptoms that can indicate prostate cancer?  Things to look out for:  - A need to urinate urgently, difficulty with getting started and weak urine stream, dribbling after finish, blood in the urine.  - However, these can be due to other ‘benign’ prostate problems:  - BPH – Benign Prostatic Hypertrophy: the prostate getting larger with age, but it’s not cancerous  - Prostatitis: an infection of the prostate  If you notice any of these symptoms you need to talk to your GP.     Should we be doing anything to check for prostate cancer?  - Yes. From the age of 50 years, talk to your doctor about a two-yearly prostate check.  - If you have a family history —father, brother— then you may need to start earlier at 40 years.  - The check is very simple: a blood test called a PSA and quick rectal examination to feel for the size of the prostate.     If a problem is detected what are the treatments?  - If the blood test indicates a possible problem, then more tests are done: further bloods, possible MRI scan, a biopsy of the prostate to look for cancer.  - If cancer is detected there are four main approaches:  - Watch and wait: because the cancer is early and is considered low risk, slow growing, and may not cause a problem.    - Radiotherapy to destroy the cancer.  - Prostatectomy: where an operation is preformed to remove the prostate.  - Hormone injections that shrink and control the cancer.  Like all cancers can be treated if found early: if you are 50, a man, visit your GP and discuss a prostate check!    LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/7/20247 minutes, 33 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: The climate, insects, and animals in Arctic regions

Jacob Anderson is an old mate from Sir Peter Blake Trust (Blake Inspire), who’s finally got his PhD and moved to the USA, taking up a job working on Climate Change.  These observations are about the effect of climate change and how critters adapt to the cold.    The Greenland wolf  The Greenland wolf is a subspecies of the grey wolf, and their population is sitting at around 200. Their range is in the ice-free areas of northeast Greenland. Their main prey are hares, but they also eat the calves of musk oxen and seals.  In the late early 1900’s a population in east Greenland was poisoned to extinction. But they were not considered high economic value due to their low abundance, compared to the fur trade of the Arctic fox.  They have small pack sizes – usually only 3 or 4 members.  Greenland wolf spoor.    Arctic mosquito   Arctic mosquitoes serve as an important food source to other animals. They are notorious for their role as pests to humans and wildlife, including caribou, whose populations can be affected by their attacks. They primarily feed on the blood of caribou.  These mosquitoes spend most of their lives in an aquatic environment in shallow, tundra ponds. Their eggs become frozen in the winter and hatch into larvae when the ponds melt in the spring. Arctic mosquitoes spend about two to three weeks in the larval stage before they develop into pupa and then adults.  They're most prevalent after a hatch, with the mosquito population spiking late June through July, and again, briefly, at the beginning of August. They can't fly in a light breeze. In fact, we only really had them annoy us for a warm (above freezing) day with no wind. The rest of the time we didn’t see them or have any land on us.  As temperatures warm in the Arctic, mosquitoes emerge earlier, grow faster, and survive as winged pests even longer.  Aedes Mosquito Hatching. Photo / Jacob Anderson    My observations came from Alaska.    Nosebot Maggots  Caribou not only feed mosquitoes, but they also feed huge maggots of the Nosebot Fly (also known as Nasal Fly or caribou warble fly). These maggots are rather large and gain access into the caribou’s nostrils when their mum literally hovers near the caribou and sprays her babies into that nice, cosy nose environment (This adult fly does not lay eggs! Skipping that life-stage saves time for the life cycle).  “Heavily infested caribou may be tormented by the irritating presence of the parasites and be thinner than other caribou, but the caribou meat is still OK to eat”, according to caribou hunters.   The frozen Woodfrog (Rana silvestris)  Here is an arctic creature that knows how to over-winter (-20 degrees). This frog simply freezes in the winter cold but manages to restrict the damage inside the body cells by increasing the amount of sugars inside the cells. Crystals in-between the cells allow the ice to form where the damage is very minimal.  When the frog thaws, it slowly gathers enough warmth to move on with its life – no doubt mumbling to itself ”That was a heavy frost!!”   (It reminds me of our unique mountain stone weta).    Ice worms on the glaciers in Alaska  These species only live in Alaska and are a relic of the old ice-ages.  Small, dark worms (2 cm long) that live and crawl in the icy glaciers, their food is algae and pollen, as well as certain invertebrates that land on the glacier (I’ve seen small moths being “pushed-up” by weather conditions at lower elevations).  The worms simply clean up the glacier’s surfaces.  They can live in temperatures below zero, but will die when the temperatures go higher than +4.4 degrees centigrade.    LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/6/20248 minutes, 23 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Elon Musk's new job if Trump wins the Presidency, Apple removes support for USB-A, drone used to find a lost child

Elon Musk may have a new job if Donald Trump wins the Presidency  He's already got X, SpaceX, and Tesla, and now he could be heading up a committee to audit the Federal government.  We know little about the idea other than this group would develop a plan to eliminate "fraud and improper payments" within six months of being formed. There are better uses for Elon Muck's talents at the Federal level than an accounting auditor!  Trump's “Make America Great Again” came from Ronald Reagan, who also happened to have a similar body during his term in the 80s called the Grace Commission.    Apple's support for USB-A could be ending soon  Apple has their Fall product launch next week, and while we are 99.99% confident we'll get a new iPhone, the reporting that's got my attention is about the Mac Mini. Reports suggest the new model may remove all the USB-A ports. They've already disappeared from the MacBooks, which suggests time is up on USB-A.    Tech used for good!  A lost three-year-old in a corn field the size of 200 football fields was found using a drone! The Wisconsin police called in the fire department for help. Using a thermal imaging camera, they located the boy and sent in a team to rescue him. What were his first words when they got to him? "I found a cat". Police said they saved hours of searching thanks to the drone.    LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/6/20243 minutes, 57 seconds
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Tara Ward: The Perfect Couple, The Body Next Door, The Boy That Never Was

The Perfect Couple   When a lavish wedding ends in disaster before it can even begin - with a body discovered just hours before the ceremony - everyone in the wedding party is a suspect (Netflix).   The Body Next Door   In 2015, the Welsh village of Beddau found itself in shock when a prank involving a 'medical skeleton' revealed a dead body wrapped in plastic, setting the police on a global investigation to identify the victim (TVNZ+).   The Boy That Never Was   An earthquake shatters Harry and Robin's life in Morocco, and their child, Dillon, vanishes without a trace. Three years later, Harry spots a boy resembling Dillon with a red-haired woman at a crowded train station in Dublin city centre (TVNZ+).    LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/6/20244 minutes, 3 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Beetlejuice Beetlejuice and Borderlands

Beetlejuice Beetlejuice   Three generations of the Deetz family return home to Winter River after an unexpected family tragedy. Still haunted by Beetlejuice, Lydia's life soon gets turned upside down when her rebellious teenage daughter discovers a mysterious portal to the afterlife. When someone says Beetlejuice's name three times, the mischievous demon gleefully returns to unleash his very own brand of mayhem.    Borderlands  Returning to her home planet Pandora, an infamous bounty hunter forms an unexpected alliance with a ragtag team of misfits. Together, they battle alien monsters and dangerous bandits to uncover one of Pandora's most explosive secrets.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/6/20246 minutes, 39 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Tamarillo and walnut meringue slice

This slice is a classic and so easy to make! The tamarillo jam is a lovely surprise.   Make 16-20 pieces    Ingredients   6-8 large tamarillo, halved and flesh scooped and diced   ¼ cup sugar   120g butter, softened  1/3 cup caster sugar  2 large eggs, separated  1 tsp vanilla extract  1 ½ cups flour, sifted  ½ cup walnut meal   1 tsp baking powder  ½ cup caster sugar  ½ cup desiccated coconut    Method  1. Make a quick tamarillo jam by simmering fruit with sugar for 15-20 minutes until thickened slightly. Cool.   2. Preheat oven to 180 C. Lightly grease and line sandwich tin.  3. Beat butter and sugar until light and creamy then add egg yolks and vanilla and beat until combined.  Fold in flour, walnut meal and baking powder and stir until it starts to come together. Tumble mixture (it will be clumpy crumbs) into prepared tin and press out evenly. Chill for 10 minutes.  4. Spread cooled tamarillo jam evenly over chilled base.   5. Beat the egg whites until foamy then gradually add sugar and beat until sugar is dissolved, mixture is glossy and soft peaks form. Fold in coconut. Spread meringue over the jam.   6. Bake for 30-35 minutes or until meringue is light brown and crisped.   7. Cool on a wire rack before cutting into squares.    Nici's Note  To avoid blood sugar levels spiking and dropping, it’s best to include some protein when consuming sugar as this has the effect of tempering the absorption of glucose into the blood stream. The walnuts and eggs in this recipe will have this ‘sobering effect’ on the sugar content.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/6/20246 minutes, 18 seconds
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Jack Tame: Would you go for a space flight?

Can you play Bananagrams in space?   Something tells me that with the whole gravity situation, they perhaps don’t recommend anything with lots of little parts. Anything that’s hard to keep as a full set on Earth is automatically disqualified from the International Space Station.   No Bananagrams. No Monopoly. No scrabble, either.  But Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams are gonna have to find something to fill their time.   An hour from now, the Boeing space vehicle that transferred them up to the space station is going to undock, propel itself into the Earth’s atmosphere, and hopefully for the sake of Boeing’s ever-sinking share price and diminished reputation, land safely in a New Mexico desert. Butch and Suni will be stuck with no way home, orbiting the Earth at 28 thousand kilometres an hour.   I love space. I love the mind-melting distances, the extremes of energy and heat. I love the endlessness of its unknown. Supermassive black holes. I love the maths, even if I don’t understand it. And given human life gets its richness from relationships, meaningful work, and diverse experiences —you can put that on a tea towel— I would love to go.   Suni and Butch felt the same way. And when they took off in Boeing’s Starliner on June 5th, they thought they’d be back on Earth just eight days later. But of course, that’s not what has happened. Three months on, Boeing has been humiliated. Its first crewed mission has had problems that can’t be fully solved remotely, and the capsule will return to Earth, empty. Butch and Suni thought they were going to space for eight days. By the time they’re flown back in February next year, they will have been orbiting the Earth for eight months.   What’s the longest flight you’ve ever been on? Mine was about 17 hours. Obviously, a commercial passenger flight is more cramped and less interesting than a few laps on the International Space Station. But in this smart phone age, nothing has more thoroughly convinced me that I don’t have the attention span or temperament for long stints in one place, like a 12-hour stopover in a lower tier international airport. So. Boring. Newsflash: Jack Tame would struggle in prison.  The good news is Butch and Suni can talk to their families. They can do a bit of exercise and socialise with other astronauts. Presumably NASA stumps for a Netflix subscription. But the one thing they can’t do easily is return to Earth. You can imagine that even for the elite-or-the-elite, it’s the kind of situation that does funny things to your head.   So would you do it? Would you go, knowing a week on the space station could become the best part of a year or longer? Would you leave your family? Leave your life? Leave your cat, and your goldfish and the lawns to someone else’s care? No wind in your hair. No smell of fresh rain. No scrambled eggs that didn’t come in a packet.   I would. I’d do it. I’d leap at the chance. Still, I reckon once might be enough. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/6/20244 minutes, 12 seconds
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Sophie Pascoe: Paralympian talks not competiting in the 2024 Games, presenting NZ's TV coverage

The Paralympics got underway this week in Paris, and for the first time in 16 years, Team New Zealand is missing a familiar face.  Dame Sophie Pascoe, New Zealand’s most decorated Paralympian, has decided to forgo this year’s Games in favour of staying home with her young baby.   Pascoe is a 4-time Paralympian, bringing home a total of 19 medals – 11 Gold, 7 Silver, and 1 Bronze.  However, while she may not be competing this year, that doesn’t mean she’s uninvolved, as Pascoe is presenting New Zealand’s TV coverage of the Games.  She told Newstalk ZB’s Jack Tame that as the Paralympics came closer she was feeling a bit nervous about presenting, as well as a bit of FOMO from not being over at the Games, however when they began she was content with her role.  “I'm right where I need to be with my family, with my baby and right here, presenting and helping out the Paralympic team, but still feeling like I'm part of the team, but just in such a different capacity.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/31/202417 minutes, 18 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: John Legend - My Favorite Dream

A change of pace from John Legend, as he releases an album of “sing-alongs and lullabies for children and families”.  My Favorite Dream is Legend’s 10th studio album, featuring nine originals, three covers of Fisher-Price songs, and three bonus tracks.  Legend says he was inspired to make the album both by his own experience as a child and his experience as a father to four children.  Estelle Clifford joined Jack Tame to give her thoughts on the release.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/31/20247 minutes, 19 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Briar Club and Girl Falling

The Briar Club by Kate Quinn  Washington, D.C., 1950. Everyone keeps to themselves at Briarwood House, a down-at-the-heels all-female boardinghouse in the heart of the nation’s capital, where secrets hide behind white picket fences. But when the lovely, mysterious widow Grace March moves into the attic, she draws her oddball collection of neighbors into unlikely friendship: poised English beauty Fliss whose facade of perfect wife and mother covers gaping inner wounds; police officer’s daughter Nora, who is entangled with a shadowy gangster; frustrated baseball star Bea, whose career has ended along with the women’s baseball league of WWII; and poisonous, gung-ho Arlene, who has thrown herself into McCarthy’s Red Scare.  Grace’s weekly attic-room dinner parties and window-brewed sun tea become a healing balm on all their lives, but she hides a terrible secret of her own. When a shocking act of violence tears apart the house, the Briar Club women must decide once and for all: Who is the true enemy in their midst?    Girl Falling by Hayley Scrivenor  Finn and her best friend, Daphne, have grown up together in a small town in the Blue Mountains, NSW. Bonded by both having lost a younger sister to suicide, they've always had a close - sometimes too close - friendship. Now in their twenties, their lives have finally started to Daphne is at university and Finn is working in the Mountains, as well as falling in love with a beautiful newcomer called Magdu.  Unused to sharing Finn, Daphne starts to act up in ways that will allow her to maintain the control over her best friend she's always relished. Then, one fateful day, Finn, Daphne and Magdu all go mountain climbing - and Magdu falls to her death. Is it suicide, or a terrible accident - or has something more sinister happened?    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/31/20244 minutes, 30 seconds
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Mike Yardley: A visit to Hawai'i's Volcanoes National Park

"If you’re planning a jaunt to the Big Island of Hawai’i, get in the hot seat. Immerse yourself in the might, power and wonder of nature’s cauldron. I recently took my first foray to Hawai’i Volcanoes National Park. The sheer size of the park is staggering – nearly as big as the entire island of O’ahu. The park climbs from sea level to over 4000 metres and encompasses two volcanoes – Kīlauea, one of the world’s most active volcanoes and Mauna Loa, the world’s largest active volcanic mountain." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/31/20248 minutes, 56 seconds
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Kate Hall: Sustainable Spring Cleaning Tips

Spring begins tomorrow and with it comes everybody's favourite chore: spring cleaning.   Kate ‘Ethically Kate’ Hall joined Jack Tame to give a few tips and tricks on how to get your home sparkling and fresh while keeping the environment in mind.  A few of her tips include:  - Using sustainable cleaning products - Using reusable cloths instead of single use wipes (e.g. old shirts or sheets) - Conserve water while cleaning (use a bucket and water the garden with it afterwards)  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/31/20249 minutes, 37 seconds
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Full Show Podcast: 31 August 2024

On the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast for Saturday 31 August 2024, legendary New Zealand athlete and our most decorated Paralympian Dame Sophie Pascoe joins Jack to discuss staying involved from home in her first time in 16 years not being at the Games.  Jack compares Kamala Harris' presidential campaign to Hilary Clinton's 2016 run in the way Harris discusses her identity.  Bring back lunchtime gigs! Jack and film reviewer Francesca Rudkin discuss the brand-new film about Beatles manager Brian Epstein and his lunch-break discovery of the band.  Plus, chef Nici Wickes shares the perfect Father's Day brunch recipe with a special twist.  Get the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast every Saturday on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/31/20241 hour, 57 minutes, 13 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Clematis the Climber

A few weeks ago we talked about an “early Spring”, simply because I thought some of my plants were flowering a lot sooner than expected. Especially the Clematis paniculata one of the seven native species of Clematis in Aotearoa.  Picture taken on Sunday 25 August, 2024  This is one of my favourite Native, New Zealand Climbers, also known as puawānanga, (flower of the skies). It belongs to the Family Ranunculaceae, the buttercup family – it always surprises me how something like Clematis paniculata belongs to the buttercup group, but then again, our plant taxonomy often has little to do with “resemblance”.  I planted our Clematis some 6 years ago near the base of a dying old Birch tree. That birch literally karked it in the next six months, so it was the perfect tree for the climber to climb on.  “Flower of the skies” needs to grow into the light, that’s where the flower buds will develop. The more exposed to sunlight, the better the buds develop.  Another important consideration is that the roots of the Clematis need to be in moist, cool soils, according to all the old horticulture books. Gardeners translate this to “cool, moist, shady roots and flowers in warm, dry and bright, sunny places”. (I have always questioned the “cool, moist shady roots” bit as when you buy the plants from garden centres, they’ll often be in black, warm and dry plastic pots!)  Having said that: the soil in which roots grow in gardens tends to be cooler than the conditions in which plants are kept on the Garden centre’s shelves…   Ever since our Clematis grew up on the old, dead birch tree, the number of flowers increased dramatically. Spring-time flowering is spectacular, and I can’t control myself at this time of the year: always taking pictures as soon as the flower buds begin to adorn the (by now) decaying old trunk.  Trouble ahead: This old Birch is nearing its last few years of strength. There will come a time when the Clematis will encounter serious struggles as a result of a collapsing, dead Birch! I am already thinking about another site for Clematis: some of the common Ozzie hardwood trees (Eucalyptus, Acacia, wattle, etc) are very tough and long-lasting structures even after death. This may well be a great (and long-lasting) climbing rack for our native Clematis.  The good thing about training them up a dead tree is the abundance of warm sunlight for the buds.  A few days ago I browsed through my collection of Clematis pictures on the computer. That’s when I found some pics (and dates) of flowering. All were starting the show in the third week of August.  And right now – as this program goes to air, they always look like this:  It looks as if Clematis the Climber is regular as clockwork!  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/31/20245 minutes, 56 seconds
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Bob Campbell: OTU 2024 Sauvignon Blanc

OTU 2024 Sauvignon Blanc. Marlborough $16  Why I chose it:  - I like Sauvignon, particularly when we get some warmer weather.  - First of the excellent 2024 vintage.  - Best of the 2024 vintage wines so far.  - Don’t overlook the discounted 2023 vintage wines.  What does it taste like?  This early release wine confirms the general belief that 2024 was a cracker of a vintage; a crisp, dry white with lime zest and passion fruit flavours, with appealing purity.  Why it’s a bargain:  Classic Marlborough sauvignon at a terrific price.  Where can you buy it?        Glengarry Wines, Auckland: $15.99  The Good Wine Co, Auckland: $16.99  Supermarkets (check the vintage)  Food match?  Great with seafood, I like it with pan-fried scallops.  Will it keep?  Fresh is best – good for a couple of years, perhaps more.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/30/20243 minutes, 7 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: The AI wars are heating up, AI safety, and Oprah's ABC special

The AI wars are heating up  Reports are out today that Amazon has selected Anthropic to be its AI partner for the new Alexa devices.   Reuters notes that initial versions Amazon's own AI proved insufficient, often struggling with words and responding to user prompts. It's thought that this enhanced AI assistant will be a subscription service costing $5 to $10 a month. Amazon already has a minority stake in the company.  Open AI is seeking investment too, and both Apple and Nvidia are interested, valuing the company at $100 billion. Apple is already planning to integrate ChatGPT into iOS and Siri, and Nvidia is a key supplier for Open AI.    AI Safety is in the government spotlight  Both OpenAI and Anthropic will share their models with the US Government's Safety Institute. Together with the UK they will evaluate safety risks and mitigate potential issues. There's a bill waiting for California's Governor's signature which will force AI companies in the state to take specific safety measures before training advanced models - that's the first in the country specifically targeting AI. That law would force companies to be able to quickly and fully shut the model down, prevent unsafe post-training modifications, and prevent critical harm.    Oprah is going to educate America about AI  She's doing a special for the ABC Network here called ‘AI and the Future of Us’, where she'll interview Bill Gates and Sam Altman among others to explain how AI works, as well as the possibilities and risks ahead.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/30/20244 minutes
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Kevin Milne: A new contender for NZ's biggest sports star?

There’s been a lot of discussion lately about who New Zealand’s biggest sports star is, with Lydia Ko and Lisa Carrington being major contenders.   Kevin Milne thinks there may be another option as he watches Dame Sophie Pascoe in her role as a live TV presenter for the Paralympics.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/30/20245 minutes, 57 seconds
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Tara Ward: Kaos, Sherwood, The Twelve

Kaos  A darkly comedic and contemporary reimagining of Greek mythology, exploring themes of gender politics, power, and life in the underworld; six humans learn that they are component parts of an ancient prophecy (Netflix).    Sherwood  A second season of the British drama about a murder investigation in a small-town, working-class community in the north of England (TVNZ+).     The Twelve   The strain of the trial taking its toll on all in the Court. As the end approaches, Kate insists on taking the stand to tell the truth about her relationship with Nathan, but her decision hands Bloom the weapon she needs to bring Kate down. Meanwhile Ezekiel finds evidence that may help salvage the case. With new revelations about her sister's betrayal, Diane's support begins to wane - but does she hold a secret that could smash things wide open? (TVNZ)    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/30/20244 minutes, 14 seconds
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Jack Tame: The contrast between Hillary Clinton's run and Kamala Harris'

I have this photo from the night of the US election, eight years ago. It was a graffiti stencil, taken right outside where Hillary Clinton hoped she’d be having a celebration party in a few hours’ time. A bit of paint on the sidewalk with Clinton’s silhouette and a simple phrase underneath.   ‘I’m with her.’   With just two months to go, I’m all-in on the US election.   And I was reminded of that Hillary Clinton stencil as I watched Kamala Harris’ first and only TV interview as the Democrats nominee.   The interview was fine. Nothing too exciting and nothing too scandalous. I can’t imagine it moved the dial in any major way. But perhaps the most telling bit from a strategic sense, was Kamala Harris’ response when asked about Donald Trump questioning her black identity.   Harris paused and said just a few words: ‘Same old tired playbook. Next question please.’   That was it. She was served up a prime opportunity to talk at length about her identity. A different candidate might have talked about America’s history of racial oppression. She might have recalled other occasions when people sought to undermine her through the prism of race. She might have talked about misogyny and the barriers she has had to overcome as an ambitious woman.   But nup! Zilch. Nothing. Not a word on identity. Next question please.   As a candidate, I reckon Kamala Harris has plenty of flaws. For now, she’s getting by on vibes rather than specifics. From the Democrats’ perspective, I don’t think that matters one bit. Trump’s such a polarising figure. People love or hate him. No one feels simply ambivalent about him. And it means any election in which he’s a candidate is not really going to focus on policy.   But in her ‘vibes’ campaign, one thing I reckon Kamala Harris is doing extremely well is NOT talking about identity. If she wins, she would be the first woman President. The first black woman. The first South Asian. All of these things are historic and arguably significant, but they’re also self-evident and I think it’s notable that she and her supporters, and other high-profile Democrats aren’t talking about them.   I contrast it with Hillary Clinton’s run, when so much of the campaign discourse centred on the possibility of her becoming America’s first woman President.   Kamala Harris has perhaps chosen a different message.   Instead of ‘I’m with her,’ ‘I’m not him.” See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/30/20244 minutes, 28 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: We Were Dangerous and Midas Man

We Were Dangerous  In 1954 New Zealand, Nellie and Daisy attempt to escape an institution for delinquent girls, but they are caught and it triggers a relocation to a facility on a remote island. The duo become a trio as well-to-do Lou joins them, and life on the island takes shape under the command of the devout Matron. The trio rail against the system, dubious of the benevolence of the bible and taking refuge in their blossoming friendship. It’s hard to reform girls who don’t believe they need reforming. However, a sense of doom settles in when experimental forms of punishment take place in the dead of night. Nellie and Daisy plot rebellion, but unexpectedly find themselves at odds with Lou, who is afraid to break the rules.    Midas Man   In 1960s Liverpool, Brian Epstein encountered a rock band who would take the world by storm.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/30/20249 minutes, 12 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Father's Day Mince on Toast

This is such a great brunch idea and a great start to Father’s Day. This mince is spiked with some fried onions and chilli and served with an egg.  Serves 4-6     Ingredients  2 tbsp olive oil   400g beef mince  2 carrots, grated   1 bay leaf   ¼ cup red wine   400g tin chopped tomatoes   ½ tsp sea salt + pepper  2 medium onions, sliced thinly   1 tbsp butter or oil   1-2 red chilli, sliced thinly   1 fried egg per person to serve  Ciabatta slices to serve, toasted   Finely chopped chives to garnish     Method  1.Heat oil in medium sized saucepan and brown mince, breaking it up with a fork as it cooks to keep it loose. Add grated carrot, bay leaf and red wine. Cook for 3-4 minutes then add tomatoes and seasoning. Reduce heat to a simmer and cook for 20-30 minutes.  Taste and season with more salt or pepper to dad’s taste.   2.Whilst mince cooks, fry onions in butter or oil. Get some really good colour on them before adding the chilli at the end. Set aside and use pan to fry eggs.  3.Plate up, topping mince with fried egg and chilli onion mix and toasted ciabatta slices on the side. Sprinkle with chives.    Nici’s notes - Cooked mince, like casseroles, curries and soups, ages well overnight so prepare it the day before Fathers’ Day, refrigerate, then re-heat for brunch.   - Use one tablespoon of balsamic vinegar instead of red wine if you prefer.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/30/20244 minutes, 59 seconds
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Erana James and Nathalie Thomas: 'We Were Dangerous' stars on winning the Special Jury Prize and SXSW 2024

We Were Dangerous is a brand-new Kiwi film about girlhood, rebellion and violence – but it has friendship at its heart.  Although the story is fictional, it comes at a time that makes you feel it could have been plucked right from the history books.  It follows a misfit trio of Nellie, Daisy, and Lou, determined to rally against the system in 1950’s New Zealand.   The film won the Special Jury Prize at SXSW this year and made its premiere at the Auckland launch of the New Zealand International Film Festival.  Erana James and Nathalie Morris, Nellie and Lou, joined Jack Tame for a chat about the making of the film, the story it follows, and the success it has found.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/24/202412 minutes, 41 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Fontaines D.C. - Romance

Phenomenon of Irish post-punk, Fontaines D.C. have released their fourth studio album.  ‘Romance’, released on the 23rd of August, is an 11 track album in which music reviewer Estelle Clifford thinks they’ve found themselves.  “This album is where I feel like they've suddenly found themselves and taken a real creative look at this and how to do things a little bit differently.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/24/20245 minutes, 10 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Tiger, Tiger: His Life, as It's Never Been Told Before and By Any Other Name

Tiger, Tiger: His Life, as It's Never Been Told Before by James Patterson   James Patterson--the only major author to have nine holes-in-one--gets inside the mystery of Tiger Woods as only he can. How did Tiger become the G.O.A.T., what drove him to fall so spectacularly, and how has he made his way back to the pinnacle of golf? In Patterson's hands, Tiger's story is an unputdownable thriller.  On April 13, 1986, ten-year-old Tiger Woods watches his idol, Jack Nicklaus, win his record sixth Masters.  Just over a decade later, chants of "Ti-ger, Ti-ger!" ring out as the twenty- one-year-old wins his first Green Jacket.  He blazes an incredible path, winning fourteen major titles (second only to Nicklaus himself) by the time he's thirty- three, smashing records and raising standards.  Then come multiple public scandals and potentially career-ending injuries.  The once-assured champion becomes an all-American underdog. "YouTube golfer" is how his two children know their father--winless since 2013--until he wins the 2019 Masters, his fifteenth major, before their eyes.  But the story doesn't end there.  Tiger, Tiger is the first full-scale Woods biography of the decade. In James Patterson's hands, this story is a hole-in- one thriller.    By Any Other Name by Jodi Picoult  In 1581, Emilia Bassano—like most young women of her day—is allowed no voice of her own. But as the Lord Chamberlain’s mistress, she has access to all theater in England, and finds a way to bring her work to the stage secretly. And yet, creating some of the world’s greatest dramatic masterpieces comes at great cost: by paying a man for the use of his name, she will write her own out of history.  In the present, playwright Melina Green has just written a new work inspired by the life of her Elizabethan ancestor Emilia Bassano. Although the challenges are different four hundred years later, the playing field is still not level for women in theater. Would Melina—like Emilia—be willing to forfeit her credit as author, just for a chance to see her work performed?  Told in intertwining narratives, this sweeping tale of ambition, courage, and desire asks what price each woman is willing to pay to see their work live on—even if it means they will be forgotten.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/24/20246 minutes, 2 seconds
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Mike Yardley: The cultural jewels of Greymouth

"Enrobed by chiselled cliff tops, wild beaches and the serene Grey Valley, the West Coast’s biggest town of Greymouth is so much more than just a gateway to the region. Explorer Thomas Brunner named the river in honour Governor George Edward Grey, which also gave rise to the town’s name. The town centre is built on the site of the former Māori pa called Māwhera, which translates as 'wide spread river mouth’. The latest attraction in town that is the worth the trip alone is Pounamu Pathway – Māwhera." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/24/20248 minutes, 36 seconds
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Dougal Sutherland: Why sleep gets disrupted when people are busy or stressed from work

Many of us experience disruptions to our sleep when we are busy or stressed. This can be due to our brains being switched into “flight or fight” mode. When this mode is on our body and brains are alert and actively looking for danger, which makes sense if our danger is from a wild animal but doesn’t make quite as much sense if our “danger” is from a high workload. This sense of alertness is the polar opposite to that state your body needs to be in for sleeping. In these situations, you might find yourself having trouble getting to sleep or waking in the middle of the night with a racing mind. This can leave you feeling tired and exhausted the next day, which may make you less effective at work, which in turn contributes to more stress!     Here's some tips for sleep during stressful times:  - If you can’t get to sleep or wake up in the middle of the night, don’t lie in bed for more than about 15mins – if you haven’t fallen asleep by then you’re probably not going to anytime soon. Get up and out of bed and do something boring until you feel tired again. If you have a racing mind sit down with a piece of paper and simply write down everything in your head until your brain has dumped it all out. Then try sleeping again  - Try to resist the urge to sleep in, at least during weekdays. Keep a consistent wake up time as this helps anchor your body clock and can help prevent sleep problems getting even worse  - Avoid napping during the day, unless you can keep the nap to 20mins or less. Sleeping too much during the day will have a flow-on effect to nighttime sleeping    LISTEN ABOVE   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/24/20248 minutes, 39 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Hibernating chewers

A few weeks ago, after that yucky and cold spell in the middle of winter, I was checking my mistletoe to see how it had been coping under those chilly and frosty conditions.  Looked okay, but there were a few bite marks on the leaves. Hmmm… nothing worrying about though.  Ileostylus micranthus is the green mistletoe I “planted” on my kowhai bush a few years ago now.   The sticky seeds should be adhered to the twigs of the host plant and with a bit of luck the mistletoe will settle itself on that host plant by sending its “roots” (haustoria) into the host plant. The Mistletoe can then draw its nutrients from the host.  That makes it a “parasite”.  Under normal circumstances, the sticky seeds are “planted” by birds. They simply try to eat the seeds but often end up wiping their bill clean on the host plant.  Clever plant!  My neighbour across the road also has a green mistletoe, but his specimen is situated on a Coprosma virescens bush known by its Māori name as “Mingimingi”. A gorgeous native shrub with a divaricating growth; tangled branches of orange colours and rather small leaflets.  I decided to see how his green mistletoe was doing after the very cold nights.  The leaves were chewed significantly – huge chunks eaten out of the edges. The last time I saw that plant it was in great condition, but this winter something or somebody must have had a real go at it.  A thorough investigation revealed the culprit: an adult Katydid was hiding in the tangled branches of the Mingimingi, sitting very still and using its green camouflage.  This in itself is quite a weird phenomenon, as I usually see Katydids in summer and autumn but not in winter.  This native chewer-of-leaves must have found enough shelter inside the Mingimingi to survive the winter conditions and chew away at the parasitic Mistletoe!  A Vandal Katydid on a Green Mistletoe on a Mingimingi. LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/24/20244 minutes, 47 seconds
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Full Show Podcast: 24 August 2024

On the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast for Saturday 24 August 2024, Jack is joined by stars of new Kiwi film ‘We Were Dangerous’, Erana James and Nathalie Morris, to discuss winning the Special Jury Prize and SXSW 2024 and what it was like to film on Otamahua Quail Island in the South Island.  Jack finds New Zealand Rugby's communication around Leon MacDonald's exit refreshing.  An underrated vegetable is hailed in chef Nici Wickes leek, parmesan and prosciutto tart - with leeks current cheaper price point making it the perfect pairing when splashing out on pastry and other ingredients.  Psychologist Dougal Sutherland emphasises the importance of sleep and shares tips to try and combat sleep disruption.   And, phenomenon of Irish post-punk Fontaines D.C. have released their fourth studio album, Jack finds out how it ranks against their previous universally hailed records.  Get the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast every Saturday on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/24/20241 hour, 57 minutes, 1 second
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Lisa Dudson: Personal wealth educator on the continually lowering rates and the impact of them

The OCR cut has seen banks lower their rates – some cutting multiple times. But how low will they go? And what impact will this have? Lisa Dudson joined Jack Tame to run through the details.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/24/20245 minutes
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Paul Stenhouse: Surprising winners in the AI race and the appeal of virtual reality

Maybe virtual reality isn't as appetizing as the tech companies want it to be  Meta has decided to call it quits on making a high-end mixed reality headset to compete with the Apple Vision Pro. They started working on it back in November, but reportedly told staff this week to stop. The goal was to keep the price under $1000 which is getting harder and harder with the price of the micro-OLED displays needed.  Apple's Vision Pro has struggled to get interest from consumers and developers. Estimates suggest Apple won't sell more than 500,000 of them. Analysts think they're too expensive and consumers might need a cheaper model.  There are some surprising winners in the AI race  Mitsubishi Electric, known to many for heat pumps and air conditioning, are also makers of optical components used in data centers and with the rise of AI they're in mega demand. They're about to ramp production capacity to 50% more than last year, which they still don't think will be enough. They think they'll need to get to double that new production capacity.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/24/20245 minutes, 24 seconds
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Tara Ward: Pachinko, Industry, The Marlow Murder Club

Pachinko   The hopes and dreams of four generations of a Korean immigrant family, beginning with a story of a forbidden romance that leads to a sweeping saga taking place in Korea, Japan and America (Apple TV+).     Industry   Young finance graduates venture out in the cut-throat competitive world to get a job during the recession times that followed as a result of the 2008 financial crisis (Neon).    The Marlow Murder Club   Retired archaeologist and crossword setter Judith Potts believes that a brutal murder has taken place in the sleepy town of Marlow; when the police refuse to believe her story, she kicks off a private investigation with two unlikely friends (TVNZ+).    Jack’s Pick:  Turning Point: The Bomb And The Cold War    A chronicle of Cold War history, from the development of the atomic bomb to the proliferation of nuclear weapons. Including an examination of the collapse of the Soviet Union, the rise of Vladimir Putin and the Russian invasion of Ukraine (Netflix).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/23/20246 minutes, 35 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: The Union and The Three Musketeers: Milady

The Union   Mike, a down-to-earth construction worker, is thrust into the world of super spies and secret agents when his high school sweetheart, Roxanne, recruits him on a high-stakes US intelligence mission (Netflix).   The Three Musketeers: Milady   Constance Bonacieux is kidnapped before D'Artagnan's very eyes. In a frantic quest to save her, the young musketeer, aided by Athos, Porthos and Aramis, is forced to join forces with the mysterious Milady de Winter.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/23/20245 minutes, 58 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Romance under the supermoon

Lovers often meet under the night sky, stargazing a cliché of the romance genre. But do other celestial bodies carry the same romantic energy?   Kevin Milne is wondering if blue moons, and blue supermoons in particular, bring romance into people’s lives. He wouldn’t have thought so, but this week’s blue supermoon has stirred some memories and emotions.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/23/20243 minutes, 52 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Leek, parmesan, and prosciutto tart

Leeks are so underrated and I have to remind myself to use them for more than just soups and chicken pies. In these tarts they are the star and as well as looking pretty they are absolutely scrumptious with soft and sweet, leeks combining with the tang of parmesan and saltiness of prosciutto. Perfect really!    Makes 4    Ingredients  3-4 leeks, cut into 2cm thick rounds (to yield about 16-20)  30g butter  2 sheets savour short crust pastry   1 tbsp olive oil   4 eggs  150g crème fraiche   200mls cream   ½ tsp wholegrain mustard  ¼  tsp sea salt + pinch black pepper  100g parmesan, grated + extra chunks for tops   50g prosciutto     Method  1. Preheat oven to 180 C. Place oven tray in to heat.   2. Line four 12cm tart tins (or one large 25cm) with pastry and trim edges neatly. Chill for 20 minutes.   3. Carefully place leek rounds in a pan with butter and oil, cover and cook gently until they begin to soften and are cooked through - about 20-30minutes. Turn once halfway through cooking but do so carefully as they like to unravel! Cool.   4. In a bowl whisk together eggs, crème fraiche, cream, mustard and seasoning.   5. Sprinkle grated parmesan over chilled pastry bases then position cooked and cooled leeks, leaving a little space between each. Transfer tarts to oven tray at this stage to avoid spillage later. Pour egg mixture around the leeks, until each case is full. Top with scrunched up prosciutto and extra cheese.   6. Gently slide back into oven and cook for 30-35 minutes (longer for large tart)  or until pastry is golden and filling is just firm.    7. Leave to cool for 5-10 minutes and serve.     Nici’s note:   Prosciutto (and pancetta for that matter) can seem expensive but a little goes a long way in recipes such as this as the flavour is very intense.   Always remove tarts from fluted tins whilst still a little warm as they come away from the tin easier when pastry is not completely cold.      LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/23/20244 minutes, 31 seconds
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Jack Tame: The handling of Leon MacDonald's departure has been strangely refreshing

13-year old Jack Tame would never have believed that Scott Robertson and Leon MacDonald weren’t getting along.   The year was 2000.  Having survived Y2K, started high school, and become a teenager in the space of a few short months, the highlight of my year was yet to come: May 20th, when the Canterbury Crusaders defeated the ACT Brumbies by a single point at Bruce Stadium in Canberra to become Super Rugby Champions for the third year in a row, the first team to achieve the feat.  It is amazing to go back and look at that starting 15. We didn’t know it then, but several of the winning Crusaders would end up becoming successful coaches after their playing careers were done. Winning finalists included Todd Blackadder, Daryl Gibson, and Mark Hammett, all of whom have enjoyed pretty high-profile coaching careers. The Crusaders’ second-five-eighth was a guy called Mark Robinson, who in years to come would be appointed the CEO of New Zealand Rugby. We didn’t know it then, but in a couple of decades, he would hire his blindside flanker teammate as the All Blacks’ coach and his fullback as assistant.   But if you could’ve told 13-year-old me that two of the guys from that team would end up having a very split after just a month at the helm of the All Blacks, I would never have believed you.   I’ve gotta say though... as shocked as I was this week to learn that MacDonald and Razor hadn’t worked out, from what we know so far, New Zealand Rugby, the All Blacks, and both Scott Robertson and Leon MacDonald deserve our praise and thanks.   I thought that New Zealand Rugby statement and Robertson’s subsequent statements were amazing. Of course we’ll probably never know the full story, but they didn’t sugar-coat anything. No one made up a rubbish excuse – the old ‘more time with the family.’ It wasn’t nasty or spiteful. But it was honest. They didn’t see eye to eye. They have differing views. And after a series of ‘robust’ conversations, it wasn’t in the best interests of the team to have MacDonald and Robertson working together, resentment building as they pulled in different directions.    It’s so easy to imagine an alternative, another World where they didn’t recognise or didn’t acknowledge things weren’t working, they weren’t clicking, and whatever tension existed festered and grew into something more damaging. Rumours would start. The odd news report would intimate that something wasn’t right. There could be cliques and factions. Players might have split loyalties. And ultimately it would hurt the team.   Again, we don’t know everything. But given the frankness of the explanation, it’s the best we have. And man, there is so much to be said for calling it early. They didn’t battle on for a couple of seasons. They didn’t try and fake anything for the rugby-loving public. They called it.   Leon MacDonald clearly has a lot of mana and as a coach he’s had success. I’m sure he’ll get a great coaching job somewhere different. Obviously 13-year-old me would be gutted to see two of his sporting heroes, split. But 20 years since they won that third title, their collective handling of this situation has been mature and strangely refreshing. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/23/20244 minutes, 17 seconds
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Jodi Picoult: New York Times bestselling author on writing process and latest novel 'By Any Other Name'

An author with a pen game strong enough to reduce people to tears, Jodi Picoult has quite an extensive and well-loved body of work.  She’s written nearly 30 books, selling around 40 million copies, with fan favourites such as My Sister’s Keeper, Mad Honey, and Wish You Were There flying off the shelves.   Picoult writes across a diverse scope of genres, from thriller to romance to ghost stories, and her latest work steps into the world of historical fiction.   By Any Other Name details the intertwining narrative of the woman many believe was the real playwright behind the work of William Shakespeare alongside a contemporary story of a New York author suffering the same fate of being silenced.  Picoult joined Jack Tame for a chat about how this new story came to be, her love of Shakespeare, and the meticulous research she puts into the narratives she creates.  "To me this is really a book about how women have been written out of history by the men who were writing it." LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/17/202415 minutes, 19 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Troy Kingi and the Cactus Handshake - Leatherman & the Mojave Green

Album 8 in his 10|10|10 project is Troy Kingi’s ‘Leatherman & The Mojave Green’.   The album is described as a “sun-baked excursion into desert / stoner rock sonics”, released August 16th 2024.  Estelle Clifford joined Jack Tame to give her thoughts on the release.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/17/20246 minutes, 48 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Act of Disappearing and I Will Ruin You

The Act of Disappearing by Nathan Gower  Julia White is struggling: her bartending job isn’t cutting it and her first book has sold hardly any copies. She’s broke, barely able to make ends meet while drowning in her late mother’s medical bills and reeling after a one-night stand with her ex-boyfriend, who’s now completely ghosted her. Enter Johnathan Aster, world-renowned photographer, with a proposal: he has a never-before-seen photograph of a woman falling from a train bridge, clutching what appears to be a baby. And he wants Julia to research the story.  Alternating between present-day Brooklyn and Kentucky as it enters the 1960s, the story unfolds as Julia races to find answers: Who was the woman in the photograph? Why was she on the bridge? And what happened to the baby? Each detail is more propulsive than the last as Julia unravels the mystery surrounding the Fairchilds of Gray Station and discovers a story more staggering than anything she could have imagined.    I Will Ruin You by Linwood Barclay  How would you react in a life-or-death situation?  It’s a question everyone asks themselves, but few have to face in real life. English teacher Richard Boyle certainly never thought he would find himself talking down a former student intent on harming others, but when Mark LeDrew shows up at Richard’s school with a bomb strapped to his chest, Richard immediately jumps into action. Thanks to some quick thinking, he averts a major tragedy and is hailed as a hero, but not all the attention focused on him is positive.  Richard’s brief moment in the spotlight puts him in the sights of a deranged blackmailer with a score to settle. The situation rapidly spirals out of control, drawing Richard into a fraught web of salacious accusations and deadly secrets. As he tries to uncover the truth he discovers that there’s something deeply wrong in the town—something that ties together Mark, the blackmailer, and a gang of ruthless drug dealers, and Richard has landed smack in the middle of it. He’s desperate to find a way out, but everyone in his life seems to be hiding something, and trusting the wrong person could cost him everything he loves.  What price will he pay for one good deed?    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/17/20243 minutes, 46 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Gozo and Comino, Malta's little rock-stars

"Just imagine taking a jaunt to Calypso’s Cave, where the nymph Calypso held Odysseus as a prisoner of love for seven years in Homer’s epic Odyssey. How about taking to the waters in the Blue Lagoon or gazing in awe at the Crystal Caves of Comino? Malta’s neighbouring islands of Gozo and Comino are full of history and wonder. I recently travelled to the Maltese islands with Insight Vacations, on their 6-day Easy Pace Malta premium guided tour. It offers the winning mix of guided sightseeing and flexi-time, allowing you to ample opportunity to personally discover and savour the destination’s treats, at your own leisure." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/17/20249 minutes, 15 seconds
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Full Show Podcast: 17 August 2024

On the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast for Saturday 18 August 2024, Bestselling Author Jodi Picoult is an author with a pen game strong enough to induce real tears, she joins Jack ahead of the release of her 29th book.   Of all the global stars to rise from this year’s Olympic Games —Simone Biles, Katie Ledecky, Dame Lisa Carrington— 36-year-old Macquarie University lecturer Rachael Gunn is perhaps the unlikeliest. Jack talks about why Australian breakdancer Raygun is an icon.   Francessca Rudkin shares two marvellous films, ‘The Hardest Line’, a music documentary on Midnight Oil and ‘The Instigators’, starring Matt Damon and Casey Affleck.  Troy Kingi is back with a new album “Leatherman & the Mojave Green”, Estelle Clifford shares her thoughts.   Get the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast every Saturday on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/17/20241 hour, 56 minutes, 35 seconds
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Kate Hall: Avocado buttons and "abnormal" sustainable hacks

Kate “Ethically Kate” Hall is a fan of the sustainable options. She recently received a comment on a DIY project where she dried avocado pips to make buttons saying that they’ll “just buy my own buttons like a normal person”, and while sure, that is an option, sometimes it’s fun to do things a little differently.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/17/20249 minutes
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Pruning back the berries

Blackcurrants pruning  Oh… good old Ribes nigrum! It’s one of our favourite fruits – Juuls makes pretty mean jam out of those dark berries. You can eat them raw off the plant, but honestly… jam is the way to go as far as I’m concerned.  They hail from the temperate areas of Central and Northern Europe and Asia – yep, they can deal with frosts.  Blackcurrants are usually grown as multi-stemmed plants, with an open structure of 6–10 upright stems growing from the base.   Established bushes (aged four years or older) are best pruned every winter to keep them fruiting strongly. This is a simple process – cut out up to a third of the oldest stems down at the base, create some space in the middle. The younger stems will then rise up to produce fruit for the next few years.   Red Currants pruning is slightly different from Blackcurrants.  From late winter to early spring – prune all forms of red and white currants annually while the plants are still dormant, before any signs of growth appear.  Red and white currants will fruit at the base of shoots, these are known as 'laterals', that grow out from the main branches, especially the younger branches!   Young = new, narrower and lighter-coloured stems; old = thicker and darker stems  Prune in winter to leave between eight and ten healthy, strong main branches each year. On one-year-old bushes, prune back new shoots by half. Leave the branch with an outward-facing bud at the top.  Some folk grow them as “cordons”: a bit like climbers, up a wire structure in the form of one or two main branches. The side-shoots that come off those main stems will carry the red currents.  In mid-summer – prune cordons and fans to restrict growth and maintain their shape.    Gooseberries pruning   Just as a warning: they are prickly rascals – wear good gloves!  First of all: get rid of dead branches – cut them off as low as you can.  Cut out the really old branches (especially more than 5 years old) and open the inside up a bit (not too much, mind you). But if you haven’t pruned your gooseberries for a long time, they may need a bit more surgery to open that bush up again.  Old branches are thick and dark in colour.  Taking these old sturdy, dark branches out makes the plant grow new juvenile growth that will do the job for the next few years.  The idea is to replace the older stuff with newer (much more productive) growth.  The younger branches (lighter in colour and thinner) can be cut back a bit (from the top) to get the plant to set up new spurs, which will produce new fruit.  The whole idea is to create a nice series of fruiting areas in the inside of the plant; not too high but certainly accessible when you want to harvest the berries.  Late winter is a good time to fertilise the berries with some general fertiliser, followed by a hand-full of Sulphate of Potash to remind the plants that it’s time to think of flowers and setting fruit!    My good mate Mike (Scottish, a builder and handy guy to have as a friend) hadn’t done any of his pruning for quite a few years and asked me to help him out restoring the Blackcurrants and Gooseberries.  He had made a pretty “cage” in his garden to stop the birds vandalizing the berries, and it took us about two hours to get the job done.  This is what it looked like, before and after:  Dense Blackcurrants before and after pruning.  Gooseberries lethal and dense, versus Gooseberries taken apart by Mike; lots of air and space.  Sometimes it pays to be ruthless!  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/17/20245 minutes, 46 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: Carpel Tunnel

What is Carpal Tunnel and who gets it?  - One of the most common hand conditions.  - Pressure on something called ‘median nerve’ that goes through the wrist.  - The nerve goes through a narrow ‘tunnel’ (carpal tunnel) in the wrist, and when it gets compressed, you can develop symptoms.  - 1-5% of the population get it at some point. Twice as common in women as men.  - Most often seen in those between 30 and 60 years of age.  - Increased risk with pregnancy, diabetes, wrist injury, obesity, and repetitive wrist activities such as manual labour and sport.     How do you recognise it?  - People often start to notice it at night: wake up with a tingly or numb hand and have to shake the hand out. Especially prominent in the thumb, and index, and middle fingers.  - Sometimes described as electric shock, sometimes holding the steering wheel of car, holding a newspaper.  - May be described as pain, and people often get discomfort up the forearm.  - Can cause hand weakness and cause people to drop things.     How do you diagnose it?  - Your doctor will take careful history.  - Examine the wrist  - Order a nerve conduction study which shows if the nerve is being compressed.  - Sometimes an Xray or blood tests are ordered to check for any underlying condition like diabetes.       What do you do about?  - It depends on the severity.  - Often it involves avoiding activities that make it worse, resting the hand if repetitive movements make it worse.  - Using a wrist splint to keep wrist straight – especially at night to alleviate symptoms.  - If it’s severe and ongoing, then refer to the orthopaedic surgeon, who do a simple operation to relieve the pressure on the nerve.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/16/20244 minutes, 44 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Fortnite's return to the iOS store and the Pixel Watch 3's lifesaving feature

Fortnite is back on the iOS store  But it's only for those in the EU, thanks to their Digital Markets Act. It's forced Apple to offer a pathway for app developers to sell their software without needing to go through Apple's official app store.  Epic says Apple has a monopoly on the market, and uses that position to force developers to give up to 30% of their revenue to them. They reportedly earn $70 billion in app store revenue each year. The "Epic Games Store" is the highest profile launch of an alternative app store yet, with a large fan base eager to get back to playing Fortnite on their phones after four years. Apple has not made the process for installing easy though - there are warning screens to get through, settings to update, which Epic says is intentional to make the experience as terrible as possible. Apple has launched a new fee for successful off-app store they're calling a "core technology fee", to try and recoup some of the revenue they'll inevitably lose. This is going to be a case study for other brands to decide if it's worth the effort to create their own store.   Google's Pixel Watch 3 has a lifesaving feature   If you have a heart attack when you're alone, you have virtually no chance of receiving resuscitation. This new "loss of pulse" feature of the Pixel Watch will give you a chance. It first uses the regular heart-rate sensor to detect a pulse, then if it can't find one will use infrared and motion sensors to help decide if you need help. An alarm will sound, giving you a chance to cancel the call for emergency services.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/16/20244 minutes, 28 seconds
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Tara Ward: Douglas is Cancelled, Kidnapped: The Chloe Ayling Story, Wheel Blacks: Bodies on the Line

Douglas is Cancelled   Douglas Bellowes is a widely respected middle news anchor with a sidekick Madeline and newspaper editor wife Sheila, when he makes an ill-advised joke at a wedding and is faced with cancel culture (ThreeNow).    Kidnapped: The Chloe Ayling Story  Based on the shocking true story of model Chloe Ayling, who was lured to a fake photoshoot and abducted by human traffickers - then found herself at the centre of a media storm, accused of staging the whole thing as a publicity stunt (TVNZ+).    Wheel Blacks: Bodies on the Line   This three-part docuseries follows New Zealand's wheelchair rugby team in their bid to qualify for the Paris Paralympics. Despite having to rely on fundraising, charity, and volunteers, these Kiwi underdogs are determined to rise to the challenge (Neon).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/16/20244 minutes, 56 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Midnight Oil: The Hardest Line, The Instigators

Midnight Oil: The Hardest Line Midnight Oil is not your typical band, so it makes sense that this is not your typical rockumentary. Sex and drugs play little if any part in the tale of one of Australia’s most successful rock groups ever. Neither will you find the kind of rivalries and tensions that one expects in the story of a band with a career as long as this one.  Told in voiceovers by managers, critics, commentators, and the band members themselves, the film features plenty of footage of the Oils performing live, from their earliest days. Watching Garrett command the stage, it is clear why they made it as big as they did, even while they resisted crucial aspects of the pop game, such as appearing on Countdown, the most popular music programme in Australian TV history.    The Instigators  Rory and Cobby are unlikely partners thrown together for a heist. However, when it goes awry, they team up to outrun police, backward bureaucrats, and a vengeful crime boss (Apple TV+).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/16/20247 minutes, 28 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Rosemary Chicken and Lentils

Pulses and legumes. They’re filling, nourishing, super versatile and cheap and yet many of us would be lucky to eat them more than once or twice a month. Would it encourage you if I told you they’re necessary, yes necessary, for a balanced diet?  This one-pot dish is tasty and wonderfully easy to throw together.  Serves 4  Ingredients  1 400g tin lentils, drained  2 tbsps olive oil  4-6 pieces chicken, skin on, bone in  1 onion, diced  1 carrot, peeled and diced  Few sprigs of rosemary  1 cup vegetable to chicken stock (can use water)  2 tbsps pomegranate molasses  Salt and pepper to season  Small handful parsley to garnish    Method  1. Heat oil in rinsed saucepan and brown chicken. 2. Add onion, carrots and rosemary and sauté for 2-3 minutes. 3. Pour in stock and pomegranate molasses, cover and simmer for 25 minutes or until chicken is cooked through. 4. Add in lentils and simmer with lid off for 5-10 minutes. Taste and season with salt and pepper.  5. Garnish with parsley and serve with salad.    Make it your own:  Use cannellini beans in place of lentils.  Change it up with some grated ginger and soy sauce in place of rosemary and pomegranate molasses.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/16/20245 minutes, 19 seconds
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Jack Tame: The enduring impact of Raygun's Olympic performance

Of all the global stars to rise from this year’s Olympic Games —Simone Biles, Katie Ledecky, Dame Lisa Carrington— 36-year-old Macquarie University lecturer Rachael Gunn is perhaps the unlikeliest.   Raygun, as per her stage name, is a true icon of these times. Not because she competed in the most modern of Olympic sports —breaking— but because through the power of the internet, her efforts have become arguably the most recognisable of the entire Olympic Games.   If you haven’t seen Raygun’s performance, I don’t know where you’ve been. All I know is you don’t have social media, because the flood of clips and memes celebrating, remixing, and/or mocking her dancing has completely inundated every bite of every feed of every platform.   When most of us think of breakdancing, we think of incredibly athletic people spinning and twisting. We think of spinning headstands, headslides, one-handed body freezes.  Really good breaking is just gymnastics to hip hop.  Raygun didn’t do that stuff. She openly admits she can’t! Instead, she did a range of pumps and thrusts that honestly wouldn’t have physically been beyond the reach of many of those people watching.   For all those people who thought the Olympics would be improved by having a mere mortal compete with the elite athletes, just to give you perspective of how good they really are? Anyone who saw Raygun’s signature move, the kangaroo, would have to agree. Yep, this was that.   Part of me admires her chutzpah. Imagine having the confidence to go to the Olympic Games —the Olympics— only to pull out a dance routine reminiscent of Jack Tame at the Grumpy Mole circa 2003. The judges gave Raygun three straight zeroes!   Internet culture has a way of fixating on a person or a moment with maximum intensity, only to move on a few days. The public shaming aspect must be so hard to endure. Raygun is a global icon this week. But soon enough, the internet will move on.  Tell you what though, I think there will be one enduring impact from Raygun’s performance. I stumbled across a clip earlier this week that caught my eye. It was of a ridiculously good breaker, twisting and springing and spinning like a top gymnast on a pommel horse. He did a backwards worm, tumbling back towards the ground and seemingly bending his body against the direction of all his limbs. It was amazing!   Who is this? Where is this? I wondered.   Then I realised, it was the Olympics. Raygun’s performance was so extraordinary, it has completely overshadowed the medallists in her sport. So many more people have seen the kangaroo than have seen the actual winning performances. Can you name the Olympic breakdancing medallists?   The IOC wanted to bring new audiences to the games. Breaking has certainly done that, just not in the way they anticipated. And if they’re weighing up breaking’s inclusion in any future games, the fact that very few of us will recall more than a plucky Aussie in a tucked-in tracksuit does not bode well for the Olympic future of the sport. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/16/20244 minutes, 41 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Is high-level competitive sport worth it?

Kevin Milne, like everyone, watched the Olympics. He loved the Olympics, but couldn’t help but notice the disappointment, tears, and heartbreak of many competitors. And it left him with a question: is high-level competitive sport worth it?  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/16/20246 minutes, 34 seconds
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Tom Sainsbury: Kiwi Comedian on pitching a film for the international film festival and hosting the NZ International Comedy Festival

Tom Sainsbury wears many hats - actor, writer, comedian, director, host, influencer - across film, tv, stage, and social media here in New Zealand and on international projects.  Kiwis might know him for his political impersonations or shows like Wellington Paranormal.  Tom is hosting a winter special of New Zealand’s International Comedy Festival, and having just returned from a very glamorous international sojourn, he joined Jack Tame in studio for a chat.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/10/202415 minutes, 9 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Tones and I - Beautifully Ordinary

For the second time in a row, Tones and I’s recently released album ‘Beautifully Ordinary’ opens at No. 1 on Australia’s album chart.  The album is the follow-up to ‘Welcome To The Madhouse’, which debuted in 2021.   Estelle Clifford joined Jack Tame to give her thoughts on the album.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/10/20247 minutes, 5 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The War Below and Home Truths

The War Below by Ernest Scheyder  Tough choices loom if the world wants to go green. The United States and other countries must decide where and how to procure the materials that make our renewable energy economy possible. To build electric vehicles, solar panels, cell phones, and millions of other devices means the world must dig more mines to extract lithium, copper, cobalt, rare earths, and nickel. But mines are deeply unpopular, even as they have a role to play in fighting climate change. These tensions have sparked a worldwide reckoning over the sourcing of these critical minerals, and no one understands the complexities of these issues better than Ernest Scheyder, whose exclusive access has allowed him to report from the front lines on the key players in this global battle to power our future.  This is not a story of tree-hugging activists, but rather of industry titans, scientists, and policymakers jostling over how best to save the planet. Scheyder explores how a proposed lithium mine in Nevada would help global automakers slash their dependance on fossil fuels, but developing that mine could cause the extinction of a flower found nowhere else on the planet. A hedge fund manager’s attempt to resuscitate rare earths mining in California relies on Chinese expertise, exposing the paradox in Washington’s quest for minerals independence. The fight to end child labor in Africa’s mining sector is a key reason, supporters contend, to dig out a vast reserve of cobalt and nickel under Minnesota’s vulnerable wetlands. An international mining conglomerate’s plan to extract copper for electric vehicles deep beneath Arizona’s desert would destroy a Native American holy site, fueling tough questions about what matters more.  In The War Below, Scheyder crafts a business story that matters to everyone. If China continues to dominate production of these critical minerals, it will have a profound impact on the geopolitical order. Beyond China, countries such as Bolivia, Indonesia, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo aim to wield their vast reserves of key minerals. There are no easy answers when it comes to energy. Scheyder paints a powerfully honest and nuanced picture of what is needed to fight climate change and secure energy independence, revealing how America and the rest of the world’s hunt for the “new oil” directly affects us all.    Home Truths by Charity Norman  Livia Denby is on trial for attempted murder. The jury has reached a verdict.  Two years earlier, Livia was a probation officer in Yorkshire, her husband Scott a teacher. Their children, Heidi and Noah, rounded out a happy family - until the day Scott's brother died.  Grief and guilt leave Scott searching for answers, a search that takes him into the world of conspiracy theories. As his grip on reality slides, he makes a decision that will put the family on a collision course with tragedy.  Livia's family has been torn apart, and now her son's life is hanging in the balance. Just how far will she go to save the ones she loves?    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/10/20244 minutes, 12 seconds
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Full Show Podcast: 10 August 2024

On the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast for Saturday 10 August 2024, the wearer of many hats Tom Sainsbury joins Jack to chat about his latest film ventures, and a special winter celebration of the New Zealand International Comedy Festival.   Jack wraps on his favourite nail-biting moments of the 2024 Olympics.  The highly anticipated adaptation of Colleen Hoover's novel It Ends With Us has hit cinemas, and film reviewer Francesca Rudkin shares her thoughts.  And Google is discontinuing the Google Chromecast, tech expert Paul Stenhouse gives Jack details on what is set to replace it.  Get the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast every Saturday on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/10/20241 hour, 55 minutes, 55 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Venturing to Valletta, Malta

"It’s one of the most southerly European nations – so far south that it’s parallel with Lebanon, Tunisia and Algeria. Malta has long been on my bucket-list and this relatively under-the-radar destination offers not only good-value for visitors, but it exudes astonishing scenery and historic treasures. I recently jaunted to Malta with Insight Vacations, who offer a fabulous introductory guided tour, spilling forth with Malta’s greatest hits." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/10/20248 minutes, 54 seconds
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Dougal Sutherland: Are older workers better at setting work-life boundaries?

“Older” employees, Gen X and Boomers, those who are over 45years, are sometimes accused of not being as skilled at utilising the benefits of tech in their work. Whilst that might be true for some, new research shows that these older workers tend to be more effective in setting clear work and nonwork boundaries when working from home and in managing their time.  The research found this age group were more likely to use good work practices such as:  - Setting strict start, break and end times  - Having a dedicated space at home for only work  - Creating new routines and dressing for work  - Informing others about their availability    Benefits of setting these boundaries include:  - Fewer unfinished work tasks  - Having better work-life balance.  - Higher productivity    Perhaps old dogs can learn new tricks!   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/9/20248 minutes, 14 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Collembola

Most people have probably never heard of “Collembola”, but I reckon they are the most important critter on the planet as their “job” is often simply recycling.  Your garden wouldn’t stand a chance without them, and nor does our planet. The circular economy starts with Collembola and ends with “Zero Waste”.  A large number feed on bacteria, fungi, and rotting plant materials; some go for living plants (and can be a pest on some crops). Others devour algae and some even prey on insects.  Collembola are no longer considered to be “insects” although they still belong to the group of “hexapods” (six-legged creatures).  Oh, by the way, the name of this group (Collembola) comes from two features: “Colla” which means glue, and “embolon” which is a “peg”, or a “piston” (referring to a structure on the underside of the body).  At last count there are some 6000 species on our planet, but what do we know? There could be as many as 40,000 taxa!  If you climb a tree in New Zealand, you are like to find them near the top where branches emerge from the main trunk, it’s usually full of decaying old plant materials; great habitat for our Collembola!  When examining the contents of your compost bin it quickly becomes clear they are the most numerous invertebrates.  Collembola working on a juicy stalk of rhubarb  You may think they are quite boring in their appearance, and indeed a lot of them are tiny (a few millimetres in size) and just one low-key colour. But some are quite attractive: Holacantella is endemic to New Zealand and is often on dead timber and bark, especially in wet conditions.  And look at that weird body armour – or are they different species?  For some reason our Collembola love living in moist (and warm) environments. But then again, some species are restricted to cooler climates (think Antarctica! Minus 60 degrees is just not too cold for them).  The craziest thing you can see at this time of the year is a rather elegant deep blue species that seems to enjoy a spot of “rafting” or “drifting” in slow-moving water courses. Every year I see them, here on the Port Hills of Canterbury. After all these years I have not been able to identify these species with certainty.  They swim in puddles, and jump around in sheep troughs.   Those pistons (or “pegs”) I described from the word ‘embolon’ are literally the tools that make the jumping (and dispersal) possible, even in water.  No wonder that their common name in horticulture, agriculture and garden nomenclature is... SPRING TAILS    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/9/20244 minutes, 28 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Smith & Sheth CRU Central Otago 2022 Pinot Noir

Wine: Smith & Sheth CRU Central Otago 2022 Pinot Noir - $50  Why I chose it:  - I was recently asked to recommend a special wine that could be used to toast a yet unborn baby. The wine should be able to be enjoyed in around five years and should survive less than perfect storage. My budget was up to $100.  - I chose the Smith & Sheth Pinot Noir because it is the sort of wine that could be enjoyed by a wide range of people and not just wine enthusiasts.  - It is sealed with a screwcap which will help it run the distance.  What does it taste like?  “Perfumed pinot noir with seductive floral, black cherry vanilla, dark berry wine in an appealing and very drinkable style. Made with a light touch the wine has a silken and almost ethereal texture.”  Why it’s a bargain:  $50 is a lot of money to spend on a bottle of wine, but in this case, it is a lot of wine and will give great pleasure on an important occasion.  Where can you buy it?                     - Smithandsheth.com   - Recently released and small production might make it hard to find initially but shop around – it’s worth hunting for.                           Food match?   Duck confit is a classic match.  Will it keep?  No rush, five or six years? Up to ten years with careful storage.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/9/20244 minutes, 2 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Google ruled a monopolist, discontinues the Chromecast

Google is discontinuing the Google Chromecast  With more than 100 million sold over an 11-year life, it was a good run. It was a great entry level device to very quickly get content onto your TV.  It's being replaced by the Google TV Streamer. It's a device that is designed to sit on your entertainment unit because it also doubles as a full-featured smart speaker with Google Assistant. Think of it more as a "set top box". The extra size means extra connectivity options and power, allowing you to use it as a smart home hub to connect and control your Nest cameras, thermostat, and more.  The TV part of the device runs the latest Android TV operating system and uses Google Gemini AI to provide TV recommendations and help you use your voice to navigate the app.    Google is a monopolist  This is a huge win for the US government who says that Google Search has a monopoly on the market - surprising no one. Google has a 90% share overall, and 95% share on mobile devices.   The judge particularly takes aim at their deal with Apple to make Google the default search engine. Apple and Google would argue that people are going to turn to Google anyway, so why not give it to them up front as the default. It's thought the judge may force those deals to be scrapped but could go so far as to force Google search to be broken out as a separate company.   Commentators say this is a warning to big tech because it says no company is too big to regulate. There's another case pending too, which examines the ads business.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/9/20244 minutes, 14 seconds
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Tara Ward: Lady in the Lake, Supacell, Secret World of Sound with David Attenborough

Lady in the Lake  In 60s Baltimore, an aspiring reporter pursues the murder of a forgotten young woman (Apple TV+).    Supacell   In South London, a group of normal people suddenly develop superpowers, and the only apparent connection between them is that they are all Black; as they deal with the impact of their powers on their daily lives, one man must bring them together (Netflix).    Secret World of Sound with David Attenborough   Using the latest audio technology, David Attenborough explores the crucial role of sound in nature, examining how it shapes and influences the everyday lives of animals, from communication to their behaviour and decisions (Netflix).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/9/20245 minutes, 59 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Interesting new arrivals at Wellington Zoo

Wellington Zoo has announced their next new arrivals, and they’re not quite what Kevin expected.  Onyx and Beryl aren’t baby primates or giraffes, but rather two Romney Cross sheep!   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/9/20246 minutes
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Francesca Rudkin: It Ends With Us and How to Make Millions Before Grandma Dies

It Ends With Us   Lily Bloom moves to Boston to chase her lifelong dream of opening her own business. A chance meeting with charming neurosurgeon Ryle Kincaid soon sparks an intense connection, but as the two fall deeply in love, she begins to see sides of Ryle that remind her of her parents' relationship. When Lily's first love, Atlas Corrigan, suddenly reenters her life, her relationship with Ryle gets upended, leaving her with an impossible choice.    How to Make Millions Before Grandma Dies   A man quits work to care for dying grandmother, motivated by her fortune. He schemes to win her favor before she passes.    LISTEN ABOVE   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/9/20245 minutes, 37 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Lemon and Cream Sponge Roll

Chocolate logs were part of my childhood as mum would whip them up on the regular. This version, all citrusy and light, is the perfect treat for when lemons are in abundance.   Serve 6-8     Ingredients  4 free-range medium eggs  100g caster (about 1/3 cup) + 2 tbsp extra 100g (a generous ¼ cup) plain flour  1 tsp baking powder 2 tbsps lemon zest   Filling:   200mls cream  1 heaped tbsp icing sugar + extra for dusting  2 tbsps. sour cream   2 tsp lemon zest  2-3 tablespoons raspberry or lemon curd (optional, see note)    Method  Preheat the oven to 170 fanbake. Line a Swiss roll tin (or other shallow tin, approx. 30cmx20cm).   In a large bowl whisk eggs and caster sugar for 6-8 minutes until light, thick and creamy. It will triple in volume.  Sift in flour and baking powder and, along with the lemon zest, gently fold into the mixture until fully incorporated. Try not to take the volume out of the mixture. Pour gently into the prepared tin.  Spread the sponge mix - I do this with a spatula and/or shaking the tin - to get it into the corners.  Bake in the preheated oven for 10-12 minutes, until the sponge springs back to the touch.  While cake cooks, dust a piece of baking paper larger than the swiss roll tin, with the extra caster sugar.  Take the sponge out of the oven and flip it onto the sugared paper. Carefully peel off the layer of baking paper it was cooked on and allow the sponge to cool for a moment before rolling it up, starting from a short end, with the sugared paper still inside. This will prevent the sponge from sticking to itself. Set aside to cool.  Whip the cream with the icing sugar until thick then stir in the zest and sour cream.   Once the sponge has cooled, unroll it gently. Leave a 1cm border and spread over an even layer of whipped cream. Gently roll it up, peeling away the paper underneath as you go.   Leave it in the fridge to chill and dust with icing sugar before serving. Slice and eat. Yum!     Make it your own:   Use orange zest in place of lemon  Spread a layer of raspberry jam or lemon curd on the sponge before the whipped cream    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/9/20246 minutes, 49 seconds
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Jack Tame: My takeaways from the Paris Olympic Games

I don’t want it to end! Has two weeks really passed that quickly?   Honestly, my entire life and the daily rhythms of our household have come to revolve around the Olympic Games. There isn’t a dinner that is cooked, a lunchbox that is prepared, a table that is wiped down, or a basket of washing that is folded without the steady hum of speed climbing, or synchronised diving, or the men’s 800m repechage in the background.   These are my takeaways from Paris 2024:  First of all, I love the way in which history turns on the finest human margins.   The men’s 100m final was a great example, the way they broke the line in such a crowd, that both first and second recorded the same time on the TV and stadium clocks. With a microscope and a high-quality photo, apparently the silver medallist somehow broke the line first, but he did so with his foot, and ultimately it’s whoever’s chest breaks the line first that wins the race. History decided by five one-thousandths of a second.   I said before the games that I was looking forward to the men’s 1500m final and it didn’t disappoint. The two favourites had been talked up so much, and had smack-talked each other so much, that basically everyone —including me— had worked themselves into a state where it looked like only those two runners could possibly win it. The defending champion was so cavalier that in the heats, he deliberately didn’t crouch for the start of the race. He waited for the starting gun, let everyone else run off, and then casually trundled after them.  But in the final, Jakob Ingebrigtsen’s approach came back to bite him. He led for the first 85% of the race, setting a cracking pace as he tried to break his great rival, Britain’s Josh Kerr. On the final stretch, Kerr looked to go round Ingebrigtsen, and Ingebrigtsen drifted into lane two to try and block the overtake. What do we know about geometry? The inside lane has the shortest path to the finish line. As the two favourites scrapped in lanes 2 and 3, an American runner, Cole Hocker, slipped up the inside and pipped them for Olympic glory. Kerr finished second, Ingebrigtsen fourth. It was extraordinary.   With a day to go before the closing ceremony, here’s my take on the Olympic sports.   I love many of the newer ones. Sportclimbing is so good. It fits into my could-a-caveman-do-it category, which I think is an excellent measure for whether individual sports should be at the Olympics.  I’m not just saying it because Finn Butcher won gold, but I reckon the Kayak Cross is fantastic. It’s such a spectacle! Same applies to the skateboarding. It’s so good.   I mean no disrespect to any of the athletes in these sports but I’m ambivalent on surfing at the Olympics and as spectacular as the breakdancing is, it’s gonna take me a bit longer to come around.  Honestly, I don’t think football should be at the Olympics. Same with tennis and golf. Those sports are big enough outside of the games. Maybe the best test should be whether or not the Olympics is the pinnacle competition in that respective sport. If it’s not, then leave it out.  One of the things that has been great about the games is how well-attended all of the events have been. The crowds for everything have been massive. I also love refreshing it is to hear from athletes who aren’t rugby players who’ve had every scintilla of life and personality beaten out of them by overly-protective media managers.  And as for my favourite Kiwi performance? We still have that incredible contest in the women’s K1 to come and there are a couple of other Kiwis who could be a chance, but for me it’s still gonna be hard to beat our very first medal of Paris ’24, our very first gold: the women’s sevens.   Tell you what though... I don’t love Mondays at the best of times... but this week is gonna’ be tough. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/9/20245 minutes, 55 seconds
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Oli and Louis Leimbach: Lime Cordiale on their newest album 'Enough of the Sweet Talk' and upcoming tour

Lime Cordiale are Australia’s ultimate purveyors of breezy indie rock.   Brothers Oli and Louis have amassed more than half a billion streams on Spotify since the band’s inception in 2009 - as well as bagging multiple ARIA awards and performing around the world.   They have cemented themselves as standouts, even more so with their brand-new album Enough of the Sweet Talk.    The brothers joined Francesca Rudkin for a chat about what went into this latest album and their upcoming tour across New Zealand and Australia.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/3/202414 minutes, 55 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Glass Animals - I Love You So F***ing Much

The fourth studio album from human musical group Glass Animals, I Love You So F***ing Much was partly inspired by the success of their song Heatwaves back in 2020.  Frontman Dave Bayley told Consequence Sound that sometimes success can leave you feeling like a “spectator”, with people expecting you to act a certain way, which "confused [him] to the point of not knowing who [he] was or if anything was real".  The title refers to the power and mystery of human connection in a universe much larger than the people who reside within.  Estelle Clifford joined Francesca Rudkin to give her thoughts on the album.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/3/20245 minutes, 31 seconds
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Kate Hall: Technology and sustainability

With technology constantly improving and companies putting out brand new updates and products on a regular basis, it begs a question: is this sustainable?  Kate Hall joined Francesca Rudkin for a chat about sustainability and technology, and the impact of new tech on the planet and the people who live on it.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/3/20248 minutes, 54 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: How the World Ran Out of Everything, 17 Years Later

How the World Ran Out of Everything by Peter S. Goodman   How does the wealthiest country on earth run out of protective gear in the middle of a public health catastrophe? How do its parents find themselves unable to locate crucially needed infant formula? How do its largest companies spend billions of dollars making cars that no one can drive for a lack of chips?  The last few years have radically highlighted the intricacy and fragility of the global supply chain. Enormous ships were stuck at sea, warehouses overflowed, and delivery trucks stalled. The result was a scarcity of everything from breakfast cereal to medical devices, from frivolous goods to lifesaving necessities. And while the scale of the pandemic shock was unprecedented, it underscored the troubling reality that the system was fundamentally at risk of descending into chaos all along. And it still is. Sabotaged by financial interests, loss of transparency in markets, and worsening working conditions for the people tasked with keeping the gears turning, our global supply chain has become perpetually on the brink of collapse.  In How the World Ran Out of Everything, award-winning journalist Peter S. Goodman reveals the fascinating innerworkings of our supply chain and the factors that have led to its constant, dangerous vulnerability. His reporting takes readers deep into the elaborate system, showcasing the triumphs and struggles of the human players who operate it—from factories in Asia and an almond grower in Northern California, to a group of striking railroad workers in Texas, to a truck driver who Goodman accompanies across hundreds of miles of the Great Plains. Through their stories, Goodman weaves a powerful argument for reforming a supply chain to become truly reliable and resilient, demanding a radical redrawing of the bargain between labor and shareholders, and deeper attention paid to how we get the things we need.  From one of the most respected economic journalists working today, How the World Ran Out of Everything is a fiercely smart, deeply informative look at how our supply chain operates, and why its reform is crucial—not only to avoid dysfunction in our day to day lives, but to protect the fate of our global fortunes.     17 Years Later by JP Pomare   Who killed the wealthy primrose family? The violent slaughter of the Primrose family while they slept shocked the nation. Their young live-in chef, Bill Kareama, was swiftly charged with murder and brought to justice. But the brutal crime scarred the idyllic town of Cambridge forever. Seventeen years later, true-crime podcaster Sloane Abbott tracks down prison psychologist TK Phillips. Once a fierce campaigner for an appeal, TK now lives a quiet life with Bill's case firmly in his past. As Sloane lures a reluctant TK back into the fight, evidence emerges that casts new light on the Primroses - and who might have wanted them dead. While the list of suspects grows, Bill's innocence is still far from assured. What will it cost Sloane and TK to uncover the truth?    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/3/20245 minutes, 47 seconds
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Ed McKnight: Opes Partners Economist on the potential changes for homeowners

There may be some good news on the horizon for homeowners.  Ed McKnight from Opes Partners joined Francesca Rudkin for a chat about the changing factors that could impact Kiwis.  On the agenda:   Westpac has cut their interest rates again, is this the beginning of a trend?  Has the criteria for getting a mortgage changed? What’s the best time to restructure or get one?  When can Kiwis expect a cut in the OCR?  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/3/20244 minutes, 17 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Escape to Malta

"It astounds me that Malta isn’t flashing on the tourist radar as a top-tier Mediterranean destination. I recently ventured to the Maltese islands with Insight Vacations, on their 6-day Easy Pace Malta premium guided tour. It offers the winning mix of guided sightseeing and flexi-time, allowing you to serendipitously unwrap the destination’s treats, at your own leisure." "One of the best ways to get your bearings on Malta’s watery lay-out is to jump on board one of the numerous sightseeing ferries in Sliema, zipping you from Marsamxett Harbour to Valletta’s Grand Harbour. It’s the best way to drink in the views of fortified Manoel Island and the butterscotch-hued walled city of Valletta, from all angles." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/3/20247 minutes, 50 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Olympic fatigue

Kevin Milne, like many people, has been watching the Olympics.  And despite only being a week into the games, he’s already exhausted, and he’s not the one competing!  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/3/20245 minutes, 39 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Winter Colours in the garden

After a few weeks of really misty, cold, and awful weather, I needed to get out of bed and find some inspiration for the garden. A “pick-me-up” if you like.  But where to go?  Yep – Hagley Park is always a good place, but so are the garden Centres!  The difference is quite obvious: The Botanical Gardens will show you stuff that was planted many decades ago. It’s the picture of the future – a glimpse into your garden the children will enjoy after you’ve moved on.   How about the “now” – or maybe the next 10 years or so?  Impatient? Perhaps…  So I went to Oderings to have a look for some quick colour, tincture, complexion, some colōris, or, as the Spanish Language so elegantly describes: el color.  Start with the Letter A: Acer Known here as Maple.  Acer senkaki is obviously a Japanese maple. It glows red in Winter (and it’s quite pretty as a summer tree too).  You don’t have to wait for it – you can buy it right now to cheer you up.  The next Acer is A. griseum (the paper bark maple) a Chinese species that is actually quite rare in nature, but reasonably common in gardens owned by observant gardeners. Don’t be fooled by the species name “griseum” (meaning grey) – it refers to the underside of the leaves.  The peeling cinnamon-coloured bark is what gives me hope: hope for a speedy springtime and hope that some young gardeners will see the beauty of back-lit leaves from a low-angled sun.  You want some weird Pink to cheer you up?  Here’s an Erica, simply because I kind-of grew up with plants like that in the Netherlands. Heather, Heaths (“de Hei”), and such plants belong to the Ericacea with almost 1000 described species. They’re tough and flower colours are often spectacular; great tucker for insects like pollinators.  But the coolest thing is that a good number of these Ericaceae have a habit of flowering in the middle of winter, and that can be brilliant!   And then there are Daphne and Hellebores and the fabulous scent of Osmanthus.  But perhaps it’s a good opportunity to highlight some Native winter jewels, like Libertia peregrinans.  Or the range of Corokias (Geenty’s Ghost and Frosted Chocolat). These last two make fab hedges!!  We also have weirdly bright Cabbage Trees (Cordyline) and strangely dark Flaxes, small and tall.  No doubt all found as unexpected genetic morphs or cross-bred entities; mind you, I must say that the dark “background” flaxes really fit well in many gardens and the nectar feeding birds are still keen to visit the flowers in late spring.  One native shrub that always bowls me over (when visiting the Catlins) is the relatively slow growing Pseudowintera colorata, also known as Horopito. This shrub is totally unexpectedly beautiful as just about every specimen has a different colour-ratio, live and in nature.  Now that’s a shrub worth investing in, especially as you can eat the leaves, not just in Māori dishes, but also in Indonesian delicacies.  It tastes just the way it looks: On fire!  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/3/20244 minutes, 23 seconds
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Full Show Podcast: 3 August 2024

On the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast for Saturday 3 August 2024, Francesca Rudkin fills in and chats to brothers Oli and Louis of Aussie indie rock sensation Lime Cordiale about their brand-new album and bringing their tour to NZ.  Francesca questions why the arts make things hard for themselves.  Horror is having a moment - Chris Schulz talks about an unexpected success in one of the best horror films of the year, Longlegs.  And, staying in the world of film, Mike Yardley takes us on a trip to Malta where the brand-new Gladiator 2 and classics like Murder on the Orient Express and Jurassic World were filmed.  Get the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast every Saturday on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/3/20241 hour, 56 minutes, 37 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Tech expert on the slow Olympic swimming pool in Paris, Apple's AI software

The Olympic swimming pool in Paris is slow... is the tech part of the problem?  It certainly isn't helping. Only one world record had been broken as of August 1st, which the unusually shallow pool is being blamed for. It's 2.15 meters deep because when it was starting to be built in 2017, it only had to be over two meters. Now the minimum depth is 2.5 meters, but the recommendation is for 3 meters.  Also not helping: the underwater cameras. They contribute to the choppiness of the water, and also don't help the water settle between races as they continue to move and reset.    Developers are getting their first look at Apple Intelligence  The reviews are... fine? Not all the promised features have been delivered yet. One reviewer says it's a "slightly smarter Siri". There are bits of AI sprinkled throughout the Apple apps.  In the Mail app there's a new section of your inbox with AI-suggested important emails, a summarize button at the top of each email, and when you highlight text you can select "writing tools" to have AI do proofreading, make suggestions, and summarize.  The search tool in the Photos app now uses AI to understand more complicated requests. You can ask for pictures of a particular person wearing glasses or all the food you ate in Iceland, all in natural language.  But these new features might not ship with the new iPhone?  It may not make the deadline to be included. Apple does have a way to update the OS while the phone is still in the box (which is a crazy piece of tech!) so that may happen, or folks who buy a new phone will need to upgrade their software later.    LISTEN ABOVE   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/2/20245 minutes, 29 seconds
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Tara Ward: Prosper, Women in Blue, The Red King

Prosper   The wealthy founder of an evangelical megachurch announces they're expanding to the US, but the collision between faith and ambition threatens to tear both his family and his church apart (TVNZ+).    Women in Blue   In 1971, four women defy ultraconservative norms and join Mexico's first female police force-only to discover that it's a publicity stunt to distract the media from a serial killer; they make a pact to bring the killer to justice (Apple TV).  The Red King   Police sergeant Grace Narayan is sent on a 'punishment posting' to an island with an eerie religion, where the cold case of a missing boy unearths buried secrets (ThreeNow).    LISTEN ABOVE   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/2/20246 minutes, 45 seconds
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Chris Schulz: Longlegs and I Saw the TV Glow

Longlegs   FBI Agent Lee Harker is assigned to an unsolved serial killer case that takes an unexpected turn, revealing evidence of the occult. Harker discovers a personal connection to the killer and must stop him before he strikes again.    I Saw the TV Glow   A classmate introduces teenage Owen to a mysterious late-night TV show -- a vision of a supernatural world beneath their own. In the pale glow of the television, Owen's view of reality begins to crack.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/2/20247 minutes, 16 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Beef, beer, and blue cheese pie

This pie is an absolute winner - hearty and rich, it’s packed full of meat and gravy, spiked with tangy blue cheese and topped with flaky pastry. It’s golden!    Serves 4     Ingredients:  500g beef chunks – I use chuck or blade steak   2 tbsps flour   1 large onion, diced  2 carrots, diced   3 cloves garlic, crushed  330mls beer, ale or lager but not too sweet   2 tbsps tomato puree  1 bay leaf   ½ tsp salt & ¼ tsp cracked pepper to season   100g blue cheese   1-2 sheets ready rolled flaky pastry   Egg wash    Method:  1. Sprinkle flour over beef chunks and toss to coat.   2. In a saucepan heat the oil and brown off the meat.  Do this in batches. Set aside.  3. In the same saucepan, sauté onions, carrots and garlic until beginning to soften. Pour over beer and as it bubbles up scrape off any yummy bits from the bottom of the pot. Add meat back in, along with tomato puree, bay leaf, salt and pepper. Lower the heat and simmer for one hour or more, until meat it meltingly tender. Cool.   4. Heat oven to 200 C. Grease a 23cm (or similar) pie dish.  To make the pie:   Ladle the cold pie filling into your pie dish. Feel free to pile it up as it will settle as it cooks. Sprinkle over blue cheese. Roll out pastry to fit as a lid and egg wash the edges (this helps them to stick and seal your pie.) Drape lid over filling and squeeze and pinch pastry onto the rim of your dish to seal well. Use a sharp knife to make plenty of steam holes in the pastry. Brush with beaten egg. Lower oven temperature to 180 and bake for 40 minutes or until golden brown and bubbling.   Serve great spoonfuls of pie with mashed spuds and peas or my favourite, a fresh leafy green salad    Nici’s note:   - I’m in the habit of making the filling a day ahead as I think it improves the flavour.   - Usually I avoid using tomato puree (too strong) but for this recipe it keeps the liquid to a minimum whilst dialling up the flavour.       LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/2/20247 minutes, 49 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: The Arts make it hard for themselves

A headline in the news this week had me rolling my eyes. Sometimes the arts make it hard for themselves.  The headline I'm referring to was about the New Zealand Film Commission spending $16,431 on two farewell and two welcome parties for their outgoing and incoming chief executives. Obviously, no one stopped to think how this particular headline might come across. If they had, the NZ Film Commission might have read the room differently.    It’s not a good look to have an autonomous Crown Entity, whose job is to distribute public money to the film industry, creating headlines about throwing parties.   In the scheme of things, this isn’t much money. And if we weren’t in the middle of a cost of living crisis, and with a government facing long term fiscal deficits, this may never have made headlines. I’m pretty sure I’ve been to similar farewells in the private sector which cost a lot more.    I should note, these celebrations took place in 2023 before the October election which delivered a new Government hell bent on making savings across the public sector.    But you could argue that we were already in a cost of living crisis before the election: a recession was expected, Labour had started tightening the belt and clamping down on costs, and we knew the policies of the potential new coalition partners. They should have anticipated how this would look.    This follows news that NZFC paid a former boss well over half a million dollars in leave and severance payments after just nine months in the role when he left in 2022.    None of this helps the NZFC garner support from the public. The New Zealand Screen industry is worth a bomb – it contributes $3.5 billion to the economy each year. It is an incredible industry filled with some of the hardest working, most innovative people I have ever worked with – and it’s world class. But when it comes to arts, and culture, and public perception, you’ll never be able to compete for funding against the need for a better education and health system, more police, and safer roads.   These headlines also grate as many organisations have done incredible work over the last 9 months to ensure stability in the struggling industry. SPADA have been lobbying tirelessly to make sure NZ on Air was exempt from having to make the across the board 7.5% cut being asked of Ministry funding. New Zealand’s longest running soap, Shortland Street, will air just three episodes a week in 2025, a compromise to keep the long-running drama alive.   The CEO of TVNZ proved she got the memo about creating headlines: after Jodi O’Donnell accepted an invitation from the IOC to attend the Paris Olympics, she thought about it and decided it didn’t pass the sniff test. She is taking leave and personally paying for the trip, even though she will attend some meetings. A sensible decision, especially considering this week TVNZ also announced it needs to find another $30m in revenue or cuts.   I am a huge supporter of the arts, but silly headlines make it hard to encourage others to support them too. Art and culture is pivotal to creating vibrant cities and communities, to fostering a sense of belonging, pride, identity, and connection. And can be a good source of revenue.    So please stop making it so hard to sell! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/2/20243 minutes, 25 seconds
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Ed Byrne: Irish Comedian talks his 'Tragedy Plus Time' tour, winning The Chase

Another popular comedian is back on New Zealand’s shores.  Irish comic Ed Byrne is known for his intellectual comedy, making appearances on TV shows like QI, and even winning the celebrity version of The Chase.  He’s back before Kiwi audiences with his ‘Tragedy Plus Time’ tour, kicking it off with a performance tonight in Hastings, before taking his act through the country over the coming month.  Byrne joined Jack Tame for a chat about his act, and touching of course on his reality TV win.  For more information and tickets for 'Tragedy Plus Time', click here. LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/27/202413 minutes, 29 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Lime Cordiale - Enough Of The Sweet Talk

Aussie pop-rock group Lime Cordiale has dropped another album.  Their third studio album, the 17-track work features many of the singles they’ve released over the last two years.  Estelle Clifford joined Jack Tame to review the brand new release.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/27/20246 minutes, 14 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: A Death in Cornwall, After Annie

A Death in Cornwall by Daniel Silva  Art restorer and legendary spy Gabriel Allon has slipped quietly into London to attend a reception at the Courtauld Gallery celebrating the return of a stolen self-portrait by Vincent van Gogh. But when an old friend from the Devon and Cornwall Police seeks his help with a baffling murder investigation, he finds himself pursuing a powerful and dangerous new adversary.  The victim is Charlotte Blake, a celebrated professor of art history from Oxford who spends her weekends in the same seaside village where Gabriel once lived under an assumed identity. Her murder appears to be the work of a diabolical serial killer who has been terrorizing the Cornish countryside. But there are a number of telltale inconsistencies, including a missing mobile phone. And then there is the mysterious three-letter cypher she left behind on a notepad in her study.  Gabriel soon discovers that Professor Blake was searching for a looted Picasso worth more than a $100 million, and he takes up the chase for the painting as only he can—with six Impressionist canvases forged by his own hand and an unlikely team of operatives that includes a world-famous violinist, a beautiful master thief, and a lethal contract killer turned British spy. The result is a stylish and wildly entertaining mystery that moves at lightning speed from the cliffs of Cornwall to the enchanted island of Corsica and, finally, to a breathtaking climax on the very doorstep of 10 Downing Street.    After Annie by Anna Quindlen  When Annie Brown dies suddenly, her husband, her four young children and her closest friend are left to struggle without the woman who centered their lives. Bill Brown finds himself overwhelmed, and Annie’s best friend Annemarie is lost to old bad habits without Annie’s support. It is Annie’s daughter, Ali, forced to try to care for her younger brothers and even her father, who manages to maintain some semblance of their former lives for them all, and who confronts the complicated truths of adulthood.  Yet over the course of the next year, while Annie looms large in their memories, all three are able to grow, to change, even to become stronger and more sure of themselves. The enduring power Annie gave to those who loved her is the power to love, and to go on without her.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/27/20244 minutes, 35 seconds
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Mike Yardley: The charm and cuisine of Corfu

"It is the greenest of Greece’s islands, lush and verdant with emerald mountains and breathlessly blue waters lapping rocky coves and sandy bays. This northeastern outpost of Greece lies across the Ionian Sea from Italy’s heel, while Albania is just 3kms away. Corfu has long enticed conquerors, as much as holidaymakers. British and French influences can be seen in Corfu’s atmospheric Old Town – however, it’s obvious that the Venetians, who stayed around for 400 years, exerted and left behind the greatest legacy. Their calling card is everywhere, with an alluring mix of neoclassical villas, Venetian palazzo and pastel-painted hill towns." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/27/20248 minutes, 41 seconds
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Dougal Sutherland: How phones can help combat loneliness and isolation

Last time we talked about how your phone could interfere with connecting with people. This time I thought it would be good to talk about how our phones can help us combat loneliness and isolation.  We hear a lot about the negative health impacts of loneliness, and yet this series of studies suggests that most of us are reluctant to reach out to old friends – even though that’s one of the fastest ways to boost our social connections.  A new Canadian study showed that fewer than one third of people in their study sent a message (txt, email. Phone call) to an old friend even when they wanted to, thought the friend would be receptive, had their contact details, and had time and space to send a message.  The study found that people tended to view old friends in the same way they view strangers, which contributed to reluctance to reach out.  Things that helped with connecting with old friends included:  - A “practice” condition (sending messages to current friends) helped more people to reach out to old friends, suggesting one practical way to warm people up to contacting old friends.  - Imagine what it’s like for you to receive a message from an old friend. Most people were very positive about being the one that is contacted rather than doing the contacting. Putting yourself in the other person’s shoes might help reduce reluctance to be the one making the first move  - Start with some easy wins – contact people you were close to in the past rather than more casual acquaintances. More likely to be able to rekindle those old fires.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/27/20247 minutes, 40 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Tauhou – The Numbers

A couple of weeks ago we talked about feeding birds in your garden. In view of a decent week off, Jack was training his birds to do without food – slowly getting them used to going and finding food elsewhere for the next week or so.  I realised that this requires some scientific back-up with observations from the distant past and very recent past, to see if the Tauhoa are really going to be affected by a week or so of no fodder.  About 18 years ago (I was living in Auckland – before I saw the light) my office was looking out over a trained citrus bush, right outside my window. From time to time flocks of silvereyes would visit in winter to look for scale insects and mealybugs, aphids and other delicacies.  I love this biological control and kept an eye on these birds – always been interested in birds, even more so later in life.  When the flocks kept on returning regularly, in spring I decided to take a look at what they were after and discovered a decent but unwanted population of scale insects that were causing quite a bit of pressure on my lemon (they also attract ants that feed on “honeydew” excreted by scale insects).  Luckily, a good flock of Tauhou descended and started working away at eating scales. Pictures show that this removed more than 50% of the sap-sucking plant pests.  Before helpers. 5 minutes after help arrived!  Not only were those little birds a great indicator of certain damaging garden pests, they were actually part of the Biological Control Squad.  In summer, they kept on coming back to the citrus to decimate the scale population.  In our current garden we feed the Tauhou with those meatballs from the Mad Butcher. I also make lard blocks, presented to them in small, metal cages.  Up to 40 birds at a time of census!!   So… I stopped feeding them for 5 days, just to see what would happen.  They were not impressed at all!! Kept on flying into their tree where the food parcels used to hang. Making lots of noise – “bad mood Bear”.  Other species were also returning to the food cart (sparrows, Green finches, Starlings and chaffinches).  It slowly tapered off to a dozen or fewer than that – but they always flew over the site for a check-up.  And in the end a couple would sit in their food tree for a bit of preening.  I discovered that Silvereyes have a routine of visiting the local feeding stations in people’s garden. I reckon they have a circular trajectory from our place to Jan’s next door, 50 meters east, then across the road and another one (or two) west, and as far as 200 meters away, before returning to our side of the road via neighbours a few houses down (north-west);   I reckon they usually fly clock-wise.  When I hung up a fresh ball and timed the return, this morning, after 5 days of no food, it took 3 minutes before 19 Tauhou were gorging themselves – this grew to the usual congestion and fights 5 minutes later.  One other little experiment took place this year by banding a good number of silvereyes in our garden in autumn and winter: it was total of 81 individuals (73 newly banded and 8 “recaptures” – older birds).  In the past week I attempted to count feeding flocks of around 30 birds – the average number of banded silvereyes was around 2 and a half (2.5) of those 30.  I know… It’s pretty hard to count those fast-moving birds! And you never know if you’ve missed a banded individual when you quickly count the chaos before you.  If 1/12th of the birds you see are banded, (and you have 81 banded individuals in the population) you can guestimate that there must be 972 birds regularly in your garden flocks – give-or-take.  Almost a thousand of these little blighters passing through your garden on a regular basis… every day in winter!  And I reckon they’ll know exactly who’s got the food cart in the garden…  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/27/20244 minutes, 58 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: What are Cold Sores?

One topic that is very common and can be quite distressing for patients is ‘cold sores’ sometimes referred to as ‘fever blisters’. A very common presentation to the doctor!    What are cold sores?  - Small fluid filled blisters appear on the skin, often in patches.  - Usually on the lips, chin or cheeks, or nostrils.  - Sometimes can occur in the roof of the mouth or gums.  - Often start with tingling or itching. Over 48 hours blisters develop, then burst and ‘crust over’, and dry out.  - Can take 2-3 weeks to heal completely.  - Occasionally you also get a temperature, sore throat, and headache.     What causes them?  - They are caused by a virus – herpes simplex virus 1.  - They can be spread through close contact – kissing, shared utensils, towels.  - More likely to spread when the blisters burst.  - The virus can hide in nerve cells and be triggered by:  - Stress, fatigue, fever, trauma, sun, or wind.     How do you treat them?  - They get better over 2-3 weeks.  - Use sunblock lip balm outside.  - Paracetamol can help the pain.  - Avoid salty food. Also, ice or warm flannels.  - You can be prescribed or buy antiviral cream from a chemist to speed up the healing.     Is there anything else I should think about?  - It’s important to avoid close contact such as kissing, touching, or sharing towels when you have cold sores.  - They can recur and be triggered, so avoid trigger factors if possible – sun, stress.  - There is a natural remedy: kanuka honey-based cream shown to be effective.  - See your GP if it’s not healed within 14 days, occurs near the eye, very large, or you have other issues such having chemotherapy.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/27/20245 minutes, 29 seconds
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Tara Ward: Time Bandits, The Decameron, Simone Biles Rising

Time Bandits  The Taika Waititi-Jemaine Clement reboot of the 1981 fantasy film is an unpredictable journey through time and space with a ragtag group of thieves and their newest recruit: an 11-year-old history buff named Kevin (Apple TV+).   The Decameron   A dark comedy about a group of 14th century aristocrats and their servants, who retreat to a villa in the Italian countryside in the hope of avoiding the plague (Netflix).  Simone Biles Rising   A documentary series about gymnastics superstar Simone Biles, who withdrew from the 2020 Tokyo Olympics due to mental health concerns and then embarked on a journey to prepare for her triumphant return (Netflix).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/27/20246 minutes, 53 seconds
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Full Show Podcast: 27 July 2024

On the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast for Saturday 27 July 2024, NZ's favourite Irish comedian, Ed Byrne joins Jack to chat winning The Chase and landing back on Kiwi shores for his Tragedy Plus Time tour.  Jack hopes for a redemption story for one of the Olympics' greatest athletes as an extravagant ceremony officially opens the games.  The perfect leftovers-for-lunch meal comes in the form of a Savoury Leek & Mushroom pancake recipe from Rosa Flanagan of Two Raw Sisters.  And, as WhatsApp hits 100 million monthly users in the US, Jack and techxpert Paul Stenhouse joke about the stress of the family group chat - though clinical psychologist Dougal Sutherland reflects on how group chats can be an approachable way to combat loneliness.   Get the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast every Saturday on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/27/20241 hour, 56 minutes, 27 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Continued outages from the CrowdStrike outage, WhatsApp's US userbase continues to grow

A week on from CrowdStrike's outage and not all systems are back online  CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz said in a post yesterday that "over 97%" of systems running its software were back online as of 25 July. Microsoft estimates that 8.5 million PCs had been disabled, so that suggests approximately 250,000 devices remain offline. In the US, Delta Airlines is the most high profile victim with lingering issues well into this week continuing to cause flight disruptions, seemingly related to issues with the systems for crewing planes with pilots and flight attendants.  The stock price managed to make a little bit of a recovery on Tuesday, but is continuing to slide, and it’s down around 10% since the outage. It's taken them back to December 2023 levels, effectively wiping out their 2024 gains.  There are reports today of a new blue screen of death issue - but this time it's not related to CrowdStrike. Microsoft’s latest blue screen can’t be blamed on CrowdStrike, which is popping up on Windows 11 machines that use BitLocker. BitLocker is Microsoft's hard-drive encryption tool that protects data from unauthorized access or theft. The issue isn’t widespread, but those impacted will have to enter a recovery key to get a PC to boot properly.   WhatsApp now has 100 million monthly users in the US  It's the big metropolitan cities showing the biggest growth - Los Angeles, New York, Miami, and Seattle. They're also the cities that have the most immigrants. WhatsApp now has more than 2 billion users in over 180 countries, but the dominance of Apple’s iMessage in the US has proven to be a hurdle since the 2014 acquisition for $16 billion. As Google and Apple both adopt RCS messaging, Meta will continue to face an uphill battle.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/27/20244 minutes, 28 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Mr Blake at Your Service, The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare

Mr Blake at Your Service   A widowed British businessman takes a job as butler of a manor house in France to remember his late French wife. His life takes a turn as he navigates the eccentric behaviour of the lady of the manor and the household staff.    The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare   British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and a group of military officials hatch a daring plan to neutralize Hitler's fleet of German U-boats during World War II. Made up of a motley crew of rogues and mavericks, the top-secret combat unit uses unconventional techniques to battle the Nazis and change the course of the war.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/26/20246 minutes, 47 seconds
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Rosa Flanagan: Leek and Mushroom Savoury Pancakes

One half of Two Raw Sisters, Rosa Flanagan joined Jack Tame to serve up a recipe for Leek and Mushroom Savoury Pancakes.    Serves: 2  Time: 20 minutes    Ingredients:  3/4 cup chickpea flour   3/4 cup water   1/4 cup plant based or dairy yoghurt   1/2 tsp sea salt   3 tbsp nutritional yeast or freshly grated parmesan   1/2 tsp baking powder   1/2 cup coriander, chopped     1 tbsp cooking oil  1 brown onion, diced   1/4 leek, thinly sliced into rounds   2 cloves garlic, crushed and chopped   1/2 tsp sea salt   1 tsp ground cumin   1 tsp ground turmeric   3 white button mushrooms, cut into small pieces     Method:   In a bowl, add the chickpea flour, water, yoghurt and sea salt. Whisk everything together with a fork, until all of the clumps in the mixture are removed.   Then add the nutritional yeast or parmesan, baking powder and coriander. Mix to combine and set aside.   Heat the oil up in a non-stick fry pan and add the onion, leek, garlic, sea salt, cumin and turmeric. Sauté until the onions start to become translucent and then add in the mushrooms. Continue to cook for another 5 minutes.   Add the onion mix to the chickpea flour mix, then mix to combine.   Using the same pan, add 1 tbsp of cooking oil. Once hot, add 1/2 of the mixture and swirl around so that one big pancake is formed.   Cook the pancake for 3-4 minutes on each side, or until bubbles begin to form on the surface. Flip and cook for another 3-4 minutes. Once cooked, remove from the pan and continue the same cooking process for the remaining half of the mixture.   Transfer the pancakes onto two individual plates and top with your favourite toppings. We are loving a combination of any of the following….. pesto, hummus, aioli, leftover roast vegetables, boiled eggs, avocado, smoked salmon, fresh greens, stir fried greens, herbs, pickles, tahini.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/26/20246 minutes, 13 seconds
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Kevin Milne: What is New Zealand's best ad ever?

New Zealand has some iconic advertisements.  Jingles and scenes everyone knows, things you can start quoting and someone else in the room will chime in to finish off.  Kevin Milne has been thinking about his favourite ads, and joined Jack Tame to run through a few.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/26/20247 minutes, 19 seconds
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Jack Tame: I absolutely love the Olympics

It’s upon us.   We are exactly eight minutes away from the conclusion of the Opening Ceremony of the 2024 Summer Olympic Games. Yes, the Opening Ceremony is a total cheese-fest. Yes, about a third of the athletes will have caught a cold from standing out in the rain for so long. But I for one, am fizzing.   I love the Olympics. Absolutely love them. Always have, and even though of course I can see clearly enough that they are an obscenely commercialised orgy of hyper-capitalism, consumption, and junk food sponsorship deals, I’ve never wavered in suspending my cynicism for a few weeks every four years, and I doubt I ever will.   Usually, the only things that get the whole World’s attention are bad things: wars, terrorism, and natural disasters. The Olympics are about as close as humanity comes to a shared experience of, and shared interest in something good. It’s about our only truly shared collective celebration.    I remember once filming alongside a super-conservative Mennonite community in rural Pennsylvania. The Mennonites eschew most modern technology and deliberately cloister themselves from much of the rest of the World. Twelve years ago, I asked a woman from the community if she’d heard of the Olympics. She’d never watched them, she said. But she’d heard of them. Was it something where people from different countries came together?   Yeah, I said. It is.    My favourite Olympic events are the primal ones. Ones where you don’t need crazy specialised equipment. Ones where the barriers to entry are relatively low.    Who can swim the fastest? Sprint the quickest? Jump the highest? Do the most impressive flips?   Outside of New Zealand’s medal prospects, these are the three sports I’m most excited about at the games:   The 1500m. An absolute classic. Maybe it’s the legacy of Snell and Lovelock etc, but the thing I love about the 1500m is it’s the shortest running race to be properly tactical. I was in the front row of the stands at the Olympics in Rio, and remember my shock at seeing just how fast the 1500m runners were moving. TV gets you close, but you still lose something in perspective. In the men’s contest this year, the favourite is Norway’s defending Olympic champion. If Jakob Ingebrigtsen wins again, I think most middle-distance running fans will consider him the greatest 1500m runner ever.    My second event is another running race and another all-time great. Eilud Kipchoge is the boss of Olympic marathoning. He was Olympic champion in 2016 and Olympic champion in 2020, and he’s pursuing a third consecutive title. Again, TV is good, but you can’t appreciate how fast they’re running until you see it!   The athlete I’m most excited about at these games is Simone Biles. There aren’t really sufficient descriptors for what she’s capable of doing, but seeing her at her best, spinning and flipping and throwing herself into unbelievably complex and dangerous contortions really pushes my engrained understanding of what the human body is capable of. I was team Simone when she pulled out at the last games. How could you throw yourself into the stuff she does without absolute, supreme confidence? I’ve watched all the redemption documentaries. I know she’s getting on a bit in gymnast years, but she’s clearly an all-time great and I’m desperate for her to pull off a gold… or five.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/26/20247 minutes, 26 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Apple & Blackberry Sheet Pan Cake

Try this cake for the school lunch boxes this week – it’s quick to make and bake, soft and moist, incredibly delicious and square pieces are much more ergonomic in the lunch box. Makes 20x25 rectangle cake INGREDIENTS 150g butter 2/3 cup water ½ cup sugar ½ cup brown sugar 1 ½ cups plain flour 1 teaspoon baking soda Pinch salt 1 tsp cinnamon (optional) 1/3 cup yoghurt, sour cream or creme fraiche 2 medium eggs, lightly whisked 200g (about 2 medium) chopped apples, I used unpeeled granny smiths ½ cup frozen blackberries, thawed   ICING 1 ½ cups icing sugar 1 tbsp melted butter 2 tsp vanilla extract   METHOD Preheat oven to 200 C. Grease and line a shallow swiss roll tin or other rectangle tin measuring about 20cmx30cm. Twist the corners of the baking paper to get the sides to stand up a bit higher than the tin. In a medium pot bring the butter and water to a boil. Stir in the sugars followed by the dry ingredients – flour, baking soda, salt and cinnamon and mix until combined. Add in yoghurt and eggs and stir to combine then fold in the chopped apples and berries. Pour batter into the prepared tin spreading it into the corners. Bake for 17-20 minutes, or until it springs back to the touch. Cool for 10 minutes then ice while warm. For the icing: Heap icing sugar into a large bowl and add melted butter and vanilla. Whisk, beat or stir until you have a smooth, pourable icing – loosen with boiling water as needed. Spread icing over just warm cake and leave to set. Slice and eat! Make it your way: You could grate the apple but I like the chunks. Leave out the cinnamon and replace with vanilla or ginger if you fancy it. Leave off the icing and eat warm as a pudding with custard and cream.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/20/20245 minutes, 39 seconds
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Mike Yardley: The thrills of the Peloponnese Peninsula

"As you wander around the Peloponnese Peninsula, it's like myth and history just constantly overlap. For history buffs, there's just so much to blow the mind in Southern Greece. Western Peloponnese is home to the Valley of the Gods. I went to Epidaurus in the Peloponnese, and you get a real flavour ancient sporting conquests. The place is home to Asclepius, the God of medicine, and is where they staged many sporting contests. You can still see the ancient stadium and theatre, which seats about 14000 people, and a coin drop there could be crisply heard from the highest seats - you cannot beat old school acoustics! Read the full article here LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/20/20247 minutes, 48 seconds
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Jack Tame: Tech outages can affect us all

Apart from my beautiful wife, of course, the last person I thought of before I dozed off last night, was Dave. Dave had texted me a few hours earlier when I was filling in for Heather on Newstalk ZB Drive, to say he was driving home from Levin to Palmerston North when he’d stopped to fill up the car and had encountered a bit of a problem. He’d filled up the tank, but as he walked over to the foyer and tried to transfer money between his banks accounts in order to pay for his petrol, his internet banking wouldn’t work. There he was, stranded, waiting for an enormous global technology outage to be sorted so that he could transfer the cash, pay for his gas, and finally get back home. Although some of the tech outages had been fixed, they’re still affecting thousands upon thousands of significant operations around the World: Airports, airlines, hospitals, emergency call centres, TV and radio stations, and banks. Who’s to say Dave isn’t still out there, madly swiping at his phone and refreshing a blank page on his internet banking? The outage was caused by Crowdstrike, a cyber security company which is ironically charged with protecting its clients. And there’s no reporting at this stage to suggest it was caused by a malicious act or a cyber attack. It’s just a plain old error. Already some experts are describing it as the largest IT outage in history. “This is what Y2K wishes it was,” someone said on Reddit. It’s a salient reminder just how fragile and interconnected many of our modern digital systems really are. I’d describe myself as being mid-tier when it comes to the uptake of technology. I have a Chat GPT account. I back up my data on the cloud. I use Apple Pay on my phone. And I absoluetely abhor cash. I hate it. Notes? Coins? Seriously?! All that clutter?! I want to go about my business with the fewest things possible. I don’t think I’ve had a wallet that was capable of carrying hard currency in at least fifteen years. But if the last thing I thought of before I hit the hay last night was poor old Dave, miserable in the dim light of a Levin petrol station forecourt, the first thing I thought of this morning was how to avoid his predicament. On the way to the studio I stopped by an ATM and withdrew a bit of cash. Not a crazy amount, mind. Just enough for a tank of gas.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/20/20243 minutes, 29 seconds
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Full Show Podcast: 20 July 2024

On the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast for Saturday 20 July 2024, all-time great of NZ athletics Dame Valerie Adams joins Jack in studio ahead of her trip to Paris - to attend the Olympics as a spectator for the first time since the year 2000. Jack reconsiders his aversion to cash usage following the global Crowdstrike outage. Catherine Raynes dishes on the juicy revelations in House of Beckham, a new book from renowned investigative journalist Tom Bower. And, in Screentime, Tara Ward shares a new BBC thriller series perfect for fans of Broadchurch. Get the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast every Saturday on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/20/20241 hour, 56 minutes, 22 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Protecting your soil from severe frost

You’ve heard me talk about the winter months for Yeeaaars! The big message is one of slowing things down and protecting your soil from heavy frosts. Keeping everything protected end give the earth a rest.Seeing most plants are now absolutely dormant they have shut down the growth; That means: no more taking up fertilisers (N-P-K) into the root systems – and no more transporting these goodies into the leaves to help with photosynthesis.Besides: the sun is basically low over the horizon which reduces the amount of energy that comes down on earth and onto the plants. But there are some plants that are forming flower buds right now: Cymbidium orchids have taken in a heap of nutrients during summer and early autumn – especially Nitrogen. It resulted in new bulbs and new stalks, from which the flower spikes will grow. Now’s the time to turn everything into flower buds and a little bit of K (Potash) will keep the buds in good shape, ready to blossom in late winter.An Orchid Flowering fertiliser (high in potash) will ensure a decent display in a month or so. A few of the most common questions I get on talk-back radio are about this “potash”. Question 1. “why is my fruit tree not producing any fruit?”The answer is found in the make-up of fertiliser regime: The Potash (K) is used by the plant for reproduction; it lets the plant grow Flowers and subsequently Fruit. That means that many of our flowering and fruiting plants would really appreciate a dollop of Potash in spring and early summer. I often suggest a fertiliser with a higher percentage of “K”; stuff such as Tomato fertiliser or Flowering fertiliser.The Wet & Forget “Seaweed Tea” is a liquid fertiliser that brings the potash in an easy to absorb formulation. Question 2) “Can I use the ash from my fireplace to deliver Potash?”Yes indeed you can!     The origin of the word ”Pot-ash” indicates that the ashes from your fireplace and Ultra-Low Emissions Burner is quite high in Kalium (the word for “Potassium Carbonate” used in Germanic Languages in the 17hundreds).It’s a long and chemical story, but we ended up naming Kalium “potash”.   The way to spread the potash over the soil underneath flower-bearing or fruit-bearing plants, shrubs or trees is literally by spreading it on a windy day when the tiny particles are dispersed. Make sure you don’t put a too heavy load on the soil, as the white powder could “set” like a very thin, brittle concrete layer. So: little bits at-a-time; and before a good rain shower would be perfect timing! The droplets will wet the potash and push it lower into the topsoil. A good dose of water from your hose will also spread it around.Potash doesn’t stay in the soil profile for very long periods of time, I understand, but 3 months is all you need for the roots to wake up in spring to start feasting on the Kalium  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/20/20245 minutes, 57 seconds
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Dame Valerie Adams: Former Olympic gold medallist talks her Olympic career and the Paris 2024 Olympic Games

One week out from the 2024 Paris Olympics, the excitement and pressure is beginning to build.   There’s one person who knows those pressures well, having represented New Zealand in five Olympic Games.  Dame Valerie Adams is one of the country’s most well-known athletes, a two-time Olympic gold medallist, four-time World Champion, four-time World Indoor Champion, and three-time Commonwealth Games Champion, who was virtually undefeated in shot-put.  Although she’s no longer competing, Adams is going along to this year’s games as a member of the World Athletics Council, and she told Newstalk ZB’s Jack Tame that her preparations have been a little bit different.  “I think the stress levels are a bit different,” Adams said.  The types of stress are also different, Adams revealed, as competing has you training “pretty much at the cliff edge”, whereas in her current role, her stresses are caused by more mundane things like travel and preparing council meetings.   There’s plenty of sports on offer this year, and Adams is looking forward to the intensity of basketball and the novelty of gymnastics.  “And obviously, following the New Zealand crew,” Adams told Tame.  New Zealand is sending 195 athletes to compete in the Games across a total of 23 sports.  The Athletics team is 15-strong with “heaps of potential”, as Adams puts it, but they’re also facing quite a lot of pressure.  “We’ve had a good history of bringing back medals at every Olympic Games since I competed, apart from Athens. So there is a lot of pressure on there, but so much potential.”  “I hope spectators and viewers, especially us Kiwis back here supporting, remember and know and realise that everybody out there competing for our country is doing their ultimate best,” she told Tame.  “Whatever the results will be, will be, and just be a bit kinder with any comments or remarks that you might want to make.”   Having competed in so many high-profile events, Adams knows what it’s like to be cast into the spotlight and faced with New Zealand’s infamous ‘tall poppy syndrome’.  “I know what it’s like to perform well and succeed, and I also know what it’s like to underperform and actually get ridiculed and abused for it, and then win the gold medal seven days later, and then I was a national hero.”  “It’s not a good place to be.”  Although being at the Games is set to stir up some nostalgia, Adams is quite sure that five was enough, and being able to make a change in her capacity as a World Athletics Council member is special as well.  “You know, if you want to make change, you’ve got to be at the table, not serving coffee to people at the table.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/19/202415 minutes, 58 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Eminem - The Death of Slim Shady

Eminem’s newly released album ‘The Death of Slim Shady’ has had a mixed reception.   Many critics are calling it a mixed bag, saying it feels like yet another late-period Eminem album as opposed to anything new.  The Guardian’s Alexis Petridis says the album “has successes and misfires in equal measure. It’s not bad enough to count as terrible, not good enough to count as great.”  Estelle Clifford joined Jack Tame to give her thoughts on the new release.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/13/20246 minutes, 40 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Lula Deans Little Library of Banned Books and Ask Not: The Kennedys and the Women They Destroyed

Lula Deans Little Library of Banned Books by Kirstein Millar   Beverly Underwood and her arch enemy, Lula Dean, live in the tiny town of Troy, Georgia, where they were born and raised. Now Beverly is on the school board, and Lula has become a local celebrity by embarking on mission to rid the public libraries of all inappropriate books—none of which she’s actually read. To replace the “pornographic” books she’s challenged at the local public library, Lula starts her own lending library in front of her home: a cute wooden hutch with glass doors and neat rows of the worthy literature that she’s sure the town’s readers need.  What Lula doesn’t know is that a local troublemaker has stolen her wholesome books, removed their dust jackets, and restocked Lula’s library with banned books: literary classics, gay romances, Black history, witchy spell books, Judy Blume novels, and more. One by one, neighbors who borrow books from Lula Dean’s library find their lives changed in unexpected ways. Finally, one of Lula Dean’s enemies discovers the library and decides to turn the tables on her, just as Lula and Beverly are running against each other to replace the town’s disgraced mayor.  That’s when all the townspeople who’ve been borrowing from Lula’s library begin to reveal themselves. That's when the showdown that’s been brewing between Beverly and Lula will roil the whole town...and change it forever.    Ask Not: The Kennedys and the Women They Destroyed by Maureen Callahan  For decades, the Kennedy name has been synonymous with wealth, power, and—above all else—integrity. But this carefully constructed veneer hides a dark truth: the Kennedy men's legacy of physical and psychological abuse of women, part of a tradition of toxic masculinity that spans generations and has ruined untold lives. Through scandal after scandal, the family and their defenders have managed to keep this shameful story out of the spotlight. Now, in Ask Not, bestselling journalist Maureen Callahan reveals the Kennedys' hidden history of abuse and exploitation, laying bare their rampant misogyny and restoring women to the center of the dynasty's story: from Jacqueline Onassis and Marilyn Monroe to Carolyn Bessette, Mary Richardson, Rosemary Kennedy, and many others whose names aren't nearly as well known – but rightfully should be.  Drawing on years of fierce reportage and written in electric prose, Ask Not is a long-overdue reckoning with this fabled American family, showing how the Kennedy myth and their raw political power has enabled the clan's many predators while also silencing generations of traumatized women and girls. At long last, Callahan also redirects the spotlight to the women in the Kennedys' orbit, paying homage to those who freed themselves—and giving voice to the countless others who could not do the same.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/13/20245 minutes, 31 seconds
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Dougal Sutherland: The more you connect, the less you connect!

The more you connect, the less you connect!  Over recent years explosion of technology has helped us increase our connection with others, both in local communities and around the world. Many positives come from increased social connection, but one downside is when connecting with people outside the home leads you to “phub” significant people in the home, particularly your partner.  Phubbing = phone + snub. It’s where your focus on connecting via your phone causes you to snub people in your immediate surrounds. Often occurs with a partner.  Partners can play a crucial role in our wellbeing including helping with better work-life balance and wellbeing. 75% of people choose to share their emotional struggles with their partner as the first port of call. Partners are usually the most available people in our home life too. Good partner support is also associated with our own career success.    On the other hand, phubbing has been linked to poorer quality of relations with partner, and lowered sense of self-esteem in the partner.    What can people do about it?  It’s not about throwing the baby out with the bathwater – it’s still important to connect with work colleagues and share work-related stressors with them.  Wherever you are – be there! If you’re at work, connect with people at work. If you’re at home, connect with people at home.  Set some limits around use of phones in your relationship e.g. no phones during dinner, not using phones after a certain time at night, not using them in bed.  Workplaces also have a role to play in this by setting appropriate expectations around replying to emails, messages, etc., out-of-hours. Hard to be present with your partner if your boss is messaging you demanding an immediate response!    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/13/20247 minutes, 16 seconds
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Tara Ward: Sunny, Colin from Accounts, Mercel the Shell with Shoes On

Sunny  A dark thriller about an American woman living in Japan, who after her family disappears in a mysterious plane crash, is given a robot by the technology company her husband worked for (Apple TV+).     Colin from Accounts   This delightful Australian comedy series about two strangers bought together after they have to care for a stray dog is back for season two (TVNZ+, July 17).    Marcel the Shell with Shoes On   A quirky and heartwarming stop-motion film about a tiny shell called Marcel who lives with his grandmother, and is searching for his shell family (Netflix).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/13/20244 minutes, 35 seconds
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Ed McKnight: How many millionaires are there in New Zealand?

How many millionaires are there in New Zealand?  Did you know that 24% of Kiwi households are millionaires? Ed McKnight didn’t!  Is this stat really true? How did they get their money?  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/13/20244 minutes, 40 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Eating your way through Athens

"Athens’ rich arsenal of antiquities needs little introduction. From the emblematic glories of the Acropolis to the ancient residential neighbourhood of Plaka, history hangs heavy in the Athenian air. As the ancient cradle of Western arts, culture and democracy, there is much to digest. But it’s the Greek capital’s culinary treasures that captured my attention on my latest swing through Athens. Epic finds await the curious foodie and an in-the-know walking tour through central Athens unlocks a treasury of tastes to savour." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/13/202410 minutes, 46 seconds
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Nick Robinson: Shapeshifter bassist on the band's 25 years of success

Kiwi band Shapeshifter is showing no signs of stopping.  They’re pioneers of one of New Zealand’s most popular music genres, carving out a niche within the DnB scene.  With seven albums and four EPs, the band is celebrating 25 years of success with a tour later this year.  Nick Robinson plays the bass, synth, and the MPC for Shapeshifter, and told Jack Tame that reaching 25 years is probably the proudest thing they’ve all felt.  “We all respect each other so much as musicians and as friends, we’re all willing to flex, there’s no ego there,” he said.  “So, I think we can sort of bounce of each other and get the best results, and you know, really sort of... it’s just been so enjoyable.”  Robinson said that there’s been ups and downs throughout the 25 years they’ve been performing, but the passion and fire is still there.  “We just sort of love what we do and we, we sort of love the way we’ve done it on our, on our own terms.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/13/202415 minutes, 42 seconds
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Full Show Podcast: 13 July 2024

On the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast for Saturday 13 July 2024, the pioneers of one of New Zealand's most popular music genres have been celebrating 25 years together - Nick Robinson of Shapeshifter discusses the quarter century.  Jack considers the countdown on Biden's withdrawal.  Blockbuster Twisters is in cinemas, and Jack recounts to Francesca Rudkin his experience chasing tornados. While Nici Wickes brings a sweet winter treat, and Jack agrees there is just something special about warm citrus in winter.  Get the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast every Saturday on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/13/20241 hour, 56 minutes, 6 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Apples for next year

Flowering and fruiting seems like a long way from now, but honestly, it’s time to get out and prune the trees that will give us our apples.  There are a heap of varieties. They all taste different and ripen at different times, but when it comes to flowering and fruiting they can roughly be put into two groups: Spur-Bearing varieties and tip-bearing varieties.  Why is that important?  Well… if you prune the “spurs” off in winter you’ll end up with fewer flowers (hence fruit) in summer.   Example: Granny Smith is a tip-bearing variety. Its flowers and fruits set at the end of the branch.  When flowering you often see a configuration of flower buds that can produce as many as 5 or 6 flowers as a “cluster”.  When these flowers are pollinated, each can grow into an apple.     Tip-bearing variety. Photo / Supplied.    The next year, when the branch extends further out it has another terminal cluster of flowers at its tip. The previous year’s swollen fruiting spur can still be found further down the branch, and it will still produce apples.     Photo / Supplied.     The so-called Spur-Bearing varieties have their spurs somewhere on the branch and these spurs will keep on producing fruit for a number of years.   Look how easy they are to identify as the spurs: rather fat buds that really stand out on the branches. If you want to trim the branches try to cut them a centimetre or two down from those spurs, so they can keep on producing. This picture shows the early ripening variety “Initial”. It’s one of my first apples in summer.    Photo / Supplied.    A slightly later Apple variety (Mid-Season harvest) is Peasgood Nonsuch. It, too, is a Spur-Bearing variety and the picture (flowering profusely) shows clearly where the apples are produced on the branches. It also indicates how to create a structure of horizontal branched at regular intervals, to keep the tree growing and give the (extremely Huge) apples some space.     Photo / Supplied.     When it comes to shaping an apple tree after planting it in winter, you have a few great choices: “Cordons”, “Fans”, “Espalier” etc. Seeing now is the time to plant these trees, it might be a good idea to make some decisions about what your trees are going to look like.  See if you can grab a copy of last June’s New Zealand Gardener where Bill Brett explains the very best ways to achieve your Apple “Look”. Just be aware that espaliered trees work best with Spur-Bearing Varieties (not the tip-bearing ones).  Waimea Nursery has a good list of Spur-bearing varieties and also indicates which ones fruit early or later.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/12/20243 minutes, 36 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Samsung's mobile product launch and Texas tracks the power outage with the Whataburger app

Samsung had their big mobile product launch event  The sixth generation of the Fold has a much less noticeable crease in the middle of the screen. Samsung is using a new display coating.  Galaxy Buds 3 - looks like the Apple EarPods got a Tesla Cybertruck styled makeover. There are some quite prominent angles!  But it's the Galaxy Ring which got the headlines, the first major brand to launch what is effectively a health tracker on your finger. It comes with an accelerometer, heart rate sensor, and skin temperature sensor to allow you to track sleep, heart rate data, and activity. It comes in gold, silver, and black on a titanium frame. It is a ring though so it can't be adjusted, which is why they have a sizing kit. It'll be an Android-only product, but when connected to your phone will allow you to do a double pinch gesture to control your phone’s camera or dismiss an alarm hands-free.   Texans got help tracking the power outages from an unlikely hero  The "Whataburger" burger chain app turned into a lifeline for people in Houston to know where in the city had power. The app has a map feature to show all the store locations which conveniently has a feature to show which stores are open and closed. And because there are so many locations in Houston, seeing the clusters of stores closed gave a very clear visual of the power situation in the city.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/12/20244 minutes, 53 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Twisters and Ka Whawhai Tonu

Twisters   Haunted by a devastating encounter with a tornado, Kate Cooper gets lured back to the open plains by her friend, Javi, to test a groundbreaking new tracking system. She soon crosses paths with Tyler Owens, a charming but reckless social-media superstar who thrives on posting his storm-chasing adventures. As storm season intensifies, Kate, Tyler and their competing teams find themselves in a fight for their lives as multiple systems converge over central Oklahoma.    Ka Whawhai Tonu   Set in New Zealand in 1864, follows the story of a crucial conflict of the nation's first land warfare, fought between Maori and colonial soldiers against insurmountable odds.    LISTEN ABOVE   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/12/20246 minutes, 47 seconds
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Kevin Milne: A new classic Kiwi news bite from Transpower

Last month saw Northlanders cut off from the power grid due to a fallen pylon.  Kevin Milne has been keeping an eye on the coverage this week, and finds Transpower’s statement about why the pylon fell rather humorous.   He thinks their "It's unprecedented that so many nuts were removed at once" will be remembered like the Kiwi classic, "You have to blow on the pie."  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/12/20246 minutes, 4 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Sticky Citrus Self-Saucing Pudding

This pudding is just the ticket in winter! I truly love the way it is both comforting and refreshing.   Serves 4     Ingredients  70g butter, melted   1 small-medium egg  1/3 cup regular white sugar   1 orange  ½ cup plain flour   1 tsp baking powder  2 heaped tbsps ground almonds  1-2 tbsps milk, if needed    Sauce   1 ½ cups boiling water  1/3 cup brown sugar, loosely packed  1 tablespoon butter   Juice from remaining ½ orange  1 tsp cornflour      Method  Preheat oven to180 C. Grease a small ovenproof dish.  In a bowl, whisk egg with sugar. Add in the melted butter & whisk. Blitz half the orange —skin and all— until it’s pulped then stir this in. Add in flour, baking powder and almonds. Stir until combined. Add in 1-2 tbsp milk if it’s too stiff. Scrape batter into the greased dish.  In the batter bowl (scraped clean) mix the boiling water, brown sugar, butter, cornflour and juice from the remaining half orange. Gently pour this over the batter. Bake for 40 mins, or until cake bit is cooked through.   Serve with ice cream or whipped cream.     Make it your own  Use any citrus – mandarin, lemon, tangerine  For very pithy fruit, use the skin and flesh of the orange but not all the pith – too bitter    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/12/20246 minutes, 19 seconds
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Jack Tame: The Biden problem isn't going away

It’s two weeks since Joe Biden and that disastrous debate, and still the drum steadily beats.   I’m obsessed with this story. Obsessed! I think this is an absolutely monumental moment in global politics. Every morning I wake up, grab my phone, and immediately check my news apps. Is he still in the race?  In a way, I suppose, you have to hand it to him and his team. Not once has Biden publicly expressed anything other than absolute total commitment to remaining the Democrats’ nominee. He knows that the moment he publicly expresses a scintilla of doubt, it’s all over.   But the more I’ve reflected on that debate, the more I find the response of the White House and Biden’s supporters, kind of insulting.   They’re gaslighting by trying to convince hundreds of millions of people to un-see what they saw. Don’t forget, Joe Biden asked for the debate. It was held entirely on his terms. He publicly promoted it as a moment in which he would prove to everyone he still had his edge. And in that moment, he was incoherent.   So far, few of Biden’s colleagues have come out and explicitly called on him to stand down. Again, it’s gaslighting. They saw what we saw. And you just know that all of the conversations being held behind closed doors are exactly the same as this one. They just don’t want to risk their own skins.  George Clooney’s op-ed was particularly devastating, this week. Not because Clooney is a Hollywood movie star, but because as someone co-ordinating fundraising campaigns worth tens or hundreds of millions of dollars, he thinks Biden needs to stand down. Like everything in U.S. politics, it pays to follow the money. Would you stake your fortune on Biden right now?  The post-NATO press conference yesterday was the first one of its kind that Biden has held in eight months. Forget his performance. Forget his competence and comfort with foreign policy and the fact he made several gaffes with names and introductions. Eight months! The fact alone tells you more about Biden’s state and capacity than anything else you need to know.   NATO is done. The Democrats convention is next month. If they’re gonna force him out, they’ve got a few weeks to act.   Two weeks deep though, it’s clear this story and this issue are not going away. With every bad poll, every donor with cold feet, the pressure is sustained. And fundamentally, the news will not move on because the problem hasn’t gone away.   And here’s the thing: It won’t go away. To campaign for President you have to be out in public, day after day after day. It requires vast energy. There will be more gaffes. There will be more blunders. There will be more moments of incoherence. And with every instance, voters will be left wondering… if this is Biden now… how’s he gonna be in another four years? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/12/20244 minutes, 30 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Sean Cunningham - Whatever That Is

Best known for his career-launching band Atlas, Sean Cunningham has released a new and very personal album.  The ten track album is an exploration for Sean, blending a variety of genres and sounds as he tries to figure out what his style is.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/6/20247 minutes, 15 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Our Holiday and The Haters

Our Holiday by Louise Candlish  Charlotte and Perry have owned their clifftop holiday home in Pine Ridge for years. They’ve worked hard for it – why shouldn’t they enjoy it? Even if the locals can’t afford to live in the village these days…  Now city friends Amy and Matt have bought a second home nearby and when the two families descend, they plan lazy days at the beach and evenings sipping rosé and watching the sun set from Charlotte’s summerhouse veranda.  But this summer is different. A group of locals – headed by the charismatic Robbie – will stop at nothing to make the second home owners pay for their holiday. By the end of their break, marriages will be torn apart, friendships shattered and crimes exposed.  And one of them will have lost their life.    The Haters by Robyn Harding  Camryn Lane is living her dream. After years of struggle and rejection, her first novel has finally been published. Her editor is happy; her teenage daughter is proud; and her boyfriend and friends are all excited for her. She’s on top of the world—until she receives a disturbing message from an unknown sender.  Rattled by the accusations she finds there, Camryn swallows the sick feeling in her stomach and resolves to put the missive out of her mind. But when she checks her ratings on a popular book site, she finds a scathing one-star review. The reviewer is so articulate and convincing that soon, Camryn’s book is flooded with bad reviews. Could the reviewer be the same person who sent the ugly email? And why do they want to ruin her?  As the online harassment creeps into Camryn’s personal life, she vows to find out who’s behind it. Is it really a disgruntled reader? Or could it be someone she knows? The troll’s actions are escalating, and when the abuse turns deadly, it will take everything Camryn has to unmask the enemy so intent on destroying her—and finally learn why she's being targeted.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/6/20244 minutes, 25 seconds
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Tara Ward: Madam, Brats, and Sprint

Madam   Mack Leigh, faced with a philandering husband and a mountain of debt starts up an ethical brothel in small town New Zealand to provide for her family and put a new spin on sex and work (Three and ThreeNow).    Brats   Actor and director Andrew McCarthy reunites with Demi Moore, Rob Lowe, Emilio Estevez, and Ally Sheedy in this documentary to explore what it was really like to be one of the so-called "Brat Pack” during the 1980s (Disney+).     Sprint   With the Olympics only a few weeks away, Netflix’s new behind the scenes documentary series takes us into the world of international athletics and follows sprinters from around the world as they compete to be the best (Netflix).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/6/20245 minutes, 50 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: The Bikeriders and The Taste of Things

The Bikeriders   Over the course of a decade, a Midwestern motorcycle club evolves from a gathering place for local outsiders to a sinister gang, threatening the original group's way of life.    The Taste of Things   Cook Eugenie and her boss Dodin have grown fond of one another over 20 years, and their romance gives rise to dishes that impress the world's most illustrious chefs. When Dodin is faced with Eugenie's reluctance to commit, he begins to cook for her.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/6/20246 minutes, 26 seconds
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Kate Hall: The New Zealand made food challenge

Kate ‘Ethically Kate’ Hall is undertaking another challenge.  July marks the halfway point of her local food challenge, where for the entirety of 2024 she’s only buying food that’s made in Aotearoa New Zealand.  She joined Jack Tame to chat about the biggest surprises and challenges so far, and give an insight into why she decided on this undertaking.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/6/20248 minutes, 19 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: Men's health and the importance of a check up

Men’s Health Week took place in June. It's an important topic as men often consider themselves bullet proof, and think they don’t need to see the doctor.    So why is men’s health important?  There are some underlying statistics that are important to reflect on:  - Overseas study: men are twice as likely never to have visited the doctor. Three times as likely not to have visited GP in 5 year period. - They die 3.5 years younger, on average, than women. - They develop heart disease 10 years younger than women. - They develop diabetes younger.  It’s a concern!     Why should they visit the GP?  There are hidden risks that can affect health that you won’t know about until you have a regular ‘warrant of fitness’ check-up:  Cholesterol:  -Increases risk of heart disease. -Only detected through a blood test.  Diabetes and blood sugar:  -Need to be checked from age of 35. -Sugars can creep up men and damage the heart, kidneys, and nervous system. -Only detected through a blood test.  Blood Pressure, the hidden killer:  - Can feel perfectly OK with raised blood pressure. - Puts pressure on the heart leading to heart attacks and increases risk stroke. - Only detected through a blood pressure check.     What other issues should men be concerned about?  The prostate:  - From the age of 50 should be seeing your doctor to discuss a prostate check. - Simple blood test and slightly uncomfortable rectal exam! - Early detection of prostate cancer leads to early cure!  Bowel cancer: - From the age of 60 - Two yearly bowel cancer screening. - Early detection of bowel cancer leads to cure!  In addition, if you have been about in the sun (especially farmers) a regular skin check for early signs of skin cancer is necessary.  If you're feeling depressed, irritable, or stressed talking to your GP is a good first step to help.     When should men we go for a check-up?  - Definitely from the age of 50 yearly check-up is important. - Prior to that 2 to 5 years from the age of 30.  With all these things early detection saves lives, and detecting problems early means major health issues can be reduced by early intervention with lifestyle, medication and occasionally specialist intervention.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/6/20245 minutes, 22 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Cruising the Greek Islands

"Has a Greek Islands cruise been flirting with your imagination? Recently, I renewed my Greek Islands love affair, joining my sister on a week-long adventure cruising the Aegean Sea aboard Celestyal Journey. The flagship vessel for Celestyal Cruises is deployed on their most iconic cruise, Idyllic Aegean, which is a 7-day highlights reel of the region. It’s like the Aegean’s greatest hits, with port calls in Mykonos, Santorini, Crete, Kusadasi, Thessaloniki and Milos. From Ephesus —site of one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World— to the cube houses and windmills of Mykonos and blue-domed churches of Santorini, the Aegean is as dreamy as reality gets." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/6/20249 minutes, 24 seconds
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Full Show Podcast: 6 July 2024

On the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast for Saturday 6 July 2024, Kiwi music legend Julia Deans joins Jack to chat noughties nostalgia as Fur Patrol reunite for a New Zealand tour.  Inspired by man-in-the-garden Ruud Kleinpaste, Jack talks about the record number of tūī in his trees since hanging a bird feeder.  And Ruud offers advice on how to avoid birds squabbling over the new treat.  Andrew Saville is in Dunedin ahead of the first All Black's test of the season, against England who haven't played in New Zealand for a decade.  Plus, Nici Wickes shares a Parisian pudding from her brand-new book ‘More From a Quiet Kitchen’ and chats with Jack about finding joy in meals for one.  Get the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast every Saturday on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/6/20241 hour, 56 minutes, 7 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Disruptors and invaders

My dear darling sister (with the beautiful name of Roos) sent me a picture from the Netherlands; it was a pretty orange slug hiding inside her robotic lawn mower named Albertus. It came out of the mower to show itself in all its glory.  Roos immediately linked this slug to a complete disaster when she came home from Holidays in France: Albertus had failed to keep up with his task as the grass was a couple of feet from touching the Matariki stars.  Investigation of the inner workings of Albertus showed a heap of soft, sticky and shredded plant material, covered in sloppy slug slime.   It’s a great habitat for the mollusc pests in the garden and at the same time a magnificent form of transport to your favourite plants.  In such a wonderful, sheltered spot slugs and snails can have a great theatre for reproduction: eggs will be stuck to all surfaces, and they’ll hatch as soon as temperatures are becoming a bit milder…  Photo / Supplied But that was not all that Roos found.  How about a rather large and active ants-nest full of white “eggs” around the battery and other electric wiring! By the way, those white “eggs” are actually the larvae and pupae of the ants; when you disturb an ants-nest they’ll run around to save as many babies as they can.  Photo / Supplied These ants may well be the electrical disruptors of your technology. I’ve seen them short-circuiting a switch in the wall of my old house in Auckland: an ant (accidentally?) touching both switch plates and getting fried in 240 volt, while releasing a “panic smell” of formic acid. This acid also works as a defence mechanism and deterrent against predators (not very effective when you are battling the 240 volts!). The nearby ants respond immediately to this SOS call for help and are also electrocuted.  In the switch you can hear the massacre taking place with each ant increasing the formic acid cloud.  In my wall we vacuumed up hundreds and hundreds of fried ants. The smell was amazing!  You can also imagine that these kind of disruptors can cause the beginning of a fire.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/5/20244 minutes, 50 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Motion Picture Association of Canada ask courts to ditch local news funding rule, Amazon breaks into luxury department store game

Netflix, Paramount ask Canadian courts to ditch local news funding rule  The new 5% tax —called the Online Streaming Act— which is to go into effect on September 1 is targeted at streaming services who pull in more than C$25m and aren't affiliated with domestic broadcasters. The expected $200m in funds will go towards creating local content, including supporting Black and Indigenous creators.   The Motion Picture Association of Canada, who represent studios including Netflix, Paramount & Disney, say they support the law, but there's also a component to fund local news content which they have asked the courts to strike out. They say this news content mandate is "unreasonable" and "is neither appropriate in consideration of the nature of the services they provide, nor equitable.”    Amazon has got into the luxury department store game  The parent of Saks Fifth Avenue, in a partnership with Amazon, will buy its rival department store chain Neiman Marcus in a US$2.65 billion deal. Amazon will take a minority stake in the new company, called Saks Global, and will provide technology and logistical expertise, according to the Wall Street Journal said. Salesforce is also part of the deal - which is a departure from their usual investments in software startups. Commentators say the luxury market is an area Amazon has been struggling to break into.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/5/20245 minutes, 27 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Calendar issues and clashes

Kevin Milne has an issue with his calendar.  It’s not the type you’d expect; it’s not a manufacturing error or a technological glitch, but rather a clash he didn’t anticipate.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/5/20246 minutes, 39 seconds
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Julia Deans: Fur Patrol singer and front woman on their upcoming New Zealand tour

One of New Zealand’s all-time favourite bands is back.  Fur Patrol first appeared in 1998 with their EP ‘Starlifter’, three albums and songs topping the charts all through the 2000s.  They’re returning to Kiwi audiences later this year on a New Zealand tour, visiting Christchurch, Auckland, and Nelson.  Fur Patrol last performed together in 2022, and frontwoman Julia Deans told Jack Tame that getting together feels like being back in the family again, and everything just kind of locks into place.  She said that when they did the shows for the Pet anniversary tour, everyone was so excited and happy, and they’re hoping to generate that kind of buzz again.    Tour Details  FUR PATROL WITH SUPPORT FROM TOM LARK  FRIDAY 6 SEPTEMBER: THE LOONS, LYTTELTON SATURDAY 7 SEPTEMBER: DOUBLE WHAMMY, AUCKLAND  + NEW SHOW ADDED THURSDAY 5 SEPTEMBER: THEATRE ROYAL, NELSON    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/5/202413 minutes, 23 seconds
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Jack Tame: Making amends with Mother Nature

It was Ruud Kleinpaste who inspired me.   Even since my fiasco with the trees in my backyard, in which I inadvertently oversaw a much, much, much more aggressive winter prune than intended, (and which for the sake of marital harmony we need not re-litigate!), I’ve been looking for opportunities to make amends to Mother Nature.  Along with my regularly Nutella’d rat trap, Ruud suggested that what the native birds had lost in terms of a leafy canopy, I might make up to them with a bit of sugar water. Native birds, it would seem, are like school children (or indeed, me). The quickest way to their hearts is through their stomachs and the more sugary the incentive, the better.   I bought one from Predator Free NZ: a Pekapeka bird feeder with a dripper bottle up the top for the nectar feeders and a little attachment for hanging energy balls or fruit underneath it.  Winter is the time when the native birds benefit most from a bit of supplementary feed. Putting a bit of food in the feeder was obvious. That would please the sparrows. But it wasn’t at all clear to me how the native nectar feeders might work out that the bottle was dripping out the avian version of Fanta.   I spent a day or two Googling various theories and methods for attracting them before the bottle arrived, but as it turned out I needn’t have worried. The moment I strung it up and turned my back on the feeder, it was swarmed by an incredible flock of tauhou, silvereyes. The pudgy little cuties swarmed the feeder’s platform and pecked at the feeder nozzle. Six or eight at a time they squabble, with more queueing up in the nearby plum tree, waiting to gorge.  In the few weeks I’ve had it up, I’ve become less concerned about attracting birds, and more worried that somehow I’ve created a dependency. As well as the silvereyes, every tūī in Auckland must have had the word. They swoop down, iridescent, gorgeous, greedy. The tauhou scramble.   I’ve no idea what the record is —maybe you can outdo me— but at one point yesterday I counted no fewer than six tūī in my backyard, all of them lined up to guzzle down the sugar water. It’s a good thing they don’t have teeth to brush, but can tūī get diabetes?  Maybe it’s middle age. I dunno. Maybe it’s a weird form of nesting. I just cannot believe what joy it’s giving me to sit down and watch the native birds squabbling over sugar water. The tauhou, like furry little ping pong balls. The tūī, bullies, but such beautiful bullies.    My feeder is not bringing back a dense tree canopy to my backyard. But it’s certainly brought back a bit of life.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/5/20243 minutes, 51 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Parisian rice pudding with salted caramel sauce and More From a Quiet Kitchen

‘I’ve always gained a great deal of pleasure out of cooking — it’s one of the most exquisite ways to look after yourself, to stay grounded, to keep yourself company and be reminded that we are all far more capable than we know. And I’ve needed this more than ever of late.’  Nici Wickes has written a number of books, spending six years as a food editor for Viva and NZ Herald, and five creating and testing recipes for New Zealand Woman’s Weekly, and contributing her craft to various other media.  Over the last few years, she’s been through a lot, the pandemic, floods, cyclones, and a bout of covid saw her losing her appetite not only for her beloved craft, but also the search for life’s joys.  ‘More From a Quiet Kitchen’ is a celebration of her return to her joy, crammed with heart-warming dishes such as ‘chowder for comfort’, ‘corn and bacon risotto’, and delicious desserts such as ‘lemon cheesecakey cake’.    To celebrate the book’s release, Nici’s recipe of the week is ‘Parisian rice pudding with salted caramel sauce’, a taste of what this new cookbook has to offer.    Parisian rice pudding with salted caramel sauce  Good old rice pudding – elevated to exceptional heights!     Ingredients  1 ½ cups whole milk   ⅓ cup + 1 tablespoon risotto rice   2 tablespoons sugar   1 vanilla bean, split and seeds scraped (or 1 teaspoon vanilla extract)   ¼ cup cream, whipped   Salted caramel sauce   ½ cup caster sugar   2 tablespoons water   1 tablespoon butter   100ml cream   ½ teaspoon sea salt or more to taste    Method  Bring milk, rice, sugar, vanilla bean and seeds to a slow simmer in a pot. Simmer for about 25 minutes, stirring every time you think of it, until it thickens and the rice is creamy and cooked. Set aside to cool.   While the rice cooks make the caramel. In a small pot, heat the sugar and water over a medium heat, swirling the pot if needed but not stirring, until the sugar has dissolved. Simmer for 5-7 minutes or until it has turned a lovely dark golden colour. Remove from the heat, whisk in the butter, cream and salt (it will spit and froth, but don’t worry). Whisk until you have a smooth sauce.    To serve, fold whipped cream through the cooled rice pudding. Drizzle with sauce and sprinkle over hazelnuts. And dream of being in Paris!   Note: The sauce stores well in the fridge, needing just a little heat to bring it back to drizzling consistency.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/5/202410 minutes, 33 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Anna Coddington - Te Whakamiha

The release of Anna Coddington’s fourth studio album 'Te Whakamiha' coincided with Aotearoa’s Matariki celebrations. It sports eight uplifting waiata sung in both English and Te Reo, tunes that Coddington describes as her own take on Māori funk.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/29/20245 minutes, 53 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Storm Child and Agent Zo

Storm Child by Michael Robotham  The mystery of Evie Cormac’s background has followed her into adulthood. As a child, she was discovered hiding in a secret room where a man had been tortured to death. Many of her captors and abusers escaped justice, unseen but not forgotten. Now, on a hot summer’s day, the past drags Evie back as she watches the bodies of seventeen migrants wash up on a Lincolnshire beach.  There is only one survivor, a teenage boy, who tells police their small boat was deliberately rammed and sunk. Psychologist Cyrus Haven is recruited by the police to investigate the murders—but recognizes immediately that Evie has some link to the tragedy. By solving this crime, he could finally unlock the secrets of her past. But what dark forces will he set loose? And who will pay the price?    Agent Zo by Clare Mulley  This is the incredible story of Elzbieta Zawacka, the WW2 female resistance fighter known as Agent Zo, told here for the very first time. Agent Zo was the only woman to reach London from Warsaw during the Second World War as an emissary of the Polish Home Army command, and then in Britain she became the only woman to join the Polish elite Special Forces, known as the 'Silent Unseen'. She was secretly trained in the British countryside, and then the only female member of these SOE affiliated forces to be parachuted back behind enemy lines to Nazi-occupied Poland. There, whilst being hunted by the Gestapo who arrested her entire family, she took a leading role in the Warsaw Uprising and the liberation of Poland.  After the war she was demobbed as one of the most highly decorated women in Polish history. Yet the Soviet-backed post-war Communist regime not only imprisoned her, but also ensured that her remarkable story remained hidden for over forty years. Now, through new archival research and exclusive interviews with people who knew and fought alongside Zo, Clare Mulley brings this forgotten heroine back to life, and also transforms how we see the history of women's agency in the Second World War.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/29/20244 minutes, 47 seconds
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Mike Yardley: The great outdoors on the Sunshine Coast

"The Sunshine Coast’s compact layout belies its bounty, richly necklaced with nature-based experiences in easy reach of each other. I hop-scotched about the place like a frisky roo, lapping up its elemental riches. The welcome mat is being thickly laid-out, with Air New Zealand direct services from Auckland to the Sunny Coast underway, and with Jetstar flying the route from later this year. "You’ve got 100 kilometres of glittering beaches at your disposal- no matter what shade of sand takes your fancy; world-class wildlife experiences; plus an enchanting hive of hinterland gems, from fabulous forest walks to characterful villages. But don’t just throw your togs in the suitcase when heading to the Sunny Coast because there’s some seriously scenic mountain trails worth packing your hiking boots for, too." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/29/202410 minutes, 25 seconds
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Tara Ward: Mary and George, I Am: Celine Dion, The Bear

Mary and George   The story of the Countess of Buckingham, who moulded her son to seduce King James I and become his all-powerful lover through intrigue, making her family richer, more titled, and more influential than England had ever seen (TVNZ+).     I Am: Celine Dion   Serving as a love letter to her fans, Celine Dion highlights the music that has guided her life while also showcasing the resilience of the human spirit as she struggles with a life-altering illness (Prime Video).     The Bear   The third season of the brilliant but stressful award-winning series about chef Carmel (Jeremy Allen White) as he tries to turn his family-owned diner into a fine dining restaurant (Disney+).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/29/20245 minutes, 25 seconds
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Dougal Sutherland: Dry July and unhealthy drinking habits

With Dry July kicking off in a couple days, Dougal Sutherland believes it's a good time for people to think about their alcohol consumption.  It’s a stressful time at the moment, with a cost of living crisis, workplace stresses, and drastic weather, and when times are stressful, people tend to turn to “unhealthy” coping mechanisms.  Dougal Sutherland joined Jack Tame to chat about the telltale signs that someone’s alcohol consumption may be becoming problematic, and a few tips for those thinking of taking on Dry July.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/29/20248 minutes, 44 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Allan Scott Cecilia Brut, Marlborough

Wine: Allan Scott Cecilia Brut, Marlborough $24  Why I chose it:   - I like it very much, especially the price. - It’s a perfect “stand-by” wine in case of unexpected visitors. - It is a real crowd-pleaser. - A wine for all seasons. - I haven’t chosen a sparkling wine for while.  What does it taste like?   - A blend of pinot noir and chardonnay with a creamy, yeast-infused palate that is both fresh and mellow with restrained complexity. A perfect balance of subtle sweetness and mouth-watering acidity.  Why it’s a bargain:   - Bottle-fermented sparkling wine is expensive to make, you won’t find too many good examples under $25.  Where can you buy it?   - Whisky and More, Waikato $20.99  -Big Barrel stores $less than $23  - Glengarry, Auckland $22.99  Food match?   -Canapes, especially seafood, particularly oysters. It doesn’t need the complication of food.  Will it keep?   - Good for a few years although it isn’t vintage-dated. Drink it up.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/29/20243 minutes, 33 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: The compost gardeners science quiz

I’ve always thought about creating the Greatest Hits (or Greatest Myths) for gardeners. There are so many things you should and shouldn’t do when gardening and creating compost.  Starting a compost system: Do we really need a “Compost Starter” to kick it off?  The easiest way to make compost is by sticking (roughly) to a ratio of Carbon to Nitrogen of something like 30:1. If you chuck a big heap of chipped wood (C) in the bin, you will need some grass clippings (N) to fire it all off. Even a simple pee on the heap will do the trick, or some Urea fertiliser, or even some old soggy lettuce.  Crushed egg shells around your vegetables are said to stop the slugs and snails as they won’t be able to cross the sharp egg-edges with their soft and tender “foot”. Molluscs do not actually come in contact with the sharp substrate as they glide over the slime they produce themselves!  And if you put the crushed shells into the compost bin, the calcium will eventually turn into useful calcium – eventually means “a few years later at least”, so don’t bank on a quick-release fertiliser!  Besides: they don’t really add a lot of value to your compost.  Ah! To speed up composting waste material, do we need to turn the heap every now and then?  Good question! Aeration will indeed help the process a bit… but so do mice and rats digging tunnels for their nests. Perhaps the question should be: how much time do you, personally, have to “turn” the compost? Every 3 or 4 weeks.  Cooked food in the compost bin?   Why not? It’s basically the same as un-cooked food, so why chuck it in the rubbish bin?  Dead Animals or left-over meat in the compost bin?  Everything that once lived is compostable – simple as that. Animals and old meat will take longer and it might start to smell somewhat, but it certainly will compost.  Can weeds be composted?  Of course! Weeds are simply plants too and when you pull them out, they will decay and form compost, just like any other organism, but should you?  That depends on the kind of weed it is and if it has set seeds or survives on a vigorous root-system.  How fast can you make compost?  Depends on what you make it from; You’ll need C and N plus support from fungal organisms and microbial life-forms. In general, it’ll go quicker when you are in a warm part of the world and slower in a cool area.  Here’s another bit of science: a compost tumbler is usually quite a bit smaller than a wooden compost bin, sitting on the soil. That means the tumbler won’t heat up as much (or at all!) as the larger bin and that may slow the process down – but it certainly will work albeit not so fast.  What can we Learn FROM Nature making its own compost?  Leaves fall down; twigs and sticks break off and join the leaves. Fruit and seeds join the party and every now and then a big branch with deliver a lot of Carbon.  “Recycling insects” and Microbes help the compost process out; worms transport the end-product to deeper layers in the soil where it’s needed by the roots… and it just carries on in its own tempo…  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/29/20245 minutes, 4 seconds
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Full Show Podcast: 29 June 2024

On the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast for Saturday 29 June 2024, the ultimate master of illusion Cosentino joins Jack to talk escape artistry and what happens when things go wrong.  Jack reflects on the moment Joe Biden's presidential fate became clear.  The much-anticipated documentary about Celine Dion has landed and Tara Ward appreciates it for the rawness shown by the global superstar. And, with Dry July just around the corner Dougal Sutherland highlights the importance of checking in on our behaviours during times of stress.  Get the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast every Saturday on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/29/20241 hour, 57 minutes, 3 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Microsoft faces a multi-billion dollar fine in the EU & AI is coming to the Olympics broadcast

Microsoft faces a multi-billion dollar fine in the EU  This is to do with the complaint Slack brought to the European Commission, arguing that Microsoft's bundling of Teams with Office was anti-competitive. Preliminary findings of the investigation side with Slack, so Microsoft could be fined up to $21 billion. The Commission says Microsoft has been "forcing" Office customers to acquire Teams. It says it also doesn't help that Teams isn't interoperable with competitors' offerings. Microsoft has already committed to stopping the bundling.  Earlier this week, European Union regulators accused Apple of breaking tough new digital competition rules under the Digital Markets Act by preventing app developers from freely directing consumers to cheaper services away from Apple's payment ecosystem.   AI is coming to the Olympics broadcast  "Your Daily Olympic Recap" will be a personalized show of highlights found on Peacock (the streaming service with rights to the Olympics) of the big moments you might have missed, based on your sporting preferences. To take it to the next level, the show will be narrated by a now-retired former Olympic broadcaster, whose voice will be computer generated. NBC said the AI system was trained using prior NBC broadcast audio - nothing else was required to make it happen - which is rather incredible when you think of all the voices which might be able to be "brought back".    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/28/20244 minutes, 35 seconds
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Consentino: Illusionist discusses his career, childhood, and the New Zealand tour of 'Decennium'

An ultimate master of illusion, Cosentino exploded into the world of magic on Australia's Got Talent back in 2011 and has since wowed audiences across the world on-stage and on screen with his tricks and escape acts.  Cosentino has earned titles like International Magician of the Year and is bringing his act to Kiwi audiences, joining Jack Tame to pull back the curtain on the magic scene.  He dug into his introduction to magic, how his act came to be, and the crazy escapes he’s managed to pull off.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/28/202416 minutes, 29 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Inside Out 2 and A Family Affair

Inside Out 2   Joy, Sadness, Anger, Fear and Disgust have been running a successful operation by all accounts. However, when Anxiety shows up, they aren't sure how to feel.  A Family Affair   A surprising romance kicks off comic consequences for a young woman, her mother and her movie star boss as they face the complications of love, sex and identity.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/28/20245 minutes, 50 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Yet another loss to Australia

Among all of the immigration statistics, New Zealand is losing another being to Australia.  Burma, the country’s last remaining elephant, is shifting across the ditch at the end of the year.  Kevin Milne understands why, but feels for the children who will no longer have an elephant to wonder at.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/28/20248 minutes, 31 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Self-saucing Banana and Pecan pudding

In this pudding gooey caramel sauce pools around light banana sponge which is studded with buttery pecans. With all the gooeyness of sticky date pudding but less rich and sickly. Divine!  Serves 6-8    Ingredients:  ½ cup dates, soaked in boiling water  2 ripe bananas  1 cup brown sugar, loosely packed  2 eggs  80g butter, melted  1 ½ cups plain flour  3 tsp baking powder  ½ tsp cinnamon  70g pecans  Sauce  2 cups boiling water  3/4 cup brown sugar  1 heaped tsp cornflour  70g butter, chopped    Method:  Preheat oven to 170 C fanbake. Butter a large ovenproof dish. Soak dates for 15 minutes, drain dates and blend in a food processor. Add bananas and blend until mixed. In a bowl whisk the eggs and brown sugar together until light and fluffy. Add melted butter and date and banana puree and mix until combined. Fold in sifted flour, baking powder, cinnamon and pecans. Scrape batter into greased dish. Place boiling water, sugar, cornflour and butter in a jug. Stir until butter has melted. Pour over the back of a large metal spoon, over batter mixture. Bake for 40-45 minutes or until top has set and cake layer is cooked through. Dust with icing sugar and serve with cream, ice cream or custard (or all three!). Make it your own:  Add ½ cup chopped pear to the batter.  Use walnuts instead of pecans for a cheaper alternative.  Add ½ cup of chopped dark chocolate to the batter.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/28/20245 minutes, 29 seconds
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Jack Tame: The Democrats need a new candidate

“I really don’t know what he said at the end of that sentence. I don’t think he knows what he said either.”  That was it. The moment. The line. The death knell. And the crazy thing about the words that best defined the 2024 Presidential Election debate is that Donald Trump wasn’t blustering or lying. I don’t think anyone who’d seen Joe Biden’s attempt at an answer honestly disagreed.   Election debates are rarely significantly consequential. They might give a candidate or a party a little bump in the polls or some choice clips for social media or campaign advertisements. But as much as Democrats are in damage control today, playing down the significance of their candidate’s performance, this will go down in history as the moment that lost Biden the Presidency. The moment where it became absolutely crystal-clear for millions of people watching live and the billions of people viewing subsequent clips; either Joe Biden stands down or Joe Biden will be defeated.    The crazy thing to remember is that everything about the debate was played on his terms. This was the Democrats’ big play to dispel the criticisms of his competence and energy. Joe Biden took a full week at Camp David to prepare. His team requested rules around the microphone being cut off to stop Trump from interrupting. And yet with all the prep, all the resource, he stood there with his mouth gaping, a dithering, pitiful, sometimes incoherent picture of a diminished, elderly man. If the goal was to prove the President had the energy and sharpness for four more years, it was a stunning own goal. Trump didn’t damage Biden. He didn’t need to. Biden damaged Biden. Take the politics out of it. At a human level, it was sad.   I’ve covered the last three U.S elections, from Biden’s Vice-Presidential debates in 2012 through to his win in 2020. I was in a freezing Delaware car park on election night, four years ago. I’ve long felt that age alone is no reason for someone not to be President, but that a lack of vim and vigour most certainly is. I’ve taken time to get to this point –12 months ago I felt that Biden might be able to dispel the criticisms and the noise. Now, I cannot see a way in which he recovers his campaign.   If the Democrats are to win the election, they need a new candidate. Someone young. Someone relatively centrist. Whatever it takes to pressure Biden to stand down, they must do it and do it now.   If you step back, there are a couple of positives in this. Imagine for a moment if this wasn’t an abnormally early election debate. Imagine if yesterday couple of weeks before the election.   Even though it’s an unprecedented situation, there is time for the Dems to scramble and to find a new candidate.  It’s funny, in watching the fallout from the debate and imagining what will happen if Biden stands down, I was reminded of our own election in 2017 when Andrew Little stepped aside and Jacinda Ardern became leader. She enjoyed a huge surge in popularity. Jacindamania. It’s totally possible a new Democrat candidate would experience something similar.   And even if they didn’t, even if a new candidate was defeated come November, would the result be any worse for the Democrats than that which they are heading towards right now?   Either Biden stands aside or Biden will be defeated. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/28/20245 minutes, 17 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Gracie Abrams - Secret of Us

Gracie Abrams second album, ‘The Secret of Us’ has a more intimate feeling. It’s shares a similar vibe to Taylor Swift’s folk sound, with one song being a collaboration with Swift herself.  Estelle Clifford joined Jack Tame to review the album.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/22/20246 minutes, 39 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Midnight Feast and Southern Man

The Midnight Feast by Lucy Foley  It’s the opening night of The Manor, and no expense, small or large, has been spared. The infinity pool sparkles; crystal pouches for guests’ healing have been placed in the Seaside Cottages and Woodland Hutches; the “Manor Mule” cocktail (grapefruit, ginger, vodka, and a dash of CBD oil) is being poured with a heavy hand. Everyone is wearing linen. But under the burning midsummer sun, darkness stirs. Old friends and enemies circulate among the guests. Just outside the Manor’s immaculately kept grounds, an ancient forest bristles with secrets. And the Sunday morning of opening weekend, the local police are called. Something’s not right with the guests. There’s been a fire. A body’s been discovered. THE FOUNDER * THE HUSBAND * THE MYSTERY GUEST * THE KITCHEN HELP It all began with a secret, fifteen years ago. Now the past has crashed the party. And it’ll end in murder at… The Midnight Feast.   Southern Man by Greg Iles   Fifteen years after the events of the Natchez Burning trilogy, Penn Cage is alone. Nearly all his loved ones are dead, and his old allies gone. Pursued by enemies and demoralized by a divided community, he's found sanctuary on a former cotton plantation above the Mississippi River. But Penn's self-imposed exile comes to an abrupt end when a brawl at a Bienville rap concert triggers a shooting - one that nearly takes the life of his daughter Annie. Before the stunned city can process the tragedy, an arsonist starts torching antebellum plantation homes in Natchez and Bienville. When an unknown Black radical group claims the deadly fires as acts of historic justice, citywide panic ensues, driving a prosperous Southern town to the brink of race war. Drafted by Bienville's mayor to end the crisis and restore peace, Penn investigates the fires as casualties mount and armed marchers move toward a decisive clash. But Penn suspects that the arson attacks may not be what they seem - not retribution by radicals, but false-flag strikes designed to trigger the very chaos he sees roiling the streets. For that mayhem provides state and county leaders the excuse to dissolve the Black-run Bienville city government and seize control. It's up to Penn and a band of locals to uncover the truth and expose those trying to destabilize the city.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/22/20245 minutes, 29 seconds
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Kate Hall: The most efficient way to deal with waste in your home

We all make waste, some of us more than others.   But how do we deal with it? It can be tough to keep everything organised and sorted.  Kate "Ethically Kate” Hall joined Jack Tame to walk listeners through the best way to set up an efficient waste system in their homes.  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/22/20248 minutes, 17 seconds
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Lisa Dudson: Personal Finance Expert on the importance of collecting your full KiwiSaver entitlement from the Government

Each year the Government contributes up to $521.43 to a person’s Kiwisaver account.  The cut off for the contribution is coming up next week, and KiwiSaver members could be missing out on as much as $55,000 in their retirement savings by not collecting the full contribution.  Personal Finance Expert Lisa Dudson joined Jack Tame to discuss the long term importance of ensuring you collect your full contribution.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/22/20244 minutes, 43 seconds
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Tara Ward: Elsbeth, Presumed Innocent, The Outlaws

Elsbeth   When the world's top tennis champion drops dead on the court, Elsbeth and Kaya home in on a rising tennis star and his competitive father and coach; Capt. Wagner begins to suspect Elsbeth's reason for being in New York goes beyond the consent decree (TVNZ+, from Tuesday 25 June).    Presumed Innocent   A horrific murder upends Chicago's prosecuting attorneys' office, as one of its own is suspected of the crime (Apple TV+).    The Outlaws   Stephen Marchant’s comedy about seven wayward strangers doing their community service returns for a third season, but can any of these ‘outlaws’ really reform? (Prime Video).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/22/20244 minutes, 47 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Despicable Me 4 and The Road to Patagonia

Despicable Me 4    Gru welcomes a new member to the family, Gru Jr., who's intent on tormenting his dad. However, their peaceful existence soon comes crashing down when criminal mastermind Maxime Le Mal escapes from prison and vows revenge against Gru.  The Road to Patagonia    Documentary film was shot over 16 years. ‘The Road To Patagonia’ gives us a first-hand experience of Matty Hannon’s epic surfing journey – starting at the northern edge of Alaska, down the west coast of the Americas, and finally ending at the southern tip of Patagonia. It’s an epic journey covering 50,000 kilometres, with many twists and turns – with an unexpected love story that becomes the heart of it all.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/22/20245 minutes, 37 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Catching up with Auckland

Kevin Milne was in a different neck of the woods this past week.  He and his wife Linda were up in Auckland, catching up with some old friends and experiencing what the city has on offer at the moment.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/22/20244 minutes, 43 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Great Eats and Drinks on the Sunshine Coast

"In the pantheon of Australia’s famous ‘big things’, the biggest thing of all is the Sunshine Coast’s Big Pineapple. This iconic king of Queensland kitsch has been resplendently restored and I happened to be in town for the reopening of this 16-metre-tall fibreglass landmark a few weeks ago. She’s as old as me, first thrust into the world in 1971, principally as an agritourism attraction, swathed in pineapple plantations. Even Charles and Diana paid the icon a visit in 1983. Over the decades, capturing some family snaps at the Big Pineapple has been a cherished, cheesy visitor pastime, in addition to riding the plantation train and indulging in a pineapple parfait. And all these nostalgic novelties are being freshly reinstated for a new generation of travellers. It’s all very grammable!" "But the gleaming rebirth of the Big Pineapple also underscores the Sunshine Coast’s striking stature as Queensland's Sunshine Pantry, brimming with over 900 food and drink producers. Heartily dabbling from this powerhouse of premium local produce, noshing and sipping your way across the Sunshine Coast, is a sure-fire recipe for blissed-out holiday indulgence." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/22/20248 minutes, 20 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: The Walking Tree

A few weeks ago, the New Zealand Arboriculture Association stunned New Zealanders with a remarkable Tree-of-the-Year competition won by the walking tree. The magnificent Northern Rata (Metrosideros robusta) looks like it is walking on high heels (see Gareth Andrew’s stunning photograph).  As it happens, this rata species belongs to the myrtle group that includes pohutukawa and many different climbing rata, as well as Southern rata and the extremely rare Bartletts rata.  I love these trees; they are endemic to New Zealand. Yes, only in New Zealand! This is where they evolved.  Some Northern Rata germinate from the ground like any other boring tree, but the majority of Northern Rata is known as a Hemi-Epiphyte (not a true strangling epiphyte that uses another tree for support and “lifestyle”).  It usually starts life from a seed that lands somewhere in the canopy of a host tree (many different tree species can be a host: from podocarps to tawa, mahoe, beech, kamahi and even tree ferns.  The magic starts when the germinated plant becomes an epiphyte (perching plant) for the beginning of its life, sending roots downwards to the ground – Takes Ages!! Often many decades. The descending roots are usually “fused” together and become a tough root system.     It also sends some shoots with leaves upward to the lighter parts of the host trees’ canopy. The rata has a rather constant root-to-shoot ratio as it is growing up.  One of the roots will become dominant as it reaches the soil where the nutrients are; the shoots then have plenty of food to race up to the top of the host tree and create their own Photosynthetic factory.  Rata can be hundreds of years old – perhaps beyond 1000 years!   The original “host tree” usually dies well before the Rata is getting to its maximum size. As the host decays, the rata will “stand on its own feet” and is left with a hollow trunk – a great home for bats and native birds in the forest!  Why does this tree look like a “walking” Tree?  Look again at the picture: old, descending fused roots on the left and a rather smooth “trunk” on the right.  Rata (and pohutkawa) are able to grow new roots when and where they are needed from anywhere on the tree – and they can do so relatively quickly.  The hypothesis (proposed by my old mate Stephen King) is that the old Rata tree developed a “lean” when the old host tree perished. A new vertical root (the right one) became a smooth trunk to support the new vertical crown.  And just to make things a bit more extraordinary in the story of this walking tree: Take a look at the old fused roots on the left: This is now the spot where a pohutukawa decided to start its own life on the ancient roots of that walking Northern Rata!  If you are interested in trees and spectacular notable trees, visit the notable trees register.    More info on Rata and other Metrosideros species, cruise to the Project Crimson Website.  And grab a copy of Philip Simpson’s book Pohutukawa & Rata – New Zealand’s iron-hearted Trees.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/22/20244 minutes, 20 seconds
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Full Show Podcast: 22 June 2024

On the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast for Saturday 22 June 2024, rugby league legend Mark Graham and filmmaker son Luke joined Jack to talk about new documentary ‘SHARKO’ - the story of the man who changed rugby league.  Jack stays up to date on the Interislander ferry Aratere running aground near Picton, and chats to his auntie Barb Tame live from the scene.  Sporto Andrew Saville looks ahead to tonight's Super Rugby Pacific Final and the test match-like atmosphere sure to be set by the crowd of 45,000.   The internet is going places it has never been before. Techxpert Paul Stenhouse gives the latest on updates from Starlink.  Plus - while visiting Auckland this week, Kevin had a rather interesting dinner.  Get the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast every Saturday on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/22/20241 hour, 57 minutes, 9 seconds
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Mark and Luke Graham: Former Rugby League player and his filmmaker son on the documentary 'SHARKO'

Mark Graham is a New Zealand rugby league legend.   In his prime he was the best league player in the world, known for his size, speed, skill, and toughness, he was “a predator in a sea of sharks”.  He’s been named New Zealand Rugby League Player of the Century, and is the only player to have made it into both the New Zealand and Australian League halls of fame.  Luke Graham, his son, is a filmmaker, and his latest documentary is about his father.  SHARKO tells the story of the man who changed rugby league, carrying his teams and country to the doorstep of greatness.  Luke’s decision to tell his father’s story was motivated by several reasons, he revealed to Newstalk ZB’s Jack Tame.  “He’s someone that, you know, I’ve always proudly looked up to and I’ve been so proud of his success, his career.”  The creation of this documentary was a way to show that pride, as well as his love for that era of rugby league.  “It was selfishly, selfish reason to get to know my family even more, and to show this family to the world,” he told Tame.  The subject of the documentary himself, Mark, was not sure that anyone would want to watch the documentary when his son pitched it to him.  “My football career is dead and buried, and while I used to love the game, I just didn’t know if anyone would be that interested, to tell you the truth.”  Mark said that initially the story that was pitched was the ‘77 Auckland side where they showed up on a Wednesday night after working all day and played international sides for 33 weeks straight, beating all of them, before going back to work the next morning.  “So I thought that was the story, but he thought it was, this one was better.”  “It was lovely for people who perhaps don’t appreciate how much has changed.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/21/202415 minutes, 10 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Starlink goes mini, Netflix's live experiences

Starlink goes mini - which I'm sure will delight the campervanners  Elon Musk says this product will "change the world". He has a point, it certainly has the potential to take internet into hard-to-reach locations, including locations without power. The new Starlink Mini is an all-in-one device, which is a combo satellite dish and router, small enough to fit in a (large) backpack. It delivers 100mbps internet on DC power sources, needing just 20-40 Watts, which means a portable power pack is enough to use it. It's around 30cm long, 25cm wide and weighs just over 1kg -- not too much bigger than the biggest iPad. Available as a mobility add-on in the USA, and as a standalone product in parts of Central & South America and is expected to roll out to more countries soon.  Netflix is going from your tv, to the mall  You can soon live your favourite Netflix shows. Opening in 2025, Netflix House is headed to shopping malls in Dallas and near Philadelphia, using the tens of thousands of square feet of retail space abandoned by department stores. They say there will be "regularly updated immersive experiences" and "unique food and drink offerings". It's certainly not going to be a theme park, but seems to be more of a highly interactive museum / gallery?  Can't get to those locations? Netflix has launched its own popcorn —"Netflix Now Popping"— which is for sale at Walmart.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/21/20243 minutes, 40 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Moroccan spiced Lamb Shanks & Lentils

This hearty one-pot dinner is just the thing to warm you up and whilst it’s cooking you can dream of far-off lands as the aroma of Moroccan spices waft around your kitchen.  Serves 2    Ingredients  2 tbsp. olive oil  1 large onion, peeled and sliced thinly  2 tsps. ground coriander  1 tsp smoked paprika  1 tsp ground cumin  1 tsp ground ginger  5 cm stick cinnamon or 1 tsp ground cinnamon  2 lamb shanks  1-2 carrots, roughly chopped  2 cm piece lemon peel  Water  1 tsp sea salt + decent grind black pepper  1 large orange kūmara, peeled and chopped into large chunks  ½ can lentils, drained and rinsed    Method  Heat oil in a large ovenproof deep pan or pot, like a le Creuset. Fry onions until softened then add in the spices and cook for 1 minute or so. Add in lamb shanks, carrots and lemon peel and give it all a stir. Add in enough water to just about cover the shanks and add in salt and pepper. Bring to a simmer on the stove top while you heat oven to 180 C.  Cover tightly with a lid or foil and place in oven for 1 hour.  After an hour, give it another stir, add in the kūmara and lentils, cover again and cook for a further 1.5-2 hours or until lamb is falling away from the bone.  Serve up, scatter with some fresh coriander and serve with a salad and/or some crusty bread to soak up the juices. Enjoy!  Make it your own  Use lamb shoulder chops instead of shanks.  Add some prunes if you like that sort of thing.  Leave out the lentils and serve with couscous instead.  Potato or pumpkin will work just as well as the kūmara.    LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/21/20246 minutes, 22 seconds
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Jack Tame: The Interislander ferry situation could've been so much worse

How much worse could it have been?  I don’t want to speak too soon. A refloating mission is underway. But from what we know at this stage, KiwiRail, the Interislander, and New Zealand might have just escaped a much, much more serious disaster.   The Aratere ferry departed Picton last night and from what we understand about the timeline, almost immediately lost steering. Within fifteen minutes it had run aground.  There are 47 people onboard. Most of them are crew. All of them are in lifejackets. Most importantly, all of them are safe. And for now, at least the ferry is watertight. We wait for high tide and the impending rescue operation.  It’s bad. But again, my reaction is strangely one of tempered relief, in that we may have just dodged a far greater disaster. Imagine if the ferry had lost steering further out in the Sounds and run aground late at night. Imagine if it hadn’t been perfectly still and calm. Imagine if it was full of passengers —school holidays— kids. Imagine if it hadn’t stayed watertight. Imagine if it got into trouble at a vital point in Cook Straight entering Wellington Harbour. There are surely moments on the journey where even if alarm was raised, emergency vessels and tugboats might not have the time to scramble and save the stricken ship.  We could be waking this morning to news of a maritime disaster in one of the most beautiful parts of New Zealand that made the Rena look like nothing. And most importantly, of course, people could’ve died.   The state and the future of the ferries has been a political football. The previous government signed a fixed-price contract to build two new ferries. But after the Inter-island Resilience Project exploded in its projected costs, the new government declined KiwiRail’s request for extra funding. In parliament, as recently as a few days ago, Transport Minister Simeon Brown was highly critical of KiwiRail's maintenance of the current fleet.   But last night’s event will obviously bring all of this into sharp focus. Is this an event that will justify new vessels and the new port infrastructure, after all?   Let’s hope the ferry and her passengers can be safely refloated. But clearly the status quo is unsustainable. And just because we may have avoided the absolute worst this occasion, doesn’t mean the next time won’t be different. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/21/20248 minutes, 29 seconds
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Jack Tame: Filling bean bags - the worst domestic task of all

De-icing the freezer. That's it, without doubt, the worst possible domestic chore.   Because you know, the tricky thing - is once you've successfully taken the plug out of the wall, got rid of the electricity, melted the water. Where does it all go? Where does the water go? I remember my mum running a system with our big chest freezer when I was a kid. She needed buckets. She needed pots and pans, towels and mops, baby baths even and still it took her the whole weekend.   But now you know what, I'm not totally sure that deicing the freezer is still Top of the Pops in miserable domestic jobs. And that is the kind of sentence only ever uttered by someone who has recently tried to fill a bean bag. Ugh.   Are bean bags having a moment? I reckon they might be, and I just personally figured that having a versatile option for vegging out in front of the telly might be quite nice when I searched them online there were a couple of different options for beanbags. For most you had to buy the bag and then the beans. Separate. But if you really wanted, you could spend a little bit more money and order a bean bag that was already filled. I thought. What do they take me for? Some kind of sucker? Bean bags, it turns out, actually have two bags. So you fill the inner bag and then you put that inside the outer bag. It's easy in principle, not necessarily in practise.   I figured that I would tackle the job alone as a nice surprise for when my wife got home. That was my first mistake. I began in the lounge. That was my second mistake. I laid out the bean bag in it and snipped the top corner off the huge bag of beans. 200 litres of them. As the scissor blades glided through the plastic, it was kind of like a can of fizzy drink that had been furiously shaken up. Beans exploded out all over me, all over the floor, all over the couch. Everywhere. And they seem to have some sort of static electricity attraction. So even as I picked them off my chest and tried to sweep them together with my fingers off the carpet, the beans kind of had a mind of their own.   20 minutes down. For my second attempt, I moved into the kitchen, pinched part of the inner bag in a kitchen drawer so that I could hold the bag open as soon as I started pouring the beans, I inadvertently relaxed the inner bag, closing the mouth of the opening. And pouring roughly 10,000 bean bag beans all over the kitchen floor.   It turns out when you get on your hands and knees and start trying to pick up pathetically small bits of polystyrene, you get a new appreciation for just how greasy the kitchen floor actually is. It made them less staticky, but alas, it did not make them easier to collect. I cut a pitiful figure when my wife found me scratching around trying to pinch up the last of the beans from under the fridge. Another half an hour I'll never get back.   If there's one thing my experience has taught me, filling a bean bag is a two-person job. It's also the kind of thing where you should really review the instructional video on YouTube before kicking off. If I'd done that, I would have known the best place to fill the bean bag isn't in the lounge, or in the kitchen. But in an empty bath. That way, if there is any spillage and trust me, there will be spillage at the very least it's contained.   Third time was a relative charm. It wasn't seamless. We still managed to pour litres of beans onto the floor. I still spent ages on my hands and knees scrambling around in the muck. Every time I thought I'd got them all, I walked out of the room for a moment and then came back in, only to discover a couple of rogue beans hiding underneath some furniture. I feel like they're going to keep popping up for months.   At least, though there is an upside: if I ever feel like a lazy slob for crashing into my bean bag. and vegging out in front of the television, I can remind myself, earnestly - nah, I had to work for this.  LISTEN ABOVE. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/15/20245 minutes, 5 seconds
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Full Show Podcast: 15 June 2024

On the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast for Saturday 15 June 2024, star of this year's Armageddon Expo John Barrowman joins Jack to discuss his sci-fi legacy and what it is about shows like Doctor Who that fans connect to so enduringly.  Jack's DIY endeavours continued with this week's task: the beanbag.  Kevin Milne was mightily impressed by podcasting this week, reaffirming that we are very much still in the days of quality long-form interviews. While, Dr Bryan Betty talks misconceptions of ADHD after it's recent media spotlight following the diagnosis of public figures.  Get the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast every Saturday on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/15/20241 hour, 56 minutes, 33 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Music reviewer on Tems' new album 'Born in the Wild'

Estelle Clifford reviews Born in the Wild by Tems.  Tems self-produced much of the LP alongside GuityBeatz, the Ghanaian Afropop DJ behind her 2021 EP If Orange Was a Place.   It’s been praised by Pitchfork for its “Polyrhythmic soundscape, adorned with the earthy tones of conga drums, wind chimes, and shekere rattles, provides a counterweight to the homogenized sound of contemporary Afropop.”  Music reviewer Estelle Clifford told Jack Tame “This is her growth on something that’s a universal attraction with afrobeats.”  Clifford says “She’s worked behind the scenes, but now her wn stuff is taking the forefront.”  LISTEN ABOVE. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/15/20247 minutes, 11 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: 'Smoke' and 'The Hazelbourne Ladies Motorcycle Flying Club'

Catherine Raynes is here to review some books with Jack Tame.  Smoke by Michael Brissenden   Detective Alex Markov has recently returned to her small hometown of Jasper, California, after leaving the LAPD in disgrace, only to find her new colleagues don't want her either. When a deadly wildfire sweeps through Jasper her investigations find a deadly underbelly beneath the smoke - a town for sale to the highest bidder and authorities playing games within games, in which she's the prize pawn.  The Hazelbourne Ladies Motorcycle and Flying Club by Helen Simonson  A young woman's life is forever changed in the summer after World War I when she befriends a group of independent, motorcycle-riding women in a seaside town on the English coast - a captivating novel from the bestselling author of Major Pettigrew's Last Stand.  LISTEN ABOVE. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/15/20244 minutes, 24 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Travel correspondent on the Sun Princess cruise ship

Earlier this year, Princess Cruises launched their next-generation flagship, Sun Princess, the first of two planned Sphere-class vessels to enter the Princess fleet. (Star Princess is launched next year.)   With a capacity for 4300 guests and 1600 crew, and weighing in at 177,000 tons, she’s a twinkling ocean beauty.  Mike Yardley recently hopped on board – he joined Jack Tame on Newstalk ZB Saturday Morning to discuss.  For more insights on sailing aboard Sun Princess, Mike's article is on the website. LISTEN ABOVE. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/15/202410 minutes, 19 seconds
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Dougal Sutherland: Umbrella Wellbeing Psychologist on job uncertainty

Over half of New Zealand workers are experiencing severe burnout – worse than Covid numbers.  In April, Massey Business School Survey found that the highest levels of burnout are among clerical workers, education professionals, office managers and health professionals.  Umbrella Wellbeing Clinical Psychologist Dougal Sutherland told Jack Tame “You can get into a situation where co-workers try out-do each other, which could affect employee relations.”  Sutherland’s advice for employees is “Focus on the aspects of situation that you can control – like preparing your CV.”  LISTEN ABOVE. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/15/20247 minutes, 56 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: How to look after birds in your garden during winter

A week away from winter – Everybody feels that – especially the birds in your garden.   Food is becoming scarce, unless you’ve planted a heap of trees and shrubs that provide nectar and honeydew to keep the nectivores happy.   Some species of Eucalypts are flowering right now; so do Tagasaste, some puriri and Banksia. Mexican Orange blossom does its best too, judging from the silvereyes that descend on those flowers.   Nectivores are often attracted by sugar water, delivered in all sorts of ways: bottle feeders are available in garden centres and can be filled with dilutions of that sugar water. Do NOT use honey water as that may spread bee diseases from hive to hive.    Be aware that we have heaps of Native Nectivores in Aotearoa: tui, bellbird, silvereyes to name a few.   A lot of people feed birds dodgy supplements such as stale bread and food scraps; yes – sparrows and starlings (as well as mynahs and the odd blackbird) might initially seem to appreciate your gestures, but so do rats and mice (who are also looking for fodder). A Bread meal is often quite detrimental to birds – if they drink water afterwards, the swelling of the bread can rupture their stomachs.   A number of bird species enjoy some seeds: sparrows greenfinches, gold finches and such introduced creatures; blackbirds don’t mind some seeds covered in fruity stuff.   Julie has a different view on the matter: “Blackbirds are there to rip the mulch off the garden”, whether or not they want to catch worms or any other invertebrates…   Another point we need to consider about feeding birds in your garden is that you’ll need to keep going till spring; Your generosity is something the birds rely on and when you stop, there will be consequences for the artificially-high populations created by extra feeding!   I tend to target nectar feeders in winter. The afore-mentioned Tui, bellbird and silver-eyes are beneficial species!  Silver-eyes are particularly useful insect eaters, specialising in scale insects, mealybugs, aphids, psyllids, whitefly and a heap more of those quite damaging garden pests.   I hate spraying systemic insecticides, so birds’ help is always welcome.   And this is how I attract them to my garden from June onwards:   Lard blocks made from dripping and contained in an old onion bag or in a small, metal “cage” where the birds can hang from. This last contraption feeds a wide range of birds that over-winter in my garden.   Replenish frequently and remember to place the feeders in a spot out of reach from neighbourhood cats.    A source of water might also be handy as – even in winter – birds need water   My goal is to get the largest flocks of silver-eyes on the lard blocks and sugar-water stations throughout winter and right into spring, when the silver-eyes start to disperse to go breeding.  You might think you will have “lost” them from the garden... they are getting very secretive around nesting time, but they will remember your place as a heaven full of food, so...   In spring and summer they’ll come and do the pest control business for you by scouting the scale insects and aphids from your plants, to feed their kids.   Tui and Bellbird will probably do a significant job of pollination in your garden.   What’s not to like?  LISTEN ABOVE. Silvereyes on MeatballSilvereyes on lard blockSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/15/20244 minutes, 6 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: GP on ADHD diagnoses

ADHD has been getting a lot of attention lately - with Wellington Mayor Tory Whanau, and Chloe Swarbrick going public with their diagnosis, its difficulties and treatment - especially for adults.   In NZ, 5-8% of children and adolescents being potentially affected, with 70% persisting into adulthood.  Dr Bryan Betty told Jack Tame “It’s a very complex condition that affects people in different ways.”  Betty said “It’s a neurodevelopment disorder – affecting people of any age, especially children.”  LISTEN ABOVE. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/15/20248 minutes, 16 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Tech expert Paul Stenhouse on Microsoft's A.I 'recall'

Paul Stenhouse, ZB’s ‘texpert’ joins Jack Tame to discuss some recent developments in A.I.   Stenhouse said “Every company wants to be seen as a leader – largely to the eyes of Wal Street if I'm being honest.”  There's a new word to know in the world of AI: "Slop" Found an AI generated article that seems like it's regurgitated garbage? Well, there's a word for that!  "Slop" is the term that is gaining traction to describe low-quality or junk AI content, helped by an article in the New York Times. Think "spam", but for content.   Microsoft is effectively putting the launch of one of its new AI features on hold because of security concerns  The new Copilot Plus PCs come with a features called "Recall" which effectively takes screenshots of what you're doing and stores them so you can go back to check what that price was for that item, or recover a sentence from an email you decided you preferred.  The feature was going to be turned on by default, which only last week Microsoft reversed, announcing it would be "opt-in" and include additional secure login requirements.  LISTEN ABOVE. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/15/20244 minutes, 47 seconds
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Tara Ward: Spinoff Staff Writer on what to watch this weekend

Spinoff Staff Writer Tara Ward joins Jack Tame on Newstalk ZB Saturday Morning – to discuss what to watch this weekend.  Red Eye - A British thriller that takes place on an all-night flight as a police officer transports an English doctor back to China to face trial for murder (ThreeNow)  Under the Bridge - Riley Keogh and Lily Gladstone star in this true crime drama about the death of a fourteen-year old Canadian girl, and the teenagers who killed her (Disney+)  Tour de France - Unchained: A second season of the thrilling behind the scenes documentary series about the Tour de France (Netflix)  LISTEN ABOVE. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/14/20245 minutes, 45 seconds
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John Barrowman: Former Doctor Who star on the show's legacy

John Barrowman became an instant hit with sci-fi fans around the world when he made his debut in Doctor Who back in 2005.   His character - Captain Jack Harkness's popularity saw him become a recurring presence in the BBC series and he later took centre stage in the successful spin-off series Torchwood.   He starred in superhero series Arrow - alongside finding huge success in theatre roles on Broadway and the West End.  John is currently in New Zealand for this weekend's pop culture convention Armageddon and Jack Tame on Newstalk ZB Saturday Morning. LISTEN ABOVE.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/14/202412 minutes, 3 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Gluten free wraps

It’s Coeliac Awareness Week – from June 10-16.  There’s a plethora of gluten-free products these days - if you're newly diagnosed with coeliac, there's no need to fear missing out.  Nici Wickes spoke to Jack Tame about the practical, social and emotional effects of coeliac disease and what to do if a friend or family member is diagnosed.  GF WRAPS  I’m celebrating Coeliac Awareness Week with these homemade GF wraps, made using chickpea flour. They’re super simple to make and can be used to make tacos, wraps, stuffed savoury crepes and more.  Makes 6 wraps  2 tsps cumin seeds  1 cup FreshLife chickpea flour  1 cup water  1 tablespoon oil  ½ tsp sea salt  Oil to grease pan  Toast the cumin seeds in a pan, without oil, until they’re fragrant – about 1 minute on medium.  In a bowl mix all the ingredients and whisk to a smooth batter. Leave to sit for 30 minutes or until thickened.  Brush a pan lightly with oil and heat to medium. Pour enough batter (about ¼ cup) into the pan and swirl it to spread the batter out in a large thin circle. Cook for 2-3 minutes or until the edges start to lift. Flip and cook for 1-2 minutes more. Repeat with remaining batter.  Visit www.coeliac.org.nz for recipes, suppliers, latest medical data.  LISTEN ABOVE. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/14/20245 minutes, 19 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Sunday Session Host reviews DocEdge film festival

DocEdge 2024 starts next week – featuring 66 local and international films.   It will be in cinemas across Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch – up until July 19th.   Francesa Rudkin reviews ‘Rather Be Ashes Than Dust’ on Saturday Morning with Jack Tame:  “It is absolutely exhausting – an interesting first-hand look at how humans can get out of control, and Hong Kong governance digs their feet in to keep China happy.”  LISTEN ABOVE. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/14/20248 minutes, 14 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Former Fair Go Presenter on quality longform interviews

Former Fair Go Presenter Kevin Milne joined Jack Tame on Newstalk ZB – to discuss quality long-from interviews.   Milne told Jack Tame “The ‘Between Two Beers’ Interview with Mark Stafford is the most extraordinary interview I’ve heard in years.”  Milne said “Every revelation was astonishing and sometimes bitterly sad.”  He said lot of broadcasters complain that the days of quality interviews are behind us – but he can only urge them to listen to the Mark Stafford interview.   LISTEN ABOVE. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/14/20247 minutes, 35 seconds
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Andrew Saville: 1News Sports Presenter on Super Rugby playoffs

The Blues beat The Brumbies 34-20 at Eden Park last night – securing their place in the Super Rugby Pacific final.   They’ll await tonight’s match to see who they’ll play in the final.  1News Sports Presenter Andrew Saville told Jack Tame “It’s a shame that the crowd wasn’t bigger – but it was a wet Friday night in Auckland – which is difficult to get to straight after work.”  Saville said “The crowd was disappointing, but the rugby was good.”  LISTEN ABOVE. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/14/20246 minutes, 16 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Georgia Lines - The Rose of Jericho

The debut studio album from Georgia Lines, ‘The Rose of Jericho’ is a ten-track album touching on grief, loss, heartache, as well as joy and lightness.  The album is named for a plant that has come to symbolise rebirth and hope due to its seemingly magical ability to come back to life.   She told RNZ that the last few years have left her feeling like a Rose of Jericho herself.  "I am [also] in the process of coming back to life, remembering things that were lost and all of the things associated with that … my record was the rose inside."  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/8/20246 minutes, 16 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Camino Island and Endgame 1944: How Stalin Won the War

Camino Island by John Grisham  A gang of thieves stage a daring heist from a secure vault deep below Princeton University’s Firestone Library. Their loot is priceless, but Princeton has insured it for twenty-five million dollars.  Bruce Cable owns a popular bookstore in the sleepy resort town of Santa Rosa on Camino Island in Florida. He makes his real money, though, as a prominent dealer in rare books. Very few people know that he occasionally dabbles in the black market of stolen books and manuscripts.  Mercer Mann is a young novelist with a severe case of writer’s block who has recently been laid off from her teaching position. She is approached by an elegant, mysterious woman working for an even more mysterious company. A generous offer of money convinces Mercer to go undercover and infiltrate Bruce Cable’s circle of literary friends, ideally getting close enough to him to learn his secrets.  But eventually Mercer learns far too much, and there’s trouble in paradise as only John Grisham can deliver it.    Endgame 1944: How Stalin Won the War by Jonathan Dimbleby  June 1944: In Operation Bagration, more than two million Red Army soldiers, facing 500,000 German soldiers, finally avenged their defeat in Operation Barbarossa in 1941. The same month saw the Allies triumph on the beaches of Normandy, but, despite the myths that remain, it was the events on the Eastern Front that sealed Hitler's fate and destroyed Nazism.  In his new book, bestselling historian Jonathan Dimbleby describes and analyses this momentous year, covering the military, political and diplomatic story in his evocative style. Drawing on previously untranslated German, Russian and Polish sources, we see how sophisticated new forms of deception and ruthless Partisan warfare shifted the Soviets’ fortunes, how their triumphs effectively gave Stalin authority to occupy Eastern Europe and how it was the events of 1944 that enabled Stalin to dictate the terms of the post-war settlement, laying the foundations for the Cold War . . .    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/8/20244 minutes, 56 seconds
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Kate Hall: Green burials and sustainable options

When it comes to burials there’s a couple of well-known options in coffins, caskets, and cremation.  However, there are other options on offer as well, some more sustainable than others.  Kate ‘Ethically Kate’ Hall joined Jack Tame to discuss sustainable and green burial options, and what people need to think about when looking at these options.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/8/20248 minutes, 18 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Getting to grips with Naples

"It’s Italy in the extreme. She’s rough and ready and in your face. Gritty, gripping, daunting and intimidating to the uninitiated, mighty Naples is a southern Italian classic beyond comparison. It can strike newcomers as a hot mess. I have to confess that on several prior occasions, I haven’t ventured beyond the central train station in Naples, surrounded by Piazza Garibaldi. The ensuing piles of rubbish, swarms of beggars and general bad vibes on the streets outside the station proved to be potent turn-off – and I high-tailed it out of town bound for the Amalfi Coast. By train, it is the critical stepping-stone to reach Pompeii, Sorrento and beyond.   "But last month, I was determined to give Naples a fair shake, eager to get a proper flavour of what this heaving, high-density city had to offer. Overcoming my fear of being ripped off, mugged, gunned down by the Camorra, or run down in a city where red lights are merely decorations, my urban safari in Naples was certainly eye-opening but undeniably rewarding. I was in town as a port call aboard Princess Cruises’ spectacular new flagship Sun Princess, so disembarking at the port terminal, Stazione Marittima, affords an effortless entrance into downtown Naples, on foot." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/8/202410 minutes, 8 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Wine Expert recommends the Durvillea 2023 Sauvignon Blanc

Wine: Durvillea 2023 Sauvignon Blanc $18  Why I chose it:- Terrific wine, especially considering the difficult vintage (cyclone Gabriella) - Entry level wine for Astrolabe. Entry level price but not entry level quality. - You might remember the MV Rena grounded on the Astrolabe reef in 2021. By chance there were a couple of containers of Astrolabe wine on board. The wine and MV Rena were lost.  What does it taste like?- One of the best examples of a Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc from the 2023 vintage. Good intensity with restrained power and the perfect amount of punch without going overboard. Tantalising wine.                                                      Why it’s a bargain:- Well below average price for SB but well above average quality  Where can you buy it?- Vino Fino and Wine Freedom in Christchurch both have it for $14.99  Food match?- A versatile food match. I like it with Feta cheese. Most seafoods are a happy match.  Will it keep?- Good for two years, perhaps more.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/8/20243 minutes, 19 seconds
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Tara Ward: New Zealand’s Best Homes with Phil Spencer, Sweet Tooth, Blue Lights

New Zealand’s Best Homes with Phil Spencer  Phil travels to the other side of the world to take a look inside some of the most amazing homes that New Zealand has to offer.  We will reveal each of these stunning properties through the eyes of the people – the architects, the builders and the owners – that dared to dream them into reality (TVNZ1 on Sundays, TVNZ+).    Sweet Tooth Season 3  On a perilous adventure in a post-apocalyptic world, a boy who's half-human and half deer searches for a new beginning with a gruff protector (Netflix).     Blue Lights  A new season of the excellent police procedural drama about three rookie police officers starting their careers on the beat in Belfast, Northern Ireland (ThreeNow).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/8/20243 minutes, 55 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Marguerite’s Theorem and Bad Boys: Ride or Die

Marguerite’s Theorem   When a brilliant mathematics student at France's top university presents her thesis, a mistake shakes the certainty of her planned-out life. She decides to quit everything and start over.    Bad Boys: Ride or Die   When their late police captain gets linked to drug cartels, wisecracking Miami cops Mike Lowrey and Marcus Burnett embark on a dangerous mission to clear his name.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/8/20247 minutes, 5 seconds
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Will Cockrell: Author and journalist on the commercialisation of Mount Everest and his book ‘Everest Inc: The Renegades and Rogues Who Built an Industry at the Top of the World’

Once seen as an indomitable challenge, Mount Everest has become increasingly commercialised.   It’s become a tourist industry, with queues of climbers all waiting to take their photos at the top, paying anywhere between US$65,000 and US$200,000, the VIP experience coming with a higher price tag.  Journalist and author Will Cockrell has been climbing mountains for over 30 years and has explored the commercialisation of Mount Everest in his new book ‘Everest Inc: The Renegades and Rogues Who Built an Industry at the Top of the World’.   He joined Jack Tame to dig into the industry surrounding one of the most iconic mountains in the world.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/8/202418 minutes, 27 seconds
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Full Show Podcast: 8 June 2024

On the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast for Saturday 8 June 2024, outdoor adventure journalist Will Cockrell gets to the heart of the Himalayan guiding industry in his new book exploring the commercialisation of Mt Everest.  How rich is too rich? Jack ponders a plan of action ahead of Lotto's $50 million draw.  Crack open your summer preserves, chef Nici Wickes has sweet plum treats perfect for a weekend on the go. And Estelle puts forward a weekend soundtrack from Aotearoa pop sensation Georgia Lines.  Plus, the kings of marketing are rebranding AI.  Get the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast every Saturday on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/8/20241 hour, 56 minutes, 20 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Covering and protecting your garden from frost

Winter is a mere 2 weeks away and that means the coldest periods are very nigh indeed. Frost is –for some plant species– quite damaging.  Growth basically stops; Invertebrates tend to hibernate, and our birds will go through a hungry phase, frantically looking for something to eat.  Traditionally, many gardeners find ways to protect their plants and their soils; covering these is often the best way to keep everything intact.  Starting with Compost heaps: Drape tarpaulin over the top and keep it down with some bricks or heavy wood; alternatively: get some pea straw and put that over the compost (at least 10 cm thick).   Pea straw. Photo / Supplied  If you are in an area where frosts can be too much for, say, fruit trees such as citrus, then Mulching the root zone might be a good preventative action: Citrus are “surface-rooting” and hence do not like a low temperature, so it pays to keep them mulched. Bark, Compost, Chippered branches, Organic matter is useful; anything that suppresses the cold nights!   Mulch for winter. Photo/ Supplied  Lemons and other citrus plants are currently developing fruits. Frost Cloth is often a good preventative cover that will make a few degrees difference. There’s even a “Liquid Frost cloth” that will protect plants up to a -3-degree frost. Spray this Liquid VaporGuard over the sensitive plants well before the evening, so that the wax can set.  In really bad frosts (more than –3 degrees) it pays to drape some material frost cloth over the shrub or tree as well.  Extra Protection!  Late frost. Photo / Supplied  Another way to protect your plants is by positioning them under an existing tree that keeps its leaves in winter. In our Port Hills Garden we are lucky to get very few frosts in winter – on a clear frosty night, the cold air will usually tumble down the hill, taking that damaging stuff away.  But if we are expecting a mean frosty night we simply position the sensitive, potted plants under the Eucalyptus trees.  Frost cloth under a tree. Photo / Supplied  Planting sensitive plants under a good, covering tree will also help to make enough difference to keep them happy in winter.  Dendrobium speciosum care in winter. Photo / Supplied  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/7/20245 minutes, 19 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Apple's next software developer conference and Microsoft pulling back on some AI features due to safety concerns

Apple's big software developer conference is next week - what will they be announcing?  Lot's of AI features... Surprise! Apple is set to unveil its AI strategy which is going to be more focused around automating tasks and summarizing information, rather than image and video generation. For example, the upgraded Mail app will use AI to sort emails in your inbox, there will be a way to 'catch up' on everything that's happened on while you've been away from your device, voice messages will be transcribed for quick scanning, and Siri will be able to complete more 'app-level' tasks like reply to a specific email or delete it, edit a photo, or summarize a news article.  Apple has played a big security card for the past few years so just how much personal data it lets leave your device will be interesting... and if it does, how it sells the security of its cloud processing.  Outside of AI: Apple's password manager called "keychain" has been hidden away in the settings for years, but it's going to be made into its own app.The calculator is coming to iPad!Your iPhone home screen will be more customizable than ever before, including arranging app icons in something other than a rigid grid, and being able to change the colour of the icons.And you'll be able to schedule an iMessage to be sent in the future.   Microsoft has had to pull back on some of its new AI features because of security concerns  The new Copilot Plus PCs come with a feature called "Recall", which effectively takes screenshots of what you're doing and stores them so you can go back to check what that price was for that item or recover a sentence from an email you decided you preferred. The feature was going to be turned on by default, which Microsoft has now reversed. There are also concerns the way it stores the images and the associated metadata was unencrypted, so bad actors could have installed ransomware and had full access to the Recall data.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/7/20245 minutes
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Kevin Milne: Critical information about cardiac arrests

Bodies are complex, and although most people have a passing familiarity with basic bodily functions and facts, there’s plenty that most people don't know.  Kevin Milne finally got around to doing a CPR course last week and realised that there’s an unsettling amount of information about cardiac arrests that he wasn’t aware of.  He joined Jack Tame to share a few facts he learned.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/7/20247 minutes, 26 seconds
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Jack Tame: What would you do if you won Lotto?

How much wealth is just the right amount of wealth?   How rich is too rich?  I had a successful businessman friend tell me once the Goldilocks zone is a mortgage-free home and five-to-ten million dollars in the bank. No more. Any more than that, and you can’t trust people.   But I dunno. Maybe this is just exposing me as a grubby money lover, but I reckon I could do fifty million.   The first step in winning Powerball would be the hardest but arguably the most important: you’d have to decide who to tell. I think it’s inconceivable that you could win that much money without telling anyone. But tell too many people and you’ll ruin your life.   So, who? Mum and Dad. The parents in-law. Siblings, as well. I trust them, of course, but already that pool of people is getting kind of wide. Maybe the rule should be you only tell people with whom you are willing to share some of your winnings. And maybe the rule with family is you pay off everyone’s mortgage and then, that’s that.   I’m not a big splurger, but yeah, I might be tempted to buy a couple of bits and pieces. As much as I love the Corolla, I’d probably shell out for a new car. Nothing crazy and ostentatious —I couldn’t ever show my face in public behind the wheel of a Ferrari— but maybe something a bit newer with a few more airbags and cruise control.   I’d pay off my mortgage. I’d probably splurge on central air, but for now at least I’d keep our family home. At least until the trees grow back. But as well as our home, I’ve always dreamed of a retreat somewhere. A house or a bach —again, nothing ostentatious— buried in native bush on a pristine beach. Ideally, it’s a surf beach. I’d wake each morning to the sound of native birds in between the crashing waves.   I don’t think I could win that kind of money and not give a big slab of it away. You’d want to be thoughtful about choosing charities and causes. I reckon you’d want to give big slabs —a few million a pop— to a couple, and then smaller parcels of donations —$100K each— to a whole heap.   Would I work? Easy to say it now, but yeah, I think I would. That being said, I’ve never forgotten Trevor, the guy who worked as a checkout operator at a supermarket in Huntly who won $27m. After initially insisting he’d be back at work, he decided, yeah... nah. Maybe I’d be the same. Maybe I’d just do this show and lose the Monday to Friday.   I’d love to travel more. I’d love to read more, to learn languages. I’d love to use that windfall to buy time. But all of this is hypothetical of course, because I haven’t actually bought a Lotto ticket. I never have. I wouldn’t even know what to do! I guess I’m just too rational. Even as I watched the jackpot roll over onto $50m, the equal-highest-ever, I couldn’t help but think that if that leads to heaps more ticket sales, statistically speaking the chances of winning Powerball by yourself are actually becoming even slimmer.   I get it though. I know why people have a punt. Buying a Lotto ticket isn’t so much a ticket to win $50m. It’s a ticket to dream. This morning though, I reckon I’ve done that for free. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/7/20245 minutes, 25 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Plum and Coconut bars

I made this with plums because I'd defrosted some of my summer bounty, but any soft juicy fruit will work - soft pears, feijoa, stewed apples, berries etc.  Makes 10 bars    Ingredients:  120g butter  ½ cup brown sugar  1 medium egg  1 tablespoon vanilla extract  ¾ cups plain flour  1 tsp baking powder  ½ cup ground almonds  ¾ cup desiccated coconut  1 tsp lemon zest  1 cup chopped plums - fresh or canned black doris    Method:  1. Preheat oven to 170 fan bake. Line a loaf tin.  2. In a medium pot melt the butter. Remove from the heat and add the sugar, stirring to combine. Whisk in the egg and vanilla until smooth. Sift in the flour, baking powder and ground almonds. Add coconut and stir well until combined.  3. Press two thirds of the mixture into the base of the tin. Scatter over plums in an even layer. Top with remaining dough in clumps.  4. Bake for 35 minutes or until golden. Cool in tin then serve either warm or cold with whipped cream.    Make it your own:  Add citrus or cinnamon to the dough in place of vanilla.  Use blackberries and stewed apples instead of plums.  Replace coconut with ½ cup rolled oats.  Make it GF by using GF flour.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/7/20246 minutes, 24 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Crowded House - Gravity Stairs

Crowded House has dropped their eighth studio album ‘Gravity Stairs’.  As stated by frontman Neil Finn, the band was aiming for a dreamy quality on the album, juxtaposing the direct nature of the lyrics.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/1/20246 minutes, 5 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Lies and Weddings and Everest Inc

Lies and Weddings by Kevin Kwan  Rufus Leung Gresham, future Duke of Greshambury and son of a former Hong Kong supermodel has a the legendary Gresham Trust has been depleted by decades of profligate spending, and behind all the magazine covers and Instagram stories manors and yachts lies nothing more than a gargantuan mountain of debt. The only solution, put forth by Rufus’s scheming mother, is for Rufus to attend his sister’s wedding at a luxury eco-resort, a veritable who’s-who of sultans, barons, and oligarchs, and seduce a woman with money.  Should he marry Solène de Courcy, a French hotel heiress with honey blond tresses and a royal bloodline? Should he pursue Martha Dung, the tattooed venture capital genius who passes out billions like lollipops? Or should he follow his heart, betray his family, squander his legacy, and finally confess his love to the literal girl next door, the humble daughter of a doctor, Eden Tong? When a volcanic eruption burns through the nuptials and a hot mic exposes a secret tryst, the Gresham family plans—and their reputation—go up in flames.  Can the once-great dukedom rise from the ashes? Or will a secret tragedy, hidden for two decades, reveal a shocking twist?    Everest Inc by Will Cockrell  Anyone who has read Jon Krakauer’s Into Thin Air or has seen a recent photo of climbers standing in line to get to the top of Everest may think they have the mountain pretty well figured out. It’s an extreme landscape where bad weather and incredible altitude can occasionally kill, but more so an overcrowded, trashed-out recreation destination where rich clients pad their egos—and social media feeds—while exploiting local Sherpas.  There’s some truth to these clichés, but they’re a sliver of the story. Unlike any book to date, Everest, Inc. gets to the heart of the mountain through the definitive story of its greatest invention: the Himalayan guiding industry. It all began in the 1980s with a few boot-strapping entrepreneurs who paired raw courage and naked ambition with a new style of expedition planning. Many of them are still living and climbing today, and as a result of their astonishing success, ninety percent of the people now on Everest are clients or employees of guided expeditions.  Studded with quotes from original interviews with more than a hundred western and Sherpa climbers, clients, writers, filmmakers, and even a Hollywood actor, Everest, Inc. foregrounds the voices of the people who have made the mountain what it is today. And while there is plenty of high-altitude drama in unpacking the last forty years of Everest tragedy and triumph, it ultimately transcends stereotypes and tells the uplifting counternarrative of the army of journeymen and women who have made people’s dreams come true, and of the Nepalis who are pushing the industry into the future.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/1/20245 minutes, 15 seconds
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Brad Olsen: Infometrics Chief Economist on the tax changes in Budget 2024

The 2024 Budget has finally been released, bringing with it a variety of changes not only to government funding, but to personal taxes.  Brad Olsen joined Jack Tame to dig into the changes, going through the new brackets, who will be affected, and who wont benefit.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/1/20244 minutes, 47 seconds
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Tara Ward: Eric, The Responder, and Jim Henson Idea Man

Eric   Puppeteer Vincent clings to his missing son's drawings of a blue monster puppet named Eric, convinced that if he can get Eric on TV then his son will come home (Netflix).    The Responder   Martin Freeman is back for a second season as the crisis-stricken first responder who works night shifts on the beat in Liverpool, trying to keep his head above water (TVNZ+).     Jim Henson Idea Man   A look at interviews of fans of Jim Henson, interspersed with footage from his works, including Wilkins and Wontkins Commercials that were previously lost (Disney+).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/1/20246 minutes, 45 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Bites and sights in Sicily

"Did you know that there’s less Italian blood in Sicilian veins than there is Phoenician, Greek, Arabic, Norman, Spanish, or French? It’s a stirring legacy to the 25 centuries of passing civilisations who have left their mark on the Mediterranean’s biggest island. The resulting mixture – exotic, spicy and highly inflammable - fuels Sicily’s distinct personality and self-governing pride. She’s a nation within a nation; the adjacent ball to Italy’s foot-shaped peninsula. I recently visited Sicily as part of a riveting Mediterranean cruise aboard the glittering new flagship vessel for Princess Cruises, Sun Princess." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/1/20249 minutes, 34 seconds
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Kevin Milne: A legendary fizzy drink manufacturer

After a throwaway line from Jack last week, Kevin Milne has been thinking about fizzy drinks.  Foxton Fizz is a local brand that’s been in business for over a century.  It’s now taking off all over the country, and Kevin has a few interesting tales about the company.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/1/20245 minutes, 30 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Freud's Last Session and Atlas

Freud’s Last Session - (in cinemas)  September 3, 1939. The world is on the brink. A monumental session with two of the greatest minds of the twentieth century over the future of mankind and the existence of God.    Atlas - (Netflix)  A brilliant data analyst with a deep distrust of AI finds it may be her only hope when a mission to capture a renegade robot goes awry.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/1/20247 minutes, 9 seconds
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Dr Dougal Sutherland: How using video games can help us unwind from work

Some new research out recently found that in contrast to what we often hear about gaming, playing video games may help to replenish our energy and boost recovery from work-related stress.  Playing games not only helped with psychological detachment (the ability to mentally switch off from work), but also promoted mastery experiences (i.e., the feeling that you’re learning new things and facing challenges).  An important factor for mastery experiences is whether employees have “obsessive” or “harmonious” passion. Those who reported higher harmonious passion (engaging in a task enjoyably without compulsion) reported a stronger relationship between time spent gaming and the experience of mastery.  Controversial idea maybe, but workplaces could consider getting gaming consoles to help people switch off for a while. I’m pretty sure some tech companies and film companies already do this.  Lucky for me there’s a pinball arcade two mins away from my office in Wellington!  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/1/20247 minutes, 20 seconds
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Full Show Podcast: 1 June 2024

On the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast for Saturday 1 June 2024, the creative force behind platinum-selling kiwi radio staple Avalanche City, Dave Baxter joined Jack to talk about his return to the spotlight.  Jack considered how much of a difference Trump's guilty verdict will make to the US election.  Settling in for the long weekend, Tara Ward previews her top Screentime picks including the new Netflix series starring Benedict Cumberbatch, Eric, and Catherine Raynes brings both a fiction and non-fiction recommendation for the ultimate reading indulgence.  Getting stuck into the outdoors, Ruud chats the art of nerd-ity and natural restoration straight from a 60-hectare park in the making, Waiwhakareke.  Get the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast every Saturday on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/1/20241 hour, 56 minutes, 22 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Community Gardening and Restoration

A couple of hundred years ago, our Planet and our Aotearoa looked quite different.  There were huge forests and wetlands, vast tussock lands and cool, high altitude alpine gardens. Birds and lizards, insects, spiders, fish and native frogs called it their home.  Slowly Homo sapiens started to turn things around; habitats disappeared, mining, urbanisation and an economy that only thinks of growth-at-all-cost.  Of course, some Parliamentarians –like Blind and deaf Freddy– are not always Nature-Literate enough to steer our bit of the planet in the right direction.  Communities and Environmental organisations are doing their thing to restore our Land. I am convinced that, together, they form the largest movement in the world and even Blind and Deaf Freddy never saw that coming.  This is the time to plant our whenua with locally-sourced native trees and shrubs. I’m talking about the Garden, but also about the Earth around us; the reserves; the walks-ways, you name it.  Waiwhakareke Natural heritage Park is a 60 hectare park in the making. On the NW side of Hamilton, near the zoo. It’s really a wetland area with Biodiversity of the Hamilton Basin. Waiwhakareke (horseshoe lake) brilliant!  Council, Hamilton Zoo, Waikato Uni all together!  The last few days (Thursday and Friday) schools have been descending on the park; kids of all ages have been planting and my job was to totally disrupt the whole event, by pulling out huge earthworms when the holes were dug.  And Flatworms slithering on the soil substrate.  We discovered beetles and maggots in decaying tree trunks – the biodiversity turned from “Ooooh” and “Yuck!!” to a competition and utter delight. We found toadstools and other fungi; lichens and mosses  We set up a fine-meshed “mist net” to see if we could catch some birds to band with tiny aluminium rings with even tinier numbers on it – that’s for the kids who wanted to work for DOC and become scientists.    Today we carry on, not just with kids, but with the Community of Hamilton, to plant and restore this magnificent Garden, which will look like the bush, all those decades ago.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/31/20244 minutes, 19 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Microsoft's new PC, why was ChatGPT's founder fired, and new updates to Instagram's Threads

Microsoft wants to take down the MacBook Air  The new Surface Co-Pilot Plus PCs, which go on sale on June 18, are the fastest and most performant laptops Microsoft has ever made. The MacBook Air has become the standard for the perfect mix of performance and portability, and Apple’s M3 has taken that to new heights. Microsoft says its new laptop beats that and spent a whole day walking reporters through the results.  Why did ChatGPT’s founder get fired? We’re hearing from a board member for the first time  Former board member Helen Toner says the board was often kept in the dark and stopped trusting Altman after a series of inaccurate information was presented. She says that when ChatGPT launched in November 2022, the board found out about it on Twitter. They didn’t get any advanced heads up for something that would put the company on the map overnight. She also claims he provided inaccurate information about the company’s safety processes, something she says he did at a previous company where the management company went to the board to ask for him to be fired because of deceptive and chaotic behaviour.  Instagram’s Threads is looking more like Twitter every day  It now has a new desktop experience that replicates the look of Tweetdeck. It allows you to pin multiple streams of threads in a horizontal scrolling, real-time updating, thread extravaganza. The ‘Tweetdeck’ experience on X is now behind a paywall for ‘Pro’ users.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/31/20244 minutes, 45 seconds
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Dave Baxter: Avalanche City on his five-year break and return to music with 'Keep that Love'

Avalanche City burst onto the scene in over a decade ago, their 2011 pop hit ‘Love Love Love’ charming Kiwis.  Behind the music is creative force Dave Baxter, a singer-songwriter, producer, and multi-instrumentalist.  After five years away from the spotlight, Baxter re-emerged with a brand-new single ‘Keep that Love’.   He stepped back from making music to raise his kids, having toured his last album through New Zealand and Europe with a six-month old before Covid hit and shut everything down.  “It’s taken me that long to kind of like, feel like I could come back to music, you know?” Baxter told Newstalk ZB’s Jack Tame.  Music is a creative endeavour, and Baxter felt he needed a bit of a break.  “I don’t want to like, force myself to do music, and I waited until I was like, hungry to come back and like, make something again before I started.”  While he was ready to start creating again, jumping back in after five years isn’t easy.  “I started thinking I want to do something, but I don't know how anymore,” he told Tame.  “I decided that I was just going to just take sort of baby steps back into things.” Baxter began writing little song ideas, ones he knew he wouldn’t use further, and uploading them on Instagram.  “I got such a good response from them,” Baxter said.  “And then I kept on going and then I was like, maybe I’ll just do one song, I’ll write one song and release it.”  That opened the floodgates, Baxter continuing to write more and more, focusing on finishing songs and building up that slow and steady momentum.  “It was almost like re-exercising an old muscle.”  Avalanche City’s previous album ‘My Babylon’ has a darker tone and energy, Baxter using it as a way to exercise his frustrations. In comparison, ‘Keep that Love’ has a much more upbeat and hopeful tone.  “I really wanted a song, the song I was writing at the time, I wanted it to be like, I don’t know, hopeful and uplifting,” Baxter said.  “It sort of felt like, with everything that’s going on, I wanted something for myself to be like, to make me feel better.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/31/202414 minutes, 41 seconds
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Nici Wickes: A pie fit for a king

It’s more of a tart than a pie but who cares, it’s a fabulous dish to whip up for the long weekend.  Makes one 24cm pie    Ingredients  1 sheet savoury short or flaky pastry  1 head broccoli, steamed whole for 2 minutes  ½ cup sour cream  100g goat cheese  ¼ tsp chilli flakes  2 tbsps store-bought pesto  100g mozzarella, grated  1 tsp lemon zest  2-3 tbsps olive oil  75g feta  Black pepper to season    Method  1. Heat oven to 180 C and grease a 24cm pie dish. 2. Roll out pastry to fit pie dish. Prick all over with a fork. 3. In a bowl combine sour cream, goat cheese, chilli flakes and pesto. Spread this over pastry base. Slice broccoli, including stalks, and arrange this over cheese spread. Sprinkle over mozzarella and lemon zest, drizzle over olive oil and bake for 30-45 minutes until pastry is golden brown. For the last 10 minutes of cooking, crumble feta over the top – it will melt and brown slightly. 4. Season with pepper and serve.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/31/20246 minutes, 41 seconds
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Jack Tame: America’s great divide grows a little bit deeper

There is no one on this planet who is yet to form an opinion of Donald Trump.  No one. No one who doesn’t know him. No one who thinks he could be okay as President for a second term, they just need to hear a bit more of his policies, or sure, he was alright the first-time round, but they really need to weigh him up before committing to a second hit.  Yesterday will have changed a grand total of zero opinions on the man. Those who find him odious will have had their views affirmed. Those who sincerely believe he’s the victim of some grand conspiracy will feel even more deeply the whole World is against the former President. America’s great divide grows a little bit deeper.  It was vintage Trump, of course. Vintage. Rejecting his guilty charges, he slagged off the judge and the witnesses. He immediately labelled the whole thing as a stitch-up, as rigged. Anyone else would have been locked up for contempt of court. You could almost hear the servers at his campaign headquarters groaning under the surge of donations as they poured in by the millions from supporters around the World.  I think one of the few defences the Democrats have against Donald Trump’s populism are the democratic institutions he has so methodically undermined. I do think the man deserves to answer criminal charges. January 6th, the efforts to ‘find more votes,’ and even the boxes of classified material in his spare shower; these are all much, much more serious than the Stormy Daniels payment.  This case was sordid and trivial, and by bringing it first, whether deliberately or otherwise, I think they undermined the gravity of what has been alleged in what are far more important cases.  So, what do Donald Trump’s felony convictions mean for the election? Very little, in my view. If voters supported him heading into this trial, having heard him in the Access Hollywood tape, having heard the sexual assault accusations, and having heard him reject the results of an election, they weren’t going to turn on him over some sneaky accounting, even if it did involve a porn star.  This will simply galvanise people. It’ll entrench the two sides. Those who dislike him will feel that little bit more justified. Those who think he’s a martyr will feel that little bit more justified. You watch – even though Trump is the first President convicted of a felony, Joe Biden won’t make much of a song and dance about the whole thing. Five months from the election, the net effects will be limited by the time people go to the polls. By the time people cast ballots there will be other stories, scandals, moments on the campaign that stick fresher in people’s minds.  There is no one in America who does not yet have a view of Donald Trump. The election will be decided by about four states, and whatever side can actually get its people to the polls.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/31/20244 minutes, 1 second
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Estelle Clifford: PARK RD - The Novel

The Novel is Kiwi band PARK RD’s debut novel, a punchy thirteen track work from a group of highschool friends from Tāmaki Makaurau.  In the bands own words “It feels like its own little world. The main theme of the album is definitely love."  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/25/20247 minutes, 43 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Real Americans and Think Twice

Real Americans by Rachel Khong  Real Americans begins on the precipice of Y2K in New York City, when twenty-two-year-old Lily Chen, an unpaid intern at a slick media company, meets Matthew. Matthew is everything Lily is not: easygoing and effortlessly attractive, a native East Coaster and, most notably, heir to a vast pharmaceutical empire. Lily couldn't be more different: flat-broke, raised in Tampa, the only child of scientists who fled Mao’s Cultural Revolution. Despite all this, Lily and Matthew fall in love.  In 2021, fifteen-year-old Nick Chen has never felt like he belonged on the isolated Washington island where he lives with his single mother, Lily. He can't shake the sense she's hiding something. When Nick sets out to find his biological father, the journey threatens to raise more questions than answers.  In immersive, moving prose, Rachel Khong weaves a profound tale of class and striving, race and visibility, and family and inheritance—a story of trust, forgiveness, and finally coming home.  Exuberant and explosive, Real Americans is a social novel par excellence that asks: Are we destined, or made, and if so, who gets to do the making? Can our genetic past be overcome?    Think Twice by Harlan Coben   Three years ago, sports agent Myron Bolitar gave a eulogy at the funeral of his client, renowned basketball coach Greg Downing. Myron and Greg had history: initially as deeply personal rivals, and later as unexpected business associates. Myron made peace and moved on – until now, when twofederal agents walked into his office, demanding to know where Greg Downing is.  According to the agents, Greg is still alive—and has been placed at the scene of a double homicide, making him their main suspect. Shocked, Myron needs answers.  Myron and Win, longtime friends and colleagues, set out to find the truth, but the more they discover about Greg, the more dangerous their world becomes. Secrets, lies, and a murderous conspiracy that stretches back into the past churn at the heart of Harlan Coben's blistering new novel.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/25/20244 minutes, 11 seconds
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Kate Hall: Clever consumption and strategic decluttering

Overconsumption is trendy, with the evolution of technology and online shopping making it easier and easier to buy things you don’t need.  Kate “Ethically Kate” Hall joined Jack Tame to discuss our relationship with stuff and dig into clever consumption and strategic decluttering.  She has a few recommendations for things people can try to avoid simply buying more things.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/25/20246 minutes, 44 seconds
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Tara Ward: Shardlake, Trying, The Blue Angels

Shardlake  During the dissolution of the monasteries in the Tudor era, Matthew Shardlake is sent by Thomas Cromwell to investigate the death of a commissioner in a remote town of Scarnsea (Disney+).    Trying  All Nikki and Jason want is a baby -- the one thing they can't have -- so they decide to adopt; with their dysfunctional friends, screwball families and chaotic lives, the adoption panel may not agree they're ready to be parents (Apple TV+).    The Blue Angels  This documentary follows the newest class of the US Navy and Marine Corps fight squadron as they go through their intense training and into a season of heart-stopping aerial artistry (Prime Video).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/25/20245 minutes, 46 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Taking a bite out of Rome

"One of the greatest ways to sample the heart and soul of a powerhouse city like Rome is to join a food tour with an in-the-know local." "I plumped for the Roman Food Tour which is a 3-4 hour walking tour in the upscale residential neighbourhood of Prati, where grand villas rub shoulders with the walls of the Vatican. Previously the area was open countryside and growing fields, but nowadays it’s one of Rome’s most prestigious neighbourhoods, home to hordes of Italian celebrities and glitterati. Needless to say, discerning tastes and culinary authenticity rules supreme in these parts, far away from the bog-standard tourist restaurants, ever-present in Rome." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/25/202410 minutes, 2 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: New Zealand's on the cusp of flu season

We’re on the cusp of the flu season. One of my concerns is that I often hear from patients phrases like ‘it’s just the flu!’. It’s almost viewed as something we don’t need to be concerned about; it’s just like a cold. However, it’s much more than that. It’s estimated it can be responsible for up to 500 deaths a year in New Zealand, based on University of Otago research. It’s more than just a cold!    What is influenza?  -It infects our nose, throat, and lungs.  -It occurs more in winter, brought in by infected people on planes from the Northern Hemisphere!  -Tends to spread with close contact indoors: coughing, sneezing, and talking to each other, or the virus lands on surfaces and we pick it up on our hands.  -Can kill up to 500 people a year.  -Especially at risk are the elderly, pregnant women, those with other illnesses like diabetes, lung and heart conditions, cancer, those under 5, and Māori and Pacific people over the age 55.     How does it differ from a cold?  -It is much more severe. It can make us very unwell and miserable, lasting up to 7 to 14 days.  -Coughs, sore throats, and sneezing can occur in both colds and flus, however a few things distinguish the flu from colds:  -The flu is often very rapid onset; colds tend to be gradual.  -In particular, unlike the common cold, the flu can cause very severe muscle aches, headaches, ‘chills’ (feeling hot and cold), and fever.  -Chest discomfort and coughs can also be very severe with the flu.  -Occasionally causes diarrheal and vomiting.     Can you treat it?  -Straight answer is no. Antibiotics don’t work. You're stuck with it, and we treat the symptoms.  -Using paracetamol and brufen for temperatures and muscle aches. Keeping fluids up.  -However, once you have it you have it!     How do we prevent it?  -Number one: if you have the flu don’t go to work, don’t spread it!  -Wash hands regularly, don’t share drinks, cover mouth and nose if coughing or sneezing.  -The most important single thing is to get vaccinated. It will prevent you catching the flu. Because the virus changes every year, you’ll need a fluvax once a year.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/25/20244 minutes, 41 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: The flaws in Google's AI search and OpenAI's voice assistant sounds quite like Scarlett Johansson

Google's big US launch adding AI to their search queries, isn't going so well.  Perhaps they pushed this a little too fast? Someone asked, "how many rocks should I eat a day?" and Google told them that UC Berkerley geologists suggested you eat a small rock a day as they contain minerals and vitamins important for digestive health but did also recognize that eating pebbles regularly may mean they get stuck in your intestines. Why does it suggest this? Because the website ‘The Onion’ had an article about it. Only problem is that The Onion is a satirical newspaper.  Yes, these responses are labelled as experimental, but maybe it's still too experimental? Another post suggested adding some non-toxic glue to a pizza recipe so the cheese doesn't fall off, and suggested Barack Obama was the first Muslim US president.  Did OpenAI steal Scarlett Johansson's voice?  She certainly thinks so. Johansson was the voice actor for the virtual assistant in the movie Her, where a man falls in love with her as if she was a real person. Friends and family heard the new Open AI voice assistant named "Sky" and thought it was her. It didn't help that Sam Altman, the OpenAI CEO, tweeted with a link to the product with the caption "Her".  Johansson says Altman contacted her back in September to ask if she'd be open to her voice being used. She said no. She says two days before the launch, her agent was contacted again asking her to license her voice. Altman says they cast the actors for their new voices before reaching out to Johansson but have removed the voice for now.  One lawyer cited a case where singer Bette Midler won against Ford, when they used an impersonator in their ad after Midler declined to be involved.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/25/20245 minutes, 49 seconds
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Full Show Podcast: 25 May 2024

On the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast for Saturday 25 May 2024, Boh Runga talks about taking part in a world-first Pride event combining dance and pop with the Auckland Philharmonia.  Jack's faith in the Crusaders remains strong despite a tough season and a rough week of headlines regarding coach Rob Penney's hot mic moment during a team press conference.  Francesca reviewed the delightful French remake of The Three Musketeers as part of the French Film Festival, and Ruud joined Jack in studio to offer compassion over last week's tree pruning disaster.  Plus, Jack got a mouthful of butterscotch pie from chef Nici Wickes.  Get the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast every Saturday on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/25/20241 hour, 57 minutes, 24 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Best practices for pruning trees

I never expected that my degree in Forestry from Wageningen University would come in handy at this late stage of my life.  Thank you, Jack!  Pruning plants in the garden is something that most gardeners can learn reasonably quickly. Yes, there will be some mistakes along the way, but hey! That’s how you gain experience.  Hedges are the next stage up in competence – they are often large plants (or really small trees). The key to pruning hedges is to do it relatively frequently – say 3 times per year or even more. Every time to take a bit off the hedge, you cut the terminal buds off (the buds at the end of a twig or branch). This in itself causes the lateral buds, a little bit lower down, to grow out and take over from the terminal buds.  In the case of hedge plants, this will make them a lot more dense, especially if a few lateral buds will grow out at different levels, taking over from that one terminal bud you just removed.  Pruning trees is based on similar botanical systems, but tackling that big stuff requires a course or three in arboriculture, safety and balance.  Some trees are pretty easy to tackle: your plane tree is a great example. Go and visit Franklin Road in Auckland and you’ll see how you can pollard those monsters every few years by cutting them back to the required height, and keep them there for decades to come; the same with the willows in the Netherlands.  Pohutukawa are different again; they can be trimmed in a few ways. I saw an elaborate pruning gig going on at Ngapipi Road (off Tamaki drive), whereby a substantial pohutukawa was pruned like a hedge (no doubt complaints about interrupted views from the locals on the opposite side of the road).  That might do the trick, but a pohutukawa is not naturally a dense hedge. Usually, it looks like a rather open tree with lots of space for birds to fly through.  This is the way you maintain that open tree configuration: cut a few branches out of the middle and pick them at various heights so it doesn’t look too bland and butchered.  Remember, every tree has its own “natural” look. It pays to trim it in such a way that it will maintain that look.  Here is a schematic picture of how I would suggest pruning such trees and keep them looking good.  1) It's always best to start pruning a tree early; the smaller the wound, the faster it heals, and there is less reactive growth.  2) When you want to reduce a tree, it's best to start when it's approx 1-2 meters taller than you want it.  3) If trees are important in your garden and in your life, sniff out an experienced arborist who loves the trees just as much as you do. Look for arborists that are members of the NZArb association - It's probably best to avoid having work done by someone who comes door-knocking.  4) Spend some time running through the way the job will be executed; you can make it “arty”.  5) Have a chat to the neighbours about what the plans are and why (privacy, biodiversity, bird food).  6) Take the day of the “operation” off work and be part of the team as much as possible.  Honestly: it’s the way to achieve the best possible outcome for your garden, the trees, the planet!  “Thinning” Photo / ISA (International Society of Arboriculture)  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/24/20244 minutes, 43 seconds
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Boh Runga: Kiwi musician and household name on her involvement in Pride Synthony, her jewellery business, and her book

Boh Runga burst onto the scene in 1999, the frontwoman of award-winning pop-rock Kiwi band Stellar.  She’s gone on to become something of a multi-hyphenate, with fingers in various pies.  The singer, songwriter, and musician has become a household name, expanding her enterprises to include designing, jewellery making, and even writing a book.  Runga is taking part in the world-first Pride Synthony event, where popular music genres and hits are married together with classical orchestral music.  The pride event is the first of its kind, and set to be an incredibly inclusive event not just for those in the queer community.  “It’s featuring a lot of artists over different genres of music coming together to celebrate the music that I guess Pride, if you can say, is famous for,” Runga told Newstalk ZB’s Jack Tame.  “Like disco, and like, great gay icons, I guess.”  “I’m chuffed to be a part of it.”  She told Tame that when the email came, she replied straight away, which she reveals is unusual for her.  “This was such a special one. I’m so pleased to be a part of it.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/24/202414 minutes, 31 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga and The Three Musketeers: D'Artagann

Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga   Snatched from the Green Place of Many Mothers, young Furiosa falls into the hands of a great biker horde led by the warlord Dementus. Sweeping through the Wasteland, they come across the Citadel, presided over by the Immortan Joe. As the two tyrants fight for dominance, Furiosa soon finds herself in a nonstop battle to make her way home.    The Three Musketeers: D'Artagann Young D'Artagnan arrives in Paris, trying to find the attackers who left him for dead. He instead finds a real war brewing and joins the king's three musketeers - Athos, Porthos and Aramis - as they work to ensure the future of France.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/24/20246 minutes, 47 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Stamps with a difference

The French Post Office La Poste has released a brand new type of stamp.  Their scratch and sniff baguette stamp celebrates the baking of six billion baguettes a year in France.  Kevin Milne saw this and wondered if the New Zealand Post Office could do such a thing, and if so, what scent?  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/24/20248 minutes, 3 seconds
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Jack Tame: The Crusaders are facing some long odds

$2.60.  Oof. I’m gonna’ hazard a guess that as a Crusaders fan, we haven’t faced such long odds against the Blues anytime this century. But honestly, given the Super Rugby season we’ve had so far, I felt a strange sense of surprise in checking the TAB website, when the number for tonight’s clash didn’t start with a four or a five.  Momentum is one of those funny things in sport. When everything’s going swell, you don’t think about Lady Luck, so much. When everything’s not, well, one thing leads to another and another, and your problems have a curious habit of snowballing out of control.    Crusaders Coach Rob Penney learnt that lesson the hard way this week. Of all the things he’s had to deal with this season that are out of his control, an exodus of experience and injuries up the wazoo, being caught on mic calling a reporter the C-word was definitely a fiasco of his own making.   Although I’m a ride-or-die Crusaders fan, I’m 100% on the reporter’s side on this one. I’ll always back someone asking hard questions. Professional sport is a high-pressure, results-driven business. You cannot have the adoration and the glory, the merchandise sales and the TV viewers, without expecting scrutiny in return. And in this case, the questions asked weren’t personal or out of scope. They were entirely fair and reasonable.   In the 90s, we had these bumper stickers in Christchurch. I don’t know why I’ve remembered them. They said ‘Of course we CANterbury.” The Can was written in red and the ‘terbury” was written in black. I wondered if an entrepreneurial soul watching Rob Penney’s press conference might reel off a few new products this week with a slight twist on the old classic.   Of course, the irony is that if Rob Penney was trying to dispel questions about the pressure he faces or trying to cast off speculation about his future, his reaction has had the exact opposite effect. That one sentence and that one word told media and fans everywhere more than any of his answers to the actual questions possibly could have.    That being said… I’d like to think we’re not so precious we’re going to hold a bad word against a man forever. If anything, Rob Penney has taken the heat off his players for a few days. The Crusaders have apologised. We can move on.   And you know what, it occurs to me that nothing would help that team move on more… nothing would help Rob Penny pull a metaphorical Andrew Mehrtens-at-Loftus-Versfeld middle finger to the World, nothing would be quite so satisfying as a triumph against the old foe tonight.   $2.60? By the Crusaders’ standards those are awfully long odds. But never discount a wounded underdog with its back against the wall.   We might have the equal-fewest wins of this year’s Super Rugby tournament. We might be facing off with the top-of-the-table team. Our coach might be slagging off my colleagues. But I for one, still believe. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/24/20244 minutes, 37 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Butterscotch Pie

There is never a time when a slice of butterscotch pie is not a good idea. This is simple and divine, and you will not regret making your own pastry for this pie – it’s super easy and failsafe.  Serves 4-6    Ingredients  CRUST  100g (about 1/2 cup) plain flour  1 tsp sugar  Pinch salt  75g cold butter, cut into chunks  40mls very cold water  FILLING  75g cold unsalted butter  225g brown sugar (about one cup loosely packed + 1 tablespoon)  ¼ tsp flaky sea salt, plus more to taste  100mls cream  1 large tablespoon crème fraiche  2 tsps. vanilla extract  3 large eggs  1 tbsp plain flour  Whipped cream to serve    Method  Grease a shallow, 18cm pie dish.  To make the pastry, blitz all the ingredients except the cold water in a food processor until it looks like breadcrumbs. Drizzle in enough of the cold water to form a damp crumb that, when pinched, clumps together. Turn out onto a floured bench and bring it together with a quick, light knead. Roll out and press pastry into the greased tin. Freeze for 15 minutes.  Prick frozen pastry all over with a fork. Press a lightly oiled piece of foil into the dish and up the sides, covering the pastry – this saves blind baking with weights. Press tightly to enclose the pastry. Bake for 20 minutes, then carefully remove foil.  While pastry is par-baking, make the filling. In a saucepan melt the butter over a medium heat. Add sugar and salt and stir to combine. Cook for 3 minutes, stirring. Remove from heat and whisk in cream, crème fraiche and vanilla. Careful as it will bubble up. Cool for 15 minutes. Whisk in the eggs, one at a time, then the flour, until smooth.  Once crust is parbaked, pour in the filling. Bake for 10 minutes at 200 C and then reduce heat to 160 C and bake for a further 25-30 minutes. It is cooked when there’s a slight jiggle in the centre when moved. Let cool completely and serve with softly whipped cream.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/24/20245 minutes, 31 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Billie Eilish - Hit Me Hard and Soft

Billie Eilish has released her third album.  ‘Hit Me Hard and Soft’ is an album intended to do as the title states, hitting listeners hard and soft both lyrically and sonically, Eilish states on her website.  You never quite know what the next track is going to be, Estelle Clifford told Jack Tame.  It’s an album you can’t listen to all at once, but there’s also not really any skip tracks, she said.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/18/20246 minutes, 13 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Ministry of Time and The Coast Road

The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley  In the near future, a civil servant is offered the salary of her dreams and is, shortly afterward, told what project she’ll be working on. A recently established government ministry is gathering “expats” from across history to establish whether time travel is feasible—for the body, but also for the fabric of space-time.  She is tasked with working as a “bridge”: living with, assisting, and monitoring the expat known as “1847” or Commander Graham Gore. As far as history is concerned, Commander Gore died on Sir John Franklin’s doomed 1845 expedition to the Arctic, so he’s a little disoriented to be living with an unmarried woman who regularly shows her calves, surrounded by outlandish concepts such as “washing machine,” “Spotify,” and “the collapse of the British Empire.” But he adjusts quickly; he is, after all, an explorer by trade. Soon, what the bridge initially thought would be, at best, a seriously uncomfortable housemate dynamic, evolves into something much more. Over the course of an unprecedented year, Gore and the bridge fall haphazardly, fervently in love, with consequences they never could have imagined.  Supported by a chaotic and charming cast of characters—including a 17th-century cinephile who can’t get enough of Tinder, a painfully shy World War I captain, and a former spy with an ever-changing series of cosmetic surgery alterations and a belligerent attitude to HR—the bridge will be forced to confront the past that shaped her choices, and the choices that will shape the future.    The Coast Road by Alan Murrin  Set in 1994, The Coast Road tells the story of two women—Izzy Keaveney, a housewife, and Colette Crowley, a poet. Colette has left her husband and sons for a married man in Dublin. When she returns to her home in County Donegal to try to pick up the pieces of her old life, her husband, Shaun, a successful businessman, denies her access to her children.  The only way she can see them is with the help of neighbour Izzy, acting as a go-between. Izzy also feels caught in a troubled marriage. The friendship that develops between them will ultimately lead to tragedy for one, and freedom for the other.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/18/20244 minutes, 36 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Greece's Second City - Thessaloniki

The beautifully historic city of Thessaloniki sits on the Thermaic Gulf of the Aegean Sea. It's a port city, and the transport hub of Greece. Mike Yardley visited Greece's second city, joining Jack Tame to run him through the beauty and the historic landmarks all around. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/18/20247 minutes, 31 seconds
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Tara Ward: Bridgerton, Big Mood, Deadwood

Bridgerton   A new season of the popular Shonda Rhimes costume drama set during the Regency era in England and following eight siblings of the rich and powerful Bridgerton family as they try to find love (Netflix).    Big Mood   Best friends Maggie and Eddie have lived in each other's pockets for 10 years, through thick, thin; but with the rest of their lives looming, and Maggie's bipolar disorder making an unwelcome return, Maggie and Eddie's relationship faces the future (ThreeNow).    Deadwood   All three seasons of the brilliant and award-winning Western show Deadwood have dropped on TVNZ+. Set in the late 1800s in Deadwood, the series follows the lives of those who must survive in the Wild West town full of corruption and crime (TVNZ+).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/18/20244 minutes, 40 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Arthur the King and Dream Scenario

Arthur the King   Desperate for one last chance to win, Michael Light convinces a sponsor to back him and a team of athletes for the Adventure Racing World Championship in the Dominican Republic. As the team gets pushed to the outer limits of endurance, a dog named Arthur comes along for the ride, redefining what victory, loyalty and friendship truly means.    Dream Scenario   A family man finds his life turned upside down when millions of strangers suddenly start seeing him in their dreams. However, when his nighttime appearances take a nightmarish turn, he's forced to navigate the consequences of his newfound stardom.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/18/20246 minutes, 15 seconds
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Full Show Podcast: 18 May 2024

On the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast for Saturday 18 May 2024, award-winning Australian comedian Rhys Nicholson has crossed the ditch to bring their charm and wittiness to the NZ International Comedy Festival.  This week, Jack experienced tragedy with a shocking tree pruning.   Tara Ward spills on Bridgerton's latest serving of high society seduction and scandal in Screentime, while clinical psychologist Dougal Sutherland dissects a brand-new report estimating that bullying in the workplace costs New Zealand employers around $1.5 billion a year.  Plus, Jack and Sav try to keep up with how many sportsmen have been arrested in the past 48 hours.  Get the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast every Saturday on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/18/20241 hour, 56 minutes, 16 seconds
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Dougal Sutherland: Umbrella Wellbeing Psychologist on the report into the costs of workplace bullying

Workplace bullying has come with a high price tag.  It’s estimated that it costs New Zealand around $1.5 billion a year, 50% of the costs arising from the impact on female workers.  Dougal Sutherland told Jack Tame that the report should really slap organisations and businesses around the head, as it demonstrates the sheer extent of the problem.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/18/20246 minutes, 39 seconds
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Rhys Nicholson: Australian Comedian discusses their career, Drag Race, and the NZ International Comedy Festival

An ARIA award winning comedian and judge on Ru Paul’s Drag Race Down Under, Rhys Nicholson is quite the entertainer.  They’ve brought their wittiness, charm, and laughs across the ditch this week as part of the NZ International Comedy Festival.  Last night saw them delight Auckland crowds, and this morning Nicholson joined Jack Tame to discuss their career, Drag Race, and the Comedy Festival.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/17/202415 minutes, 17 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Set your traps

Ever since moving to Christchurch I have been trapping pests: stoats and possums, rats and mice. Think Predator-Free New Zealand!  Mice are quite common here on the Port Hills; rather rural with heaps of herbage, seeds, and grasses, plus good seed crops in the gardens.  Mice are an important food source for rats and stoats. They also eat heaps of Native New Zealand Invertebrates (caterpillars, beetles, weevils).  In summer the mice have a great time, breeding like mice.  In autumn the wusses get a bit cold and look for shelter in people’s homes and ceilings as well garages.  I have about 10 mouse traps employed and they’re going off regularly. Big populations at the moment, be warned!  A few weeks ago, I attended a lecture by Pete McClelland, one of New Zealand’s unsung heroes when it comes to pest eradication. Pete has been managing huge projects on Subantarctic Islands and Tropical islands for many years.  Fascinating stuff and very much one of the inspirational tools to create a Predator-Free Aotearoa.  Of course, he was always dealing with the famous exotic pests that somehow gained entrance to an ecosystem that never had those pests before. From Donkeys to Deer and from Ferrets to Rodents, Feral Cats to Foxes and Rats to Mice.  Mice are often seen as the small (almost cute) creature that is probably the least impactful pest on the world list.  Many people would be surprised to learn that these ubiquitous mice (Mus musculus) are a complete pain on many isolated islands in Hawaii (Midway atoll), Gough Island (in the south Atlantic), Marion Island (in the Southern part of the Indian Ocean), to name just a few important Nature reserves with Albatrosses and other ornithological gems.  The mice on these islands have climbed up the ladder of the ecosystem so cleverly that they can attack huge albatrosses at night (while they are incubating their eggs). They do this by chewing open the tops of the birds’ heads, eating the brains and simply keep on extending the damage, which ultimately becomes fatal for those birds.  Should you wish to see the horrific pictures of these massacres, caused by, simply google the names of these islands and the words “mice”  Summing up:  Not uncommon on islands, those adaptable mice, causing ecological damage, and oh yes, New Zealand is an island too, remember!  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/17/20246 minutes, 1 second
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Bob Campbell: Neudorf 2023 Tiritiri Chardonnay, Nelson

Wine: Neudorf 2023 Tiritiri Chardonnay, Nelson $29  Why I chose it:  - Terrific Chardonnay, like a good French Chablis  - Neudorf is one of the country’s top chardonnay producers  - NZ is a top Chardonnay producer  - 2014 Neudorf Moutere Chardonnay – 100 pts  What does it taste like?  Taut, vibrant chardonnay with pronounced oyster shell/saline, hazelnut and subtle nutty oak flavours. Impressive purity and power with good cellaring potential although it can certainly be appreciated now.  Why it’s a bargain:  -Worth at least twice the price  Where can you buy it?  -Neudorf Wines, Upper Moutere, Nelson $29  Food match?  -Seafoods, especially oysters.  Will it keep?  -No rush, keeps five or six years?    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/17/20243 minutes, 36 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Changes to Google Search and the use of Reddit to train AI

Everything you know about Google Search is about to change  Google’s famous ten blue links will be replaced in the USA thanks to AI. Forget typing in keywords, Google now wants you to ask it questions and it will give you answers. No more links, but paragraphs of answers. "AI overviews" will appear when the technology determines it's the fastest way to answer a user.   This is rather terrifying for news organizations who have already sounded the alarm that their digital revenues will plummet if traffic is reduced. Anyone who has a business that relies on search traffic for inbound leads should be nervous too. Information from your blog posts and landing pages will be sucked up and the content will be used for the answer, but you may never see the lead. OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT has hired a Google Search veteran, and now the race for the "search engine 2.0" is on.   Reddit posts are being used to train ChatGPT  It's a great treasure trove of content, written and moderated by humans, going back almost two decades that OpenAI hopes will boost their AI efforts. Reddit's shares popped on the news.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/17/20243 minutes, 47 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Alternative public bathroom regulations

NZ First has introduced a new bill that would fine those who do not use the public bathroom of their designated sex.  Winston Peters announced the bill to ensure all non-domestic public locations have “clearly signed unisex and single-sex bathrooms.  Kevin Milne thinks the only positive of the bill is that it won't become law, but has some alternatives he thinks could be adopted instead.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/17/20247 minutes, 14 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Simple yet versatile orange cake

NZ oranges are some of the best in the world, I think! Gisborne and Kerikeri produce the finest citrus and this cake is one to really highlight them. It's a simple cake but is so versatile. It makes a decent tea cake or serve it warm with custard and cream for a dessert.  Serves 6-8    Ingredients  1 large orange, chopped roughly, skin and all  1 ½ cups sugar  200g butter  3 eggs  1 ½ cups plain flour  1 heaped tsp baking powder  Pinch of salt  Custard and whipped cream to serve    Method  Pre-heat oven to 170 C fanbake. Grease and line a 20cm round cake tin.  Blitz orange in a food processor.  In a large bowl beat together the sugar and butter until pale and creamy. Add the eggs, beating after each addition.  Mix in the dry ingredients and the blitzed orange and beat briefly. Don’t beat for too long or the flour will make for a tough cake.  Scrape into prepared tin.  Bake for 50 minutes then check with that a skewer inserted comes out clean – it may need 5 or 10 more minutes.  Serve with custard and whipped cream.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/17/20245 minutes, 4 seconds
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Jack Tame: Why did it have to be the trees?

It was my fault.   One of those things that came about because of whole lot of factors, but which can ultimately be boiled down to doing too much at once. Work, family, life. I was too stretched. Too stressed. And something gave.   But why did it have to be the trees?  This will sound really crazy, but I only realised afterwards that maybe the single-biggest reason I bought my home, was the trees.  We’ve got a section that slowly slopes down, so the backyard is at a lower level than the main living area. It means you would step in off the street, walk into the main living area on the top storey, and suddenly be eye-to-eye with a huge wall of green.  A jacaranda, a plane tree, a karaka and a pohutakawa, all of them probably decades old, and with enough thickness in the coverage that you couldn’t see beyond them.   I would step out of Auckland, the noise and the traffic, and into this perfect green sanctuary. A cocoon. Tui, blackbirds, piwaka, they loved it.   The problem with a perfect green canopy with no light passing through is my neighbour noticed no light was passing through. She asked if we could prune the trees. Just to let some morning light through. They must have been almost twenty metres high.   I wanted to do the neighbourly thing. A lovely guy came around and surveyed the canopy.   “We’ll do it on Thursday.” he said.  I think it was a communication thing, which is another reason why I take the blame. If anyone should be able to communicate, it’s the professional communicator, right? But my wife and I were at work all day, and by the time we got home, it was done.   The trees weren’t just pruned, they were pruned. Metres taken out of them, right across the top. A straight, brutal cut. Like a bowl cut, but for trees. With all of thickest green canopy, the leaves that provided such a dense, rich canopy, the favourite branches for tui and the piwakawaka, gone.   I walked into my lounge, where previously I’d stare out at a wall of green. I stared out at a wall of houses. I looked at the stumps of the branches, and I felt tears prick in my eyes.   My wife didn’t hold back. She walked in the front door, looked at the trees and tears streamed down her face. The neighbour was delighted at how much light was now passing through.    Two nights have passed. Both nights I’ve had broken sleep, lying there thinking about the trees. My wife isn’t much better. She said she felt we damaged their wairua.   I can rationalise it. The trees aren’t dead. And I do know they’ll grow back. It may even be that their prune encourages rich, fulsome, rapid new growth. And when there are more leaves and coverage instead of stumpy branches, it’ll be a whole lot less brutal. But no amount of fertiliser or hugs can really speed up the process. We’re looking at years before they are back to where they were.   And honestly, I feel terrible about it. I feel stupid. I feel guilty, and I feel grief.   Yeah. I grieve for my trees.   I know that in the future I’ll laugh about it, but right now it is a very painful lesson. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/17/20244 minutes, 47 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Jordan Rakei - The Loop

Yesterday saw the release of Jordan Rakei’s fifth studio album The Loop, an album he’s wanted to make since he was 19.  He took his 35 acoustic demos and refined them down to 13 tracks, recorded over two “action-packed” weeks with an orchestra, choir, and band.   Rakei says it’s his most ambitious project to date, inspired by becoming a father.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/11/20246 minutes, 24 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Five Bad Deeds and You Are Here

Five Bad Deeds by Caz Frear   Teacher, mother, wife, and all-around good citizen Ellen is juggling nonstop commitments, from raising a teen and two toddlers to job-hunting to finally renovating her dream home, the Meadowhouse. Amidst the chaos, an ominous note arrives in the mail, People have to learn there are consequences, Ellen. And I’m going to teach you that lesson. Right under your nose. Why would someone send her this? Ellen has no clue. She’s no angel—a white lie here, an occasional sharp tongue there—but nothing to incur the wrath of an anonymous enemy. She’d never intentionally hurt anyone. But intention doesn’t matter to someone. Someone blames this supposed “good person” for all the bad they’ve experienced. And maybe they have reason to? Because few of us get through life without leaving a black mark on someone else’s. Could the five bad deeds that come to haunt Ellen explain why things have gone so horribly wrong? As she races to discover who’s set on destroying her reputation and her future, Ellen continues to receive increasingly threatening messages... each one hitting closer to everything she cherishes.    You Are Here by David Nicholls  Sometimes you need to get lost to find your way  Marnie is stuck.  Stuck working alone in her London flat, stuck battling the long afternoons and a life that often feels like it's passing her by.  Michael is coming undone.  Reeling from his wife's departure, increasingly reclusive, taking himself on long, solitary walks across the moors and fells.  When a persistent mutual friend and some very English weather conspire to bring them together, Marnie and Michael suddenly find themselves alone on the most epic of walks and on the precipice of a new friendship.  But can they survive the journey?  A new love story by beloved bestseller David Nicholls, You Are Here is a novel of first encounters, second chances and finding the way home.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/11/20244 minutes, 18 seconds
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Kate Hall: Bag essentials for reducing waste while out and about

Staying sustainable when out and about can be something of a challenge, but the key lies in what you bring with you on the go.   Kate ‘Ethically Kate’ Hall has mastered the art of reducing waste while on the go, and joined Jack Tame to run through her essentials.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/11/202411 minutes
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Andrew Nichol: Opes Property Managing Partner on the changes to mortgage rules

Mortgage rules are changing, but what does this mean? Will it be easier to get a mortgage? Harder?  Andrew Nicol of Opes Property joined Jack Tame to discuss the changes that come with the updates to the Credits Contracts and Consumer Finance Act (CCCFA).  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/11/20244 minutes, 28 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Garlic Experiments - early planting

Allium Rust on garlic has become quite an issue of the past 10 years, not just in Canterbury, where I live, but in many places of New Zealand. Many people complain that this fungal disease strikes in late winter/early spring and the only thing that stops it from hammering the garlic plants is by regular spraying with Copper or copper/sulphur fungicides (Organics!). And regular might be as frequent as every fortnight.  Rust is transmitted by air movement – the spores float with the wind and can travel from great distances. If you are in a densely populated area with many gardeners that grow onions, shallots, leeks, and other Allium species, the spores will be all over the place.  Traditionally garlic used to be planted on the shortest day (third week of June) and harvested around the longest day (Just before Christmas), but I’ve done some trials now for the last half a dozen years or so to bring those dates forward by at least a month and a half.  With rather little success, to be frank – I still need to spray regularly and when I am on the road and miss one of the sprays, the leaves will turn that yucky yellow-orange with the rust.  This year I decided to go inside my tunnelhouse; A week ago (on the 4th of May) I planted a few narrow beds of garlic in-between the lingering Tomato plants  The tomatoes are still going for at least another month which gives the garlic enough time to develop leaves and do some photosynthesis.  The beds go north-south and will be in full sun during the winter months, especially when the tomatoes are pulled out near the shortest day. At the moment, while the soil is still relatively warm, the garlic will have enough heat to sprout the leaves in record tempo.  Just when the development of the bulbs starts to take place the spores start flying outside, but with a bit of luck those spores will find it hard to gain access to my tunnelhouse.  Fingers crossed!    Varieties available from farmers markets and Garden Shops:  Printanor is the common old garlic variety you buy at “New World”. Often it is imported from China and treated to stop it sprouting That means no good for planting!!  Buy some planting cloves that are either organic or simply not treated.  At farmers market you can sometimes purchase interesting varieties:  - Californian Red Turban – can grow into huge bulbs (15 cm diameter bulbs)  - Macedonian – strong flavour – and somewhat oily  - West Coast Miners – rather good, large cloves too  - Hard-neck garlic; gets little flowers/bulblets up the stem – edible as soft green salad component, in mid-spring  - Elephant garlic is actually a leek, with a swollen stem – not a garlic – very mild flavour  Shallots can also be planted now!  Well-drained soil, shallow planting (tip just above the ground) – 15 cm spacing. Cover with ground sheep dags (KINPACK) or fine, rich compost.  Keep moist but not overly moist, because that encourages rotting.  Harvest when the foliage dies down (in my case Early to Mid November) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/11/20244 minutes, 5 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Forest-bathing on the West Coast

"Amid the treasury of winning attractions across the West Coast, sampling its spoil of historic pubs, steeped in character and heritage is an irrepressible draw. They are keepers of the past and bridges to the present, proudly speaking to our pioneering history, of heady gold and coal rushes, and trail-blazing development. A starring specimen is Formerly The Blackball Hilton, located at the foot of the Paparoa ranges, just 29km from Greymouth." "From Blackball, it’s a short drive to one of the most powerful heritage sites on the West, the Brunner Mine Memorial Site. In a region wrenched by many a mining disaster, this magnificently preserved site is a memorial to New Zealand’s worst mining disaster of all. Strung along the slopes of a deep gorge carved out by the Grey River, Thomas Brunner not only named the river, but the mine bears the name of this intrepid overland explorer, who discovered the vast black coal seam in 1847. Straddling both sides of the river, and crowned with a dramatic suspension bridge, every twist of the pathways around the 2km-long loop walk leads you to vestiges of the old mine." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/11/20247 minutes, 31 seconds
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Tara Ward: Tattooist of Auschwitz, Dark Matter, Bodkin

Tattooist of Auschwitz  Six-part series based on the international bestselling novel by Heather Morris, inspired by the real-life story of Holocaust prisoners Lali and Gita Sokolov (Neon).    Dark Matter  A man is abducted into an alternate version of his life. Amid the mind-bending landscape of lives he could've lived, he embarks on a harrowing journey to get back to his true family and save them from a most terrifying foe: himself (Apple TV+).    Bodkin  A group of podcasters set out to investigate the mysterious disappearance of three strangers in an idyllic Irish town. But when they start to pull the strings, they find a story much bigger and stranger than they could have imagined (Netflix).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/11/20244 minutes, 12 seconds
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Full Show Podcast: 11 May 2024

On the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast for Saturday 11 May 2024, Jack spoke to kiwi filmmaker James Napier Robertson about his fascination for dysfunctional characters in real life stories and new film Joika.  Research has revealed that manual cars will essentially be extinct in the next five years, and Jack considered how engaging automatic cars are to drive.  Chef Nici Wickes brought us a winter warmer in the form of a pumpkin & kūmara soup with pesto, and music reviewer Estelle Clifford continues to celebrate NZ Music Month following the release of Jordan Rakei's new album The Loop.  Plus, Jack told Francesca Rudkin about his embarrassment following a run-in with actress Anne Hathaway.  Get the Saturday Morning with Jack Tame Full Show Podcast every Saturday on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/11/20241 hour, 56 minutes, 55 seconds
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James Napier Robertson: Kiwi filmmaker on the creation of his new film 'Joika'

A fascination for dysfunctional, outsider characters in real life stories has led James Napier Robertson across the stage, small screen, and big screen.  The filmmaker has found huge success telling kiwi stories like The Dark Horse starring Cliff Curtis, and 2020's Dame Whina Cooper biopic.  Napier Robetson is going global with a story about one of the only American women ever to take part in the Russian ballet, Joy Womack, in his new film Joika.  He told Jack Tame that he’s been really struck by Joy’s story, even back when he saw it just by chance.  The filmmaker joined Tame to discuss the journey of making the film.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/10/202417 minutes, 6 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: The Idea of You and Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes

The Idea of You   A 40-year-old single mum begins an unexpected romance with a 24-year-old boy band singer.    Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes   Many years after the reign of Caesar, a young ape goes on a journey that will lead him to question everything he's been taught about the past and make choices that will define a future for apes and humans alike.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/10/20248 minutes, 30 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Apple's iPad launch went as expected but their new ad missed the mark

Apple's iPad launch went as expected  They announced a new M4 chip just months after the M3, and put it in their iPad Pros. These chips are blazing fast. Oddly, the iPad Pro is thinner and lighter than the iPad Air - which makes no sense. The lineup is getting super complicated, with each iPad flavor now almost having its own accessories.  They are leaning into the Pro part of the iPad though. Final Cut can now bring in external projects and use media on external drives. The new "Final Cut Camera" gives pro-level control on both iPhone and iPad and allows the output to be streamed back to an iPad where four cameras can be monitored and recorded. The iPad Pro is becoming a TV control room in a device.  The new ad though, missed the mark  It showed creative objects —instruments, paint, a record player— being crushed into an iPad. Yes, it can do it all, but at what cost? Actor Hugh Grant called it a “destruction of human experience". It's starting to show the fine line marketers are going to have to walk with AI too - how do you show that something is helpful, but not going to take away from the 'human experience'. Do we really want fully synthesized music? Digital paint brushes? A robot to become our friend? Maybe all this AI will send us back to non-internet connected cameras, notebooks, and picnics in parks with friends?    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/10/20245 minutes, 26 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Pumpkin and kūmara soup with pesto

“Kāore te kūmara e kōrero mō tona ake reka” speaks to humbleness. The kūmara does not speak of its own sweetness. Kūmara softens and sweetens a regular pumpkin soup beautifully. These bowls of golden goodness are a true celebration of our national vegetable.   Serves 6-8     Ingredients  1 large onion, diced  3 cloves garlic, diced   2 tablespoons olive oil   2 teaspoons turmeric  1 teaspoon fresh grated ginger    1 small butternut pumpkin, peeled and chopped roughly   500g yellow or orange kūmara, peeled and chopped roughly   4 cups vegetable stock or water  1 cup coconut milk   Salt and pepper to season   6-8 teaspoons sour cream to serve   6-8 teaspoons pesto to serve   Bread to serve     Method  In a large saucepan, gently fry the onion and garlic in olive oil for 5 minutes. Add turmeric, ginger, pumpkin, kūmara and stock. Bring to a boil then simmer for 30 minutes or until vegetables are soft.   Use an immersion blender or food processor to blend to smooth, return to the saucepan and taste for seasoning. Add salt and pepper to taste. Pour in coconut milk and bring to the heat then serve in bowls with a dollop of sour cream and pesto on each. Serve with bread.     Pesto  Ingredients  A few big handfuls fresh watercress, rocket or basil  ¼ cup roasted almonds, cashews or walnuts  Juice from one lemon   ¼ teaspoon sea salt    ¼- ½ cup olive oil     Method  Use a food processor to blend together whatever greens and nuts you’re using,, lemon juice and salt. Drizzle in the olive oil until you have a chunky sauce consistency. Taste and adjust seasoning.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/10/20245 minutes, 3 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Technology and watching marathons

Quite the achievement has been made in Kevin Milne’s family.  The first in their family, his 34-year-old son Jake has run a marathon.  Unlike in the past where supporters would have to make the trek out to the course, these days family from around the world was able to watch the race live from the comfort of their own homes.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/10/20247 minutes, 6 seconds
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Jack Tame: Driving a manual is the real thing

Five years. That’s it.   According to research this week, manual cars will be essentially extinct within five years.   It shouldn’t really come as a great surprise, I suppose. EVs don’t require a manual gearbox, and already this decade there has been a pronounced decline in the production of new manual cars.   My first car was a manual. So was my second. The last thing I did before I moved overseas in my twenties was drive with my brother from Auckland to Christchurch, the long way. We shifted up and down, through the gears, all the way around the East Cape. Everyone I knew back then learnt to drive in a manual, unaware of the redundancy that lay around the corner.   My dad had strong views on the subject. Automatic transmission seemed kind of posh. My friends, whose parents had cooler, newer cars than our family van (which wasn’t exactly hard) all had automatics. The first time I drove one, I left it in Drive when I switched it off, and freaked out when I couldn’t re-start it. Dad always said that a manual gave you more control.  He was right, of course. If you learnt to drive a manual, you were connected to your vehicle and to the road in a way that was never replicated in an automatic. Subconsciously you’d read inclines, you’d assess the breadth and tightness of corners. Is that a corner for second or will I glide around in third? You listened to the car. Most obviously, you used both hands and both feet.   I remember how satisfying it was to master a hill start in a manual car. All-four limb coordination. The way you ease the handbrake off, and perfectly balance the clutch and the gas so you don’t move an inch, and balance perfectly against the incline. How good?!  Driving’s changed. These days most modern cars are fancy computers on wheels. They beep at you with lane assists and prompts. And the vast majority of cars which people sit their licenses in are automatic.   I haven’t owned a manual in 12 years. But even today, when I drive over the mighty Takaka Hill, I always use the tiptronic gears. Better control. Less work for the brakes. Connection to the road.   There’s no changing the course of progress on this one. Nor should there be. Whatever benefits there are to getting the World off fossil fuels surely outweigh the downsides.   But it doesn’t mean I won’t miss the steady glide up and down through the gears.   Driving an auto isn’t really driving. It’s commuting.   Driving a manual... that’s the real thing. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/10/20244 minutes, 8 seconds
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Mike Yardley: A dip with Doha

With non-stop flights from Auckland, Doha is becoming an increasingly popular through-route for travellers on their way to Europe.  Mike Yardley dipped into the city, describing it as eclectic and exotic, with a real melting pot of cultures.  “It does intermingle well,” he told Jack Tame.  “You’ve got the fusion of cutting-edge modernity and timeless tradition all in one.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/4/20248 minutes, 37 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Cryptic Clue and The Everything War

The Cryptic Clue by Amanda Hampson   In ZigZag Lane, in the heart of Sydney’s rag-trade district, tea ladies Hazel, Betty and Irene find themselves in hot water. Having already solved a murder, kidnapping and arson case, and outwitting an arch criminal, they have proved themselves a useful resource and earned the respect of a local police officer. Now he needs their help to solve a plot that threatens security.  As if that’s not enough, Irene gets a coded message directing her to the spoils of a bank robbery, which sends the tea ladies on a treasure hunt with an unexpected outcome.  There’s also trouble brewing within the walls of Empire Fashionwear, where an interloper threatens not just Hazel’s job but the very role of tea lady. It’s up to Hazel to convince her friends to abandon their trolleys and take action to save their livelihoods – before it’s too late.    The Everything War by Dana Mattioli  From veteran Amazon reporter for The Wall Street Journal, The Everything War is the first untold, devastating exposé of Amazon's endless strategic greed, from destroying Main Street to remaking corporate power, in pursuit of total domination, by any means necessary.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/4/20246 minutes, 19 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Out of my Head - Delaney Davidson

A distinctive figure in the New Zealand musical landscape, Delaney Davidson has dropped yet another album.  Out of My Head has a more theatrical feel, co-producer Mark Perkins’ synth atmospheres creating a cinematic soundscape for the twelve-track album.  The album is filled with songs written over the global pandemic lockdown period, with notable guest appearances from Marlon Williams and Reb Fountain.  Despite the circumstances in which they were written, music reviewer Estelle Clifford told Jack Tame that there’s a kind of freedom and joy to a lot of the tunes.  “I love it,” she said, giving the album a 10/10.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/4/20245 minutes, 51 seconds
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Thomas Powers: Kiwi Musician on the upcoming release of his solo debut 'A Tyrant Crying in Private'

Co-founder of the hugely successful ‘The Naked and Famous’, Thomas Powers is stepping out from behind the curtain.  The musician is positioning himself centre stage with the upcoming release of his debut album, ‘A Tyrant Crying in Private’.  He told Newstalk ZB’s Jack Tame that the transition has been both easy and difficult.  “In one respect, it’s easier, like I don’t, it’s easier for me to get things done and I’m very used to the process of completing things,” he said.  “But actually in the promotion of the music and putting it out there into the world, I’m totally unconfident because times have changed.”   The music market is quite youth-oriented Powers said, and it feels disingenuous to pretend to be young online.  “That’s been a real hurdle.”  For most artists moving from a group act to being judged on their individual merits is daunting, but Powers has no such issue.  “I think I just know myself now and I don't feel insecure about who I am as a person,” he told Tame.  “So making art, that’s easy. I can do that. I can do that all day long.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/4/202414 minutes, 27 seconds
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Tara Ward: The Night Caller, A Man in Full, High Country

The Night Caller   A lonely taxi driver haunted by his past reaches out to a late-night talkback radio host, forming an on-air friendship which escalates into a dangerous obsession (TVNZ+).    A Man in Full   When real estate mogul Charlie Croker faces bankruptcy, political and business interests collide, as he defends his empire from those attempting to capitalize on his fall from grace (Netflix).    High Country   Detective Andie Whitford gets transferred to the High Country, where she is tasked with investigating the mysterious disappearances of five locals lost in the Victorian wilderness (ThreeNow).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/4/20245 minutes, 38 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Golda and Back to Black

Golda   Faced with the potential of Israel's complete destruction, Prime Minister Golda Meir must navigate overwhelming odds, a sceptical cabinet and a complex relationship with U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger as millions of lives hang in the balance during the tense 19 days of the Yom Kippur War in 1973.  Back to Black   Singer Amy Winehouse's tumultuous relationship with Blake Fielder-Civil inspires her to write and record the groundbreaking album "Back to Black."    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/4/20248 minutes, 25 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Success in the garden

Kevin Milne has found some success in his garden.  The birdbath, a Christmas gift for his wife, has been attracting some clientele after five months free of visitors. LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/4/20247 minutes
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Dougal Sutherland: Workplace bullying

There’s been reports that this has increased since COVID, particularly online.  People usually think there is a particular “personality type” that engages in bullying and therefore in order to stop it we just have to root out those particular people. Whilst this is true to some extent (e.g., people who are more narcissistic and want to advance their career tend to engage in bullying behaviour more), what research shows is that bullying behaviour is more likely to occur in workplaces where there are high levels of stress.  Research found that when people had high workloads there was more bullying at work, and that this rate was increased even further when people were feeling insecure about their jobs. So, when people are feeling stressed and under pressure they behave in negative ways towards others – “hurt people hurt people”.  Particularly relevant at the moment when we have high workloads and people feeling very insecure about their jobs due to current economic environment and also because Pink Shirt Day coming up on 17 May.  What can done:  - Organisations need to be alert to the increased risk at the moment.  - Leaders need to create an environment where people feel comfortable speaking up when something they don’t like is happening (this is called psychological safety).  - Pay attention to the small seeds that might start to take root – not technically bullying but being rude or uncivil towards others —Prof Geoff Plimmer from Victoria Uni calls this “workplace incivility”— like a virus that can spread through an organisation. - The Mental Health Foundation and Umbrella Wellbeing are running a free webinar about online bullying for Pink Shirt Day    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/4/20247 minutes, 51 seconds
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Bryan Betty: Hypothyroidism

What is the thyroid and what does it do?  -A small butterfly shaped gland at the front of your neck.  -Produces ‘thyroid hormone’ which is very important in regulating the body.  -Does a range of things from: keeping us warm, to regulating heart, brain, muscles, bowels.     What happens when your thyroid slows down and becomes underactive?  -We start to get a range of symptoms affecting all parts of the body, that are often very subtle and difficult to pick up.  -In particular weight gain and tiredness and feeling cold.  -Other symptoms may be constipation, dry skin, hair loss, muscle pain, depression, cholesterol issues.     Who gets it and what are the causes?  -More common in women over 50.  -Also more common those with issues such as Type 1 Diabetes and rheumatoid arthritis.  -However, anyone can develop an underactive thyroid including babies (very rare) and children.  -Most commonly caused by immune disorder called ‘Hashimoto’s Disease’ where body turns off the thyroid and starts to shut the thyroid down.  -Other causes include some medication, previous thyroid treatment, iodine deficiency,     How do you diagnose and treat?  -Your GP will do a simple blood test on how your thyroid is working.  -Sometimes if the changes are very small so we just monitor.  -However, if it’s causing symptoms it’s treated with thyroid medication to replace the missing thyroid.  -Often need to take medication for life with periodic blood tests and medication may need dose changes.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/4/20245 minutes, 9 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: DIY Wasp Control

In NZ we have five wasp species that can cause problems: three paper wasp species, two Vespula species.   First of all, the paper wasps. They are now flying around your garden, where the males settle themselves on easy-to-spot places (“lek sites”) to attract females.   Yes, autumn time is what it’s all about: fertilise the females, who will hibernate and start new colonies in spring.  Male paper wasps vying for the attention of females.   A blast with some fly spray will sort them out quickly and it will also reduce the number of fertilised wasps that over-winter.   Some paper wasp nests are still in operation as the last-born wasps emerge. The best way to get rid of these nests is by going out on cool evenings in the dark. No muckin’ around, 4 or 5 seconds worth of fly spray is more than enough. If you use a residual insecticide you’ll find that the wasps will not survive a return to their autumnal nest.  German Wasps and common wasps (Genus Vespula) nest in cavities (hollow trees, wall cavities and hollow trunks of trees, in your ceiling or roof space, etc). Both these two species sting – no sense of humour!  These wasps are often found eating honeydew in native forests, especially in the South Island. They will also hunt for insects (protein) in your garden (Monarch butterfly caterpillars and other sizeable insects) to feed their young ones in the nest.  This is what these Vespula nests look like: layered with many cells in which the larvae (juveniles) develop and get fed by the workers… a little bit like bees!  The nests are constructed from masticated wood fibres, collected during spring and summer; nice and warm, waterproof, and quite environmentally friendly!  The Vespula species are tricky to control, kill, and remove. It is best left to professional pest controllers, but if you want to have a go yourself here are some tips:  - Work out where the entrance of the nest is – sometimes there are a few entrances.  - Get yourself some wasp powder (such as Kiwicare no wasps).  - Wait till well into the evening (as temperatures go down in autumn).  - Head-torch on, wasp powder ready. Approach the nest confidently and squirt the powder into the opening – no muckin’ around!  - Retreat smartly and turn the torch off as soon as you are able when retreating (the wasps cleverly assume that the person with the torch is an invader!).  - You’ll hear the buzzing noise increase soon after your attack – because the wasps’ wingbeats stir up the powder and they can’t control that dust-like insect killer!  - Next morning have a careful look to see if there’s anyone still alive. If so, come back again the next cool night  Oh – yes: DO NOT wear togs!  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/3/20244 minutes, 8 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: What are we expecting from Apple's 'Let Loose' event?

It’s expected to be focused on the iPad which hasn't had a refresh in a while.  Predictions: - OLED screens, the tech that the ultra-high quality iPhone screen has had for five years now. - A larger iPad Air - 12.9" version, like the Pro range. - A new magic keyboard design, which is metal and feels more laptop like. - New ways to interact with the Pencil, possibly adding new squeezing features and haptic feedback.   To me, it further complicates the iPad vs MacbookAir purchase decision, unless something changes at this event. An iPad isn't quite a laptop, but with the M2 chip also expecting to be announced, maybe the convergence between iPadOS and MacOS is closer? One noticeable change: the time slot. The 'Scary Fast' event was in the early evening for NYC, this one is at 10am, 7am PT, which means Asia will be able to see it before they go to bed. Is it partly because Apple needs to boost sales in China? Maybe! Huawai is seeing massive growth in the premium phone market in China. iPad sales are also not up to Wall Street expectations. Unlike phones which get hammered every day, iPads tend to have a longer life and so need a good sales pitch to get folks to upgrade. Also, there is still no in-person crowd. Seems Apple is sticking with its pre-recorded format.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/3/20245 minutes, 53 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Twice-baked cheese souffle

Who can resist a gooey, melting, light-as-a-feather soufflé? Once you’ve mastered these little beauties, you’ll be impressing friends with them in no time.  Makes 6 x 150ml ramekins    Ingredients:  For 1st baking:  Butter & plain flour for coating ramekins  50g butter  2 heaped tbsp plain flour  300mls milk  50g grated aged cheddar or Gouda  1 tsp fresh thyme (or ½ tsp dried)  3 eggs, separated  ¼ tsp salt, pinch of black pepper    For 2nd baking:  100mls cream, slightly whipped (or sour cream)  60g grated cheese, perhaps a pecorino.    Method: 1. Preheat oven to 160 C. Rub 6 ramekins, or other oven proof dishes or even a Texas muffin tin, with butter then dust lightly with flour. 2. In a saucepan melt the butter over a medium heat. Add the flour and stir continuously while it cooks and thickens to a paste – about 1-2 minutes. 3. Take off the heat, whisk in the milk, a little at a time until it has all been added, then return to the heat and cook it, stirring with a wooden spoon, until you have a smooth and thick white sauce – about 3-4 minutes. Add cheese and stir until it has melted. Stir in the thyme and allow to cool slightly. Lightly whisk in the egg yolks, one at a time, then add in the seasoning. Cool to warm. 4. Whisk the egg whites until soft peaks form. Fold ¼ egg white mixture into the cheese sauce to ‘loosen’ it, then fold in the remaining egg white. Spoon the filling into the moulds to 2/3 full. 5. Place ramekins in an oven dish to cook in a water bath, pouring enough boiling water into the dish (around the moulds) to come half way up the sides of the moulds. 6. Bake 20-25 minutes until they are risen, ‘just set’ and still a little wobbly. Remove ramekins from the water bath and leave to cool for 10 minutes (don’t worry that they sink a little) then run a knife about each and invert onto a tray or into an oven proof casserole dish. They can remain like this in the fridge for 2-3 days. 7. About 15 minutes before you are ready to serve, heat oven to 180 C fan bake. Divide the cream between each soufflé, pouring over the top, and sprinkle with extra cheese. Bake for 15 minutes or until risen again and golden. Serve immediately.   LISTEN ABOVE   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/3/20246 minutes, 6 seconds
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Jack Tame: A bit of DIY

I dunno what happened. I used to crave nightclubs. Dancefloors. Parties and drinks and the euphoria of thumping music, sweaty bodies, raised voices, and a big night out. But at some point in the last couple of years, I went through that cliched transition that so many of us experience in life.  My idea of a good time now? A few hours to myself and a bit of DIY. Headphones in. Podcasts on. Ryobi batteries charged and caulking gun at the ready. Life knows no greater bliss.   When you own an old house there’s always a project. Autumn’s project was among the more complex I’ve tackled in the 18 months I’ve called my home my home: I have two sets of twin split awning windows in my kitchen, right next to my sink. But when I first bought the place and moved in, I realised you couldn’t open them.  Why? For some reason... a reason that still isn’t entirely clear, someone had nailed the windows shut. What’s more, once I pried them open, I could see the hinges had been painted over, and were clogged with decades-old dried paint.  Week one I opened the windows, removed the nails, oiled the hinges and stripped the paint. It was an oddly splendid morning. Me, my podcasts, some noxious chemicals and a paintscraper. How could something so dull be so nourishing?  I couldn’t wait for Week Two. I sanded the timber, dried the rot, caulked the gaps, taped the interior windows, scraped and oiled the hinges. When I found that one rusty hinge had snapped and the window sagged out of place, I bought an extra-durable titanium drill bit to drill through the metal and carefully refixed the hinge to the inside of the frame. Another satisfying day’s work.   Week Three I primed them, re-oiled the hinges, lined the windows with draft-stoppers, and played Russian Roulette with rainclouds for the first coat of paint. I opened them ajar on matching angles, like sails in the wind, partially to dry the paint and partially to show them off to my wife when she got home.   “Oh, wow... great job!”   I could tell she was only acting impressed for my sake, but I took the compliment all the same.   It’s curious to me how strangely relaxing it is —therapeutic, even— to chip away at a relatively menial DIY project. There’s something primal in it. Something so human about using your hands to make something.   I wiled away hours each week, I exhausted my podcast downloads. And each week I was able to stand back and assess a little bit of progress.   Week Four. The home straight. I began with a window paint scrapper. Someone previously had painted the outside of the windows without using tape where the glass met the frames, and there were areas where the wobbly paint lines strayed a long way onto the windows themselves. I’d done three of the four windows, flicking away the old paint with the edge of the scraper’s razor blade. I got to the last window. The most prominent window. The one you stare through when you use the sink. And as I flicked away paint right at the bottom of the glass, something gave way.  It was less of a crack and more of a crunch. Maybe I dug just a little bit too hard with the corner edge of the window scraper’s razor blade. A month’s worth of me time shattered around me, as a huge split spread up the glass in the centre of the window.   Ahhh yes. So therapeutic. So relaxing. So good for the soul.   Until it isn’t. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/3/20245 minutes, 2 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Bewitched: The Goddess Edition - Laufey

An expansion on her second studio album, Bewitched: The Goddess Edition features four new songs from singer-songwriter Laufey.  In her own words the album is “a love album, whether it be a love towards a friend or a lover or life”, Bewitched dealing with a variety of romantic themes.   According to Estelle Clifford it could’ve come straight out of the 1935, an old-school movie quality to the first four songs on the album, the rich jazziness of her complimenting the vibes.  LISTEN ABOVE   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/27/20245 minutes, 43 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Earth and The Last Secret Agent

Earth by John Boyne  It’s the tabloid sensation of the two well-known footballers standing in the dock, charged with sexual assault, a series of vile text messages pointing towards their guilt. As the trial unfolds, Evan Keogh reflects on the events that have led him to this moment. Since leaving his island home, his life has been a lie on many levels. He’s a talented footballer who wanted to be an artist. A gay man in a sport that rejects diversity. A defendant whose knowledge of what took place on that fateful night threatens more than just his freedom or career. The jury will deliver a verdict but, before they do, Evan must judge for himself whether the man he has become is the man he wanted to be.    The Last Secret Agent by Pippa Latour and Jude Dobson  This is the astounding true story of one of the last female special operations agents in France to get out alive after its liberation in WWII.  Born in 1921, Pippa Latour became a covert special operations agent who parachuted into a field in Nazi-occupied Normandy. Trained by the British, Pippa was lauded for her fluency with languages and her coding ability - attributes she put to remarkable use when she posed as a teenage soap-seller, often selling her wares to the German soldiers and sending back information via code to England.  Incredibly brave - Pippa knew she could be instantly shot if her cover was blown - she concealed her codes on a piece of silk that she threaded through a shoelace and wore as a hair tie. She bicycled around the region, often sleeping rough and foraging for food.  During her time in Normandy, Pippa sent 135 secret messages conveying crucial information on German troop positions in the lead-up to D-Day. Pippa continued her mission until the liberation of Paris in August 1944.  For decades, Pippa told no one - not even her family - of her incredible feats during WWII.  Now, for the first time, her story can be told in full.    LISTEN ABOVE   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/27/20244 minutes, 35 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: The Lie and The Fall Guy

The Lie   A father and daughter are on their way to dance camp when they spot the girl's best friend on the side of the road; when they stop to offer the friend a ride, their good intentions soon result in terrible consequences (in cinemas).  The Fall Guy   After leaving the business one year earlier, battle-scarred stuntman Colt Seavers springs back into action when the star of a big studio movie suddenly disappears. As the mystery surrounding the missing actor deepens, Colt soon finds himself ensnared in a sinister plot that pushes him to the edge of a fall more dangerous than any stunt (in cinemas).    LISTEN ABOVE   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/27/20246 minutes, 12 seconds
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Tara Ward: Thank you, Goodnight: The Bon Jovi Story, The Dry, Food Rescue Kitchen

Thank you, Goodnight: The Bon Jovi Story  Follows the history of Bon Jovi, featuring personal videos, photos, and music that provide a look at Jon Bon Jovi's life and the band's journey from New Jersey clubs to global fame (Disney+).    The Dry  After living it up in London, Shiv returns home to Dublin, where she must navigate new relationships, family drama and her own questionable life choices, all while trying to stay sober (TVNZ+).    Food Rescue Kitchen  A new heartwarming New Zealand show that sees six top chefs create a three-course meal for the community out of rescued food (ThreeNow, Three at Saturday, 7pm).    LISTEN ABOVE   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/27/20246 minutes, 12 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Autumn Fling with Sydney

"Crisp, clear days sets the stage for cracking autumn adventures in Sydney. If you’re planning a fresh fling with the Emerald City, here’s a roundup of some winning picks to rev up your city-break, from bucket list classics to seasonal treats and in-the-know gems." Read Mike's full article here.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/27/20249 minutes, 59 seconds
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Kate Hall: Fashion Revolution Week

This year marks the 10th anniversary of the Fashion Revolution movement, a week-long fashion activism campaign.  The campaign was prompted by the collapse of the Rana Plaza in Bangladesh, killing over a thousand people and injuring around 2,500.  It aims to bring awareness to the way fashion and clothing are created and consumed, promoting sustainability.  Kate ‘Ethically Kate’ Hall joined Jack Tame to discuss the campaign and this year’s Fashion Revolution Week.  LISTEN ABOVE   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/27/20248 minutes, 20 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Spectacular plants in autumn

Do you want something to think about? Something that sets fire to your garden?  Go and visit your local Botanic Gardens, they’re everywhere in Aotearoa!  I know… we are really lucky in Christchurch.  Best Autumn performers: liquidamber, smoke bush, Japanese Maple, ash, sycamore, poplar, birch and even some willows.  To me, all these autumn colours remind me that our planet has been on the re-using bandwagon for 3.8 billion years,and the display is absolutely dazzling!  This is the time for Dahlia flowers.  Dahlia Joal Jay Jay. Photo / Supplied  Julie’s pick of the bunch – it just about hurts your retina!  Talking about bright colours: a Yellow Ginko biloba (the maidenhair fern tree); ancient gymnosperm  When leaves form a carpet, it looks pretty impressive. Oh… use male trees only as females smell!!!  Here’s a great native; always providing colour, so needed in winter too.  Pseudowintera colorata – pepper plant  Sequoiadendron giganteum, the giant redwood from the USA. Yes you’ll need to wait a few weeks for it to grow massively, but you’ve got to think “long-term” in this game. The bark is lovely and soft.  This particular one (in Christchurch botanic gardens) has been host (for many, many years) to one of our most rottenest pest weed in the garden: Poison Ivy!!  But have a look how stunning this turned out to be… as long as someone takes the time to control that ivy!  And then, for folk with a decent-sized and shallow water feature (a lake or “lakelet”) this caught my eye a long time ago when visiting the Okefenokee swamp (on the border of Georgia and Florida)  A Taxodium distichum (Swamp Cypress) can live in water and has pretty knobbly knees or pneumatophores that allow the roots to breathe air above the level of the water.    These swamp cypresses also take a long time to age, but their Pneumatophores will show quite quickly when the tree(s) start to settle  One word or warning: don’t fall over them, keep an eye on where they are, otherwise you’ll end up pretty wet.  Sometimes you encounter a tree that you’d never expect in Aotearoa:  The Wollemi Pine! (Wollemia nobilis)  This Conifer species belongs to the Araucaria Family of trees (Araucariaceae) and was considered extinct in Australia some 2 million years ago.  It was re-discovered in 1994 in a canyon NW of Sydney. Fewer than 100 mature specimens still exist and propagation and planting of new trees in suitable habitat is aiming to save this species from extinction.  Your Botanic Gardens are involved in exactly this kind of restoration of endangered species!  And collaboration is the key to these projects – even gardeners can be involved!  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/27/20245 minutes, 31 seconds
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Bob Campbell: OTU (Otawhero Estate) Chardonnay

BOB’S BEST BUYS  Wine: OTU (Otawhero Estate) Chardonnay, 2023 Hawke’s Bay $20 Why I chose it:  - Discovered it in a recent blind tasting - Excellent wine from a challenging vintage (La Nina, wet)  What does it taste like?   - Silken texture with grapefruit, green apple, lemon curd and a touch of whipped cream.  Why it’s a bargain:   - $20 or less  Where can you buy it?   - New World - Devonport - Shop around  Food match?   - Versatile   - Seafood pasta dish   - Creamy chicken fettucine  Will it keep?   - Drink up    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/26/20243 minutes, 26 seconds
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Chris Parker: Kiwi Comedian on the International Comedy Festival, the impact of social media, and his solo show

The NZ International Comedy Festival is kicking off next week, and to kickstart the shenanigans Chris Parker will be hosting the annual Comedy Gala.  The kiwi comedian has cemented himself as one of the country’s favourite comics, having done everything from stage shows and stand-up to podcasts and books.  He’s just returned home from the Melbourne Comedy Festival where he did a total of 22 shows alongside line-ups, a podcast, and various other gigs over the course of a month.  He told Newstalk ZB’s Jack Tame that there’s a lot of people, and a lot of kiwis looking for something familiar.  “I’m doing sort of customer service, sort of trying to figure out where my audience is,” Parker said.  “And I’m like, ‘oh I see. They’re mostly kiwis who are feeling homesick and want to hear an accent again.”  The set he performed at the Festival was titled ‘Give Me One Good Reason Why I Shouldn't Throw My Phone Off This Bridge’, a title he said was a dramatic reaction to being on his phone too much.  “I keep sort of having those like, ‘what if?’ moments. I don’t know if you feel like whenever you’re driving over the Harbour bridge and you’re just like, ‘what if?’” Parker asked Tame.  “I have that with my phone every morning, or I just want to crush it, you know? Just because I’m just done with it.”  Parker appreciates that he built his audience through social media, but he does worry about the impact social media and technology has on those who use it, their attention spans, and the way they connect with others.  “When we first had the internet, which is such a joyful place where we talk to men in their forties in chat rooms, and now it’s sort of dissolved into this, you know...”   “This actually unpleasant place,” Tame chimed in.  “It’s very interesting,” Parker agreed.  This is the crux of the show, he explains, the relationship and dependence we have on social media, Parker even saying that he might go cold turkey on it.  He compares the assortment of media consumed in one moment to canapes at an event, a chiropractor video next to world news next to a pasta recipe similar to a bao bun, a prawn twizzler, and a burger all on one plate.  “That’s a lot of different stuff to be consuming in one moment.”  Speaking of canapes and events, Parker rejects the notion that hosting the Comedy Gala is a rough gig.  “I am, you know, a serial showoff,” he told Tame.  “So, all I’m gagging for is the stage time, and I get more than anyone else! No other acts, it’s me for an hour.”  The awards are a beautiful thing, he said. Being able to see his colleagues at their best in a four or five minute act, six if they go overtime, it’s wonderful.  “It gives a real gauge on how we’re going as a country in terms of our, you know, comedic landscape, which is like, we’re sharper and funnier than ever."  “We were storming Melbourne,” Parker revealed.  “They were getting angry at how good, at how funny New Zealand was.”  In Parker's opinion, this is an amazing time for New Zealand comedy, and while we do celebrate it, we could be better. "Please go out and support live comedy." "Stop watching comedy on your phone, get out, put your phone in the bin, get out of the door and go take a punt on a comedian that you've never heard of before." The International Comedy Festival begins May 3rd in venues across Auckland and Wellington, with select shows occurring around the country.  ‘Give Me One Good Reason Why I Shouldn't Throw My Phone Off This Bridge’ will be touring New Zealand from June 20th, visiting Nelson, Christchurch, Dunedin, Auckland, Wellington, and Rotorua.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/26/202414 minutes, 41 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: The TikTok clock has started, and TikTok is saying it's not even looking at it, Meta's pumping billions more into AI

The TikTok clock has started, and TikTok is saying it's not even looking at it.  Parent company ByteDance posted overnight that it doesn't have any plans to sell TikTok. Reuters is reporting that a source says it would prefer to just shut the app down in the US, their algorithm is their secret sauce, so selling the app would be selling the algorithm. Get ready for a showdown. TikTok's CEO says the law and the US Constitution is on their side. The US says it has concerns TikTok could be used by the Chinese government to spy on Americans, which TikTok strongly rejects. To complicate matters, 60% of Bytedance is owned by investment Firms including large (and likely influential) US investors.  Meta's pumping billions more into AI  The company had planned to spend up to $37 billion this year but now says it could be closer to $40 billion. They certainly have the cash though, profit was $12.4 billion for Q1, more than double Q1 last year. A staggering number of people are dependent on Meta, with Zuckerberg saying at the earnings call more than 3.24 billion people use one or more of its apps every day. WhatsApp is a big driver of that usage. He also made a plea to shareholders to trust that the money will come at some stage with AI & Metaverse products, just as it has for Reels and Stories which initially didn't make any money.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/26/20244 minutes, 3 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Raspberry Clasfoutis

This dessert is an easy French classic and any fruit can be used really – feijoa, peach, plum, prune or the original, cherry. I’m only using raspberries as I’ve recently been late-season raspberry picking! Serves one    Ingredients:  Butter  ½ cup fresh raspberries  1 medium egg  2 tablespoons caster sugar + extra  1 tablespoon plain flour  1 tsp vanilla extract  ¼ cup milk  Cream to serve    Method:  Preheat the oven to 180°C and generously butter a small ovenproof dish.  Scatter raspberries into dish.  Whisk egg with the 2 tablespoons sugar, add flour and whisk until smooth. Whisk in vanilla and milk.  Pour batter over fruit, dot some butter over the top and bake for 20 minutes or so until just set in the centre and golden.  Serve with a final sprinkle of sugar over the top and drizzle with cream.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/26/20247 minutes, 58 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Small town ANZAC Services

Although the ANZAC services in Wellington may be bigger, there’s a reason Kevin Milne sticks with his local services.  There’s just something about the things that happen in small towns that really appeals.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/26/20246 minutes, 36 seconds
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Jack Tame: The legacy of James Shaw

On Wednesday this week the former Green party co-leader James Shaw will address parliament as an MP for the last time. And in a moment when his party is reeling from a combination of scandal and tragedy, his valedictory marks the end of an undervalued career.   Many of the politicians who join our so-called minor parties are idealists. They’re not like some Labour or National MPs (more than a few of whom I reckon secretly dream of becoming Prime Minister). They join because they really intensely believe in the political philosophy or kaupapa. And in the case of the Greens, it’s my view that sometimes activism comes at the expense of more pragmatic strategy.   Ahead of his valedictory address, I went back and looked up James Shaw’s maiden speech in parliament from back in 2014.   What stuck out to me was how much he talked about overcoming political divisions and tribalism, working together, reaching across the aisle to make connections and compromises with politicians in different parties.   That might sound like bland political speak, but actually, politicians in New Zealand don’t talk about compromise all that much. In the U.S, Republicans and Democrats often talk about working across the aisle —even if that’s bollocks, these days— but the way New Zealand’s system is structured, usually the only compromise we see for really big legislation is between coalition or support partners in government together.   As an MP, James Shaw did not achieve everything he wanted. Our biggest-emitting industry doesn’t pay for its emissions. Tax reform never got done. But it’s interesting to reflect on what big legacy changes have and haven’t survived the change of government.   The Māori Health Authority, Three Waters, Auckland Light Rail, Te Pūkenga, the Oil and Gas ban; so much of the last Labour government’s policy and work programme has been scrapped.   But one big piece of work has endured. Despite ACT’s continued opposition, the Zero Carbon Act has survived the change in government.   Why? I’d suggest a major part of the reason is the way James Shaw went about crafting that legislation. He didn’t charge ahead by himself. He very deliberately worked across the aisle. He developed a close relationship with National’s then-climate spokesperson Todd Muller and worked to gain the support of every MP in parliament, but one. The whole purpose of the legislation was that it would survive the changing winds and ups-and-downs of politics over time. And here we are.   I think there’s a good argument to be made that the single most significant piece of enduring legislation from Jacinda Ardern’s time in government, was a piece of work developed by an MP who wasn’t even in her party or Cabinet.   The Zero Carbon Act is a victory for compromise. A victory for putting aside differences and uniting around common goals. And although James Shaw’s style and strategy may not have always have been appreciated by everyone in his own party, the result speaks for itself. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/26/20244 minutes, 49 seconds
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Laura Lee and DJ Johnson: Khruangbin bass and drummer on their band and recent album 'A LA SALA'

Musical trio Khruangbin is well known for their blend of classic soul, dub, rock, and psychedelia; the group emerging in 2010 and going strong fourteen years on.  They’ve played 18 tours to nearly half a million people, selling out iconic venues such as Red Rocks and Radio City Music Hall, the latter twice.  Two weeks ago, they released their fifth album A La Sala, and just last week they took to the stage at Coachella.  They have a music-forward approach to their craft, and the group’s drummer DJ Johnson told Newstalk ZB’s Jack Tame that it’s been that way since the start.  “The music always comes first,” he said.  Johnson said that the music determines everything that happens in the backend, album titles being one example.  “We’ve been asked like, ‘what’s the next album gonna be called?’ And it’s like, well, we don’t know yet because the music doesn’t exist yet.”  They’ve described the album as a creative homecoming of sorts, bassist Laura Lee telling Tame that while the band has grown and evolved, touring the world and playing stadiums, it's nice to strip everything back.  “The amount of voices and opinions and, you know, tugs and pulls in various directions have grown, and I think there was a desire to just get back to square one.”  A La Sala is free of collaborations, guests, and features, and although they are proud of the collaborations they’ve made, Lee said it felt like so long since they’d made music just the three of them.  “As we were getting back to that place, we realised that the creative was in less, and not in more.”  Johnson said that while it does have the same kind of magic as when they were first making music, the growth and evolution they’ve gone through has impacted it.  “We went back to more or less the way that we used to approach the material when we first started, but with a renewed sense and a maturity in which we’re approaching it.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/20/202412 minutes, 36 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: The Tortured Poets Department - Taylor Swift

Taylor Swift has released her much anticipated eleventh studio album The Tortured Poets Department, the release catching her fans by surprise with the addition of 15 unknown songs. Two hours after the initial release of the album The Anthology was released, Swift saying in a tweet that she'd written so much tortured poetry over the last two years and wanted to share it with her fans, hence the double release. The BBC described the album as 'vulnerable but vicious', which Estelle Clifford had to agree with. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/20/20248 minutes, 7 seconds
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Tara Ward: The Sympathizer, Baby Reindeer, Painting with John

The Sympathizer  Near the end of the Vietnam War, a spy who was embedded in the South Vietnam army flees to the United States and takes up residence in a refugee community, where he continues to gather intelligence and report back to the Viet Cong (Neon).    Baby Reindeer  Dealing with a female stalker, a man is forced to face a dark, buried trauma (Netflix).    Painting with John  At an undisclosed location in the Caribbean, artist John Lurie hones his watercolour painting techniques while sharing his reflections on life (Neon).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/20/20246 minutes, 3 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Abigail and Origin

Abigail  A group of would-be criminals kidnaps the 12-year-old daughter of a powerful underworld figure. Holding her for ransom in an isolated mansion, their plan starts to unravel when they discover their young captive is actually a bloodthirsty vampire.    Origin   Based on the life of Isabel Wilkerson, played by Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor, as she writes the book Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents. Over the course of the film, Wilkerson travels throughout Germany, India, and the United States to research the caste systems in each country's history.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/20/20246 minutes, 51 seconds
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Ed McKnight: Economist on the amount needed to save for retirement

How long does the average person live? How will that impact their retirement?  How much money do you need to live comfortably when retiring? When do you start saving? How do you start saving?  Economist Ed McKnight joined Jack Tame to dive into how to save to make your retirement work.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/20/20246 minutes, 27 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: My Favourite Mistake and A Calamity of Souls

My Favourite Mistake by Marian Keyes   Anna Walsh had a dream life - according to everybody else. She lived in New York, had a long-term boyfriend, and had The Best Job In The World working as a highly successful beauty PR. So why did she decide to take a flamethrower to the lot? Because now she's back Dublin, living with her parents. She's undeniably forty-eight, with no partner, no job, and no direction. Anna's lost her purpose. She needs a new challenge to help her fall back in love with life again. When an opportunity arises to solve a PR crisis in the tiny town of Maumtully, Anna leaps at the chance. But will the appearance of an old love interest derail her plans?    A Calamity of Souls by David Baldacci  Jack Lee is a white lawyer from Freeman County, Virginia, who has never done anything to push back against racism, until he decides to represent Jerome Washington, a Black man charged with brutally killing an elderly and wealthy white couple. Doubting his decision, Lee fears that his legal skills may not be enough to prevail in a case where the odds are already stacked against both him and his client. And he quickly finds himself out of his depth when he realizes that what is at stake is far greater than the outcome of a murder trial.    Desiree DuBose is a Black lawyer from Chicago who has devoted her life to furthering the causes of justice and equality for everyone. She comes to Freeman County and enters a fractious and unwieldy partnership with Lee in a legal battle against the best prosecutor in the Commonwealth. Yet DuBose is also aware that powerful outside forces are at work to blunt the victories achieved by the Civil Rights era.     Lee and DuBose could not be more dissimilar. On their own, neither one can stop the prosecution’s deliberate march towards a guilty verdict and the electric chair.  But together, the pair fight for what once seemed impossible: a chance for a fair trial and true justice.      LISTEN ABOVE   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/20/20244 minutes, 56 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Wine country getaway in Waipara

"The humming Hurunui township of Amberley is on a roll. 40 minutes’ drive from Christchurch, Amberley’s population has surged by over 50% in the past decade and is projected to double again in the next ten years. Straddling SH1, this embracing country town exudes a hearty welcome, with its boutique shopping offerings and a fantastic Farmers Market every Saturday morning, abuzz with producers and artisans. With a long and proud rural history, Amberley is a rich commercial cradle for the region’s growers and producers." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/20/20249 minutes, 19 seconds
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Dr Dougal Sutherland: The importance of leading well during times of change

The importance of leading well during times of change (of which there is a lot of at the moment!) and the importance of leaders looking after their own wellbeing as part of leading well.  A recent study interviewed 20 CEOs from leading companies in the USA. It showed that really effective leaders helped improve team and individual performance and helped the organisations do really well.  On the flip side, leaders who were burnt out or stressed passed this onto their team. They tended to be closed off to new ideas, create a negative psychological climate, and make decisions based on anxiety and avoidance.  This highlights the need for leaders and organisations to make sure leader’s mental wellbeing is a priority. Leaders should consider this as a core part of their job and actively schedule it in.  It’s helpful for leaders to make sure they have good social connections outside of work and ideally a peer network across their business that they can talk openly with as they’re often not able to share everything with their team.  Important to be predictable in their role and part of this is managing their own emotional expression, but what do they do with the “residue” of this? Getting professional coaching/supervision can be really helpful in this domain.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/19/20246 minutes, 53 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Fertilisers in Autumn?

Let’s concentrate on the N, P and K.  Nitrogen is the stuff that makes plants green; this molecule provides the building blocks for Chlorophyll. If you have plants that are valued for their leaves and green stems (grass, lawns, lettuce, ornamental trees and shrubs) they will need more N than say P or K.  Plants with important roots (carrots, parsnips, potatoes) and other underground organs that will grow as they explore for “food in the dark”; they need a little bit more P (Phosphate) to do just that.  And the K (Potash) is for reproduction.  Plant reproduction is of course mostly through flowers, which are pollinated and hence become fertilised to produce seeds and fruits which, when deposited on soil, will yield new seedlings.  That means that flowering plants and fruiting trees, shrubs, vines and berry bushes, really appreciate an extra dollop of potash, just to keep the cool stuff coming.  But in Autumn temperatures are going down and most plants, trees and shrubs will slowly stop growing to prepare for winter. They simply don’t need a lot of fertiliser at all – in fact many of them slowly stop taking in these food molecules.  Generally speaking: if you would fertilise plants in autumn the plant may try to create some more new leaves – roses (and quite a few other plant species) would do that in late summer and autumn. Those soft, new leaves will be very susceptible to frost damage.  Not advisable!  Right now, a lot of shrubs and trees are trying to prepare for winter by storing the N, P, K and such valuable macro or micronutrients before they drop the leaves. Those nutrients are “stored” in the twigs, stems and woody parts; the leaves will discolour to reds, oranges and yellows,  Those autumn colours literally look like deficiency patterns – mind you, they look beautiful! Just visit Central Otago.  One thing I would fertilise from now on is the compost bin!! If I use the Seaweed Tea, its nutrients will encourage tiny critters and bacteria, fungi etc., to develop in the compost. That results in a much quicker decomposition and more fertility when you use that compost in spring.  Another good use of fertiliser is for Cymbidium orchids! These plants are often grown in warmer areas (out of the frosty zones) and will appreciate a high K (potash) diet in autumn and winter so they can produce a heap of flower buds in late winter.  Similarly certain bulbs would like a bit of slow-release food, to develop their own flowers or even more bulbs. Think about Garlic and shallots! Winter is often their growth time.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/19/20244 minutes, 4 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Meta is out to kill ChatGPT

Meta is out to kill ChatGPT  Mark Zukerbeg admits that Meta isn't known as an AI leader but doesn't want it to be that way for long. They have released their Llama 3 models which are monumental steps ahead of Llama 2.  For the sake of scale, Llama 2 was trained on 2 trillion tokens, Llama 3 was trained on 15 trillion tokens. Simply, it's going to know more and be able to connect more dots than before. Meta has made the small and medium versions of Llama 3 available to external developers but hasn't yet confirmed when the large model will be made available. You're going to see more AI on Facebook, Messenger, and Instagram. You'll see prompts for replies generated by AI. The AI Assistant will be more prominent. For the first time, Meta's created a standalone chatbot for desktop, outside of its product frameworks. Meta.AI looks just like ChatGPT but is totally free.   The Swifties were divided over the album leak  What do you do when a hotly anticipated Taylor Swift album is leaked in a Google Drive folder before launch? Do you listen? Do you wait for the official release? It's the ethical questions that had Swifties debating online this week. The leak has turned out to be the real album, but not the surprise 2am album, making the The Tortured Poets Department a double album.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/19/20246 minutes, 3 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Leek and cauliflower croquettes

For those who are taking Anzac Day off next week and are looking for something to make over the long weekend, these could be worth a try.    Ingredients:  ½ leek, diced and gently sautéed  1 cup cauliflower florets, finely diced  20g butter + 50g butter  4 heaped tbsps. plain flour  300mls milk  Pinch white pepper  50g hard cheese (cheddar or machego are good options)  1 egg  extra flour for coating  ¾ cup breadcrumbs    Method:  1. In a pot, melt the 20g butter on a low heat, add the leeks and cook until softened. Add in cauliflower and cook for 3-4 minutes. Remove with a slotted spoon.   2. Melt the 50g butter then add flour and stir to form a paste. Allow to cook for 2-3 minutes, then slowly add the milk, stirring or whisking until there are no lumps. Increase the heat slightly and stir until the sauce is a thickened and the flour has completely cooked – you shouldn’t be able to detect any flour when you taste it.  3. Add the pepper, cheese, leeks and cauliflower and stir to combine. Taste to make sure it has enough seasoning. Pour into a bowl and allow to cool completely. It will be very thick once cooled.  4. Set up three plates, one with a beaten egg, one with seasoned flour and one with breadcrumbs.  5. Begin to shape the croquettes by rolling tablespoonfuls of the cooled béchamel into small sausage shapes. Roll each one in flour, then egg, then in the breadcrumbs and set aside.  6. Fill a medium sized pot with enough cooking oil to come halfway up the pot and turn it to medium heat. Focus and do not leave the pot for a minute!  7. Once hot enough (small currants will form on the bottom of the pot but it will not reach smoking point), begin to cook the croquettes, 3-5 at a time by lowering them into the oil with a slotted spoon. If your oil is not hot enough they will sink and melt, instead of floating and frying, so trial one first.  8. Fry in batches until each is golden brown all over (turn them if you need to but they often do it themselves). Remove and drain on paper towel and serve immediately.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/19/20246 minutes, 1 second
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Kevin Milne: Passing a tricky test

When you reach 75 years of age, in order to get your drivers licence you have to do a health test.  The test includes a cognitive test to check for dementia, and a general health test.  Kevin Milne went to sit the test earlier in the week and suffice to say he was a bit nervous. LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/19/20249 minutes, 17 seconds
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Jack Tame: Is Taylor Swift worth the hype?

How did she do it?   How could it be?  Tell me how —HOW— does the most famous popstar in the World right now keep anything secret?  I get it. It’s not a nuclear code. It’s not a secret access key for a banking system that would make a keen hacker trillions of dollars in an instant. But that Taylor Swift, in the digital age, with however many hundreds of millions of fans Worldwide following her every move, can press a button and drop 15 songs, having secretly recorded them and prepared them to be published simultaneously on streaming platforms around the World, tells you one thing: Taylor Swift’s lawyers really know how to write an iron-clad NDA.  Is Taylor Swift worth the hype?  I’m not a Swiftie, per se. I didn’t go to Australia for the Eras tour. But I also hate it when people sneer at other people’s music tastes. Music tastes are so subjective. Who am I to say that what I’m listening to is any better or worse than what you prefer?   Any reasonable person cannot say that Taylor Swift is not two things: an incredibly talented songwriter, and an incredibly hard worker.   Taylor’s been teasing something new. She’s made mysterious social media posts. Finally, yesterday, all was revealed: The Tortured Poets Department, a surprise double album. As the internet melted down with reactions and analysis, I searched the 31 songs on Spotify and cranked up the beats.  It was good. It was fine. Personally, I still prefer her early stuff. But even though I couldn’t name the ex-boyfriends most of the songs are apparently about, I enjoyed listening to the lyrics and found myself gently tapping along as I fixed dinner.   And I’m noticing this weird phenomenon with Taylor Swift. Even though I’m ambivalent to her music, like an ocean current, I find myself still getting swept along in the hype.  I get it. I think we all do. We all have an artist for whom at some point in our lives we’ve been desperate for any flicker of something new: a magazine cover, a single, an album, a World Tour. For me, for about five years, it was Kanye West. For you, someone else, I’m sure. It’s the Beatlemania thing. There is something primal, something is our cells, a zeal, some magic, some uniquely human quality that loves to be caught up in the fever of a crowd, to share in the collective idolising of that little dot under the brights on stage.  It doesn’t happen with authors or artists. The closest you might get is Lionel Messi on a football pitch. And although I wouldn’t call myself a Swiftie. I’m here for the Swiftie hype.   But is she worth it? A miserable sod might suggest no one’s worth it.   But given she has built one of the largest and most influential fan bases in the history of music, she has produced the highest-grossing tour of all time, she’s the first musician to become a billionaire solely from writing and performing, and she’s shattering all manner of streaming records, I’m gonna side with the wisdom of the Swiftie crowds.   Is Taylor Swift worth the hype? Of course she’s worth the hype! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/19/20244 minutes, 33 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Gothic Summer - The Veronicas

Released right as summer died, ‘Gothic Summer’ is the sixth studio album from Australian pop duo The Veronicas.  In an interview with Rolling Stone, Jess Origliasso said the album was very metaphorical.  “The whole theme of Gothic Summer is that it’s basically exploring social commentary on what we think is reality versus how we create our reality.”  The duo’s other half, Lisa Origliasso, told Apple Music the album is about the highs and lows of life, “Finding beauty, empowerment and self-love in the shadows and darker parts of life’s experiences.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/13/20247 minutes
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Catherine Raynes: Day One and The Hidden Storyteller

Day One by Abigail Dean  Marty seems to do no wrong. Trent can’t seem to get things right. When they are thrown together by tragedy, their futures may be defined by one What really happened on Day One?  Stonesmere is an English seaside suburb defined by poignant traditions passed from generation to generation, and the bonds of small town community spirit. But when a lone gunman disrupts a school assembly, he sets of a chain of events that throws this close-kint town into turmoil.  Marty is a golden girl, albeit one sometimes in the shadow of her father’s accomplishments and the care of her mother—an outsider who became a beloved teacher. Meanwhile, Trent’s home life is in the only child of a mother forever on the lookout for the boyfriend who can remake their lives, Trent longs for Stonesmere’s stability. But he and his mother only pass through.   In the wake of the violence in Stonesmere, Trent is transfixed by the news coverage of his former home, and his sense that something doesn't quite add up. As he dives deeper, he falls under the spell of a slick online media personality and the conspiracies he peddles. As Marty fumbles to play the part of the grieving good girl, she becomes the focus of these conspiracies—and Trent’s attention.      The Hidden Storyteller by Mandy Robotham   The war is over. But there are still secrets to be found amidst the ashes…  Hamburg, 1946.  The war is over, and Germany is in ruins. Posted to an Allied-run Hamburg, reporter Georgie Young returns to the country she fled seven years prior – as Chamberlain spoke those fateful words – to find it unrecognisable.  Amidst the stark horrors of a bombed-out city crumbling under the weight of millions of displaced Europeans, she discovers pockets of warmth: a violinist playing amidst the wreckage, couples dancing in the streets, and a nation trying to make amends.  But when she joins forces with local policeman Harri Schroder to solve a murder case he is working on – a woman with the word traitor engraved into her skin – she soon discovers that the darkest secrets of war haven’t been left in the past. And once again she is pulled into a world she hardly expected to see again…    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/13/20244 minutes, 10 seconds
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Tara Ward: Friends Like Her, Franklin, Fallout

Friends Like Her   In a quake-torn Kaikoura town, best friends' lives spiral downwards when a surrogacy pact disintegrates, revealing dark secrets and strained loyalties amid a calamitous backdrop (Three from Monday at 8.40pm and ThreeNow).    Franklin   In December 1776, Benjamin Franklin is world-famous for his electrical experiments, but his passion and power are put to the test when he embarks on a secret mission to France, with the fate of American independence hanging in the balance (Apple TV+).    Fallout  In a future, post-apocalyptic Los Angeles brought about by nuclear decimation, citizens must live in underground bunkers to protect themselves from radiation, mutants and bandits. Based on the video game series of the same name (Prime Video).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/13/20246 minutes, 15 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Civil War and Late Night with the Devil

Civil War   In a dystopian future America, a team of military-embedded journalists races against time to reach Washington, D.C., before rebel factions descend upon the White House.    Late Night with the Devil   In 1977 a live television broadcast goes horribly wrong, unleashing evil into the nation's living rooms.    LISTEN ABOVE   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/13/20246 minutes, 51 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Working up an appetite in Waikīkī

"It’s entirely understandable that on arrival in Waikīkī’s sun-kissed playground, you will soon surrender to the dazzling arsenal of holiday indulgences along the glitter-strip. Whether you’re stuffing yourself sinfully at the Cheesecake Factory or marinating in Mai Tais, decadence flows freely in Waikīkī. It has worked its monopolising magic on me, far too many times!  "But without wishing to sound like a virtuous try-hard, on my latest visit to Waikīkī, I made a personal pact that I would off-set my culinary and cocktail indulgences, by working-out for those rewards. I duly explored a plethora of nature experiences in close proximity to the holiday mecca, to counterbalance the inevitable binging and boozing. And it fast became an eye-opener about the ravishing outdoorsy treasures, string around the south-eastern coastline of O’ahu." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/13/20247 minutes, 15 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: Cryptosporidium stomach infections

What is cryptosporidium and what does it do?  - It’s a parasite found in the gut of infected people. Also, animals such as cats, dogs, cattle, and sheep.  - Basically, it’s a nasty ‘stomach bug’, if you get infected it causes a nasty stomach infection.  - Gives you painful stomach cramps, really smelly diarrhoea, and nausea.    How do you get it and can we treat it?  Infected people or animals pass it on through infected poo, we basically swallow the parasite:  - Contact with infected people or animals  - Drinking water becomes infected  - Food after food preparation with hands that are contaminated.  - Swimming in shared water such as swimming pools, paddling pools, or infected beaches, rivers.  Generally, we don’t treat it, antibiotics generally don’t help. We advise things such as Panadol and medication to stop stomach cramps. It’s really important to keep fluid levels up so you don’t become dehydrated, especially children.    What do we do to prevent it?  - It’s really important not to spread it or catch it!  - The basics: don’t spread it, wash hands for 20 seconds with soap and hot water then dry:  -After going to toilet -Before you prepare food. -Have contact with animals, after gardening, caring with someone with diarrhoea, or changing babies' nappies    Other thing to note: - The parasite hangs around in your body for 14 days after your symptoms clear up.  - Don’t  swim in swimming pools for 14 days after an infection – you can spread it for up to two weeks!!  -Also, when signs go up at beach or river not to swim, don’t. Means there’s a sewage leak and you can contract cryptosporidium.  -Certainly, if you are concerned contact your general practice or medical centre.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/13/20244 minutes, 39 seconds
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Kate Hall: The rise of repair cafes in Aotearoa

Repair Cafes have become increasingly popular across the country, 233 of them popping up in the last twelve months.    What is a repair cafe?  -A free event where people bring in their broken or damaged belongings and local volunteer experts do their best to repair them.  -Generally happens once a month in a community or as a pop-up event.    Why they are great  -Promotes sustainability  -Encourages the development of repair skills (which we need to preserve - too many skills, like simple sewing, are being lost)  -Cost saving  -Community building  -Education/awareness  -Empowerment (community & individual resilience)  -Innovation/creativity  -Circular economy: keeps resources in the local resource pool    Where people can find them: https://www.repaircafeaotearoa.co.nz/    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/13/20248 minutes, 35 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Bird Science

Despite the nice week or two in Canterbury (noticed the Temperatures in the high twenties, this week?) there comes a time when we’ll be filling the Ultra-Low Emissions Burners again. Some of our native birds will either be looking to get autumn food, while others will depart for better climates. Migration is a clever option. There are a few ways in which we can keep an eye on our birds’ movements: the expensive trick is to catch birds and attach a transmitter to their body that bleeps every now and then and sends a signal to satellites indicating the longitude and latitude, time of day and speed of flight. Expensive technology, but pretty cool to work with. Our team in Canterbury, led by Peter Reese, is doing it the simple way: catch the bird (in this case a Harrier), put a standard metal band around one leg and on the other leg a much larger, coloured tag with a (three-digit) number that can be seen from quite a distance through a pair of binoculars. We re-capture some of the birds, often in the place where they were banded originally. But the clever trick is that anybody with binoculars might be able to contribute to the research. That is a rather safe way of assisting with the project. You see, Harriers have very little sense of humour. You can imagine that their strong, curved beak will be their ace attack system…Maybe. I found that they would love to smack you with their extremely sharp talons, a great scientific word for long, pointy nails. So far we have only started a year or so ago; the hypothesis is that these harriers move north when the snow starts falling in the South Island – maybe they do exactly that! But it would be nice if people could keep their eyes peeled and report tagged or banded harriers when they see one, or when they find one on the side of the road, bowled over by a car. Either fill in an online reporting form, write, email, or ring the National Banding Office (DOC). They will need to know the following details: • Band number• When the bird was found the bird (date if possible) • Where the bird was found• If the bird is colour banded, the position of each colour band (note which leg it was on and the position • The condition of the bird Seeing it’ll be school holidays, it might be a good idea to get kids to observe Harriers (and other birds) and become real-life ornithologists. Or maybe just Nature Nerds!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/12/20244 minutes, 33 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Gmail's testing a 'manage subscriptions' feature, Google One VPN goes to the graveyard, and Spotify's developing music mixing tools

Gmail knows your inbox is overflowing with subscriptions and is trying to help  So it wants to help. It seems they're testing a new feature which adds a "Manage Subscriptions" area. There you will be able to see who is sending you the most emails per quarter. Marketing folks get ready... early screenshots show you'll be able to see who sends you less than 10, 10-20 and 20+ emails per quarter. It's estimated that Google blocks nearly 15 billion undesired emails daily. You can see why they want to deter folks from sending things that they'll filter out anyway! They already have the one-click unsubscribe feature which is brilliant. They've also recently started requiring companies who are "bulk senders" —who send more than 5000 emails a day— to adhere to new requirements proving they own the domain they're sending from and that the email being delivered has been authorized to be sent by the service sending it.  Yet another product goes to Google's graveyard  Google One VPN is now dead. Google Podcasts was also killed a few weeks ago. It's so commonplace there's a website to memorialize these dead products: killedbygoogle.com. It's up to 295 entries.  Spotify will let creators manipulate songs  According to WSJ, Spotify is developing tools that would allow users to “speed up, mash-up, and otherwise edit” songs, and save them for listening. Some TikTok creators have made pitching up or speeding up songs part of their signature look. The idea is that if you do the editing on Spotify, Spotify knows about it, and can make sure the artists get their appropriate royalties. On TikTok these remixes become "original audio" of the creator and it's unclear if the money makes its way back to where it should.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/12/20244 minutes, 47 seconds
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Alan Bates: Former subpostmaster on the Horizon IT scandal and the fight against the British Post Office

In 1999 the British Post Office introduced a faulty piece of accounting software, the consequences of which would see over 900 subpostmasters wrongly prosecuted for theft, fraud, and false accounting.  Some lost their businesses, jobs, and homes, and many were left financially ruined. Others were convicted and sent to prison, some dying while they waited for justice.  The case has been highlighted in the ITV drama Mr Bates vs the Post Office; the prosecution of Post Office subpostmasters being described as ‘Great Britain's worst miscarriage of justice’.  Alan Bates, a former subpostmaster, has been leading the charge and this week gave a strong witness statement at the public inquiry into the Horizon IT scandal.  He told Newstalk ZB’s Jack Tame that the outpouring of support from across the nation has been absolutely wonderful, and they may need to engage it going forward.  “Some of the, if you might call them, the baddies in all of this might be trying to get away scot-free,” Bates said.  “We have real concerns that they need to be held accountable for their actions in all of this, and often that fails to happen in so many of these big scandals with big firms.”  Bates told Tame that he’s never really struggled with accounting, so when the Horizon system was introduced to his own Post Office, he could see it was lacking from the outset.  “Once problems started occurring, it was pretty obvious what was the root cause of it all.”  He’s worked with computer systems before so he could not only see the issues with the programme itself, but with the stances the Post Office was taking on it.   Bates said they could never give him an assurance over the accuracy of the system, and they kept swearing no one else could access it, despite it being a network system that anyone could access if they had the right codes.  “They just terminated me, given me three months' notice and walked off with the investment.”  Bates professes to be something of a stubborn man, telling Tame that he knew his stance on the system was right and so he dug his heels in on it.  “We started meeting others over the years, and then we found out we weren’t the only ones, and they weren’t the only ones, and we sort of grew from there.”  In Bates’ opinion, a lot of this whole event has been about controlling the narrative, which the Post Office with its significant resources was able to do for ‘donkey’s years’.  “It wasn’t until we got them in the court, into the high court, and we got the judgements, the outstanding judgements from Judge Fraser, that the narrative changed.”  “They started losing their footing in all of this, and we started to take over.”  The most important thing in all of this, Bates told Tame, is getting the financial redress for the victims.  “They’ve been waiting far too long.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/12/202416 minutes, 47 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Slow cooked lamb and quince

Autumn brings one of my all-time favourite fruits: quince. Lumpy and bumpy, rock hard and astringent when raw, this fruit transforms upon cooking to something fragrant, soft and utterly divine.   This recipe is a derivation of the Persian dish khoresh, referring to a stew, and the quince pair beautifully with lamb.   Serves 2-4     Ingredients:  1 large onion, diced  500g lamb, cubed  1 tbsp turmeric   2-3 cm cinnamon stick  ½ tsp cardamom powder (optional)  100g yellow split peas, pre-soak these for 1-2 hours   2-3 tbsp lemon juice   1-2 tbsps sugar  2 quince, peeled, quartered and cored  2 tbsp bloomed saffron (optional)  Salt and pepper to taste  Vegetable oil  Water     Method  Heat some oil in a pan and sauté chopped onions until softened and beginning to brown. Add the lamb along with the spices and fry until browned on all sides. Add in split peas and just enough boiling water to cover. Lower the heat and simmer for one hour or until meat is fully cooked and split peas are tender.   Whilst the meat cooks, sauté the quince quarters in a clean, lightly oiled pan over a medium heat until golden brown. Set aside until the meat is tender, about 45-50 minute mark, and add them then.   Once the quince has been added, season with lemon juice, sugar, saffron (if using), salt and pepper to taste and cook without stirring for the final 10 minutes or so.   Serve with rice.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/12/20246 minutes, 10 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Why can't there be a cross-party approach to truancy?

Truancy has been a hot topic over the last few weeks, the Government announcing their new guidelines and targets.  Kevin Milne has been reading up on the subject and has come to the realisation that it’s a significantly bigger issue than he thought.  He thinks it’s time to stop trying to score political points and set about fixing the problem.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/12/20247 minutes, 4 seconds
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Jack Tame: The most statistically significant day of my life

Tuesday was one of the most statistically significant days of my life.  I’m sure I’m not the only one who spends a lot of time on the Statistics New Zealand website but just in case you have more exciting things to do with your time, you might have missed the latest population estimates.  According to Statistics New Zealand, the median age for New Zealand men is 37.1 years old. That means half of men are older and half are younger.  I was born on March 4, 1987. That means on Tuesday April 9th, I turned 37.11 years old, I moved from one side of the ledger to the other. This time last week, when we were last speaking, I was in the younger half of Kiwi blokes. Today, I’m in the older half. I know, I know… you might as well sign me up to a Ryman Village right now.  The truth is I do feel older. Or at the very least, I’m conscious of having an aging body. I’ve got an arthritic hip and deteriorating eyesight. Hair grows in weird places, springing from my shoulders, nostrils, and the outsides of my upper arms. When I catch myself in the mirror as I get out of the shower, it’s as though gravity has grown a few percentage points stronger. Wibble-wobble.  One of the flaws of the human condition is that most of us only appreciate our youth as it starts to fade. We lament being ID’d until the day we’re not ID’d. For some reason, having a dicky hip has made me really want to climb more mountains. I’ve always been big on sunblock if I was spending a long time outside, but it’s only now, as the wrinkles and sunspots gather on my face, that I’ve started to block up every day in summer, regardless of whether I’m spending much time outdoors. For the first time in my life, I proactively take anti-inflammatories before playing social sport.  Statistics New Zealand can give you all sorts of milestone numbers. It can tell you I’m old for a first marriage. It can tell you I’m already older than most first-time Dads. It can tell you that statistically speaking, I can expect to die on the 25th of June, 2073.  Of course, I know that’s not quite how life works. I’m at the age and stage where you really appreciate that life isn’t fair. No one is guaranteed any amount of time on this mortal Earth. Sometimes it’s the most full-of-life, the five-plus-a-day, Low BMI, not-one-cigarette-evers who for whatever reason, fate cruelly picks out. I‘ve said it to you before; aging is a privilege.  I remember once reading somewhere that 27 typically marked the physical peak for men. I felt old when I turned 28. I remember staring down 30, looking back when I turned 35, and thinking I should have better appreciated just how youthful I was.  I’m sure this will be the same. I’ll look back at 37.11 and laugh at my youthful naivety. Except that it doesn’t change the facts. Short of a mass exodus or a national fertility crisis, I will never again be in the younger half of New Zealand men. Once you’ve crossed the Rubicon, there ain’t no going back. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/12/20245 minutes
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Estelle Clifford: Ohio Players - The Black Keys

‘Ohio Players’ is the 12th studio album by the Black Keys, with fourteen tracks and a run time of 44 minutes.  The intention behind the album was to create something “fun”. Something that not only sounded fun, but was also fun for the band to create. The album’s title seems to be a nod to that ideology, the band’s members coming from the state of Ohio, but also a reference to the 70’s band of the same name.  Music reviewer Estelle Clifford thinks this may be the most poppy songs they’ve put together, the album filled with feel good, energetic music, the kind that makes you feel like you’re at a live gig or festival. LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/6/20246 minutes, 32 seconds
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Tara Ward: Scoop, Ripley, Alone Australia

Scoop  Inspired by real events, this fictional dramatization gives an insider account of how the women of Newsnight secured Prince Andrew's infamous interview (Netflix).    Ripley   A wealthy man hires down-on-his-luck grifter Tom Ripley to travel to Italy to urge his vagabond son to return home; Tom's acceptance of the job is the first step in a life of deceit, fraud and murder (Netflix).    Alone Australia  Ten brave Australians are dropped into the most brutal terrain of New Zealand's South Island to face the ultimate survival test and merciless forces of nature for a cash prize (TVNZ+).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/6/20246 minutes, 10 seconds
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Dr Dougal Sutherland: How to handle change within your organisation

Redundancies and restructures galore are taking place across every sector at the moment, and these changes can have a significant impact on mental health and wellbeing.  Change is always difficult, but change within a business can really set off people’s flight or fight instincts and add to their worries and anxiety.  Businesses have to be careful in how they handle this change, as doing so badly can increase the harm their employees suffer and open the organisation up to increased risk.  Dr Dougal Sutherland has some tips for what to do when change is occurring.    For individuals:  -Focus as much as you can on the aspects you can control throughout the process  -Try not to get sucked into worrying about the problem, focus instead on the aftermath    For organisations:  -Really emphasise wellbeing in the workplace, you need to look after everyone involved  -staff who are affected  -staff who are “unaffected” but may be suffering from “survivors' guilt”   -managers who have to deliver the decision  -HR people who support the managers and staff    LISTEN ABOVE   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/6/20247 minutes, 36 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: On Call and The Fellowship of Puzzlemakers

On Call by Ineke Meredith    It's all in a mad day's work: the good, the bad and the crazy. From a man who swallowed fishhooks to a patients playing pranks, emergency operations in the wee hours, constantly being mistaken for a nurse, and holding hands through silent goodbyes, this is a book about the strange, messy, intense world of surgery. When Ineke's parents in Samoa fall ill, she is torn between her roles as a surgeon, a daughter, and a single working mother. Are the sacrifices of a life in scrubs worth it? Laugh-out-loud and sobering in equal turns, On Call is a memoir from inside the operating room and everything it takes to survive.    The Fellowship of Puzzlemakers by Samuel Burr   Clayton Stumper might be in his twenties, but he dresses like your grandpa and fusses like your aunt. Abandoned at birth on the steps of the Fellowship of Puzzlemakers, he was raised by a group of eccentric enigmatologists and now finds himself among the last survivors of a fading institution.  When the esteemed crossword compiler and main maternal presence in Clayton’s life, Pippa Allsbrook, passes away, she bestows her final puzzle on him: a promise to reveal the mystery of his parentage and prepare him for life beyond the walls of the commune. So begins Clay’s quest to uncover the secrets surrounding his birth, secrets that will change Clay—and the Fellowship—forever.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/6/20245 minutes, 7 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Holiday adventures in Maui

"Despite being ravaged by devastating wildfires last August, the Valley Isle of Maui continues to shine with unparalleled scenery and golden hospitality. Maui would love to see you. From hidden beaches in every shade to the dramatic peaks of West Maui and Haleakalā, Maui’s elemental brilliance is seductive. Also known as the East Maui Volcano, Haleakalā is a colossal, active shield volcano that constitutes more than 75% of Maui’s landform." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/6/20249 minutes, 53 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Wine expert's pick of the week, Escarpment Gris 2023 Martinborough

BOB’S BEST BUYS  Escarpment Gris 2023 Martinborough $30  Why I chose it:    -I like it very much and respect Escarpment as a top producer.  -It’s a wine that spans the seasons.  -It is genetically the same grape as Pinot Noir, but it is “gray” instead of red-skinned (“Gris” is French for gray). Pinot Blanc is even paler (“Blanc” means white in French).  What does it taste like?   -A smooth-textured, bright, fresh wine with flavours that resemble pear and green apple. It has a hint of sweetness balanced by refreshing acidity.  Why it’s a bargain:   -It is an interesting wine that is well made, by a top producer who offer it at a fair piece.  Where can you buy it?   -Wine Hub, Christchurch, $26  -NZ Wine Boutique, $29.99  Food match?   -Blue cheese combines sweetness and acidity with the saltiness of the cheese – delicious!  Will it keep?   -Good for 3 or 4 years, possibly more with careful storage.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/6/20244 minutes, 24 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Soil Conditioning and Blackbird vandals

It’s time to start thinking about winter and looking after your soil.  We all know that garden soil thrives when you add Organic material (compost!!!) to the soil. Just like the Sea-food soup it enriches the Fertiliser amount and that helps no, not just the plants, but certainly the tiny live-stock in the soil that feeds the plants through the roots: Photosynthesis is the way a plant feeds itself.  It allows the microbes and beneficial fungi to work on the mulch – it simply breaks the mulch down and turns it into a kind of slow-release fertiliser that will benefit the plants when everybody “wakes up” in spring.  Chipped prunings from your fruit trees, hedges, severed dead branches and twigs, old fallen fruits, berries, and husks are all ready to be recycled according to the law of “Circular Economy” which runs the planet and your garden.  My most wonderful tool in the garden is our Hansa C7 Chipper Machine; it works its bottom off at this time of the year.   Everything that goes through it will turn to mulch and everything that once lived will turn to compost, even Coffee grounds!  There are lots of articles that warn gardeners against using coffee grounds in the garden, so we’ve decided to have a go at that stuff (our son-in-law owns a French bakery that also brews a decent cup of coffee – plenty of brown grounds in serious quantities).  Information around this topic:  Acidity (pH): After brewing, the grounds are almost pH neutral: between 6.5 and 6.8 (higher than Hydrangeas that need a lower pH to flower blue!  Nitrogen: Just 2%; not a great deal – still need N on the soil in spring!  Other nutrients: Phosphorous, Potash, Calcium, Magnesium all in rather small amounts and Manganese, Zinc and other micronutrients also in very small quantities – certainly not an “over-dose”.  So, it looks as if these coffee grounds really don’t produce a heap of “plant food”; instead, they “feed” the microbes that deliver “Glues” that are brilliant at producing great soil structure.  What about effects on plant growth? Any negative effects?  Robert Pavlis (a Canadian who writes an interesting blog called Garden Myths) led me to some publications around Testing caffeine for allelopathic effects.  The findings show that if you use huge amounts of coffee mulch it could certainly stunt the growth of bacteria, fungi, seedlings and even plants! (Does that surprise you?)  However, after 6 months the trend totally reverses, and the plants grow better than before.  And here’s Julie’s observation:  Since we used the grounds as “mulch”, the blackbirds (her worst enemy that toss mulch out of the garden and onto the paths) have ceased vandalising the borders and raised beds.  No more mess of ornithological origin!  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/6/20245 minutes, 6 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Microsoft is unbundling Teams from Office globally and Amazon's stopping its "just walk out" service at supermarkets

Microsoft is unbundling Teams from Office globally  Once again, thanks EU! It comes six months after it uncoupled the two products in Europe in a bid to avert a possible EU antitrust fine. Rivals say packaging the products together gives Microsoft an unfair advantage. I'm all in favor of unbundling - because all these services are starting to offer the things the others do too, but usually not as well. Slack is great at instant messaging, but now you are also effectively paying for its video and audio meetings and collaborative documents. Google's bundle includes email, calendar, docs, video meetings. Zoom now offers add-ons such as an email and calendar service, IP phone system and virtual white-boarding.   Amazon's stopping its "just walk out" service at supermarkets  Amazon Fresh will now have smart carts, which allow customers to scan items as they go. Amazon says this is better for the customer because they want to  view their receipt as they shop, and know how much money they saved while shopping. It also reduces a massive overhead of installing the cameras and sensors the technology relied upon AND the extensive human review process. According to The Information, 70% of the sales had to be manually reviewed in 2022, which was far, far higher than the 5% Amazon had hoped for, which needed a team of over 1000 people.  It's also a good example of where it looks like the AI is doing all the heavy lifting, when in reality most of it was people in India watching the cameras and effectively being the cashier, just remotely.      LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/5/20245 minutes, 55 seconds
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Jayden Daniels: Former Shortland Street actor on making the switch from screen to stage with 'The Effect'

Shortland Street has been running for an impressive 32 years, and Jayden Daniels played one of the most popular characters in its entire run.  After graduating from Toi Whakaari in 2014 Daniels picked up the role of Curtis in 2015, using that role as a stepping stone to enter the screen industry proper.  He starred as Gabriel in the 2023 film Evil Dead Rise, and Cyril in Whina, the biopic of Dame Whina Cooper.  Daniels' is now making the switch from screen to stage, going back to his roots and theatre training with Auckland Theatre Company’s production of The Effect.  The play follows two people who meet during a clinical drug trial and fall in love, asking the question of whether the love is real or just a side effect of the medication, written by multi-award winner Lucy Prebble.  “There’s love, there’s sorrow,” Daniels told Newstalk ZB’s Jack Tame.  “She writes it way better than I’m explaining it now.”  A majority of Daniels’ training was theatrical training at drama school, but since he’s been working on screen since his graduation there’s been a bit of an adjustment.  “The whole time I’ve been trying to pull down, be smaller and more subtle,” he said.  “If I’m on screen, I can drop right down and talk to you like this,” Daniels lowered his voice in example.  “Whereas on stage I’m having to project. Even if I’m talking to you close, I have to be big and loud.”  “That’s been a challenge for me.”  Daniels has worked in both mediums, and while he used to think he had a preference, he’s recently discovered that theatre has a lot to teach him.  The techniques he can rely on when acting for camera aren’t applicable to stage performances, as audiences can’t hear softspoken voices or see the minute expressions on actors’ faces.  And while he doesn’t prefer one over the other, he told Tame that there are benefits to working in theatre.  “You can take more risks in theatre. You’re rehearsing for a very long time, which is a luxury in acting, especially on screen.”  “I feel like I put a lot of pressure on the product on screen because you get there, you don’t have long to shoot the scene and its done. Whereas here you can try this, it didn’t work, I’ll just throw it to the complete other end.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/5/202413 minutes, 42 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Io Capitano and Monkey Man

Io Capitano   Longing for a brighter future, two Senegalese teenagers embark on a journey from West Africa to Italy. However, between their dreams and reality lies a labyrinth of checkpoints, the Sahara Desert, and the vast waters of the Mediterranean.    Monkey Man  A young man ekes out a meagre living in an underground fight club where, night after night, wearing a gorilla mask, he's beaten bloody by more popular fighters for cash. After years of suppressed rage, he discovers a way to infiltrate the enclave of the city's sinister elite. As his childhood trauma boils over, his mysteriously scarred hands unleash an explosive campaign of retribution to settle the score with the men who took everything from him.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/5/20247 minutes, 12 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Sticky Coconut Feijoa Cake

This sticky cake is studded with tangy feijoas and has a chewy caramelised coconut topping added halfway through cooking and it’s just gorgeous.  Makes a 23cm cake.    Ingredients  1 cup pitted dates  1 cup boiling water  1 teaspoon baking soda  130g butter  ½ cup white sugar  ½ cup brown sugar  1 large egg  1 ¼ cups plain flour  1 teaspoon baking powder  Pinch salt  ½ cup dessicated coconut  1 cup peeled and diced feijoa    Coconut topping:  1 cup shredded coconut  1/3 cup brown sugar  1/3 cup milk  50g butter    Method: 1. Preheat the oven to 170 C. Grease and line a 23cm round baking tin. 2. Cover dates in boiling water and leave to soak for 5 minutes then add baking soda and blend to a chunky paste in a food processor. 3. Cream the butter and both sugars until pale and creamy then beat in the egg and beat for one minute more. Add the date paste to the creamed mixture and stir until combined. Sift in flour, baking powder and salt. Fold in coconut and feijoa chunks until combined. Scrape into baking tin, gently smooth the top and bake for 30 minutes. While it cooks make the coconut topping by combining all ingredients in a small pot over a low heat until melted together. 4. At 30 minute mark, gently spoon the coconut topping over the cake, in an even layer. Continue to cook for a further 25-35 minutes until topping is golden brown and a skewer inserted comes out clean. Run a knife around the edge of the cake to loosen the topping from the tin and leave for one hour before gently turning out and cooling fully.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/5/20246 minutes, 32 seconds
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Kevin Milne: A rather humiliating experience

Over a decade ago Kevin Milne wrote a book about his life.  Going about his daily life, he keeps an eye out for copies of this stunning work of literature, which this time led to something of an humiliating situation for him.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/5/20248 minutes, 9 seconds
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Jack Tame: Mr Bates vs The Post Office is a story about power

As the words spilled out of my mouth, I realised it didn’t make for much of a pitch.  “I’ve got a show I want us to try.” I’d told my wife.  “Oh yeah. What’s is about?” she asked.  “Well... err... it’s about a scandal in Britain involving lots of post offices and an accounting dispute.”  “Post offices?” She said.  “Accounting? Riiight.” She said.  Yes, it’s fair to say I hadn’t pegged ‘Mr Bates vs The Post Office’ on an expectation of sex scenes, car chases, gunfights, and Hollywood heartthrobs.  I’d actually only been vaguely aware of the Post Office scandal before the TV show was aired in Britain earlier this year. If you haven’t heard of it, it’s now routinely described as the greatest miscarriage of justice in British legal history.  In short, Britain’s Post Office —arguably once Britain’s most trusted institution, and surely it’s most British institution— directed all of its subpostmasters, the people running the little village post offices you see all over the U.K, to use a new software system for balancing their books.  But the software underpinning the system was faulty, meaning try as they might, subpostmasters routinely ended up with shortfalls.  Despite thousands and thousands and thousands of complaints, the Post Office refused to accept there was anything wrong and they forced subpostmasters to make up the thousands of pounds in shortfalls with their own money. Most egregiously, between 1999 and 2015, 900 subpostmasters were convicted of theft, fraud and false accounting.  That number alone makes you spin. A handful of people being charged with stealing might be one thing. But 900! It’s remarkable there were any subpostmasters left.  The legal efforts to overturn convictions and get the Post Office to take full responsibility and pay compensation has been a long, painful affair. The story has been covered by British media. It’s been raised in parliament. But it took a TV drama to really rattle the cage.  It mightn’t have been much of a pitch, but within minutes of starting Mr Bates vs the Post Office, my wife and I were locked in. It was compelling. She had tears rolling down her cheeks and even I felt a bit misty-eyed (although I was naturally careful not to let her see me).  I don’t know that I’ve ever watched a show and so desperately wanted it all to be resolved. And I cannot think of many TV dramas that have had more of an immediate impact.  Immediately after it aired, the government announced legislation to overturn the wrongful convictions of hundreds of subpostmasters. More than a million people signed a petition calling for the former Post Office CEO to be stripped of her CBE. King Charles formally revoked it shortly thereafter. More than a billion pounds has been earmarked for compensation.  I realised as the final credits rolled that of course, it wasn’t really a story about the Post Office and accounting. It was a story about power. About class. Mr Bates, David, vs The Post Office Goliath.  And in an age where so much entertainment is fast and snackable, and we all have so much competing for our attention, it was a great reminder about the extraordinary power of really good storytelling. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/5/20244 minutes, 57 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Cowboy Carter - Beyoncé

In Beyoncé's own words, “this ain’t a country album. This is a Beyonce album.”  Cowboy Carter is Beyoncé's eighth studio album, presented as a broadcast by a fictional Texan radio station, Dolly Parton, Linda Martell, and Willie Nelson all acting as the radio DJs.  The album features a total of 27 songs resulting in a lengthy hour and 19 minutes total.  While primarily being a country album, elements of blues, soul, rock, R&B, and folk are incorporated into its overall sound.  While Beyoncé was born and raised in Houston Texas, Daddy Lessons from her 2016 album Lemonade was the first time she’d used the country influences of her upbringing in her musical career.  It was met with a fair bit of pushback, the experience resulting in the creation of Cowboy Carter.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/30/20246 minutes, 21 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Ten Seconds and The Long and Winding Road

Ten Seconds by Robert Gold  After a tense birthday celebration in Haddley, journalist Ben Harper watches his boss, Madeline, get into the car that has come to collect her. He walks home, never imagining that by the next morning, Madeline will be missing.  To find Madeline, Ben will have to return to the now infamous murder case that made her journalism career over a decade ago. A case which, Ben quickly discovers, was never as simple as it seemed.  But time is of the essence, and soon it's not just Madeline's life on the line . . .    The Long and Winding Road by Lesley Pearse  Lesley Pearse didn't publish her first novel until she was 48. Now she has sold over ten million books around the world and is a constant presence on the bestseller chart. A writer of heart-stopping stories, Lesley's books are filled with heroines struggling to make it in a difficult world. Yet this description could apply to Lesley herself. In this, her first ever autobiography, she tells of growing up in an orphanage after her mother's death, her racy twenties in London during the swinging sixties and working as a bunny girl and dressmaker. Packed full of Lesley's signature warmth, wit and poignancy, this is the story of a woman and a writer fighting against the odds to achieve her dreams.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/30/20244 minutes, 36 seconds
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Kate Hall: Sustainability and nomadic living

Nomadic living is becoming more common with the rise in living costs, people travelling round the country house sitting to save money.  Kate “Ethically Kate” Hall is one of these people, and joined Jack Tame to discuss how it works, the pros and cons, and how to keep sustainable while you do so.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/30/20247 minutes, 56 seconds
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Nadine Higgins: What are the impacts of the tax changes for landlords?

This weekend will see two tax changes come into effect for property owners.  One is impacting those who use the likes of Airbnb or Bachcare to rent out their property, and the other impacts those who rent out an investment property.  What are the changes and what effect will they have? Enable Me’s Nadine Higgins joined Jack Tame to run through it all.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/30/20246 minutes, 15 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Autumn fling with Melbourne

"From time-honoured tourist haunts to hidden treasures and trending head-turners, Melbourne impresses in all seasons. But if you’re planning an autumn city-break in the Victorian capital, here’s a round-up of some top recommendations to thread into your schedule." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/29/202410 minutes, 37 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Passionvine hoppers in Christchurch

The Garden City is becoming more and more the home of that Aussie sap-sucking pest we knew so well in Auckland, and it shows in the number of people that contact us on talkback radio.  Until recently, this species was a North-Islander – it slowly spread further and further south: Nelson, Blenheim, Golden Bay, further south along the west coast and also down the east coast of the South Island: Kaikoura, Christchurch and Banks Peninsula.  I’ve seen them in Akaroa a few years ago, so they have been hanging around the warmer Canterbury spots for a while.  I reckon this is a nice example of climate change in action.  Damage to a large range of garden plants:   They suck sap from a wide variety of host plants, often climbers (Wisteria, Passionfruit vines) and Perennials (salvia, Hydrangeas, Camellia, you name it!!).  Sap-sucking is their big impact on garden plants – sometimes they debilitate their host, pooping honeydew all over the place and that creates a deposit of sooty mould, like with so many sap-sucking insects in the garden.  The damage starts as soon as the little fluffy-bums appear on the scene (in mid-Spring).  Now, these are the Passionvine Hopper control tricks for Autumn:  Currently they are adults, with quite cute moth-like wings that are partially see-through. These jumpy sapsuckers are impossible to hit with chemical sprays.   The female hoppers mate and lay eggs on thin twigs or branches and also on the tendrils of growing vines (such as Passionfuit vines):  Easiest thing to do is to find those egg-laying sites and prune them off in late autumn - early winter. Chuck them in the Ultra Low Emissions Burner and they won’t hatch next spring.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/29/20244 minutes, 14 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: The US Government's AI rules for agencies and self-driving "Robotaxies"

The US government has released AI rules for its agencies   Say hello to the "Chief AI Officer" - every US government agency will now need to have one. Agencies will also be required to establish AI governance boards to coordinate how AI is used within each agency. They must mitigate the risks of algorithmic discrimination and inform the public about how the AI is used. They will be required to submit a report each year detailing every system which is used. Any government-owned AI models, code, and data should be released to the public unless they pose a risk to government operations. Kamala Harris says: "This is to make sure that AI is used responsibly, understanding that we must have senior leaders across our government, who are specifically tasked with overseeing AI adoption and use."  Self driving "Robotaxis" are coming to NYC's streets   At this stage, they will only be permitted if they have a safety driver behind the wheel as they test their software on the "country’s most challenging urban environment". NYC is letting other cities be the testing ground, only allowing companies who have tested their cars elsewhere to be permitted. As part of the process, they'll need to supply crash and "disengagement" data.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/29/20244 minutes, 48 seconds
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Tara Ward: Mr Bates and The Post Office, Renegade Nell, The Couple Next Door

Mr Bates vs The Post Office   The extraordinary story of the greatest miscarriage of justice in British legal history, where hundreds of innocent sub-postmasters and postmistresses were wrongly accused of theft, fraud and false accounting due to a defective IT system (TVNZ+, from March 31).    Renegade Nell  A historical drama about a quick-witted and courageous young woman framed for murder, who unexpectedly becomes the most notorious outlaw in 18th-century England (Disney+).    The Couple Next Door  A British drama about a young couple who develop a fast friendship with their new neighbours when they move to an idyllic suburb, only for the relationship to take some unexpected and sinister turns (TVNZ+).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/29/20245 minutes, 3 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Wicked Little Letters and Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire

Wicked Little Letters When the residents of Littlehampton start receiving letters filled with obscenities and hilarious profanity, Rose, a rambunctious Irish immigrant, is accused of the crime. Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire Godzilla and the almighty Kong face a colossal threat hidden deep within the planet, challenging their very existence and the survival of the human race. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/29/20246 minutes, 52 seconds
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Gavin Strawhan: Prolific screenwriter on his debut crime novel 'The Call'

Originally from Australia, screenwriter Gavin Strawhan is behind some of New Zealand’s biggest TV shows.  Shortland Street, Outrageous Fortune, Nothing Trivial, and Mercy Peak are just some of the entries on his extended resume, but now he’s turning his focus to the page instead of the screen.  Set in rural coastal New Zealand, The Call is Strawhan’s debut novel, the novel growing from a story Strawhan was told years ago by a detective.  “She had given out her number and the girlfriend of a guy in a gang had started ringing her late at night and giving away little tips of information, especially if they had a domestic.”  Although he's been working in screen and television for over thirty years, he told Newstalk ZB’s Jack Tame that this was what he wanted to do growing up.  “I took a very long route via television to get back to what I wanted to do.”  Strawhan went to university for biology, swapping to drama and English after going out with an actress. He wrote for a theatre company years later, before going on to get a job as a trainee script editor on Neighbours.  “So, you know, these things are going in weird directions.”  The process of writing a novel is rather different to working in a writer's room, Strawhan telling Tame that while it's an exciting environment, it’s also exhausting.  “When Covid came along and the production I’d been working on shut down, it was my opportunity.”  There was no network to pitch an idea to, and he didn’t have to come up with an ending or have everything locked down.  “I just got up every morning and wrote two or three thousand words, and then I’d go for a walk and then I’d come back and edit what I’d written.  “It was just so lovely,” he told Tame. “I really enjoyed it.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/29/202416 minutes, 19 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Easter Mess

Every mouthful of this tastes like a hot cross bun only better! It’s crunchy and creamy, sweet and spicy.   Serves 4-6       Ingredients:  ½ cup currants or raisins  ¼ cup rum or brandy   Squeeze of fresh orange juice   ½ tsp cinnamon + extra for dusting   Pinch nutmeg   Pinch mixed spice   200mls cream, whipped  1 packet store-bought meringues  2-3 fresh plums, sliced   2 tbsps glace orange or lemon peel, chopped finely   Small handful mint leaves     Method:  Simmer currants or raisins with rum, orange juice and spices for 3-5 minutes until they plump up. Cool.  Take a large platter and dollop the whipped cream on it. Roughly crush the meringues and sprinkle these over the cream. Scatter over plum slices, chopped peel and cooled currants. Dust with a bit more cinnamon and scatter over mint leaves.   When serving make sure that each serve gets a bit of everything.      Notes:   Use pears or feijoa if you can’t find fresh plums.  For a dairy free alternative, use coconut yoghurt instead of cream.      LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/29/20246 minutes, 2 seconds
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Kevin Milne: What decade has the most romantic music?

Music and love often go hand in hand, many of the most well-known songs covering the topic.  While there’s plenty of modern pop songs that do the feeling justice, Kevin Milne believes that they’re not the most romantic.  He’s been taking a look back at the stage shows of the 50’s and 60’s and can’t help but think they top the charts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/29/20246 minutes, 48 seconds
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Jack Tame: Bankman-Fried's story was too good to be true

25 years.  If Sam Bankman-Fried was to spend his full sentence behind bars, he’d be in his fifties by the time he was released from prison. Still, it could have been worse. The maximum potential sentence faced by the so-called crypto king was more than a century.  Like many, I’ve marvelled in the rise and fall of Sam Bankman-Fried. It’s an extraordinary story. The son of high-profile professors, he made a fortune in crypto currency faster than any human had ever made money before. $NZ 43 billion with his dual crypto-currency companies, FTX and Alameda Research. Companies which turned out to not be nearly as independent from each other, and from each other’s balance books, as they legally should have been.  But what is really extraordinary about the Sam Bankman-Fried story is that we fell for it.  Not you or I, necessarily —even though I’m firmly in the crypto demographic, I’ve never heard anyone sensibly explain what it actually does. It just seems like speculation for the sake of speculation. No different to gambling for the sake of it— by we, I mean the world.  Looking at it now, it all just seems so obvious.  Bankman-Fried, like however many characters before him, perfectly played the part of an uncouth, slobbily-dressed, beanbag-sleeping tech bro. I say characters because —come on— the whole wearing sneakers, shabby socks, and poorly-fitting t-shirts despite billions of dollars in net worth, while meeting a former President – this has become such a cliché for so called tech geniuses.  He suckered the world with his image. And he suckered the world with his money. How many celebrities took a buck, or a few million, to shill for something they didn’t really understand? How many politicians chose not to ask too many questions, but gladly received the campaign donations he passed on their way?  It remains to be seen how much investors will actually get back from Bankman-Fried’s fraud. But following the case, what is clear about his $NZ13 billion fraud is not that it was the work of a tech genius, but that it was the work of a simple conman. The fraud was not breathtaking in its complexity, it was breathtaking in its simplicity. A good old fashioned ponzi scheme.  For all of the hype, then. For all of the fuss. For all of the big promises about crypto’s future and the blazing path of a brilliant young billionaire who’s genius sucked in titans of industry and some of the most powerful people in the World, we are left once again with an old pearl of wisdom: If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/29/20244 minutes, 25 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: A review of Gossip's new album, Real Power

Estelle Clifford reviews Gossip's first album since reuniting in 2019, Real Power.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/23/20245 minutes, 55 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Reviewing The Hunter, Private Equity

The Hunter by Tana French It's a blazing summer when two men arrive in a small village in the West of Ireland. One of them is coming home. Both of them are coming to get rich. One of them is going to die. Private Equity by Carrie Sun When we meet Carrie Sun, she can't shake the feeling that she's wasting her life. The daughter of Chinese immigrants, Carrie excelled in school, graduated early from MIT, and climbed the corporate ladder, all in pursuit of the American dream. But at twenty-nine, she's left her analyst job, dropped out of an MBA program, and is trapped in an unhappy engagement. So when she gets the rare opportunity to work at one of the most prestigious hedge funds in the world, she knows she can't say no. Fourteen interviews later, she's in.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/23/20244 minutes, 25 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Southern treats of the Gold Coast

Mike Yardley spoke to Jack Tame about his time in Coolangatta, in southern Gold Coast. For more tips on tripping the sights and treats of the southern Gold Coast, Mike's article is here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/23/20249 minutes, 5 seconds
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Dougal Sutherland: New study on wellbeing in the workplace

Dougal Sutherland discusses a recent survey by Umbrella Wellbeing showing the large number of employees who feel that their mental wellbeing isn't being prioritised, and the risk that poses for businesses.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/23/20245 minutes, 19 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Autumn holes in the ground

A few days ago, we celebrated our Autumn Equinox; that was on Wednesday 20th March at 16:06 to be precise.  It really has nothing to do with this story, apart from the fact that you'll notice quite a few good-looking holes in your lawn around this time of the year. It shows you that life-cycles either come to an end or change from one phase to the next. A good example is the mess made by starlings in my lawn: hundreds of sizeable holes per square metre really stands out.  Autumn rain has finally made the soil quite wet; Grassgrub larvae (juveniles) are moving upwards in the soil to avoid being drowned and starlings literally probe the soil for tasty grubs. I'm not that worries: these starlings provide a gratis pest-control service.  On soils where there are few plants (think of those "naked" vertical clay banks) you'll often find medium-sized round holes with an opening that looks "counter-sunk" in shape. This is the job of our native tiger beetles. When they are larvae they create these tunnels into the soil and block the entrance with their head, while waiting for suitable prey to walk past.  From now on, you'll notice that the holes are open - the larvae will finalise their juvenile stages underground and emerge in late spring as fast-moving adult beetles. And from now on there will be critters that come out of the soil, especially after good rain events. Earthworms will move up easily to grab some organic material from the surface of the soil and to drop some casts off on top! These worms are recyclers and literally live off of the dead plant material (and other natural waste, such as animal droppings). This planet is perfectly designed in and around our soil.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/23/20243 minutes, 55 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: US Government says Apple is monopolising the smartphone market

The US Government says users who purchase Apple smartphones are "locked in" to the Apple ecosystem. Within the ecosystem, all your devices and services are meant to interconnect effortlessly. Apple says it will seek to have the case dismissed, and if unsuccessful, will fight it vigorously.  The Justice Department estimates that Apple's share of the US smartphone market exceeds 70%.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/22/20242 minutes, 51 seconds
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Tara Ward: Reviewing Escaping Utopia, Palm Royale, Obituary

Escaping Utopia TVNZ's new three-part documentary series takes us behind the scenes of Gloriavale and reveals what it's like to live in - and leave - the extreme religious community. (Begins Sunday on TVNZ1 and on TVNZ+). Palm Royale This new comedy drama features an all-star Hollywood cast and follows a woman in the late 1960s who will do whatever it takes to be admitted into an exclusive Palm Springs society (Apple TV+). Obituary A dark Irish drama about an obituary writer who is being paid per article. When work dries up, she decides to take matters into her own hands (TVNZ+). LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/22/20244 minutes, 40 seconds
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Brooke Fraser: Returning to NZ to perform with the Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra

Brooke Ligertwood, also known as Brooke Fraser, returns home to New Zealand to perform a one-off concert with the Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra.  Brooke sits down with Jack Tame at Roundhead Studios to discuss what she has been up to.  WATCH / LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/22/202418 minutes, 46 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Food budgeting in a recession

With a recession just announced, it's important to get the most out of every dollar without compromising on the quality of your food. Here are some things you can do to stretch the weekly meal budget: Learn to cook! Adopt a waste not, want not attitude - never let anything go to waste. Grow your own food, especially herbs. Preserve or freeze! Sauces, fruit, chutneys, butter, milk, etc.  Buy in season and buy on special.  Buy off-supermarket - bulk foods, local fruiterers, clearance houses. Ingredients and food items that will save you money: Protein - beans, peas, meats (limit to 100g per person), chicken, etc. Tinned and frozen vegetables retains their quality well - corn, peas, tomatoes. Meatless meals will always be cheaper; potato & pea curry, tacos, eggs. Use lesser cuts and offal - chuck steak, kidneys, etc.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/22/20246 minutes, 57 seconds
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Kevin Milne: The romanticism of 50s & 60s stage songs

Kevin Milne spoke to Jack Tame about his love for the stage songs of the 1950s & 60s.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/22/20245 minutes, 5 seconds
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Jack Tame: Well wishes for the Princess of Wales

Just before 6pm Friday local time, Kensington Palace published a rare video of Catherine, Princess of Wales. Having taken a few weeks to process and digest the news in private, and having taken time to tell her children, she announced to the World she is being treated for cancer.   Apart from that, we don’t have a huge volume of information. We don’t know much more except she says she received the diagnosis after tests following abdominal surgery in January. She has begun receiving preventative chemotherapy.   First of all, hearing those words is a shocking and affecting experience. For anyone who has had friends or family with cancer – and I would suggest that’s most of us – it snaps you right back to your own experience. At a really basic human level, I think many of us feel a real sense of empathy for what Kate and that family must be going through.  Personally, I found my thoughts drifting to the issues of the last few weeks: The internet conspiracies about Princess Kate’s health and whereabouts and the now-infamous doctored family photo.   I also found myself trying to imagine all the complicated dimensions that being a prominent royal adds to this situation. You would think that the privilege of that position will afford Kate the very best medical care. But at the same time, there is an extraordinary level of public attention that will come with this experience. Even before this announcement, medical staff in the U.K were trying to illegally access Princess Kate’s health records. That’s tough.  And finally, my thoughts settled on Kate’s health in the broader context of what the Royal Family is going through right now. Both Princess Kate and King Charles are now being treated for cancer. It must be a huge stress on the family... and I am acutely aware that Prince William is sitting there in the middle, trying to support both his father and his wife as they are undergo their treatments.   I think everyone will be wishing them a speedy and full recovery. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/22/202410 minutes, 37 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin reviews Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire, Road House

Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire The Spengler family returns to the iconic New York City firehouse where the original Ghostbusters have taken ghost-busting to the next level. When the discovery of an ancient artifact unleashes an evil force, Ghostbusters new and old must unite to protect their home and save the world from a second ice age. Road House 2024 remake available on Prime. Ex-UFC fighter Dalton takes a job as a bouncer at a Florida Keys roadhouse, only to discover that this paradise is not all it seems. Starring Connor McGregor and Jake Gyllenhaal.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/22/20245 minutes, 35 seconds
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James Irwin: Bill Ryder-Jones - Lechyd Da

Bill Ryder-Jones was guitarist/vocalist for the West Kirby Merseyside band The Coral, who were successful in releasing 5 top 10 albums in mid 2000s, starting out as teenagers.  His latest solo album is complete with classy hooks and rousing choruses, and his closely mic-ed voice is fragile, delicate, even on the edge of croaky, giving the impression he's sharing intimacies directly with the listener.  Featuring lush pop hooks and even school assembly choirs of kids - the songs sound triumphant and powerful and happy even if most of them are dark, sad and of lost love. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/16/20248 minutes, 42 seconds
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Secrets and mystery make for page turners

Sisterhood by Cathy Kelly - In just one night, at her own 50th birthday, her world has imploded. Her mother has kept a secret hidden all her life. And it changes everything. Before Lou can take another step, she needs to get to the bottom of the shocking truth that alters who she really is.    The River We Remember by William Kent Krueger - A body of a wealthy landowner, Jimmy Quinn, is found shot and assumed murdered by many. His body is found floating half naked in the Alabaster River. The investigation is thrown into the lap of Brody Dern, a returned honored veteran, the sheriff, who bears many internal and external scars from the war. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/16/20244 minutes, 24 seconds
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Mike Yardley: New Caledonia Hinterland and Island treats

"Basking in the world’s largest lagoon, fortified by the world’s second-largest barrier reef, and boasting extraordinary biodiversity, New Caledonia’s natural good looks and succulent subtropical balm is just the beginning of the sweet seduction. Unlike Fiji or the Cook Islands, New Caledonia has not established the same holiday getaway familiarity with Kiwis. It is still somewhat under the radar. But you can fully expect your great expectations of South Pacific holiday indulgence to be delightfully smashed." Read Mike's full article here.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/16/20248 minutes, 13 seconds
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Ethically Kate: 4 sustainable things to do this autumn

4 sustainable things to do this autumn    Collect leaves for your compost: gather these from parks, ideally not in car parks (can be contaminated). Put them into your compost, store in a dry place and add them slowly over the course of the year. They're great carbon for your compost!   Get your winter clothing out & donate what you can (autumn is a good time for this as the second-hand stores want autumn/winter clothing, NOT summer stuff as they cannot store it). Wash it properly, hand wash woolen knits, store them in vented places to reduce the risk of moths.   Freeze/store/save your autumn/summer produce: e.g. freeze your abundance of tomatoes, turn it into tomato sauce or chop them in meal sized portions to freeze. This reduces your reliance on canned tomatoes during winter.   Consider how you're going to heat your home: do your curtains need to be replaced? Set timers on your heat pump, find second-hand heaters, consider adding things like wool underfloor insulation. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/16/20248 minutes, 8 seconds
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Stonefruit jobs in March and Autumn – Prune and Control Leafcurl

Leafcurl on stone fruit: peaches, Nectarines, plums, peachcotts, peacherines, apricots, etc always a sad sight on the leaves – it manifests itself in Spring and Summer – after flowering.  The leaves become distorted and discoloured (pretty yellow and orange coloration); when infestations are serious the number of leaves that drop off can be substantial, causing a reduction in photosynthesis and hence the ability of the tree to “feed itself”.  In spring the answer to “cure?” it will always be: “You’re too late!”… Right now, in late summer/Autumn you are still ahead of the 2024 infection game.  Taphrina deformans is the fungus that causes this leafcurl. Note how “deformans” is quite aptly chosen as a name, as it deforms the shape of the leaves quite obviously.  The disease becomes active at bud-break: when the leaves and flowers come out of the buds in spring. The spores of Taphrina deformans are already settled on those buds, making infection quite easy.  Those buds are initiated by the trees in autumn, which is just a few weeks away.  What to do?  First of all prune your stonefruit right now – after the last peaches, nectarines etc etc have been harvested, pruning can be done. Doing it this early has another advantage: you avoid bacterial diseases in the cooler months (late autumn/winter is a dodgy period for bacterial infections!)  Pruning now also reduces the amount of tree to spray in April.  Around mid April, when the leaves are falling off the deciduous stone fruit trees, the new buds for the next season are formed. Taphrina deformans will then be invading those new buds and overwinter on those buds to infect the trees again in spring.  First thing to do is to remove all fallen leaves from under the trees. That reduces infection chances.  Next thing is to apply a double dose of copper spray (copper oxychloride, liquid copper, or copper-sulphur mixtures, available form garden centres) on the remaining leaves and on the branches/twigs/buds of the tree.  Don’t worry about “burning the rest of the leaves off: they were going to fall anyway.  Use a “sticker” if you can, to increase coverage and stickability  Do this again a few weeks later and ensure good coverage of all parts of the tree.  This autumn spray exercise is the most important preventative thing you can do to avoid Leaf curl.  If you still get some infected leaves in spring there is no point in spraying with copper fungicides as that will burn those leaves quite badly. Best thing to do is to remove and get rid of infected leaves as much as you can – especially fallen leaves. “Getting rid of them” does not mean COMPOSTING them!!  Fertilising the tree in spring allows it to make new leaves and get some resistance to the infection, especially when you use Seaweed Tea and such marine-originated liquid fertilisers.  During the period when fruits grow and expand, check for fallen leaves that show signs of leafcurl, and get rid of them. REMEMBER “Getting rid of them” does not mean COMPOSTING them!!  Autumn is the time to start controlling leafcurl on stonefruit for the next fruiting season:  Some people use Lime sulphur; that’s OK too as a winter clean-up; seeing the trees are getting to dormancy this Lime Sulphur won’t harm the leaves either; but I think that lime may not be a great material for apricots as it has the ability to raise the pH levels.  A last smack of Copper spray before budburst should “mop up” the last surviving spores before the flowering and fruiting season begins again. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/16/20246 minutes, 19 seconds
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Paritua Stone Paddock 2023 Chardonnay - For fans of a big and buttery style

Why I chose it:   - Difficult vintage (Cyclone Gabrielle)  - Be guided by vintage ratings but be aware that there are many exceptions  - Sorting machine takes a photo of every grape and rejects sub-standard fruit.    What does it taste like? A rich and flavoursome chardonnay that will be appreciated by fans of the “big and buttery” style. Slightly toffee-ish, mouth-filling wine with enough richness and flavour to handle a mild butter chicken curry.  Why it’s a bargain: I’d buy it if it was $40    Where can you buy it?  Wine Collective Direct $33.31. Paritua Winery, Hawke’s Bay $25    Food match? Roast chicken, most seafood    Will it keep? Drink up See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/16/20245 minutes, 8 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: The USA is once again talking about a TikTok ban

The "Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act" would ban TikTok in the US, unless it is sold to a non-Chinese owner.  It passed the House 352-to-65. The Senate Leader hasn't decided when the bill will make it to the floor for a vote. There are concerns over free speech restrictions and presidential overreach. The driving factor according to the White House: Chinese ownership of ByteDance poses grave national security risks to the United States, including the ability to meddle in elections. It's particularly concerned that the Chinese government could meddle in the algorithm that serves up content. Financial Analysts are concerned it could prompt China to retaliate against American's firms' business activities in China. Disney has a theme park, Tesla gets almost of a quarter of its revenue from China, about half of Amazon's third-party partners are from China. But remember, Platforms like Facebook and YouTube are blocked in China. TikTok is not going down without a fight. It has called on its 170 million US users to phone and write to their representatives. In 2020 the company created a deal with Oracle to separate US user data from the rest of the world, and host that in the US. Arguing this is a breach of the first amendment is likely to be the company takes its lobbying. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/16/20247 minutes, 11 seconds
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Screentime: Retirees, 90's girl groups, and drug moguls

Apples Never Fall - (TVNZ+) In Apples Never Fall, recent retiree Joy, played by Annette Bening, suddenly disappears. Police are quick to suspect her husband, Stan, a former tennis coach played by Sam Neill, and the mystery forces the couple's four adult children to reevaluate their parents' seemingly perfect marriage.  Girls5Eva - (Netflix) A '90s girl group with just one hit record gets a second chance at success when a young rapper decides to sample their song.  The Gentlemen - (Netflix) When cannabis mogul Mickey Pearson plans to sell his profitable marijuana empire following his retirement, it stimulates an array of wrongdoings in the name of greed. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/16/20246 minutes, 49 seconds
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“The intensities just keep going up”: Peter Burling and Blair Tuke ahead of SailGP in Lyttleton

Eight events deep into the fourth season, Team New Zealand is vying for the top spot in SailGP.  This month the race is returning once more to Lyttleton Harbour in Christchurch, giving the kiwis the home-water advantage.   Peter Burling and Blair Tuke have been on the team since New Zealand sailed onto the scene in season two, and the growth they’ve witnessed in the scene is impressive.  “It’s great for our sport to have a league that’s there,” Tuke told Newstalk ZB’s Jack Tame.  “To see then the growth of the whole SailGP brand, of the teams individually, viewership numbers all around the world... it’s pretty impressive.”  Last year was the first year that a leg of the competition was hosted in New Zealand and the support the team received from local fans was amazing, Burling said.  “Seeing how many people down in, in Lyttleton and Christchurch, you know, got behind us, and it sold out in minutes I think.”  “It was crazy.”  Burling and Tuke have been sailing together since 2008 and in those sixteen years they’ve experienced the growth and development not only of SailGP, but of sailing as a whole.   “The intensities just keep going up,” Burling said.  Since every team has the same type of boat, winning comes down to the way they use it and the skill of the sailors. Mistakes are costly and events are becoming tighter, with a lot coming down to the fifth race.  “Everyone’s starting to push the margins harder and harder."  The competition’s timeframe has also aided in its growth, occurring yearly as opposed to every three or four years like the America’s Cup or the Olympics.  “The unique thing with the, the GP format is we get such limited time training,” Burling said.  “We’re having to develop the whole time during these events.”  While this is great for strengthening the abilities of the racers, it makes it somewhat tricky for newcomers as they don’t have the same level of experience.  “Getting to grips with everything is the bit that takes time.”  Burling and Tuke are co-CEOs of the team, which means they not only have to focus on growing their skills on the water, but also growing the business.  “It’s like any, any start-up business where yeah, it’s not necessarily about those mistakes but how you learn from then, and then grow going forward,” Tuke told Tame.  Their partnership extends even further than SailGP and Team NZ, the pair establishing the Live Ocean Foundation together out of their deep concern for the health of the ocean and the life within it.  The charity is partnered with Team NZ, the pair seeing the platform that SailGP could be for connecting new audiences to what’s happening just below the surface.  It’s a busy year in sailing, with SailGP, the Olympics, and the America’s Cup all taking place, America’s Cup occurring not long after SailGP finishes.  “We’re incredibly lucky as a sailing team,” Burling said.  “We get to, you know, practice our trade at the really high level in two sporting competitions, essentially.”  The America’s Cup is kicking off in August, which means it’s too early to have an idea of how it’ll shake out just yet. Boat launches in April will give the first insight, Burling told Tame, but even then, you can’t be sure how they’ll develop over the coming months.   “Keep pushing as hard as you can and hope you’re faster than them and racing better at the end.”   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/16/202412 minutes, 31 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Roast Pumpkin with sunflower cream

This dish magically transforms pumpkin from side dish to star performer and I can’t get enough of it.  Serves 2-4    Ingredients 750g crown pumpkin (can use butternut), cut into wedges, skin on  2 tablespoons olive oil  1 tablespoon pomegranate molasses  1 teaspoon smoked paprika  ½ teaspoon sea salt  4 tablespoons pumpkin seeds  Handful parsley, chopped    Sunflower cream  ½ cup sunflower seeds  2 tablespoons lemon juice  1 tablespoons tahini  ¼ cup olive oil  ½ teaspoon sea salt    Method Heat oven to 180 C. Line a tray with baking paper. Mix oil, pomegranate molasses and paprika and rub/brush this all over the pumpkin. Lay out on prepared tray, sprinkle with salt and roast for 45 minutes or until pumpkin is soft and cooked through. You can cook the pumpkin for longer and it will only intensify the flavour. Toss in the pumpkin seeds in the final 5-10 minutes and they will toast and puff up. To make the sunflower cream, cover sunflower seeds with warm water and soak for at least 1 hour. Drain. Blitz drained seeds with remaining ingredients in a blender until it is smooth and creamy. Add water if needed to get a creamy consistency. Taste for seasoning and add more lemon juice and/or salt to taste. Serve warm pumpkin drizzled with sunflower cream and scattered with parsley and toasted pumpkin seeds. Nici’s note: Use kumara or cauliflower in place of pumpkin if you like. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/16/20245 minutes, 41 seconds
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'Goodbye Julia' a film about secrets and guilt - Francesca Rudkin

Goodbye Julia   Winner of the Freedom Award at Cannes Film Festival, this Sudanese film sees a married former singer from the north seek redemption for causing the death of a southern man by hiring his oblivious wife as her maid.    Ricky Stanicky  Twenty years after creating the imaginary Ricky Stanicky, three childhood friends still use the non-existent pal as a handy alibi for their immature behaviour. When their spouses and partners get suspicious and demand to finally meet him, the guilty trio decides to hire washed-up actor Rod to bring him to life. However, when Rod takes his role of a lifetime a little too far, they begin to wish they never invented Ricky in the first place.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/16/20247 minutes, 16 seconds
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Kevin Milne: The miracle of finding that one life partner

Is it a miracle to find that one life partner? Or do we underestimate how many people we could have a successful marriage with?  Kevin Milne ponders whether getting to know someone in a non-romantic setting is the secret to a long-lasting relationship.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/16/202410 minutes, 14 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Norah Jones – Visions

A sister to her previous album, Norah Jones has released her 9th studio album ‘Visions’.   The album consists of a vibrant and joyful twelve tracks, celebrating the rollercoaster of life, feeling free, and wanting to dance.  It's a stark contrast to her previous album, 'Pick Me Up Off The Floor', released early in the lockdown of 2020, foreshadowing many of the dark emotions that period invoked. LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/9/20246 minutes, 21 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Women and End of Story

The Women by Kristin Hannah  An intimate portrait of coming of age in a dangerous time and an epic tale of a nation divided.  Women can be heroes. When twenty-year-old nursing student Frances “Frankie” McGrath hears these words, it is a revelation. Raised in the sun-drenched, idyllic world of Southern California and sheltered by her conservative parents, she has always prided herself on doing the right thing. But in 1965, the world is changing, and she suddenly dares to imagine a different future for herself. When her brother ships out to serve in Vietnam, she joins the Army Nurse Corps and follows his path.  As green and inexperienced as the men sent to Vietnam to fight, Frankie is over- whelmed by the chaos and destruction of war. Each day is a gamble of life and death, hope and betrayal; friendships run deep and can be shattered in an instant. In war, she meets—and becomes one of—the lucky, the brave, the broken, and the lost.  But war is just the beginning for Frankie and her veteran friends. The real battle lies in coming home to a changed and divided America, to angry protesters, and to a country that wants to forget Vietnam.    End of Story by A. J. Finn  “I’ll be dead in three months. Come tell my story.”  So writes Sebastian Trapp, reclusive mystery novelist, to his longtime correspondent Nicky Hunter, an expert in detective fiction. With mere months to live, Trapp invites Nicky to his spectacular San Francisco mansion to help draft his life story . . . living alongside his beautiful second wife, Diana; his wayward nephew, Freddy; and his protective daughter, Madeleine. Soon Nicky finds herself caught in an irresistible case of real-life “detective fever.”  “You and I might even solve an old mystery or two.”  Twenty years earlier—on New Year’s Eve 1999—Sebastian’s first wife and teenaged son vanished from different locations, never to be seen again. Did the perfect crime writer commit the perfect crime? And why has he emerged from seclusion, two decades later, to allow a stranger to dig into his past?  “Life is hard. After all, it kills you.”  As Nicky attempts to weave together the strands of Sebastian’s life, she becomes obsessed with discovering the truth . . . while Madeleine begins to question what her beloved father might actually know about that long-ago night. And when a corpse appears in the family’s koi pond, both women are shocked to find that the past isn’t gone—it’s just waiting.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/9/20243 minutes, 36 seconds
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Dougal Sutherland: New priorities emerging for workers

Career progression seems to be on the back burner for many kiwis.  Randstand’s latest Workmonitor report found that employees are prioritising flexibility and mental health over career progression.  Over 27,000 people were surveyed, a thousand of whom were kiwis.  Dr Dougal Sutherland joined Jack Tame to talk about this new data and offer some tips for businesses who want to proactively address these new priorities.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/9/20247 minutes, 29 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Colour and cuisine in Noumea

"Situated on the largest island in the archipelago, Grand Terre, New Caledonia’s bustling capital proudly flaunts its oh là là influence as a French overseas territory, where European chic mingles with laid-back Melanesian charm, set amid coconut palms in the swagger of a sea breeze. If you want a tropical island getaway with a little Parisian panache and the best baguettes in the South Pacific, you’ve come to the right place." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/9/20249 minutes, 55 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Tomatoes till the end

I remember Jack telling me he’d harvested his tomatoes in February and was pleased with the crop.  I reckon that —especially in the North— tomatoes can go on and on and on; here in Canterbury they grow well into autumn (April, May) until the frosts start to play havoc.  In my tunnel house I carry on harvesting them till June, sometimes July!  This is what they look like in February/March:      The green tomatoes are still on the plant.  These will easily ripen as long as you water and fertilise the plants with a fruit-fertiliser (sufficient Potash – K). Keep trimming the laterals and keep tying up the vines to the stakes.  Each week I do a thorough harvest of all the tomatoes that are ripe or almost ripe.  Pink Berkely Tie-Dye is quite lovely coloured and firm, great for fried tomatoes with eggs.    My biggest crop is F100 (sweet cherry tomatoes) that come in red and Brown-ish hues; The original F 100 is really long-lasting on the plant and keeps going the longest. It’s my standard variety that is best represented in the tunnel house. It’s also the basic tomato for roasted tomato sauce, creating the Bolognese for decent Italian meals  Another good general processing tomato is “Tigerella”, this one goes on till May at least – sometimes well into June.  Roasting them is a piece of cake; olive-oil over the top, plus some onions, paprika and later, basil. Not too high in temperature (150 is usually enough), blitz them when done, if you like, and freeze them in ziplock bags and you’ll have tomato sauce for the year.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/9/20243 minutes, 27 seconds
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Hannah McQueen: Long-term wealth creation

With everyone talking about mortgages and interest rates, it's easy to forget that property is just one part of your overall wealth plan and strategy.   Hannah McQueen joined Jack Tame for a chat about the considerations people should have towards long-term wealth creation and what homeowners should be preparing for once the housing market has settled again.  And, if you're not interested in property, how to choose your investment strategy while the markets are down.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/9/20247 minutes, 8 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: If you have an Xtra email, you're going to start paying

Xtra says there are 260,000 email accounts which will need to start paying.   From May 16th, 2024 Xtra Mail will be $9.95 a month, or $5.95 a month if you're a Spark customer with broadband, a monthly mobile plan or a landline (That works out to be $71.40 per mailbox per year, almost $18 million a year for all those customers).  So where to from here? What are your options?  If you choose to go somewhere else, Xtra says it has a free email forwarding service. Free services are available from Gmail or Hotmail/Outlook, you may get ads or your data may be used for targeting ads. Microsoft Outlook has the option to go "premium", which is an ad-free experience for $3 a month, or you can bundle it with a Microsoft 365 subscription for $129 a year, or $179 for a family plan.  A .nz domain name is going to be about ~$20 a year, then you need to pay for a mail service on top of that.  Fastmail is an option for US$2.50 a month, there are also offerings from Proton Mail (Swiss based), Hey (US based) or Zoho (India based). Google Workspace is US$6 per user per month, and Microsoft 365 is NZ$9.70 a month.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/8/20243 minutes, 52 seconds
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Stewart Sowman-Lund: Curb Your Enthusiasm, James Must-A-Pic His Mum a Man, The Regime

Curb Your Enthusiasm   The final season of the long-running show sees Larry David star as an over-the-top version of himself in this semi-improvised comedy series that shows how seemingly trivial details of day-to-day life can precipitate a catastrophic chain of events. (Neon)    James Must-A-Pic His Mum a Man   Imagine being tasked with finding your mum the love of her life in front of the nation. That’s exactly what comedian James Mustapic sets out to do in his new show James Must-a-pic His Mum a Man. Alongside his mum, Janet, the 2023 Celebrity Treasure Island winner will vet potential candidates in the reality/comedy series, ensuring hilarity ensues along the way. (TVNZ+)    The Regime   The Regime is an American political satire television miniseries from HBO starring Kate Winslet, depicting a year within the palace of a crumbling authoritarian regime. (Neon)    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/8/20245 minutes, 34 seconds
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Guy Pearce: Australian actor on his career and role in 'The Convert'

Named by IndieWire as one of the best actors to have never received an Academy Award nomination, Guy Pearce has had quite the prolific career.   The Aussie actor has stared in over 400 episodes of Neighbours, L.A. Confidential, Memento, and The Time Machine, but his breakout role was in The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert back in 1994.   He’s returning to kiwi cinemas in a week’s time with The Convert, the third collaboration between director Lee Tamahori and producer Robin Scholes.  The film is a historical drama, depicting pre-colonial Aotearoa New Zealand and Māori Culture. A lay preacher arrives at a British settlement in 1830s New Zealand, his violent past is drawn in to question and his faith is put to the test as he finds himself caught in the middle of a bloody conflict between Māori tribes.   Pearce plays preacher Thomas Munro, telling Newstalk ZB’s Jack Tame that he found the script very raw, moving, and fascinating.  “It was just very emotional, and I could really see myself as that character.”  The film is set in a New Zealand context, but the content translates to an international audience, Pearce telling Tame that no matter what the narrative is the idea of a white colonial man taking over or delving into indigenous culture is something that people in many countries can relate to.   The Convert is more than a two-dimensional depiction of colonialism, director Lee Tamahori aiming to take that narrative and make more of a human story, centring connection and compassion regardless of culture, history, and background.  For Pearce, the crux of the story was his character’s development.  “We’re finding a character who’s been traumatised and is looking to find himself and in, in discovering this other culture, he is, he is allowed to then find himself and he therefore owes this other culture.”  “His life was the crux of the story in a way,” he told Tame. “Certainly for me, selfishly, it was the crux of the story.”  This project wasn’t the first time Pearce met Tamahori, but it was the first project they’d worked on together, and Pearce said it was beyond his expectations.  “To witness that wonderful, brilliant intelligence, inspirational kind of outlook that he has, to witness that on a daily level and to be a part of it, and to, you know, he’s so joyful.”  “He’s got such a beautiful kind of energy, and an inspiring quality that you just want to be around him.”  Pearce has had an extensive career, and his success means that he can now be discerning in the projects he chooses to be involved in.  “I just do the things that move me, you know. I’ve always done that.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/8/202415 minutes, 41 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: How To Have Sex, 20 Days in Mariupol

How To Have Sex   Three British teenage girls go on a rites-of-passage holiday - drinking, clubbing and hooking up, in what should be the best summer of their lives.    20 Days in Mariupol   As the Russian invasion begins, a team of Ukrainian journalists trapped in the besieged city of Mariupol struggle to continue their work documenting the war's atrocities.    Quick mention   The Oscar’s are on March 11th - we can watch them on Disney+ in NZ.   Red carpet 11.30am and ceremony 2pm.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/8/20248 minutes, 18 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Stonefruit Crumble

Late season peach or nectarine crumble is just the best! Make these individual fruit crumbles, they’re fabulous!  Serves 2    Ingredients  2 large peaches or nectarines, halved, stones removed  1-2 tablespoons golden syrup or maple syrup  ¼ cup rolled oats  2 tablespoons brown sugar  1 tablespoon plain flour  2 tablespoons butter  Small handful of nuts – almonds, hazelnuts, walnuts – chopped  Yoghurt, cream and/or ice cream.    Method  Heat oven to 180 C and grease a small ovenproof dish.  Place fruit in dish, cut side up. Generously brush the fruit with golden syrup or maple syrup.  Mix together dry ingredients and rub in the butter. Add the nuts.  Fill the holes of the fruit with crumble. Scatter over any leftover crumble. Drizzle in a little water – just enough to cover the bottom of the dish.  Bake for 30-40 minutes or until fruit is lovely and soft and the crumble is golden.  Serve with yoghurt, whipped cream and/or ice cream.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/8/20244 minutes, 23 seconds
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Kevin Milne: The demise of Fair Go disarms New Zealand

TNVZ announced a raft of cuts yesterday, with nearly 70 members of staff facing the axe and Sunday, Fair Go, Tonight, and Midday all on the chopping block.  Kevin Milne was Fair Go's longest serving host, and finds the loss of the show to be a great shame not only personally, but for regular kiwis who will no longer have that weapon available to them. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/8/20247 minutes, 56 seconds
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Jack Tame: The news organisation cuts are devastating

It was an awful day in my household and office yesterday, as TVNZ joined its free-to-air mates at Warner Brothers Discovery in announcing massive cuts to news gathering operations.  My wife Mava is a reporter on Sunday, and for many, many years I’ve worked with the teams on Sunday, Fair Go, Tonight, and Midday. They are my colleagues and friends. As anyone in any industry who has gone through a restructure or been made redundant will know, it’s a personally devastating thing to experience.  Perhaps I’m biased, but I do think the news business is a bit different to other businesses. I think it contributes to the strength of our democracy and the vibrancy of our society in ways that can’t be measured on a balance sheet. I think it celebrates and reflects us, and I think well-resourced journalism is our single most effective check on power.  When it comes to the TV business, it’s clear the traditional economic models are no longer fit for purpose. In the digital age, traditional TV plays a less prominent role in our lives than it once did. Advertising dollars move from the telly to the likes of Google and Meta, instead. The gazillions they make in profits are mostly shipped offshore.  Of course, people in my industry should have seen this coming. And for the most part they have. I’m not saying there aren’t things they couldn’t have done differently, innovations they could and should have made, but ultimately the force of those digital giants is irrepressible. Trying to save free-to-air commercial TV, with quality news, current affairs, and local programming, in a country with five million people... is like trying to bail out the Titanic with an empty ice cream container. I’m not aware of any comparable broadcast markets where they’ve managed to pull it off.  TV and moving pictures still have a certain magic. Radio has intimacy. But TV is the only medium where you can both hear the crack in the politician’s voice and see the flash in their eyes when a hypocrisy is exposed. At moments of national or international significance... natural disasters, pandemics, we can get information from several sources, but for the collective experience, we still turn to telly.  And there is an extra power that comes with TV currents affairs. Think about the kinds of stories that have been exposed in New Zealand. I remember as a kid in Christchurch, when the doctor Morgan Fahey was exposed by TV3’s 20/20 for sexually abusing his patients. I was eleven years old and I remember it. It was profound, devastating journalism... a story which has stuck in my head for more than 25 years.  Consider Kristin Hall and Sunday’s extraordinary recent investigation into emergency housing in Rotorua. News reports about that issue popped up from time to time on various news websites, but it took moving pictures, careful storytelling, meticulously-produced, expensive current affairs, to drive home the full scale and significance of those abuses. It took the power of telly to affect change.  If we value these things, one way or another we have to pay for it. From a purely economic perspective, if the commercial model is broken, the only other real viable option is a regulatory response.  Of course I’m biased, but I’d argue the value of journalism should be measured in more than dollars and cents. Maybe you disagree. Maybe you think a number of newish, small, independent, digital outlets fills the gap left by the shows that are dying. I think I’d be more open to that argument if the overall number of journos in New Zealand wasn’t massively, steadily dropping.  The traditional TV companies might be poor, but without something meaty in place of Newshub, Sunday and Fair Go, our society and our democracy are poorer too. And by the very nature of the work they do and the vital stories they tell, we will never know what we have lost. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/8/20246 minutes, 7 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: L.A.B - VI

Iconic kiwi band L.A.B. has just dropped their latest album ‘VI’.  It’s their sixth album in seven years, a total of nine tracks with cruisey summery vibes.  They celebrated the album's release with a performance at Electric Avenue in Christchurch.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/2/20245 minutes, 32 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Lone Wolf and The Wartime Book Club

Lone Wolf by Greg Hurwitz  Once a black book government assassin known as Orphan X, Evan Smoak left the program, went deep underground, and reinvented himself as someone who will go anywhere, and risk everything to help the truly desperate who have nowhere else to turn. Since then, Evan has fought international crime syndicates and drug cartels, faced down the most powerful men in the world and even brought down a President. Struggling with an unexpected personal crisis, Evan goes back to the very basics of his mission - and this time, the truly desperate is a little girl who wants him to find her missing dog.    The Wartime Book Club by Kate Thompson  From enchanting cliff tops and white sandy bays to the pretty cobbled streets of St Helier, Jersey is known as the land of milk and honey. But for best friends Bea Rose (the local postwoman) and Grace Le Motte (who works in the island's only library) it becomes the frontline to everyday resistance when their beloved island is occupied by German forces in 1940.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/2/20244 minutes
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Tara Ward: Shōgun, Constellation, The Completely Made Up Adventures of Dick Turpin

Shōgun  Set in Japan in the year 1600, Lord Yoshii Toranaga is fighting for his life as his enemies on the Council of Regents unite against him, when a mysterious European ship is found marooned in a nearby fishing village (Disney+).    Constellation  When a fatal accident occurs on board the International Space Station, a lone astronaut makes the heroic journey back to Earth, only to discover key pieces of her life —including her young daughter— have changed (Apple TV+).    The Completely Made Up Adventures of Dick Turpin  Dick Turpin is a legendary British motorway robber, whose success is defined mostly by his charm, showmanship and great hair. Together with his gang of rogues, he sets out on new adventures, all while trying to escape the clutches of a thief-taker (Apple TV+).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/2/20244 minutes, 57 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Dune: Part Two and The Great Escaper

Dune: Part Two   Paul Atreides unites with Chani and the Fremen while seeking revenge against the conspirators who destroyed his family. Facing a choice between the love of his life and the fate of the universe, he must prevent a terrible future only he can foresee.  The Great Escaper   In the summer of 2014, a World War II veteran sneaks out of his care home to attend the 70th anniversary commemoration of the D-Day landings in Normandy.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/2/20246 minutes, 52 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Golden days in Golden Bay

"Remote and wind-blasted Farewell Spit is a sweeping 30km-long sliver of sand that arcs east, buffering Golden Bay from the Tasman Sea. If you’ve never done it before, revel in this singular environment, by hopping onboard a Farewell Spit Eco Tour, for a 6 hour journey of discovery." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/1/202413 minutes, 7 seconds
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Kate Hall: Load shifting and sustainable power

Load shifting is one of the best things we can do to ensure we are using renewable energy sources instead of non-renewables. But what is load shifting?  Load shifting is simply moving power use to different times of the day. Turning large appliances on at off peak times, setting timers, charging EVs overnight etc.  Kate Hall joined Jack Tame to discuss the benefits of load shifting and its ability to save kiwis hundreds of dollars a year.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/1/20246 minutes, 57 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Paper wasps and their nests

In NZ, we have a number of wasp species that can cause a few problems:  1) German Wasps (arrived after WW2) Vespula germanica  2) The Common Wasp (arrived in the 1970-s) Vespula vulgaris  Both these two species sting – no sense of humor!  They nest in cavities: hollow trees, wall cavities and hollow trunks of trees, in your ceiling or roof space, etc.  These wasps are often found eating honeydew in native forests, especially in the South Island.  They will also hunt for insects (protein) in your garden (Monarch butterfly caterpillars and other sizeable insects).  The Vespula species are tricky to control, kill and remove – best left to professional pest controllers.  3) Australian Paper Wasp (been here for more than 100 years) Polistes humilis  4) Chinese Paper Wasp (since 1979) Polistes chinensis  5) European Paper Wasp (Since 2016) Polistes dominula  These guys and girls sting too!  Paper wasps do not go for the sweet stuff; they eat mostly caterpillars. Not a problem when they go for white butterfly caterpillars that damage your broccoli etc, but killing our native insects is not welcome.  A few weeks ago —in Bannockburn— I ran into Susie Bassett of Waspol NZ Ltd collecting nests of paperwasps. This Company is based in Nelson. (Facebook Waspol NZ)  They send the wasps (frozen) to US immunotherapy Laboratories where they develop products to desensitise people that are seriously affected by wasp stings through acute allergies.  Wasp species have unique versions of venom – immunotherapy can save lives! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/1/20244 minutes, 44 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: Middle Ear Infections in Children

What is a ‘middle ear’ infection?  - One of the most common infections that occur in children.  - By school age most children would have had an infection, and it becomes less common as they get older.  - An infection of the middle ear: air filled space behind the ear drum, which contains the vibrating bones of the ear we hear with.     What do we need to look out for?  - Often starts with a cold.  - Tube that drains the middle ear to the back of throat becomes blocked.  - Middle ear fills up with fluid and can become infected with viruses or bacteria.  - Symptoms include pain in the ear, temperatures, headaches, and trouble hearing.  - Babies may cry a lot, pull at their ears, stop feeding, or be irritable.  - Drum may burst and discharge fluid from the ear     How is it diagnosed?  - Your doctor will look into the ear with a magnifier called an otoscope.  - They’ll look at the drum and see if it’s infected behind the drum.     How do we treat it?  - Most middle ear infections will clear themselves after four days.  - Simple pain relief such as paracetamol or brufen is used for symptom control, fluids, many cases don’t need antibiotics.  - With severe symptoms such as fever or vomiting, they’re more likely to use antibiotics.    Where there is risk of complications:   - Those younger than 2 years, Māori/pacific children, or underlying medical conditions.     Any long term concerns?  - Recurrent infection or can develop glue ear: thick mucus that won’t clear behind the drum.  - Can interfere with hearing.  - You may need to see an ear specialist to insert a grommet or drain.  - If you have hearing concerns, see your GP.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/1/20245 minutes, 12 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Facebook is breaking up with news, Apple ditches self-driving car project

Facebook & News are breaking up  The "news tab" is no more and Meta is basically trying to get out of the news business altogether.  Meta says it will “deprecate” Facebook News in the US and Australia in April and has removed the News tab in the United Kingdom, France, and Germany. Meta says it will not do any new commercial deals for news and “will not offer new Facebook products specifically for news publishers in the future.”   In Australia, the News Media and Digital Platforms Mandatory Bargaining Code prompted Meta to do huge licensing deals worth an estimated $70 million with publishers like News Corp, Seven, Nine, and Sky News. But no more!  Threads and Instagram have been pushing as far from news as they possibly can, trying to deemphasize news content. Meta says: “news makes up less than 3% of what people around the world see in their Facebook feed".     Apple's car stays in the garage  Dubbed one of Silicon Valley's "worst kept secrets", Project Titan is no more. Apple had planned to produce a fully electric and self-driving vehicle and has spent billions on research and development. By all accounts it was a very real project.   In 2017, it got a permit to test self-driving vehicles in California and purchased a startup in the car space. One analyst said Apple is following investors’ appetites, with enthusiasm for electric vehicle investments waning amid the frenzy for all things AI. Apple still hasn't commented on anything related to the car project.  In the past five years, Apple has spent $113 billion developing new tech ($22b a year!).   What's next? The guess is that Apple will evolve the CarPlay offering to become an operating system for cars.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/1/20244 minutes, 50 seconds
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Dame Kiri Te Kanawa: Iconic kiwi opera singer on her 80th birthday, family, moving back to NZ, the Kiri Te Kanawa Foundation, and performing

Dame Kiri Te Kanawa has had an eventful life.  One of New Zealand’s most prolific performers, the opera singer has performed in countries all over the world in several different languages, receiving a slew of honours over the years.  She retired in September 2017, her last performance taking place in October of 2016.  Since then, Te Kanawa committed herself to nurturing young artists, sitting as a judge in singing competitions and establishing the Kiri Te Kanawa Foundation which supports young musicians and singers in realising their dreams.  Te Kanawa recently moved back to New Zealand after living in the United Kingdom for over 55 years, and her connection to both countries saw her sent as one of NZ’s official delegates for the state funeral of Queen Elizabeth II.  Her 80th birthday is coming up this week, Te Kanawa telling Newstalk ZB’s Jack Tame that she can’t believe she got to this age.  “I thought 70 was bad enough, now we’re at 80.”  The celebrations might not be exactly what you’d expect for such a milestone, Te Kanawa revealing that she and her husband are going fishing.  They plan to just get enough for the table, as being out on the water is what Te Kanawa really enjoys.  “I’m, you know, a Pisces, my husband’s an Aquarius, so we’re water people.”  Te Kanawa moved back to New Zealand in 2021, settling down in the Bay of Islands.   While she does feel that it was the right choice, she does still feel homesick for England after having lived there for such a long time.  “We did it and we’re pleased we’ve done it, but I’ve left an awful lot of my heart behind.”  “But home is here, and I am thoroughly enjoying all the different things about New Zealand which I never knew about.”  One such thing is kiwis' refusal to give way to others in traffic, a contrast to the politeness she’s used to in England.  “There’s a whole lot of little things that people don’t do or do do that are nice.”  Despite having such a long career, Te Kanawa revealed that she doesn’t look back on it all that much, the rapid pace of her life and career overwhelming.  “It took me several years to calm down and about a year to sort of say that I’m not going to sing again.”  “It’s best not to look back, it’s always best to look forward.”  Since retiring from performing, Te Kanawa has instead put her efforts into supporting the next generation of artists with the Kiri Te Kanawa Foundation.  “We’ve had a lot of great successes,” Te Kanawa told Tame.  Some of the people the Foundation has supported have gone on to get major roles at Covent Garden, some singing in Glen Bourne and Salzburg.  “I’m so pleased that we’ve, we’ve helped them a lot, and it’s a lovely little group now that we’ve been sort of really mentoring.”  Mentoring is what she’ll continue to do, Te Kanawa having no plans to perform in public again.  “The past is in the past,” she said.  Te Kanawa told Tame that while her voice was very beautiful in the past, she hasn't trained it in years.  She said that even if she tried to start training it again, it would take months to get it anywhere near what she would like it to be.  “It’s just best to leave it, go to sleep, and let’s enjoy the youth of today.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/1/202414 minutes, 56 seconds
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Kevin Milne: The Government's lacklustre response to Newshub's demise

New Zealand is losing one of its two TV news organisations as Warner Bros. Discovery pulls the plug on Newshub. Kevin Milne has found the Government's response to be quite lacklustre, given the importance of the third estate to democracy. "NZ is now on it's own and I think that's, in a way, a bit tragic." LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/1/20247 minutes, 49 seconds
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Jack Tame: Life with a wedding ring

We made it.  Hurrah. My wife and I celebrated the one-month anniversary of our wedding this week. A meagre milestone relative to many other relationships but a month married is a month married and so far at least, it’s been great.  It also means I’ve crossed the one-month threshold for life with a wedding ring.  I must admit I was a bit torn at first about whether or not a ring was for me. Like many of his generation, my Dad never wore a ring. When my siblings and I questioned him about it as kids, we’d joke that no ring would fit around his salami fingers, but he’d always counter by proudly stating that men shouldn’t wear jewellery.  The words must have stuck for, because but for an ill-advised few months in fifth form where I wore a beaded surfer necklace and an oversized chunky goth ring with a demon’s face and two large protruding horns, I’ve not worn more than a watch.  My boss put his ring finger on the scale by telling me you can’t trust a married man without a wedding ring. But when my wife said it was up to me but at the very least she thought I should try it, I ordered simple gold band.  I’m not gonna lie, it was weird at first. It reminded me strangely of having braces on my teeth for the first time, in that all of a sudden you’re going about life with a little piece of you that’s artificial. The morning after our wedding, I woke at dawn and went for a swim. And even though the water was still and calm, I pinched the fingers of my left hand together, paranoid that somehow my ring would slip off and be lost on day one.  I tested it this week, travelling. I fly fairly regularly for work and pride myself on being very organised when it comes to the security scanning – my laptop is always out and ready to go. But having left the ring on my finger, I was alarmed when metal detector buzzed. Oh no, I thought. Don’t tell me the ring is going to ping me every time I pass through security for the rest of my life. I tried again on the return journey. Wore the ring. Didn’t change a thing. No beep. No hold up. No drama.  I fiddle with it. I turn it on my hand and every day or two slide it off to check if my finger hasn’t yet grown too fat. And every now and then when I see my hand, I get a good feeling. That’s right, I think. I’m married.  The ring still feels new. It still feels novel. But a month in, it feels good. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/1/20243 minutes, 57 seconds
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Tara Ward: Boiling Point, Feud, The Choir

Boiling Point A new four part British drama that picks up six months after the 2021 movie of the same name, and follows the staff working in a high pressure restaurant (TVNZ+).   Feud  Capote and the Swans: Tom Hollander, Naomi Watts and Chloe Sevigny star in this American drama about writer Truman Capote’s friendships with a group of high society New York women (Neon).   The Choir  An uplifting six part documentary series about the Detroit Youth Choir, as the inner city kids practice for a performance of a lifetime at Carnegie Hall (Disney+).   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/24/20243 minutes, 51 seconds
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Kate Evans: Kiwi author on her research and book 'Feijoa: A Story of Obsession and Belonging'

A highly controversial fruit, feijoas have long held a special place in New Zealand culture.  They’ve become a feature of kiwi iconography, their popularity seeing the flavour crop up in the least expected places.  Kiwi author Kate Evans thinks of herself as the nerdiest of feijoa nerds, travelling the world and researching the fruit.  She’s recently published a book on the subject, ‘Feijoa: A Story of Obsession and Belonging’.  Evans told Newstalk ZB’s Jack Tame that her obsession started with the fruit tree in her parents’ house, sitting under the tree as a child and eating them by the bucketful.  “I lived overseas for about a decade, and when I was away, I just missed feijoas so much.”  She said that whenever she managed to find one overseas, cutting it open would fill her with an intense nostalgia for home.  “When I moved back to New Zealand in 2014, I was so excited to be here for an entire feijoa season.”  The fruit is so ubiquitous in New Zealand despite not being native, which got Evans wondering how this South American fruit became such a cultural touchstone.  Feijoas originated in South America and were imported over to New Zealand in the late 1800’s, where they were found to grow incredibly well.  “It’s quite easy to grow them, you don’t really have to do much.”  Despite the cultural love for Feijoas, the Colombians might have us beat with their festival dedicated to the fruit.   “They make so many more things with them than we do,” Evans told Tame.  Recipes for some of which, she has included in her book: feijoa mousse, carpaccio, and more, for those desperately searching for a new way to consume their crop.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/24/202414 minutes, 54 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: MGMT - Loss of Life

The fifth studio album from American rock band MGMT, 'Loss of Life' is the band's label debut on Mom + Pop, coming six years after the release of 'Little Dark Age'. The ten track album shifts between genres, Britpop, acoustic folk, power ballads with an 80's flair. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/24/20246 minutes, 15 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: One Day and Moscow X

One Day by David Nicholls  15th July 1988: Emma and Dexter meet for the first time on the night of their graduation. Tomorrow they must go their separate ways.  So where will they be on this one day next year? And the year after that? And every year that follows?    Moscow X by David McCloskey  A daring CIA operation threatens chaos in the Kremlin - its execution is foiled by a Russian woman with secret loyalties. CIA operatives Sia and Max enter Russia to recruit Vladimir Putin's moneyman. Sia works for a London firm that conceals the wealth of the super-rich. Max's family business in Mexico, a CIA-front since the 1960s, is a farm that breeds high-end racehorses. They pose as a couple, and their targets are Vadim, Putin's private banker, and his wife Anna, who is both a banker and an intelligence officer. As they descend further into a Russian world dripping with luxury and rife with gangland violence, Sia and Max's hope may be Anna, who is playing a game of her own.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/24/20244 minutes, 35 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Free-roaming Tairāwhiti

If you're done seeing the sights of Gisborne and are after something a little more outdoorsy, Tairāwhiti is packed with adventures. Mike Yardley joined Jack Tame to run through some of his favourites, including tandem cycling, Tipuna Tours up in Tolaga Bay, and feeding the stingrays down the line at Tatapouri. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/24/202410 minutes, 15 seconds
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Dougal Sutherland: Ignoring after-hours work correspondence

In Australia workers have been given the right to ignore after-hours calls from work, unless it’s in their contract/role requires it or an emergency, following on from some European countries (e.g., France) who have done this.  How likely are we to follow suit in NZ? It's unlikely that it will become law – since 2015 Health and Safety at work act neither Labour nor National govts appear to have been interested in putting in any more regulations.  However, debate may increase in kiwi workplaces surrounding the topic.  There are pros/cons to the discussion – some will feel it’s an example of a “snowflake” generation who do the bare minimum, others will see it as supporting people to switch off from work when they’re done.  Some workplaces say things like “if you receive an email from me after hours feel free to ignore it until it’s your work hours”, which might be a compromise. We do that at Umbrella, it allows some level of autonomy and responsibility on both ends – I can send you an email at 11pm but don’t expect you to respond to it until you’re at work. You do need to be a bit careful about this as there can be an implied pressure to respond, particularly if the person sending the email is your boss. That links into the topic of how “psychologically safe” you feel at work to express your opinion (but that’s a whole other topic!)  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/24/20247 minutes, 42 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Psyllids – Exotic and Native

You may have caught me talking about Psyllids, from time to time. Especially the Tomato-Potato Psyllid.  This is an insect that appeared in New Zealand around 2006 and it makes a mess of the two main hosts: Tomatoes and Potatoes.  The Tomato-Potato Psyllid. Photo / Supplied  As a fanatic tomato grower, I always keep a serious eye out this thing and practice a lot of weed control (Solanum weeds – the overwintering hosts of my crops). I also use regular Neem sprays to stop the Psyllid nymphs (immatures) from developing on my tomatoes.  Like most Psyllids, they are sapsuckers; taking the sweet sugars out of the plant to extract Nitrogen for growth of their bodies. They excrete the sweet materials as “honeydew” which in itself is a great food for other insects, but also birds and certainly black, sooty mould.  Another Exotic Psyllid species came in the late 1990’s and is often found on Syzygium smithii, mostly known as “Monkey apple”, Lilly-Pilly, or the old name Acmena. It is often used to form fast-growing hedges.  Black hedges, especially in the warmer north, due to copious amounts of sooty mould.  Lilly-Pilly is considered a weed in our country, so the psyllid is perhaps helping to suppress this exotic plant somewhat.  But in NZ we have our own, Native species too:  On Pohutukawa and Rata, for instance (Trioza curta), and a species on Pittosporum (Trioza vitreoradiata).  Both these natives suck juices out of the leaves of their host, causing distortions and dimples.  Isn’t that causing some severe stress and damage to these native hosts?  The creation of the dimples is also no doubt under the influence of toxins or enzymes injected by the young, sedentary nymphs. But the astonishing thing is that the actual health of the Pohutukawa, rata or pittosporum is rarely, if ever, severely affected as a result of these psyllids. Mind you, they've been living together now for many millions of years, and the evolutionary processes will have reached a nice balance between the sucker and its host plant.  But when we take a detailed look at this symbiosis, we must ask ourselves the question why the Pohutukawa facilitates the psyllids by creating cosy little dimples?  The answer can be found at a surprising location: the rear end of the larvae. You see, that's where the sweet excrement is being produced.  Pittosporum psyllid being “milked” by a native ant. Photo / Supplied  Native ant species will patrol the psyllids and collect any sugary waste products that may become available, and while doing so, they protect the psyllid nymphs and the leaves they are living on! Indeed, Pohutukawa and rata leaves with psyllids on them are almost always without any chewing damage.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/23/20245 minutes, 54 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Taylors Estate Limestone Coast, Clare Valley Shiraz $20

Taylors Estate Limestone Coast, Clare Valley Shiraz $20    Why I chose it  - Hearty red for the months ahead. - Taylor’s produces some of the best value reds in Australia. - Australian wine sales to China, once their biggest wine market, have ground to a halt, resulting in many bargains if you are prepared to shop around.    What does it taste like?  - Dense, inky red with choc/mocha, cassis, anise/liquorice, vanilla, cigar box and spicy oak. Nicely layered shiraz with obvious cellaring potential.    Why it’s a bargain?  - Terrific quality for less than $20.   Where can you buy it?  - Whisky and More $16.99, The Good Wine Co. $17.99, New World $17.99, Countdown $16.   Food match?  - Hearty stews and casseroles.   Will it keep?  - Yes, good for 5 or 6 years if stored well.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/23/20243 minutes, 48 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: AI's real world consequences and the first private spacecraft's moon landing

We talk a lot about AI and how it might change things, but it's starting to have real world consequences  Tyler Perry, who founded the Black Entertainment Television (BET) Network and is a prolific content creator, has said he's stopping plans to open more sound stages. He was due to add 12 sound stages to his Atlanta complex, but advances by OpenAI's video generator Sora has given him pause.   Sora is an AI model that can create realistic and imaginative scenes from text instructions. It's not without its quirks, but there's probably a very good chance that in the time it would take to build 12 sound stages, the model might actually get better. We're seeing advances that quickly!    Tyler Perry: "I had gotten word over the last year or so that this was coming, but I had no idea until I saw recently the demonstrations of what it's able to do. It's shocking to me."  Think of the jobs lost through this - construction workers, stage crew, catering, production assistants...    It did it... the first private spacecraft has landed on the moon  Intuitive Machines' lunar craft successfully landed.   It has some communications issues, but the CEO of the company confirmed the craft is standing upright and transmitting data successfully. Odysseus will now begin a suite of experiments that will hopefully provide data useful for a future mission and help to ensure the safety of humans when they eventually return. The mission is the first American lunar landing in more than 50 years, since the crewed Apollo 17 mission in December 1972.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/23/20247 minutes, 11 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: The Zone of Interest and The Eternal Memory

The Zone of Interest   Winner of the Grand Prize at Cannes 2023, this historical war drama from filmmaker Jonathan Glazer (Under the Skin) centres on the commandant of Auschwitz, Rudolf Höss, and his wife Hedwig, who strive to build a dream life for their family in a house and garden next to the camp.    The Eternal Memory   Chilean couple Augusto and Paulina have been together for 25 years, but Augusto was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease eight years ago. Both of them fear the day he will no longer recognize her.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/23/20245 minutes, 33 seconds
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Nici Wickes' Plum Paste

Have you got a glut of plums like me? This little condiment - plum paste - is easy to make and it goes so well with all manner of cheeses and meats.    Ingredients:  1.5kg whole fresh plums, washed (count them into the pot, I used 32 plums – see note)  1 ¼ cups water  ½ cup sweet white wine or apple cider vinegar  ¼- ½ tsp ground cloves, depending on your taste  Sugar, white or raw – likely to be about 600-750g    Method:  1. Cook plums with liquids and cloves until very soft and reduced a bit – about 20 minutes. Extract the same number of plum stones as you had plums. Mash or blend the pulp and weigh it. Add half its weight in sugar and return to the stove. Cook on a brisk simmer for 40 minutes or so, stirring occasionally to prevent sticking. 2. It’s ready when a teaspoonful is dropped on a cool saucer, left to cool, then a finger dragged through it leaves a clear stripe. Keep cooking until it reaches this stage. 3. Line a swiss roll tin or similar with baking paper or lightly oiled foil. 4. Pour paste into prepared tin and refrigerate overnight. It will be gorgeously glossy. 5. Cut into squares, wrap in baking paper and store in fridge. 6. Eat with cheese or meats.   Note:  If your plums aren’t freestone count them into the pot, so you know how many stones you need to remove once they cook down.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/23/20245 minutes, 37 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Long-lasting music tastes

It’s often believed that the music you listen to when you’re seventeen or eighteen is what sticks with you throughout your entire life.  Kevin Milne recently stumbled across concert programmes from when he was living in London in the 70’s; how much of that has stuck around?  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/23/20246 minutes, 17 seconds
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Jack Tame: First year free deserves to go

I never thought the previous government’s fees-free education policy made sense.  I’m on the record from the get-go. I didn’t think it was a well-designed or considered policy. At an annual cost of hundreds of millions of dollars, the policy was expensive. I felt there were other priorities. The more cynically minded might even suggest that fast-tracking a fees-free education policy was a decision made with an impending election in mind, rather than the stated educational outcomes.   The goals of the policy were to increase access for students from poorer backgrounds, Māori and Pasifika, and to improve educational outcomes. But short of a Scandanavian-style tax system, I actually thought New Zealand’s interest-free student loan scheme is pretty good. It strikes a fair balance and the barriers to access are low. And for every poorer student brought in by fees-free and who otherwise might have missed out on higher education, there were obviously dozens if not hundreds or thousands of middle-class kids who would’ve gone to university anyway, and now enjoyed an additional subsidy.   Instead of a blanket fees-free policy, the previous government could have considered so many alternatives:  - Increasing scholarships for students from poorer backgrounds, or for students from low-decile schools.  - Re-introducing the 10% bulk payment incentive to student loans, whereby anyone who paid off more than $1000 in a voluntary payment, had ten percent of that payment matched by the government.  - Means testing first year fees-free students.  - Making the third year of an undergraduate degree fees-free, so students were incentivised to finish.  - Greater assistance to students with cost-of-living support.  Instead, although they held off making additional study years fees-free, the previous government stuck with their scheme. And the results have been damning.    The total number of fees-free students has been decreasing. From the get-go, overall enrolments fell short of what was promised. Fees-free students have been dropping out. What’s more, the New Zealand Herald revealed over summer that the number of decile 1 first-year students has halved since the scheme began. The number of first year decile 10 students has increased by 40%. So much for improving access for students from poorer backgrounds.   I was surprised National stuck with the scheme during the election campaign. But now at least, the government is moving to change the policy to make the final year fees-free, as per New Zealand First’s election policy.   I note the Tertiary Education Commission acknowledged this week there was no discernible evidence the policy has increased access to low-socio economic groups. The policy has failed in its stated objectives. It’s a nice-to-have, not a need-to-have. It deserves to go. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/23/20244 minutes, 45 seconds
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Ashley Bloomfield: Former Director General of Health on tomorrow's Round the Bays Wellington and the joys of running

Tomorrow marks the 46th year of Round the Bays Wellington, an iconic community event bringing together people of all ages and backgrounds to celebrate physical activity.  Over 10,000 people are expected to take part in one of three distances, Sir Ashley Bloomfield among them.  He’s taking part as a Pause Breathe Smile ambassador, which is a free mental health program for primary and intermediate schools.  Bloomfield is doing the 5.5km event, telling Newstalk ZB’s Jack Tame that he’s been taking it easy with his training this week, to ensure that he’ll be able to finish the run.  He said he’s been running in some capacity for his entire life, having run a few marathons and as well as having a group of friends he goes on Saturday morning runs with whenever possible.  “That fellowship kind of aspect of it, spending time with friends and in terms of both physical and mental wellbeing, to me you couldn’t tick many more boxes than that.”  One of the reason’s Bloomfield enjoys running is its accessibility.  “All you really need is a pair of shoes.”   Regular exercise is also known to be a benefit for those in high stakes environments and high stress jobs, both of which Bloomfield was facing in the last few years.  “Being able to kind of decompress, as well as get out and keep active and fit was a lifesaver for me.”  “Literally a lifesaver.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/17/202411 minutes, 38 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Jennifer Lopez - This Is Me... Now

Jennifer Lopez has dropped her ninth studio album, a sister to her 2003 LP ‘This Is Me... Then’.   The genre crossing ‘This Is Me... Now’ is a confessional, a deeply personal insight into her love life and relationship with Ben Affleck.  Released alongside was a 65-minute short film, ‘This Is Me... Now: A Love Story’, a high gloss blend of genres and styles to match the tone of the album.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/17/20245 minutes, 55 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Anna O and The World's Biggest Cash Machine

Anna O by Matthew Blake   What if your nightmares weren’t really nightmares at all? We spend an average of 33 years of our lives asleep. But what really happens, and what are we capable of, when we sleep? Anna Ogilvy was a budding twenty-five-year-old writer with a bright future. Then, one night, she stabbed two people to death with no apparent motive—and hasn’t woken up since. Dubbed “Sleeping Beauty” by the tabloids, Anna’s condition is a rare psychosomatic disorder known to neurologists as “resignation syndrome.” Dr. Benedict Prince is a forensic psychologist and an expert in the field of sleep-related homicides. His methods are the last hope of solving the infamous “Anna O’” case and waking Anna up so she can stand trial. But he must be careful treating such a high-profile suspect—he’s got career secrets and a complicated personal life of his own. As Anna shows the first signs of stirring, Benedict must determine what really happened and whether Anna should be held responsible for her crimes. Only Anna knows the truth about that night, but only Benedict knows how to discover it. And they’re both in danger from what they find out.  The World's Biggest Cash Machine by Chris Blackhurst  From Chris Blackhurst, the former Editor of the Independent, comes The World's Biggest Cash Machine, a gripping and tightly reported account of how the Glazers, owners of Manchester United, became the most maligned figures in the Premier League, and how they changed the beautiful game forever. Manchester United's supporters span the globe and cross generations. But, with few exceptions, they are united in their anger with the American family who bought their club in 2005, plunging it into record levels of debt. The Glazers' reign has become synonymous with the financialization of football, and has coincided with fan protests and a decline of Manchester United's fortunes on the pitch . . . if not on the balance sheet. But what defines this secretive family, and do these astute businessmen deserve the opprobrium they receive? In this captivating account, informed by interviews with key figures behind the scenes, journalist and commentator Chris Blackhurst charts the gripping story of the world's biggest football club - as well as exploring the wider transformation of the Premier League into a playground for billionaire owners.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/17/20244 minutes, 59 seconds
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Tara Ward: Criminal Record, Strife, The New Look

Criminal Record  In the heart of London, an anonymous phone call draws two brilliant detectives -- a young woman in the early stages of her career and a well-connected man determined to protect his legacy -- into a fight to correct an old miscarriage of justice (AppleTV+).    Strife  Asher Keddie stars in this Australian drama about a small-time blogger who overcome professional and personal challenges while working towards creating a women-centric website (ThreeNow).    The New Look  This series explores the rise of fashion designer Christian Dior, as he attempts to bring colour and life back to post-war Europe (Apple TV+).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/17/20243 minutes, 58 seconds
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Kate Hall: How to discuss sustainability with your partner

Communication is key to a healthy relationship, but not all conversations are simple to have.   In the changing climate it’s important to be on the same page as your partner when it comes to sustainability, and how you implement it in your lives.   But how do we have this conversation? What needs to be covered?  Kate ‘Ethically Kate’ Hall joined Jack Tame to give a few tips to ensure that you and your partner can be on the same page.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/17/20247 minutes, 54 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: This Is Me... Now: A Love Story, May December

This Is Me... Now: A Love Story  Jennifer Lopez stars in a highly visual and musical reimagining of her publicly scrutinized love life.    May December   Twenty years after their notorious tabloid romance, a married couple buckle under the pressure when a Hollywood actress meets them to do research for a film about their past.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/16/20247 minutes, 59 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Good as Gold in Gisborne

"Gazing across the ravishing seascape, Young Nick’s Head and Mahia Peninsula loomed large on the horizon, while directly beneath us, the photogenic allure of Wainui Beach and Okitu Bush casts you under its spell. It’s immediately self-evident why a beach house at Wainui is the epitome of aspirational real estate. What a sweet spot -no wonder the sun wants to be the first to see it. A year on from the damage and despair of a natural disaster, Gisborne and the Tairāwhiti district’s welcome mat is unmistakeably rolled out. Don’t be fooled by the enduring misnomer that the region’s roads are still too tricky to navigate or that visitors aren’t welcome. Nothing could be further from the truth. Gizzy and her surrounds is good to go and would love to see you." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/16/20249 minutes, 31 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Termitical Wood destroyers

As I was cutting firewood for the 2024 winter, I came across some brilliant tunnels in the timber and larger branches.  Drywood Termites.  The adults are ready to fly out, mate and make a new home in decaying wood; their wings are gorgeous, slate grey and rather delicate.  You’ll find them attracted to lights, landing on the windows in the evening or near the front door.  Termites are rather ancient insects. Fossils of termite-like beasts date back some 50 million years, and it looks as if their diet has more or less remained the same during that period of time: wood and cellulose materials. This could give the impression that termites are boring insects, and yes, that is exactly what they are.  No matter how you look at it, boring is the only way to start or accelerate decay in wood, opening up trunks or branches allows entry of fungi and moulds. Our native termites are fond of rotting wood, and as such play an important role in the recycling of woody materials. Ashes to ashes, dust to dust, and forest fibres to faecal frass.  Kalotermes brouni larva in dead wood. Photo / Supplied Only very recently in the geological history of Kalotermes brouni (our so-called dry-wood termite), humans came on the scene and obligingly built these enormous structures from large quantities of dead, milled wood, known as "houses". Especially in the good old days these houses were made from untreated local timbers.  Lots of myths around our three species of Native Termites but the most important one is that the dry-wood termite really prefers wet timber and untreated timber. I remember in my old house in West Auckland, the bedroom was built from untreated timber; the gutter was leaking; the water soaked the weatherboards and studs, and the termites chewed their tunnels right to the paint-layer!  Spectacular and clever way to control relative humidity in their wooden home!  Prevention of native termite invasion is obvious: Use treated timber and keep it dry.  We do have some invasive termites from Australia. Coptotermes acinaciformis and Coptotermes frenchi are quite a different kettle of fish. They do not require dead or wet wood and will happily excavate in living trees. In the Canberra region, where they are the most economically important termite species, colonies are often found associated with Eucalyptus trees from where they can invade houses.  In contrast with our native termites, these Aussie chisel-beaks are basically a subterranean species. Nests are commonly hidden in amongst the root systems of a living tree and are therefore not easy to detect. But when they shift to another location, or extend their feeding grounds, these termites construct characteristic runways from mud. These earthen tubes usually originate from the soil and enable them to maintain their required humidity.  If you find termites with mud “runways” please contact MPI – 0800 809 966. We don’t want those around!!    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/16/20244 minutes, 44 seconds
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Hannah McQueen: Fixing Long or Fixing Short in 2024

Homeowners with a fixed-rate mortgage expiring soon likely perked up when forecasters started suggesting that interest rates could start falling this year. But the Reserve Bank isn't convinced the inflation beast is back in the bag just yet. With conflicting information and no guarantees on when, how far, or how fast interest rates will fall, how can you assess your position and determine the best pathway forward?   Hannah discusses strategies on how to proceed when interest rates are sky high but anticipated to fall, why you should calculate the interest rate differential when you want to fix short-term, and why favourable conditions demand a focused mindset to maximise progress and avoid complacency.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/16/20246 minutes, 44 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Elon Musk's 'Odysseus' is heading for the moon, Google joins Environmental Defense Fund

A private spacecraft is headed to the moon  Launched from Elon Musk's SpaceX Falcon 9, the "Odysseus" will land on the south pole of the moon in search of water. Scientists believe ice exists amongst the rock in both the sunlit and dark sides of the moon, possibly from icy meteorites hitting the moon.   If successful, Odysseus will be the first private craft to land on the moon.  NASA has funded part of this journey though because it's carrying a range of their scientific instruments, including a laser retroreflector which will bounce back laser beams fired from earth and a tool to measure how the landing disturbs and sends up plumes of moon dust.     An eye on methane from space  Google joins the non-profit "Environmental Defense Fund" in launching a program to understand how oil and gas plants are emitting methane, believed to be one of the causes of climate change because it traps heat in the atmosphere. The satellite will orbit the earth 15 times a day. Data will be sent back every few weeks and fed into Google's AI and Earth technology systems for viewing. The group says that if they notice a significant leak, they're not going to specifically notify the plant, but would rely on regulators and governments to use their data as they see fit.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/16/20246 minutes, 55 seconds
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Nici Wickes: One bowl fruit salad cake

It’s that time of the year when the stonefruit season collides with the last of the blueberries so I thought I’d marry them up in this gorgeous cake!    Ingredients:  3 medium eggs  A generous half cup of caster sugar  1/3 cup oil – I used canola!  Pinch salt  1 cup fruit – chopped quite small , I used peaches and nectarines  1/3 cup blueberries  1 1/3 cup self raising flour  1/3 cup yoghurt (can use milk see note)    Method:  Preheat oven to 180 C and line a 20-23cm round cake tin. Note the image depicts a VERY large version of this cake that I make to feed 25 hungry students!  Whisk eggs well in a large bowl then pour in the sugar, salt and oil and whisk some more until well-combined. Add the chopped fruit and blueberries and mix well.  Add in flour and yoghurt and stir until mixed and there are no pockets of flour remaining.  Scrape into prepared tin and bake for 35-40 minutes or until a skewer comes out clean.  Once cooled, either dust with icing sugar or make a vanilla icing and ice it.    Make it your own:  Use olive oil for a posher version  Used tinned fruit salad and frozen blueberries in the off season  Sour milk with a squeeze of lemon juice if you don’t have yoghurt    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/16/20244 minutes, 19 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Strangers and documentary memories

It’s a small world.  Kevin Milne was in a café on Thursday and by complete chance, happened to run into someone he made a documentary about 45 years ago.  He joined Jack Tame to chat about some of his favourite memories from the making of that doco.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/16/20246 minutes, 27 seconds
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Jack Tame: I've had my AI 'wow' moment

"Saturday Mornings with Jack Tame on Newstalk ZB is a captivating blend of insightful conversations, engaging interviews, and thought-provoking discussions. With Jack Tame at the helm, you can expect a refreshing take on current events, combined with his unique charm and wit.”  But hey... don’t take my word for it. Take Chat GPT’s. That’s what happens if you tell the world’s best-known generative artificial intelligence bot to write a few sentences in order to convince someone to listen to this show. Pretty good, eh?  I’ll be honest though, I was impressed by GPT when it was released, but not totally wowed. It seemed to get a lot of pretty obvious facts wrong, even when correct information was readily available on the internet. And I know these are relatively early stages in AI, but still, you’d think if Wikipedia has the real answer, Chat GPT wouldn’t make it up.  The ‘wow’ moment with AI came for me yesterday. Open AI, the company behind Chat GPT, released a video generating model called Sora.  You write a command, and working off your words, it generates a video clip up to sixty seconds long based on the detail and information you provide it.  The examples released by Open AI are… extraordinary.  Working off just a few lines of text, the model creates hyper-realistic video images. In one, a woman walks down a Neon-lit Tokyo Street, the light bouncing perfectly off the little puddles underneath her black boots. In another, a Victoria crowned pigeon twitches and shifts before the camera. In maybe my favourite example, two tiny pirate ships keen and tilt in the churning, swirling black of a hot coffee.  Are all of the videos perfect? No. With a keen eye, you can notice some little imperfections. But from a visual effects perspective, they are probably more advanced than most movies just a few years ago. And here’s the thing; they were created in just a few seconds.  I don’t profess to fully grasp the true capacity and risk of artificial intelligence. Obviously, it’s going to be disruptive, but sometimes it’s hard to distil the hype. But Open AI’s Sora programme was a wow moment for me. It’s amazing to me that a technology can create something so impressive, so realistic, both out of nothing, and out of everything. And again – in just a few seconds.  And all I could think as I scrolled through the examples —the woolly mammoths lumbering through a snowy meadow, the movie trailer with a space man in a red wool helmet, the aerial shot of waves crashing against the California Coast, a homemade video of people in Nigeria thirty years in the future— all I could think was if this is where the technology is now, just imagine where it’s going to be in five years. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/16/20244 minutes, 52 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Brittany Howard - What Now

"With five Grammy® wins and sixteen nominations, Howard follows up her massively acclaimed solo debut Jaime—a 2019 LP that landed on best-of-the-year lists from the likes of Pitchfork, the New York Times, and Rolling Stone – with What Now, drawing an immense and indelible power from endless unpredictability. Over the course of its 12 tracks, Howard brings her singular musicality to a shapeshifting sound encompassing everything from psychedelia and dance music to dream-pop and avant-jazz—a fitting backdrop for an album whose lyrics shift from unbridled outpouring to incisive yet radically idealistic commentary on the state of the human condition. At turns galvanizing, cathartic, and wildly soul-expanding, the result is a monumental step forward for one of the most essential artists of our time." LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/10/20246 minutes, 50 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Spy Coast and The Fury

The Spy Coast – Tess Gerritsen  Former spy Maggie Bird came to the seaside village of Purity, Maine, eager to put the past behind her after a mission went tragically wrong. These days, she’s living quietly on her chicken farm, still wary of blowback from the events that forced her early retirement. But when a body turns up in Maggie’s driveway, she knows it’s a message from former foes who haven’t forgotten her. Maggie turns to her local circle of old friends—all retirees from the CIA—to help uncover the truth about who is trying to kill her, and why. This “Martini Club” of former spies may be retired, but they still have a few useful skills that they’re eager to use again, if only to spice up their rather sedate new lives. Complicating their efforts is Purity’s acting police chief, Jo Thibodeau. More accustomed to dealing with rowdy tourists than homicide, Jo is puzzled by Maggie’s reluctance to share information—and by her odd circle of friends, who seem to be a step ahead of her at every turn. As Jo’s investigation collides with the Martini Club’s maneuvers, Maggie’s hunt for answers will force her to revisit a clandestine career that spanned the globe, from Bangkok to Istanbul, from London to Malta. The ghosts of her past have returned, but with the help of her friends—and the reluctant Jo Thibodeau—Maggie might just be able to save the life she’s built.   The Fury – Alex Michaelides  This is a tale of murder. Or maybe that's not quite true. At its heart, it's a love story, isn't it? Lana Farrar is a reclusive ex-movie star and one of the most famous women in the world. Every year, she invites her closest friends to escape the English weather and spend Easter on her idyllic private Greek island. I tell you this because you may think you know this story. You probably read about it at the time ― it caused a real stir in the tabloids, if you remember. It had all the necessary ingredients for a press sensation: a celebrity; a private island cut off by the wind...and a murder. We found ourselves trapped there overnight. Our old friendships concealed hatred and a desire for revenge. What followed was a game of cat and mouse ― a battle of wits, full of twists and turns, building to an unforgettable climax. The night ended in violence and death, as one of us was found murdered. But who am I? My name is Elliot Chase, and I'm going to tell you a story unlike any you've ever heard.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/10/20243 minutes, 57 seconds
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Tara Ward: One Day, Arctic Ascent, Superhot: The Spicy World of Pepper People

One Day After a brief college romance, Emma and Dexter pursue separate dreams, but meet on the same day each year to compare their progress in life and love.   Arctic Ascent The professional adventure rock climber Alex Honnold embarks on a lifelong dream - an epic climbing quest across the remotest and toughest walls and peaks of Greenland.   Superhot: The Spicy World of Pepper People A deep dive into a subculture fueled by spice: from the elite growers who strive to create new superhots to the chili eaters who chase the endorphin rush of consuming them; one chili headsets out on a quest to answer the spiciest of questions.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/10/20246 minutes, 50 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Force of Nature: The Dry 2 and American Underdog

Force of Nature: The Dry 2 Five women head out on a remote hiking retreat but only four return, each telling a different story. Detective Aaron Falk must find out what really happened before time runs out.  American Underdog  The inspirational true story of Kurt Warner, who overcomes years of challenges and setbacks to become a two-time NFL MVP, Super Bowl champion, and Hall of Fame quarterback. Just when his dreams seem all but out of reach, it's only with the support of his wife, Brenda, and the encouragement of his family, coaches and teammates that Warner perseveres and finds the strength to show the world the champion that he already is.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/10/20248 minutes, 24 seconds
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Mike Yardley: A sizzling stopover in Kuala Lumpur

This week Mike Yardley found himself in the stunning capitol city of Malaysia: Kuala Lumpur. He's got all the details on the sights to see, the best shopping locations, and the tastiest street food. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/10/20248 minutes, 6 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: Cervical Smears

Why is cervical screening important?  - In NZ approx. 180 to 190 women get cervical cancer every year.  - Up to 80% have not been screening.  - Cervical screening picks up changes early preventing cancer.    What is the cervix?  - Organ connects the uterus to the vagina.  - Why it’s important:  - Keeps baby inside the uterus while growing during pregnancy.  - The canal through which baby passes at birth.  - Canal sperm can travel up to fertilize eggs to get pregnant.    What does a cervical smear do?  - The smear scrapes some cells from the cervix.  - The cells are looked at under a microscope for any abnormal cells, ones that could cause cancer, so they can be treated.  - It’s traditionally every 3 years.  - The Problem – it’s invasive to do and can be painful and off putting.    What has changed?  - A new screening test has been introduced, which can be done by a simple easy vaginal swab once every 5 years.  - Most changes that lead to cancer in cervix are caused by the HPV virus.  - The swab looks for the HPV strains that lead to cancer and do something about it.  - Swab is much easier. It’s not painful and is only once every five years from age 25.  - Easily accessed through your General Practice or clinic.     One other important thing.  - There is now HPV vaccine to prevent HPV infection.  - Free for all adolescents and girls between 9 and 26.  - This stops you from contracting HPV, thus preventing the cancer altogether. - Talk to your GP or Nurse.    LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/10/20245 minutes, 13 seconds
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Dr Dougal Sutherland: Giving the mental health and safety of your business a warrant of fitness

The start of a new year is often a good time to check in on how your business is going. Just like we’d take our car in for a WOF, it’s just as important to get a WOF done on the mental health and safety of your business.  Recent court case highlights that workplaces can be held liable for the mental distress and injury their workers suffer.  At its most basic level, mental health and safety at work means making sure that workers aren’t being mentally harmed by the work they’re doing. Mental harm can occur through things such as exposure to traumatic material (e.g., a first responder), having way too much work for one person, or from things like bullying. Workplaces are legally obliged to identify risks to health (including mental health) and take steps to prevent or reduce these risks. This can involve things like providing EAP counselling to staff, training for managers about how to spot signs of distress in their people and support them, through to modifying workflows so it doesn’t all fall on one person.  Some workplaces are really proactive in this area, and others are only just becoming aware of their responsibilities. For this latter group it might be helpful to get some outside support for this from an organisational psychologist. But can also start by actively engaging with staff around their experiences of mental stress and ideas they may have to reduce this. Often the best solutions come out of talking to people at the coalface.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/10/20249 minutes, 11 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Overwatering and pruning back your plants

Dry conditions? Honestly, watering yourself silly is always an expensive exercise (especially in Wellington! Bottles of water are at least a dollar each…).  Protect your soil from evaporation by chucking a heap of mulch in between your plants; I’ve just finished my firewood stash and the smaller branches are chippered into big bags of mulch.  Timing is everything. Water tanks next to the house? Maybe now is a good idea to invest in some tanks, connected to your guttering, just saying…  Raspberries: If you have harvested your spring-fruiting raspberries, they need pruning now. Get down on your hands and knees and prune off all the old “canes”; It’s easy to see which are old, brown canes with yellow old leaves and which ones are the new, fresh ones that will fruit for you next year.  Raspberries also have this habit of producing heaps of runners and canes far, far away from the original bed! Either mow them down of translocate these new runners to a new row. They’ll survive that easily if done now, while the soil is warm.  Add some fertiliser and everybody’s happy for next spring!  Note: autumn raspberries still have a crop to go!!!  Mid-summer is also the time to prune your plums when they have been harvested. I tend to do that now, with the summer heat still here. When you do it in late autumn or winter, the cooler, wetter weather can cause quite a few problems with diseases.  Remember: stonefruit bears its fruit on young wood, but the European plums (such as prunes, Damson, and Greengage) tend to fruit heavily on 3–4-year-old branches. In our garden the Damson and Greengage are our jam work horses, so they can be shortened back to the well-established branches.  Japanese plums tend to fruit on new wood, which means you can’t be as ruthless; Think ahead!!  Vegies to sow/buy/plant: most of the winter crops:  Prepare your patches – compost, dig-over, make friable with a fork  Carrots in really good, stone-free soil. Well-drained and easy to penetrate for the roots (no forks in the carrots); Seed tape!  Swedes and beetroots – again, well-drained soils that don’t stay wet too long (roots can rot in stagnant water  Leeks – yep always a good winter vegetable, start while soil is warm (good germination)  All the Brassicas can be sown or planted now, whatever you like; Caulies, Broccolinis, cabbages etc, etc. Protect from white butterfly larvae (still very prolific in the warm weather) – use “Success” (Yates) or fine netting that doesn’t let the mother whites onto the leaf surface.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/9/20245 minutes, 23 seconds
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Peter Hillary: Adventurer on the Antarctic expedition taking place to try to combat climate change

An incredible team of people are heading off on a unique expedition to see first-hand how daunting the melting sea ice, warming seas, and changing weather patterns will be for Antarctica.  Adventurer Peter Hillary, alongside Graham and Raewyn Henry, will lead 130 participants whose expertise spans science, business, art, and politics on a voyage of enlightenment down south.  Antarctica is not your typical tourist destination, and while most people will never visit, the upcoming expedition is Hillary’s 43rd trip.  “It is an incredible place,” he told Newstalk ZB’s Jack Tame.  “Kind of unlike anywhere else on earth.”  The objective of the trip is to immerse the participants in the solitude and expanse of the icy landscape and use that as a base for meaningful conversations about what can be done to stabilise climate change.  “We have to connect with these places.” Hillary said.  He told Tame that in the 19th century, Antarctica was rarely visited except by sealers and whalers, who proceeded to devastate the populations of those animals.   “No one saw it and really, no one cared.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/9/202411 minutes, 28 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Identifiers on AI images and Google's Gemini

AI generated images are getting an identifier  Images created by Open AI's DALL-E technology will now come with a new label, a CR in a circle up in the top left corner. That's the mark that’s going to be on images produced by a range of AI companies. The only trouble there is it can pretty easily be cropped out.   Open AI will also be adding metadata to the image file. While it's a nice idea, it's wildly impractical. If you take a screenshot of the image, the metadata disappears. If you post it online, the metadata isn't easily visible, or can even be wiped.  But the same tech actually shows promise for verifying reality. The Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity (C2PA) is working with camera companies, and even newsrooms, to embed metadata in real images to verify their authenticity. It will stay as the image is edited and be able to be verified using an online tool with the full history.     You'll be hearing a lot about Gemini  Google's Bard and Duet are being merged under the new name. Gemini will be the name of their large language model and there'll be Pro and Ultra versions. It's part assistant, part chatbot, part search engine — likely the future of Google.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/9/20245 minutes, 9 seconds
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Kevin Milne: The online shopping experience continues to impress

Online shopping is one of life's many conveniences.  It allows people to simplify their shopping experience, and buy things from places or companies they might not be able to access in their day to day life. Kevin Milne told Jack Tame that the experience continues to impress. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/9/20245 minutes, 19 seconds
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Rosa Flanagan: Summer Tabbouleh

Quick, light, fresh and delicious, making it the perfect summer salad for you to share with friends and family. We love to serve this salad alongside our hummus, dukkha yoghurt flatbreads and smoky carrot falafels.   Serves: 6  Time: 20 minutes    Ingredients:  1 cup bulgur wheat   Boiling water   4 spring onion, finely chopped  180g cherry tomatoes, chopped   1 cucumber, chopped   3 stalks celery, finely chopped  1 lemon, zest and juice   2 tbsp pomegranate molasses   ¼ cup extra virgin olive oil   1 tsp sea salt   2 cups flat leaf parsley, chopped   2 cups mint, chopped     Method:  Add the bulgur wheat into a bowl and cover with boiling water. Cover the bowl with either a plate or a clean tea towel and allow it to sit for 20 minutes. The bulgur wheat will absorb all of the water and expand. If you have any excess water once the 20 minutes is up, just drain the bulgur wheat through a sieve.   While the bulgur wheat is cooking, assemble the other ingredients.   To a large mixing bowl, add the cooked bulgur wheat, spring onions, cherry tomatoes, cucumber, celery, lemon zest and juice, pomegranate molasses, extra virgin olive oil and sea salt. Gently toss everything together.   Add the flat leaf parsley and mint. Gently toss one more time before enjoying.   Leftovers will keep in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 2 days.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/9/20244 minutes, 9 seconds
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Jack Tame: Artists are brilliant

Of the many, many, many things I’m bad at... perhaps in no department am I more lacking than in artistic talent. I am a truly appalling artist. I have no vision. I have no voice. I can’t sculpt. I can’t mould. I can’t paint. I have the sketching ability of a lesser-developed primate but without the novelty factor. I am a terrible artist.   And so it was curious series of events this summer that led me to find myself with a head torch and overalls, dragging myself through the dank, dark, crawl space below the floorboards of one of New Zealand’s premier art galleries.    My friend, Mike, was preparing for a show. And with his centrepiece installation in mind, he needed volunteers to drag themselves on their knees and their bellies, as he worked to reinforce the gallery floor.    I’ve never really watched an artist at work. But Mike’s work makes him a bit unique. His studied engineering and worked as an engineer, before following his artistic passion to Columbia University. We met in New York. Now he uses his engineering skills and artistic talents to make big, bold, sometimes provocative public works. His most recent big work was a playground in Melbourne’s Southbank featuring huge boulders perched precariously on tiny little trollies. He reverse engineered a rubber compound to look just like the bluestone slabs which pave much of Melbourne’s city. When you look at the playground, you see rocks on wheels on concrete. But it’s all an illusion. A playground which looks dangerous, but isn’t.   I remember Mike explaining to me the initial concept for his new show. I remember him developing it, tweaking it as he went. Watching him prepare meant bearing witness to a man repeatedly solving the kind of problems most of us would never even conceive of.   How do you get a thin sheet of extremely rare, extremely expensive marble from Australia to New Zealand in one piece? How do you suspend hundreds of kilograms of steel in the air in a building with very few structural components? How do you get a giant palm tree through a not-very-giant door?   Mike’s show opened last night.   It features a series of crazy drinking fountain sculptures, with what Mike insisted had to be chilled, filtered water. Room temperature? Puh-lease. There’s a space with a table placed below a continuous drip from the gallery ceiling, some ten metres up. The drip falls down to a yellow dish cloth, which over time leaks a thin stream of water, feeding a plant. It’s very clever.    And the piece de resistance of sorts: In the centre of the gallery is an 8 metre-high real, living palm tree with an NBA regulation basketball hoop. The backboard is a stunning piece of blue marble which looks like the sky. The hoop is entirely functional. You can dunk it, if you’re athletic enough. You can swing from it. At the show’s opening, people took shots and played pickup.    As I studied Mike’s creations, I felt a weird mix of bewilderment, admiration, and envy.    They were brilliant. Fantastic, in the true sense of that word. But not only could I not build any of the works, I simply couldn’t conceive of them in the first place. I’ll tell you what though, for those of us bereft of any artistic skills, it is one of life’s great pleasures to see and appreciate in a friend a talent you admire.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/9/20245 minutes, 41 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: James Arthur – Bitter Sweet Love

Bitter Sweet Love is the fifth studio album from British singer-songwriter James Arthur, the thirteen track album releasing late last month. After a week long race for the top spot, Bitter Sweet Love surpassed the Reytons to take the number one spot on the UK Charts. The album is full of the contradictions surrounding love, Arthur having written the album during some post-tour blues, unsure if he wanted to continue with music. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/3/20246 minutes, 36 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Heiress and The Boys in the Boat

The Heiress - Rachel Hawkins  With unexpected twists and heart-throbbing pacing, it draws you into a captivating mystery set within the claustrophobic Ashby House. The secrets hidden behind its closed doors, along with its notorious and heartless inhabitants, add to the intrigue.    The Boys in the Boat - Daniel James Brown  Told against the backdrop of the Great Depression, The Boys in the Boat is narrative non-fiction of the first order; a personal story full of lyricism and unexpected beauty that rises above the grand sweep of history and captures instead the purest essence of what it means to be alive.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/3/20245 minutes
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Tara Ward: Mr & Mrs Smith, Griselda, and The Greatest Night in Pop

Mr & Mrs Smith   A reboot of the 2005 Hollywood blockbuster sees Donald Glover and Maya Erskine play two spies who are assigned as husband and wife for a secret mission, and end up falling for each other.    Griselda   Sofia Vergara plays a real-life Columbian drug-lord who went on to create one of the most profitable drug cartels in history.    The Greatest Night in Pop    On a January night in 1985, music's biggest stars gather to record "We Are the World." The team goes behind the scenes of the event to see how all of the artists came together to make history.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/3/20244 minutes, 44 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: The Holdovers and To Catch a Killer

The Holdovers A curmudgeonly instructor at a New England prep school remains on campus during Christmas break to babysit a handful of students with nowhere to go. He soon forms an unlikely bond with a brainy but damaged troublemaker, and with the school's head cook, a woman who just lost a son in the Vietnam War. To Catch a Killer  A troubled police officer is recruited by the FBI's chief investigator to help profile and track down a disturbed individual terrorizing Baltimore, Maryland.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/3/20247 minutes, 47 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Heartland treats in Mid-Canterbury

"Fanning out from Ashburton and bounded by the Rakaia and Rangitata rivers, Mid-Canterbury is a land of dramatic contrasts. Pancake-flat coastal plains give way to abruptly rising hill country, while large sweeping braided rivers, crystal clear alpine lakes and the serrated glory of the Southern Alps all add to the scenic medley." "It is an understated region ripe for discovery and exploration, particularly when you’re road-tripping the Mainland." Read Mike's full article here.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/3/20249 minutes, 55 seconds
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Kate Hall: What are the new recycling regulations?

New recycling rules have come into place as district and city councils across the country standardise what can and cannot be recycled.  Kate ‘Ethically Kate’ Hall joined Jack Tame to run through these regulations and give an insight into whether recycling is as helpful as we think it is.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/2/20249 minutes, 4 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Vigilance and early action

Had a great “break” around Christmas? No doubt a fabulous, lazy time with whanau and grand kids.  The problem is: often some pests and diseases sneak into the system without you knowing!  Codling moths in your apples  After flowering, when the apples set fruit (the tiniest fruits that grow into apples!), this is the time when codling moth adults lay their eggs. During the X-mas growth the caterpillars will tunnel into your “codlings” (small fruits in old-fashioned English language!) and your task will be to try and get them out of those fruits. Good luck with that!  Photo / Supplied Prevention is quite simple and effective:  After flowering, spray your apples with Madex 2 (or Madex 3 if you need to use a lot); it’s organic and safe and contains the infectious particles of a virus that only kills codling moth.  Spray every two weeks until Christmas and no caterpillars will enter your fruit!  Green Vegetable Bug (Stink bug)  They are slowly increasing in your garden right now; Adults are green, juveniles are black with reddish spots  They suck juices out of a long list of crops, causing plants to reduce in vigour.  Scouting is the term for your warfare: go out early in the morning and later in afternoon/evening to intercept these sap-suckers.  Photo / Supplied Squash them till they smell somewhat like coriander and drop their bodies under the host plants they are feeding on. In no time you’ll find a lot of live bugs drop to the ground as well (that smell is a warning smell that makes them jump and lie-down very quietly). Knock them all off (the warning smell gets stronger and more bugs will jump!!)  In no time you will have reduced the population to a fraction of what was there.  Powdery Mildew Fungus lurking around the garden already!  You might not see it just yet, but it surely is on your crops (Gherkins, courgettes, melons, cucumber and later apple and other fruit too)  The infection started in late November and early December, when you were doing the Christmas shopping!!! If only you could have sprayed your susceptible plants then !!! You would have certainly reduced the trouble that you’ll face in a month or so.  Photo / Supplied Copper and sulphur mixes (Nature’s Way Fungus Spray) are simple organic fungicides that will knock the mildew back; you can also use some hard-core fungicides if you like, but the idea is to be as early as possible! Have a look at the brilliant story in a recent NZ Gardener by Keith Hammett  Oh, by the way… those yellow-and-black ladybird beetles on the mildew-infested leaves are not a great help at all: they actually eat the mildew and spread it around your garden!  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/2/20247 minutes
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Bob Campbell: Wine expert's pick of the week - Askerne 2022 Viognier

BOB'S BEST BUYS Wine: Askerne 2022 Viognier, Hawke’s Bay $26.90  Why I chose it:  - One of the best examples of NZ Viognier I’ve tasted.  - Often blended with Syrah to give greater complexity and a silkier texture.  - Delicious wine from a challenging vintage.  What does it taste like?  - “Ripe, almost luscious wine with tree fruit/apricot/nectarine, vanilla and musk-like flavours underpinned by a core of sweet fruit that helps make the wine very accessible now.”  Why it’s a bargain:  - Aristocratic wine at a working-class price.  Where can you buy it?  - Wines of NZ $22.49 New Zealand  - First Glass Wines and Spirits, Auckland $22.99  - Advintage, Hawke’s Bay $23.99  - Vino Fino (NZ) Christchurch.  Food match?  - Apple Tart  Will it keep?  - Drink up    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/2/20243 minutes, 17 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: UMG removes audio from TikTok and Mark Zuckerberg's getting praised by Wall Street

Top artists have vanished from TikTok  Superstars Taylor Swift, The Weeknd, and Olivia Rodrigo's music has been removed from TikTok because their record label and TikTok can't agree on what to pay. Universal Music Group says TikTok is paying a fraction of the price of other social media sites. It's tricky though, because TikTok has been the source of many #1 hits recently as clips go viral, and that means streams on Spotify, downloads on iTunes, and concert tickets.    UMG: "TikTok is trying to build a music-based business, without paying fair value for the music".  TikTok's position: "It is sad and disappointing that Universal Music Group has put their own greed above the interests of their artists and songwriters".    Mark Zuckerberg got slammed on the Hill, but praised on Wall St  They announced their 2023 & Q4 results and stock prices shot up 12% in after-hours trading. Investors are loving the new margins, the dividend, and buybacks. Revenues increased by 16% but its profits increased by 69%. The “year of efficiency” has doubled their operating margins from 20% to 41%. For the very first time too, they'll pay a dividend and signaled that they'll pay it regularly. Meta now has 22% fewer staff compared to last year, and Wall St doesn't seem to care it cost $1b to make those changes. The losses on the Metaverse —building the Oculus headset and supporting platform— increased to $16b for 2023.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/2/20243 minutes, 57 seconds
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Russell Howard: British Comedian on his upcoming NZ tour 'Wonderbox'

Comedian Russell Howard is returning to New Zealand for his sell-out tour- a very different version of New Zealand when compared to his previous visit, where he was granted exemption to pass through the borders during the Covid-19 pandemic.  “Last time we came, the army were there. They greeted us by saying- you know you’ll be staying at a hotel for two weeks. We’ll ask about your mental health, you have to lie. I told them I’ll be fine, there’s no way I could tell the truth,” the comedian told Newstalk ZB’s Jack Tame.   With the restrictions safely out of the way this time, Howard’s free to wander around New Zealand again, and potentially source some joke material from the local shops - he says he was particularly fascinated with what he saw in Auckland’s CBD.  “We were in Ponsonby, and it was funny because they were clearly coming up with names that have no relevance whatsoever to what they’re selling. There was a place called the Stolen Girlfriends Club - they sell clothes! There’s a cinema called the Silky Otter, my interest was piqued because you’re looking at all these. Is the Women’s Bookshop all female authors? No!”  Howard explained that seeing the picturesque images designed to appeal to travelers were less fascinating than observing the nation first-hand and building jokes from what he sees. To him, the standard mountainscapes were less compelling than spotting a restaurant that sounded like a ‘really specific Google search’, as he described Auckland’s Monsoon Poon.   He’s used to taking comedic material out of his observations, as his standup specials, TV projects and TikTok videos show off his takes on the state of the world as we ping-pong from one crisis to the next- from controversial presidential administrations, economic downturns, pandemics, climate change, to a possible expanding war.  “The audience is your master, your jury. There’s a great quote from Stephen Fry about the peculiarity of comedy. Comedy is so intangible, it’s surreal.”  He promised his current tour will bring his signature energy to Kiwi audiences. As he explained to Jack Tame, New Zealand has a ‘gentle, lovely’ atmosphere with plenty of entertaining aspects that could sound absurd when played back to an international audience.  “For instance, Rotorua calls itself Rotovegas, despite the fact that it doesn’t have a casino. That is innately funny, I love the idea of some American tourists wondering where the casino is and people from Rotorua going - there isn’t one,” he told Newstalk ZB.   Howard’s standup tours have sold thousands of tickets to people all over the world, from the US, to the UK, to Europe, to Australia - allowing him to show off his jokes to different audiences and tastes.  “I’ve got a load of stuff, it’s the final version before I record it for a special, so it’s as tight as a drum. I’m just putting it through New Zealand and Australia, to see if that works, to see what doesn’t work here.”  His comedy manages to work 80 percent of the time, as he claims. Audiences clearly agree, as demonstrated by the high-ticket sales and millions - sometimes hundreds of millions - watching his social media content and ‘The Russell Howard Hour’ on television or YouTube. Celebrity appearances and connections bring in the viewers, but Howard holds his own and brings his comedic chops wherever he appears.  “You have to figure out the right version of it. I don’t know the lay of the land, so I look forward to going to gigs and asking people how they feel.”  He’s taking in New Zealand in February and observing our nation’s cities and stories - and he expects to discuss our response to the crisis in the Red Sea, our politics and our other ‘interesting’ aspects. As he told Jack Tame, he’ll never know when an off-the-cuff observation turns into a joke, or standup special, or tour highlight.  LISTEN ABOVE   Tour Dates Wellington 3rd February 2024, Michael Fowler Centre  Palmerston North  4th February 2024, Regent On Broadway  Whanganui  5th February 2024, Royal Whanganui Opera House  Tauranga  7th February 2024, Mercury Baypark Arena  Hamilton  8th February 2024, Globox Arena  Auckland  9th February 2024, Kiri Te Kanawa Theatre  Auckland  10th February 2024, Kiri Te Kanawa Theatre  Hawke's Bay  11th February 2024, Toitoi Opera House See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/2/202417 minutes, 8 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Strawberry Poppyseed Cake

End of season strawberries are so jammy and sweet, they’re perfect for baking with.   Makes one 20cm cake.     Ingredients:  55g butter, softened   2/3 cup caster sugar + 1 tbsp   2 tsps pure vanilla extract   1 large egg   1 cup plain flour   ½ tsp baking powder   ½ tsp baking soda   3 tbsps poppy seeds   1/2 tsp lemon zest   1/2 cup plain Greek yoghurt or sour cream   140g fresh strawberries, quartered   Yoghurt or whipped cream to serve     Method  1. Preheat oven to 180 C fan bake with rack in middle. Grease and line a 20cm springform tin. 2. Beat butter and 2/3 cup sugar until pale and fluffy, then beat in vanilla and egg. 3. Whisk together flour, baking powder, baking soda and poppy seeds and add these into the mix in two batches, beating on low and alternating with yoghurt. Stir in zest and half the strawberries until just combined. Spoon batter into prepared cake tin. Arrange remaining strawberries evenly over top and sprinkle with remaining one tablespoon of sugar. 4. Bake 35 minutes or until golden and a skewer comes out clean. Cool for 10-15 minutes before ‘springing the tin’ and allow to cool completely before transferring to a serving plate.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/2/20246 minutes, 28 seconds
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Kevin Milne: How do we react to the possibility of catastrophic earthquakes?

The Government is being warned of the country’s vulnerability to more frequent severe weather, and the possibility of catastrophic earthquakes that could cripple the country.  These earthquakes could occur in the near future, or even within the next few days.  The news is hardly reassuring, and Kevin Milne is wondering just how he’s supposed to react.  Should he try refund his concert tickets? How would an earthquake affect the pitch for Sunday’s cricket test?   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/2/20244 minutes, 31 seconds
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Jack Tame: We should celebrate more milestones

The big news from my summer this year, is that I got married last weekend.  Well, technically actually that’s not correct. My wife, Mava, and I were legally married back in May. But last weekend we had a little wedding. The white dress, the tux, the families in from different parts of the country and the World, the hair, the pocket squares, the petit fours, the rings, the champagne, the stress.    Mava chose to enter to a beautiful song by Bon Iver. I chose to enter to – who else? -  Kanye West. I’m not gonna bore you with all the details in the World except to say it was so good. So good. So special. The stress of the lead up melted away. Mava and I felt present. And more than anything, we felt incredibly loved.    And although truthfully I’m feeling a bit emotionally depleted, I’ve found myself this week reflecting on a couple of things about our day.  There are two vital elements in a wedding. One is obviously that you make a profound commitment to someone else. You solidify and formalise the bond and the relationship between the two of you.   The other is that you do it in a room full of people who are important to you.   I know this is a bit of a cliche, but one of those things... I really want to do again.   Modern life is tricky. We’re all on different orbits. In different countries. Different cities. Kids, jobs, career trajectories: we’re all at different ages and stages of life. But what a privilege it is, a *rare* privilege, to pull the handbrake of push the big red button, and get all of those planets to line up together, if only for a night. How amazing it is to look around a room, to recognise all the faces beaming back at you, and know that you and each of those people have a special connection.   Culturally, I reckon we can sometimes be a bit lousy at celebrating milestones. Getting married has made me determined to do better, to have more parties, to break the glass and hit the red button again.  The morning after our celebration, I woke before dawn. I was exhausted, running on fumes, but still buzzing. Before my wife stirred, I kissed her on the cheek, walked down to the beach and slipped into the water. I lay, floating on my back, bobbing in the tide, processing everything.   I felt so warm. So content. So lucky. So loved. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/2/20244 minutes, 8 seconds
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Tara Canton: Kiwi actress on landing her role in TVNZ's 'After The Party'

Tara Canton is the definition of talented.   Starting out in theatre, she was a triple threat taking up roles in the Sound of Music and Annie.   But before she even graduated at Wellington’s Toi Whakaari, she landed the role in TVNZ’S 'After the Party', working alongside well-respected Kiwi actress, Robyn Malcom.  "I've always been interested in performing in arts,” Canton told Newstalk ZB’s Wilhelmina Shrimpton.  "I have an older sister Allegra, and she did musical theater, and dancing ,and all that growing up. So I kind of followed suit just, just, because I looked up to her and stuff.”  She started her performing career with stage and musical theatre, and through Toi Whakaari was introduced to the world of screen acting.  “When I booked this role, it was my first every self-tape that I’d done,” she said.  “I had never done anything remotely like, professional in terms of screen work.”  When it comes to working with Robyn Malcom, Canton said that she was a like a sponge, soaking up the experience.  “She made it so easy to talk to her.”  “I was trying to remember as much as I could.”  After The Party features some darker themes and serious elements, one of which relates directly to Canton’s character’s father.  “I really wanted to do the character of Grace justice,” she told Shrimpton.  “Definitely a bit of a scary first role.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/27/202416 minutes, 27 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Green Day - Saviors

Their fourteenth studio album, Green day is back with 'Saviors'.  A fifteen track punk-rock album that slots seamlessly into their discography and is, in their own words, an insight into the band's collective consciousness.  "Saviors is an invitation into Green Day’s brain, their collective spirit as a band, and an understanding of friendship, culture and legacy of the last 30 plus years." LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/27/20247 minutes, 22 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Search Party and The Woman on the Ledge

The Search Party by Hannah Richell   A spellbinding locked-room mystery about a glamping trip gone horribly wrong when a powerful storm leaves the participants stranded and forced to confront long-held secrets and a shocking disappearance. Max and Annie Kingsley have left the London rat race with their twelve-year-old son to set up a glamping site in the wilds of Cornwall. Eager for a dry run ahead of their opening, they invite three old university friends and their families for a long-needed reunion. But the festivities soon go awry as tensions arise between the children (and subsequently their parents), explosive secrets come to light, and a sudden storm moves in, cutting them off from help as one in the group disappears. Moving between the police investigation, a hospital room, and the catastrophic weekend, The Search Party is a propulsive and twisty destination thriller about the tenuous bonds of friendship and the lengths parents will go to protect their children—perfect for fans of Ruth Ware and Lucy Foley.    The Woman on the Ledge by Ruth Mancini   A woman falls to her death from a London bank's twenty-fifth-floor roof terrace. You're arrested for her murder. You tell the police that you only met the victim the previous night at your office party. She was threatening to jump from the roof, but you talked her down. You've got nothing to do with this tragedy. You're clearly being framed. So why do the police keep picking holes in your story? And why doesn't your lawyer seem to believe you? It soon becomes obvious that you're keeping secrets. But who are you trying to protect? And why?    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/27/20246 minutes, 24 seconds
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Mike Yardley: A high country escape to Lake Heron Station

"Deep in the golden heart of the Ashburton District, the mountains rise up to meet you. Two hours drive from Christchurch, I turned off the inland scenic highway at Mount Somers, bound for Lake Heron Station. The sealed road ends by the historic Hakatere buildings, but the sense of heritage in these parts is rich. Turning off at Hakatere onto the graded gravel road to the lake, I’m rolling through a wide open basin of golden tussock and matagouri, bracketed by high, glaciated mountain ranges.   Lake Heron Station is a magnificent high country merino station that’s been a going concern for the Todhunter family since 1917." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/26/20246 minutes, 24 seconds
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Dr Dougal Sutherland: Umbrella Wellbeing Psychologist on beginning the year with oomph

Psychologist Dr Dougal Sutherland joined Wilhelmina Shrimpton for a chat about beginning the year with oomph.  Top tips include:  -Daily scheduled activity -Mapping your activities to match your personal energy flow -Learning how to mentally switch off from work    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/26/20249 minutes, 4 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Watering the Botany

After a great summer with scorching temps on the Port Hills, the plants started to suffer a wee bit – away from home for a week or more makes most gardeners a bit anxious. Plants dried out very quickly.  How to Water?  Never been a fan of sprinklers. I try to keep my leaves dry as much as possible; wet leaves often give fungal spores the opportunity to settle on the plant, causing leaf-spots, rots, downy mildew, and powdery mildew.  Try to water the root zone of a plant, by depositing the water —gently— on the soil. A fierce jet of water can clog the porosity of the soil (not so good either!), so a nice shower-setting of your hose handpiece is perfect.  Evening or Morning?  It doesn’t really matter a lot, I think. The water cools the soil remarkably and, in the morning, (when it’s cooler) most of the water will actually penetrate the soil. In the evening (with warmer temperatures) a proportion of the water will evaporate, become a “cloud” of H2O gas and meet its mates, somewhere high up in the sky. In other words, it doesn’t do the plants much good.  But watering in the middle of the day makes a huge percentage of the water disappear into the stratosphere.  In my tunnel house (Tomatoes, Cucumbers, Capsicums) I prefer an evening watering to moisten the soil…. Followed by a liquid fertiliser (seafood Soup / Seaweed Tea) a few hours later when the soil is cooler, and the plants are in the mood for a liquid “meal”  Established shrubs and trees?  Most Nature Nerds that go walking will see in dry summers how established trees show severe signs of dehydration or wilting. Even without any rain those leaves will often look a lot better in the evening. Wilting is simply a strategy to shut off the leaves’ stomata to save the moisture escaping from these openings in the heat of the day.  This wilting can go on for weeks, sometimes.  A thoroughly good soak (hours and hours of watering) can re-set the water deficit in the soil. This deep watering is far more beneficial to soil and shrubs/trees than daily “piddle-waterings”  Over-watering?  As mentioned, a few months ago: to get trees and shrubs acclimatised to the drought, don’t “Over-Water” them. Let the search for water by getting the roots to grow deeper and further away from the main trunk/stem. Build Resilience!!  I reckon that UNDER-WATERING is a great way to train your perennials.  Regular droughts? Which plants are suited for water-stressed areas?  Think Mediterranean species that often don’t get much during the 5 months of summer in Spain and Morocco and Italia. Often plants with blue-ish or white-ish colours or with thick hairs on the leaves (that stop water loss). Euphorbias, Echiums, Watsonias, cacti, succulents, phlomis, Jerusalem sage, rosemary, lambs ear, etc etc.  Plants that can NEVER dry out.  Ferns have got a different vascular system in their stems and fronds; these bundles are not as strong and lignine-supported as other “Vascular plants”; So when a fern gets too dry, its bundles simply shrivel up and irreversibly collapse.  I warned you!!   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/26/20243 minutes, 39 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Apple's forced to allow outside apps and explicit deepfake images of Taylor Swift

Apple is being forced to allow apps from outside it's App Store  The EU's Digital Markets Act is coming into effect in March and it will see monumental changes to Apple's iPhone business. For the first time apps from outside of its App Store will be allowed to be installed on the phone, either directly, or via a third-party-created app store of their own. It's huge because Apple charges up to 30% of an App's direct revenue to be distributed in their store and have strict guidelines on what apps can and cannot do. These new rules allow for more freedom than ever. These new DMA rules will also force Apple to allow for web browsers to be powered by technology other than their proprietary "WebKit". For New Zealanders it won't mean much but it may give more ammunition for other governments to propose similar legislation.    Explicit Taylor Swift images are going viral, but they're deepfakes  Don't believe what you're seeing. The realistic pornographic images are likely generated by AI technology which makes creating them as easy as typing "prompts" or instructions - no photoshop skills necessary. A single instance of one image on X (formally Twitter) was viewed 47 million times before the account was taken down. In the US there aren't federal regulations around AI imagery, and no states have laws against creation or sharing of non-consensual deepfake photography.  Taylor Swift's is one of America's sweethearts and this is shining a light on a very real issue because these types of images can be created for almost anyone.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/26/20248 minutes, 3 seconds
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Tara Ward: Masters of the Air and Black Coast Vanishings

Masters of the Air   A new military drama from Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks, based on a true story from in World War II about ten American airmen who risked their lives against unrelenting German fighters (AppleTV+).    Black Coast Vanishings  A new New Zealand true-crime documentary series about the mysterious disappearances of six people from the small coastal community of Piha (Three and ThreeNow, from Sunday 28 January).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/26/20243 minutes, 55 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Priscilla and Lift

Priscilla When teenager Priscilla Beaulieu meets Elvis Presley at a party, the man who's already a meteoric rock 'n' roll superstar becomes someone entirely unexpected in private moments: a thrilling crush, an ally in loneliness, and a gentle best friend.     Lift  A master thief is wooed by his ex-girlfriend and the FBI to pull off an impossible heist with his international crew on a 777 passenger flight from London to Zurich.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/26/20247 minutes, 44 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Celebrating the 100th anniversary of Winnie the Pooh

It’s a very special anniversary for one of childhood’s most beloved figures: Winnie the Pooh.  This month marks one hundred years since AA Milne introduced the beloved character to the world in a poem called ‘Teddy Bear.’  Kevin Milne joined Wilhelmina Shrimpton to celebrate the occasion.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/26/20246 minutes, 21 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Plum and Vanilla Cake

At this time of year the plum trees are dripping with fruit! It’s time to make the annual supply of plum sauce and plum chutneys but it’s also time to bake this beautiful cake!  Ingredients  3/4 cup sugar  180g butter, softened  1 tbsp vanilla extract  2 medium eggs  ½ cup plain flour  ½ cup ground almonds  1 tsp baking powder  6 plums, halved and de-stoned  Method  1. Heat oven 180 C. Grease a springform tin.  2. Cream the sugar and butter until pale, light and fluffy. Add the eggs and beat well. Stir in flour, almonds and baking powder until combined.  3. Spoon the batter into a springform tin. Place the plum halves skin side up on top of the batter. Sprinkle lightly with sugar.  4. Bake for 50 minutes or until a skewer comes out clean. Let it sit for 5 minutes then remove the sides and cool completely.  5. Serve plain or with whipped cream and custard.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/26/20246 minutes, 32 seconds
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Wilhelmina Shrimpton: Timing really is everything

I want to talk about timing, because it really is everything.   It can be the difference between whether you say or do something, and it can be the difference between whether you don’t.  It can shape opinion, and it can morph public perception.  The timing of an announcement or an incident can also dictate how it’s received.   I think we’ve well and truly seen the importance of timing when it comes to our politicians and their mental health struggles.   I know that Francesca Rudkin spoke about this on last week’s show following the shoplifting allegations against Golriz Gharahman, but the headline is back in the spotlight after former Labour Minister Kiri Allan opened up about her mental health struggles after allegedly drink-driving and crashing her car last year.   Like Golriz, she resigned from her role, and like Golriz, she’s due to have her day in court after being charged over the incident.   In her first interview since the crash Allan says she’d returned to work to deal with a change in Labour’s policies after a ‘mental health break’ … and admits she got to a point where she “decided she wanted to take her life” the night of the incident.   Now before I continue, I think it’s important to remind everyone that both Golriz Gharahman and Kiri Allan have said that their mental health struggles are not an excuse but an explanation for what happened.   Even so, they both faced a mound of criticism that mental health had been used to try and manage the PR disasters.   There are of course a lot of similarities between the former politicians’ stories, and while I applaud them for openly sharing their struggles, I wonder whether the timing of that was what threw many Kiwis.   Perhaps if they’d laid that bare when they entered politics, or when the first signs of trouble began to emerge, then many may have been more willing to accept the explanation. Or perhaps, by speaking openly about it earlier on, then the incidents may not have even happened and they’d still be sitting in the beehive right now.   I realise that’s all very well in theory but in practice it seems to have become increasingly obvious that as a government, and also as a society, we haven’t created an environment where people feel comfortable enough to come forward without judgment.   This was evident in a LinkedIn post I read last week after Golriz’s shoplifting allegations emerged, which stated that people with mental health struggles shouldn't bother getting into politics or positions with a public profile.   Not only is that discriminatory and completely unfair, it also doesn’t bode well for democracy, swiftly eliminating 31% of Kiwis who in the latest New Zealand Health Survey said they live with moderate to very high levels of psychological distress.   My fear is that although we’re seeing an increase in conversation and campaigns about mental health, that isn’t translating into an understanding or acceptance of the issue.   Kiri Allan said in her latest interview that if she looked at how her mental health may have impacted the way she operated, that it was her responsibility to manage that aspect of her life, and that she didn’t do that well.   She’s right. But there’s also some responsibility on our friends, colleagues and employers too.   And to bring it back to timing, maybe if we walked the talk we saw in all of those mental health campaigns then it would never be an awkward time to speak out.   Both Kiri Allan and Golriz Gharahman are now paying the price for their mistakes - as they should.   Both have valuable lessons to learn. But so do we. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/26/20244 minutes, 2 seconds
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Amanda Palmer: Award winning musician on living in New Zealand for two years, her upcoming tour, and new music

Award winning musician, Author, ted talker, Amanda Palmer is adventurous, creative, and a real go-getter.    She was one of the great minds behind music duo “The Dresden Dolls” and won Artist of the Year at the 2006 Boston Music Awards.    Amanda has a soft spot for New Zealand, spending nearly two years on Waiheke and in Hawkes Bay with her son during the Covid pandemic.   Now she’s returning with a tour and new music, honouring her time as an accidental Kiwi, and joining Francesca Rudkin to chat about it.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/20/202415 minutes, 51 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Erny Belle - Not Your Cupid

Home-grown in Aōtearoa, Erny Belle released her debut album in 2022. 'Venus is Home' is flavoured with the sounds of alt-folk, country, and Pacific-pop and is an ode to her connection with her grandmother and growing up in rural Aōtearoa. Her latest album 'Not Your Cupid' expands upon its predecessor, adding new influences.  The album is less narrative and more focused on imaginings, the throughline a little more cryptic and intuitive.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/20/20247 minutes, 49 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Dinner Party and Dark Arena: A Frenchman Thriller

The Dinner Party by Rebecca Heath    The new exciting thriller by Rebecca Heath, author of THE SUMMER PARTY. A dark and twisty domestic thriller set in a seemingly idyllic suburban neighbourhood, where family secrets are best kept buried...     Dark Arena: A Frenchman Thriller by Jack Beaumont  When a DGSE agent is brutally murdered in front of his family, the 'Company' swings into action, determined to track down the killers. Meanwhile, operative Alec de Payns is turning a Russian intelligence officer by blackmail. His team must establish who is posting classified material against the Kremlin to embassies all over Europe. The clues lead to a secret meeting of businessmen, terrorists and mercenaries on a luxury yacht in the Mediterranean, which Alec must infiltrate. What he discovers there will set Europe on course for catastrophe. Can de Payns and his team establish who is setting up an assassination? Who is the target? And will they be able to stop it?    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/20/20246 minutes, 19 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Encounters in Glacier Country

"South Westland’s natural splendour seems to grow in awe-inspiring intensity the further south you go. There’s a fairytale quality to the sense of escapism, as you drive through those long and leafy highway glades, where the forest canopy drapes across the road. I wended my way to Whataroa, where nesting is the star attraction. Just out of Whataroa, the rare white heron/kōtuku nest at the Waitangiroto Nature Reserve from September to March." "Just 25 minutes south from Whataroa, Ōkārito is an irresistibly laidback hamlet, like a world unto itself. On arrival, you’re rewarded with stunning panoramic views of the towering jaws of the Southern Alps, the roar of the ocean, the magnificent lagoon, striking sea cliffs and vast, lush forest in this heart-stealing eco-wonderland." "The twin glaciers, Franz Josef and Fox are revered as being two of the most accessible glaciers in the world, plunging down from the Southern Alps, wrapped in rainforest, almost to sea level. Descending from 3000 metres, Franz Josef Glacier terminates just 240 metres above sea level, and just 19km from the coast. The terminal face of Fox, which is the longest of the West Coast glaciers, is only 12km from the Tasman Sea. It’s what makes Franz Josef and Fox so exceptional – you’d struggle to find many glaciers so close to the ocean." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/20/20245 minutes, 15 seconds
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Kate Hall: Eating only New Zealand made food

This year Kate Hall is embarking on a challenge.  She’s aiming to only purchase local and New Zealand made food when doing her grocery shopping.  Kate joined Francesca Rudkin to chat about why she’s embarking on this challenge, and the difficulties she thinks she’ll face along the way.  Read her blog explaining the challenge here.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/20/20248 minutes, 38 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: The importance of yearly check-ups

Why bother with a yearly check-up?  - Prevention is better than cures.  - There are many things that we may not be aware of that we can do something about.  - In many cases it’s not about now but about the future.   - Three main areas to think about: checking for cardiovascular risk factors, early detection cancer, and prevention of disease.     What things will your GP check for?  - They’ll check for the ‘hidden’ issues.  - Physical: look at blood pressure and weight in particular. Both can cause heart disease.  - Run some routine blood tests, in particular checking blood sugar for diabetes and cholesterol.     Why are these important?  - Rising blood pressure, sugars rising in the blood stream, and fats in the blood stream are silent. We don’t know they’re happening.  - Blood pressure and cholesterol left untreated can lead to heart disease and strokes down the track.  - Elevated sugars can give us a warning that we are headed for diabetes, which is treatable with changes to diet, exercise, and weight loss.     What else do we need to think about?  - Cancer screenings:  - Mammograms for early breast cancer from age 45.  - Bowel screening from the age of 60 for bowel cancer.  - Cervical screening for cervical cancer from age 25.  - In men, think about a blood test for prostate cancer from the age of 50.  - If we detect cancer early enough, we can cure it – that simple!     Any other issues?  - Being up to date with immunisations.  - For children we need to think about all those diseases we prevent with immunisation. Measles, diphtheria, whooping cough, hepatitis, pneumonia, tetanus, and meningitis are all killers, and we need to make sure our children are protected.  -For adults: a yearly flu injection, shingle vaccine at the age of 65, being up to date with Covid boosters, and discussing pneumococcal vaccine for pneumonia over the age of 65.  -These are all important in preventing disease.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/19/20245 minutes, 10 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: AI fingerprint analysis and the continuing tech layoffs

Some new research suggests our fingerprints may not be as unique as we thought they are.  The common thesis has always been that each of our fingerprints is unique, but researchers from Columbia University have run AI over 60,000 fingerprints and found that it's possible to detect when two fingerprints belong to the same person with 75-90% accuracy.  Here's the scary part - they don't know how AI is doing it, but it doesn't seem to be using the markers that forensics experts have been using for decades. It seems there is something about the curvature and the angle of the swirls in the centre that are common enough on each of our fingerprints to identify us. There are still lots of questions, like is it to do with how the samples are collected? Or do these markers change over time?    The tech layoffs continue  Google has started 2024 with another round of layoffs impacting over a thousand employees and their CEO Sundar Pichai says to brace for more. Google is actively working to cut out layers of middle management to "simplify execution", but also focusing its investments in its core areas - which has seen funding reallocated from elsewhere.   The tech sector has laid off nearly 8,000 workers so far this year, according to layoffs.fyi. Folks from Amazon, Discord, Instagram and many startups.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/19/20244 minutes, 8 seconds
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Tara Ward: True Detective: Night Country, Boy Swallows Universe, Death and Other Details

True Detective: Night Country The acclaimed HBO detective series is back, this time starring Jodie Foster and Kali Reis (professional boxer turned actor) and set in chilling small town Alaska (Neon). Boy Swallows Universe  Bryan Brown stars in this Australian drama based on the bestselling book of the same name, about a young boy from Brisbane who must navigate the criminal world (Netflix).Death and Other Details Fans of an Agatha Christie mystery will enjoy this new series about a detective trying to solve a murder on a Mediterranean ocean liner where every passenger seems to be hiding something (Disney+).   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/19/20246 minutes, 12 seconds
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Chris Schulz: The Iron Claw and Bitconned

The Iron Claw The true story of the inseparable Von Erich brothers, who make history in the intensely competitive world of professional wrestling in the early 1980s. Through tragedy and triumph, under the shadow of their domineering father and coach, the brothers seek larger-than-life immortality on the biggest stage in sports.   Bitconned In this true-crime documentary, three guys exploit the freewheeling cryptocurrency market to scam millions from investors and bankroll lavish lifestyles.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/19/20246 minutes, 56 seconds
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Nici Wickes: BBQ Tacos

Whip up these beef tacos in a minute on the BBQ and you’ve got yourself a feast!  Makes 10-12 tacos    Ingredients:  1 piece rump steak, sliced into thin strips  1 red capsicum, sliced thinly  1 onion, sliced thinly  2 cloves garlic, minced with some salt  2 tsps. cumin seeds  1 tsp chilli flakes  ½ tsp dried oregano  2 tbsps. olive oil  Juice from a lemon or lime  To serve:  10-12 tortilla  ½ cup guacamole  Shredded lettuce  Crumbled feta  Salsa – I use La Morena available in supermarkets    Method:   1. Marinate the beef strips in all of the main ingredients for at least 15 minutes. 2. While the meat marinates, warm the tortilla on the BBQ or in a pan, keeping them warm wrapped in a tea towel. Set out a build your own platter with tortilla, lettuce, guacamole, feta and salsa. 3. Cook the beef and vegetable mix on a hot BBQ plate or in a pan (do it in batches so it doesn’t stew) until the beef is just cooked. Serve alongside the platter and diners can build their own taco!   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/19/20247 minutes, 25 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Omens for what 2024 has in store

2024 is still in its early days but nearly three weeks into January, Kevin Milne is starting to get a sense of what the year has in store for him.  He told Francesca Rudkin that this is the time of year where you have to look for omens, and with a speeding ticket and an insurance refund it’s already looking like a mixed bag.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/19/20244 minutes, 29 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Are we too hard on politicians?

This week I found myself wondering if we’re too hard on politicians? Is there enough support for those who choose to go into public service? And why do we forget they’re human too?   When we see some of politics’ most passionate, talented, hard-working participants, some touted as potential leaders, hit mental health road bumps which often derail their careers, you’ve got to wonder if it’s worth it.    This time last year our then Prime Minister called a press conference and announced she didn’t have enough energy in the tank to do the job well and was resigning. She wanted to spend more time with her family.   It was a shock, but not surprising. It had been a brutal, unprecedented 5 years at the top for Ardern, and would have taken a toll on any leader.    This January we have another surprising resignation of a high-profile politician, for quite different reasons. In the case of Greens MP Golriz Ghahraman it was due to allegations of shoplifting, for which she has now been charged.   Ghahraman did not offer an excuse —and rightly so, as there’s no excuse for illegal behaviour— but she did try and offer an explanation. An extreme stress response to her work and unrecognised trauma contributed to her irrational behaviour – basically, it was down to her mental health.   As I know from hosting Summer Mornings this week, some of you feel empathy for Ghahraman, appreciate her hard work, and wish her the best in dealing with her issues. Some of you believe that mental health is just a convenient excuse.   I think it’s both. We need to differentiate between a person’s mental health crisis, which deserves our compassion, and their actions, which can be inexcusable. It is possible to hold both thoughts at the same time.  What we don’t want though is for the mental health ‘excuse’ to become an easy PR solution to a problem, because it’s really important people —from all walks of life— share their stories to destigmatise mental health issues.  What intrigued me this week was when Ghahraman’s Green Party colleagues and former members of Parliament spoke out about the stress, violent and sexual threats, and the challenges of being a politician, but especially a female politician.   Abuse has always been a part of being a politician. Talk to any politician and they will tell you about some of the crazy abuse they have received over the years, but you get the sense from those in the business now that it’s worse.   Why do people feel they have the right to abuse and threaten politicians?   If you don’t like their policies, don’t vote for them. There is never any rationale or excuse for sexual or violent threats. We must differentiate between the person and the politics, and at the same time offer better support for those who decide to enter public service.   This needs to come from both the party and Parliamentary Services. The last thing we want is for our politicians to become unreachable and untouchable due to a fear of the public, or for good, capable people to decide to avoid public service altogether.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/19/20243 minutes, 18 seconds
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Jack Tame: The Christmas Reset

It was left to my wife to break the bad news.  Our boy was sitting patiently in the back of the car and as we made our way across town, she gently asked him about the letter which we’d just discovered he’d written to Santa.  “When did you write it?” She asked.  “A couple of weeks ago. I didn’t tell you, cos it was going straight to Santa.”  “Fair call. Good thinking. Who helped you do it?”   “My Kaiako... my teacher.”  “And... um... What did you ask for?”  “Oh, nothing major,” he said. “The standard. A Rubik’s cube. Some stuff for his Beyblade spinning tops. Oh, and you know... a dog.”  “A dog?” Asked mum.  “Two dogs,” replied our boy. “So, they’ll always have someone to play with even when I’m at school.”  Nothing stokes the magic of Christmas like watching it through kids’ eyes. Nothing kills your dream of two new pet dogs like Mum gently explaining that Santa called her on the phone from an unknown number to double-check the pets would be ok... and unfortunately, our family just isn’t in a position where we can have two new dogs, this year.   What am I looking forward to this Christmas? I’m looking forward to watching his face when we finally let him loose on the non-canine gifts sitting there, tantalising and mysterious, under the Christmas tree.   I’m looking forward to cracking the click-clack Tupperware and hoeing into my mum’s Christmas baking. I’m looking forward to knocking around on guitars, cold drinks in the summer twilight, and turning off all of the notifications on my phone.   I’m looking forward to meeting my new nephew, baby Freddie, for the first time. I’m looking forward to playing with his older brother and sister, who are at the age where all they want to do is a bit of rough and tumble. We’ll play Jonah – an old favourite where I crouch on one side of the lounge, and they try to run past me and score an imaginary try on the couch, only for me to pick them up and tackle them to the carpet. My nephew will no doubt ask me to string him like a pig... holding him from the ankles and dangling him upside down. A great way to wind up a four-year-old just before bed.  This is our last show morning for 20203. It’s been a year. For me, 2023 started for me with a 2000km road trip across South Africa, Lesotho, Swaziland, and Mozambique, and is ending in Nelson. We’ve had an election. Natural disasters. Wars. World Cups. Somewhere in there, I asked my partner to marry me.   For me, this time of year is when we bank all of that. A time to exhale. To reconnect, reset, recharge and go again. And for all the peripheral stress, nothing else comes close.   Dogs or no dogs, I love Christmas. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/16/20233 minutes, 54 seconds
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Lorin Clarke on her memoir 'Would that be funny?' and growing up with John Clarke

In her own right, Lorin Clarke, the daughter of New Zealand Comedian legend John Clarke, is as talented as it comes.   Following in her father’s footsteps, Lorin expressed her creative side through writing and producing children's TV, film, and books, as well as podcasts and columns for the ABC.  She’s told the story of what it was like growing up with John as a father in her memoir ‘Would that be Funny? Growing Up with John Clarke’.   Lorin joined Jack Tame to chat about the memoir, which was released in August this year.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/16/202314 minutes, 8 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Samara Joy - A Joyful Holiday

Two time Grammy Award Winner Samara Joy has released her first Christmas Album! The album features six songs total, four of them completely new: - Warm in December- Twinkle Twinkle Little Me- The Christmas Song- Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas- O Holy Night (feat. The McLendon Family)- The Christmas Song (Live) LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/16/20235 minutes, 44 seconds
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Catherine Raynes' favourite books of 2023

Fiction:  The Secret Hours – Mick Heron  A gripping spy thriller from the bestselling author of Slow Horses, about a disastrous MI5 mission in Cold War Berlin—an absolute must-read for Slough House fans. Learned by Heart –Emma Donaghue  Eliza and Lister have never been this wide-awake in their lives, and the Slope, with its curtains drawn wide, is bright with starlight. They talk in whispers, not to disturb the maids who lie sleeping on the other side of the box room. The question Eliza’s been needing to ask swells like a great berry in her mouth, and all at once she’s not scared to let it out, not scared at all, not scared of anything . . . Tom Lake – Anne Patchett   This is a story about Peter Duke who went on to be a famous actor.This is a story about falling in love with Peter Duke who wasn't famous at all.It's about falling so wildly in love with him – the way one will at twenty-four – that it felt like jumping off a roof at midnight.There was no way to foresee the mess it would come to in the end.   Non Fiction:   Fire Weather: A True Story from a Hotter World – John Vaillant   In May 2016, Fort McMurray, the hub of Canada's oil industry and America's biggest foreign supplier, was overrun by wildfire. The multi-billion-dollar disaster melted vehicles, turned entire neighborhoods into firebombs, and drove 88,000 people from their homes in a single afternoon. Through the lens of this apocalyptic conflagration--the wildfire equivalent of Hurricane Katrina--John Vaillant warns that this was not a unique event, but a shocking preview of what we must prepare for in a hotter, more flammable world. Fire has been a partner in our evolution for hundreds of millennia, shaping culture, civilization, and, very likely, our brains. Fire has enabled us to cook our food, defend and heat our homes, and power the machines that drive our titanic economy. Yet this volatile energy source has always threatened to elude our control, and in our new age of intensifying climate change, we are seeing its destructive power unleashed in previously unimaginable ways. The Wager – David Grann  On January 28, 1742, a ramshackle vessel of patched-together wood and cloth washed up on the coast of Brazil. Inside were thirty emaciated men, barely alive, and they had an extraordinary tale to tell. They were survivors of His Majesty’s Ship the Wager, a British vessel that had left England in 1740 on a secret mission during an imperial war with Spain. While the Wager had been chasing a Spanish treasure-filled galleon known as “the prize of all the oceans,” it had wrecked on a desolate island off the coast of Patagonia. The men, after being marooned for months and facing starvation, built the flimsy craft and sailed for more than a hundred days, traversing nearly 3,000 miles of storm-wracked seas. They were greeted as heroes. But then ... six months later, another, even more decrepit craft landed on the coast of Chile. This boat contained just three castaways, and they told a very different story. The thirty sailors who landed in Brazil were not heroes – they were mutineers. The first group responded with countercharges of their own, of a tyrannical and murderous senior officer and his henchmen. It became clear that while stranded on the island the crew had fallen into anarchy, with warring factions fighting for dominion over the barren wilderness. As accusations of treachery and murder flew, the Admiralty convened a court martial to determine who was telling the truth. The stakes were life-and-death—for whomever the court found guilty could hang. The Twat Files: A hilarious sort-of memoir of mistakes, mishaps and mess-ups – Dawn French   When I was younger I wanted to be an interesting, sophisticated, semi-heroic, multi-layered person. BUT. That kind of perfect is impossible. Being an actual twat is much more the real me. Sorry to boast, but I am a champion twat. In The Twat Files I will tell you about all the times I've been a total and utter twat. The moments where I've misunderstood stuff and messed up. My hope is that these stories might fire up yer engines to remind you of just what a massive twat you also are. Let's celebrate and revel in this most delightful of traits together. That would be perfectly twatty. The Woman In Me – Britney Spears   The Woman in Me is a brave and astonishingly moving story about freedom, fame, motherhood, survival, faith, and hope.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/16/20235 minutes, 24 seconds
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Mike Yardley: South Westland's World Heritage wilderness

"One of my favourite Kiwi road trips can be mistaken as an unsung feeder route in South Westland, stitching the West Coast’s Glacier Country to the glittery allure of Wanaka and Queenstown. Rushing is the problem. Anyone who races through the ravishing Haast Pass Highway is unwittingly short-changing themselves. Set aside the time to devour its epic glories. As the last mountain pass to be constructed over the Southern Alps and only fully chip-sealed in 1995, this 140km-long panoramic alpine pass still exudes a “final frontier” sense of escapism as it threads its way through South Westland’s primeval forests. The route had long been used by Māori warriors and greenstone (pounamu) gatherers, as they traversed the Main Divide." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/16/20239 minutes, 30 seconds
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Dr Dougal Sutherland: Are you drinking too much at Christmas?

‘Tis the season to eat, drink, and be merry. Emphasis on drink. Increased alcohol consumption can be a problem at this time of year, especially as people are under increased amounts of stress and pressure. This can sometimes contribute to problem drinking, as people increasingly use alcohol or other drugs as a way to cope. At Christmas, drinking becomes even more socially acceptable, and workplaces have a role in this, often via work Christmas functions which give people the license to drink as part of unwinding from work.  It’s useful to think about whether alcohol will have a role in workplace functions in the future. Lots of workplaces are reducing their emphasis on alcohol as part of their functions e.g., having outdoor picnics or doing activities where alcohol use isn’t the core thing or choosing a venue for a Christmas party that doesn’t serve alcohol.  On a personal front there are some danger signs to look out for:  - Increased tolerance: At first, 2 drinks was enough to relax, then it was 3, now it’s 4. The more you drink, the more your body adapts, so that the same amount has less effect.  - It’s hard to stop or cut back. - Problems with others: are you “that person” at the office Christmas party or social function?  - Life feels smaller: Sometimes, we stop doing things that matter, or only do them if we can do them while drinking. This starts to limit your life and can lead to giving up hobbies or even people that you used to enjoy.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/16/20238 minutes, 46 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Holiday highlights for Nature Nerds

I have always loved travel, especially to great Natural Environments. We all have favourite destinations and I have been extremely lucky touring the world while filming for Discovery Channel and Animal Planet – But in New Zealand alone, there are plenty of places that are inspirational when you want to have a break for all sorts of reasons: Gardening Botanic gardens in Auckland, Hamilton, Christchurch, Otari (Wellington), Dunedin, Queens Park Invercargill, Napier and Waikereru (Just outside Gisborne). Most have their own botanical highlights: local plants, or a series of trees and shrubs from around the world – others focus on botanists and their historical discoveries. Otari/Wilton Bush: New Zealand’s only public botanic garden dedicated solely to native plants – all because of a vision by Leonard Cocaine. Waikereru – Joseph Banks and Daniel Solander plants from Cook’s Endeavour. If you want to get some inspiration for your garden, go and visit some of those places mentioned above. This is gardening on a huge scale. At the same time you’ll find out what grows well in your region and often keep up on the latest plant releases. Stunning Natural Parks Mount Taranaki – great tracks in the National park: The Puffer Track going up steeply and showing you the spectacular botany as you climb higher and higher, ending up on the Round-the-Mountain track. You may have heard about the famous cloud forests (Moist air going upwards in Mountainous Tropical areas) – well, if you park your car at the lower end of the North Egmont carpark (down from the visitor centre) you can access the Connett loop track, which goes through New Zealand’s cloud forest. This is the real deal in Aotearoa. The Lewis Pass (right at the top) has a fabulous, high altitude walk around wetlands (tarns) with orchids flowering and constantly on the edge of the tree-line: shrunken alpine versions of trees you might know from lower altitudes. If you like Lichens, this is the walk to make. Great insect life all over the place, especially in late spring and summer. (Alpine stone weta!) Further south, try to spend some time in the Catlins. Sealions, Southern rata flowering, deserted beaches and extraordinary forests in pristine landscapes. This is where you immediately get the definition of Biodiversity. This is the very first time in my life that I have mentioned the Catlins on the wireless – it should remain a secret place for ever and ever (ake ake). Milford track too long for you? I have a perfect alternative: Start the Routeburn track on SH 94 (the Milford Road, an hour north of Te Anau) and get to Key Summit. Pick a good weather day and get to the top: Alpine views, wetlands with magical wetland plants (a few Sundew species – Drosera); these plants eat insects – extraordinary! Key summit is the Natural History of Lord of the Rings. Oh yes… rock wrens !!! Ecological “Islands” These are bits of our Landscape that have been made predator-free. That allows the presence of pretty rare birds, lizards, aquatic critters and insects, to name but a few groups under pressure. Zealandia (Wellington) is a mere 20 minutes from down town. Predator proof fence keeps the nasties out; kaka,Tuatara, falcons, kiwi, tieke hihi etc etc. The noise can be deafening. Maungatautari near Cambridge, south of Hamilton is an impressive breeding ground for western brown kiwi: “kohanga kiwi”. After releasing some of these birds there, the numbers increased dramatically. Now these birds can be translocated to other sites with effective pest control. Good numbers of other endangered birds and bats. Brook Waimarama near Nelson where the predator-proof fence keeps the locals safe. It’s a great valley with aquatic habitats and my favourite giant carnivorous snails (Powelliphanta) Orokonui EcoSanctuary North of Dunedin city. One of the few places where you can see the large Otago skink, sunning itself on warm rocks in the sun. With Kaka, Tui and Bellbird sipping nectar from native flowers and additional sugar water dispensers, the sounds are reminiscent of the concept of a cacophony This is what New Zealand sounded like when Maori arrived! Tawharanui Open Sanctuary is probably the most “summer Holiday destination”: North of Auckland on the Coast, not far from Goat Island. Kiwi, Takahe, brown teal, Kaka and bellbird, tui and some stunning (albeit small) areas with original forests. Puriri trees with puriri moth holes in the trunks, beaches with dotterels and rocky sea-shore sites with amazing marine rockpools with endemic Nudibrancs and endemic fishes. It’s the place where we take teachers for the school holidays with the Blake Inspire sessions: Nature Nerd teachers, ready to teach Nature Nerd Kids! Finally: My environmental “home” in Aotearoa: Wingspan in Rotorua. This is the place where you can interact with falcons, harriers and owls, and learn about the people that rescue these raptors and teach them to fly and hunt for prey, using ancient falconry techniques and traditional methods in ornithology, language and culture.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/16/20235 minutes, 42 seconds
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Bob Campbell: 2023 Giesen Uncharted Sauvignon Blanc, Marlborough $20.99

Wine: 2023 Giesen Uncharted Sauvignon Blanc, Marlborough $20.99  Why I chose it:  - I wanted to choose a wine that would put a smile on the face of the largest number of people as a sort of Christmas present to listeners who enjoy wine.  - Sauvignon Blanc is our biggest selling wine both locally and overseas. - Giesen is a large, quality conscious producer of Sauvignon Blanc. - I recently tasted this wine in a blind line-up and it performed very well. - NZ makes the world’s best SB according to many top wine critics (We make 25% of the world’s SB). What does it taste like?  - “Sweet acid” sounds like a contradiction in terms but to me it describes an important component of this wine perfectly. Gentle sauvignon with good intensity of passionfruit, guava, grapefruit flavours with a gooseberry undercurrent.  Why it’s a bargain: $20.99 is an average price for Sauvignon Blanc but this is a well-above average quality wine. Where can you buy it?  - New World $17.99 (check the vintage, wait for 2023) - Glengarry Wines in Auckland (2022) $18.99 - Vineonline $17.99  Food match?  - Most seafoods, great with clams/cockles  Will it keep?  - Drink up    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/15/20234 minutes, 39 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: A new way to save your passwords

Passkeys are the reverse password you never need to remember.  Instead of having your username and password stored on the server and it letting you in if you can make it match, the passkeys instead rely on your device to unlock a secret key, and only if the keys match mathematically, will the authentication be granted.    The benefits:   You can't be tricked! The website/app is coming to you clearly identifying itself and providing their version of the 'key'. Your private key will only work with its corresponding key held by the true website.  It's more secure! You need to prove you are you (using biometrics such as a fingerprint or face scan on your phone or a device) and will need to actually have the device on you to first unlock your private key and it never leaves your device. If the server is hacked, then it's basically useless information.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/15/20235 minutes, 54 seconds
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Tara Ward: Vigil, Fool Me Once, The Tourist

Vigil  A new season of the British crime drama that starred Suranne Jones as a detective solving a murder on a submarine - this time, however, she’s investigating a murder on land (TVNZ+, Boxing Day).    Fool Me Once  An eight-part British thriller based on the book by Harlan Coben about a woman recovering from the murder of her husband, when she unexpectedly sees him again and starts to uncover an unlikely conspiracy (Netflix, New Year’s Day).    The Tourist  Jamie Dornan returns for another game of cat-and-mouse in this thriller about a man who has no memory of who he is and why somebody is trying to kill him (TVNZ+, 2 January).  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/15/20234 minutes, 55 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Failsafe Christmas Pavlova

I stand by this recipe as the one and only (controversial!) as it turns out a gorgeous pav every time – crisp outer shell and marshmallow inside.  Makes one large or 6-8 small individual pavs.     Ingredients:  - 5 medium egg whites  - 280g caster sugar  - 1 tbsp cornflour  - 1 tsp white vinegar    Method:   1. Heat your oven to 160 C fan bake and line an oven tray with baking paper. 2. With an electric beater on medium-high, whisk the egg whites until soft peaks begin to form. Start adding the sugar, a tablespoon at a time, whisking well between each addition. I scrape down the sides a few times to make sure that all of the sugar is incorporated. Allow 12-15 minutes for this - it should be thick and shiny. Add in cornflour and vinegar and beat the meringue for 20-30 seconds more. 3. Reduce oven temperature to 100 C. 4. Pile up on lined tray, smoothing edges with the back of a wet spoon. 5. Bake for 1.5-2hrs hours (or until pav easily pulls away from the paper and the base is crispy) then turn oven off and allow to cool completely without disturbance. 6. Dressing your pav: Whipped cream or a combination of cream and mascarpone is a good base then add any toppings you wish to suit the season.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/15/20236 minutes, 9 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Previewing films released over the festive period, The Boys in the Boat, One Life, Ferrari

The Boys in the Boat During the height of the Great Depression, members of the rowing team at the University of Washington get thrust into the spotlight as they compete for gold at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin.   One Life The story of British humanitarian Nicholas Winton, who helped save hundreds of Central European children from the Nazis on the eve of World War II. Ferrari During the summer of 1957, bankruptcy looms over the company that Enzo Ferrari and his wife built 10 years earlier. He decides to roll the dice and wager it all on the iconic Mille Miglia, a treacherous 1,000-mile race across Italy.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/15/20238 minutes, 29 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Christmas traditions

It’s the little things that matter.  This week Kevin Milne has been thinking about the little traditions that families observe at Christmas.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/15/20237 minutes, 14 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Tate McRae - Think Later

Think Later is the second studio album released by Canadian singer Tate McRae, following from her debut album i used to think i could fly.  McRae said in an interview with Rolling Stone that the last year has been driven more by her intuition, and she hopes fans can feel that in the music as it covers themes of falling in love and the raw emotions that come with. The album has a total of fourteen songs with two pre-release singles: exes and greedy. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/9/20235 minutes, 16 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Prima Facie and Being Henry: The Fonz . . . and Beyond

Prima Facie - Suzie Miller Tessa is a thoroughbred. A young, brilliant barrister from a working-class background now at the top of her game: defending, cross-examining and lighting up the shadows of doubt in any case. The law is a game and she is its most talented player. One sickening night, though, Tessa finds herself in a position countless women - one in three - have been in before her. And she's faced with a gut-wrenching, life-changing decision. Will she take the stand to testify about her rape, with the full awareness that the system has not been built to protect her?   Being Henry: The Fonz . . . and Beyond - Henry Winkler Henry Winkler, launched into prominence as "The Fonz" in the beloved Happy Days, has transcended the role that made him who he is. Brilliant, funny, and widely-regarded as the nicest man in Hollywood (though he would be the first to tell you that it's simply not the case, he's really just grateful to be here), Henry shares in this achingly vulnerable memoir the disheartening truth of his childhood, the difficulties of a life with severe dyslexia, the pressures of a role that takes on a life of its own, and the path forward once your wildest dream seems behind you. Since the glorious era of Happy Days fame, Henry has endeared himself to a new generation with roles in such adored shows as Arrested Development, Parks and Recreation, and Barry, where he's been revealed as an actor with immense depth and pathos, a departure from the period of his life when he was so distinctly typecast as The Fonz, he could hardly find work. Filled with profound heart, charm, and self-deprecating humor, Being Henry is a memoir about so much more than a life in Hollywood and the curse of stardom. It is a meaningful testament to the power of sharing truth and kindness and of finding fulfillment within yourself.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/9/20235 minutes, 45 seconds
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Lauren Parsons: Balancing productivity and wellbeing

In our modern society there are two qualities which we’re always told to value that are seemingly at odds with each other: productivity and wellbeing.   Lauren Parsons has spent her career working out how best to balance them.   In her book, ‘Thriving leaders, thriving teams’ Lauren hits on the keys to shaping a positive energised workplace culture.   Lauren’s just earned herself the ‘Keynote speaker of the year award’ and ‘Educator of the Year’ for 2023.   Lauren Parsons joined Jack Tame to discuss her work.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/9/202314 minutes, 11 seconds
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Mike Yardley: The Rees, Queenstown

"It was recently crowned New Zealand’s leading hotel at the 30th Annual World Travel Awards, beating out 11 other big-name hotels in Auckland, Wellington and Queenstown. So what is all the fuss about? Does it really live up to all the hype? Channelling my inner-Curious George, I zipped to Queenstown to sample the supreme comforts of The Rees Hotel." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/9/20238 minutes, 1 second
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Hannah McQueen: Financial progress shouldn't wait for perfect conditions

One of Hannah's key lessons (and an important point we make to all of their clients) is that financial progress shouldn't wait for perfect conditions. When life gets uncertain and throws a curveball, that’s the exact time financial opportunities tend to reveal themselves - ironically, at the least opportune moment. After the year that's been, we can probably all relate to that feeling!   So the question becomes: If financial opportunity presented itself, would you see it for what it is, or would it simply pass you by? Our experience with clients would suggest the latter. So in the current climate where the high cost of living does not want to budge, where interest rates remain painfully high and many of us are due to refix if we haven't already, why is Hannah so optimistic? What are the opportunities she's seeing on the horizon and how do we see it for what it is and take advantage of it?  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/9/20234 minutes, 37 seconds
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Tara Ward: Beef, Happy Valley, Jury Duty

Beef  The dark comedy about two Americans who begin to obsess over a road rage incident and let it slowly consume their everyday lives (Netflix).    Happy Valley  The third and final season of the superb British drama featuring Sarah Lancashire as police officer Catherine Cawood (TVNZ+).    Jury Duty  The unique documentary-style comedy series that shares the inner workings of an American jury trial through the eyes of one unknowing juror (Amazon Prime Video).      LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/9/20235 minutes, 54 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Dicks: The Musical and Next Goal Wins

Dicks: The Musical  Two self-obsessed businessmen discover they're long-lost identical twins and come together to plot the reunion of their eccentric, divorced parents.    Next Goal Wins   With the 2014 World Cup qualifiers approaching, down-on-his-luck coach Thomas Rongen tries to turn the American Samoa soccer team into winners.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/8/20238 minutes, 13 seconds
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Kate Hall: Tackling sustainability when it comes to food at Christmas

Christmas is the most wonderful time of the year for many, but it's also the most wasteful.  Kate 'Ethically Kate' Hall has a few tips for making sustainable choices this holiday season: -Shop local, buy from small vendors at Christmas or farmers markets -Consider making food the present or focus to reduce pointless gifts -Serve less meat, or pick meat that is sustainable sourced (e.g. Premium Game, the only wild meat hunted in NZ) -BYO takeaway containers to your Holiday events to reduce food waste -Use reusables instead of single use for your cutlery, dishes, etc. -Gift your leftovers to local food pantries or community groups LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/8/20239 minutes, 38 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Parasites are everywhere

Parasites… Bodies everywhere!!!  This is the time to take a good look at the small critters in your garden. You may go on holiday and need someone to control the “pests” on your plants, crops and fruit trees. We are talking predators, but especially parasitoids.  The concept of parasitism is not always easy to grasp for non-entomologically inclined people. For starters you’ll need a good set of eyes and in some cases a decent magnifying glass or even a small microscope, to get the picture.  So – what is it all about and how do you look for evidence of these clever critters?  Parasites are organisms that take advantage of a host, by living off them or even inside them. Usually, parasites don’t necessarily kill their hosts directly (think: headlice, tapeworm, ticks, fleas, mosquitoes, scabies, etc).  Parasitoids, however, tend to be fatal to our plant pests and other small creatures that live in our garden environment. The reason is simple: the larval stages of the parasitoids develop inside the host, and this causes internal destruction (remember Alien?).  Most parasitoids are members of the wasp order, but they don’t really look like the common and German wasps. Parasitic wasps are often quite small and reminiscent of winged ants. Their size and insignificant black and brown colouring makes them hard to detect and identify as a “goodie”, so it may be more advantageous to keep an eye out for the, shall we say, results of their efforts.  On cabbages, cauliflowers, broccoli and such crops, the caterpillars of white butterflies cause many chewing holes. Small, 2-3 mm parasitoids (Cotesia glomerata) lay a number of eggs inside the living caterpillars; these eggs hatch into hungry grubs that take very little time to completely clean out the fluids, meat and musculature inside the hapless larva.  When the grubs emerge from the dying host, they spin silken cocoons inside which they pupate. These creamy-white cocoons are a dead give-away for the presence of useful parasites in the cabbage patch.  Of course, the message is obvious: don’t spray insecticides, as you’ll certainly kill the small black wasps that come out of those white cocoons!  Parasitoids tend to be specialised in their job. There’s another species of small, black wasp (Pteromalus puparum) that likes to lay its eggs inside the chrysalis of the white butterfly. Evidence of this bodysnatching is the perfectly round emergence holes in the skin of an otherwise empty pupal case: the parasitoids will have left the cramped conditions inside that host already and are looking for more victims.  Sometimes parasitoids species aim for an even smaller abode: imagine completing your entire life cycle inside an aphid. Yet there are tiny parasitic wasps that do just that. The adult wasps may be the size of flying dust, but the clobbered aphid is very easy to spot.  Parasitised aphids are generally referred to as “mummies”: slightly bloated and discoloured with a parchment texture, they truly stand out from the crowd. Check out your roses, swan plants or any other aphid-infested plant for that matter.  Mummies means parasitism is lending a helping hand in your garden and insecticides would do more damage than good.  There are even parasitoids that develop inside the eggs of their host insects: A good example is the famous Trissolcus basalis wasp that hunts for the beautifully arranged egg clusters of our stinky green vegetable bug.  When she has found such an omelette of opportunity, the female Trissolcus will lay one egg in just about every green vegetable bug egg in the cluster.  She then wipes her abdomen over the finished job, to lay down a chemical scent or marker that will deter other Trissolcus females parasitising the same cluster of eggs, which makes sense: the space inside a green vegetable bug egg is just enough for the development of one parasitoids, not two.  This, indeed, is a small world!  To keep it ticking over in your garden:  -Don’t spray insecticides.  -Attract parasitoids by planting flowering plants with nectar for the adults.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/8/20235 minutes, 41 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Threads is getting set for its European debut

It's coming December 14th. Threads has been slowly launching features: it now has hashtags (and even emoji hashtags), a web app, polls, an edit button, the ability to view a 'for you' feed and most recent threads, and they're testing "trending hashtags" in Australia. Threads is reportedly struggling with some stats, indicating it's down 80% from its launch peak.  Threads almost wasn't called Threads. "Epigram" was a popular name internally at Meta. The project's codename was "Textagram".  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/8/20235 minutes, 5 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Beef fillet with mustard tarragon crème

A beef fillet is as impressive as it is easy to cook and serve for a crowd. Get your butcher to prepare the eye fillet, removing silver skin and tying with kitchen string at 5cm intervals. This is for even cooking and ease of slicing.  Serves 10-12    Ingredients  2-2.3kg beef eye fillet  2 tablespoons olive oil  2 teaspoons sea salt  4 tablespoons each fresh thyme and rosemary leaves  1 teaspoon chilli flakes  3 teaspoons cracked black pepper  1 whole garlic bulb, broken into cloves  500g vine tomatoes  1/3 cup store-bought    Mustard tarragon crème  ½ cup crème fraiche or sour cream  2 tablespoons hot mustard  Small handful fresh tarragon leaves, or 1 tablespoon dried  ¼ cup olive oil  ½ teaspoon sea salt    Method   1. Allow beef fillet to come to near-room temperature before cooking. Rub with oil then sprinkle liberally with salt. 2. Preheat oven to 200 C and place a large shallow roasting dish in to preheat. 3. Place fillet in the hot oven dish and sear on stove top until browned on all sides. Add garlic cloves and tomatoes to the dish before putting in the oven for 30 minutes. 4. Chop fresh herbs on a large chopping board and add chilli flakes and pepper. Remove beef fillet and use tongs to roll hot fillet in herbs and pepper before returning to the oven. Keep checking every 5 minutes for doneness - when cooked to medium-rare it ought to have tightened somewhat but still have some give in it when poked with your finger. Remove fillet, cover with foil then a folded tea towel and rest for 20 minutes before slicing. 5. Make the crème by whisking all ingredients together to a smooth sauce. 6. Serve beef drizzled with pan juices and with oven roasted tomatoes and garlic with mustard crème and pesto.   Nici’s Note: When cooking beef to perfection I use the rule of roasting for approx. 12 minutes per 500g for medium rare or 16 minutes for medium. Whole beef fillet can be cooked a day out and then warmed through in a 160 C oven for 20 minutes, before slicing.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/8/20237 minutes
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Kevin Milne: Lifelong Friendships

This week Kevin Milne has been celebrating loyal friendships.  His brother Brian was filled in a car crash when he was 23 years old, and Friday marked his 80th birthday.  Kevin was joined by friends of his brother who have never forgotten him or them.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/8/20236 minutes, 17 seconds
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Jack Tame: New experiences

New experiences make you feel young.  At least, that’s what I told myself as I slipped into a gown, folded my pants and shirt into a plastic container, and followed the technician through the big double doors.  It took me almost 37 years to get my first MRI. I don’t know if that’s good or bad, but even though I’m pretty good with claustrophobia and that kind of thing, I still felt a little blush of nerves, the hesitation of the unknown, as the giant machine shifted me into position.  The technicians had advised me not to move. So of course, just as soon as the machine began scanning my insides, whirring and beeping around me, I developed an itch right on the tip of my nose.  I breathed through it as best I could and by the time, I was ready to be extracted, 40 minutes later, I swear I was almost about to doze off.  If new experiences make you feel young, my MRI results did not. Reasonably advanced arthritis. Various tears and bits of damage to body parts with long names. A bone spur steadily nibbling away at the already-reduced cartilage in my hip. Not the end of the World, but also not the kind of ailments that will ever improve. The pain I have been feeling in my left hip isn’t going away. When it comes to the sports I love to play, there are some tough decisions that lay ahead.  The next morning, I went to the optometrist. The news didn’t get much better. I swear I was reading every line on the chart, and he was saying, ‘Good.... good... good!”  But then after he’d trialled me with various exercises, the optometrist turned his chair towards me and explained it was time to consider reading glasses. Again, hardly the end of the World. But a first for me.  ‘Really?’ I asked. Surely, I thought, he’s just trying to swindle me for a fancy pair of designer specs.  “There’s been a decline since your last check.” He said.  “Not a massive decline, but a decline.”  He showed me again what it felt like with corrective lenses over my eyes. The letters on the chart were clearer.  I thanked him, limped out and squinted at the sales rack to try and work out if any of the glasses there would suit my face.  Yesterday morning, I woke up to a text on the family group chat. Overnight, my sister had had her baby. A boy. Her third. Fit and healthy and doing well. I had that primal response. A photo of a child, hours old, whom I’ve never met, and whom I already love so much.  It’s funny, one minute you’ve got your whole life ahead of you. And then you realise you don’t. The thing that makes this tolerable is knowing that at least someone else does. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/8/20234 minutes, 1 second
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Estelle Clifford: Drax Project - Upside

Kiwi R&B band Drax Project has finally released their second studio album 'Upside'. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/2/20236 minutes, 29 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Good Material and The Edge

Good Material - Dolly Alberton   Andy's story wasn't meant to turn out this way. Living out of a suitcase in his best friends' spare room, waiting for his career as a stand-up comedian to finally take off, he struggles to process the life-ruining end of his relationship with the only woman he's ever truly loved.  As he tries to solve the seemingly unsolvable mystery of his broken relationship, he contends with career catastrophe, social media paranoia, a rapidly dwindling friendship group and the growing suspicion that, at 35, he really should have figured this all out by now.  Andy has a lot to learn, not least his ex-girlfriend's side of the story.    The Edge - David Baldacci  When CIA operative Jenny Sikwell is murdered in rural Maine, government officials have immediate concerns over national security. Her laptop and phone were full of state secrets that, in the wrong hands, endanger the lives of countless operatives. In need of someone who can solve the murder quickly and retrieve the missing information, the U.S. government knows just the chameleon they can call on.   Ex-Army Ranger Travis Devine spent his time in the military preparing to take on any scenario, followed by his short-lived business career chasing shadows in the deepest halls of power, so his analytical mind makes him particularly well-suited for complex, high-stakes tasks. Taking down the world’s largest financial conspiracy proved his value, and in comparison, this case looks straightforward. Except small towns hold secrets and Devine finds himself an outsider again.   Devine must ingratiate himself with locals who have trusted each other their whole lives, and who distrust outsiders just as much. Dak, Jenny’s brother, who’s working to revitalize the town. Earl, the retired lobsterman who found Jenny’s body. And Alex, Jenny’s sister with a dark past of her own. As Devine gets to know the residents of Potter, Maine, answers seem to appear and then transform into more questions. There’s a long history of secrets and those who will stop at nothing to keep them from being exposed. Leaving Devine with no idea who he can trust... and who wants him dead.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/2/20233 minutes, 20 seconds
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Ashleigh Hoeta on her journey to breaking the equipped powerlifting record

In 2020 Ashleigh Hoeta felt numbness in her leg, her face drooping and was rushed to hospital to find she’d suffered a stroke.  She had to teach herself how to walk again, move her legs and fingers, all while raising two children.   Not only that, in October this year, her father passed away after a long battle with emphysema. Now, Ashleigh has just become the first woman to bench 317.5kg in equipped powerlifting, breaking the world record. She’s one of the top women arm wrestlers and an ex international gymnast.  Ashleigh Hoeta joined Jack Tame to discuss her journey and breaking the world record. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/2/202315 minutes, 41 seconds
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Tara Ward: Scrublands, Artful Dodger, Slow Horses

Scrublands An Australian crime drama about a journalist investigating a murder in a small rural town (ThreeNow).    Artful Dodger This spinoff of the Oliver Twist story sees the Artful Dodger sent to 1850s Australia to carry on his dodgy behaviour (Disney+).    Slow Horses A new season of the delightful spy thriller that sees Gary Oldman play the boss of a dysfunctional team of MI5 agents (AppleTV+).   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/2/20234 minutes, 56 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Napoleon and The Old Oak

Napoleon A look at the military commander's origins and his swift, ruthless climb to emperor, viewed through the prism of his addictive and often volatile relationship with his wife and one true love, Josephine.   The Old Oak A pub landlord in a previously thriving mining community struggles to hold onto his pub. Meanwhile, tensions rise in the town when Syrian refugees are placed in the empty houses in the community.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/2/20236 minutes, 52 seconds
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Mike Yardley: South Dakota's tourist trail

"Rising up from the western South Dakota plains, just over the Wyoming state line, the Black Hills region beckons like an emerald isle in a sea of prairie. These ponderosa-covered mountains, slashed by creek-carved canyons and softened by alpine meadows have a majesty all their own. But this picturesque pocket of South Dakota also serves up a head swirl of landmark sights and experiences, which makes this region a runaway highlight of any American West road-trip." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/2/202310 minutes, 45 seconds
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Dougal Sutherland: Neurodiversity and ASD in the workplace

A few weeks ago we discussed ADHD in the workplace and how this is beginning to show up a lot in recent times. Following on from that, we are seeing a lot more people in the workplace with ASD (Autistic Spectrum Disorder). Together ASD, ADHD and Learning Disabilities are sometimes referred to as “neurodiversity”. ASD now the term used for what used to be call Autism or Asperger’s Syndrome. A stereotype would be Dustin Hoffman’s character in Rainman but really important to note that the difficulties are experienced on a spectrum. We're now seeing more adults diagnosed in adulthood for much the same reasons as ADHD (i.e., missed during childhood, not enough services out there, have had a child diagnosed with ASD and now wondering about it for themselves). The main difficulties for people with ASD in the workplace are around social relationships, a strong need for routine and sameness, and sensory hypersensitivity (e.g., very sensitive hearing). There are other symptoms which include very strong “obsessional” interest in specific topics (e.g., being an expert on the French revolution) and some unusual behaviours (e.g., handflapping when distressed).  People with ASD report not having the natural understanding of how social relationships work. They might find it hard to keep eye contact and have difficulty balancing conversations (e.g., they talk too much about themselves and not ask anything of the other person or barely participate in a conversation, might take things very literally). Expressing their emotions might be difficult because of the difficulties in social interactions. Hypersensitivity might make working in certain environments very difficult.   What can be done to help? Recognition and understanding always hugely important for both the employee and employer. Work out together what can be done to the work environment to reduce stress. It may also, with permission of the individual, be useful to educate the wider team about ASD. Work out best ways of communicating with the person. It may also be useful to get a professional assessment to help guide employee and employers in what steps to take.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/2/20236 minutes, 35 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Growing tomatoes

Growing tomatoes is one of the big hobbies of New Zealanders, especially males! It’s great to have a go at these fruit – there are many many varieties too and everybody has their favourite ones. But there are some problems that can occur, whether you’re raising them in an open garden bed, or in a tunnel house Tomato – (potato) thrips are a nuisance; they got here a few decades ago and will attack Solanaceous plants (potatoes, tomatoes, nightshades, poroporo, and such weeds) Tomato thrips adults and nymphs I used to get heaps of them when growing tomatoes in Auckland, but in CHC they seem to be prevalent only in autumn (takes longer to develop plague proportions); My best preventative action is to pull Solanum weeds out everywhere. It prevents them from settling on these hosts and survive during winter. When you have a hassle: spray the plants with oil (Conqueror Oil or Neem Oil) on a regular basis (every 10 days or so); aim for the newer leaves/growth on the tomato plants. Sprays with insecticides need to commence well before you see the first psyllids; it keeps their populations down too. I generally don’t grow potatoes (only the early season varieties of potatoes (before Xmas) Blossom End Rot on Tomatoes has always been translated as a deficiency of calcium. Apparently that is a myth in itself; it has more to do with the inability of the plant to transport calcium through the plant. Gibberellins appear to be playing an important role in that job and most NZ soils are not deficient in calcium; so: try some fertilisers with gibberellic acid (Seafood Soup/Seaweed Tea!) Often the first tomatoes of the season show some Blossom End Rot. With settling temps and regular fertilisation/watering these symptoms often disappear. Early Blight and Late Blight on stems and leaves can move pretty quickly through the plants. Here comes the watering again!!! Only water the soil (NOT the leaves); remove the lower leaves as soon as practicable, so they don’t drag on the moist soil and get infected. Underwatering also helps in this matter: keep the area drier; make sure the wind/air movement can dry the plants and stems quickly. If you have persistent hassles with blight: keep a regular fungicide treatment going Passionvine hoppers (Scolypopa australis) I call them fluffy bums – as their “nylon-filament tails” are prominent features (of course these tails are made from fine waxy material!) Photo / Supplied They suck sap from a wide variety of host plants, often climbers (Wisteria, Passionfruit vines) and Perennials (salvia, Hydrangeas, Camellia, you name it!!) Sap-sucking is their big impact on garden plants – sometimes they debilitate their host, pooping honeydew all over the place and that creates a deposit of sooty mould, like with some many sap-sucking insects in the garden Slowly they grow larger and larger shedding skins along their journey (moulting), until they reach adulthood in summer: Moth-like insects with delta-shaped wings, showing prominent vein-markings; they, too, suck plant sap These insects have the ability to jump quickly and far and the adult passionvine hoppers also flick and fly very smartly… avoiding the insecticides you may want to spray at them!! They are impossible to spray with insecticides. But the fluffy bums might still be reduced in numbers in spring, when they are still young: On a wind-still morning, grab an aerosol can with simple fly spray and create an insecticidal mist around those densely-packed groupings of young and impressionable fluffybums; they may try to “jump away from danger”, but won’t be able to succeed. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/1/20234 minutes, 45 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: The truth behind 'old wives tales'

Dr Bryan Betty joined Jack Tame to chat about the truth behind some 'old wives tales': Whether you’ll get a cold if you go outside with wet hair.  If you’ll get arthritis if you crack your knuckles.  Whether you should chew your food 30 times before swallowing.  If you’ll get square eyes watching too much television.  If eating Carrots will give you better eyesight.  Is the five second rule for dropped food accurate? LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/1/20233 minutes, 5 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Google's deleting inactive accounts and Happy Birthday Chat GPT!

Google is starting to delete inactive accounts  Accounts which have been created but never used are first on the chopping block. They'll start being deleted today. Then accounts that haven't been active in more than two years. To keep an account active you'll need to log into it, and then it'd be best to complete an action like send an email, watch a YouTube video or add a contact.     Happy Birthday ChatGPT!  It was a year ago that ChatGPT burst onto the scene.  It moved AI from something that was magic in the background —like Spotify's weekly personalized playlists, or Netfix recommending what to watch next— to a product people could directly interact with and put generative capabilities into the hands of everyone. It's now used by 100 million people a week. Businesses now are looking at ways to integrate and use it in their workflows, and it's made the creation of chatbots easier by giving it source documents and fewer pre-defined steps.  According to Pitch Deck, more than $21 billion has been invested in generative AI startups so far this year.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/1/20233 minutes, 5 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Strawberry Shortcake

Rich, buttery, and simply gorgeous. The combo of strawberry, rhubarb and vanilla in this shortcake is so, so good.  Makes 1 x Swiss roll tin    Ingredients:  2 regular chips of strawberries, chipped and chopped  2 cups chopped rhubarb, cut into 2 cm lengths  2 tbsps. sugar  Zest of half a lemon  2 tablespoons vanilla extract  225g butter  1 cup sugar + 1 tbsp  2 large eggs  2 ½ cups flour  2 tsps. baking powder  Whipped cream to serve    Method:  1. Set the oven at 180 C. Line a Swiss roll tin with baking paper. 2. In a bowl toss strawberries and chopped rhubarb with first measure of sugar, lemon juice and vanilla and leave to sit while you make the shortcake dough. 3. Make the shortcake: Cream the butter and sugar (reserve the 1 tbsp sugar measure) until light and creamy, then beat in eggs. Stir in the sifted flour and baking powder, mix well and chill for 15 minutes. 4. You won't be able to roll this mixture (it’s too buttery) so with floured hands gently flatten half of the mixture into the lined tin. 5. Spread the fruit over the base then cover with the other half of the shortcake – you can crumble it over as it will spread as it cooks - and cook for 40-45 minutes hour until golden brown. 6. Sprinkle with extra 1 tbsp. sugar to serve. 7. Serve warm or cooled slices with whipped cream.   Make it yours:  - Use blueberries in place of rhubarb. - Add lemon zest or a decent pinch of cinnamon to the pastry. - Sprinkle top with chopped hazelnuts midway through baking.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/1/20236 minutes
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Kevin Milne: The good and the bad of Marriage

Kevin went to a function with his wife this past Wednesday. He may have been oblivious to the state of the shirt he was wearing, but his wife was not. The events that followed, in Kevin's words, perfectly illustrates some of the good and bad things about marriage. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/1/20235 minutes, 3 seconds
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Jack Tame: Crocs are back in fashion

Fashion.  It’s not a subject I can profess to knowing an awful lot about, but if there’s one thing I’ve learned about the ebbs and flows of what’s hot and what’s not, it’s that you can never rule anything out.  No matter how unfashionable something is, no matter how objectively horrible it looks, at some point it will be in.  It’s easy to forget, once upon a time codpieces were the height of sophistication and taste. It happened with sneans, sneakers and jeans. And even though it would seem very unusual by today’s standards to see a group of young men loping around with their pants halfway down their thighs and their underwear sticking out, low-riding was until recently very fashionable and sadly given the cyclical nature of fashion, it’ll probably be fashionable again.  This brings me to Crocs. I’m hardly the first person to notice the popularity of the plastic-y modern clog. But I’ve been struck by the way in which Crocs have crossed from being a sort of ironic haha-I’m-wearing-ugly-shoes option for middle aged people who wanted to wind up their teenagers, to a shoe which is actually cool, cool. Crocs have been worn by popstars and Hollywood heartthrobs. For several years now they’ve been the boot of choice for the likes of Justin Bieber, Ariana Grande, and fashionistas at openings in fancy art galleries.  Nowhere is this more obvious than with kids. I was standing at the bottom of a large and slightly intimidating slide at a West Auckland playground last weekend, waiting for my stepson to come on down. And kid after kid after kid whipped off a pair of Crocs and threw the shoes to the bottom of the slide, least the rubbery soles stunt their momentum on the way down.  The way kids wear them, of course, is with Jibbitz. Jibbitz are little charms that you can attach to a pair of Crocs in much the same way as you might wear a charm on a charm bracelet. It’s a way for kids to further personalise their Crocs and distinguish their pair from everyone else’s. Fashions come and go but one thing that has never changed in the schoolyard: shoes are still the ultimate status symbol.  But of course, as is the danger with in-demand fashions, there are inevitably downsides to the popularity. At least one New Zealand school has introduced a complete Crocs ban. Several others are banning the Jibbitz charms as kids argue over them.  There’s always the risk you might push a trend too far and get caught out as the fashion tides change. Ugly is trendy, I get that. But I must confess to wondering how far the concept reaches after being confronted this week by an ad for a Croc accessory I’d never seen before.  Croc Nuts. The perfect solution for that hard-to-buy-for person in your life, this Christmas. For those who are familiar with Truck Nutz, it’s more or less the same concept. A pair of gleaming metallic testicles which you can clip to the back of your Crocs to swing around in the breeze as you go about your business.  Taste may be in the eye of the beholder. But let this serve as a reminder to all of us: in fashion, you can never rule anything out. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/1/20234 minutes, 46 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Road-tripping Southern Montana

Southern Montana is the Wild West of dreams and the Hollywood big screen, sprawling over a rugged and serene landscape. After taking in the manifold treats of Wyoming, a dabble with Montana’s big-skies and rock-star good looks is an essential addition to an American West road-trip. Part rough-and-tumble Rocky Mountains and part expansive prairie, the state doesn’t boast any major cities – they are more like overgrown cow towns. Main Street Red Lodge: Credit Mike Yardley But if you’re in need of an urban fix, your best bet is Billings, the state’s most populous city – about the size of Hamilton. Nicknamed the Magic City, the moniker came about from Billings’ expansive growth in the golden age of railroads, steamboats and cattle barons. The city is a springboard for historical explorations and outdoorsy adventure. First impressions count and what captured my attention on arrival in Billings is how the city is dramatically cradled by magnificent sandstone cliffs known as the Rimrocks. Deposited by an ancient inland seaway and slowly carved over millions of years by the Yellowstone River, these scenic "rimrocks" backdrop the northern edge of town. Rim Rock by Kayak, Billings I struck out on the trails at Swords Park which offers enormous views from the rimrocks. Just keep an eye out for the rattlesnakes! Zimmerman Park and Phipps Park offer fabulous walking trails too, while if you’d rather take to the water to admire the rimrocks, hire a kayak for a dreamy float at sunset on the Yellowstone River. Immerse yourself in nature’s splendour! History also adorns Pompeys Pillar, a striking sandstone monolith just of town. It’s where William Clark carved his name into the stone in July 1806 before continuing his famous expedition west with Meriwether Lewis. If you’re up for a culture fix, there’s a good clutch of museums in Billings. I particularly enjoyed the Western Heritage Center, housed in the city’s old library, proudly preserving the stories and history of the Yellowstone River Valley and Northern High Plains. Don’t let the city’s brightly illuminated, flame-throwing oil refineries symbolise your sense of nightlife in Billings. Bar-hopping the craft breweries is where the city excels, come nightfall. Angry Hanks Brewing Clustered in the downtown district, hop-scotch your way from Angry Hanks and Thirsty Street Brewing Company to Uberbrew and Montana Brewing Company. Right next door on Montana Ave, Hooligan’s Sports Bar will top off your all-American night out on the town. Montana Ave, which has been transformed into a very hip strip of hospitality, parallels the railroad that gave the city life in the 19th century. For the kids and kids at heart, the only thing better than a binge at the Caramel Cookie Waffles bakery is to get your fill at the gourmet ice cream store, Big Dipper. In the blazing Montana sunshine, this place is like a refuge! I highly recommend a scoop of Banana Cream Pie and tangerine sorbet. A block away, The Burger Dive dishes up creations like I’m Your Huckleberry burgers, which have been honoured by the World Food Championships. Their garlic-drenched fries will linger long in your memories – if not on your breath. Caramel Cookie Waffles, Billings But it’s that angus burger topped with smooth goat cheese, bacon, a fresh cut onion ring and huckleberry and chili barbeque sauce, that really hit the spot. Few tastes carry such revered status as the huckleberry does in the American West. They grow wild across Montana, resembling large dark blueberries and Native Americans still use them as a traditional medicine – packed with antioxidants. They certainly taste great in a burger! Where to stay? In the heart of town, the Northern Hotel is the grand dame, first built in 1940, but extensively refreshed a decade ago. You’ll enjoy swish accommodations with all of the creature comforts, plus the on-site dining is superb. Enjoy a classic but upscale breakfast at Bernie’s Diner. To the west of Billings, Red Lodge is a small-town gem that will charm your pants off, edging the Yellowstone River. This sweet little town is nestled in the foothills of the Beartooth Mountains and lassoed by Custer National Forest. The main street, flanked by evocative old stone buildings, brims with enticements, from western-wear stores and antique shops to art galleries and great hospo options. You’ll love the gift store, Montana CC Legends, which is loaded with trinkets, treasures and impressive local art. Sweet-tooths must not miss one of the best confectionary stores I have seen in a long time – Montana Candy Emporium. Think the Remarkables Sweet Shop on a gigantic scale. This Red Lodge institution has been a mainstay for decades, housed in a nostalgic building, overspilling with nostalgic candy. Montana Candy Emporium. Credit Mike Yardley The handmade chocolate treats at the counter are sinfully good, but being in Montana, it would be rude not to stock up on huckleberry candy. I loaded up on gob fills of huckleberry sour balls for road-trip sustenance. Relax in the garden at Red Lodge Ales, share a massive margarita and pizza with at Bogart’s, grab a burger at Red Box Car or wind down with a steak and whiskey cocktail at The Pollard Hotel. Red Lodge is the quintessential place where you’ll just want to kick-back, to shop, nosh and linger. Just out of town, treat yourself to an exhilarating drive on the Beartooth Highway, a 64-mile stretch of U.S. 212 from Red Lodge to Cooke City. Dubbed the most beautiful roadway in America, this jaw-dropping drive climbs to an astounding 11,000 feet above sea level. That’s nearly as high as the summit of Aoraki/Mt. Cook. Completed nearly 90 years ago, its stature as a bucket-list drive has not dimmed – and it certainly lives up to its hype as the ultimate high-country route. Heading out of Red Lodge, I felt transported to Heidi’s Switzerland, with lodgepole pine forests and lush meadows rolling down to meet the road. Before long, the ascent became stark and dramatic, thrusting you up higher and higher into the grip of the Beartooth Mountains. The sprawling range features 20 peaks higher than Aoraki. Mile upon mile of switchbacks serves up epic views across the sweeping snow-clad tundra and bejewelled glacial tarns of the Hellroaring and Silver Run plateaus. You end being higher on that highway, than the snow line on the plateaus, across the valley. At Vista Point, the plummeting views staring down into the jaws of the Rock Creek canyon is another highlight. Just pass the highway summit, the “Bear’s Tooth” comes into view – a narrow pyramidal spire of rock, carved by glaciation, that became the namesake of the Beartooth Mountains. It’s a cranking drive, if not a little vertigo-inducing! (Beartooth Highway is only open from about May to mid-October, depending on snow. They’ve had some late, unseasonal snow dumps in June and even July, in recent years, so check ahead that the road is open.) Beartooth Highway To the left of Billings, the plains of eastern Montana stretch out like a pancake, offering a more subtle beauty than the gnarly mountains to the west. A land of rolling hills, dusty bluffs and badlands, and the occasional rock-walled canyon, this is classic cattle and wheat country. Temperatures can be extreme; hot in the summer under a blazing sun, and brutally cold in the winter. Just over an hour southeast of Billings, I drove to Little Bighorn Valley. A sequence of low-slung hills rises above the valley - it is sacred ground because it’s where the Battle of the Little Bighorn took place in 1876, between the US Army and Great Plains Indians. As many as 2,000 Lakota and Cheyenne warriors encircled and routed the US Army, in ferocious defence of their ancestral way of life. Perhaps there is no phrase in the English language that serves as a better metaphor for an untimely demise than "Custer's Last Stand." It was on the Little Bighorn battlefield, 800 acres of dry sloping prairies, that George Armstrong Custer and the soldiers of the 7th US Cavalry Regiment met their end. The Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument chronicles the history of this world-famous engagement, offering a coherent look at how the battle developed, where the members of Custer's contingent died on Last Stand Hill, and how it might have looked to the swarming warriors. It’s very easy to traverse the 7km-long battlefield, driving along the ridgelines, to all of key sites. Last Stand Hill at little Big Horn: Credit: Mike Yardley The fight was an overwhelming victory for the Plains Indians, who were led by several major war leaders, including Crazy Horse and Chief Gall and had been inspired by the visions of Sitting Bull. They may have won the battle, but ultimately lost the war. Custer's death galvanised the military. In subsequent months, they tracked down Sioux and Cheyenne warriors and forced them onto reservations in North and South Dakota, ending their independent, nomadic way of life. Within a few short years they were all confined to reservations. Custer's remains were eventually reburied at the US Military Academy at West Point in 1877. Below the battlefield, the adjacent National Cemetery was established in 1879, and it incorporates a self-guided tour to some of the more significant figures buried there. It’s an indelible encounter with the American story. www.greatamericanwest.co.nz Mike Yardley is our resident traveller on Jack Tame Saturday Mornings.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/24/202310 minutes, 29 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Troy Sivan 'Something To Give Each other' Review

Estelle Clifford joins Jack Tame to talk about Troy Sivan's new album 'Something to give each other'   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/24/20235 minutes, 16 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Reluctant Beatle and Lawrence of Arabia

The Reluctant Beatle "Biography Of George Exploring the Fascinating Life Of The Reluctant Beatle." Step into the world of George Harrison, the quiet and introspective Beatle whose story has long been overshadowed by the charismatic presence of his bandmates.   Lawrence of Arabia by Ranulph Fiennes   The authoritative and illuminating biography of T. E. Lawrence - the man who inspired the iconic film Lawrence of Arabia - from "The World's Greatest Living Explorer" Ranulph Fiennes.Thomas EdwardSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/24/20235 minutes
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Kate Hall: Sustainable Christmas Wrapping

- Most wrapping paper is not recyclable, especially when it's in little pieces.   - What to use instead: reusable wrapping paper, sheets, pillows, glass jars, containers, wrapping paper that you've saved throughout the year. Get crafty or find things from around the house plus second hand shops.   - How to avoid it altogether: gift non-physical things. e.g. acts of service (my husband and I cleaned my parents house!), quality time (dinner voucher), or scrap gifts altogether and focus on the day together.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/24/20238 minutes, 30 seconds
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Bob Cambell: Dashwood 2023 Rosé, Marlborough

Why I chose it:  - How can they do it at this price? I guess the answer is “volume” but this wine is technically very good indeed.  - Rose has become a popular choice in recent years  - 2023 was a good Marlborough vintage  What does it taste like?  - Moderately deep-hued rose (A lot of people prefer paler Rosé but they should remember “the deeper the colour the richer the flavour” in an off-dry style with crushed raspberry and candy floss flavours. Quite intense with a refreshing cut of bright acidity and a lingering finish. A real crowd-pleaser.  Why it’s a bargain:  - It’s very price-friendly  - I gave it a good score at a blind tasting. If I’d had to guess a price it would have been over $20  Where can you buy it?  - Countdown $13 (check the vintage), Blackmarket.co.nz case of six bottles $77.94 (equ. $12.99 + Frt)  Food match?  - I like “pink foods” such as prawns, crayfish or scampi    LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/24/20234 minutes, 6 seconds
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Tara Ward: Faraway Downs, Time and Squid Game: The Challenge

Faraway Downs: Baz Luhrmann takes his 2008 film Australia starring Hugh Jackman and Nicole Kidman and reworks it into a six-part TV series, adding new footage and music (Disney+)    Time: A British drama starring Jodie Whittaker and Bella Ramsey about three women who arrive at Carlingford prison on the same day (Neon)  Squid Game: The Challenge:  Inspired by the hit Netflix series, this sees real-life contestants compete in a series of high-stakes children’s games in pursuit of a $4.56 million dollar cash prize (Netflix)    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/24/20236 minutes, 3 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Salmon with quick pickled asparagus

Plate up individual servings of this simple, elegant dish as a starter or set out a platter for people to help themselves.  Serves 4-6  4 thick spears asparagus  1 small carrot, peeled  1 small zucchini  1 tsp sea salt  1 cup white wine vinegar  1/3 cup caster sugar  ½ tsp mustard seeds  3cm piece lemon rind  ½ cup thick Greek yoghurt or crème fraiche  200g-250g smoked salmon – I used hot smoked but cold smoked salmon will work just as well or smoke your own!  4 tablespoons good quality olive oil  Ground black pepper  Sprigs fresh dill  Snap the tough ends off the asparagus and discard. Use a vegetable peeler to shave very thin strips of the asparagus stem and use a knife to cut the tips into thin slices. Cut the carrot and zucchini into very thin matchsticks. Toss together in a bowl with salt. Heat vinegar, sugar, mustard seeds and lemon rind and simmer until the sugar has dissolved. Pour this over the vegetables and gently toss them in the pickling liquid. Cover and set aside until required. Note that you could do this stage up to a few days before the big day, tossing them every now and again. To serve; spoon 1-2 tablespoons of yoghurt or crème fraiche onto each plate (or all of it on the platter) and spread it with the back of a spoon. Top with salmon, dividing it evenly between the plates. Add a decent spoonful of the pickled vegetables to each plate. Just before serving drizzle with olive oil, sprinkle with pepper and add springs of fresh dill.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/24/20235 minutes, 51 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Saltburn and The Velveteen Rabbit

Francesca Rudkin reviews Saltburn and new remake of the Velveteen Rabbit on this mornings program with Jack Tame   SALTBURN A student is invited to an eccentric classmate's estate for an exciting summer.   THE VELVETEEN RABBIT When 7-year-old William receives a new favourite toy for Christmas, he discovers a lifelong friend and unlocks a world of magic.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/24/20235 minutes, 42 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Why Can't Winston Be More Civil?

Why Can’t Winston Be More Civil?  Kevin Milne Joined Jack Tame to talk about the ludicrously of media scrums. Especially when it comes to trying to get anything out of Winston Peters...  “If Winston Doesn’t want to talk, why don’t journalists just pack up and go back to the office?”    LISTEN ABOVE   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/24/20237 minutes, 45 seconds
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Jack Tame: It's A Done Deal

We can dispute when the counter should have started – election night or the official results – but I suspect the waiting game will soon be forgotten as the new government is sworn in and the house sits in urgency.  At first blush, I actually think the biggest winner of the three parties is National. Perhaps you’d expect nothing less from the highest-polling party, but there’s no doubt Christopher Luxon and his team were negotiating with a couple of wily, smart operators. And at the conclusion of negotiations, almost all of National’s policies remain on the table. They haven’t had to sacrifice their babies.  Sure, there’s the foreign buyers’ tax. But given the scrutiny over the projected revenue numbers during the election campaign, I’d suggest National was none too bothered to have that policy tossed upon the bonfire. They can blame Winston Peters. Give him the win. And yes, it means a gap in revenue that will need filling, but something tells me National would much prefer that than monthly updates on how much the foreign buyer tax revenue was falling short of projections.  There are some significant visable wins for NZ First: The $1.2B infrastructure fund – ka ching - the various gender and Māori language provisions, and a Covid inquiry. I think Winston Peters is a really good choice for Foreign Minister and Shane Jones is exactly where he wants to be with fisheries and regional development. NZ First will be really pleased.  I think we’ll have to wait before we can properly assess the scale of ACT’s wins. There will be no Treaty referendum, and if it so chooses, it’ll be easy enough for the National Party to drops its support of a treaty principles bill straight after select committee. It’ll be interesting to see whether scrapping the Māori Health Authority, co-governance provisions, and changing various Māori names might take some of the heat out of that issue for the time being.  Compared to NZ First, ACT has certainly taken on less-flashy ministerial positions. And again, we probably won’t be able to assess the true impact of the deal until we see how much regulation David Seymour can cut as the new minister, or how much Brooke van Velden can shake up workplace relations, or exactly what the new Arms Act will look like. In ACT’s coalition deal, it struck me that in many areas there are less concrete commitments, but that perhaps those commitments cover broader areas. The words explore, examine, and consider are sprinkled throughout the document. Listen to this, for example:  In consultation with the relevant Minister, carry out regulation sector reviews, which could include the primary industries, the finance sector, early childhood education, and healthcare occupational licensing, in each case producing an omnibus bill for regulatory reform of laws affecting the sector. Maybe I’m being a bit of a bush lawyer here, but that theoretically has the potential to be enormously consequential. It also has the potential to change basically nothing. They haven’t even agreed with certainty what sectors will be reviewed.  From Christopher Luxon’s perspective, I thought the Deputy Prime Minister split was a pretty elegant solution. But the real test of a coalition is not the detail in the deal, but the behaviour of the parties and the management of relationships when inevitably they disagree. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/24/20235 minutes, 41 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Three Great Wild West Towns in the USA

"After feasting on nature’s splendour in Yellowstone National Park, I was itching for a dabble with the Old West’s frontier spirit." "Cody proudly touts itself as the “Rodeo Capital of the World,” and its colourful downtown brims with cowboy apparel stores, cheap and cheerful steakhouses and effervescent, boot-tapping saloons. I adored Cody and it’s infectious, welcoming ambience." "Located at the foot of the Bighorn Mountains on the Bozeman Trail, cute little Buffalo exudes charm in spades, proudly home to one of the most acclaimed Old West hotels." "Sixty years ago, Deadwood became the only city in the United States to be named a National Historic Landmark." Check out Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/18/202313 minutes, 50 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes and The Killer (1)

The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes Years before he becomes the tyrannical president of Panem, 18-year-old Coriolanus Snow remains the last hope for his fading lineage. With the 10th annual Hunger Games fast approaching, the young Snow becomes alarmed when he's assigned to mentor Lucy Gray Baird from District 12. Uniting their instincts for showmanship and political savvy, they race against time to ultimately reveal who's a songbird and who's a snake.   The Killer  Solitary, cold, methodical and unencumbered by scruples or regrets, a killer waits in the shadows, watching for his next target. Yet, the longer he waits, the more he thinks he's losing his mind, if not his cool.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/18/20237 minutes, 49 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes and The Killer

The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes Years before he becomes the tyrannical president of Panem, 18-year-old Coriolanus Snow remains the last hope for his fading lineage. With the 10th annual Hunger Games fast approaching, the young Snow becomes alarmed when he's assigned to mentor Lucy Gray Baird from District 12. Uniting their instincts for showmanship and political savvy, they race against time to ultimately reveal who's a songbird and who's a snake.   The Killer  Solitary, cold, methodical and unencumbered by scruples or regrets, a killer waits in the shadows, watching for his next target. Yet, the longer he waits, the more he thinks he's losing his mind, if not his cool.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/18/20237 minutes, 49 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Dolly Parton - Rockstar

Country icon Dolly Parton has matched her Rock n Roll Hall of Fame induction with the release of her new rock album Rockstar. The 30 track album features both covers of iconic rock songs and a few original compositions, each track featuring an accompaniment from a star studded list. Rockstar is Parton's 49th studio album, and the only one of it's genre that she ever plans to do. "It's thirty songs! Why would I ever need to do another?" LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/18/20237 minutes, 14 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Year of the Locust and The Drowning

The Year of the Locust by Terry Hayes   If, like Kane, you're a Denied Access Area spy for the CIA, then boundaries have no meaning. Your function is to go in, do whatever is required, and get out again - by whatever means necessary. You know when to run, when to hide - and when to shoot. But some places don't play by the rules. Some places are too dangerous, even for a man of Kane's experience. The badlands where the borders of Pakistan, Iran and Afghanistan meet are such a place - a place where violence is the only way to survive. Kane travels there to exfiltrate a man with vital information for the safety of the West - but instead he meets an adversary who will take the world to the brink of extinction. A frightening, clever, vicious man with blood on his hands and vengeance in his heart...   The Drowning by Bryan Brown   The body of a local teenage boy is found on the beach of a sleepy northern New South Wales town. David went for an evening swim and got into trouble . . . at least, that's what it looks like. Three weeks before, Leila, a young backpacker, didn't turn up for her shift at the local cafe. Benny, the owner, isn't worried. It happens - backpackers are always on the move. There'll be another one. One of the locals, Adrian, has been a help to Benny. He's found him a nice little sideline. Not exactly legal. Is that all Adrian is arranging on the coast? He once was a cop but has he gone bad? And in the backblocks outside town, a bikie gang is gearing up for a large consignment from South America. Murder, drugs, liaisons and lies are stirring up this small coastal town.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/17/20233 minutes, 48 seconds
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Dr Dougal Sutherland: Barriers men face when it comes to mental health and the ways around them

In the middle of Movember, Dr Dougal Sutherland is joining Jack Tame to chat about the barriers men face to talking about their mental health and a few ways to get around these barriers.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/17/20237 minutes, 9 seconds
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Hannah McQueen: Parallels between running a marathon and achieving financial goals

Hannah McQueen has just returned to New Zealand after running the New York Marathon. While preparing for this event, she identified a few parallels between what it takes to run a marathon and achieving one’s financial goals.    The notes:  - Have a goal.  - Understand your own limitations - not everyone’s a runner and not everyone is naturally inclined to make the best financial decisions (even if they know what they are).    So:  - Get someone who’s got experience/expertise to help you build a plan to achieve that goal.  - This means the plan is tailored to you.  - This means there’s an expert on hand in the event you experience a setback and the plan needs to flex or adapt to a new situation.  - There’s someone to be accountable to (some of us aren’t very good at being accountable to ourselves).    And if you are working with a professional:  - Trust the process - others may have a different plan to you, so don’t compare yourself to others.  - If you feel like you’re not ‘doing enough’ or progress has stalled, trust that your plan has been designed with you and your goals in mind and probably has a few contingencies if things don’t go to plan. You may not see the progress you’re making —or see how it’s helping you get to your end goal— but that doesn’t mean that you’re not 100% on track.  - It will be uncomfortable, especially at first. But that doesn’t mean it’s not worth doing.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/17/20236 minutes, 4 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Starlink's new competition from Amazon and Microsoft becoming an app on Apple devices

Elon's Starlink has competition from Amazon They're using the rockets from founder Jeff Bezos' other company Blue Origin (along with others) to launch over 3,000 LEO (low earth orbit) satellites, aiming to bring internet to every corner of the earth. They'll be between 590 and 630 kilometres above earth. Amazon's project has successfully launched its first two prototype rockets a month ago, and this week announced they're fully operational and passed all their tests with flying colours. They were able to stream 4K video and do two-way video calls over the network. These satellites have a custom electric propulsion system designed and built in-house by Amazon. They say it's a way to safely maneuverer the satellites in space in an eco-friendly way. They expect to start service by the end of next year, and have half of their constellation operational by July 2026. There are 1000 people working on the project.   Windows is now an app for iPhones, iPads, Macs What a bizarre sentence that is. Microsoft wants you to use Windows on whatever device you have! The Windows app allows business users to connect to virtual PCs, running Windows in the cloud -- combining an array of services already in market (Azure Virtual Desktop, Windows 365, Microsoft Dev Box, and Microsoft’s Remote Desktop Services). They have plans to offer the same service to consumers too.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/17/20233 minutes, 41 seconds
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Guy Montgomery: Stand-up comedian on comedy and his 2024 tour "50,000,000 Guy Fans Can’t Be Wrong"

The Award-winning Guy Montgomery knows what it takes to be a successful and iconic kiwi comedian in a challenging, small, and competitive industry.   Starting out as a young teenager, trialing jokes and learning to work a room, Guy has grown into a fantastic multi-tasking stand-up comedian, podcaster, and improviser.   He’s making his way round the country with his brand new 2024 standup tour ‘50,000,000 Guy Fans Can’t Be Wrong.’   Montgomery told Jack Tame that the title is based on Elvis’ second greatest hits compilation ‘50,000,000 Elvis Fans Can't Be Wrong.’   “I’ve always loved X number of anyone can’t be wrong.” He told Tame.  “I think it’s so misinformed, I like the brazen arrogance of it.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/17/202316 minutes, 41 seconds
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Nici Wickes: A Winning Christmas Cake

It’s that time of year when we can no longer deny that Christmas will be happening in about 6 weeks! Get at least this fun job ticked off - making the Christmas cake. This recipe makes a neat little cake, perfect for smaller households or as a gift. Makes one small cake (15cmx15cm)   Ingredients: 650g mixed fruit – I used currants, sultanas, raisins, dried apricots 1 tbsp honey 1 grated apple ¼ cup brandy ¾ cup loosely packed brown sugar 1 scant tsp baking powder 1 ¼ cups of flour 150g butter, melted 3 small eggs, beaten Blanched almonds for top (optional)   Method:  1. In a large mixing bowl put the first 4 ingredients (fruit, honey, apple, brandy) and leave overnight. 2. Preheat the oven to 150 C. Prepare a 15x15cm tin with 2 layers of newspaper followed by another 2 layers of baking paper, sides and bottom. 3. Mix the brown sugar into the fruit mix and mix thoroughly. Add the flour and baking powder and give it another good mix. Now add the melted butter and finally the beaten eggs. Make sure all is mixed well - strong arms are needed! 4. Tip this all into your prepared tin and decorate with the almonds – any shape you like but if it’s a gift I'm inclined to shape them into a heart. 5. Place cake tin on a magazine in the middle rack of the oven and bake until a skewer comes out clean - about 1 ¾ - 2 hours. Leave to cool. 6. Wrap cake well in foil and store in a cool place in an airtight container until needed.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/17/20235 minutes, 51 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Should the Bird of the Year competition be geo-restricted?

The winner of this year's Bird of the Century competition comes as no surprise.   Backed by an international campaign run by British-American comedian John Oliver, the pūteketeke swept the competition with a total of 290,374 votes, decimating its closest competition by over 270,000 votes.  With the intense international involvement weighting the competition, Kevin Milne is wondering whether the Bird of the Year should be geo-restricted for following years.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/17/20235 minutes, 58 seconds
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Jack Tame: The Christmas Cake Curse

I love Christmas cake.  Not any Christmas cake. Not every Christmas cake. But my mum’s Christmas cake, for whatever reason, gives me so much joy.  It’s not that her cakes are crazy-fancy or anything. She uses store-bought mixed fruit. They’re not iced and there’s no surprising secret ingredient, but for whatever reason Mum has mastered the perfect Christmas fruit cake. They’re moist. They’re dense. They’re heavy. They’re a highlight of a Tame family Christmas.  Perhaps it all just comes down to practice. She used to make ten or twelve every year and give them as gifts. But the moment I get home every summer, Mum has a couple of cakes waiting on the bench, and I carve off big hunks to eat while standing in the kitchen. Sometimes Dad eats it with blue cheese.  But however well Christmas fruit cakes hit my taste buds, they also hit my stomach. Is it a PH thing? I dunno. Maybe the mixed fruit starts to ferment or sour in my gut? It doesn’t happen to anyone else. Not another soul. All I know is there is a direct correlation between my eating mum’s fruit cake and no one wanting to be within a twenty metre radius.  “Oh GOD! What IS that?! Is something dead?”  “Get the children! Ahh!”  “Burn our clothes! Burn our clothes!”  I don’t know exactly what happens, but somewhere deep inside me there is a chemical reaction of sorts. I’m the first to admit... it’s just awful. Putrid. The smell will curl your ears. The moment a bit of cake hits my stomach it’s like that scene from Titanic.  “Are there any survivors?”  Call it the Christmas Cake Curse.  My mum flogs herself with Christmas baking. Mince pies, shortbread, mars bar slice, Russian fudge. It’s too much! We can’t fit all the baking in the cupboards. We’ve had to establish a Tame family Christmas baking spillover zone. And yet for all the abundance, all of that choice, my favourite Christmas treat just happens to be the one that’ll end up peeling the paint off the walls.  Baking is an act of love. Baking, when you know how it affects your son, is an even greater act of love.  But the greatest act of love this summer will be my noble decision to take a piece of fruit cake and politely excuse myself, outside. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/17/20233 minutes, 37 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Michael Franti - Big Big Love

Michael Franti’s new album with Spearhead was released last week.  ‘Big Big Love’ is a seventeen-song album to accompany you through the “highs and lows of life”, as Franti puts it.  In the post announcing its release Franti said the central theme of the album was “togetherness.”  “Togetherness is the central theme in all the songs on this record. How do we get that feeling of togetherness, that feeling of closeness, that we so often overlooked and took for granted, but now has become so important? Not only just in terms of how we interact with each other in our neighborhoods or our personal relationships, but on a worldwide scale. How do we bridge these gaps so that people can feel close to one another again?  There are forces in the world that use our division to achieve their greedy goals, their political aims, or just to divide people because they want to try to take advantage of it. I want to really use my music and my time in my life to bring closeness to people and help them feel like they’re not alone in this world.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/11/20237 minutes, 5 seconds
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Arthur Brooks: How to live a Happy Life

Happiness is what arguably motivates you to do just about anything,   Arthur Brooks is a Harvard University lecturer American author and public speaker, and he’s just about cracked the code when it comes to living a happy life.   He just about lives and breathes the subject, Arthur’s written in the Atlantic's ‘How to Build a Life’ column, hosted the podcast ‘How to Build a Happy Life’, and now he’s teaming up with Oprah Winfrey to co-write a book.   Arthur Brooks joined Jack Tame to chat about his work.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/11/202313 minutes, 6 seconds
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Kevin Milne: The Hoity-toity Hall of Fame

Kevin Milne has opinions on culture.  The Hoity-toity Hall of Fame is what Kevin calls the things people are expected to like but simply couldn’t care less about, such as the art of “influential” Kiwi artist Francis Hodgkins.  He’s also wondering if he’s the only one feeling awkward because he's never read a Katherine Mansfield book.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/11/20238 minutes, 20 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: The Marvels and Nyad

The Marvels    Carol Danvers, aka Captain Marvel, has reclaimed her identity from the tyrannical Kree and taken revenge on the Supreme Intelligence. However, unintended consequences see her shouldering the burden of a destabilized universe. When her duties send her to an anomalous wormhole linked to a Kree revolutionary, her powers become entangled with two other superheroes to form the Marvels.     Nyad   Sixty-four-year-old marathon swimmer Diana Nyad attempts to become the first person ever to swim from Cuba to Florida.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/11/20239 minutes, 28 seconds
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Tara Ward: Robbie Williams, The Buccaneers, and 007: Road to a Million

Robbie Williams A four-part documentary series featuring 30 years of never-before-seen archive footage about the British singer’s controversial rise to fame (Netflix).   The Buccaneers This new historical drama set in the 1870s follows a group of wealthy American women as they travel to London for the debutante season (Apple TV+).   007: Road to a Million Succession’s Brian Cox stars as The Controller in this fun British adventure series that sees contestants compete in a series of Bond-inspired challenges around the world to win one million pounds (Prime Video).   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/11/20234 minutes, 40 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Frozen River and Resurrection Walk

The Frozen River - Ariel Lawhon  Maine, 1789: The Kennebec River freezes, entombing a man in the ice. Martha Ballard is summoned to examine the body and determine cause of death. As the local midwife and healer, Martha is good at keeping secrets. Her diary is a record of every birth and death, every murder and debacle that unfolds in the town of Hallowell. In that diary she also documented the details of an alleged rape that occurred four months earlier. Now, one of the men accused of that heinous attack has been found dead in the ice.  While Martha is certain she knows what happened the night of the assault, she suspects that the two crimes are linked, and that there is more to both cases than meets the eye. Over the course of one long, hard winter, as the trial nears, and whispers and prejudices mount, Martha’s diary lands at the centre of the scandal and threatens to tear both her family and her community apart.    Resurrection Walk - Michael Connelly  Lincoln Lawyer Mickey Haller enlists the help of his half-brother, Harry Bosch, to prove the innocence of a woman convicted of killing her ex-husband.  Defence attorney Mickey Haller is back, taking the long shot cases, where the chances of winning are one in a million. After getting a wrongfully convicted man out of prison, he is inundated with pleas from incarcerated people claiming innocence. He enlists his half-brother, retired LAPD Detective Harry Bosch, to weed through the letters, knowing most claims will be false.   Bosch pulls a needle from the haystack: a woman in prison for killing her ex-husband, a sheriff’s deputy, but who still maintains her innocence. Bosch reviews the case and sees elements that don’t add up, and a sheriff’s department intent on bringing quick justice in the killing of one of its own.   Now Haller has an uphill battle in court, a David fighting Goliaths to vindicate his client. The path for both lawyer and investigator is fraught with danger from those who don’t want the case reopened and will stop at nothing to keep the Haller-Bosch dream team from finding the truth.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/11/20235 minutes, 47 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Wild-eyed in Yellowstone National Park

"Over 150 years old, it was an act of incredibly bold foresight to preserve Yellowstone all those years ago, when Americans were so busy “conquering” the West. A fusion of land and water, forest and field, wildlife and geothermal wizardry, it’s a large unspoiled canvas of the American West. Anchored by a huge supervolcano, that last erupted 600,000 years ago, there is no place quite like Yellowstone National Park. Like a colossal kettle on the boil, this wild land of fire and brimstone froths, bubbles and belches at every turn. The supervolcano feeds the world’s largest group of hydrothermal features, from hot springs and geysers to fumaroles and mudpots. It’s like Rotorua writ large." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/11/20238 minutes, 21 seconds
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Kate Hall: Sustainable sunblock

Summer's almost upon us which means it's time to break out the sunblock. There are a lot of options out there, but what one is best for you and the environment? Kate 'Ethically Kate' Hall joined Jack Tame to give a few suggestions and tips on how to pick the best choice. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/10/20238 minutes, 6 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Birds' nests on your property

It’s breeding time for birds!  As a bird nut (and a registered bird bander) I have a nest box for little owls. Further down in the Quarry, my Bird mate Peter and I are looking after other owl boxes and monitoring their success. So far one female on four white eggs.  Photo / Supplied These introduced little owls came from Europe and are well established in the South Island, especially around Christchurch. I love hearing them call at night – it’s so special!  And although you may not realise it: there are likely some other bird species making nests and breeding in dense bushes in your garden  I have noticed so far: 2 blackbird nests, 2 Song thrushes. I’m still looking for a Dunnock nest (hedge sparrows)... Tricky!! And, at neighbours, a swallow nest as well.  Nests under cover. Made from clay, filled with feathers… and underneath an enormous heap of poo – yes it can be seriously messy.  When the chicks are big enough, I’ll band them with some “bling”.  I also suspect a sneaky bellbird (which has become very, very quiet all of a sudden) but haven’t found its nest yet.  Silvereyes will always be at my place (I feed them in winter, so they are used to my garden; the juveniles are real little punks).  Silvereye nestlings. Photo / Supplied Code of Conduct around nests:  If you do stumble across a nest in some shrubbery (while pruning, for instance), have a quick look to see if there are any eggs or young birds in it (It could be an old nest from last year!); if so: back out and conceal the nest as much as possible. Put branches back in their position asap; that gives them privacy from preying eyes of predators (including harriers!).  Most bird species can cope with a bit of disturbance – depends on how far in the brood-cycle they are. Usually when they have young in the nest, parents will keep on feeding them; eggs are a “rather new” investment for the parent birds, and they may sometimes pull the plug on that nest.  Blackbirds (and thrushes) are often quite touchy: I noticed that as soon as the nest has been “discovered” and their privacy is breached, the young will fledge far too early and before they can actually fly away from cats and dogs!  This puts them in a much more vulnerable situation.  During the breeding season (which can go on till late summer for some species! Multiple broods for parent birds if the season is “good”) the young birds sometimes do silly things, like fly clumsily into your windows.  If you find those stunned mullets on the ground, carefully pick them up and put them in a dark card-board box for an hour or so. Out of the light and no interaction; No Feeding; nor Watering, no Handling. Keep them quiet for a while and you’ll be surprised how they recover from such a knock!  If your patient is a rare/endangered bird, please contact a local vet and organise some professional hospital care!  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/10/20233 minutes, 30 seconds
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Bryan Betty: How to deal with Long Haul flights

What issues can arise on a long haul flight?  The main complaints tend to be irritating more than anything  Becoming dehydrated – can lead to headaches, dry mouth, dry nose  Not being able to sleep, ankle swelling  Cramped conditions, especially in economy class seats!  More serious: deep vein thrombosis – leg clots due to not moving around.     How do we improve comfort?  Really important to stay hydrated - plenty of fluid.  Wear loose fitting clothes – you want to be comfortable.  Carry lip balm or nasal spray to moisten nasal passages if dry - for comfort.  Don’t drink alcohol or overdrink alcohol – it can worsen dehydration, headache and interfere with sleep.     Are there issues with food and taste?  At 30,000 feet your taste buds don’t’ work as well and food tastes ‘bland’.  Also, your nose can dry out which affects taste.  Airlines tend to produce stronger flavoured food such as curries to compensate.  Up to 30% more sugar and salt in food to add to taste.  Don’t overeat as we tend to bloat as gas forms in abdomen, which can cause abdominal discomfort.      And sleep?  Carry eye shade and ear plugs, and a neck pillow is a really good idea.  Best thing to do is work out the sleep time at your destination before you go and try and sleep at that time on the flight.  Some use melatonin, a ‘sleep hormone’     How do we avoid blood clots?  Two key things – stay hydrated and get up and move around every 3-4 hours to get blood circulating.  Failing that wiggle toes and bend knees in your seat frequently.  Some choose to wear compression of flight stockings which encourage blood to circulate.  They also reduce ankle swelling!  If you have persistent leg swelling, chest pain or SOB in weeks after a long-haul flight – see your GP!    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/10/20235 minutes
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Paul Stenhouse: Could your mobile phone be a thing of the past? Company launches Humane AI Pin

Could your mobile phone be a thing of the past? A new company has launched a product to let you go hands-free.  It's the Humane AI Pin, a voice and gesture activated wearable that can do many of the things your phone can do: send messages, read emails, make calls, get directions, play music, take photos and video, translate to other languages, and more.   It's not always on, it's not listening for a wake word - it's got trust and privacy built in from the beginning. It has a light on the device so others know when it's activated. But it's powered by AI and even in its demo, it got facts wrong. If you can't see a screen or make direct inputs then you need to trust that you're getting and sending what you think you are.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/10/20235 minutes, 19 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Asparagus & Blue Cheese Tart

To celebrate the abundance of asparagus available right now, make this simple tasty tart.  Serve 4-6    Ingredients:  2 bunches (or about 20) medium thickness asparagus spears  1 sheet puff pastry  1 egg, beaten with a fork  150g sour cream or crème fraiche  100g blue cheese, crumbled  2 tablespoons caramelised onion chutney (store-bought is fine)  ½ teaspoon sea salt + decent grind black pepper  Drizzle of olive oil    Method:  Heat oven to 200 C. Trim or snap the tough ends off the asparagus spears. Line a tray with the pastry, twisting and pinching up the edges to form a rim if you need to. Brush the edges with the beaten egg. Whisk together the remaining egg with sour cream (or crème fraiche), ¾ of the blue cheese and onion. Spread this over the pastry. Lay the trimmed asparagus on top, season with salt and pepper and drizzle over olive oil. Bake for 30 minutes, until the pastry is golden and cooked on the base too. To serve, grind over some more pepper and crumble over remaining blue cheese.   Make it yours:  You could add chopped, crispy bacon or flakes of smoked salmon to this tart if you fancy it!  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/10/20233 minutes, 58 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: 1989 (Taylor's version)

Taylor Swift has re-recorded her 2014 album "1989".The superstar has been re-recording her back catalogue so she can own the rights to her own music rather than her record label. Swift owning her own version would allow her to control what happens to her music and how it is streamed and bought.Music reviewer Estelle Clifford talked to Jack Tame about the album and the story behind the new album.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/3/20235 minutes, 30 seconds
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Books: The Secret, and The Woman in Me

The Secret – Lee Child and Andrew Child   Jack Reacher has returned in yet another novel from Lee and Andrew Child.  ‘The Secret’ is the 28th book in the series and was released only a few months before the second season of the TV show is set to be released in December.  The Woman in Me - Britney Spears  Britney Spears’ hotly anticipated memoir The Woman In Me has finally hit shelves after already topping bestseller charts. It’s Spears’ first official memoir, though she has already written two books with her mother Lynne. She reportedly started writing it shortly after her 13-year conservatorship ended.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/3/20235 minutes, 57 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Jaw-droppers in Jackson Hole, Wyoming

Flanked by jagged mountain spires scratching at the sky and slashed by the crystal waters of the mighty Snake River, the valley of Jackson Hole sets the stage for some wild Wyoming adventures, where the spirit of the West sings out loud. Early fur trappers used the term “hole” to describe a valley entirely encased by mountains, which perfectly sums up Jackson Hole’s terrain. Thickly forested mountains are carpeted in fir, spruce and Lodgepole pine trees. Lodgepole trunks served as trusty tipi poles for Native Americans. Then there’s the lush alpine meadows and the silvery-gray-green sagebrush flats - all guarded by the Tetons’ towering peaks, that are part of the Rockies. Crossing over into Wyoming from Idaho, the vertigo-inducing Teton Pass, at an elevation of 2500 metres, served up my first eagle’s perspective of Jackson Hole. It’s a mesmerising perspective and searing reminder that this is a land of rugged adventurers and stoic settlers. This sprawling valley not only plays host to hordes of wildlife, but the Grand Teton National Park and the ebullient town of Jackson. As the warm autumn sunshine bathed the bucolic landscape in a soft glow, I was staggered how many road-trippers were out in force, well past the summer peak. But nature’s towering glories, whether you’re magnetised by the ski slopes, the hiking trails or serendipitous wildlife encounters, underpins Jackson Hole’s year-round pulling power. Travel correspondent Mike Yardley talked to Jack Tame on the best things to do in Jackson Hole in Wyoming.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/3/20239 minutes, 17 seconds
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Dougal Sutherland: What is ADHD and what workplace support is available?

What is ADHD?  Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder  Symptoms include difficulty focusing attention -often cant’s keep focused on something but sometimes get “hyperfocused” on something and can’t move off it when need to; acting suddenly without thinking (impulsivity); being really disorganised; fidgety, restless, can’t sit still for long; changing jobs a lot, messy and disorganised, misses deadlines, often seen as unreliable; can affect friendships    Why is it an issue in the workplace  Historically ADHD was thought to only exist in children and that they would grow out of it  Now know that about 2/3 of people with ADHD as a child continue to have symptoms and signs as an adult  Lots of people missed being diagnosed in childhood but now realising that they might have it – so lots more people getting diagnosed as adults  Also increasing number of women being diagnosed in adulthood who were likely overlooked during childhood    How to support at work  Recognising it’s ADHD is a good start rather than assuming someone is “lazy” or it’s something to do with their personality  Adjusting work environment to reduce distractions  Figuring out with the person how best they work – sometimes having tight deadlines is really useful as it creates positive pressure to get a job done. A number of journalists have commented to me that they think they have ADHD and news media is a great place for them to work as the content is constantly changing and the deadlines are tight and quick  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/3/20239 minutes, 4 seconds
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Bob Campbell: "Crisp, refreshing with mouth-watering acidity" wine for summer

Wine: Nautilus 2023 Albarino, Marlborough $30  Why I chose it:  - Exciting new (to New Zealand) grape variety with a great future in this part of the world  - Nautilus makes my favourite Albarino  - Great summer wine – crisp, refreshing with mouth-watering acidity  What does it taste like?  - A delicious albarino with classic citrus/mandarin/orange flavours. A kiss of sweetness is perfectly balanced by fruity, mouthwatering acidity that leaves a refreshing finish. Memorable wine that makes perfect summer drinking.  Why it’s a bargain:  - High quality wine at a reasonable price  Where can you buy it?  - Wine Freedom, Otago $24.99; Whiskeyonline, Auckland $25.99; Society Liquor, Wellington $25.99  - More likely to find it at fine wine stores rather than on supermarket shelves  Food match?  - Most seafood, my favourite is scampi seared on the BBQ  Will it keep?  - Drink it up    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/3/20233 minutes, 28 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Preventative action!

Spring: everything wakes up. All sorts of creepy crawlies are gunning for your crops and sometimes we need to be ahead of the game.  Apples have stopped flowering and the smallest beginnings of the fruit are on your trees.  Those tiny fruitlets are known in English as “Codlings”  Hence the name for the moth who’s caterpillars love to invade these codlings: Codling moth  Parents (moths) are now laying eggs on these codlings, so let’s avoid the caterpillars tunnelling into your tiny, developing fruit!  MADEX is the spray to use from now on; every two weeks or so until February.  Madex is a codling moth granulosis virus that will affect the small brutes before they enter the apple. Only works on Codling moth species (Cydia pomonella); and the virus will not harm us either.  Noticed the black sooty mould on your lemon tree leaves? That stuff grows on all sorts of citrus!  That’s a fungus that grows on the excrement of sap-sucking insects, especially scale insects, mealybugs and citrus whitefly.  Those tiny whitefly have really become the bigger pest on citrus, especially north of Christchurch.  Trying to remove the black, sooty mould is literally useless, as the sap-suckers will continue to drop their sweet poos;  So: we need to control those whitefly etc., right now by giving them a weekly dose of Neem Oil. Aim for the top-side of the leaves and the bottom-side of the leaves. The regularity of spraying halts the egg-laying part of the life cycle, simply by killing the susceptible juveniles before they become adults.  Lemon tree borer is another troublesome critter on citrus; this one grows its babies (rather large beetle grubs) in tunnels in branches, twigs and trunks of citrus trees.  The female beetle lays her eggs on freshly-made pruning cuts, so the very first thing we must not do is prune our citrus in spring and summer.  To remove the grub from its tunnel is tricky, but can be achieved with a “hypodermic needle” filled with insecticide. You can literally squirt that stuff into the grub’s tunnel by access in the “toilet hole” from the outside.  That way you won’t cause any extra damage to the branch but still halt the destruction inside the branch  Clever, eh?    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/3/20237 minutes, 8 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: YouTube is cracking down on ad-blockers

YouTube is cracking own on ad-blockers If you have an ad-blocker you'll likely get a warning that using it violates their terms of service. It's been a slow road here - they previously had allowed you to watch one video before blocking you, but no more. The big streamers are doing the same, but with account sharing - everyone is focused on profitability at the moment and are tightening up where they can. Apple really wants you to buy a new laptop They released their new M3 chips on Tuesday and put those into MacBook Pros and the iMac. They referenced multiple times that 'Intel-based' Macs were slow, and that it's a great time to upgrade! They also did their "scary fast" event at a new time - 8pm in the East, 5pm in the West - I imagine hoping to get in front of consumers rather than industry folks.The trouble is that most people don't have a need for these more powerful chips right now.. and the sales reflect that with Q3 of 2023 was down 34% compared to Q3 of last year -- they did $7.6 billion in sales.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/3/20233 minutes, 46 seconds
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Tara Ward: All the Light We Cannot See, The Gilded Age, and Wolf

All the Light We Cannot See: Adapted from the novel by Anthony Doerr, this tells the story of a blind French teenager who crosses paths with a German soldier as they both try and survive the devastation of World War 2. (Netflix)     The Gilded Age: The return of Julian Fellowes’ sumptuous costume drama about a young woman who moves to New York to live with her aunts, and is exposed to an exciting new world on the brink of the modern age (Neon)      Wolf: A British drama where anything goes. Set in an isolated house in the country, a family find themselves the victims of a terrifying psychopath’s cruel games (TVNZ+)    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/3/20235 minutes, 4 seconds
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Sam Low: MasterChef New Zealand winner on his new cookbook

The term ‘MasterChef’ Is not a term to be taken lightly.  Yes, it comes with all the TV star glory but it’s also about incredible talent and skill.   Starting out as a young boy running an Auckland takeaway shop and local dairy, Sam Low has gone from strength to strength making a name for himself in the food industry as an award-winning barista and latte art champion.   He took the crown in last year's MasterChef New Zealand.  Now he’s combined a collection of delicious recipes in his new cookbook - “Modern Chinese”.  Sam Low spoke to Jack Tame about it.     LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/3/202313 minutes, 55 seconds
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Nici Wikes: New Zealand's Gelato Week returns, showcasing the diversity of the country's industry

NZ Ice Cream & Gelato Week returns in November 2023. Over a week NZ ice cream, gelato and sorbet makers will celebrate the vibrancy and diversity of the country’s growing industry and encourage Kiwis to buy and enjoy locally made.  The week kicks off with Ice Cream & Gelato Sundae on Sunday 5 November 2023 – with specials in scoop shops across the country.  NZ Ice Cream & Gelato Week is from Sunday 5 until Sunday 12 November 2023 with ice cream and gelato stores featuring; tastings, competitions and special promotions.   Kiwis can head to www.nzicecreamandgelato.co.nz to vote for their favourite NZ Ice Cream or Gelato maker AND your favourite NZ Scoop Store – and go into the draw to win ice cream & gelato    Affogato!  This is the perfect little sweet treat pick me up; ice cream drowned in espresso coffee and topped with toasted, crushed hazelnuts. Add a shot of liqueur if you fancy. Bellissimo!  Makes 4  ½ cup hazelnuts, toasted and roughly chopped  1 cup very strong espresso coffee  4 big scoops good quality ice cream  4 tablespoons amaretto, Kahlúa or other liqueur (optional)  Scoop vanilla ice cream into small, pre-chilled glasses or cups. Pour over ¼ cup hot espresso over the top and top with hazelnuts. Add a shot of liqueur (optional) and serve immediately. Nici’s note: For kids, use decaf coffee or hot chocolate and leave out the liqueur.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/3/20236 minutes, 33 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: ZB's film reviewer on Tom Sainsbury's new horror film

Francesca Rudkin reviews Kiwi comedian Tom Sainsbury's new horror film Loop Track and Till, about the search for justice following the lynching of African American teenager Emmett Till in 1955.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/3/20236 minutes, 57 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Kiwi swimming star Lewis Claeburt abandoning Wellington for Auckland

New Zealand's top swimmer, Lewis Clareburt, is having to move to Auckland and find a new coach because he can't get consistent training time at Wellington city council's top pool.  Why?   Because their community pools are "heavily used" by swimmers and other water sports.   Kevin Milne talked to Jack Tame about it.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/3/20237 minutes, 1 second
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Jack Tame: The 2023 election was the "Anyone But Labour" vote

The results are in. Not the final, final results. The super-dooper recounted and not-subject-to-further-legal-challenge results. But as final as results are going to be for a bit longer. And on the numbers released by the Electoral Commission yesterday, I think we can reasonably dub the 2023 General Election the ABL-Vote.  ABL. Anyone. But. Labour.  The left has gone more left. The right has gone more right. Winston Peters and New Zealand First have hoovered up whatever remains, and we wait to see what kind of deal might be struck between the governing parties.  These are the things that stand out to me:  1) Labour’s vote has almost halved on the result three years ago. Maybe it’s the polling or just the general widespread sense of dissatisfaction with the government, but I still think we haven’t paused and considered the scale of that reversal, enough. They received 50% of the party vote in 2020. I get it. It was an extraordinary result for an extraordinary political moment. But in just three years they’ve shed almost half of that support Almost a quarter of all New Zealand voters have left them. And as if that weren’t painful enough for the party’s members, what is there to show for that historic majority government?  2) With just over 38% of the vote, by National’s traditional standards, this is not an impressive election result. It was enough. And it only needed to be enough. But if you take out the 2020 drubbing, this year’s result was the lowest party vote result for National for more than 20 years. But for 2020, the last time they were lower than 39% was the 2002 election.  3) Both the Greens and Te Pāti Māori are celebrating their largest-ever caucuses. A big part of their success is surely the ABL factor. Anyone but Labour. But I also think they ran the two best campaigns of the election. The Greens were super-disciplined. They put out well-constructed policies early in the campaign, soaking up a lot of political discourse before the other parties switched into campaign mode. Te Pāti Māori understood better than any other party except for maybe New Zealand first, how to mobilise their supporters.  4) I think ACT will be a bit disappointed by their final numbers. Of course, the result is great by the party’s traditional standards and winning the Tamaki electorate was a huge boon symbolically, but compared to where they were polling a few months ago, it’s a notable drop.  5) New Zealand First’s result marks a masterful sprint to the electoral finish line for our most experienced and seasoned politician. Winston Peters saw the space opened up by National’s dithering and seized it. The party didn’t confirm its policy platform until well after voting had already opened but their supporters don’t care. New Zealand First might have been largely absent from politicial discourse for most of this parliamentary term, but their result goes to show how important timing and momentum are in a political campaign.  So what happens now? Negotiations will be fascinating. My impression is that David Seymour will be intensely focused on achieving policy concessions. I suspect New Zealand First will be less interested in big, meaty, high-workload Cabinet portfolios, but I could be wrong.  I think the triumphant reaction from the Greens, while understandable at one level, shows they’re completely focused on themselves and are deluded about the constraints of opposition. No one seems to note that a record election result for the party isn’t actually worth that much if you’re languishing in opposition, and the governing parties are pledging to restart oil and gas exploration, delay emissions pricing on farms, and even scrap the Zero Carbon Act.  I think Labour’s totally adrift. And I think the new Prime Minister has his work cut out. The ABL factor will give him a honeymoon glow for a bit, but this is still an incredibly tricky economic and political moment, and if this election has shown us anything it’s how quickly voter sentiment can change. Three’s a crowd and managing relationships between ACT and New Zealand First is potentially complex. Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and the next government will know they can only trade on being Anyone But Labour for so long.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/3/20236 minutes, 18 seconds
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Greg Page and Jeff Fatt: The original Yellow and Purple Wiggles on the documentary and the history of the Wiggles

They’ve been described as the Beetles for kids.  And now after more than a decade of spreading joy to generations of children, the Wiggles – Anthony, Murray, Greg, and Jeff have reunited on screen to tell how the magic happened.  It wasn’t all upbeat and colourful skivvies, as the film sheds light on some of the struggles they faced as individuals.   Yellow Wiggle Greg Page and Purple Wiggle Jeff Fatt joined Jack Tame to chat about the documentary, the history, and the success of the Wiggles.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/28/202316 minutes, 26 seconds
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Kevin Milne: How can it cost so much to demolish a building?

This week the Wellington City Council committed to complete earthquake strengthening and renovations of Wellington Town Hall, approving an eyewatering $328 million budget.  The reason they’ve committed to this figure is because if they closed the site and demolished the building, it would allegedly cost about the same amount.   Kevin Milne is struggling to wrap his head around this fact.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/28/20234 minutes, 44 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour and Ms Information

Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour  The cultural phenomenon continues as pop icon Taylor Swift performs hit songs in a once-in-a-lifetime concert experience.   Ms Information  As the nation plunges into pandemic, Gwen Isaac’s observational documentary delves into the trenches with Siouxsie Wiles, the fuchsia-haired microbiologist who emerged as a national hero and a satanic witch in the minds of a divided New Zealand.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/28/20238 minutes, 43 seconds
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Tara Ward: After the Party, Last Stop Larrimah, Hot Potato: Story of the Wiggles

After the Party Robyn Malcolm stars in this New Zealand drama about a woman whose world implodes after she accuses her husband of a sex crime but nobody believes her (TVNZ1 from Sunday, and TVNZ+).     Last Stop Larrimah An HBO true crime documentary series about the Australian outback town of Larrimah, population 11, and the mysterious disappearance of one of the residents that turned everyone else into suspects (Netflix).    Hot Potato: Story of the Wiggles A documentary about the incredible story of The Wiggles, who sang and danced their way into the hearts of millions of people around the globe (Prime Video).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/27/20234 minutes, 27 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Exchange and Lola in the Mirror

The Exchange – John Grisham   What became of Mitch and Abby McDeere after they exposed the crimes of Memphis law firm Bendini, Lambert & Locke and fled the country? It is now fifteen years later, and Mitch and Abby are living in Manhattan, where Mitch is a partner at the largest law firm in the world. When a mentor in Rome asks him for a favor that will take him far from home, Mitch finds himself at the center of a sinister plot that has worldwide implications—and once again endangers his colleagues, friends, and family. Mitch has become a master at staying one step ahead of his adversaries, but this time there’s nowhere to hide.    Lola in the Mirror – Trent Dalton  A girl and her mother have been on the run for sixteen years, from police and the monster they left in their kitchen with a knife in his throat. They've found themselves a home inside a van with four flat tyres parked in a scrapyard by the edge of the Brisbane River.  The girl has no name because names are dangerous when you're on the run. But the girl has a dream. A vision of a life as an artist of international acclaim. A life outside the grip of the Brisbane underworld drug queen 'Lady' Flora Box. A life of love with the boy who's waiting for her on the bridge that stretches across a flooding, deadly river. A life beyond the bullet that has her name on it. And now that the storm clouds are rising, there's only one person who can help make her dreams come true. That person is Lola and she carries all the answers. But to find Lola, the girl with no name must first do one of the hardest things we can ever do. She must look in the mirror.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/27/20233 minutes, 56 seconds
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Hannah McQueen: The results are in – but what does that mean for our money?

The results are in and it’s looking very likely we’ll have some form of National-led government for at least the next three years. So, what will this actually mean for our finances and the housing market? Will it be the boost some were hoping, or will the impact not be quite as much as people expect?  Hannah McQueen joined Jack Tame to give her insight and answer a few questions about what kiwis should expect. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/27/20234 minutes, 28 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Road trips through Central Idaho

“If you’re sizing up embarking on an epic roadie across the great American West, Idaho is the pitch-perfect launch-pad.”  “With a similar sized population to Christchurch, Boise beats to a leisurely tempo, flanked by golden hills and verdant forest, sliced by the Boise River. It’s a picturesque setting and the compact, leafy city centre exudes good looks and an easy-going grace.”  “Hitting the road, I scooted across Idaho’s central folds on a three-hour drive to Ketchum and Sun Valley. As the soaring Sawtooth Mountains shuffled into view, we passed through gorgeous tourist villages like Hailey and Bellevue.”  Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/27/20238 minutes, 53 seconds
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Kate Hall: Reducing food waste

Kate "Ethically Kate" Hall is back with more sustainability tips! This time she's got her top tips for reducing food waste both on a personal and community level. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/27/20236 minutes, 35 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Cucurbits

Cucurbits: melons, squash, pumpkins, courgettes, zucchini, gherkins and… cucumbers.  A bit “touchy” —don’t like cold spells of weather— cool southerly winds are no good; frost tender.  That’s why it’s best to sow them later in spring (from end of October onwards).  I sow them in medium-sized pots with seed-raising mix (high in organic material); these cucurbits appreciate a good organic feed (compost, sheep’s poo, Seafood Soup – a great liquid fertiliser) on a regular basis.  But what you have to be careful with is too much water when they have germinated: their new roots are very susceptible to rotting in wet potting mix!  A well-draining mix helps to keep the young roots safe from the rots.  Keep your seedling in a nice, warm spot; around 18 degrees or more during the daytime hours and no less than 7 or 8 degrees at night.  Sunlight is important: at least 7 hours per day direct sunlight.  My tunnel house easily gets those numbers (and allows earlier planting and better regulation of watering too!).  I’m not too keen on courgettes (which have a habit of becoming marrows – even worse!); nor am I a pumpkin aficionado. Let’s face it: in Winter there are heaps of pumpkins on the market and they cost bugger-all!  I usually concentrate on Cucumbers, watermelon, and gherkins.  These fruits are usually largely made of moisture – which means that when the flowers develop into fruits, the plants need more water (compared to the seedling stage); It’s the watering (liquid fertiliser!!) that really helps them to expand the fruit to a good size.  Watermelon grows nicely on warm soils – sprawling all over the place; if you want to help them with lovely warm soil, perhaps cover the soil with some black plastic.  Gherkins and Cucumbers are best grown on a trellis or climbing rack. Again: fruit develop best with increased watering / liquid fertiliser. Cucumbers need to be harvested regularly to make the plant set new fruit.  Summer snack: Pickled gherkins? (or watermelon??). See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/27/20234 minutes, 45 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: The UK's Online Safety Bill, driverless Ubers, and a supply of PlayStation 5s

The UK's Online Safety Bill has become law  This is hugely controversial and could lead to WhatsApp, Telegram, Signal, and iMessage shutting down their services in the UK. It's a fight over encryption and internet privacy. The government wants to improve internet safety by forcing these providers to remove harmful content such as child sexual abuse, extreme violence, animal cruelty, terrorism, promotion of illegal weapons or drugs, and more.   They've also outlined new laws for 'cyber-flashing' and "deepfake pornography". But monitoring for this content would mean the tech companies would need to be able to see the content - something they are fiercely against. The government says Ofcom would only ask tech firms to access messages once "feasible technology" had been developed, but we're unclear what that means.    How would you feel if your next Uber didn't have a driver?  If you're living in Phoenix, Arizona it now might not! The future is here if you choose to accept! When you book a ride in the Uber app, you'll be able to select to go driverless.  Waymo will still have their own app - which will allow you to grab a ride in Phoenix, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and soon, Austin. But this partnership with Uber makes it frictionless to try the new service. It won't be any cheaper than a car driven by a human though!     A PlayStation 5 might actually be able to be put under your Christmas Tree  Supply Chain issues have made the PS5 a tough thing to get with some people waiting months for their game console to arrive. Chip shortages have seriously limited the availability for the past three years, making them a rare commodity. Good news is that PlayStation says their supply chain is fixed and they have lots of availability now.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/27/20234 minutes, 8 seconds
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Rosa Flanagan: Toasted Couscous, Herb Oil, Broccoli, and Almonds

Our go to summer salad that you can get creative with! Change up the grain and vegetables dependent on what you have in the fridge or garden. We love serving this with any plant based or animal protein, especially chicken or salmon. If you are GF, we recommend replacing the couscous with millet or brown rice.   Serves: 4-6   Time: 20 minutes   Ingredients  1 cup israeli couscous  Water  2 tbsp cooking oil  1 head broccoli, cut into florets  1/2 tsp sea salt   Herb Oil: 1 cup herbs, roughly chopped  1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil  2 cloves garlic, crushed  1 tsp sea salt  To Serve:  1/2 cup flaked almonds, toasted  1/2 cup pumpkin seeds, toasted  1 cup herbs, roughly chopped   Method:   Add the couscous into a pot and toast over a medium heat for a couple of minutes. Then add enough water to just cover the couscous. Bring to the boil, then reduce to a simmer and cook for 8 minutes. Drain and set aside.   Heat up the oil in a pan and add the broccoli and sea salt. Allow the broccoli to sit and cook in the oil for a couple of minutes, then give it a toss. Then allow it to sit and cook for another couple of minutes. Once it is nice and crispy, remove the pan from the heat.   For the herb oil, add all of the ingredients to a small blender and blend until a vibrant green oil is formed. Alternatively, you can use a handheld stick blender. Set aside.   In a large bowl, add the cooked couscous, broccoli, almonds and pumpkin seeds. Drizzle over the herb oil and gently toss everything together. Lastly add the herbs and give everything one last final toss before serving.   This salad will last in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 3 days.   Please note if you are wanting to keep it over the 3 days, leave the herbs out and add them just before enjoying. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/27/20235 minutes, 45 seconds
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Jack Tame: Stories are what gives sport its magic

“Historically, the All Blacks haven’t faced too much adversity. But here it is. The team is at odds and ends. The players are being criticised. The coaches and their bosses are being hammered in the press.  Maybe they will falter. Maybe we’re watching the unravelling of a once-mighty team. Maybe Silver Lake has bought a dud.  Or maybe, through whatever changes are necessary, and through the pluck and determination of a unit that can only be truly tested when its back is against the wall, the All Blacks will find a way to rise up.”  Those were the words of famed rugby analyst Jack Tame on a radio station called Newstalk ZB, shortly after the All Blacks had lost a home series to Ireland for the first time.  15 months on, I’ll be honest, my thoughts have been a bit muddled this week.  Yes, I can rationalise that we’ve improved massively since that last encounter with the Springboks back in August. A 28-point deficit? Surely that won’t be repeated. I can rationalise that we’re fit. We’re coming off a slightly longer break. We’ve weathered the Irish storm. Our set piece is a thousand times better than it was, we’ve barely lost a lineout in the tournament and our outside backs are maybe the most exciting in World rugby.  Buuuuuuuuuut, still. South Africa. They’re good.  I feel for Dane Coles missing out. For years he’s defined what a hardy, mischievous hooker should be. I’m not bothered by the locking decision either way - Retallick to start and Whitelock on the bench - except to say that Sam Whitelock is a titan of a leader, and I can’t imagine a Rugby World Cup victory without him playing a massive role, whether off the bench or in the starting 15.  Buuuuuuuuuut, still. South Africa. Gulp.  The Springboks have named a 7-1 split. Seven forwards on the bench. That’s a gamble.  Gambles can backfire.  But if there’s anything… any one thing that can push the All Blacks over the edge… that can propel them to Word Champion status… That can secure a record fourth Rugby World Cup… It’s the story.  It’s that doing so will be the pièce de résistance… the cherry on top of the whole Ian Foster fiasco.  I was not someone who thought Ian Foster was the best man for a job. I’m still not! But I also think he’s been treated woefully over the last few years. And in the midst of a pretty awful situation, I think he acted with dignity and grit.  Finishing up as the coach of the World Champions wouldn’t just be an incredibly satisfying conclusion to his All Blacks career. It’d be a hell of a middle finger to the haters.  And I can never underestimate the power of stories in sport. Stories are what give sport its magic. I want to finish with another quote of mine from last year:  “Maybe it’s lunacy to even ponder a World Cup victory next year. But crazier things have happened in sport.”  “Often the greatest sporting narratives are those in which an athlete or a team overcomes adversity. Victory against all odds.”  I said my thoughts had been a bit muddled this week. My head and my heart in a furious battle. But the closer we get to kick-off, the more clarity I have.  Ultimately, I do know what I think. I think I was right to maintain that sliver of optimism even during trying times. I think the All Blacks will win. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/27/20234 minutes, 31 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: New books by Dawn French and Arnold Schwarzenegger

The Twat Files by Dawn French    Be Useful by Arnold Schwarzenegger   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/20/20235 minutes, 5 seconds
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"Put this album as often as you can": Paige's new album

King Clown is the latest album by 25 year old New Zealand singer Paige. The South Auckland artist debuted the song Aquarian at a show at Auckland's The Cloud during the Women's World Cup.  Simon Gooding, who has also worked with Pink and Neil Finn, is the producer for this album. Billie Eilish has also shared one of Paige's songs. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/20/20234 minutes, 17 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Brews & Bites in Blenheim

- Blenheim might be a byword for grapes, but beverage-making doesn't just stop with wine production.  - What about DNA Brewery?  - And Moa Brewing is under new ownership?  - There's a lot of tasting experiences at Vines Village. ( Gin and whisky and cheese)  - Did you check out Dodson Street Beer Garden?  - Any other tasty bites to add to the bingo card?   For more tips on savouring Blenheim's best brews and bites, Mike's article is on the website.  www.newstalkzb.co.nz/lifestyle/travel/    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/20/20239 minutes, 2 seconds
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Margo Flanagan: Pomegranate + Orange Marinated Strawberries w/ Ice Cream

The perfect light summer dessert. Sweet ripe strawberries, zesty orange, tangy pomegranate molasses, maple syrup and delicate vanilla. If strawberries aren’t in season, in winter we love marinating pears and roasting them. Serve with vanilla ice cream and our sweet and salty crunch. Serves: 4 Time: 30 minutes One punnet of strawberries, sliced Zest and juice of 1 orange 1 tsp pomegranate molasses 2 tsp maple syrup 1/2 tsp vanilla bean paste or extract Sweet + Salty Crunch: 1/2 cup nuts of your choice, roasted 2 tbsp maple syrup ½ tsp sea salt To Serve: 8 scoops of plant based or dairy vanilla ice cream Method: Add the sliced strawberries to a medium sized bowl. Add the remaining ingredients and mix until well combined. Allow the strawberries to marinate for at least 30 minutes, allowing the fruit to infuse the syrup flavours. Meanwhile, make the sweet + salty crunch. In a small bowl, combine your choice of nuts with maple syrup and sea salt. Once marinated, divide the ice cream between bowls and top with the marinated strawberries and sweet + salty crunch    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/20/20235 minutes
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Ruud Kleinpaste: What to do in your garden now El Niño is back

We’ve been warned – a dry spell is coming our way this summer in the form of El Niño. (little Boy!)  We’ve seen this before, of course but I reckon it may need a bit of a reminder:  Temperatures, Rainfall and Wind direction are the key elements of the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) phenomenon. El Niño is characterised by more westerly winds, dropping more rain on the west coasts and less rain on the east coast.  It also tends to create warmer summer temperatures in the east, making the drought conditions even trickier for gardeners. The North Island may likely see the worst effects.  Keeping water tanks as full as possible might be a good idea.  Planting drought-tolerant species will certainly ease the stress; so I went on a hunt for species that would be reasonably drought-tolerant. Southern Woods (South of Christchurch) has a good range of trees, shrubs and plants and Chris Smith sent me a few great tips, as well as a list of their best performers during El Niño.  Brachyglottis greyii – Daisy Bush (aka shaggy Ragwort)  Brachyglottis monroi – Monro’s Daisy; evergreen with yellow flowers  Carmichaelia australis – common native broom – an insect magnet  Coprosma acerosa – ground cover for dry/hot/coastal  Coprosma brunnea – wiry ground cover with white to blue fruits; cold tolerant too. Birds and Lizards  Coprosma crassifolia – divaricated shrub with small leaves – North and South Island  Coprosma rugosa – “Needle-leaved Mountain coprosma – nice orange-brown species – stands out!  Coprosma virescens – an orange and green species – another favourite of mine;  Cordyline australis – good old cabbage tree: hardy in wetlands and in drought! Pain for lawnmowers  Corokia cotoneaster - My plant to find native bees on spring flowers – colourful.  Dodonaea viscosa - hopbush or “ake ake”; green version is NZ Native; reddish-brown ex Australia  Elaeocarpus hookerianus known as Pōkākā; can do dry, but also cold  Kanuka – Great flowering tree – a source of nectar for heaps of insects  Melicytus alpinus – porcupine bush; brilliant mountain shrub – grows well at lower levels too  Muehlenbeckia astonii – tough as! However I feel it’s a bit “over-used” in NZ gardens.  Olearia – tree daisies – many types to choose from  Ozothamnus – cottonwood  Pseudopanax crassifolius – Lancewood! The story of Juvenile foliage and adult foliage  Sophora microphylla – Sth Island Kowhai; watch the tui and bellbirds, the silver eyes and the Kereru  Teucrium parvifolium – rather rare shrub endemic to New Zealand and quite at home on eastern  side of our Islands, which indicates tolerance to dry spells  Do a bit of research and see what would look great at your place. When you plant them, ensure you don’t “bury” them too deep and water them in for a few days to allow them to settle in.  Of course, mulching will help (reduce evaporation), and if possible, planting in the cooler seasons  Watering is often tricky: water well periodically rather than every week. If you let these shrubs dry out between waterings, they’ll send their roots in all directions to “look for water”. That sets them up to survive El Niño!  If you are in Canterbury: go and see Chris and the team at Southern Woods – and a Dutch tip:  time it well with their spring sale!!! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/20/20233 minutes, 51 seconds
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Bryan Betty: New medications for type 2 diabetes

What is Type 2 diabetes?  Body not able to control sugars – sugars become  in body high  Basically due to the pancreas wearing out over time not producing enough insulin or insulin becoming ineffective.  We are seeing more cases in younger people especially Māori and Pacific.     How big a problem is it and what harm to the body does it cause?  Thought to be approximately 300,000 in NZ living with type 2 diabetes.  Health system cost 2.1 billion year – 0.67% GDP!  Individual cost: increased rates renal failure, heart disease, blindness, leg amputation, if not controlled.     What are the new medications?  Diet, exercise and  weight reduction  central to treatment. Medications are needed such as metformin and insulin.    Now available two new medications:  Jardiance daily tablet: causes us to ‘pee’ sugar out of the body when we urinate.  Trulicity- weekly injection: mimics a hormone that means we feel full and eat less and absorb sugar within body and can lose weight.     Why are they important?  Gives more treatment options in addition to metformin and insulin.    Major differences don’t just lower sugar in body: also protect kidney from damage , and reduce chances of heart disease, and weight reduction: first time ever!  In Higher doses Trulicity the weekly injection:  has been used overseas for weight reduction ( Ozempic, Saxena New Zealand – not funded here) – has been in news  Lead  to worldwide  shortages at times that have affected New Zealand.     What should we do?  Important over age of 40 have regular blood sugar tests to see if developing problem.  Need to review regularly with GP and nurse: diet, exercise in combination with medication is important.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/20/20235 minutes, 40 seconds
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Tech: New Zealand a test case for X's (formally Twitter) plan to charge new users

Social media platform X (formally Twitter) is using New Zealand as a testing ground for a plan to charge new users. The platform's owner Elon Musk plans to charge new users $1 a year to use X.Users can opt out, but that means they won't be able view posts and not post anything. Musk says this is to weed out bots on the platform.LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/20/20233 minutes, 27 seconds
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Murder mysteries, thrillers, and rural women

Bodies A crime drama set over four different time periods where  the same dead body keeps turning up in the same place in London across those four time periods (Netflix). The Pigeon Tunnel A new documentary film exploring the life and career of famed spy novelist John le Carré (Apple TV+). Sheperdess  A celebration of rural women where filmmakers visit and interview different women about their lives in rural settings (Sky Open from tomorrow).   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/20/20234 minutes, 19 seconds
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Elliot Smith: ZB rugby commentator on All Blacks' "perfect result" against Argentina

The All Blacks have completed a resounding 44-6 victory over Argentina, propelling themselves into the final to face either England or South Africa.Will Jordan had a standout game scoring three tries with both Jordie Barrett and Shannon Frizell bagging two tries each.  Newstalk ZB's rugby commentator Elliot Smith spoke to Jack Tame about the result and what happens next.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/20/20233 minutes, 16 seconds
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Drax Project's Shaan Singh and Matt Beachen, as well as Charley on their new song 'Disrespect'

Iconic Kiwi band Drax Project has been collaborating with the upcoming Australian pop artist Charley. They've released their new single 'Disrespect,' and Jack Tame has managed to get three of the artists in one interview to discuss the song. Shaan Singh and Matt Beachen from Drax Project and Charley hopped in a call to chat about how it all came together. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/14/202311 minutes, 57 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Rick Astley - Are We There Yet?

‘Are We There Yet?’ is the new, long awaited album from Rick Astley via BMG. His ninth studio album overall, it’s the third in a row of which Astley has written, recorded, played and produced himself at his home studio in London. Featuring the single ‘Dippin My Feet’, an invigorating twist on his signature style, ‘Are We There Yet?’ is the sound of Rick reflecting and building upon the experiences he’s gone through since the release of 2018’s ‘Beautiful Life’. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/14/20234 minutes, 18 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Armor of Light and Rambling Man: My Life on the Road

The Armour of Light - Ken Follett  The long-awaited sequel to A Column of Fire, The Armor of Light, heralds a new dawn for Kingsbridge, England, where progress clashes with tradition, class struggles push into every part of society, and war in Europe engulfs the entire continent and beyond.  The Spinning Jenny was invented in 1770, and with that, a new era of manufacturing and industry changed lives everywhere within a generation. A world filled with unrest wrestles for control over this new world order: A mother’s husband is killed in a work accident due to negligence; a young woman fights to fund her school for impoverished children; a well-intentioned young man unexpectedly inherits a failing business; one man ruthlessly protects his wealth no matter the cost, all the while war cries are heard from France, as Napoleon sets forth a violent master plan to become emperor of the world. As institutions are challenged and toppled in unprecedented fashion, ripples of change ricochet through our characters’ lives as they are left to reckon with the future and a world they must rebuild from the ashes of war.    Rambling Man: My Life on the Road - Billy Connolly   Being a Rambling Man was what I always wanted to be, to live the way I damn well pleased. I've met the weirdest and most wonderful people who walk the Earth, seen the most bizarre and the most fantastic sights - and I've rarely come across something I couldn't get a laugh at. I don't think I've ever had a bad trip. Well, apart from in the 1970s, but that's a whole other story . . .  In his joyful new book, Billy explores this philosophy and how it has shaped him, and he shares hilarious new stories from his lifetime on the road. From riding his trike down America's famous Route 66, building an igloo on an iceberg in the Arctic, playing elephant polo (badly) in Nepal and crashing his motorbike (more than once), to eating witchetty grubs in Australia, being serenaded by a penguin in New Zealand, and swapping secrets in a traditional Sweat Lodge ritual in Canada, Rambling Man is a truly global adventure with the greatest possible travel companion.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/14/20234 minutes, 14 seconds
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Kate Hall: Sustainable bathroom alternatives

What does a sustainable bathroom look like? Kate 'Ethically Kate' Hall has a list of alternatives for common bathroom necessities. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/14/20238 minutes, 53 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Striking out on the Nydia Track

"500 year old giant rimu, tentacular rata vines and red beech anchor the forest, with a supporting cast of lush ferns and ponga. Once over the saddle, it's a steady descent through bush and farmland to reach Nydia Bay, with sporadic glimpses as far as Kenepuru Inlet, whose peninsulas fold into the distance. Indignant-looking cows grazing in paddocks cast me a suspicious glare, as if to say “What an earth are you doing in my paddock?” Finally, the gently lapping waters of the lake soundtracked my the final stretch of the first day’s walk." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/14/20239 minutes, 12 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: My Nemesis - Passionfruit

You started it, Jack! Last week you mentioned that dreaded word: Passionfruit vine.  It’s not that I don’t like passionfruit – I love them.  But after many, many years of trying to grow these vines I have to confess to gangrene thumbs.  Here are some of the conditions and growing tips that I have collected over the past 45 years in Aotearoa – stuff from growers and producers of the vines, so… Grab what you like of these notes:  They need exceptional drainage and full sun.  I have always strived to provide these conditions.  Open, free-draining soils: If you have clay or such heavy soils with tiny particles that clog-up the watering, the ground needs to be raised or drainage improved.  To improve drainage, a large hole can be dug out and drainage gravel and pumice incorporated with good topsoil before back-filling the hole.  Of course, if you simply dig a large hole with the best gravel you are literally constructing an enormous sink, with the plug-hole still in it. So it pays to literally create some kind of pipe or system that takes the excess water away.  If this is all too much work you can plant the passionfruit vine in a large pot with good quality Tub-Mix (Growing mix) and drainage holes in the bottom. Make sure the pot will be slightly raised above the ground so the water can actually leave the bottom of the pot through the holes.  Do not forget to feed and water the plant; plants in large pots can dry out quite quickly.  Instead of a large pot with a good growing mix, you can always build a “raised garden bed”, say 40 cm higher than your current soil level. Once again: make sure the water can drain away effortlessly  Give the passionfruit roots ample space to establish in the raised garden bed or in the large pot. Do not over-water these roots but – on the other hand – don’t let them dry out too much.  In terms of “full sun”: I think that it might be an idea to face the plant a bit more “North-East”, rather than “North-West” (The mid-day to afternoon sun tends to be quite a bit hotter than the morning sun!)  Passionfruit is not keen on harsh winters – it hates the cold winds and frosts as these will stress the plant; couple that with wet, rainy winters days and you can see how these factors will knock the plant around. It also shows you how important good drainage is in winter!  Passionfruit are rapid growers and consequently benefit from 2 to 3 applications of a general slow release fertiliser during the spring and summer growing period. Nitrogen makes lots of new leaves.  If you have a young plant don’t prune them fiercely as they set fruit on the new growth – keep your new growth to actually get that fruit. Once the vine is well-established, you can prune it a bit more heavily, but remember to keep plenty new growth on that vine – get rid of diseased parts of the plant.  Best time to prune is right now, when warmth comes back to your garden and frosts are no longer an issue.  I hear from experts that passionfruit doesn’t last much longer than 5 or 6 years, so plant the next generation before your plant kicks the bucket…  I planted mine every year and got totally sick of it. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/14/20234 minutes, 48 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Adobe's AI Experiments and the violence in Gaza spreading online

The violence in Israel & Gaza has spread online  The EU Commissioner has written to TikTok to request they "urgently step up" efforts to combat misinformation and respond "within the next 24 hours" how it is following European law.   TikTok has an especially young audience - children and teens - and therefore has an even stronger obligation to remove violent content and terrorist propaganda.   Meta and X have also been asked to comply with the EU Digital Services Act (DSA) law. This requires them to proactively remove illegal content and show they've taken measures to do so.   Meta says they immediately spun up a situation room with Hand Arabic speakers to assist with content moderation. "Our teams are working around the clock to keep our platforms safe, take action on content that violates our policies or local law, and coordinate with third-party fact checkers in the region to limit the spread of misinformation."   X says they've removed content and accounts - but says they haven't been informed of any illegal content they need to remove.    Adobe has showcased its AI experiments  Incredible advances --   They showed how they could remove people from the background of video.   They showed generative fill changing a man's shirt and giving him a tie.  They showed removing reflections from photos.   They also showed videos of being able to translate audio from one language into dozens, while keeping the sound of the original speaker's voice - effectively showing what it would be like if you were speaking another language.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/13/20236 minutes, 42 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Paul Jaboulet 2022 Viognier, France

Wine: Paul Jaboulet 2022 Viognier, France $23.73  Why I chose it:  - It‘s a delicious dry white wine at an attractive price  - If you like NZ Viognier you will love this wine  - Viognier is an aromatic grape variety which means it often has a floral character (in this case “wildflowers”)  - Often blended with Syrah to make it softer and more perfumed.  What does it taste like?  - Ripe, attractive viognier with classic apricot and wildflower flavours supported by subtle citrus characters. Appealing wine that is dry without being austere and has weight without being at all clumsy. Excellent value at this price.  Why it’s a bargain:  - Average price for Viognier in this country is $31 and this is well above average quality  Where can you buy it?  - Vino Fino, Christchurch $22.99  - Vine Online, Auckland $24.99  - Wine Central, Auckland $24.00  Imported by Dhall and Nash  Food match?  - Roast chicken  Will it keep?  - Drink it up    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/13/20233 minutes, 34 seconds
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Tara Ward: Malpractice, Lessons in Chemistry, Special Ops: Lioness

Malpractice: A British medical thriller about a doctor who finds herself embroiled in a medical scandal (TVNZ+ and TVNZ1 from Sunday).   Lessons in Chemistry: Brie Larson stars in this 1950s drama about a woman who dreams of being a scientist but is forced to take a job as the host of a TV cooking show - and sets out to teach a nation of overlooked housewives a lot more than recipes (Apple TV+).   Special Ops: Lioness: This American action thriller follows a young Marine recruited to join the Lioness Engagement Team to help bring down a terrorist organisation from within (Prime Video).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/13/20236 minutes, 27 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Rhubarb, orange, and white chocolate sundaes

The mix of roasted rhubarb, juicy orange and vanilla-scented cream tumbled together with shards of crisp, nutty filo pastry and white chocolate sauce is simply sensational!  Serves 4-6    Ingredients:  1 sheet filo  2 teaspoons butter, melted  2 cups rhubarb, chopped into 4 cm lengths  1 tablespoon caster sugar  70g white chocolate, chopped roughly  2/3 cup cream  1 teaspoon vanilla extract  2 tbsp thick Greek yoghurt, unsweetened  2 oranges, segmented    Method:  Preheat oven to 180 C. Line two baking trays with baking paper. Brush filo sheet with melted butter and sandwich between the lined trays. Bake for 5-10 minutes or until very golden brown. Remove and cool. Break into shards. Toss rhubarb in sugar and, using the same lined tray(s), roast the rhubarb for 15 minutes until softened. Set aside to cool. In a small pot heat a third of the cream to near boiling. Throw in chopped chocolate, cover with a tea towels and leave for 5 minutes before whisking to a smooth sauce. Cool. Whip remaining cream with vanilla to a soft whip consistency. To assemble: Choose small glasses, jars or bowl and layer up rhubarb, the cream mix, shards of filo, orange segments and topping it all off with the white chocolate ganache. Be prepared to be delighted! Nici’s note: Plums (fresh or tinned) in place of the rhubarb are just as good in this recipe so feel free to mix it up! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/13/20236 minutes, 2 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Anatomy of a Fall and In The Land of Saints and Sinners

Anatomy of a Fall   A woman is suspected of her husband's murder, and their blind son faces a moral dilemma as the sole witness.    In The Land of Saints and Sinners  Hoping to leave his dark past behind him, former assassin Finbar Murphy leads a quiet life in a coastal Irish town, far from the political violence that grips the rest of the country. When menacing terrorists show up, Finbar soon discovers that one of them has been abusing a local girl.   Drawn into an increasingly vicious game of cat and mouse, he must choose between exposing his secret identity and defending his friends and neighbors.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/13/20234 minutes, 31 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Stephen Sanchez - Angel Face

Angel Face is Stephen Sanchez’s debut album, filled with a collection of ‘50s and ‘60s style songs that chronicles the life of the fictional Troubadour Sanchez.   It focuses on the love story between the Troubadour Sanchez and Evangeline, who is currently in a love affair with a mobster.  The album brings a fresh take to old fashion blues, ballads, and rock ‘n’ roll.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/7/20236 minutes, 4 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Uproar and The Show Me Shorts Film Festival

Uproar  A 17-year-old is forced to clamber off the fence he has actively sat on all his life to stand up for himself, his whānau, and his future.    The Show Me Shorts Film Festival  Show Me Shorts is Aotearoa New Zealand's leading international short film festival. Our mission is to connect New Zealand audiences with short films and share New Zealand short films with the world.   Screenings in 35 cinemas across New Zealand during 6-29 October 2023.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/7/20236 minutes, 17 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Chasing the stars in Hollywood

"If you’re planning a fling with the entertainment capital of the world, a trip to Tinsel Town tingles with a distinct blend of escapist reality. Beyond the time-honoured staples of the studio tours like Universal and Warner Brothers, a frolic through the Dolby Theatre, Grauman’s Chinese Theatre and down the Hollywood Walk of Fame, I checked a few other ways you can chase the stars on a visit to Hollywood." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/7/20239 minutes, 30 seconds
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Tara Ward: Beckham, Lupin, and The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar

Beckham Featuring never-before-seen footage, this Netflix docuseries follows David Beckham’s rise from humble beginnings to global football stardom (Netflix).    Lupin A new season of the delightful thriller based on the classic French story about Arsène Lupin, the world-famous gentleman thief and master of disguise (Netflix).    The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar Benedict Cumberbatch stars in this Wes Anderson adaption of the Roald Dahl story about a wealthy man who wants to master a new skill in order to cheat at gambling games (Netflix).   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/7/20234 minutes, 36 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Code Red and The Running Grave

Code Red – Vince Flynn  Mitch Rapp hates owing anyone a favor—especially when it’s the world’s most powerful crime lord. But when Damian Losa calls, Mitch is honor-bound to answer.  The Syrian government appears to have created a highly addictive new narcotic that it plans to distribute throughout Europe. It’s a major threat to Losa’s business and he’s determined to send someone to keep him on top by any means necessary. With far more than Damian Losa’s interests at stake, Rapp devises a desperate plan that forces him and his team onto a battlefield where the United States is virtually powerless and allegiances shift almost hourly. Further, if Russia uncovers their plot, it will set off a confrontation between the two countries that could change the course of human history.    The Running Grave – Robert Galbraith   Private Detective Cormoran Strike is contacted by a worried father whose son, Will, has gone to join a religious cult in the depths of the Norfolk countryside.  The Universal Humanitarian Church is, on the surface, a peaceable organization that campaigns for a better world. Yet Strike discovers that beneath the surface there are deeply sinister undertones, and unexplained deaths. In order to try to rescue Will, Strike's business partner, Robin Ellacott, decides to infiltrate the cult, and she travels to Norfolk to live incognito among its members. But in doing so, she is unprepared for the dangers that await her there or for the toll it will take on her. . .    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/7/20235 minutes, 21 seconds
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Dr Dougal Sutherland: Quiet quitting

A recent Gallup poll shows that a majority of workers in NZ are not engaged or are “quiet quitting”.  4/10 say they are experiencing high levels of stress, 4/10 looking for new job, with managers playing a key role in determining whether people thrive or disengage at work.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/6/20237 minutes, 11 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Flowers and Pollinators and Water-cleaners and parasitoids

I’ve recently been reading a few books about Bees and Bumblebees; in the past I worked on mosquitoes and beneficial pest controllers, got stung by a Japanese hornet (no, not the “giant murder hornet”, but it was big and it did hurt!) and slowly come to the conclusion that entomology should have been my hobby a lot earlier in life.  There are so many stories!  We know Honeybees and Bumblebees as “pollinators” of flowers, especially our food crops. In this insect group (Hymenoptera) the Honeybees and the four species of Bumbles are all exotic creatures imported as slave labour. Without them our diet would look a lot poorer.  As gardeners we know too well that these pollinators are welcome visitors to our garden: my tomatoes would never fruit without those bumblebees; (the honeybees never get into my tunnel house – tomato is not their gig!).  Every pollinator has its own range of flowers to work on – the reward, of course, is to extract some nectar to feed babies and queens.  This teaches us to create a heap of “wildflowers” under the apples, pears, plums and peaches, near raspberries and strawberries. The diversity of these wildflowers attracts a wide range of pollinators.  It is exactly what you’d need as a TEACHER if you want to do a unit on bumble bees, or a topic for “mini-beasts” in the curriculum; identify what visits which flower.  But these wildflowers also attract other nectar hunters: mosquitoes! Males only – they are the pollinators! They also fertilise the females who then lay eggs on the edge of ponds and water features.  Woah! Hang on for a moment!! I know what you’re saying…  The mosquito wrigglers grow up in the pond/water feature, where they consume the bacterial soup that makes those water habitats so “dirty looking”; Mozzie larvae clean your water!  Water cleaning mosquito wrigglers. Photo / Supplied  Last but not least: the variety of flowers you plant in your garden also attract a variety of pollinating flies, beetles and parasitic wasps. Those flies and beetles give birth to babies (larvae) that are often predators of aphids, mealybugs and scale insects, as well as caterpillars and other plant “pests”.  The Parasitic wasps (pareasitoids) will lay eggs inside their host; these eggs hatch into wasp larvae that will devour your garden “pests” from the inside-out, controlling a heap of damaging insects that give your plants a hard time.  Parasitoid on Fennel. Photo / Supplied.  For every job an insect does certain plant species receive a benefit; everything is connected to everything else…  This why my garden has many different species of flowering plants, spread willy-nilly under fruit trees and near vegetables.  I also make sure there are bumble bee nest boxes near my tomatoes and small bamboo “bug motels” in which some tiny native, parasitic wasps create their home …  The more bio-diversity, the fewer troubles in your quarter acre paradise! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/6/20237 minutes, 37 seconds
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Hannah McQueen: How to cope with the costs from increased mortgage interest rates

Half of mortgages are due to be refixed over the coming 12 months and many of those will be rolling onto much higher interest rates than where they are right now.  While predictions last year were that interest rates would start easing towards the end of this year, it now looks like it won’t happen until mid-next year, if not later. And while the OCR hasn’t shifted since May, banks have continued increasing their interest rates, unnecessarily adding to the pressure.  Yet despite all this —and the extensive media coverage that mortgage interest rates and the cost of living has been getting— people are still not prepared for what they’ll do when their mortgages come up for refixing, and how they’ll cope with this increase in cost.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/6/20235 minutes, 33 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Microsoft teams has been rebuilt, unfortunate time for people named Siri

Her name was Siri, she had to change it   It was annoying enough when colleagues or friends couldn't greet her with "Hey Siri" without setting off their phone's assistant, but the latest changes to iOS has made it even worse. Now you don't need to say the "Hey", which has forced 26-year-old Siri Price to change her name. She now goes by "Siz". She says she loved the name Siri because it means “beautiful woman who leads you to victory”. For Apple, it means “Speech Interpretation and Recognition Interface”.    Microsoft Teams is going to be significantly faster  It's been completely rebuilt and is said to be 2x faster than the current version and uses half the memory - which is great news because Teams really dragged down your computer's performance. "Classic Teams" will stick around for a bit, but all new features will be added only to the new Teams moving forward. For those who use new Apple desktops and laptops - it'll also work natively with Apple Silicon. It'll be a slow rollout until December when it'll become the default in Enterprise plans.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/6/20234 minutes, 1 second
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Nici Wickes: Magical Cheesy Toast in Celebration of NZ Cheese month

This snack is a combo of a cheesy cob loaf (you know that thing where you hollow out a cobb loaf and make a fondue in the middle to dip bread into?!) and a Welsh rarebit, that magical cheese toast that’s made with a sauce loaded with cheddar, Worcestershire, mustard and ale. My version is super fast and easy to make and it’s just the thing for a weekend lunch or snack.  Makes 4 toasts    Ingredients  ½ medium-sized onion, diced finely  2 rashers bacon, diced roughly  1 tablespoon butter or oil  4 slices sourdough, lightly toasted (or other quality bread)  4 big tablespoons creme fraiche, sour cream or cream cheese  100g grated good quality cheddar cheese + extra  1 teaspoon balsamic vinegar  Decent grind black pepper  Small handful parsley, chopped fine    Method  Heat oven to 180 C.  Fry the onion and bacon in the butter/oil until onion is softened and bacon has given up its fat.  In a small bowl mix creme fraiche, cheddar, balsamic, pepper and parsley until combined. Mix in onion and bacon. Spoon the mixture onto each toast slice, spreading to the edges. Place on a tray, sprinkle over some extra cheese and bake for 15 minutes until the topping is golden.  Eat while hot!    Make it your own:  Use tinned tuna or salmon in place of bacon and add some capers Stir in a teaspoon of wholegrain mustard instead of balsamic Leave out the bacon and stir in chopped spinach and chives for a vegetarian option Use parmesan for the cheese and basil in place of parsley See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/6/20235 minutes, 19 seconds
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Julian Dennison and James Rolleston: Kiwi actors on their new film 'Uproar'

Julian Dennison and James Rolleston are familiar faces to fans of kiwi films.  The pair started acting young, starring in Taika Waititi’s Hunt for the Wilderpeople and Boy, respectively.   The award-winning actors returned to New Zealand screens October 5th with the highly anticipated local feature film Uproar, a story about connection and finding your place in the world, set during the Springbok protests of 1981.  Dennison plays the protagonist of the film, Josh Waaka, while Rolleston plays his older brother Jamie.  “Jamie and Josh are both Māori and go to a very Pākehā school,” Dennison told Newstalk ZB’s Jack Tame.   “So, it’s about Josh finding his Māoridom, also finding himself.”  While the outdated fashion might be the first difference viewers notice, it’s not the only part of the film that kiwis might find unfamiliar.  “It was hectic,” Rolleston told Tame. “The things that were happening back then, around the Springbok tour.”  “Before the film, I just knew that there were some marches that didn’t go too well, that kind of thing. I wasn’t too clued up about it.”  “They don’t really teach you at school,” Dennison agreed.  In terms of the characters themselves, Dennison found himself acting from experience.  “I felt like I could relate to him a bit,” he told Tame. “Going to an all-boys school that was predominantly European.”  “That thing of being too brown for school, but also being too white for some cliques outside of school.”  The film is a journey of self-discovery for Josh, not only finding himself beyond where he fits in school, but also within his family and culture.  Both actors are hoping that this film will be an inspiration for people to find those cultural connections, to connect with their Māoridom in a way they hadn’t previously.  “I hope people walk out of there going, “Yeah I’m going to start the journey.””  “You see the Māori ways come up in the film,” Rolleston said. “Which is good for people to see, especially our young people.”   “I feel like this film is going to bring up some good conversations,” Dennison told Tame.   “I think this movie will, you know, cultivate people to talk about this stuff.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/6/202312 minutes, 56 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Why do political parties have colours?

Ignoring all the politics and policies, there is one key thing that sets the political parties apart: their colour.  Throughout the election campaign politicians have been seen wearing their colours like a uniform, on their ties, their blazers, even their dresses. Kevin Milne wants to know why and how this came to be. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/6/20237 minutes, 8 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Ed Sheeran - Autumn Variations

Ed Sheeran has dropped another album.  Autumn Variations’ fourteen tracks are based around the life situations of Sheeran’s friends, written from their point of view.   The title is a reference to Edward Elgar’s Enigma Variations, fourteen short musical portraits of the composer’s friends and acquaintances.   The album was released on September 29th, 2023, and had been previewed in concerts and live performances.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/30/20236 minutes, 44 seconds
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Kate Hall: Op-shopping v Ethical Fashion

Sustainability expert Kate Hall joined Jack Tame to chat about op-shopping versus sustainable fasion. Which is better? How does affordability play into it, and what are some of the concerns? LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/30/20239 minutes, 21 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Planting for Lepidoptera

This program is increasingly becoming a Community Information Resource that assists our native plants and critters – no apologies here!  We read in the news that the DOC is translocating rare/endangered birds and lizards to keep them safe and increase their populations. Gardeners can do exactly the same thing for our butterflies and moths – we even have a New Zealand Moths and Butterfly Trust that does exactly the same thing, so why not join them and enrich your quarter acre Paradise?  Monarchs are mating and looking for places to lay their eggs. We all know their food plants:  Swan plants (bit boring in my opinion!) can be sown right now – Kings Seeds and other seed merchants have these popular plants in stock; Moths and Butterfly trust also stocks a heap of different seeds for Monarchs. Germination is good at warmer temps, and 21 degrees is recommended.  Fabulous Asclepias species with colourful flowers are also suitable host plants – more my gig!  Prettier relatives of the swan plant. Photo / Supplied  Whatever you sow: aim for heaps of plants and keep some of them in large pots as “spares” for when famine breaks out.  Admiral Butterflies love nettles to lay their eggs on; if you have a safe space you can try the native Ongaonga stinging nettle. Just be careful, they are ferocious (Hence their name Urtica ferox).  Red admirals are keen on that tree nettle (ferox) but will also feed on perennial nettle (dioica).  Yellow admirals tend to go for the smaller nettle species as food for the caterpillars.  I have both admirals in abundance here in the Halswell Quarry. The reds seem to overwinter here too.  Red admiral (left) – Yellow admiral (right). Photo / Supplied  Just be aware that red admirals may not be as common in the Auckland region, so extra food plants might make them be a little more “regularly observed”.  They are plentiful in the south though, the yellow admirals are pretty common right around the motu.  For our Blue Butterflies (commonly known as “Blues”), sow some Trifolium, Medicago or Lotus, as well as lucern, trefoil and clover species. Note how these plants are members of the Fabaceae (they are Legumes!).  Copper butterflies and boulder coppers (in the Genus Lycaena) are absolutely beautiful, mostly orange-coloured insects that fly quite erratically through the landscape, often not too far from their preferred host plant on which the caterpillars feed. By planting the appropriate species of Muehlenbeckia (complexa or australis, not astonii) you'll find the butterflies often “in attendance”.  The Bolder coppers are often characterised by a deep purple-blue reflection on the wing scales. Photo / Supplied Their food plant is Muehlenbeckia axellaris (creeping pohuehue).  More butterfly details can be found of the Moths and Butterflies Trust website: https://nzbutterfly.info/  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/29/20235 minutes, 22 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: Urinary Tract Infections

What is a urinary tract infection and who gets them?     -Referred to as a bladder infection or cystitis  -Bacteria gets up into bladder causing the infection  -Sometimes if untreated can go up into the kidneys – more serious infection is called pyelonephritis  -More common in women – most women will get one at some point  -Less common in men – often related to an enlarged prostate as get older     How do you recognise them?  -Burning passing urine  -Increased frequency of urination   -Sudden urgency to pass urine  -Abdominal pain  -Smelly or cloudy urine    -Children can also get urine infections: temperatures, or suddenly bed wetting at night  -Elderly: can be very difficult to diagnose.  May present with confusion or a fall.    -Often the GP or nurse will do urine test or send-off sample to the Lab.     How do we treat them?  -Antibiotics from doctor or nurse  -If its straightforward your pharmacist may be able to give you antibiotics  -Drink plenty of fluids  -You need to see a doctor if you haven’t improved in three days, develop shakes, have a spiking temperature, or increasing pain     Can you Prevent them?  -Stay well hydrated, cranberry juice may help prevent them  -Post-sex voiding urine sometimes advised  -Avoid wearing tight-fitting underwear  -Make sure to wipe after bowel movements, going front to back  -Treating constipation if present, as it puts pressure on the bladder  -They can be recurrent and may need ‘preventive antibiotics.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/29/20235 minutes, 7 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Meta's celebrity themed AIs and Taylor Swift breaking Google

Taylor Swift broke Google Search with cryptic clues about her new album  She's re-releasing 1989, so we're about to get Taylor's Version of Shake It off, Blank Space, Style, and Bad Blood, as well as some previously un-released songs which she's calling "from the vault".   Taylor teased in an Instagram post: "you can tell me when the search is over, if the high was worth the pain". The Swifties figured out that if you Googled Taylor Swift, there were 89 word puzzles giving clues to the names of the tracks. If the puzzles were solved 33 million times (Taylor is 33), then they'd be revealed.   Google was so overwhelmed they had to shut the puzzles down for a bit, but they got them back and the job is done - Taylor has now revealed the track names. Phew!     Facebook's AI play is celebrity themed chatbots  When you use "Meta AI" on Facebook you'll get to interact with themed chatbots that look and sound like celebrities you'll know:  Snoop Dogg will be “Dungeon Master”, who will assist users to play adventure games.  Kylie Jenner will be “Billie”, a “big sis” referred to as a “ride-or-die companion”.  Naomi Osaka will be “Tamika” an anime-obsessed bot.  They want AI to be more about entertainment than fact. Meta says they've put lots of guardrails to steer away from sensitive topics.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/29/20233 minutes, 16 seconds
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Tara Ward: Changing Ends, The Messenger, Maryland

Changing Ends  This British sitcom tells the semi-autobiographical story of comedian Alan Carr’s life growing up in 1980s Northampton (TVNZ+).     The Messenger  An Australian drama about an accidental hero who receives a series of mysterious messages scribbled on a playing card that sets him on a strange journey (TVNZ+).     Maryland  The story of two estranged sisters who have to learn to love each other again after the death of their mother, who they discover was a leading a double life (ThreeNow).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/29/20234 minutes, 55 seconds
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Elliott Smith: Newstalk ZB rugby commentator on the All Blacks v Italy

Scoring at the rate of a try every six minutes, the All Blacks have wiped Italy off the map at the Rugby World Cup in Lyon.  They beat them 96-17, scoring seven tries in both the first and second half of the game.  Newstalk ZB’s voice of rugby, Elliott Smith, told Jack Tame that from the opening try to the full time whistle the All Blacks were relentless and ruthless.   He said it’s hard to judge Italy’s performance when the All Blacks strangled them out of the contest from minute one onwards.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/29/20235 minutes, 38 seconds
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Joel Shadbolt: L.A.B vocalist and guitarist on their Best Single award and new song Casanova

L.A.B vocalist and guitarist Joel Shadbolt has that certain something you can't quite put your finger on.  He’s a combination of pure talent and palpable drive and edge from his vehicle of choice – a Harley-Davidson.  Shadbolt fronted L.A.B as they skyrocketed through the charts with reggae-funk song ‘In the air’ staying in the top 10 for 73 weeks.   Shadbolt told Jack Tame that they’ve had a great week, the band walking away from the Panhead Rolling Stone Aotearoa Awards with Best Single.  He said they’re still trying to figure out how to divvy up the prize ring up between the members of the band.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/23/202312 minutes, 15 seconds
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Jack Tame: The mystery of the missing F-35

What’s the worst thing you’ve ever lost? Car keys? A wedding ring? Your dignity, perhaps?  I’m not really a loser. Well, I’m a loser. But I’m not a loser of things. I’m not a misplacer. At least not yet. Against the odds, I’ve managed to go several years with the same pair of wireless earbuds without any major incident. And but for a very occasional misplaced bikelock key, perhaps my worst-ever losing of something was when I foolishly parked a rental car in a Las Vegas casino’s underground carpark and spent about 2 hours walking the rows trying to listen for the bleep’bleep.  Certainly I’ve never lost anything that comes close to an F-35 jet.  This for me was the stand out story of the week. Not the election campaign or the U.N General Assembly. The mystery of the missing F-35.  It started on Tuesday, when a sheepish young man made a call to 9-11 asking if there had been any reports of a plane crash. He’d ejected, he said, while flying a F-35B Lightening II jet.  Why exactly did he eject? We don’t really know. But he was only a mile from Charleston International Airport – an airport I’ve flown in and out of before – and he ended up parachuting down into someone’s suburban backyard.  This is only a hunch, but if he was the one who hit the eject button, I’m guessing that pilot is feeling just a little sheepish. Because despite his ejection, the plane continued flying. Not just a few miles, but a full hundred kilometres.  The F-35B is the most advanced fighter jet in the U.S military arsenal. It can take off and land vertically. And apparently the jet’s capacity for stealth shouldn’t be underestimated. Because maybe the most extraordinary thing about this whole situation is that it took more than 24 hours to find and report the debris field from the crashed F-35.  To be clear – it didn’t go down on the battlefield. It didn’t go down in the ocean. A $170m fighter jet went down in a field in South Carolina and it took the mightiest military with the most advanced technology more than a day to find it. Forget transponders or radar or GPS, at one point the military was asking the public to call a special hotline with any information. 0800-missing-jet-who-am-I-speaking-with?  You see, this is why I never believe in deep state conspiracies. As seductive as it might be to imagine an all-powerful government pulling the wool over our eyes and manipulating the global order, people always underestimate the incompetence factor.  If America’s military can lose a state-of-the-art fighter jet in their own backyard, what hope do any of the rest of us have for our house keys? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/23/20234 minutes, 10 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Teddy Swims - I've Tried Everything but Therapy (Pt 1)

‘I’ve Tried Everything but Therapy (Part 1)’ is the debut studio album from American musician Teddy Swims.   The album is a blend of pop, soul, and R&B, featuring ten songs, two of them singles.   His music features various heavy topics, substance abuse, mental health, and in an interview with the NZ Herald Swims admitted that he “made a promise to [himself] that when [the album] does come out, [he] will put [himself] into therapy.”  The title of the album is tongue in cheek reference to that.   “I named it that to buy myself a couple more months of freedom, of being a traumatised little s***.”  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/23/20236 minutes, 25 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Frolicking in the spring brilliance of Buller

"The brilliance of Buller is ablaze in spring, as the sun-splashed countryside and lush pastures positively vibe with the vivid lime greens of new and verdant growth. Like a frisky spring lamb, I was itching to frolic far and wide, while exploring the wonderful West Coast. Point the car north from Westport and venture over the vast bush-clad heights of the twists and turns of Karamea Bluff, thickly robed in rimu and matai forests."   Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/23/202310 minutes, 25 seconds
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Dr Dougal Sutherland: Mental Health Awareness Week and the Five Ways to Wellbeing

Mental Health Awareness Week is upon us, and Dr Dougal Sutherland has five ways to wellbeing to offer, plus some potential work-related activities.    Take Notice – get together a bunch of people at work for daily or weekly mindfulness or yoga sessions – if you’re lucky, work might pay for them.  Give – give time, or money or resources —good example is volunteering: sports coach, church youth group, charity shop, meals on wheels— lots of evidence to show this not only helps the community but also is good for personal wellbeing.  Be Active – schedule in some activity every day —make it like any other meeting in your diary— just do it – might be something you could do with others at work as having a buddy helps with accountability and makes you stick at it.  Connect – really important in this age of hybrid working —virtual connection is good, but nothing beats face to face— is there a way to encourage everyone to be in the office on certain days and then when they are there making connecting with each other a top priority.  Keep Learning – keep going from te wiki o te reo Māori —or learn a new skill at work— do some professional development.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/23/20239 minutes, 36 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Rare Beauties

This is the time for planting. I’ve never been so busy as last week in the vegetable garden – even got to catch up with some serious pruning back-log.  Gardeners can be very useful creatures that support our native and endangered trees, shrubs and climbers. Some of our endemic taonga are literally on the brink of extinction and planting these botanical specimens in appropriate places is like putting your eggs in many baskets.  1) Metrosideros bartlettii is also known as the Bartlett’s Rata; it occurs naturally in the far north of our country. Being a “rata” means it is closely related to pohutukawa and other species of Rata. But this one is pretty unique: its bark is grey-white and feels (and sheds) like tissue paper. The flowers are not red, but white and look just like Pohutukawa or rata in shape  Rare?  Oh yes: just 13 adult trees are left in our country; of the five “genotypes”, just one has been propagated from. Some trees are on private land – not sure about their future safety.  Browsing animal pests (think possums, deer, goats etc) are the main cause of decline. And now we have myrtle rust as well!  Myrtle Rust on Metrosideros. Photo / Supplied  2) Tecomanthe speciosa – the Three Kings Vine – is an absolute stunner of a liane. It is readily available in garden centres and can grow in a wide range of climatological conditions.  As a climber it needs good support from other trees – it also needs lots of space, moisture in the soil, and it prefers to have the roots in the shade.  The plant starts to bloom after 2 or 3 years growing up (patience!) – but will reward you with large, creamy-white tubular flowers in clusters, attracting native birds. Tecomanthe can be grown from seeds or cuttings; it’s frost tender, so plant it in areas that are subtropical.  Rare?  It’s the rarest plant in the world: One vine was discovered on Great Island (Three Kings Group, NW of Cape Reinga) in 1945; Feral Goats (who else?) were the cause of this plant’s decline. That original plant is still there – but struggling, since the eradication of goats have caused huge forest growth, shading that particular specimen.  3) Ngutukākā (also known as Kākābeak). Clianthus maximus and Clianthus puniceus are two species that originally occurred in Northland and the Auckland Region, especially Hauraki Gulf.  Its history in European times involves Captain Cook’s 1769 Nature Nerds Joseph Banks and Daniel Solander, who “discovered” the plant at Uawa (Tolaga Bay) in Tairāwhiti. The brilliant red flowers were visible from the ship and common on hill sides.  That likely indicates that Maori were keen on Ngutukākā (trading them?) and planted them in many places.  Browsing animals cause havoc (deer, goats – who else? – stock, pigs, hares) but also introduced garden snails and native kowhai moth caterpillars.  On my last trip to Tairāwhiti it was wonderful to see ngutukākā everywhere, especially near schools.  Thank you Graeme Atkins!! This is the modern mahi following on from the Maori History.  As relatives of kowhai (pea Family) these plants can fix Nitrogen from the air and therefore can grow in nutrient-poor soils. They like to grow in light-spots (where trees have fallen over and caused an opening in the canopy) or slip faces.  Seed is viable for a long time. The red flowers are a beacon for tui and bellbird and other nectar feeders. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/23/20235 minutes, 12 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Robert Mondavi 2021 Private Selection Buttery Chardonnay

BOB’S BEST BUYS  Wine: Robert Mondavi 2021 Private Selection Buttery Chardonnay, California $21.99  Why I chose it:  - Popular style  - Buttery character is a by-product of malolactic fermentation  What does it taste like?  - Smooth, soft-textured chardonnay in a “big and buttery” style with spicy oak, vanilla. Mellow wine with a little heat on the finish. A crowd-pleasing style that lives up to its description. Not my kind of chardonnay.  Why it’s a bargain:  - Offers great value if you like the big and buttery style.  Where can you buy it?  - New World $21.99 (on special)   - Whisky and More $20.99 (six-pack $119)  Food match?  - Rich chicken dishes  Will it keep?  - Drink it up See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/22/20234 minutes, 23 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: AI is coming to Windows 11 next week

Goodbye Cortana, hello Co-Pilot.  Co-Pilot will live in the right-side panel of your PC and allow you to connect with data from across Office, the web, and other apps on your computer. There won't be separate apps anymore, just one Co-Pilot to call on. Microsoft wants it to become "your everyday AI companion".   They showed the AI being able to use data from your calendar and email to write text messages. Or, asking Co-Pilot to set your computer to dark mode, arrange your windows, it's going to make your settings panel obsolete.   Microsoft Paint is getting new features, such as layers, background removal, and AI integrations to help you create and manipulate images. Just type what you want the image to be, and the AI will generate it.  The free upgrade will be released on September 26.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/22/20236 minutes, 24 seconds
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Kevin Milne: A new flag before the next Olympics

The responses to a quick-fire question in the Leaders’ Debate has gotten Kevin Milne excited.  Turns out that both Chris Hipkins and Chris Luxon both voted ‘yes’ to change the New Zealand flag.  The last flag referendum was a long, expensive, pointless process, as an estimated $25 million dollars was spent only for the flag to remain the same.  However, Kevin has a plan and wants a new flag before the Olympics rolls around in July.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/22/20235 minutes, 16 seconds
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Tara Ward: Supermodels, Annika, Big Boys

Supermodels   Apple TV+’s new documentary series looks back on the careers of four supermodels - Naomi Campbell, Cindy Crawford, Linda Evangelista and Christy Turlington - and how they dominated the modelling world during the 1990s (Apple TV+).     Annika   The return of the Scottish series starring Nicola Walker as a detective working for Glasgow’s marine homicide unit, investigating the unexplained murders that wash up on shore (Neon).    Big Boys  A heartwarming British comedy about two young men who strike up an unlikely friendship when they’re thrown together at university (TVNZ+).    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/22/20234 minutes, 21 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: It Lives Inside and 2nd Chance

It Lives Inside   Desperate to fit in at school, Sam rejects her East Indian culture and family to be like everyone else. However, when a mythological demonic spirit latches onto her former best friend, she must come to terms with her heritage to defeat it.    2nd Chance  Richard Davis invents a concealable bulletproof vest, and shoots himself 196 times over the course of his career to prove its effectiveness.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/22/20237 minutes, 23 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Spring Green Tart

This crustless tart is such a lovely dish to make in spring when mint and parsley are going crazy in the garden. It’s a great way to get some greens into you!  Serves 6    Ingredients  50g butter  1 bunch spring onions, sliced thinly  500g frozen peas  150g ricotta cheese OR use cottage cheese  2 tbsps cream  Small handful each mint leaves and parsley leaves, roughly chopped  2 large eggs  100g parmesan, grated  2 tbsps gluten free flour  ½ tsp sea salt and decent grind of pepper  A little olive oil    Method  Preheat the oven until 190 C. Grease a 23cm springform cake tin and line with baking paper. Gently fry the onions in butter until soft then add the peas and gently cook for five minutes or until they’re thawed. Using a food processor, blend half the onion and pea mixture with ricotta/cottage cheese and cream until quite smooth. Add remaining ricotta/cottage cheese, herbs and eggs and briefly blend until mixed. Transfer to a bowl, add the rest of the onion/peas, half the parmesan cheese, flour and season with salt and pepper. Give it a good stir and pour into the prepared tin. Drizzle a little olive oil on the surface and scatter the remaining cheese on top. Bake for 30 to 45 minutes until the top is golden brown, the middle is set and edges are pulling away from the sides, an indication it is cooked. Rest for 10 minutes before removing from the tin and cut into wedges and serve with a salad.   Make it your own:  Replace half the peas with 2 cups shredded raw spinach. Replace peas with chopped asparagus when in season. Add chopped bacon or flaked smoked salmon to the mixture. Crumble over chorizo sausage before baking. Use basil or coriander in place of the parsley. Use sour cream or cream fraiche instead of cream for extra tanginess. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/22/20235 minutes, 22 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Corinne Bailey Rae - Black Rainbows

Black Rainbows is the fourth studio album by English singer and songwriter Corinne Bailey Rae, released on 15 September 2023 by Black Rainbows Music and Thirty Tigers.  The album is a multi-genre mix of the progressive R&B-neo soul sound of her previous works but it also contains rock, jazz, and electronic elements. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/16/20235 minutes, 13 seconds
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Nici Wickes: The Public Office Café (Ngātea, NZ) Cheese scones

A road trip is made by the food stops along the way I reckon and when I called into a café I’d long wanted to visit in Ngātea recently their scones blew me away! They were so darn delicious, moist (or as I like to say ‘damp’) and super cheesy. The owners, Sarah and Simon, kindly shared their recipe and top tips with me.  Makes 6-8 scones    Ingredients:  - 1 ¼ cup tasty cheese, grated  - loosely packed 1 ¼ cup mozzarella, grated  - loosely packed Extra cheese for topping  - 2 ½ cups self-raising flour  - Generous pinch of salt  - 2 cups yoghurt  Method:  Preheat oven to 180 C fan bake. Put all ingredients in a large bowl. Bring the mix together with a large spoon. Once you have a big ball of mix and lots of dry bits on the bottom of the bowl, use your hand to push all of the dry ingredients into a wet ball. Turn out onto a floured bench and shape the mix into a 20x10cm rectangle, about 5cm high (you don’t want the mix to be too flat).  Cut with a sharp knife or dough cutter into 6 large or 8 medium sized scones. Spread out on a baking paper lined tray and top generously with more grated cheese. (See note)  Bake in a preheated (oven must be preheated!) for 15 mins for medium sized and 17mins for large sized. Cool slightly then slice and spread with loads of butter! Notes:  Replace the yoghurt with a can of sprite or soda water (335mls) which gives them a lovely crust Use 2 ½ cups of pizza blend cheese You want some of the topping cheese to spread down the side of the scones on to the tray so you get the really crispy bits on the edges. These scones also freeze well and are excellent to add to lunchboxes. They are good cold but if reheating are best reheated by slicing in half and toasting in the oven for a few mins.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/16/20235 minutes, 20 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Mother-Daughter Murder Night and The Secret Hours

Mother-Daughter Murder Night – Nina Simon  Nothing brings a family together like a murder next door.  The whodunit sees an older, high-powered businesswoman convalescing in a sleepy coastal town with her adult daughter and granddaughter. When the granddaughter discovers a body while kayaking and becomes a suspect, the trio, all fiercely independent, must come together to solve the crime, uncovering all sorts of secrets in the town along the way.      The Secret Hours – Mick Herron  Monochrome is a busted flush - an inquiry into the misdeeds of the intelligence services, established by a vindictive prime minister but rendered toothless by a wily chief spook. For years it has ground away uselessly, interviewing witnesses with nothing to offer, producing a report with nothing to say, while the civil servants at its helm see their careers disappearing into a black hole.  And then the OTIS file falls into their hands...    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/16/20234 minutes, 7 seconds
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Mike Yardley: The sights of Skopje, North Macedonia

"Instantly appealing, Skopje brims with time-honoured charm and some quite recent epic transformations. There’s a distinct sense of quirkiness that adds to its overwhelming good looks. The pint-sized country dodged the ravages of war, after declaring its independence from Yugoslavia in 1991." Read Mike's full article here.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/16/202310 minutes, 7 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Are our doctors overqualified?

In light of the recent medical strikes, Kevin Milne has been thinking about doctors. Are our medical professionals overqualified? Do we make it too hard for many bright motivated students to get into med school?   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/16/20236 minutes, 9 seconds
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Hannah McQueen: The election's impact on financial planning

With tax changes and policy changes promised by differing parties – where should the election feature in your financial plan? Plenty of people have spent the past year holding off on financial decisions, on the expectation that a change in Government would have a material impact on their wealth creation plans – but is that a sound strategy, or a risky one?  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/15/20234 minutes, 48 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: The country's first VegElection

This is what I got in my inbox a week or so ago:  As New Zealand prepares to go to the polls, the reputation of the country’s favourite vegetables are at stake in the country’s very first VegElection.  Be a part of history and let your taste buds be heard. Voting closes 30 September 2023. Cast your vote on Yates' website. Everyone who votes goes into the draw to win one of three $500 National Gardening Week hampers containing Kiwis’ favourite vegie seeds and everything to kick start a bountiful summer garden.  Good old Yates!  Imagine asking people what their favourite vegetables are, especially since some of them are quite a pain to grow!  Example: rogue potatoes that pop up everywhere in your garden. The trouble is they are hosts for the Potato-tomato psyllid, a bummer of a creature (exotic!) that always manages to suck the living daylights out of my precious tomatoes!!  For the record: my favourite edibles are Tomatoes, Witlof, Cos Lettuce, asparagus, and Spring Onions.  Asparagus are my only crop that needs constant weeding – it doesn’t want too much “competition” at root level, so I always hack away at little weedlings on a regular basis. I mulch and cut the old asparagus ferns in autumn, add compost and fertile molecules (liquid fertiliser: Seafood Soup) and keep everything nice and clean and gorgeous.  Our reward: first crop of asparagus came out on the last day of August!  To my absolute delight two other crops appeared in the asparagus bed in winter:  Seedling plants of the red Cos lettuce, as well as spring onion seedlings.  Both are doing well in the asparagus bed, no doubt self-sown by the plants in the next door vegetable bed. They literally have all the space they want and grow fabulously with the regular seafood soup applications.  What about the “competition”? - you may well ask.  Asparagus have their roots at least 4 inches below ground level. Spring Onions and Cos lettuce don’t go much deeper than 2 inches – so no major fighting in that department.  Asparagus are thin and lanky and won’t cast a great deal of shade on the Cos and onion; and the little shade caused by lettuce is not going to bother asparagus (which initiates from well below the ground and is above the soil for just a few days!).  All I need to do is keep up the liquid fertiliser molecules so everybody has a feed.  Oh – and by the way: the red Cos is a hardier version of the green Cos lettuce when you get frosts!  Weedy vegetables? Oh yes – and I love them.  Especially since they seem to work together in an ecological fashion  Competition? Nah, collaboration!  Great candidates for the Vegelection … Just before National gardening week on 11 October  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/15/20234 minutes, 50 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Apple adopts USB-C and their SOS service now assists drivers

The iPhone 15 is the first to use USB-C   Huge! The European Union voted to approve legislation to require smartphones, tablets, digital cameras, portable speakers, and other small devices to support USB-C charging by 2024, and Apple has delivered globally. It's part of the EU's goal tackle e-waste, but also allows consumers more options for accessories.  An additional bonus: The USB-C connector allows for direct recording of video to an external drive, allowing the iPhone 15 Pro to be used just like a professional digital film camera on set Pro Res 4K up to 60 frames per second for the first time.    Apple's SOS service now assists drivers  Now extended to roadside assistance in the USA with the AAA - which is a huge help for those who travel to the parts of the US where your provider's cell signal is spotty. They now have you covered for flat tires, breakdowns, etc.  NZ saw its first use of the SOS service just last week to rescue hikers in Canterbury, after first becoming available in May. They found themselves cut off by rising waters near Arthur's Pass.  Interestingly - Apple hasn’t announced what it will cost, they've only said so far that it's free for the first two years.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/15/20233 minutes, 46 seconds
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Tara Ward: Dear Child, Blue Lights, The Morning Show

Dear Child:   A German psychological thriller about a mysterious woman’s escape from captivity and her links to an unsolved disappearance years earlier (Netflix).     Blue Lights:   This police drama set in Belfast follows new recruits Grace, Annie and Tommy as they learn the ropes win a high-pressure environment (ThreeNow).        The Morning Show:   Jennifer Aniston and Reese Witherspoon are back for a new season set in the cutthroat world of an American TV morning news show (AppleTV+).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/15/20233 minutes, 46 seconds
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Vitale Lafaele: First Samoan Police Commander and speaker on his book 'A Canoe Before the Wind'

Vitale Lafaele has lived a life of challenges, adversity, and bravery.   Arriving in Auckland from Samoa during the 1970s Dawn Raids era, his childhood was characterised by poverty, discrimination, and bullying.   Lafaele told Jack Tame that he would never take back the hard times, and that it taught him a lot about life.  He served for seven years in the New Zealand army and the Police for 30. Lafaele was the first Samoan to gain the command of an area in New Zealand and the first Polynesian to reach the top level in any of Auckland's three metropolitan police districts.   He’s told his extraordinary journey in his book ‘A Canoe Before the Wind’.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/15/202317 minutes, 19 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: A Haunting in Venice and Blue Beetle

A Haunting in Venice:  In post-World War II Venice, Poirot, now retired and living in his own exile, reluctantly attends a seance. But when one of the guests is murdered, it is up to the former detective to once again uncover the killer.    Blue Beetle:  Jaime Reyes suddenly finds himself in possession of an ancient relic of alien biotechnology called the Scarab. When the Scarab chooses Jaime to be its symbiotic host, he's bestowed with an incredible suit of armor that's capable of extraordinary and unpredictable powers, forever changing his destiny as he becomes the superhero Blue Beetle.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/15/20235 minutes, 52 seconds
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Jack Tame: A new high in reality TV casting

Maybe I’m just too close to it, but my sense is that a big slab of the New Zealand public is thoroughly sick of the election campaign already.  People are done. They’re fed up. They’re spent. And for the days of the week in between significant sporting fixtures, they’re dead keen for a different kind of contest that doesn’t seem so negative and bleak.   And this morning, I’ve got the answer. Before I share it though, you’ve got to understand, I’m not usually one to gush about reality TV. It’s not that I’m too cerebral or hoity-toity. It’s not that I spend my evenings annotating James Joyce and listening to Baroque compositions in a leather armchair, it’s certainly not that I don’t own a TV. It’s just that sometimes I find some of the shows a bit formulaic.  This one will be different. On Monday night, a new season of Celebrity Treasure Island begins, and as much as I’m excited about the comedians, and the middle-aged sporting stars, one celebrity contestant in particular marks what I think is an extraordinary new high in reality TV casting.  Competing in the Papura team and raising money for I Am Hope, is none other than Tame Iti.  Yes, that Tame Iti. Tame Iti of the discharging-a-shotgun-at-Waitangi Tame Iti. He of Te Urewera raids. Tame Iti, former member of the NZ Communist Party. Former champion wrestler. Tame Iti, actor, artist. Tame Iti, lifelong Māori rights activist.  This is what makes New Zealand great. Only in New Zealand could a person like Tame Iti, with his extraordinary life and history, be happily cast in a survival reality show alongside the former captain of the Warriors.  To be fair, Celebrity Treasure Island has consistently set the standard for entertaining New Zealand telly. I know there will be some people rolling their eyes but trust me - that’s only because you haven’t seen it. The thing that makes the show so genius is how it has become such a glorious reflection of our culture. The cast is always diverse. They’re always characters. And as much as they each want to compete to win, the programme as a whole never takes itself very seriously. It’s incredible self-aware and self-deprecating. It’s moving. It’s emotional.  If you do decide to do it, to get yourself in the mood, watch Tame Iti’s Ted talk on Youtube. It’s a simple speech called Mana: The Power in Knowing Who You Are. It’s the most moving and affecting Ted talk I’ve ever seen.  So that’s my recommendation for you this week. If you feel like the election campaign has turned into a daily exercise in talking down New Zealand, give Celebrity Treasure Island a crack.  Tame Iti, artist. Tame Iti, activist. Could he soon be Tame Iti, Celebrity Treasure Island champion? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/15/20234 minutes, 11 seconds
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Elliott Smith: Newstalk ZB's rugby commentator on the pool match between the All Blacks and Namibia

A big win for the All Blacks in the Rugby World Cup.  They've beaten Namibia 71 points to 3, while playing in Toulouse this morning.  Newstalk ZB’s Elliott Smith told Jack Tame that as far as the All Blacks are concerned it went virtually as good as it could’ve gone.  That is until the 72nd minute, when Ethan de Groot was red carded for a high hit on Namibian player Adriaan Booysen.  Smith said that de Groot was likely to get a six week ban that could be mitigated down to three, and potentially down to two if he’s eligible for the tackle school ruling.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/15/20236 minutes, 26 seconds
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Tara Ward: The Lovers, Bay of Fires, Alone

The Lovers  A British drama about the relationship between Janet, a supermarket worker who doesn’t care about anything, and Seamus, a self-centred, political broadcaster (Neon).     Bay of Fires  An Australian crime dramedy about a successful CEO who is forced to escape to Tasmania with her children to avoid a murder plot (TVNZ+).     Alone  The most intense and genuine reality adventure series on TV is back, with new seasons on both TVNZ+ and Netflix. Ten individuals try to survive alone in the wilderness for as long as they possibly can, with limited access to survival equipment.     LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/9/20235 minutes, 57 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Olivia Rodrigo - Guts

Guts is the second studio album by American singer-songwriter Olivia Rodrigo, released on September 8, 2023, by Geffen Records. Two singles preceded the album's release: the lead single, "Vampire", was released on June 30, 2023. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/9/20235 minutes, 44 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Eye-catching artwork in Rotterdam

"But like an edgy antidote to the chocolate-box gorgeousness of gabled Amsterdam, the Netherlands’ second-biggest city, Rotterdam is a contemporary, design-focused urban masterclass that will soon seduce you." Check out Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/9/20237 minutes, 57 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Normal Rules Don't Apply and Adventures with Emille

Normal Rules Don’t Apply - Kate Atkinson   A dazzling collection of eleven interconnected stories from the bestselling, award-winning author of Shrines of Gaiety and Life After Life which offer the gimlet eye and delightful social critique that have made Atkinson one of the most lauded writers of our time. In this brilliant volume, nothing is quite as it seems.    Adventures with Emille - Victoria Bruce   A mother and daughter's wild journey to rediscover the wonder and restorative power of nature. “I'm here because I want to test the very limits of my own resilience and reassure myself that no matter what's happened to me, I'm not ready to lie down and die.”    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/9/20234 minutes, 40 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Predator Control

I clearly remember Maggie Barry, John Key and Nick Smith, Steven Joyce and Nathan Guy launching Predator-Free NZ in July 2016, 7 years ago!  This was a big gig; and it’s still going.  If you think about it, it’s a huge task and incredibly collaborative, with scientists, DOC and heaps of New Zealand Volunteer trappers. Make no mistake, the army of ordinary kiwis and backyard engineers are really contributing to the reduction of exotic pests in our ecosystems.  I can see the improvements in our biodiversity simply by looking from my window on the Port Hills in Christchurch!  The most important predators we are targeting are mice, rats, stoats, ferrets, weasels, Possums, hedgehogs and – oh yes – feral cats! Add domestic dogs kept off lead in kiwi habitat and you’ve got the line-up we’re aiming for.  I realise this is a little bit more than the original target line-up, but I have my own reasons for including mice, hedgehogs and uncontrolled dogs.  Mice: they’re everywhere and actually (kind-of) do the ecological job of a tree weta.  Mice are predominantly seed and nuts eaters. Walnuts, hazelnuts, etc. Fatty materials allows them to successfully overwinter in your garden.  They also eat a heap of insects and they are important food for rats! (Mice keep rat numbers up)  Simple mouse traps are a great idea around the house – cheap traps, baited with peanut butter or Nutella or hazelnut spread. Shelled walnuts work well too. Contrary to popular belief they don’t really go for cheese! I have them all around my house and even in the ceiling. I set my traps near the wall – that’s where they run to keep “out-of-sight”.  Rats do a lot of damage to birds and lizards. They raid nests and eggs. Most people are not aware that they also go for juicy, large insects (weta and other large, native critters).  Rat traps are a large version of mouse traps and they can be used on their own around the house, or inside a wooden tunnel, which gives the rat some cover and shelter as it explores the smell of the delicious bait in the trap.  Great baits are peanut butter and Nutella, as well as fish and moldy cheese.  One thing that rats are keen on is a trajectory that leaves them unnoticed. Traps near a wall or along a fence line seem to be working best. Make sure you don’t “contaminate” the lure with your bare hands – good idea to wear gloves so the rat doesn’t… well… smell a rat (I mean a human!!).  Stoats are a lot trickier again – they really will avoid open spaces. And they are clever.  You’ll also need a much heavier artillery (trap) than rats, as stoats are able to survive the smack of a rat trap; they also have the ability to escape from these traps by wriggling out.  A “DOC 200” is the heavy duty trap to use here. These metal traps are usually built inside a wooden box with attractive lures (salted rabbit meat or fresh rabbit cuts, eggs, and believe it or not: mayonnaise!). Eggs are often a visual attractant to these mustelids.  I have always been disappointed by the clever stoat’s ability to avoid my traps. I rarely trap these buggers.  Stoats can kill young kiwi (up to 800 gram body-weight) and they are ferocious hunters.  DOC 200 stoat trap. Photo / Supplied  Ferrets are another step up in the predator game – they’ll kill adult kiwi and large prey; you won’t find them in urban areas – they are creatures of the farm and forest edges. They also require some serious knowledge to trap, plus an even heavier gauge of trap.  Just so you know: I am a member of the stoat and ferret conservation society… In the Netherlands!  That’s where they are native and that’s where they are in ecological trouble due to the declining populations – how ironic!  I actually used to have a pet ferret in Holland – wonderful animals!  Possums are the last species I’ll mention in this segment. We have about 70 million of them in our forests and gardens.  They mainly feed on fruits, shoots, and leaves: 21,000 tonnes each night, which is about the same as the weight of the sky tower. They alter the composition of our native forests.  Possums get protein from eating birds (and nestlings).  Possums really need a Timms Trap, baited with apple, cinnamon and such delights. I often use flour and icing sugar mix and smear that on the tree near the trap – it really “lures them in”  Timms Trap. Photo / Supplied  The modern form of the old Timms Trap is the Flipping Timmy. This trap can be attached to a tree trunk, so the possum climbs up and ends up in the trap  Great websites exist on trapping the pests; have a look and join the team of New Zealanders keeping their gardens and local reserves and parks predator free. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/9/20234 minutes, 48 seconds
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Dougal Sutherland: What do we mean when we say “wellbeing”?

It’s important to know what you mean so you’re clear on what you’re aiming for.  Wellbeing could be defined in at least one of 3 ways:  Feeling good, happy, satisfied with life (sometimes called hedonic wellbeing)  Having meaning & purpose in life, leading a fulfilling life, accepting who you are (eudaimonic wellbeing)  Leading a life full of rich & varied experiences – doesn’t mean you will necessarily feel positive in the moment but leads to longer term broader view of life incorporating different perspectives    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/9/20236 minutes, 25 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Microsoft's AI, Google's Mountain View visiting centre, and heated BMW seats

Microsoft wants you to use its AI so badly, it'll cover you if you get sued  Copyright, and infringing it, is one of the biggest concerns many corporates have about diving into the AI game. There are so many open questions that they're not prepared just yet to take the risk. It's a huge departure from most 'terms and conditions' of services, where companies  do almost everything they can to distance themselves from the user. They don't want to be held liable! But Microsoft says if you use the filters and guardrails they've implemented, then they'll back you. That's quite the commitment, especially as Microsoft and OpenAI are already being sued for allegedly recreating licensed code without crediting the engineers.     If you're a Google fan, you'll soon be able to visit the Mountain View campus  Add this to your San Franciso travel itinerary. Google is turning 25, and to celebrate they're opening a visitor center on its famous campus in Silicon Valley. Like any good American tourist attraction there'll be a store, where you can explore and purchase Google products - like their phones, tablets and laptops. There'll also be a community space for events, a cafe and public art.      BMW is pulling the handbrake on its heated seat subscription  Ahead of its US launch, BMW has shelved plans to offer this service in your brand-new car on a subscription plan for $18 a month! It actually launched in some places, including NZ. It seems buyers weren't impressed - a BMW board member says: "People feel that they paid double – which was actually not true, but perception is reality, I always say. So that was the reason we stopped that.” Typically these types of features are available as 'upgrades' when you order your car for hundreds or sometimes thousands of additional dollars.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/9/20236 minutes, 13 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: Gallstones

What are gallstones?  Gall bladder: sits under the liver.  Stores and concentrates bile: fluid made in liver which helps digest fats.  This bile clumps together to form ‘stones’: From sand to small pebbles.     Who is at risk?  10% New Zealanders have gallstones, 80% have no symptoms.  Most at risk:   Women are twice as likely as men.  Ages 20 to 60.   If you’re carrying too much weight, have a family history of them, have diabetes, or experience rapid weight loss.     What are the symptoms?  80% have no symptoms.       Can be severe pain, ‘colic’ - often pain in the right upper abdomen, through to your back between shoulder blades.  Often after eating a large, fatty meal.  They can cause nausea, vomiting, and indigestion. May mimic a heart attack.  If it’s more severe it becomes infected or inflamed: fever, sweats, jaundice – turning yellow.     How do we diagnose?  History and exam, blood tests.  The doctor will order an ultrasound to look for stones, sometimes an MRI scan.     What do we do about them?  Avoid fatty foods, drink plenty of fluids, slow weight reduction - not rapid.  May need surgery ‘laparoscopic’ keyhole surgery to remove the gallbladder.  We don’t need the gallbladder – get by very well without it.  Often see ads for remedies such as lemon juice or large amounts of oil. These don’t work! No evidence at all!  If you have pain in abdomen – see your GP.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/9/20235 minutes, 17 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: My Big Fat Greek Wedding 3 and Operation Fortune: Ruse de Guerre

My Big Fat Greek Wedding 3   Members of the Portokalos family reunite in Greece for a hilarious and heart-warming trip full of love, twists and turns. The family gather in Athens after the passing of Gus, honouring his final wish that they visit his birthplace, reconnect with his old friends, and discover their family roots.    Operation Fortune: Ruse de Guerre   Elite spy Orson Fortune must track down and stop the sale of a deadly new weapons technology wielded by billionaire arms broker Greg Simmonds. Reluctantly teamed up with some of the world's best operatives, Fortune and his crew recruit Hollywood's biggest movie star, Danny Francesco, to help them on their globe-trotting mission to save the world.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/8/20236 minutes, 35 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Buttery mussel and sake buns

BBQ mussels are just the best! When they pop open their shells on the grill you can sneak all manner of interesting flavours into them – in this recipe it’s butter, soy sauce and a splash of sake that gives them that authentic Japanese BBQ house taste. Once cooked, pluck ‘em out of the shells, tuck them into a small soft bun, or pop them on a mound of rice, with shredded cabbage and plenty of sesame dressing and eat. I guarantee you’ll be in heaven!  Makes 8-12 sliders    Ingredients:  16-24 mussels in shells  1 lemon, halved  8-12 sliders or small soft white rolls  50g butter, softened  ¼ cup tamari soy sauce  ¼ cup sake  ½ cup store bought sesame salad dressing  2 cups finely shredded cabbage    Method:  Give mussels a quick scrub and remove hairy beards by gripping firmly and pulling towards the rounded tip of the shell.  Place mussels on grill plate of BBQ and cook until the shells begin to pop open. Place lemon cut side down to grill also.  As each mussel pops open, sneak a small knob of butter into each, as well as a teaspoon of tamari soy sauce. Allow to cook for a few minutes then douse in sake and toss on the grill. Remove from grill.  Liberally butter tops of each bun and grill each until butter is foamy and tops have turned golden – watch them as they like go from golden to burnt rather quickly!  TO SERVE: Set all ingredients out on a board for diners to build their own buns stuffed with mussels and cabbage and drizzled in sesame dressing and a squeeze of warm lemon juice.  MAKE IT YOUR OWN:  Add in a little slice of daikon radish into each bun for extra crunch Flag the buns and serve with little bowls of slaw and rice Use softened butter blended with lemongrass and lime leaves instead of sake for a Thai-inspired flavour Make it Spanish with olive oil in place of butter and a thin slice of chorizo tucked into each mussel No mussels? Make little foil parcels of using snapper instead, cooking them on the bbq for about 10-15 minutes See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/8/20235 minutes, 40 seconds
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Elliott Smith: Newstalk ZB Rugby Correspondent on the All Blacks loss to France

This morning watched the first Rugby World Cup match of 2023 play out, the All Blacks versing France at Stade de France.  France beat the All Blacks 27-13, ending their run of 31 straight wins in the pool stage.  Newstalk ZB’s rugby correspondent Elliott Smith told Jack Tame that it was a real testament to their game management.   He said that in the first half it seemed like the All Blacks had all the momentum, but the French never let them in in that second half.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/8/20234 minutes, 8 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Foley - Crowd Pleaser

Auckland based pop-duo Foley have finally released their highly anticipated album ‘Crowd Pleaser.’ They released their EP ‘Crowd Pleaser Pt. 1’ in February of 2023, with the full album releasing on August 25th, six months later.   The duo have over 100k monthly listeners on Spotify.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/2/20236 minutes, 43 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Bites and sights in Sofia, Bulgaria

This week Mike Yardley went adventuring through the beautiful Sofia, capital of Bulgaria.   Read Mike’s full article here.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/2/20234 minutes, 18 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Cinderella Boys and Masters of Death

Cinderella Boys - Leo McKinstry   The remarkable story of the unsung RAF wing who rescued Britain from Hitler's U-boats and made Allied victory possible.  The transformation of Coastal Command from a ramshackle outfit into a vast, formidable organisation provided one of the turning points of the war, keeping Britain in the war and opening the way to D-Day in 1944. But they never received the credit they deserved.  Based on a wealth of new sources, including from diaries, log books, official records, archives and interviews, Leo McKinstry shines a new light the courageous pilots, ingenious scientists and political risktakers - many of them outsiders - who defended the freezing Atlantic from Nazi rule.    Masters of Death - Olivie Blake  Viola Marek is a struggling real estate agent, and a vampire. But her biggest problem currently is that the house she needs to sell is haunted. The ghost haunting the house has been murdered, and until he can solve the mystery of how he died, he refuses to move on.  Fox D’Mora is a medium, and though is also most-definitely a shameless fraud, he isn’t entirely without his uses—seeing as he’s actually the godson of Death. When Viola seeks out Fox to help her with her ghost-infested mansion, he becomes inextricably involved in a quest that neither he nor Vi expects (or wants). But with the help of an unruly poltergeist, a demonic personal trainer, a sharp-voiced angel, a love-stricken reaper, and a few high-functioning creatures, Vi and Fox soon discover the difference between a mysterious lost love and an annoying dead body isn’t nearly as distinct as they thought.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/2/20234 minutes, 55 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Buds and flowering trees

Buds and flowering trees – it sometimes feels like Spring, but don’t be fooled for another 4 weeks mistakes can be made!  Spring —by the way— starts 23rd of September at eleven minutes to seven in the evening. ;-)  Yet slowly —very slowly— the soil starts to warm up a bit and that is a condition that requires us to plant our new crops and ornamentals.  First of all, the soils are still quite moist and that is a positive reason to plant anything that lives long: shrubs, trees, fruit-bearing vines, and flowering, perennial beauties.  Reason is: the planted trees/shrub etc will not need to “sulk” for a long time – it will ‘wake up’ from its winter slumber relatively quickly to start the growth.   And there little need to water these new plants.  Because the soil is slowly warming up, the fertiliser you apply will be absorbed relatively quickly – the N-P-K won’t dissolve into the deeper soils where it might get “lost”.  The same arguments will go for your food crops:  Peas, Broadbeans, Cos lettuce, and spring onions will almost immediately germinate or adapt after planting, giving you the first spring crops of fresh vegetables. Oh, and Carrots, Cauliflowers, and spinach are also on the “NOW” list.  For those of you that like “new Potatoes” for Christmas: start chitting and plant your spuds as seed potatoes; Jersey Bennes and such early varieties are probably the best to use before Christmas.  That’s all I do this year so I don’t play Russian roulette with solanum pests such as Psyllids, later in the season (AND I WANT TO PROTECT MY MAIN TUNNELHOUSE CROP: TOMATOES!).  That brings me to SOWING the tomato varieties for 2023-24. If you do that now, (like inside in a relatively warm room with plenty of light) you’ll find they will germinate quickly, so that you can start “hardening” them off by placing them outside in sheltered areas during the day (take them inside again when the evening coolness comes along after 5 pm).  Just get them used to the spring conditions slowly.  Mine will go into the tunnel house to provide me with tomatoes from Early December till well into autumn. You can also grow them under “cloches” to help them along during the cooler spring nights. Cloches are miniature glass houses that hold just one plant. They literally reduce the difference between warm day temperatures and cool nights.  My fabulous, rich and well-drained bed for Strawberries is ready to be planted. Last year’s crop has been disastrous, probably because I really didn’t have the time to weed well; and I left too many old runners in that bed, which didn’t provide me with too many strawberries.  Cama Rosa is my pick of the strawberries and a fine netting will need to be placed on top, so that the birds are not able to access them later this spring.  Don’t forget to use some liquid fertiliser (Seafood Soup and Seaweed Tea!!) to give your plants the boost they need! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/1/20235 minutes, 53 seconds
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Kate Hall: NZ Fashion Week - Sustainability in Fashion

Kate Hall’s been at NZ Fashion Week this week and attended around twenty shows. She decided to share her perspective and thoughts as a sustainable fashion enthusiast:   + Kiri Nathan opened (first Māori designer to open with a solo show - incredible representation & move for NZ Fashion).  + I’m reminded of the over consumption of fashion: attendees arriving in new outfits (some wearing multiple new outfits a day), outfit after outfit coming down the runway - new seasons.  + Excited to see The Graduate show include a lot of repurposed materials and styles.  + Slow conscious collection of 3 sustainable designers - though far less attendance at this one!  + Diversity of models - not as progressive as I expected it would be in 2023.  + Feels incredibly strange to have a fashion week that doesn't mention the makers as predominantly - only a few shows actually had storytelling & meaning in their shows.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/1/20239 minutes, 38 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Paritua 2020 Stone Paddock Scarlet

Paritua 2020 Stone Paddock Scarlet, Hawke’s Bay $24.99  Why I chose it:  - Terrific red at a modest price  - Demonstrates the value of mechanical sorting  - Terrific wine from an excellent vintage.  - Potential to develop well with bottle age.  - A blend of merlot, cabernet sauvignon and cabernet franc.  What does it taste like?  - Intense, almost chewy red with cassis, dark berry, dark chocolate, dried herbs, cedar, vanilla and nutty oak. Good cellaring potential - needs time to mellow.  Why it’s a bargain:  - Great wine at a great price  Where can you buy it?  - Vino Fino (Chch) $20.99   - Advintage, Hawke’s Bay $23.99   - Regional Wines, Wellington $24.99  Food match?   - Fillet steak, most red meat dishes.  Will it keep?  - Yes. 5-10 years, possibly more if stored well See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/1/20233 minutes, 6 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: EU Microsoft Office bundles, Australia backtracks online age verification

Microsoft's Office bundle in the EU will look different to the rest of the world  It'll be missing Teams thanks to an anti-competitive complaint by competitor Slack, made to the European Commission.  Microsoft is taking the proactive step of offering a bundle —that's cheaper than the current one— that doesn't include Teams. It'll be €2 less per month or €24 per year, which still makes it a more expensive option to get Office and Slack together.  They'll also offer Teams as a standalone product for €5 per month.   The Commission is still actively investigating Microsoft, so this may not be the only change we see.    Australia has backtracked from forcing age verification on adult websites   The options all proved to have a mix of privacy, security, effectiveness and implementation challenges. The Minister will now work with the industry to educate parents on how to access filtering services and limit children's access to adult content — so effectively, putting the problem back for parents to solve.     Want to feel old? Gen Z apparently doesn't know how to dial phone numbers with letters in them!  ZB's sister station ZM had to show a video on their Instagram about how to dial the 0800 number with words! Were they joking? I don't know!    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/1/20233 minutes, 57 seconds
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Tara Ward: The Following Events are Based on a Pack of Lies, Live to 100: Secrets of the Blue Zones, Starstruck

The Following Events are Based on a Pack of Lies  An unpredictable thriller that tells the story of two women who have nothing in common - apart from the same conman, who is trying to destroy them both (TVNZ+).    Live to 100: Secrets of the Blue Zones  Author Dan Buetter travels around the world to visit five unique communities where people live long and exuberant lives, and to discover their secrets to long living (Netflix).    Starstruck   The third season of the brilliant rom-com series written by Rose Matafeo and Alice Snedden lands on our screens (TVNZ1, Saturday at 8.30pm and TVNZ+).    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/1/20235 minutes, 47 seconds
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Dallas Tamaira: Fat Freddy's Drop frontman on his solo work 'Stormy'

Dallas Tamaira's been the frontman of the genre-bending seven-piece band Fat Freddy’s Drop for more than 20 years.   During the pandemic and unable to tour with his band, Dallas hit a new phase of personal creativity.   With nothing to do but write and create, Dallas began working on brand new solo music.  'Stormy' which was released only yesterday, and today he joined Jack Tame to chat about his new creation.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/1/202314 minutes, 32 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Lemon Ice Cream and the NZ Ice Cream and Gelato Awards

Nici Wickes MC'd the NZ Ice Cream and Gelato Awards last night, where medals and trophies were awarded to the best of the best ice cream, gelato, sorbet and frozen desserts in NZ. She joined Jack Tame to run through some of the highlights, plus, she has a very easy, no churn needed, ice cream recipe to share.    River Cafe’s Lemon Ice Cream  This is the incredibly delicious ice cream from the esteemed River Cafe in London. It’s a magic alchemy of just a few ingredients and no ice cream churn is needed. Try it, you’ll love it!  Makes 4 small portions  Ingredients:  Zest of 1 lemon  1/3 cup lemon juice (about 3 lemons)  135g (about 2/3 cup) caster sugar  ½ tsp sea salt  300mls cream  Method:  In a bowl stir together the lemon juice and zest, sugar and salt. Drizzle in the cream whilst still stirring gently. The mixture will immediately thicken a bit – like magic! – as you keep gently stirring. If it doesn’t thicken at all, add a bit more lemon juice.  Pour into a container and freeze for at least 2 hours. No stirring needed.  Serve in little scoops, on it’s own. Divine! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/1/20237 minutes, 47 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Scrapper and The Equalizer 3

Scrapper  Living alone in her London flat, 12-year-old Georgie must confront reality when her estranged father, Jason, shows up out of nowhere. Uninterested in a sudden new parental figure, she remains stubbornly resistant to his efforts. As they both adjust to their new circumstances, Georgie and Jason soon find that they still have a lot of growing up to do.  The Equalizer 3  Since giving up his life as a government assassin, Robert McCall finds solace in serving justice on behalf of the oppressed. Now living in Southern Italy, he soon discovers his new friends are under the control of local crime bosses. As events turn deadly, McCall becomes their protector by taking on the mafia.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/1/20235 minutes, 31 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Who knew an ad could be so fun?

This week Kevin Milne joined Jack Tame to chat about a ridiculously hilarious commercial he saw recently. Who knew an ad about free bowel screenings could be so fun?  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/1/20234 minutes, 41 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Birdy - Portraits

‘Portraits’ is the fifth studio album released by English singer-songwriter Birdy, and takes influence from the sounds of 80’s pop music. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/26/20236 minutes, 39 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: When One of Us Hurts and Lady Tans Circle of Women

When One of Us Hurts by Monica Vuu  The small coastal town has its own ways of dealing with the evil, the foolish, the misled, and it holds tightly to them. But the seams start to split after two deaths occur on the same tragic night: a baby abandoned at the foot of a lighthouse, and a drunken teenager drowned in the storming sea.    Lady Tans Circle of Women by Lisa See   From a young age, Yunxian learns about women's illnesses, many of which relate to childbearing, alongside a young midwife-in-training, Meiling. The two girls find fast friendship and a mutual purpose—despite the prohibition that a doctor should never touch blood while a midwife comes in frequent contact with it—and they vow to be forever friends, sharing in each other's joys and struggles. No mud, no lotus, they tell themselves: from adversity beauty can bloom.  But when Yunxian is sent into an arranged marriage, her mother-in-law forbids her from seeing Meiling and from helping the women and girls in the household. Yunxian is to act like a proper wife—embroider bound-foot slippers, pluck instruments, recite poetry, give birth to sons, and stay forever within the walls of the family compound, the Garden of Fragrant Delights.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/26/20234 minutes, 6 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Breezing through Bucharest

This week Mike Yardley joined Jack Tame to chat about his adventures through the beautiful Bucharest, capital of Romania. Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/26/20239 minutes, 10 seconds
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Dougal Sutherland: Keeping mentally well in winter

A lot of us get “the blues” during winter or feel a little down – for some people this is a more serious disorder called Seasonal Affective Disorder where periods of depression are strongly linked to winter seasons – although interestingly there must be more to it than simply levels of light/winter weather as it’s not so common in people living in polar regions.  Tips for keeping mentally well over winter:  Keep doing the basics:  Try and get some daylight each day, especially if you’re leaving for work in the dark and coming home in the dark  Keep up your exercise  Keep your sleep in good patterns  Kiwis are pretty oriented towards the outdoors and getting out and about, which is more difficult in winter. Maybe rather than trying to fight the winter weather, learn to embrace it – like the Danish concept of “Hygge” where they relish and make the most of winter – think sitting inside toasting marshmallows, having people over for candlelit dinners inside after cooking up a big winter feast, cosying up with a good book on a rainy afternoon etc.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/26/20235 minutes, 27 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Sand Scarab Beetles

Spent a week in one of my favourite regions: Tairawhiti… Wainui, Tolaga Bay, Mangatuna and Tokomaru Bay.  The school kids love muckin’ around on beaches, despite all that hideous slash everywhere.  Looking for bugs, of course.  At Tolaga Bay they found heaps of rather large black scarab beetles, known in the trade as Pericoptus truncatus, or “sand scarab”; moving across the sandy, grassy play area during the day.  Captured specimens were digging down into the sand provided in the containers.  This was my opportunity to raise the fact that this beetle is related to some rather famous species from the more tropical regions of the world: The “Rhinoceros beetles”.  The male sand scarabs actually have a rudimentary “horn” on their head to shows the species “affinities”.  Our sand scarabs live on beaches and dunes and are adapted to moving about the sand habitat. The larvae (grubs) are able to actually migrate from the beaches to inland habitats over reasonably long distances; it is presumed they are needing a certain amount or percentage of moisture in the sand.  The grubs are “massive” (6 cm long or more), creamy-white, with distinct round stomata (breathing-hole) patches on the side of their bodies.  Their larval food is the decaying woody mass of driftwood on beaches and the roots of grasses in dune vegetation.  The adult beetles are sturdy insects that can dig into the sand really fast. During the day they will hide in the sand (sometimes at considerable depth: a meter or so deep!), but at night they surface again to go hooning in the dunes and on the beach – they are very noisy flyers and that no doubt helps with locating potential partners.  The front legs of these beetles have specially-adapted claws that allow them to dig efficiently.  The beetles and the larvae themselves are often coated with populations of mites on their skin. These have always thought to be parasitic mites, but there are suggestions that these tiny critters might actually be feeding on other mites and nematodes, associated with the sand scarabs.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/25/20234 minutes, 41 seconds
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Hannah McQueen: Does it still make sense to buy a home?

Data shows that mortgage payments are much higher than paying rent – but does that mean it’s not worth owning a home? What are the implications of not owning? What should you be doing with that ‘spare’ money if you opt to rent instead?  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/25/20235 minutes, 22 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Meta's coding AI and Trump's return to X

Meta's launched AI to produce code  Their new "Code Llama" can create working code from natural language prompts, and also debug and explain code pasted into it. So in what is a bizarre turn of events, Meta software engineers have created AI to take their job… or at least parts of it.   Meta says this allows its staff to focus on the "most human-centric aspects of their job, rather than repetitive tasks". But they don't go so far as to say what those human aspects are.  Microsoft's Github Copilot has similar features but is currently being sued for copyright because the AI can reproduce proprietary code.     Donald Trump is back on Twitter/X  Back to post an image with his mug shot from his booking in Atlanta, with the words "Election Interference, never surrender" and just a link to his website to fundraise.  Trump was banned indefinitely, until Elon bought Twitter and gave him his account back.   His return is not a surprise though. According to reports earlier this year, his exclusivity deal with his own Truth Social was due to expire in June and sources said he was eager to get back to Twitter. This post could be the first of many to come.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/25/20233 minutes, 58 seconds
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Tara Ward: Kin, Who is Erin Carter?, At Home with the Fury's

Kin A gritty Irish drama about a small Dublin crime family who take on a gangland war with a powerful international drug cartel after a young boy is killed (TVNZ+).     Who is Erin Carter? A British schoolteacher living in Spain finds herself entangled in a supermarket robbery and must fight to clear her name after she is recognised by one of the criminals (Netflix).    At Home with the Fury’s Netflix’s new reality series follows the lives of controversial boxer Tyson Fury and his family.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/25/20234 minutes, 36 seconds
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Owen Wright: Australian surfing legend on his new memoir 'Against the Water'

Australian surfing legend Owen Wright ranked 5th in the world, earned a bronze medal at the 2020 Olympic Games and was the first surfer to get to two perfect scores in one event. In 2015, he wiped out at the Bnzai Pipeline in Hawaii and suffered a major brain injury, resulting in him needing to relearn how to walk, talk, and surf once more. In early August he released his memoir ‘Against the Water’ chronicling his journey and experiences. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/25/202316 minutes, 27 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Apple Pie

This pie is so perfect as a quick dessert that will thrill anyone lucky enough to be sharing dinner with you, especially served warm with vanilla ice cream and softly whipped cream.  Serves 2-4    Ingredients: 1 sheet store-bought puff pastry  1 small egg, lightly beaten  1 teaspoon sugar for sprinkling on top  Filling  2 tablespoons cornflour  2 big tablespoons brown sugar  1 teaspoon mixed spice (or just cinnamon will do)  ¼ teaspoon nutmeg  2 granny smith apples, peeled and roughly chopped into small pieces  ¼ cup sultanas  ¼ cup toasted walnut pieces  Ice cream and whipped cream to serve    Method: Heat oven to 180 C. Line a baking tray with baking paper.  Halve the sheet of pastry and roll it out slightly thinner than it comes. I always do this with store-bought pastry as it tends towards being too thick straight out of the packet. Place one piece on the prepared tray and brush the edges with a lightly beaten egg.  In a bowl mix the filling ingredients together, tossing it all together to combine. The cornflour will help to thicken the juices once it starts to cook. Pile this filling up on the pastry leaving a 2cm border free of filling. Lay pastry lid over the filling (you may have to stretch it a little to cover) and press to seal it to the base. Make a few cuts in the top to let the air out, brush with egg and sprinkle with sugar.  Bake for 40 minutes or until lovely and golden brown on top and crisp on the bottom.  Serve warm with ice cream and cream    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/25/20234 minutes, 56 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Pacific Mother and Sound of Freedom

Pacific Mother In Pacific Mother we see that when women are supported emotionally, physically and culturally, they are more likely to have a positive birth experience. Whether it's in hospital or at home, on land or in the water. “Collaboration” has been key for our Pacific Mother film.    Sound of Freedom After rescuing a boy from ruthless child traffickers, a federal agent learns the boy's sister is still captive and decides to embark on a dangerous mission to save her. With time running out, he quits his job and journeys deep into the Colombian jungle, putting his life on the line to free her from a fate worse than death.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/25/20236 minutes, 22 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Having a passion

Today Kevin Milne joined Jack Tame to chat about having passions, specifically a passion for your job. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/25/20235 minutes, 3 seconds
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Jack Tame: The tui are back for spring

I had this amazing little moment one afternoon this week, when for the first time this winter... I threw open the doors of my deck, sprawled out on the couch nearby, and basked in the sunshine as it spilled through onto my face and neck.  Isn’t it amazing what a difference a few days of sunshine can make?  My God.  I know that there are parts of the country that have had it a whole lot sunnier than Auckland these last few months but I cannot recall a winter in my part of the World that has felt so wet and so grim.  The sunshine brought with it the first blossom of Spring.  I’ve got a Taiwan cherry tree in my backyard, and it’s been heavy with red and pink flowers.  And as much as I love the blossom, the tūi loved them more.  They’re always darting in and out at my place, hopping between branches of the different trees, calling out to their mates before hustling off for the next feed.  And tūi really do hustle, don’t you think? They don’t really glide as such. And even when they’re parked up, they always seem have a bit of a boisterous temperament.  Tūi are so beautiful. I love how understated and yet sophisticated their colours are, the black and green, and bronze, with that extraordinary irredescent shimmer, as though every feather has been lightly glazed. Tūi almost twinkle.  Some of the tūi who turn up at my place are perfectly turned out. Some have that slightly shabby appearance, as though they’ve gone to sleep with wet hair and forgot to check the mirror in the morning.  I’ve never heard them sing so much in my backyard as they have been these last few days. There was barely an instance when I looked up at that cherry tree and didn’t see a tūi drinking in the blossom, and calling out to his or her tūi mates.  Is this middle age? I dunno. But I’m at the age and stage where I get it. I get it. I get the native birds thing in a really big way. Lying on the couch in the sunshine, watching the tūi drink and sing out to the neighbourhood just made me feel so content.  ‘What can I do to steal a few more of these moments?’ I wondered.  I can’t do anything about the weather. I can’t compel the sun to shine.  I picked up my phone and googled three words. Predator. Free. NZ.  My brand new rat trap arrived the next morning. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/25/20233 minutes, 32 seconds
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Estelle Cliffords: Kelsea Ballerini - Rolling Up the Welcome Mat (For Good)

Rolling Up the Welcome Mat (For Good) is an extended version of the second EP from American country-pop artist Kelsea Ballerini. The EP was initially released on the 14th of February 2023, and the extended version was released on the 11th of August 2023. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/19/20236 minutes, 9 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Keeper of Hidden Books and Tom Lake

The Keeper of Hidden Books - Madeline Martin  From the New York Times bestselling author of The Last Bookshop in London comes a heartwarming story about the power of books to bring us together, inspired by the true story of the underground library in WWII Warsaw. All her life, Zofia has found comfort in two things during times of hardship: books and her best friend, Janina. But no one could have imagined the horrors of the Nazi occupation in Warsaw. As the bombs rain down and Hitler’s forces loot and destroy the city, Zofia finds that now books are also in need of saving. With the death count rising and persecution intensifying, Zofia jumps to action to save her friend and salvage whatever books she can from the wreckage, hiding them away, and even starting a clandestine book club. She and her dearest friend never surrender their love of reading, even when Janina is forced into the newly formed ghetto. But the closer Warsaw creeps toward liberation, the more dangerous life becomes for the women and their families – and escape may not be possible for everyone. As the destruction rages around them, Zofia must fight to save her friend and preserve her culture and community using the only weapon they have left - literature.    Tom Lake - Ann Patchett  In the spring of 2020, Lara’s three daughters return to the family's orchard in Northern Michigan. While picking cherries, they beg their mother to tell them the story of Peter Duke, a famous actor with whom she shared both a stage and a romance years before at a theater company called Tom Lake. As Lara recalls the past, her daughters examine their own lives and relationship with their mother and are forced to reconsider the world and everything they thought they knew.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/19/20234 minutes, 29 seconds
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Mike Yardley: A bite out of Transylvania

This week Mike Yardley joined Jack Tame to chat about his recent visit to Transylvania. Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/19/20237 minutes, 51 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Invasive species and native plants

Always interesting! Gardeners love a wide range of plants; often species that are exotic, colourful and bright.  But a number of them are pretty invasive and “weedy.” We all know weeds – they grow where we don’t want them to grow.  Invasive species have often a larger impact on our planet, our natural gardens, forests, ecosystems and alpine vegetation. It all comes down to interfering with our native systems, pushing out our native critters, plants, and landscapes.  They change our Native systems to Exotic systems – Nice curricular exercise for schools: definitions of Native, Endemic, Exotic, Introduced, etc etc  Examples:  Darwin’s Barberry  One of the dirty dozen weeds (a Maggie Barry project when she was Minister for Conservation). Prickles and impossible for humans to get through. Seeds like an idiot and takes over native forests; hard to control and nobody benefits from flowers/nectar, apart from some pollinators. You can see why New Zealand Gardeners like the look of them!  Moth catching plant: Araujia  An exotic climber that smothers our native trees and shrubs. A pain in the butt in areas where we are trying to restore native vegetation. The seed pods have zillions of fluffy seeds in them that are dispersed on the wind in all directions. The stems and pods ooze a white, toxic sap (the same stuff that comes out of swan plants!) which allows Monarch Butterfly caterpillars to eat the plant. Some monarch aficionados use that horrid vine as “spare food.”  But there’s a real weird behaviour to these plants: the white flowers attract these insects with their nectar, and as the butterfly sticks its tongue into the flower it gets trapped. This is followed by distressed movements and flapping of the wings, which pollinates the flower;  The butterfly eventually dies, stuck on the flower…  A monarch butterfly stuck in Araujia. Please get rid of these horrible exotic climbers – they don’t belong here; they are exotic pests!  There are many plant species that catch insects to get some food: Sundews (alpine areas and around wetlands) love to get flies with their sticky leaves – it provides them with Nitrogen and proteins.  Venus flytraps also eat bugs… Kids love to observe them and hope a fly will land on the trigger hairs. I have no problem with technologies like that – that’s ecological life, especially in Aotearoa!  Parapara plant  Here we have a native species that is not terribly common; it occurs in Northern habitats, especially off-shore islands and coastal forests. It looks really lovely with large, almost tropical leaves.  Native to NZ and some other areas in the Pacific.  Small white flowers and copious amounts of long, sticky seed pods. And with sticky I mean super-glue! It holds insects small and large as well as small birds: silvereyes, grey warbler, fantails and even ruru (all going for the stuck insects, of course).  This is New Zealand’s method of “Seed Dispersal.”  The trapped bird often succumbs to this sticky situation, and falls down on the ground with seeds attached; the seeds use the decaying bird body as their first meal of fertiliser to germinate and grow up.  One of the reasons the Parapara plant is becoming “rare-ish” is because some folk believe that this plant is evil and therefore pull it out… (and many folk believe it is not a Native – well… it is!!).  If you want to save your birds in the garden: take the seeds off before they develop their sticky skin.  If you find birds that are stuck: don’t pull them off the seeds, but take them, branch and all, to a Bird Rescue place or a vet near you – they have the gear and correct shampoos to give those birds a chance to survive!  And please make a donation to the wonderful work they do.  More information can be found on the BirdCare Aotearoa website.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/19/20236 minutes, 23 seconds
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Kate Hall: Composting systems

- Bokashi: fermenting system, takes meat and high concentrations of citrus, cheap to make and transport easily.  - Cold Compost: microorganisms break things down (worms, bugs etc too).  - Hot Compost: more deliberate balance of materials that isn't added to over time (made and then left for 3-6 months), takes garden clippings, branches, hard things, gets up to 65/70 degrees.  - Worm Farm: worms do the work, can't put in strongly acidic foods, meat, dairy etc.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/19/20239 minutes, 23 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: Heartburn

What is it?  Burning sensation in the lower chest. Sometimes with a sour/bitter taste in mouth - often after big meal or lying Very mild to severe. Can cause you to cough or your voice to become hoarse. Lasts minutes or sometimes hours.    What causes it?  Stomach full of acid to digest food. Valve at top of stomach – may be weak and not fully The acid in the stomach escapes into oesophagus (tube from the mouth to stomach) and causes a burning sensation.     Can things make it worse?  Yes - smoking, alcohol, coffee, citrus fruits which are acidic, tomato, chocolate, spicy foods - the list goes on! Lying down after eating, being overweight, and some medicines.    How do you diagnose and treat it?  Often a careful history will give you the answer. Can be serious sometimes and need further investigation: endoscope -  camera in into the stomach to look for ulcers or ‘burning’ oesophagus. Sometimes do a test for a bacteria pylori which can make it worse Treat with ‘antacids’ which neutralise acid, or medication which stops acid in the  stomach, or if we have the bacteria, antibiotics. Can help prevent: being careful what you eat, not eating big meals before bed, losing weight, stop smoking, reduce alcohol. If have symptoms see your doctor!   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/18/20235 minutes, 33 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Typing in passwords and the launch of X Pro

Typing in your password - it's not as safe as you might think  With the help of AI, the researchers could effectively create a unique identifier for how you strike each key, and use that to figure out what you're typing. Each key has an ever-so-slightly different sound based on how we type and where the key is pressed.  In their experiment, they only needed the key to be pressed 25 times to create the link. To build this, they need to know what you initially typed as you typed it - which could be done via Zoom chat messages or filling in a form. Once they have that, they just need to listen to your type and they could gather passwords, private messages... anything that you type.  How do you get around that? A password manager that automatically copies in the password is a great way! Or having music, key stroke simulators, or white noise.    X has relaunched Tweetdeck as X Pro  And you guessed it… you now need to pay for it. I'm not surprised. I always thought Twitter should have done this and I think pre-Elon Musk, many social media managers and journalists would have been happy to.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/18/20234 minutes, 17 seconds
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Tara Ward: Fifteen-Love, Waco: The Aftermath, Men in Kilts

Fifteen-Love A British sports drama starring Aidan Turner (Poldark) about an elite tennis player who makes a shocking allegation against her former coach (TVNZ+).    Waco: The Aftermath An American drama about the aftermath of the disastrous 1993 standoff at the Branch Davidian compound in Texas (Neon).    Men in Kilts Two Scottish stars of time-travelling drama Outlander return for a second season of their travel show - and this time, they’re travelling around New Zealand (Neon).    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/18/20234 minutes, 3 seconds
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Al Brown releases 'Eat Up Eat Up New Zealand: The Bach Edition'

Iconic kiwi chef Al Brown is well known for his beloved restaurants Depot and Federal Delicatessen, as well as his Best Ugly Bagel shops. He’s published a number of cookbooks and has recently released a ‘Bach Edition’ of his recipe book ‘Eat Up New Zealand,’ featuring more than 150 recipes and on-location photos from around the country. Al Brown joined Jack Tame to chat about his new book and the stories and recipes within. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/18/202314 minutes, 52 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Tangerine Cake

Makes one loaf tin cake and is simply gorgeous!    Ingredients: 3/4 cup raw sugar  Rind of 2 tangerine – avoid the white pith  Flesh of one tangerine  2 medium eggs  ½ cup rice bran oil  ½ tsp salt  ½ cup thick natural yoghurt  1 ½ cups plain flour  2 tsps baking powder  Method: Preheat oven to 180 C, on fan bake. Grease and line a loaf tin with baking paper.  In the bowl of a food processor, blend the sugar and citrus rind until the rind is chopped very small. Add the tangerine flesh. Blend until smooth.  In a mixing bowl beat the egg and sugar/citrus mix together until it is thick & creamy. Add the oil and salt and continue beating until mixed.  Stir through the yoghurt. Fold in flour and baking powder and combine until just mixed (over-mixing will produce a tougher, drier cake).  Scrape the batter into the tin, smooth the top if need be for a better looking loaf cake at the end.  Bake for 35-45mins, until a skewer comes out clean. Leave for 10 minutes to cool before turning out of tin.  Ice with vanilla and citrus zest frosting, or not.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/18/20235 minutes, 51 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Kandahar and Monolith

Kandahar An undercover CIA operative gets stuck in hostile territory in Afghanistan after his mission is exposed. Accompanied by his translator, he must fight enemy combatants as he tries to reach an extraction point in Kandahar.    Monolith A headstrong journalist's investigative podcast uncovers a strange artefact, an alien conspiracy, and the lies at the heart of her own story.     LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/18/20237 minutes, 12 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Why should the dogs be put down?

A Northland man was recently charged when his pet dog was caught picking up a kiwi chick and running off with it. The chick was killed, and as a result the owner was fined and the dog was put down. Kevin Milne joined Jack Tame to chat about his first reaction and thoughts about the situation. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/18/20236 minutes, 8 seconds
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Jack Tame: Football's popularity is rising

The hosts on Fox Sport Australia were bamboozled by a question earlier this week.  What’s the biggest winter sport in Australia?  Is it Rugby League and the excellent entertainment of the NRL? Is it Aussie Rules? Or could it now, be football?  Sadly, it goes without saying that it isn’t rugby, and I’d suggest that even when the Rugby World Cup kicks off, only so many Australians will even realise it’s on.  At a time when all sorts of different things are vying for our attention, the Matildas’ semi-final in the FIFA World Cup obliterated TV ratings records. In Australia, it was the most-watched TV event in more than two decades.  The key with football is the low barrier to entry. Grassroots participation isn’t totally dominated by one gender. You don’t need money to have a kick around with your friends. And you can explain the key rules in just a few sentences: Your team has to get the ball in the goal and stop the other team from getting it in yours. Only the goalies can use their hands. You can challenge the ball, but you can’t tackle people.  That’s it. Sure, there’s an offside rule and passback restrictions but the basic rules are stunningly, beautifully simple. And even the way they’re enforced allows the game to flow. No one agonises over taking a throw-in from the exact mark.  I don’t want to pick on rugby, but the contrasts are stark. I’ve watched, played, and loved rugby all of my life. But there are still infringements at the breakdown that leave me totally confused. Sometimes even the commentators don’t understand what’s happened.  Football’s making a play at the moment into markets where historically it’s been a bit of a second-tier sport. At the same time as its recording record ratings in Australia, arguably the greatest footballer of all time has chosen to eschew the Saudi clubs to play in the United States. The average ticket to Lionel Messi’s first game for Inter Miami was selling only for $NZ 1200. The crowd included Serena Williams, LeBron James, the Beckham family, and Kim Kardashian. It was more than a football match – it was a cultural event.  It’s fair enough to expect that when the World Cup hype has died down a bit, the buzz around football in Australia will die back a bit, too.  Personally, I think it’s only a matter of time. It won’t happen overnight. Rugby, rugby league, and netball, will all still hold a special place in New Zealand. Basketball will continue to go from strength to strength.  But fast-forward a few decades from now. I reckon football will be the most-played sport, the most-followed sport, the most popular sport in New Zealand, too. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/18/20234 minutes, 23 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Blur - The Ballad of Darren

The Ballad of Darren is the ninth studio album by English rock band Blur. It was released on 21 July 2023 by Parlophone and Warner Records.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/12/20235 minutes, 26 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Collector and After I Do

The Collector - Daniel Silvia  The Collector is a 2023 novel by Daniel Silva in the author's Gabriel Allon series. The book debuted at #2 on the New York Times bestseller list. The book's premise is the current location of Vermeer's The Concert, which has been missing since the painting was stolen from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.    After I Do - Taylor Jenkins Reid  From the New York Times bestselling author of The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo, comes a breath-taking novel about modern marriage, the depth of family ties, and the year that one remarkable heroine spends exploring both.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/12/20233 minutes, 57 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Montenegro and Mostar

This week Mike Yardley joined Jack Tame to chat about his adventures in Montenegro and Mostar. Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/12/202311 minutes, 55 seconds
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Dr Dougal Sutherland: In office or working from home?

Zoom is ordering people back to work in the office. Is this a good thing and how does your office affect your wellbeing and productivity?  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/12/20238 minutes, 28 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Awatere River 2023 Pinot Gris

BOB’S BEST BUYS  Wine: Awatere River 2023 Pinot Gris, Marlborough $25  Why I chose it:  - 2023 was a good vintage in Marlborough  - Pinot Gris is 4th most planted grape variety – growing in popularity  - If someone wants a white wine but is not sure what variety, pour them a pinot gris. Good all-rounder.  - Delicious thirst-quencher for Spring and Summer months ahead  What does it taste like?  - Off-dry pinot gris with succulent tree fruit/pear and nectarine flavours. An initial hint of sweetness is perfectly balanced by gentle, fruity acidity. Smooth-textured wine with a deliciously lingering finish.  Why is it a bargain:  - One of the best 2023’s I’ve tasted. At a moderate price.  Where can you buy it?  - Best price Countdown $19.99 (check the vintage), just released  Food match?  - My favorites are crayfish, prawns or shrimps  Will it keep?  - Good for the next 2-3 years although it is drinking well now.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/11/20234 minutes, 46 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Insulating your greenhouse

I have a tunnel house (for edibles) and Julie has a glasshouse (for her ornamentals) – she’s a fancy one!  Despite these forms of “protection from frost” they can get to low temperatures on cold winters morning. We’ve seen 1.5 degrees a few times.  Is there a way to add some extra insulation to these buildings that would keep the temps a bit higher?  As per usual: my local Botanic Garden has delivered some answers (see pictures); the “Curators Garden”, an edible garden next to the Curators House restaurant, here in Christchurch, always investigates new ideas and technologies.  (No doubt your local Botanic Garden will have some great ideas as well!)  Wouldn’t it be great to have a temporary layer of insulation for just the winter months – stuff you can remove when spring starts?  I love the idea of having old, recycled plastic drink bottles assembled vertically on a long bamboo pole. Each pole can be removed in its entirety and stored for re-use next winter.   Honey-comb plastic screwed between two pieces of wood to tighten them up. It’s almost a double-glazing system made from plastic. It lets sun through and blocks the cold.  It, too, can be removed in its entirety for storage during spring and summer  Bottles stacked horizontally and filled with water are probably more efficient at insulating the air inside the glasshouse.  These is old Bubble-wrap that can be used on vertical walls and Perspex sheets that can be fixed to the ceiling on the inside of the glasshouse too.  By “retro-fitting” double glazing you don’t lose any space inside, really, but keep the cold from coming in to slow all growth See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/11/20235 minutes, 29 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Facebook is good for wellbeing?

Wait a minute... Facebook is good for wellbeing?   A new study by the Oxford Institute of Technology suggests the opposite of what we typically hear – researchers say that after analyzing data from nearly a million people across 72 countries over 12 years that the claims are more speculative than conclusive. This isn't saying that harm doesn't exist... but on balance, the use of Facebook is "possibly related to positive wellbeing." The results showed the association between using Facebook and wellbeing was slightly more positive for males as well as for younger people. The study looked at high-quality country-wide well-being data, and compared that with Facebook data with the uptake of their platform.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/11/20234 minutes, 54 seconds
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Tara Ward: Far North, Painkiller, Winning Time

Far North  This New Zealand drama stars Temuera Morrison and Robyn Malcolm and tells the bizarre true story of an international drugs smuggling ring foiled by two unlikely Northland locals (Mondays on Three, and ThreeNow).   Painkiller   Matthew Broderick stars in this drama about America’s opioid epidemic that follows both the perpetrators and victims, and an investigator seeking the truth (Netflix).     Winning Time   A second season of the sports drama about the rise of the LA Lakers in the 1970s and 1980s (Neon).    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/11/20234 minutes, 48 seconds
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Balu Brigada: Kiwi music duo on their career and upcoming NZ tour

Auckland brothers Henry and Pierre Beasley started out as young musicians, trying to pass as 18-year-olds so they could perform in bars. Now they make up the duo Balu Brigada, and after scoring themselves a record deal with Alantic record they spread their wings to New York City.    Since then they’ve earned themselves the #1 fastest breaking New Zealand/Australian artist spot on Spotify and have been applauded by outlets such as Rolling Stone, i-D, and People Magazine.  The pair are returning to New Zealand to give kiwi audiences a taste of their genre-bending music with their August tour. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/11/202316 minutes, 38 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Steak & Kidney Casserole with Dumplings

Casseroles, stews, braises – they’re all so absolutely hearty and can be really affordable if you know how to shop for different cuts of meat.  Serves 4    Ingredients: 350g beef steak, either chuck, cross-cut blade or rump  100g (about one) sheep kidney, halved, membranes and fatty nodules (white bits) removed  2 tbsps plain flour  2 tbsps cooking oil  1 large onion, diced  ½ tsp salt  Decent grind of black pepper  2 large carrots, diced  Dash of Worcestershire or soy sauce  1 bay leaf  200-250mls stock or water    Method: Cut beef into large bite size pieces and kidneys a little smaller. Dust meat in flour. Heat oil in a medium-size, heavy based saucepan and brown the onions. Add the floured meat and don’t disturb until some pieces (the ones on the bottom) are well browned. Season with salt and pepper, add carrots, a dash of either Worcestershire sauce or soy sauce, bay leaf and pour in enough stock or water to almost cover the meat. Put the lid on and bring to a simmer and cook gently over a low-medium heat until the meat is tender - approx 1.5 hours – or transfer to a casserole dish, cover tightly with foil and pop it in an oven at 170 C to cook for 1.5 hours. Cool overnight.   DUMPLINGS    Ingredients: 1 cup plain flour  50g butter  1 tsp baking powder  ¼ tsp salt  3 tb finely chopped parsley  ½ cup milk (approx.)    Method: Rub butter into dry ingredients - flour, baking powder, salt - until it resembles breadcrumbs. Add chopped parsley and then mix in the milk bit by bit until you have a soft dough. Flour your hands and gently pinch tablespoonful sized balls of the dough, rolling each gently into a ball and dropping onto the simmering stew. Work quickly until all have been added. Replace the lid and cook for 10 minutes until the dumplings are light and fluffy and cooked through (check one by breaking it open).   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/11/20235 minutes, 40 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Gran Turismo and Asteroid City

Gran Turismo A player wins a series of Nissan-sponsored video game competitions through his gaming skills and becomes a real-life professional race car driver.   Asteroid City World-changing events spectacularly disrupt the itinerary of a Junior Stargazer/Space Cadet convention in an American desert town circa 1955.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/11/20236 minutes, 38 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Meeting up with old mates

Kevin Milne joined Jack Tame to chat about the old mates he met up with this week. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/11/20236 minutes, 51 seconds
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Jack Tame: Ruling out NZ First now would martyr Winston Peters

There was an air of inevitability around the polls this week. It pays to be restrained in putting too much weight into any one poll, but the trends are what matter and the trends are suggesting Winston Peters and New Zealand First might break 5% and make it back to parliament.  All manner of pundits have come out and suggested that Christopher Luxon should make a call and do what he’s refused to do in the race so far, follow in John Key’s footsteps and rule out working with New Zealand First after the election.  I think Luxon’s best opportunity has passed. Back in May, I wrote that the National leader was strategically well-positioned to rule out Peters, so long as he managed the process as delicately as might be possible. He’d need to be respectful and deferential to New Zealand First’s supporters, explaining that it was less about the party’s leader and more about forming a simple, clean, two-party coalition to counteract what he continues to describe as a potential ‘coalition of chaos’ on the other side.  Given Winston Peters’ and David Seymour’s open distain for each other, the ‘coalition of chaos’ barb is now much better suited to the centre-right block.  Think about the reaction if Christopher Luxon ruled out working with New Zealand First, today. It’s not impossible it would have the desired effect from National’s perspective, but it comes with much greater risk than when New Zealand First was polling at 3%.  “Why have you ruled them out now, when you’ve been asked so many times over the last few months?”  “... Ahhh... because for the first time it actually looks like he’s gonna’ get in?”  It would martyr Winston Peters. It would play into the narrative that the major parties were colluding to exclude him and New Zealand First from parliament. It would breathe oxygen into his campaign and potentially galvanise his support base.  If Luxon had ruled out New Zealand First while they were polling at 3%, it wouldn’t have mattered if none of those 3% changed their minds and the vote was essentially wasted. But it potentially would have stopped new supporters from coming across in the subsequent months and deciding to back Winston Peters.  Now the party’s hitting 5%, and it’s a totally different equation. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/11/20233 minutes, 52 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: John Farnham: Finding the Voice, The Beanie Bubble

John Farnham: Finding the Voice The story of an Australian musical icon, following John Farnham from his humble beginnings in the Melbourne suburbs to record-breaking pop success.    The Beanie Bubble (Apple +)   The unbelievable tale of one of America's most fascinating phenomena -- Beanie Babies. Flashing back to the '90s and early 2000s, an in-depth look at how the era-defining zeitgeist came to be.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/5/20238 minutes, 29 seconds
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Jack Tame: Kiwis stepped up for the FIFA Women's World Cup

For all the angst heading into the tournament, Kiwis have absolutely stepped up for the FIFA Women’s World Cup. I’ll admit I was a bit nervous for the tournament’s local organisers as kick-off neared. There wasn’t really much buzz. No real sense of occasion. And I worried that for what is a massive tournament in the context of global sport – arguably the biggest tournament ever hosted on New Zealand soil – we might show ourselves to be a bit miserable. Don’t forget, just days before it officially began, FIFA’s boss Gianni Infantino paused a press conference, picked out the New Zealand media in attendance, and made a direct plea down the camera barrels for their audiences to get out and actually buy tickets. To the best of my knowledge, he didn’t feel that was necessary with the Australians. The nature of the tournament meant that some of the pool games were the likeliest to have small audiences. It’s an exciting time because there are games almost every day, but if we’re honest, Zambia vs Costa Rica is unlikely in this part of the World to drum up the same kind of enthusiasm as it might elsewhere. Once you get to the knockout stages, the drama is greater, the games are closer, and it’s reasonable to expect the crowds are consistently big. But get this. Of the twenty-four pool games played in New Zealand, the average crowd was more than 21,000 fans. More than half a million total fans. That’s fantastic. For the big games we’ve had record numbers in attendance. But even Zambia vs Costa Rica drew more than 8000 people to Waikato Stadium. And anyone who has attended a game will attest to how much fun it’s been. I live within walking distance of Eden Park. Fans are constantly making their way to the stadium with flags and face paint and jerseys for their respective countries. It feels properly global in a way that few events here ever do. We should thank the Football Ferns for their part in this. That opening night was thrilling. Although they didn’t progress to the knock-out stages, they played a major role in igniting our collective excitement. But it’s funny, I went back and looked at that Gianni Infantino press conference, where he effectively begged Kiwis to go out and buy football tickets. He said one extra thing I hadn’t noticed at the time.   “Do the right thing.” He needn’t have. My experience at the FIFA World Cup is that fans haven’t attended out of charity. They haven’t attended out of a sense of duty to try and promote the women’s game. They’ve attended because it’s been really exciting, skillful, high-drama football. We might have left the ticket-buying to the last minute, but there’s no doubt New Zealanders have wanted to be there. Now, we’re at the knockout stages. Some of the biggest names in World football are struggling or have already been knocked out. The tournament feels like it’s anyone’s. And I for one, don’t want it to end.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/5/20234 minutes, 19 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Tom Jones, Welsh music legend

A couple weeks ago Kevin Milne’s wife saw Welsh music legend Tom Jones in concert in London, and he told Jack Tame that she thought that for an 83-year-old, he was amazing. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/5/20234 minutes, 24 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Carly Rae Jepsen - The Loveliest Time

The Loveliest Time is Carly Rae Jepsen’s seventh studio album, and a companion piece to her fifth studio album, The Loneliest Time. The artist refers to the album as a “B-side in every sense of the word,” featuring songs created during the same time period and era of The Loneliest Time, that she had “always intended to put out.” LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/5/20236 minutes, 49 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The New Wife and None of This Is True

The New Wife by JP Delaney My darling son, Sam, is marrying his childhood sweetheart and I couldn't be prouder of the man he's grown into. Walking out on his abusive father all those years ago was the best thing I ever did. And today he stands, tall and handsome, saying 'I do' to my dream daughter-in-law. If I hadn't pushed them together all those years ago, he might never have found a girl as perfect as Lauren. It's true what they say, mother always knows best.    None of This Is True by Lisa Jewell  Celebrating her forty-fifth birthday at her local pub, popular podcaster Alix Summers crosses paths with an unassuming woman called Josie Fair. Josie, it turns out, is also celebrating her forty-fifth birthday. They are, in fact, birthday twins. A few days later, Alix and Josie bump into each other again, this time outside Alix’s children’s school. Josie has been listening to Alix’s podcasts and thinks she might be an interesting subject for her series. She is, she tells Alix, on the cusp of great changes in her life. Josie’s life appears to be strange and complicated, and although Alix finds her unsettling, she can’t quite resist the temptation to keep making the podcast. Slowly she starts to realise that Josie has been hiding some very dark secrets, and before she knows it, Josie has inveigled her way into Alix’s life—and into her home. But, as quickly as she arrived, Josie disappears. Only then does Alix discover that Josie has left a terrible and terrifying legacy in her wake, and that Alix has become the subject of her own true crime podcast, with her life and her family’s lives under mortal threat. Who is Josie Fair? And what has she done?    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/5/20234 minutes, 2 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Tripping through Tirana, Albania.

This week Mike Yardley joined Jack Tame to chat about his recent visit to Tirana, Albania.  Read more about Mike's trip here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/5/20237 minutes, 46 seconds
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Kate Hall: Protecting and Preserving New Zealand's Unique Biodiversity

NZ is renowned for its amazing landscape, unique wildlife & diverse ecosystems, but we have a huge issue with invasive species & habitat loss.  I enjoy our native birdlife in my area, so I signed up to be a volunteer with Forest & Bird to help reduce invasive species (hedgehogs, rats, possums) by baiting & trapping - fun anecdote to talk about my experience in handing over custody of a 'baiting line' from a man who has done it for over a decade!  What everyone can do to help: give wildlife space, clean your shoes, check your gear when entering/leaving sanctuaries, plant natives in your garden, volunteer or donate.  It’s conservation week 14th - 20th August so this is a great time for people to know these tips and get sorted/plan for action during that week.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/5/20239 minutes, 53 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Green Manure

Green Manure? Don’t take that too literally – New Zealanders call fertiliser “manure.”  Nature doesn’t like “bare soil”, so even in winter it will sprout seeds into plants, so why not make those plants desirable ones!  We usually harvest our food crops in autumn, leaving behind a heck of a lot of soil, ready to be colonised by weeds.  I realise we’re in mid-winter right now, but even at this time we can sow some plants that are experts at helping your garden become a lot more fertile in spring.  The technique is quite simple:  Green Manure crops literally extract some of the nutrients from the winter soil and store that in the stems (cells) and in the roots of the plant;  Some green manure crops (the Legumes) have colonies of collaborative bacteria on board (in the roots) that can harvest Nitrogen from the air and store that in the root nodules too.  Seeing the amount of Nitrogen in the air is 78%, we might as well use that stuff: Nitrogen (N) is essential for Leaf-growth – it literally creates the green matter that carries out Photosynthesis.  Just a quick Science reminder: Photosynthesis is essential to keep us humans alive: the leaves of plants change Carbon-dioxide into Oxygen with the help of energy from the sun. We inhale that Oxygen and the exhale Carbon Dioxide  The green plants basically do the opposite of how we breathe and keep everything in balance…  Legumes that we can use (even right now) are clovers, lupins, beans, peas and fenugreek. Sow them in the fallow, and weed-free soil.  The good thing is that they have a habit of quickly germinating and covering the soil before weed seeds come along  These leguminose Nitrogen fixers are pretty efficient in grabbing the goodies from the air.  Don’t let them go to seed as that will reduce the amount of N you can dig into your garden bed. Besides, seeds would create a weedy spring and summer, so avoid that.  A good bed of Blue Lupins really covers the soil and prevents weeds germinating.  Crimson Clover is one of those magnificently beautiful Legumes that also attracts pollinators. Generally speaking, the best time to dig your green manure into the soil is when it is flowering.  In Sandy soils the Green manure works extra hard against loosing organic materials; Sand is notorious for loosing compostables quickly!  In “Hard soils” the Green manure softens the soils by providing better soil structure.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/5/20236 minutes, 13 seconds
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Nadine Higgins: Financial Advisor and Coach on financial sabotage

There is a myriad of troubling economic factors prevalent at the moment —inflation, high interest rates, unemployment— that could knock your financial progress off course. But sometimes it’s an inside hit-job – i.e., what’s sabotaging your financial progress more than anything is you. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/5/20236 minutes, 3 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Turning off Tiktok's algorithm and Google offers $99 hotel rooms

Those in the EU will be able to turn off TikTok's famous algorithm  This is in response to the EU's Digital Services Act which forces 19 companies to strict regulations regarding algorithms and AI, allows users to opt out of targeting of content or ads, and gives ways to for users to flag illegal content and for platforms to take actions. Basically, they need to be more proactive and transparent than other companies because of their influence as a leader in their space as a "very large online platform" VLOP or a "very large online search engine" VLOSE.   Users between 13 and 17 will not be able to be served personalize ads.  If you switch off the algorithm, what will TikTok in the EU look like? It'll have popular videos in the area you live, and around the world.   Expect announcements and changes from the other 18 companies before the august 28 deadline.   Google is tempting staff back to the office with $99 hotel rooms. So you can avoid the commute!  There's a hotel on their Bay View campus, and for a limited time Google will let employees you stay there for $99 a night. The marketing materials say it'll "help users transition to the hybrid workplace". "Just imagine no commute to the office in the morning and instead, you could have an extra hour of sleep and less friction". Yeah... imagine! Google says they regularly offer deals so folks can enjoy the campus amenities.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/5/20234 minutes, 54 seconds
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Tara Ward: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart, Fisk, The Traitors

The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart:   Sigourney Weaver and New Zealand’s own Frankie Adams star in this Australian drama about a young girl who goes to live with her grandmother after her parent’s death in a mysterious fire (Prime Video). Fisk:  An Australian comedy about high-end lawyer Helen Tudor-Fisk, who is forced to take a job at a shambolic suburban law firm after a humiliating marriage breakdown and a career implosion (Netflix).      The Traitors:   The murder-mystery reality format that’s taken the world by storm finally reaches New Zealand, hosted by Paul Henry and featuring a cast of celebrities and “everyday” New Zealanders (Three, from Monday).    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/5/20234 minutes, 45 seconds
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Tiki Taane: Tiki Taane In Session With CSO

Tiki Taane is a man of many talents; a music experimentalist, musical activist, producer, and live engineer.      Tiki’s now putting on his director’s hat for a documentary, giving a behind the scenes perk at his sold out concert with the Christchurch Symphony Orchestra.   The documentary's already won film festival awards across the world and will be released in New Zealand next Friday.   Tiki Taane joined Jack Tame to chat about it. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/5/202313 minutes, 17 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Chocolate Coffee Cheesecake

Chocolate, coffee, cheesecake. Say no more. Makes one 22cm cheesecake.    Ingredients: Mocha sauce  100mls cream  150g dark chocolate, chopped  3 tsps ground espresso or instant coffee  Cheesecake  500g full fat cream cheese  ¾ cup caster sugar  3 large eggs  1 tablespoons vanilla extract  1 heaped tablespoon plain flour  A decent pinch of sea salt  250mls cream    Method: Preheat oven 220 C. Line a 22cm cake tin with baking paper, making sure it comes up the sides.  Make the espresso/chocolate sauce (to swirl) by heating cream in a small saucepan until it nearly comes to a boil. Remove from heat, add chopped chocolate, cover with a tea towel and leave for 10 minutes. Whisk in espresso powder and continue whisking until you have a smooth sauce. Keep warm and set aside.  Beat together the cream cheese and sugar until smooth and the sugar is dissolved. Add in vanilla and eggs one at a time and beat for 20 seconds between each. Add flour and salt and beat until combined then pour in the cream and mix until combined. Scrape into prepared tin.  Swirl in espresso/chocolate sauce; using a teaspoon take spoonfuls of the sauce and dig it/drop it deep into the cheesecake mix. Then with the handle end of the spoon, drag it through the sauce to form a swirl, repeat in whatever patterns take your fancy - you may not use all of the sauce.  Bake on the middle rack for 30 minutes until the top is very dark brown and the middle 5cm is still wobbly. It will fall and firm up as it cools.  Chill completely (at least 3 hours or overnight) before removing from tin.  Serve with softly whipped cream and any extra mocha sauce you have.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/5/20238 minutes, 25 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Barbie soundtrack

After much anticipation, the Barbie soundtrack has finally been released. The album, which was announced several months ago, features a star-studded lineup of artists, including Billie Eilish, Sam Smith, Lizzo, and Dua Lipa. However, the one powerhouse that the team behind the compilation wanted more than any other was Nicki Minaj.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/29/20235 minutes, 35 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Scarlet Papers, The Ambassador

The Scarlet Papers – Matthew Richardson   VIENNA, 1946: A brilliant German scientist snatched from the ruins of Nazi Europe. MOSCOW, 1964: A US diplomat caught in a clandestine love affair as the Cold War rages. RIGA, 1992: A Russian archivist selling secrets that will change the twentieth century forever. LONDON, THE PRESENT DAY: A British academic on the run with the chance to solve one of history's greatest mysteries.  Their stories, their lives, and the fate of the world are bound by a single manuscript. A document feared and whispered about in capitals across the globe. In its pages, history will be rewritten. It is only ever known as . . .  THE SCARLET PAPERS The devastating secrets contained within teased by a brief invitation: Tomorrow 11AM. Take a cab and pay in cash. Tell no one.    The Ambassador – Joseph P Kennedy   Through meticulous research and many newly available sources, Ronald confirms in impressive detail what has long been believed by many: that Kennedy was a Fascist sympathizer and an anti-Semite whose only loyalty was to his family's advancement. She also reveals the ambitions of the Kennedy dynasty during this period abroad, as they sought to enter the world of high society London and establish themselves as America’s first family. Thorough and utterly readable, The Ambassador explores a darker side of the Kennedy patriarch in an account sure to generate attention and controversy.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/29/20235 minutes
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Mike Yardley: Spirit of Sarajevo

This week Mike Yardley joined Jack Tame to chat about his visit to Sarajevo, the capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/29/202310 minutes, 34 seconds
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Dougal Sutherland: Is the way we work bad for our mental health?

Dougal Sutherland, Clinical Psychologist from Umbrella Wellbeing, joined Jack Tame to talk about whether the way we work is mentally harming us. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/29/20237 minutes, 14 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: Acne

What is acne?  Very common. Affects hair follicles. Follicles have glands which secrete oily fluid, they can become blocked and cause inflammation and pimples. Typically whiteheads, blackheads or pustules, face, neck, back and chest. Can cause scarring if not treated, pigmented skin, and can sometimes have severe psychological affects. Who gets it?  85% of 16 to 18 year olds are affected. However the reality is any age can in fact get acne. Younger children and adults of any age. I often see older patients with persistent acne. And what causes it?  Combination of factors not fully understood can cause acne. Family, hormones around puberty, bacteria on the skin. Flares can be provoked: drugs such as steroids, occlusive cosmetics, high humidity, some foods; for instance diary. What’s the treatment?  Depends on the severity Mild: Topical anti-acne agents from chemist, combined oral contraceptive, antiseptic washes Moderate: We look at antibiotics often up to 6 months. Something called Doxycycline or erythromycin. Relatively new – low dose isotretinoin vitamin A derivative. Effective but careful side-effects – can’t use in pregnancy, watch mood. Severe: extensive skin lesions, fever skin infection,   may need specialist dermatologist   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/28/20235 minutes, 3 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: ChatGPT and Microsoft teams is under a microscope

ChatGPT can't figure out if something has been created by ChatGPT  OpenAI had a tool which people could paste in text and it would tell you if it was AI generated or not... except that it often said things that were written by AI when they weren't. So OpenAI has decided to shut that shown. As the technology gets better, that task is only going to get more difficult, especially if there isn't a way to watermark the text. I'm sure teachers will be thrilled!   The new agreement between the US Government and the leading AI companies we talked about last week which would make identifying AI content more obvious clearly has some work to go.   Microsoft Teams is under the microscope in the EU  It's all about how Teams is made available to folks - which is through an Office 365 subscription, and even force installing it for folks using Office. Windows 11 was deeply integrated with Teams chat, which Microsoft has now disabled. Slack first raised this to the European Commission when the pandemic saw a massive rise in usage. Slack is a standalone paid product and Slack doesn't feel it's fair to for Microsoft to give it away for free as part of the Office bundle. The European Commission is going to launch a review, to see if Microsoft has breached competition rules.  Microsoft has had troubles in the EU in the past with their bundling of the Windows Media Player with Windows XP and Internet Explorer on Windows 7.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/28/20234 minutes, 54 seconds
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Tara Ward: Lincoln Lawyer, Angel City, Five Star Chefs

Lincoln Lawyer: A new season of the American drama about an idealistic lawyer who runs his practice out of the back of his Lincoln Town car (Netflix).      Angel City: An HBO docuseries that goes behind the scenes of the groundbreaking Los Angeles-based professional women’s soccer team, Angel City Football Club (Neon).      Five Star Chefs: A reality series that sees seven professional chefs compete to bring their fine-dining concept to London’s luxurious Langham Hotel (Netflix).  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/28/20234 minutes, 7 seconds
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Spencer Frost: Corners of the Earth

Australian filmmakers Spencer Frost and Guy Williment spent years planning the trip of the lifetime to Kamchatka, in Far East Russia. The pair wanted to search for a wave no one else in the world had surfed and roped in a couple of Aussie surfing pros to make a documentary.   They stepped off their first flight in Dubai in February of 2022, to find that Russia had invaded Ukraine, and were faced with the choice of whether to go on or head home.  They chose to continue on. What followed was an incredible story of humanity, unimaginable scenery and of course, some of the best waves in the world.  Their documentary Corners of the Earth is touring New Zealand from today in cinemas all over the country.   Spencer Frost joined Jack Tame to chat about the documentary, and what it was like to film it. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/28/202315 minutes, 48 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Trinity Rodman, US Football Star

This week Kevin Milne joined Jack Tame to chat about U.S. football star, Trinity Rodman and how at 21 she’s made it to the top without her outrageous father, Dennis.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/28/20237 minutes, 40 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Pittos and Hedges

You can count on Jack – After 36 years of being blissfully unaware of the art of gardening, the questions suddenly start… Buying a house with wilderness helps. But the coolest thing is that those questions are inspiring enough to make me look up all sorts of things, related to those topics. In MediaLand it’s called “research”. Privacy, Height-restrictions of trellises and fences, useful hedge species and easy maintenance are important facets of the design – I just added “Natives” and researched the Genus Pittosporum. Pittosporum means “sticky seeds” Wow! 200 species – many in New Zealand; lots of different varieties within the best garden species. And often the flowers of this genus produce nice scents during the hours of darkness – obviously pollinated by nocturnal insects. Everybody grows P. tenuifolium (kohuhu) – it could well be the most popular plant for hedges; small-ish leaves in various colours and hardy from coast to Highlands. Pittosporum eugenioides (tawapou) or Lemonwood is another frequent planter: can grow pretty tall (10 meters or so) with dense foliage of large leaves – see if that Council of yours can stop that growth! But then there are some really spectacular species that are quite stunning, native and elegant. P. obcordatum is a rather rare tree in the wilds of New Zealand, with reddish-bronze twigs and a rather “woolly” look. It is now cultivated (seeds and cuttings) for the NZ garden market. Honestly it is a great wild hedge and grows in just-about any condition. I’ve seen it near Kaitaia, on Banks Peninsula and near Invercargil; This hedge rocks and the less you clip it, the wilder it looks! Pittosporum turneri looks a bit like obcordatum, but seems to be a bit “leaner” and “thinner” and it has a distinct grey or silver colour; can stand growing in shady areas, which can be useful. Pittosporum umbellatum is another native from our country. Mostly in the North Island. It has dense foliage with outstanding pinky-white, sometimes cream-coloured inflorescences. (that is a fancy botanical word for “flowers”). The flowers hang in so-called “umbels” – hence the species name umbellatum. Easy to grow from seed. The trees are pretty hardy in windy conditions. Finally I can recommend a species called Pittosporum crassicaule; a small and tight species of just half a meter or so that grows very slowly; It has that alpine-plant look with firm twiglets and a feeling of densely interlacing branches, known from divaricating plants. P. crassicaule has very interesting black flowers that smell beautifully at night. I reckon it’s not a plant for “privacy” as Jack requested, but it would make a brilliant low hedge around an alpine garden Have a look at specialist growers of our pretty Pittosporum species – you’ll be surprised.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/28/20237 minutes, 40 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Cheat’s Chowder

This is my ‘cheat’s chowder’ in the sense it’s super cheap to make but full of yumminess all the same. I’m a true seafood lover so I couldn’t be more delighted that in September I’ll be heading off to cook at not one but TWO seafood festivals! Ahead of these festivals I’ve been working on some seafood recipes that use sustainable seafood and I’ve been testing different chowder recipes - it’s such a great filling lunch or dinner and not too expensive to make if you know how. Makes 2 servings  Ingredients: 8-10 mussels 1/3 cup white wine 2 tbsps olive oil 1 tbsps butter 1 medium onion, finely diced 1 stalk celery, diced 1 carrot, peeled and diced 1 large potato, peeled and 2-cm diced 3 cups fish or vegetable stock 100mls cream Zest from a half a lemon 140g salmon, skin removed, cut into chunks Small handful parsley to garnish Crusty bread to serve   Method: Give mussels a quick scrub then pile them into a large pot with wine. Bring to a simmer, cover and steam for 2-3 minutes or until mussel shells spring open. Remove from heat and tip mussels and liquor into large bowl to cool. When cool enough to handle, remove the beards and discard. Remove mussel meat and chop roughly or blend in a food processor for a smoother chowder. Leave one or two in the shell if you want to be fancy and use it to garnish. Heat oil and butter in saucepan and sauté onion until beginning to soften. Add celery and carrot and cook, covered, until softened – about 10 minutes. Pour in reserved mussel/wine liquor and stock and add the cubed potatoes. Simmer until potatoes are soft, another 10 minutes I’d say. Just before serving pour in the cream and add lemon zest, salmon and put the mussels back in. Bring to a simmer and cook for 1-2 minutes only or until fish is just cooked. Taste and add salt if required and a decent grind of black pepper. Serve garnished with parsley and with buttered bread.    Nici’s note: Any fish or shellfish can be used - try cockles and/or pipis and add calamari instead of salmon if you prefer.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/28/20236 minutes, 36 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Barbie and Oppenheimer

Barbie   Barbie and Ken are having the time of their lives in the colorful and seemingly perfect world of Barbie Land. However, when they get a chance to go to the real world, they soon discover the joys and perils of living among humans.    Oppenheimer  During World War II, Lt. Gen. Leslie Groves Jr. appoints physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer to work on the top-secret Manhattan Project. Oppenheimer and a team of scientists spend years developing and designing the atomic bomb. Their work comes to fruition on July 16, 1945, as they witness the world's first nuclear explosion, forever changing the course of history.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/28/20236 minutes, 48 seconds
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Jack Tame: It really puts our other problems in perspective

Have you ever been to the Hanmer hotpools? They were my first hotpool experience. North Canterbury. And they hold a bit of a special place in my heart.  What about Polynesian Spa in Rotorua? Think about how it feels to walk into the hot pools. You dip a toe or a foot, you kind of brace yourself as you wait to adjust to the heat. And then, how you ease yourself in. How you move slowly, you find a spot to sit down and slip beneath the warm water. They gently do their thing, easing and relaxing your muscles. For some people the warm water gets a bit much. Maybe it’s my ice-cold heart, but I can only last so long in those hot pools before I start sweating, and I need to jump out and refresh. The hot pools at Polynesian Spa range from 36C to 42C. Hanmer is similar. And so is the ocean, off Miami. Yeah... the ocean. Preliminary data this week recorded the ocean temperature off Florida as a little over 38C. That’s a full 10C warming than the ocean temperature in Fiji in the heart of summer.  No wonder the U.N. Secretary General says we’ve reached a Global Boiling Point. That does sound bad. I’m sure there will still be many people who dismiss the words as alarmist or hyperbole, but those affected by the extreme weather in the northern summer this month might beg to differ.  July was certainly the hottest month globally since records began. Climate scientists reckon it was probably also the hottest month in the history of human civilisation. 100-to-120 thousand years.  Wildfires in North America, heatwaves across Europe. How crazy were the pictures from Rhodes in Greece? This week saw the largest evacuation in the country’s modern history. I think my favourite – if that’s the right word – extreme weather event of the Northern Hemisphere’s summer, was the insane hailstorm which struck Northern Itay, just outside of Milan. The region had been sweltering in an oppressive heatwave, when black skies brought with them hailstones as large as tennis balls. As they started to melt in the warm air, the little cobbled Italian village streets were turned into rivers of melting ice. It was crazy. Anyway.  I don’t know about you, but much of the time I find I subconsciously put the climate issue to the back of my mind. Or if not the back, at least the side. I make a few measly sacrifices. I ride my bike. I try to limit how much meat I consume. But honestly, a lot of the time life just gets in the way and a lot of my thoughts are consumed by other things. But then a week like this will snap me back at attention. The hottest month in human civilisation. I don’t mean to dismiss inflation or crime, the state of our education system, or the Football Ferns’ chances of making the playoffs. But you’ve gotta say, it really puts our other problems in perspective.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/28/20235 minutes, 10 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Rita Ora - You & I

'You & I' is Rita Ora's third album, coming after the release of Phoenix in 2018. She says the album is inspired by her connections with her friends and family, and is a 'personal letter to fans.' LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/22/20236 minutes, 16 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Bad Summer People and Wavewalker

Bad Summer People – Emma Rosenblum  None of them would claim to be a good person, but who among them is capable of murder?  The families on the island have been vacationing here for years; the Weinsteins, the Metzners, the Grobels - and unlucky in love Rachel Woolf. Outsiders aren't welcome. That is except for Robert, the handsome new tennis coach, who some people are going out of their way to make very welcome... But the problem when everyone knows everyone is that secrets can't stay secret forever. And when a body is found face-down beneath the boardwalk, they realise that maybe one of them is worse than they thought...    Wavewalker – Suzanne Heywood   Aged just seven, Suzanne Heywood set sail with her family on a three-year voyage around the world. What followed turned instead into a decade-long way of life, through storms, shipwrecks, reefs and isolation, with little formal schooling.  Suzanne fought her parents, longing to return to England and to education and stability. This memoir covers her astonishing upbringing, a survival story of a child in dire circumstances deprived of safety, friendships, schooling, occasionally drinking water… At eighteen, through resolve and resilience, Suzanne earned a place at Oxford university and returned to the UK.  From the bestselling author of What Does Jeremy Think?, Wavewalker is the incredible true story of how the adventure of a lifetime became one child’s worst nightmare – and how determination helped her escape.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/22/20234 minutes, 44 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Grit and sparkle in Belgrade, Serbia

This week Mike Yardley joined Jack Tame to chat about his recent visit to Belgrade in Serbia. Read Mike's article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/22/20238 minutes, 30 seconds
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Kate Hall: Simple sustainable travel trips

+ Travel slowly - and as locally as possible (if you're not going on a Europe trip like your friends, don't be sad! Celebrate your reduced carbon footprint and enjoy yourself just as much in NZ)  + Water bottle filter (Water-to-go bottle you can get in NZ to purify & reduce plastic water bottles)  + Taking reusables & storing/keeping food waste  + Choosing locally owned hospitality to support  + Considering what activities you're doing (no photos with sedated tigers!)  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/22/20237 minutes, 29 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Looking after our birds

This weekend I am in Taupo – basically to celebrate a Company that has been trapping vermin and exotic pests to create predator-free forests and landscapes. EPRO is their name and they have been doing it for 25 Years – worthy of serious congratulations! They literally provide long-term strategies for ecological restoration. Many of our Native taonga (but especially birds) are in trouble; Often stories in the news – such as the famous Miami Kiwi: Paora was the kiwi that became famous for all the wrong reasons; but not because it was predated by exotic mammals. For some reason we got upset because humans were touching the bird and stressing it far too much. The irony is that around the same time, a kiwi was found, Mauled to death by a dog in Ohope (Whakatane). Yes, a Dog! And the dead kiwi was found behind Ohope Beach school, not just a forest in the middle of nowhere. That bird was also one of the important ancestors for the next generation of kiwi in that area! A set-back for the Whakatane Kiwi Trust. Not many people realise that dogs are the biggest threat to kiwi in habitat around human settlements.   Kiwi smell is very attractive to dogs… and dogs will have a go (yes, Ma’am: even your tiny lap dog will chase that bird!) They may not necessarily want to eat or bite the bird, but just a paw on the back of the kiwi can cause serious crushing troubles; Kiwi have no sternum (breastbone) for the simple reason they don’t have wings and don’t need a sternum to attach flight muscles to. That makes them very vulnerable to crushing from dog bites and pressure from above. They literally bleed to death internally. So EPRO can control stoats and ferrets and rats and feral cats, but when Homo sapiens goes for a walk in the forest with an UN-leashed dog, kiwi are often the victims. And please don’t tell me your little cute Roly will not harm anything …. A totally different way to look after our native birds, is by supporting the science that’s going on throughout the Motu: We are currently banding Harriers (Harrier-Hawks)… or “Large Piwakawaka” as I call them… These birds are banded in Canterbury and Marlborough: a small metal band on one leg, (the usual DOC band with small numbers on them), and a larger brightly coloured band with large, three digit numbers on them, that can be read through binoculars from quite far away, when the bird is sitting on a fence post or feasting on road kill. We are hoping to confirm that these harriers are doing some migrating in autumn and spring (towards the North and South, respectively). If you find a banded bird, record the date and location and report to DOC: www.doc.govt.nz/non-gamebird-band-report-form If the bird is injured, please take it to the nearest Wildlife hospital   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/22/20235 minutes, 11 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Jules Taylor 2023 Sauvignon Blanc

BOB’S BEST BUYS  Wine: Jules Taylor 2023 Sauvignon Blanc, Marlborough $26.99  Why I chose it:  - From the very good 2023 vintage  - Jules Taylor is a consistently good SB producer  - Stock up for summer  - I’m a big fan of Marlborough SB  What does it taste like?  - Ripe yet tangy sauvignon with passion fruit, guava, lime zest, gooseberry and red capsicum flavours. Reasonably concentrated, vibrant wine with punchy varietal characters. Impressive wine with purity and power.  Why it’s a bargain:  - It’s a very good wine at a fair price.  - Recently released – price may drop in another month or two when it gets wider distribution. Where can you buy it?  - Glengarry in Auckland $26.99. Keep an eye out at your local supermarket but make sure you get the 2023 vintage.  Food match?  - I like it with smoked salmon. Good match with Feta cheese.  Will it keep?  - Good for 3-4 years but probably not a lot to gain from keeping it.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/22/20233 minutes, 46 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Spotting AI content and the UK's Online Safety Bill

The leading AI companies have agreed to a series of safeguards as the technology increases in sophistication   Meta, OpenAI, Google, Amazon, Microsoft and others have pledged to work within a framework designed in collaboration with the US government. This is a voluntary effort, there aren't any penalties if they break the pact.  Broadly, the rules are designed to make it easier for folks to spot AI content - which is certainly important as the US heads into the Presidential election season nearly next year.  The companies agreed to:  Security testing of their AI systems by internal and external experts before their release. Ensuring people are able to identify AI generated content through watermarks. Publicly reporting AI capabilities and limitations on a regular basis. Researching the risks such as bias, discrimination and the invasion of privacy.   In the UK, the future of encryption is being tested  The new Online Safety bill would allow Ofcom - the UK's communications regulator - to be able to request tech companies to scan encrypted use data for child exploitation and counter-terrorism threats. It's interesting that they're seeking to give this power to a regulator, and not the courts as is common for things like search warrants and detailed data collection about someone.   Those supporting the bill say it's needed to tackle "record levels" of child abuse hidden away from view. But privacy advocates say it's a step too far. The tech companies agree - with Meta saying they'd pull WhatsApp from the UK. Apple says they'd pull FaceTime and iMessage. They don't want to create a backdoor to their global platform for a specific country, and broadly don't believe in breaking encryption.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/22/20235 minutes, 15 seconds
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Tara Ward: The Bear, Totally Completely Fine, The Deepest Breath

The Bear: Season two of the show about a young chef trained in the fine dining world who comes home to Chicago to run his family sandwich shop after a heartbreaking death in his family (Disney+)    Totally Completely Fine: Thomasin McKenzie stars in this Australian comedy-drama about a troubled young woman named Vivian, who inherits a cliffside property in Sydney only to discover her new backyard is a popular suicide spot (TVNZ+)   The Deepest Breath: Netflix doco about a free diver who trains to break a world record with the help of an expert safety diver. This film follows the paths they took to meet at the pinnacle of the free diving world, documenting the rewards and risks of chasing a dream through ocean depths.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/22/20234 minutes, 58 seconds
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Tracy Edwards: Skipper of the first all female team in the Whitbread Round the World Yacht Race on her career

Tracy Edwards was the first woman to skipper an all-female crew in the Whitbread Round the World Yacht Race in 1989.  The Brit was up against none-other than one of our very own in that race – Sir Peter Blake and the New Zealand crew.   But it wasn’t all smooth sailing for Tracy to get there, she was expelled from school and found herself in the sailing world by sheer luck and determination.   Tracy happens to be coming to Auckland later this year as part of The Ocean Race – to mark the 50th anniversary of the original Whitbread event.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/21/202313 minutes, 14 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Marmalade Steamed Pudding

Steamed puddings are traditionally an inexpensive and if I’m honest, slightly stodgy, pudding option. Not this one. It’s light, buttery and even marmalade-haters will love this!    Ingredients: ½ cup orange marmalade - can use any really ½ cup brown sugar ½ cup orange juice 125g butter 3 eggs, separated 1 cup plain flour 2 tsps baking powder Zest of 1 orange ¼ cup sultanas Custard and cream to serve   Method Butter a 3-cup heat proof pudding bowl well. Spoon the marmalade into the base. Dissolve brown sugar in the orange juice. Cream the butter and egg yolks then add the juice/sugar mix and continue beating. Mix in flour, baking powder, zest and sultanas. Beat the egg whites until soft peaks and gently fold into pudding mixture. Scrape into pudding basin, over marmalade. Cover tightly with 2 layers of foil and tie so that it is well sealed. Place in a large saucepan and pour in boiling water to come about half way up the bowl. Cover, bring to a simmer and steam for 1 hour. Remove pudding, cool for 5 minutes and un-mold onto a plate. Serve warm with custard and whipped cream. Tips  For an even more gourmet version, heat up another quarter cup of marmalade with a little orange juice and Grand Marnier and pour over pudding when serving.  A piece of old stocking is perfect for securing the foil as it stretches so you can get it nicely tight.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/21/20235 minutes, 24 seconds
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Chris Schulz: Reality and Talk to Me

Reality   A former American intelligence specialist is given the longest sentence for the unauthorized release of government information to the media about Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections via an email operation. Features one of the actors of the moment, Sydney Sweeney.    Talk to Me When a group of friends discovers how to conjure spirits by using an embalmed hand, they become hooked on the new thrill -- until one of them unleashes terrifying supernatural forces.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/21/20236 minutes, 33 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Cold, hard cash

This week Kevin Milne joined Jack Tame to chat about cold, hard cash and how close we are to a cashless society. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/21/20235 minutes, 21 seconds
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Jack Tame: As fans, we never know

Amidst all of the amazing sporting action we’re being treated to at the moment, I’ve been mad for the Tour de France. I was sucked in by the Netflix series following last year’s competition, and I’ve keenly prioritised watching the highlights over the last few weeks of racing. The Tour is almost over and the final result is essentially a foregone conclusion. Denmark’s Jonas Vingegaard is about to back up his win last year and ride to glory along the Parisian streets. For most of the tour, the racing has been incredibly close. Vingegaard and his arch rival, former Tour champion Tadej Pogacar have been duking it out, blow for blow. Their teams have been heroically positioning them for the gnarliest climbs, and towards the end of these  gut-busting stages, they’ve been taking turns attacking and trying to out-sprint each other, high on alpine passes. But the Tour took a turn in the individual time trial, a really short race – just 22kms - in which riders race solo. After two weeks of utterly brutal racing, in which you’d expect all of the riders to be wrecked, Vingegaard blasted away his competition so comprehensively, that he admitted even he was surprised by the stats on his power-meter. Against the best riders in the World, in a race lasting only a fraction of the time of previous stages, he beat Pogacar, his next closest competitor, by more than a 1’30”. ‘How did he do that?’ I found myself wondering in awe as I watched the race. Seriously. How... did he do that? It is a decade now since Lance Armstrong finally came clean. A decade since he sat on the couch with Oprah and admitted he was a cheat. In the time since, riders in the Tour de France have performed differently. For starters, most of them have bad days, which didn’t used to happen. But the subject of doping hangs about the Tour de France like a mist in the Pyrenees. To most of us mere mortals, they all seem extraordinary. How anyone can put their body through so much pain, day after day, is superhuman. And as much as I love the competition, I can’t help but find myself pausing and reflecting a little more on the word. The impact of doping is multi-faceted. The riders who are clean, who were literally in primary school when Lance Armstrong competed in his last Tour de France, are constantly forced to justify themselves and their performances. They know there’s little they can do to convince the sceptics. Jonas Vingegaard says he’s been tested four times in the last two days. He’s being filmed the whole time he’s off the bike for two different documentary series. He’s not failed a test, and the mere logistics of doping would make it impossible for him and his team. He’s asked repeatedly about doping, and he’s emphatic. “I wouldn’t take anything I wouldn’t give to my daughter.” I hope he’s right. His team has pointed out that unlike his main rival, he hasn’t competed in other gruelling competitions so far this season. His preparation was solely focused on the big kahuna. It’s entirely predictable that as the Tour continued, he’d slowly grind down the more exhausted riders. But a real tragedy of doping is that as fans, we never know. Given the history, we can never be 100% certain of anyone in the Tour de France. And as much as you can suspend reality a bit and soak up the day-to-day racing, any especially notable performance and those invasive thoughts come crashing back. Superhuman? Or superhuman?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/21/20235 minutes, 30 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Alayna - Self Portrait of Woman Unravelling

Kiwi musician Alayna has released her debut album titled ‘Self Portrait of Woman Unravelling.’ The album features elements of pop, R&B, soul, and folk, and encapsulates her journey and efforts in understanding herself as a person and an artist. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/15/20236 minutes, 40 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Guest and Night Will Find You

The Guest, Emma Cline   Summer is coming to a close on the East End of Long Island, and Alex is no longer welcome. A misstep at a dinner party, and the older man she’s been staying with dismisses her with a ride to the train station and a ticket back to the city. With few resources and a waterlogged phone, but gifted with an ability to navigate the desires of others, Alex stays on Long Island and drifts like a ghost through the hedged lanes, gated driveways, and sun-blasted dunes of a rarefied world that is, at first, closed to her. Propelled by desperation and a mutable sense of morality, she spends the week leading up to Labor Day moving from one place to the next, a cipher leaving destruction in her wake. Taut, propulsive, and impossible to look away from, Emma Cline’s The Guest is a spellbinding literary achievement.    Night Will Find You, Julia Heaberlin Vivvy Bouchet, daughter of a known psychic, was ten when she saved a boy’s life by making an impossible prediction. Now she’s an astrophysicist in Texas, devoted to science, but the boy she saved has become a cop who continues to believe she can see things no one else can. When he begs for help on the high-profile cold case of a kidnapped girl, Vivvy steps back into the ocean of voices that once nearly drowned her. She is forced to team up with detective Jesse Sharp, a skeptic of anything but fact. When Vivvy becomes the target of a conspiracy theorist podcaster, she fights back with both her scientific mind and her inexplicable gifts, hoping to lure a kidnapper, find a child who haunts her, and lay some of her own ghosts to rest. Sharply relevant, Julia Heaberlin's Night Will Find You explores the mysterious nature of belief—in psychic power, in science, in conspiracies, in a higher power—and the delicate dance between scientific truth and the things we can’t explain.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/15/20234 minutes, 48 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Return to Hong Kong

This week Mike Yardley joined Jack Tame to chat about his recent trip to Hong Kong. Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/15/20239 minutes, 33 seconds
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Dr Dougal Sutherland: The importance of mentally disconnecting after work

Being unable to mentally disconnect from your work once your day is over can be a major problem, resulting in higher levels of stress, poor sleep, and even relationship issues. Dr Dougal Sutherland joined Jack Tame to talk about the importance of disconnecting and reconnecting each day, and how to achieve it. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/15/20237 minutes, 10 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Hibernating (Overwintering) in unexpected places

Insect life cycles vary from species to species. It all depends on where they live and what the temperatures are in summer, and in winter Many “overwinter” as eggs – which is easy: no eating needed, no movement needed… which is handy as temperatures are low in winter and insect movement can only happen when temps are comfortable.  Remember: they are cold-blooded, so rely on external temperatures to get energy for movement. So, cold conditions means not much movement. Examples: aphids (on host plants); Cicadas inside the twigs (where Mum laid her eggs); Black Field Crickets (underground); Praying mantis (in cool egg cases stuck to our house). Other species decided a long time ago, that overwintering as pupae or chrysalis is the way to go Similar advantages: no movement no eating and slow development into adult life-stage. Examples: some moths (Gum emperor moths and silk moths) Some moth species literally slow down during the winter as “stunned” adult moths and hibernate – not moving at all.   Moth Chrysalis. Social species, such as Vespid wasps (German wasp/common wasp) and Paper wasps (Polistes species) play a totally different game: they hibernate as adult females, fertilised and all. We call them Queens.   Queen wasp Hibernating in wood. Just before autumn turns into winter, the surviving fertile females from a colony mate with the males (drones) and, after a feed (often of carbo-hydrates … sugars!) they will look for a suitable place to hibernate. Anything will do, really, as long as it’s out of the severe frost and preferably dark and safe Of course, in spring when temperatures become a little more agreeable, the queens will leave the hibernation spot and try locate some sustenance in the form of early-flowering plants with nectar. This will start the early-season cycle off. Finding a nest site and starting a brand-new nest is the very first priority. But before it gets that far, we’re stuck with them in winter and often on or near the house. Look for hibernating queens in window cavities, in the grouting of bricks, indeed: any nook or cranny will do. But as I found out a week or so ago: stored and stacked firewood is one of the best places for the queen wasps. As soon as you fill the basket near the Ultra-Low Emissions Burner, the blighters believe that spring has sprung and it’s time to move on to the next phase of the wasp life-cycle. Yep they fly around inside the lounge, trying to get out through the window… if they haven’t stung you already when you lifted up the firewood to transport it inside, that is!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/14/20235 minutes, 18 seconds
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Nadine Higgins: Quitting jobs without another lined up

The NY Times has declared The Great Resignation over... but people quitting their jobs without another one to go to is still a very common occurrence (often *cough* at a particular time of their lives).   Not only do we see it often – but we see how it can often go wrong, and there are definitely things you can do to stop it being a source of relationship friction, financial stress and a recipe for a crisis of confidence.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/14/20235 minutes, 49 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: SAG joins the writer's strike, AI a key issue

The Actors have joined the Writers in striking - and again AI is a key issue  160,000 performers stopped work at midnight - no more publicity tours, events, filming and more for the biggest names in Hollywood. People have been asking why Barbie has been going so big on their marketing so early, might just be because that will now grind to a halt. At the center of the strike - Actors want more profit sharing in the global success of their shows and want to protect their craft from AI.  The Union's negotiator said studios had asked for the ability to scan the faces of background artists, pay them for a day's work, then be able to own and use their likeness "for the rest of eternity, in any project they want, with no consent and no compensation".   The Studios negotiator disagrees with the characterization and says the proposal only permits a company to use the digital replica of a background actor in the motion picture for which the background actor is employed. Any other use requires the background actor’s consent and bargaining for the use, subject to a minimum payment.  Either way - there is concern from the actors about how their work is valued, and how to protect their most important IP: their body!  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/14/20235 minutes, 17 seconds
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Tara Ward: Full Circle, Creamerie, Quarterback

Full Circle: Steven Soderbergh directs and Claire Dane stars in this thriller that follows a fallout from a botched kidnapping, and the secrets that are exposed that connect multiple characters across New York City (Neon).       Creamerie: A second season of the dark New Zealand comedy about three dairy farmers living in a dystopian world where a deadly virus has wiped out 99% of all men (TVNZ+).     Quarterback: In the tradition of Drive to Survive and Point Break, this sports docu-series follows three quarterbacks in the American NFL as they experience highs and lows on their way to the Super Bowl (Netflix).   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/14/20234 minutes, 35 seconds
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Chris Fletcher: What it's like to be a Master Distiller at Jack Daniels

Chris Fletcher is one of only a handful of people to hold the title of Master Distiller at Jack Daniels in his 155-year history. He carried on the family tradition, following in the footsteps of his grandfather who also held the role, and is responsible for the whiskey’s overall quality from “grain to glass”. Jack Tame managed to catch up with Chris Fletcher this morning, to have a chat about what it’s like to have the job. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/14/202312 minutes, 6 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Doctors appointments and alcohol intakes

Should we really tell the truth when the doctor asks, “What’s your alcohol intake?” After all, don’t they double it anyway because it’s assumed we all lie?  Kevin Milne joined Jack Tame this week to tell a story about what he discovered in a specialist report. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/14/20235 minutes, 56 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Matariki Watercress Pesto

Matariki is a time to celebrate all things Aotearoa; relax, think, and kōrero about what the coming year can bring. It’s best to do this around a tableful of food I find : )  It’s a great opportunity to focus on ingredients that are locally grown and I just love this peppery pesto made with watercress and NZ-grown pine nuts.    Ingredients A few big handfuls fresh watercress, washed  ¼ cup pine nuts – use Pinoli which are grown in NZ!  30-50g grated parmesan  Juice from one lemon  ¼ teaspoon sea salt  ¼- ½ cup olive oil    Method Use a food processor to blend together watercress, pine nuts, parmesan, lemon juice and salt. Drizzle in the olive oil until you have a chunky sauce consistency. Taste and adjust seasoning. Use this on grilled mussels, lamb chops, stirred through pasta or on a beautiful baked kūmara!   Notes:  Can sub pine nuts for almonds or walnuts.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/14/20235 minutes, 20 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One & Robots

Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One Ethan Hunt and the IMF team must track down a terrifying new weapon that threatens all of humanity if it falls into the wrong hands. With control of the future and the fate of the world at stake, a deadly race around the globe begins. Confronted by a mysterious, all-powerful enemy, Ethan is forced to consider that nothing can matter more than the mission -- not even the lives of those he cares about most.    Robots on Apple TV +  Charles is a womanizer while Elaine is a gold digger. The duo learn humanity when forced to team up and pursue robot doubles of themselves. Starring Jack Whitehall and Shailene Woodley.     LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/14/20235 minutes, 59 seconds
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Jack Tame: Sometimes you have to make unpopular calls

I was driving about some of the outskirts of Nelson this week and it took me a bit of time to notice it. Since my last visit to the region earlier this year, several of the large billboards that had been hammered up on the sides of the road to protest the Three Waters reforms have been removed and not obviously replaced. I don’t know if it’s a Nelson thing or if the billboards have just been moved to another location, or if their removal is symptomatic of something greater nationwide. But at the very least, it’s been my observation that much of the anger around Three Waters has dissipated since Kieran McAnulty took over the portfolio and the government reset the plan. I’m not saying Three Waters isn’t still contentious. There are still public meetings and roadshows and Facebook groups spilling with fury. I’m just saying it’s not nearly as contentious as it was 12 months ago. And even though the new ten-entity plan doesn’t make anything like the financial savings that were initially promised, the government has correctly bet that it can push ahead with a version of Three Waters without it being the single issue that costs it the election. In six years, I can think of few other significant reforms in which Labour has pursued a vision over short-term political popularity. Auckland’s Light Rail project might make the cut, except –like Three Waters– I suspect the project is probably more popular and less contentious than some of the pushback would have us believe. The nature of political leadership is that sometimes you have to make unpopular calls for the greater good. As much as voters have a collective wisdom, they’re also human. They’re motivated by short term incentives. Everyone wants more for less. I suspect that many of those who vehemently oppose Three Waters, for example, have also railed for decades against the rates increases that might have gone some way to developing water infrastructure and removing the need for the reforms in the first place. If you’re only prepared to make popular decisions, then what is the point in leadership? It’s not really leadership, is it? It’s just focus-grouping. Polling. Instead of laying out a platform, debating its merits, and pursuing a distinct vision, you might as well just have a smartphone app or a website on which everyone votes on every little policy so that you can be sure you never fall afoul of the masses. I’m not remotely surprised by Chris Hipkins’ captain’s call on tax, this week. The Prime Minister has made it clear from day one that his absolute priority is winning the election. But I do wonder if somewhere on the ninth floor, at some point, Labour’s strategists find themselves in an existential bind. If the cost of winning an election means sacrificing your political vision, then what’s the point in winning?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/14/20233 minutes, 57 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Olivia Dean - Messy

Olivia Dean began her career working with dance act Rudimental. With burgeoning solo success following a series of solo EPs, she now releases her debut album, Messy. It’s a mainstream pop record, but with a loose Londony informality amid the polish. You can hear the distant echo of rare groove and acid jazz.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/8/20234 minutes, 54 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: My Friend Anne Frank and The Book of Form and Emptiness

My Friend Anne Frank - Hannah Pick-Goslar  Hannah Pick-Goslar died in October just before her 94th birthday (I accidentally put in an interview request for her and that was the book publisher’s response lol)  In this long‑awaited memoir, Hannah shares the story of her childhood during the Holocaust, from the introduction of anti-Jewish laws in Amsterdam to the gradual disappearance of classmates and, eventually, the Frank family, to Hannah and her family's imprisonment in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. As Hannah chronicles the experiences of her own life during and after the war, she provides a searing look at what countless children endured at the hands of the Nazi regime, as well as an intimate, never‑before‑seen portrait of the most recognizable victim of the Holocaust. Culminating in an astonishing fateful reunion, My Friend Anne Frank is the profoundly moving story of childhood and friendship during one of the darkest periods in the world's history.    The Book of Form and Emptiness - Ruth Ozeki  With its blend of sympathetic characters, riveting plot, and vibrant engagement with everything from jazz, to climate change, to our attachment to material possessions, The Book of Form and Emptiness is classic Ruth Ozeki—bold, wise, poignant, playful, humane and heartbreaking.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/8/20235 minutes, 31 seconds
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Mike Yardley: The best of Bergamo, Italy

This week Mike Yardley joined Jack Tame to chat about his recent visit to the city of Bergamo in Italy.  Find his full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/8/20237 minutes, 37 seconds
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Kate Hall: Sustainable School Holidays activities

+ Take a bus card, jump on random buses and see where the bus schedules take you! Adventure, explore, and use it as a way to teach kids how to take the bus while making busing feel cool & fun (I am doing this with my 6 & 8 year old nieces today so will have a good story/insight).  + Declutter: turn your house clearout/clean up into a game.  + Treasure hunt: even if it's raining, finding a free list online or making your own treasure hunt up can be a great source of entertainment for hours.  + Bake - but head to a package free store to source all the ingredients with the kids (let them make decisions and learn how to use the bulk bin stores).  + Upcycling: choose broken things from your house or take items from the recycling bin to carry out your own upcycling challenge.  Most of these are sustainable financially too as they are free or cost very little!  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/8/20238 minutes, 42 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Reproduction

Spent some time looking at Julie’s wonderful display of bright pink Cyclamen – they are flowering beautifully – such an old-fashioned plant… (my mother had them in pots outside, all those years ago) But those Cyclamen Coum have not always been in the large pot in which the Cumquat grows its small bright-yellow/orange citrus fruits; It was one of those experimental accidents that seems to be the result of Julie’s arty Green thumbs. A few years ago, she put a small pot with Cyclamen under that cumquat; it started flowering pretty pink and produced seeds – lots of seeds.  The idea is to let the seeds develop and fall onto the soil in winter – in the following autumn they’ll produce heaps of small Cyclamen and the soil is covered in a matter of a few years. Partial shade is the preferred spot – that means you can grow these plants under trees in the garden (not necessarily in pots). They will go dormant in spring – leaves drop off and the plants stay dormant all summer. The cycle starts again in Autumn. Light (liquid) fertiliser - every now and then – will be great. Another way to get Cyclamen to reproduce is by lifting the tubers in late summer/Autumn and dividing them before replanting those underground tubers. Division of the tubers results in all offspring being very much the same (colour, size, etc) But – of course – it’s very satisfying to find the right spot and conditions that allow these plants to go nuts – and more nuts they go, the better it looks. Another way to look at seeds and their variability in development is when you start playing with a plant species through cross-pollination. Dahlias are a perfect example of a plant you can muck around with; all you need is a brush! (or a very well-trained pollinator, such as an obedient honey bee) Imagine taking pollen from a red-coloured Dahlia flower and transporting that (with your brush) to a yellow flower of the same cultivar… (or even a different cultivar – what the heck!). A cross pollination like that can sometimes yield a completely new colour morph or a new variety! This is the kind of gig that professional plant-breeders are into. In New Zealand our Famous Dahlia breeder is Keith Hammett. He created soooo many new varieties! … and every year he has sooo many seeds left to propagate – he simply runs out of time and space. This year he –once again– teamed up with the New Zealand Gardener: You can get some of Keith’s seeds and propagate those yourself; (get in touch with NZ Gardener) Imagine growing a variety that has never been seen before – Just name it yourself and propagate it by growing the tuber every year. You know how to do it!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/7/20233 minutes, 22 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Instagram's Threads is the fastest growing app, ever?

Meta says 70 million people have now signed up for Threads and there have been over 90 million posts. It took Twitter four years to build that audience.    Elon is now threatening to sue Meta, alleging Meta has copied Twitter, saying  "competition is fine, cheating is not". But he's in for a hard time because copyright law doesn't protect ideas, and Meta has a patent for its newsfeed. If anything, it means Meta could counter sue Twitter - which is exactly why these companies patent things like this even if they never really expect to enforce them.  Jane Manchun Wong - who is famous in tech circles for uncovering unreleased features in Twitter (and other apps) as they're being developed - is now working for Meta on Threads.    Meta is really pushing the safety and community aspect of this app  Meta says they want it to be a "friendly" place for conversation but I still don't see how they plan to make that happen. Instagram's boss says they're not going to do anything to encourage politics and “hard news" - but that won't stop people publishing their thoughts about it? Yes, Meta has more moderation policies, more tech to enforce them, more people to manually review content - but that doesn't inherently make it a safer place. Is Twitter a less safe place than Facebook today?    What's next?  Instagram is working on a feed just for people you follow and a chronological feed - which is going to make it a LOT more usable. Right now the feed seems to display random content without rhyme or reason - I certainly can't pickup a theme to what I'm getting.  Hashtags, trending topics and more are also in the works.  They'll also add proper fediverse / activity pub support - which will could open the door to account portability, and even interoperability with other Twitter-like services.  Hopefully a proper web version is coming soon too. At the moment you can only find someone's profile if you know their username - eg. https://www.threads.net/@paulstenhouse See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/7/20234 minutes, 30 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: Appendicitis

Dr Bryan Betty joined Jack Tame to talk about appendicitis: what it is, the signs, and what to do about it. LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/7/20234 minutes, 30 seconds
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Tara Ward: Unforgotten, Everybody Else Burns, The Horror of Dolores Roach

Unforgotten: A new season of this brilliant British crime drama starring Nicola Walker and Sanjeev Bhaskar recently arrived on TVNZ+. Everybody Else Burns: A sharp British comedy about the Lewises, an everyday family from Manchester who happen to belong to an ultra-religious cult (Neon). The Horror of Dolores Roach: A comedy horror about a woman who is released from prison after 18 years, and after reuniting with an old friend, is driven to shocking extremes to survive (Prime Video).   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/7/20236 minutes
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Marianne van Velzen: Dutch Journalist on her book about Minnie Berrington

Marianne van Velzen is a Dutch journalist who has long held a fascination with Australia, having been born in the Netherlands but growing up down under.  The country’s long informed her work – and she’s researched and written about some the most adventurous and pioneering people in Australia.  Her latest book is centered on Minnie Berrington, the first female opal miner in South Australia’s outback.  Marianne joined Jack Tame to chat about her latest work. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/7/202311 minutes, 54 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Peanut Butter Cookies

These are ridiculously easy to make, yummy as, and they just happen to be gluten free! Chewy, densely rich and very moreish.  Makes 12–15 cookies    Ingredients: 1 cup sugar  1 cup peanut butter  1 large egg  50g dark chocolate, roughly chopped  1 teaspoon vanilla extract (optional)    Method: Preheat the oven to 180°C and line a baking tray with baking paper.  With an electric beater or a food processor, mix sugar, peanut butter and egg until combined. Add the chopped chocolate and vanilla and mix briefly.  Roll dough into balls about the size of a walnut or golf ball, depending on how big you like your cookie. Flatten with your palm.  Bake for 14–16 minutes, flattening again at the 8-minute mark.  Cool on a rack. Store in an airtight container. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/7/20237 minutes, 19 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: WHAM! and Sugar and Stars

WHAM! Through archival interviews and footage, George Michael and Andrew Ridgeley relive the arc of their Wham! career, from 70s best buds to 80s pop icons.    Sugar and Stars Ever since he was a little boy, Yazid has dreamed of becoming a pastry chef. Moved from one foster home to another, nothing predestined him for such a career. Yazid’s indomitable determination and resourcefulness have proven priceless in helping him succeed in the elitist arena of patisserie. Working for the world’s top chefs from Paris to Monaco, he strives to become the best and to fulfill his dream of winning the international pastry championship.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/7/20235 minutes, 37 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Instructions on what to feed the dog

Kevin's wife Linda is away for a couple weeks, leaving him with pages of instructions on what to feed the dog. Plus, he's finally figured out where all their money has been going. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/7/20237 minutes, 24 seconds
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Jack Tame: Distracting kids on road trips

The drive was only three hours but we knew we’d have to distract him. It’s not his fault! 6-year-olds simply do not have the biologicial composition for sitting still in place for more than about 14 seconds. And even a relatively simple drive, Auckland to Rotorua, is an almighty test for the first weekend of the school holidays. When I was a kid, my parents used to try and placate us with food. Ahead of a long drive, my three siblings and I would climb into the back of the family van, each of us with an ice-cream container full of Uncle Toby’s finest highly-processed treats. It was like a Tame family version of the marshmellow test. My sister and I would try and drag our respective treat boxes out until we’d made it most of the way to our destination. Delayed gratification. My little brother would be finished his by the time our van reached the end of the street. The first ‘are we there yet?’ came before we’d even cleared the Bombay Hills. Although I’d encouraged Mr Six-year old to plot our remaining journey time on the car’s Google Maps, it became clear he didn’t understand how to read the column with the hours remaining, and to everyone’s grave disappointment - “It says only nine more minutes!” - had been solely focusing on the minutes column for our procession down the Southern Motorway. My wife introduced a game of Hoiho. If you see a horse, you yell ‘Hoiho!’ If you see a paddock of horses, you say ‘Pataka.’ Everyone keeps tally of their total horses, until a player sees a cemetery, ‘Urupā,’ and gets to choose what other player’s horses get scratched.   Mr Six-year-old was an enthusiastic participant. A little too enthusiastic, if anything. Cows? “Hoiho!” Deer? “Hoiho!” Vegetation on distant hillsides? “Hoiho! Hoiho!” And it quickly became clear that what maybe he lacked in horse-spotting skills, he made up for in cunning. “Hoiho!” “Where?” “Oh back there around the corner. You missed it.” Finally, somewhere just south of Huntly, we resorted to technology. Not a screen, but my noise-cancelling headphones and a series of children’s podcasts, about things like why cheese is smelly and why fish can open their eyes underwater. It was a good call. Mr Six-year-old was chuffed. He asked to pause Hoiho and seemed to relax back into his seat and watch the Waikato countryside drift past. The only problem with the noise-cancelling headphones setup is that even for the quietest among us, it can be very difficult to regulate the volume of your voice. My wife would just be dozing off when she’d be wrenched from her slumber by someone screaming in the back seat. “Unpause. Hoiho! Ok, pause again.” The rate at which time passes depends on your frame of reference. I dunno if Albert Einstein had a brainwave moment in describing the theory of relativity. But part of me wonders if he took a family trip to Rotorua with a six-year-old in the back. I figured three hours was gonna’ be a long time for him. But the person most relieved when we reach our destination wasn’t Mr Six-year-old. It was me.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/7/20234 minutes, 24 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Kelly Clarkson - Chemistry

With her tenth studio album, “chemistry,” the singer turned talk-show host drills into the specific heartbreak of a marriage’s end.  In 2020, after filing for divorce from her husband of nearly seven years, Brandon Blackstock, Clarkson hinted at new music, claiming that she was writing the “most personal” album she’s ever made.   Last year, she said that she’d been working on the record for two years, and that she’d done the Christmas songs because it had provided a joyful break from the difficult realities of her life.  That project-in-the-making, “chemistry,” is finally out, and it is a worthy entry in the annals of breakup albums, a musical gesture that teases, entices, and—for better or worse—provides the public a window into a relationship gone bad.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/1/20235 minutes, 49 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Horror and hope in Phnom Penh

Lusciously located at the confluence of the mighty Mekong and Tonle Sap rivers, the very name Phnom Penh conjures up an image of the exotic. I recently visited Cambodia’s capital with Emerald Cruises on their magnificent week-long float from Ho Chi Minh City. From the fluttering saffron robes of passing monks to the glimmering spires of the Royal Palace, Phnom Penh struts its Buddhist stripes at every turn. But the Cambodian capital’s shine was egregiously tarnished by the ravages of the Khmer Rouge regime. Forty years on, Phnom Penh aspires to be as electric as Bangkok or Ho Chi Minh City, with swanky new developments and the hip, edgy design boom revving up the city centre’s allure, and eye-catching skyscrapers extravagantly reframing the skyline. Come nightfall, there is no question that Phnom Penh is one of the most illuminated cities in Asia, radiantly aglow in the city’s insatiable obsession with playful, escapist light shows. The city is lit! But the shameful shadow of Pol Pot and his abominable regime is a stain that cannot be airbrushed away – or joyfully dressed up in fairy lights. The past bastardry is still central to the city narrative. Remarkably, when the Khmer Rouge grabbed power, it forced most of its three million residents into the countryside, apart of its grand vision for a classless agrarian society. Today, Phnom Penh resembles a city of startling contrasts, from extreme poverty to ostentatious wealth. It’s a city gripped by entrenched state corruption and the reaffirming kindness of locals you meet. Virtually everyone I chatted to was scathing of Cambodia’s slavish dependence on China. Nearly 50% of their public debt is owed to China, with more “debt trap” loans in the works. Phnom Penh is a city where the streets have no name – merely numbers. The legacy of the Khmer Rouge looms large as one of the central reasons to visit the city and to reflect on history’s epic horrors, dipping into the darkest corners of the country's traumatised past. It’s an unvarnished, gut-wrenching experience. My first shore excursion with Emerald Cruises was to one of Cambodia’s biggest Killing Fields. Under Pol Pot's maniacal rule from 1975 to 1979, roughly a quarter of Cambodia’s population was murdered, the genocide of roughly 2 million people. Tens of thousands of Khmer Rouge prisoners who had been tortured at the infamous S-21 prison were then taken just out of town to the Choeung Ek extermination camp, which was previously a Chinese cemetery and longan orchard. Prisoners would arrive blind-folded unaware of the brutality that was about to unfold. Our guide pointed out the tree named the Killing Tree, which is where children would be beaten to death. Another tree has been named the Music Tree. The Khmer Rouge executioners would hang speakers from the tree and blast out loud music to drown out the screams of people being bludgeoned to death, so that those awaiting their fate remained oblivious to the evil about to be unleashed. The Killing Tree. Photo / Mike Yardley My guide soberly remarked that most people were viciously bludgeoned to death by farm implements, because the Khmer Rouge didn’t want to waste precious money on bullets. The most sickening spectacle at this site are the shards of bones and clothing sticking up from the vast mounds of dirt that mark the mass graves. Every time it rains, the earth reveals more and more of its sinister secrets, lurking beneath the surface. Most mass graves have been left untouched. Today the camp is a memorial site. A monumental 17-storey glass stupa, built 25 years ago, rises up from the centre, filled with 8,000 skulls, exhumed from the mass graves nearby. It's a harrowing spectacle – steel yourself. Many of the skulls, which are grouped according to age and sex, bear the holes and slices from the blows that killed them. Photo / Mike Yardley Back in town, we visited the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum, another horrific reminder of the cruelty humans are capable of inflicting. Once a neighbourhood high school, the building was seized by Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge and turned into a prison and interrogation centre, the dreaded S-21. During the prison's four years of operation, an estimated 20,000 Cambodians were tortured here before being transferred to the Killing Fields for execution. Initially it was the previous governments officials, academics, doctors, teachers, students, factory workers, monks and engineers that were imprisoned. The regime was paranoid about educated Cambodians becoming CIA spies and went to outrageous lengths to interrogate inmates and force out confessions – many of which were false confessions. Prisoners were routinely beaten and tortured with electric shocks, searing hot metal instruments and hanging. Some were cut with knives or suffocated with plastic bags. Other methods for generating confessions included pulling out fingernails while pouring alcohol on the wounds and waterboarding prisoners. Even a Kiwi, Kerry Hamill, was tortured in the prison, before being executed. He was imprisoned along with his friends after sailing off the coast from Thailand and inadvertently straying into Cambodian territorial waters. The four school buildings that made up S-21 have been left largely as they were when the Khmer Rouge left. The prison kept extensive records and photos of the victims, and many of the documents are on display; particularly chilling are the representations of torture scenes painted by S-21 survivor Vann Nath. He is just one of a handful inmates who walked out of the prison alive. His painting skills were his saving grace. Another survivor is Chum Mey. His life was only spared because of his ability to repair sewing machines for Pol Pot's soldiers. The 93 year old has appeared in numerous documentaries and still greets visitors most days in the museum courtyard. S21 Prison in Phnom Penh. Photo / Mike Yardley For a welcome change of scenery, we also headed to the bejewelled splendour Royal Palace, the official residence of current King Sihamoni. The residential areas of the palace re strictly off limits, but within the pagoda-style compound are several structures worth savouring, including the Silver Pagoda; the Throne Hall, with a tiered roof topped by a 200-foot-tall tower; and a pavilion donated by the Emperor Napoléon III and shipped here from France. Photo / Supplied The Temple of the Emerald Buddha, built from 1892 to 1902 and renovated in 1962, is one of Phnom Penh's greatest attractions. It's referred to as the Silver Pagoda because of the 5000 silver tiles—more than 5 tonne of pure silver—that make up the floor in the main temple hall. It’s also home to the Emerald Buddha—some say it's carved from jade, while others maintain that it's Baccarat crystal. In front of the altar is a 90kg solid-gold Buddha studded with over 2000 diamonds. Serious bling! Just out of Phnom Penh, we also headed to Uodong, the former royal capital of Cambodia until it moved to Phnom Penh in 1886. It’s home to the burial sites of numerous Khmer kings and the Oudong Monastery. It was fascinating to interact with some of the nuns who live here – many who lost their husbands during the insanity of Pol Pot’s regime. Best of all, entering the grace and gorgeousness of the main temple, we received a traditional Buddhist blessing from a couple of resident monks. Photo / Mike Yardley Shop up a storm in Phnom Penh. Bartering is expected and part of the fun at markets - just watch your wallet doesn't go walkabout with a fleet-footed pickpocket. Colourful krama (checked headscarves), weird and wonderful fruit, gemstones, fried grasshoppers -- it's all under one enormous Art Deco roof at Central Market. Haggle for handwoven silk, silver animal trinkets and Buddha carvings in the Russian Market's warren of dark alleys, which takes its name from the Russian wives who would previously sweep into town for a buying binge. Street 240 and Street 178 are the city's chicest boulevards, dotted with fashion boutiques, art galleries and bookstores. Phnom Penh has a reputation for booming nightlife. Booming it is, but a large part of that is actually pretty seedy. As in Thailand, in some parts of town, child prostitution is rife. The main nightlife area, nicknamed The Strip is on Street 51, spills forth with young Khmer girls from the countryside, soliciting on the footpath, waiting for large old white men with fat wallets. I felt sick. For a classier, cleaner experience, head to the riverfront scene on Sisowath Quay, where the restaurants and bars party deep into the night – without the sleazy sex trade atmos. Down on the quay, enjoy sizzling city views, cool breezes, cook-your-own-meat Khmer barbeque and rooftop cocktails at FCC, the Foreign Correspondents Club, a city institution housed in a French colonial gem. It is currently undergoing a major refresh, but the history runs deep here. Photos on the wall date back to the Khmer Rouge invasion, as taken by war correspondents who used to hang out at FCC back in the day. Photo / Supplied You’ll have a world of fun taking in the trippy night lights on a remork ride, as Phnom Penh spangles itself silly in splashy light displays. Good-cause dining is also big deal in town, whereby numerous restaurants are run by aid organisations to help fund their social programmes and train new recruits to the hospitality trade. One of the best is Friends, on St 13, which offers former street children a head-start in the restaurant business. Explore the wonders, horror and history of Vietnam and Cambodia on Emerald Harmony’s 7 night Majestic Mekong river cruise. Your cruise includes 21 meals with complimentary wine, beer and soft drinks accompanying lunch and dinner on board. Knowledgeable local guides will bring each destination to life in small group excursions. It’s an enchanting way to savour a truly heady pocket of the world. Book direct at www.emeraldcruises.co.nz Jet your way to Phnom Penh with Malaysia Airlines, who offer super-convenient, one-stop services from Auckland via Kuala Lumpur, eight times a week. With well-timed overnight flights, to and from KL, the award-winning Malaysia Airlines is a full-service carrier, renowned for competitive airfares, exceptional service and quintessential Malaysian hospitality. Bag some great fares and seats to suit with the Malaysia Airlines Explore the World Sale. www.malaysiaairlines.com Mike Yardley is our resident traveller on Jack Tame Saturday Mornings.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/1/202310 minutes, 17 seconds
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Dougal Sutherland: What is 'mindfulness'?

We hear lots about “mindfulness” – it seems to be everywhere. But what actually is it and what does it do?  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/1/20238 minutes, 51 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Leaf Curl on Stone Fruit

One of the common queries from the Garden involves the phenomenon of leafcurl on the leaves of peaches, nectarines, apricots, almonds …. STONE FRUIT in other words. It is caused by the fungus Taphrina deformans. The leaves (especially in spring) are discoloured and contorted (if there is such a word) disfigured and looking quite awful. Colours vary from pale green to pink and deeper purple colours, but the distortions are very diagnostic: as if the leaves have become a lot “thicker” The affected leaves fall off the trees along with infected small fruits. Infection As soon as the leaf buds have “swollen” to produce spring-time leaves, the infections take place. Later in spring and early summer, when most of the affected leaves have fallen off, the leaves appear to be “normal, but the tree will have been weakened. By then the damage has been done. With newly-formed peach leaves in spring, you are NOT advised to spray copper on those leaves, as copper often causes “burn” on those leaves and - besides – you’re too late controlling the fungus at that time. A spray with Myclobutanil (“Fungus fighter”) might be more effective as that (non-organic) material will control the fungal infection – albeit too late for that year’s crop! Timing of Infection The reason we’re talking about leaf curl at this time of the year (July) is that from Late Autumn to Early Winter (right now!) the fungal spores of Taphrina deformans are infecting the leaf buds that are being formed on the twigs for the new spring growth. Control Grab yourself a double dose of Copper spray (or a mixture of Copper and Sulphur (both regarded as organic sprays) and drench those new buds two or three times (2 weeks apart). I have the feeling that you can’t go wrong with three or even four sprays of copper from all angles, so the buds are thoroughly sprayed and the fungal spores are given a run for their money! Some folk advise to do apply another copper spray just before the leaf buds swell (in spring) and  produce leaves. But it’s quite simple: if you can control the Taphrina deformans at this time of the year, you’ll control the leaf curl too and have a much better crop of stone fruit in spring. If you still get some leaf curl on the new leaves, a quick dose of fungus fighter will “mop up” the fungus before it goes into its summer state. Hygiene Don’t forget to pick up fallen, infected leaves and fruit from the ground underneath the tree.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/1/20234 minutes, 46 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Master of Wine's top pick

BOB’S BEST BUYS  Wine: Neudorf 2022 Tiritiri Chardonnay, Nelson $28  Why I chose it: - Neudorf is one of the country’s top chardonnay producers  - It is less than one/third of the price of Neudorf’s top chardonnay  - “Special occasion” wine  What does it taste like?  - Appealing, accessible chardonnay with an initial hint of fruit and alcohol sweetness leading to nicely integrated acidity that helps drive a lengthy finish. A mix of subtle mineral and citrus flavours. Great value at this price.  Why it’s a bargain: - It is one of those wines that I spot on the shelve and think they have made a mistake by underpricing it.  Where can you buy it? - Moore Wilson’s, Wellington $26.95; - Neudorf Vineyards, Upper Moutere $28. - Wine retailers know that they don’t have to discount the wine to sell it. It has such a good reputation.  Food match? - Freshly shucked Nelson Toi Point oysters garnished with a squeeze of lime. Most seafoods.  Will it keep?  - It offers great drinking now but will still be delicious in 4-5 years.  therealreview.com   LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/30/20234 minutes, 25 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Messenger Supervision Tools and Meta blocking news links in Canada

What are your kids up to on Instagram and Messenger - you can now find out more than ever  Just how much time are they spending chatting to friends? The new "Messenger Supervision Tools" will show that and lots more. Parents will be able to see contacts lists, who messages with their child and who can see their Stories. They can't however see the actual messages themselves. These are available now in the USA, Canada and UK. Will roll out globally over time.   Over on Instagram, if a kid isn't following someone and they try to send a message, they'll get an invite to connect before any photos or videos can be received, or calls are connected.    An update about Meta blocking links to news sites in Canada  Well Google is doing the same now. It'll be removing all news content from Google Search, and Google news. They haven't said if links to stories about Canada from foreign publishers would be allowed. Google is calling the Online News Act "unworkable" - especially because it forces the tech companies to the negotiating table with no guidelines on what a reasonable deal should be valued at.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/30/20235 minutes, 30 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Winning the Lotto

This week Kevin Milne joined Jack to chat about his win in the Lotto draw this week, and what he’d do with $33 million dollars. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/30/20236 minutes, 11 seconds
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Tara Ward: Hijack, The Witcher, Muscles & Mayhem

Hijack: Idris Elba stars in this drama about a negotiator who has to use his professional skills when his flight from Dubai to London is hijacked (Apple TV+).   The Witcher: The popular dark fantasy series sees Henry Cavill return for a third season as a monster-hunter available for hire, navigating a world where people are more wicked than beasts (Netflix).  Muscles & Mayhem: An Unauthorised Story of American Gladiators: This docu-series follows the dramatic rise and fall (and all the behind the scenes drama) of one of the biggest TV shows of the 1990s (Netflix). LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/30/20235 minutes, 27 seconds
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Jimmy Chin: Oscar winning director and photographer on Wild Life project

Jimmy Chin is responsible for capturing some of the most famous outdoor photos and documentaries of our time alongside his wife, Chai.  The pair shot the Oscar winning documentary Free Solo, following climber Alex Honnold conquering the 900 metre vertical rock face of El Capitan in Yosemite… without any ropes.  Jimmy and Chai have a new project that’s been picked up by Disney called Wild Life.  It follows Kris Tompkins and her partner Doug, who helped pioneer the likes of Patagonia, The North Face, and Esprit. They then turned their attention to creating National Parks throughout Chile and Argentina through one of the largest private land donations in history.  Jimmy Chin joined Jack Tame to chat about this latest project. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/30/202313 minutes, 50 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Persimmon Salad

This beautiful fruit is in abundance right now, and it’s a great ingredient to work with given it lends itself to both sweet and savoury dishes. Often paired with blue cheese, I recently enjoyed it at a fab restaurant in Wellington, High Water on Cuba St, where they paired it with fresh burrata. This is my version of that dish.  Serves 2    Ingredients: 3 tablespoons currants, soaked in boiling water to plump 1 firm persimmon, sliced very thinly (I used a mandolin) 100g burrata or fresh mozzarella or cottage cheese Small handful of toasted hazelnuts Honey, pomegranate molasses, balsamic vinegar or vincotto Dressing:  2 tablespoons good olive oil 2 tablespoons red wine vinegar Whisk up the dressing in a little bowl.    Method: Choose your favourite plate and dollop some of whatever cheese you’re using around it in spoonfuls or torn pieces. Cover these with the thin slices of persimmon. Drizzle over the dressing, scatter over the currants and hazelnuts. Add a final flourish of whatever you’re using, the honey, molasses etc.  Eat quietly and reverently.  Note: Vincotto is a beautiful, fruity, tangy viscous vinegar See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/30/20235 minutes, 30 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny, The Last Rider

Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny  Daredevil archaeologist Indiana Jones races against time to retrieve a legendary dial that can change the course of history. Accompanied by his goddaughter, he soon finds himself squaring off against Jürgen Voller, a former Nazi who works for NASA.      The Last Rider  American cyclist Greg LeMond wins the 1989 Tour de France to complete one of the greatest comebacks in sports history.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/30/20238 minutes, 26 seconds
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Jack Tame: There's no such thing as a free lunch

Sir Isaac Newton missed a trick. Albert Einstein did no better. Archimedes was good, sure. But he still failed to describe one of the most obvious principles defining almost every aspect of our mortal existance: There’s no such thing as a free lunch. So far as I’m concerned, the Theory of No Free Lunch applies to every aspect of our lives. It’s the rule of payoffs. The rule of compromises. Sure, you can drive a massive V8 that sounds awesome and goes like the clappers, but it’s probably gonna’ be terrible for the environment and a nightmare to maintain. Sure, you can have a meaningful, purposeful, nourishing job, but you’re probably only going to earn a 50th of the salary of someone trading derivatives or trafficking weapons for a living. But perhaps nowhere is the Theory of No Free Lunch more applicable than at lunch. Sure, you can have a fast, convenient, delicious meal, but it’s probably not gonna’ be very healthy. You can enjoy a highly-nutritious, wholesome, plant-based dish, but it’s probably not gonna’ be quite as tasty or convenient as some other options. Think about how we use salt and sugar. Up to a point, is it too cheeky to suggest that every sprinkle makes a dish both a bit more delicious and a bit less healthy? There are very few unicorns when it comes to the Theory of No Free Lunch, which is why I for one am not surprised in the slightest at the news on Aspartame. The World Health Organisation is reportedly preparing to define the artificial sweetener as a possible human carcinogen. Aspartame is the miracle ingredient that makes things like Diet Coke, toothpaste, and sugar-free chewing gum delicious. Sure, you’re not consuming good old-fashioned sugary calories, you’re not rotting your teeth and clogging your arteries, but there’s a cost to that deliciousness that has to be paid somewhere. You can’t have something for nothing. We have to wait a couple of weeks for the final WHO report, but that it’s taken this long to define aspartame as possibly carcinogenic is yet another great example of how stunningly little we seem to actually understand about the science of nutrition. Aspartame is in 6000 products worldwide. It’s been studied and studied and studied. Diet Coke is 41 years old! And yet if the reports are true, it’s taken until 2023 for the WHO to finally decide aspartame meets the carcinogenic threshold. The good news, if there is any, is that it’s likely you’ll need to consume a huge quantity of the stuff for it to have a significant effect. I don’t think anyone is suggesting aspartame is on the scale of leaded petrol or tobacco. I occasionally have a diet fizzy drink. I used to be addicted but I weaned myself off it for exactly this reason. I figured it had to be bad for me, somehow. But really, the thing for me is chewing gum. I chew gum like an Australian cricketer. And will this news stop me? Of course not. Because like I said... it’s not news to me. Whether carcinogenic or something else, for sugarfree gum to taste that delicious, I’ve always known there had to be a cost. I knew, and I will always know, that there is no such thing as a free lunch.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/30/20234 minutes, 25 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: The Teskey Brothers - The Winding Way

Returning with their first album of new material since 2019's chart-topping Run Home Slow, Melbourne's The Teskey Brothers have unveiled their third official long player The Winding Way.  They’re playing in NZ later this year.   “Our old recording studio was on a street called Winding Way in Melbourne. We moved out of that house in 2021 just before recording this album,” Josh explains. “When we were trying to come up with a title we realised ‘The Winding Way’ is the perfect metaphor for all the recent changes we’d been through in our lives.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/24/20236 minutes, 29 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Covenant of Water and Search History

The Covenant of Water – Abraham Verghese   From the New York Times-bestselling author of Cutting for Stone comes a stunning and magisterial epic of love, faith, and medicine.   Spanning the years 1900 to 1977, The Covenant of Water is set in Kerala, on South India's Malabar Coast, and follows three generations of a family that suffers a peculiar affliction: in every generation, at least one person dies by drowning -- and in Kerala, water is everywhere. At the turn of the century, a twelve-year-old girl from Kerala's long-existing Christian community, grieving the death of her father, is sent by boat to her wedding, where she will meet her forty-year-old husband for the first time. From this unforgettable new beginning, the young girl -- and future matriarch, known as Big Ammachi -- will witness unthinkable changes over the span of her extraordinary life, full of joy and triumph as well as hardship and loss, her faith and love the only constants.     Search History – Amy Taylor   A young woman’s online obsession with her new boyfriend’s deceased ex fuels this sharp and honest portrait of modern love “brimming with humor, insight, and uncomfortable truths”  After Ana flees to Melbourne in the wake of a breakup, all she has to show for herself is an unfulfilling job at an overly enthusiastic tech start-up and one particularly questionable dating app experience. Then she meets Evan. Charming, kind, and responsible, Evan is a complete deviation from her usual type; Ana feels like she has finally awoken from a long dating nightmare.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/24/20235 minutes, 26 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Cruising the Mekong Delta

Mike Yardley joined Jack Tame to chat about his recent trip cruising down the Mekong Delta, taking in the sights of Vietnam. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/24/20237 minutes, 31 seconds
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Kate Hall: What does the next phase of the plastic ban mean for us?

The next phase of the government’s plastic ban is kicking in from July, with single use plastic straws, tableware and cutlery, and plastic bags all being phased out. Kate “Ethically Kate” Hall joined Jack Tame to chat about the ban, what it’ll mean, and how people can get ready for the changes. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/24/20238 minutes, 1 second
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Jack wants to grow Pomegranates

Welcome to winter! So you want to grow that tropical Pomegranate? Punica granatum is likely to have originated from Persia or Central Asia; a closely related ancestor (Punica protopunica) came from Yemen. The Pomegranate was quickly transported by humans throughout the Mediterranean basin, California and Asia; that was made possible by the fact that these trees are extremely adaptive to various climates and soil conditions. So yes, they would probably grow nicely in Canterbury on the port hills! What made this fruit (and bark, leaves and flowers) so desirable was its medicinal use: bio-active chemicals (and anti-oxydants) were found to be anti-microbial and anti-bacterial and pretty useful in the battles with diabetes, high blood pressure and cancer. Not sure how much real scientific work has been put into these medicinal claims, but as per usual, in our modern language, this fruit became a “Super Food.”   Growing the Pomegranate tree/shrub In full sun is best. In any type of soil, but well-drained soil with organic material/compost gives best results. I think that if you have rather wet soils, it may pay to “raise your bed” at least 30 centimetres to avoid inundation of the roots; Pomegranates can stand rather dry soils, which means you can water the plants when you have time – and use liquid fertiliser! There is a dwarf variety called “Nana.” It can be planted in a large pot and will grow to 1 meter high. Advantage: can be shifted to a warm spot to ripen the fruit in autumn. Use a good container mix with some slow-release fertiliser. Grow them in an area where you get warm summers, slowly extending the nice temperatures to 6 or 7 months. They're pretty resistant to cool winters, but require at least 6 months of warm temperatures to ripen the fruit. Planting time. In Auckland you can plant them in late autumn/early winter (soil temperatures are not too low and the soil not too wet); In Canterbury I would plant them in autumn when the soil is still relatively warm You need patience. Pomegranates need to get established into the soil first – they slowly start to put down their roots and create flowers on the next shoots. Don’t expect too much fruit in the first year or two. Fertilisers and watering. Not required in winter and early spring – you can ignore them! But once flowers have started to show, water the tree and chuck down some fertiliser (best to use “flowering fertiliser” for tomatoes or roses) and keep up the “care” to allow the fruit to ripen in autumn. Pruning in winter: lightly prune to remove dead branches and keep the tree in shape.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/23/20235 minutes, 10 seconds
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Hannah McQueen: Does your Money Personality matter?

Money Personalities. The Retirement Commission this week released a study which identified 5 main Money Personalities – an enterpriser, a minimalist, a socialite, a realist, and a contemporary.  Hannah McQueen has seen thousands of clients over the years, does this hold true, and does it matter?  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/23/20236 minutes, 48 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: News is disappearing from Facebook in Canada

News is disappearing from Facebook in Canada  Canada's Online News Act passed on Thursday which forces tech companies to negotiate with news publishers to link to their content. There's even a provision for binding arbitration if needed. Meta isn't happy. They said back in May that it's "like asking email providers to pay the postal service because people don’t send letters any more". Meta's argument is stronger than Google's because users choose to share the news on Facebook & Instagram, rather than Facebook itself. The tech companies have six months before the legislation comes into effect, but Facebook plans to start blocking access immediately.     Amazon wants in on the AI race too  AWS is allocating $100 million to a program to work with companies to use their AI tech. They're adding data scientists, engineers, and solutions architects. Amazon is in a slightly different position to Microsoft & Google because they don't have the same access to datasets from crawling the web. What they do have is connections for an enterprise to their own data inside the AWS data servers thanks to their position as the cloud-leader.    LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/23/20235 minutes, 12 seconds
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Tara Ward: Class of '09, Black Snow, Carpool Karaoke

Class of ’09: An American thriller that follows a group of FBI agents in three distinct time periods as they grapple with the changes to the US criminal justice system as it is altered by artificial intelligence. (Disney+)    Black Snow: When a time capsule is unearthed at a Queensland high school, a small town is forced to confront the past and an unsolved murder of a student. (TVNZ+)     Carpool Karaoke: A star-studded, song-filled ride in this five-time Emmy award winning series that sees celebrities sharing a car, singing along to their favourite songs - including Succession’s Brian Cox singing The Spice Girls?! (Apple TV+)      LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/23/20234 minutes, 36 seconds
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Jason Mraz: Mystical Magical Rhythmical Radical Ride

‘I’m Yours’ by Jason Mraz was the song of the year back in 2008, going on to achieve the relatively rare diamond status the next year, and going platinum a total of ten times. The US artist has had a successful career, with worldwide tours, multiple Grammy wins, and is a Songwriters Hall of Fame honoree. Jason has released a brand new album called Mystical Magical Rhythmical Radical Ride, and joined Jack Tame this morning to chat about both it and his career. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/23/202313 minutes, 51 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Keep warm with French onion soup

It’s soup season and this has got to be one of my absolute favourites because it’s rich with flavour but so cheap to make!  Serves 1-2    Ingredients: 1 tablespoon each butter and oil  2 onions, sliced thinly (see note)  1 scant tablespoon plain flour  3 cups beef, chicken or vege stock (or water)  Splash of white or red wine (optional)  1 bay leaf  ½ tsp sea salt  ½ tsp brown sugar  Decent grind black pepper  1-2 thick slices of bread  ¼ cup grated cheese – gruyere is traditional but you can use any    Method: In a heavy pot cook the sliced onions on a medium heat in the butter and oil. Do this with the lid on to let them sweat down. After 5-7 minutes given them a stir (lower the heat if they are getting too brown) and keep covered and cooking for 10 more minutes. Stir the flour through the onions, add a splash of the stock and cook for 1 minutes until the flour has thickened then add the remaining ingredients. Simmer, lid on, for 20-30 minutes. Taste and adjust seasoning.  To serve: Grill bread on both sides, top it with cheese and grill until cheese is melted then place on top of soup in a bowl. Enjoy! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/23/20237 minutes, 8 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: No Hard Feelings and My Sailor, My Love

No Hard Feelings   On the brink of losing her childhood home, a desperate woman agrees to date a wealthy couple's introverted and awkward 19-year-old son before he leaves for college. Starring Jennifer Lawrence.     My Sailor, My Love  A retired sea captain and his daughter must reassess their strained relationship after he begins a new romance with a widowed housekeeper.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/23/20235 minutes, 47 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Saying goodbye to Piggy Sue

This week Kevin joined Jack Tame to say goodbye to one of New Zealand’s most endearing stars: Piggy Sue. She was adopted by Kevin and his wife Linda after starring in Vodafone ads back in 2015, but recently had to be put down after an illness. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/23/20237 minutes, 25 seconds
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Jack Tame: This whole thing says so much about human nature

I’ll be honest with you, I’ve been utterly compelled from the very start. I first read about the missing Titan submersible a few hours after it was publicly reported missing, and I’ve been hanging on every update ever since. That’s not to say I ever thought there might be a happy ending to the whole saga. This is perhaps a confronting thing to say, but in that vessel, at that depth, at that location, an instantaneous catastrophic implosion was a preferable alternative to one in which the occupants suffered over days or were conscious of what was happening. I just think –more than any other news story in recent memory– the whole thing says so much to us about human nature. First of all, the occupants themselves. Curious, daring. Fantastically wealthy. Was anyone terribly surprised to learn they were all men? And what does it say about our species that for those people who can afford it, of all the oceans in the World and all the incredible things to see, they chose an already extremely well-documented shipwreck that happens to be in a very tricky and unpleasant stretch of water. When you think about, a trip to a wreck where 1500 people died and you can still catch glimpes of shoes in the sand is a pretty morbid. Did the tourists really want to see the Titanic? Or did they just want to be able to say they’d seen the titanic? For us, watching from the outside, that a search for five men could engross the World says so much. We are utterly compelled by the horrors of the deep. We compelled by exploration. By hubris. By the faintest hope of an extremely unlikely rescue. We picture ourselves in that situation. Would I go in that submarine? What would I do now? Human beings aren’t even-handed in their interest or attention. Sadly, we don’t give nearly the same resource or news coverage to sinking migrant ships filled with poor and nameless people, missing in the Med. Is it just? Of course not. Ultimately though, nothing in this saga said more about human nature than the CEO of Oceangate, who died with his vessel. Stockton Rush was smart and resourceful enough to build a device which could make it kilometres below the surface of the ocean, but not wise enough to heed the warnings of myriad experts and engineers in what is a very small community. Ultimately every dive was a game of Russian roulette. As the film director James Cameron noted, there is something awfully poetic about the whole situation and its parallels to the original Titanic disaster, in which a captain blithely ignored warnings and steamed into the path of icebergs. Ultimately Stockton Rush will be remembered for publicly courting attention and media, boasting of his creation and lambasting his critics, only to perish by the flaws of his own design. There’s one word for it: Shakesperean.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/23/20234 minutes, 27 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Music - Cat Stevens - King of the Land

Unlike the two previous records, his first to include the Cat Stevens moniker since 1978, King of a Land is made up of all new material.  Not much has changed in Yusuf / Cat Stevens' music over the past half-century. He even sounds remarkably the same, singing in a voice that's lost none of its geniality and compassion, even if the world has.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/17/20236 minutes, 13 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Books - Yellowface and Killing Moon

Yellowface – RF Kaung  White lies. Dark humor. Deadly consequences… Bestselling sensation Juniper Song is not who she says she is, she didn’t write the book she claims she wrote, and she is most certainly not Asian American—in this chilling and hilariously cutting novel from R.F. Kuang, the #1 New York Times bestselling author of Babel  Killing Moon – Jo Nesbo   This killer will get inside your head...  Two women are missing, their only connection being they attended the same party, hosted by a notorious real-estate magnate. When one of the women is found murdered, the police discover an unusual signature left by the killer, giving them reason to suspect he will strike again.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/17/20234 minutes, 19 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Heritage hits in Ho Chi Minh City

The city's bling-bling urban verve is surging, but it's Saigon's history that still attracts most travellers. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/17/20237 minutes, 49 seconds
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Dougal Sutherland: 47 is statistically the most depressing point of your life, here's how to turn it around

47 is statistically proven to be the most depressing point of your life...but here's how to turn it around.  Numerous scientific studies have shown that happiness is U-shaped – it declines and bottoms out in your 40s as you struggle with the pressures of working life, lack of new experiences, financial worries, and the weight of responsibility.  No longer thirty and thriving? A recent study1 suggests that 47 years old is the most ‘depressing’ point of your life. But with every problem comes a solution, and Tourism Fiji has collated a series of holiday experiences designed to turn that middle-aged frown upside down.  According to the research, happiness declines and bottoms out in your 40s before slowly hiking upwards again in the mid-50s. Combine tweenaged children with mortgages, high-interest rates and depleting collagen, and you’ll potentially find yourself a miserable 40-something-year-old.  Psychologist Dr Dougal Sutherland claims that there is a method to the miserable-ness: “Your 40s are a time in life when you feel the weight of responsibility most strongly. Many people will have dependent kids, alongside duties that come with ageing parents, plus potentially increasing levels of responsibility at work. All of these things can eat into your general sense of life satisfaction.”  “In your 40s, you look back with fondness at the care-free days of youth and look ahead to semi-retirement and enjoying the ‘good life’. You’re caught in the middle and stuck in a dangerous cycle of comparison.” See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/16/20237 minutes, 14 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Cirque du Soleil spiders

I was excited to go to my favourite circus: Cirque du Soleil; they’re back in town!! Great costumes – lots of art – and creative music.  Most of all: fabulous performers that can do incredible things with their bodies; this, by the way, is something that makes my old body ache, just looking at it!  Safety has to be an enormously important part of the show, yet you rarely see obvious signs of safety lines and nets, really…  Fast-Forward to some of our jumping spiders; their Family name is “Salticidae” from Latin “Saltare”, meaning: to jump  Some of our species are absolute masters at it – they come inside the house, look around for potential prey and then the stalking starts.  Jumping spiders have great eye-sight – total of eight eyes, two are large front eyes for perfect stereo vision…   The following “jump” is also extremely fast and accurate, but what most people don’t see is that during this jump the spider reels off silk from a gland in the abdomen. (at lightning speed!)  This silk line is the spider’s safety line, in case it misses the target or falls of the window sill, table or other precarious edge where the jump takes place.  Looking at these spiders you’ll see an entomological version of Cirque du Soleil with “web-sites” and bungy cords, safety lines and safety nets, daring jumps and lightning fast reflexes, all made from Natural fibres that are strong and efficient and - most of all – Biodegradable!  Not surprised then that some scientists think they have observed jumping spiders going into REM (Rapid Eye Movement) sleeps…  No doubt dreaming about their miniaturecircus acts.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/16/20234 minutes, 53 seconds
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Dr. Bryan Betty: Cataracts and what we can do about them

Cataracts  Very common as get older. 400,000 thought to be living with cataracts Not treated can lead to blindness How do we now we are getting cataracts?  Notice haziness in vision especially at night or bright light. May see halo’s around lights. Worsens vision becomes cloudy. Due to lens front of eye turning yellow or clumps protein. Reaction to UV light. Who’s at risk?  Age biggest risk factor – unusual before 40. Rarely children and develop congenital cataracts. Some things worsen risk: Smoking, diabetes, increases exposure to UV light – working outside. Why UV sunglasses so important! What can we do about it?  Surgery only long term  option! Short operation 45 minutes under local anaesthetic – your awake. Small cut in cornea (front of the eye) – lens removed and plastic one inserted. Can’t be rejected , can’t develop another one once done. Few days off work so as not to strain eyes. How do we prevent?  Regular eye checks with optometrist. Protect eyes – wear sunglasses See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/16/20234 minutes, 51 seconds
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Tara Ward: Screentime - The Full Monty, Arnold and Our Planet II

The Full Monty: 26 years after the unemployed men from Sheffield first stripped off in the iconic movie of the same name, they’re back - older, certainly - but are they any wiser? (Disney+)  Arnold: Following his recent return to our screens on Netflix’s Fubar, this three part documentary series looks back at the varied life of the Austrian bodybuilder and his pursuit of the American dream (Netflix)    Our Planet II: Sir David Attenborough’s latest nature documentary series follows the astonishing stories of animal migration across our planet (Netflix)   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/16/20235 minutes, 8 seconds
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Nici Wickes: What's your favourite toastie combo?

The Great NZ Toastie Takeover finalists have been announced   So, let's talk toasties, how much we love them, MY TOP TIPS FOR MAKING A GOOD ONE and encourage listeners to check out the finalist's offerings - their website is fantastically easy to navigate and find one near you. With a whopping 120,000 toasties served up since mid-April , the competition’s 185 entries have now been whittled down to 14 finalists from around the country - winner will be announced on TUESDAY 20 June.  This is such a popular competition - I love the way consumers can actually get to try the toasties during the comp and the names and combos the chefs come up with are incredible:   "Baabaa Ganoush" - Sprig & Fern Tavern (Nelson):   House smoked lamb shoulder, baba ganoush, peppery rocket, Thor’s Hammer Manchego style cheese, McClure’s Sweet & Spicy Pickles, fresh hop aioli, on Don Rodrigo’s quinoa sourdough bread. Served with house cut twice cooked chips seasoned with rosemary and garlic Marlborough sea salt flake.  "Come out with your hams up" - Cafe Polo (WELLINGTON)   Croc MonShaw: - Good Day (Orakei): Thick cut free range smoked ham (from local butcher the legend Mr Chris Knight), lashings of cheesy, mustardy bēchamel sauce, crunchy McClure’s Sweet & Spicy Pickles and more cheese for the ultimate melt, on local baker the Dusty Apron’s grilled sourdough.  "Sheep Thrills" - Roasted X Toasted (Lumsden)   Slow roasted Southland lamb, Old Yella mustard, creamy mayo, McClure’s Bread & Butter Pickles, three cheese blend and Kel’s homemade McClure’s pickle jelly.   The Joestie: - Shining Peak Brewing (New Plymouth)  An in-depth delve between land and sea. Smoked eel, kawakawa aioli, smoked cheddar, McClure’s Pickles, puha, topped with McClure’s pickle caviar.    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/16/20235 minutes, 58 seconds
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Madeleine Sami: Star and director of 'Double Parked' on her busy life and band with her sisters

Madeleine Sami is a busy woman.  Out this week is Double Parked a comedy series she both stars in and directs featuring Antonia Prebble.   She stars in a new black comedy series with the Aussies called Deadloch – released earlier this month to great reviews.  And if that wasn’t enough - Madeleine is in a band with her equally as talented sisters – called, of course, The Sami Sisters.   Madeleine Sami joined Jack Tame. LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/16/202312 minutes, 32 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Film - Guy Ritchie's The Covenant and Extraction 2

Guy Ritchie's The Covenant – yes, he has put his name in the title of the film  During the war in Afghanistan, a local interpreter risks his own life to carry an injured sergeant across miles of gruelling terrain.  Extraction 2   Back from the brink of death, commando Tyler Rake embarks on a dangerous mission to save a ruthless gangster's imprisoned family.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/16/20237 minutes, 25 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Dreaming of travelling business class

You hope, one day, to be rich enough to take at least one long haul flight in business class.   But every time you think you can afford it, you discover that business class seats are selling at an even more outrageous price, so you’re back to economy again.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/16/20236 minutes, 37 seconds
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Jack Tame: Wasting 10,000 litres every day is the most profoundly selfish thing I can imagine

I think it rates as among the single most selfish acts I can ever recall. A North Canterbury farmer, disgruntled with his local council over the water connection rates he’s being charged for an as-yet uninhabited subdivision, has decided to launch a protest against the Waimakariri District Council. In a part of New Zealand where droughts are common, and where water access is an especially contentious subject, he’s been pouring 10,000 litres of drinking water down the drain, every day. 10,000 litres. It’s like leaving a shower on for eleven or twelve hours every day. I’m sorry, but that’s not a protest. That’s environmental vandalism. It should be a crime, as far as I’m concerned. The whole situation is yet another reminder of why New Zealand councils all need to introduce water metering. I know it’s a contentious subject, but it’s outrageous to me that people like this farmer can so wilfully waste a precious resource without any financial impact. At the moment, we have a bit of a hodgepodge patchwork of water metering for different councils across the country. Some regions and cities have metering, where you’re charged relative to your usage, but many still don’t. They rely on connection fees or other forms of rates to try and finance the pipes and infrastructure. The value of metering is pretty obvious. Water metering also helps to detect leaks across the pipe network. People who are charged by their usage as opposed to their connection are incentivised to be more thoughtful about their water use. When the Kāpiti Coast introduced water metering, Stuff reported that water usage dropped 25%. That’s massive! Not only did it save the resource, it meant the maintenance on the region’s water infrastructure could be deferred for longer because the assets weren’t being hammered so hard. New Zealand lags embarrassingly compared to other countries. when it comes to water metering. It’s commonplace overseas. By the year 2000, two-thirds of OECD countries had water metering for more than 90% of their single family homes. Imagine what that number is today! Fiji has water metering! The Ivory Coast has water metering! The main criticism of metering is usually that water is a human right and metering will impact poorer families. I think we’re sophisticated enough to introduce targeted support for those people, like we do for other things. I get that it’s not a vote winner. But water metering seems an obvious thing for the new Three Waters entities to standardise across New Zealand. The thing about that farmer’s protest is that, in a way, I agree with his gripe. He says he’s protesting an annual water connection fee for sections that haven’t yet been built on. Instead of that fee, I think a per-litre charge would be much more effective tool. It’s a shame they can’t retroactively introduce it and charge him an absolute premium. Wasting 10,000 litres every day is about the most profoundly selfish thing I can imagine.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/16/20234 minutes, 44 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Music - Niall Horan, The Show

Three years after his last release, the 29-year-old singer has jumped feet first into the spotlight to promote third album The Show. LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/10/20235 minutes, 42 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Books - Everything is Beautiful, Everything Hurts and The Forgotten Girls

Everything is Beautiful, Everything Hurts – Josie Shapiro  Mickey Bloom: five foot tall, dyslexic, and bullied at school. Mickey knows she's nothing special. Until one day, she discovers running.  Mickey's new-found talent makes her realise she's everything she thought she wasn't – powerful, strong and special. But her success comes at a cost, and the relentless training and pressure to win leaves Mickey broken, her dream in tatters.  Years later, when Mickey is working in a dead-end job with a drop-kick boyfriend, her mother becomes seriously ill. After nursing her, Mickey realises the only way she can overcome her grief – and find herself – is to run again.  A chance encounter with a stranger sees Mickey re-ignite her dreams. The two women form an unbreakable bond, as Mickey is shown what it means to run in the right direction.  The Forgotten Girls – Monica Potts  An unforgettable story of friendship and lost promise in 21st-century America  Growing up gifted and working-class in the foothills of the Ozarks, Monica and Darci became fast friends. The girls bonded over a shared love of learning as they navigated the challenges of their declining town and tumultuous family lives - broken marriages, shuttered stores and factories. They pored over the giant map in their classroom, tracing their fingers over the world that awaited them, vowing to escape. In the end, Monica left Clinton for university and fulfilled her dreams. Darci, along with many in their circle of friends, did not.  Years later, working as a journalist covering poverty, Monica discovered what she already intuitively knew about the women in Arkansas. Their life expectancy had steeply declined - the sharpest such fall in a century. She returned to Clinton to report the story, trying to understand the societal factors driving disturbing trends in the rural south. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/10/20235 minutes, 3 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Outdoorsy adventures in Vanuatu

- Waterfalls and cascades are a huge draw in Vanuatu. Where's best?  - If you've got a head for heights, the Sky Bridge sounds like a plan.  - And there's a ziplining trek as well, right?  - What about day trips to islands beyond the mainland?  - And they have massive coconut crabs on Lelepa!  - What about Mozo and the Turtle Sanctuary.  - Further afield. Tanna Island Coffee. Can you visit the island?   LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/10/20239 minutes, 29 seconds
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Kate Hall: Hidden plastics

- Acknowledging how brilliant it is that people are becoming more aware of the detriments of plastic and avoiding it more often.  - Discussing what plastic is found in: chewing gum, tea bags, our clothes, makeup (IN the product, not just the packaging!), paper coffee cups (lined with plastic)  - In preparation for Plastic Free July we can become more aware of where plastic is and start using alternatives  - Alternatives to that list = no chewing gum (I use mouthwash and tongue scraper instead to reduce bad breath), loose leaf tea (I use a reusable metal tea bag replacement), clothes made from natural fibres (wool, cotton), makeup free from plastic, no cup no coffee + BYO reusable + sit in + use a reusable cup scheme.  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/10/20237 minutes, 14 seconds
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Bic Runga: New Zealand music icon ahead of her nationwide tour

Bic Runga is a true icon of New Zealand music. She’s been awarded just about every music award in the country and was made a member of the New Zealand Order of Merit in 2006.  And can you believe, it’s been 20 years since the release of her hit album Beautiful Collision.  It has tunes like Something Good and Listening for the Weather and Bic is celebrating by going on tour across the country next month.   Tickets to Bic’s tour are available at LiveNation. LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/9/202315 minutes, 48 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Wine - 2022 Thornbury Pinot Gris, Waipara

Why I chose it:  - Pinot Gris is to wine what mashed potatoes is to cuisine – a bit taken for granted. It’s a comfort wine, a crowd pleaser that is quietly growing both locally and internationally.  - This is classic example – smooth textured and pleasingly fruity – seductively easy to drink.  - Pinot Gris falls into two categories: Lusciously intense wines in the style of the French wines from Alsace and the leaner, drier and often tangy wines Pinot Grigio from Italy. (both are made from pinot gris grapes). This follows the French model.  What does it taste like?  - Attractive floral/honeysuckle aromas and flavours suggesting ripe pear, nectarine and peach with a subtle spicy influence. The wine has a nice sweet/sour balance with some pleasing tension.  Why it’s a bargain:  - A lot of bang for a high quality wine priced at around $15  Where can you buy it?  - The Good Wine Co., Auckland $13.99, Vino Fino, Chch $13.99 and Wine Freedom Ltd, Otago $13.99  Food match?  - Quite a versatile food wine, my favourite match is onion tart. The sweetness in the onions matches the subtle sweetness in the wine.  Will it keep?  - Drink up. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/9/20233 minutes, 32 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Significant trees

Just before we start winter (almost 12 more days to go) on 22 June at 2.57 am, it might be a nice idea to look at planting trees  The soil is still relatively warm – and hopefully not too wet yet  What am I looking for there?  Fruit trees you really like – take your favourite variety of apple or pear or an elegant, fast-growing Sanguine peach that doesn’t show a lot of brown rot or any other typical peach diseases.  Your heart goes out to spring and summer and now’s the time to plant that stuff  Remember: if you are short of space, grab a young tree with two (or three) varieties grafted on the Main stem/Trunk;  Have a look at the catalogues of New Zealand’s best tree Nurseries.  As an entomologist, this is what I’d be looking for: host plants/Trees for our native insect taonga.  Mahoe (Melicytus ramiflorus) (AKA marble leaf) is one I use all the time. Tree weta love to eat it (and I use heaps of the leaves to feed my captive specimens.  Maori use the soft wood of mahoe to make fire, by rubbing it with Kaikomako (Pennantia corymbosa) a very hard wood species, endemic to NZ.  Both small-ish trees produce fruits that are devoured by some of our native bird species: the violet-blue Mahoe seeds are eaten by kereru and geckoes.  The purple berries of Kaimakomako are in demand by birds, large and small.  Plant both trees and you can make fire, boy-scout style!  Another great example is planting a putaputaweta (Carpodetus serratus) also known as marble leaf.  Native of New Zealand and serving many creatures well.  One of the most favourite host plants of the Puriri moth. The caterpillars live inside this tree for many years – growing into a beautiful bright-green moth in the North Island of Aotearoa.  When the moths have vacated their tunnel in the putaputaweta, they leave behind a perfect second-hand dwelling for our Tree weta.  Planting this tree will support a heap of native species through an ecological system and food chain. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/9/20234 minutes, 14 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Tech - Apple unveil raft of new features and products

FaceTime on your TV  Instead of gathering around a phone, or a laptop to connect with family or friends, why not gather around the biggest screen in your house - the TV. The new feature allows you to use your iPhone as a camera, connected to your Apple TV. Plus, it'll have the 'centre stage' capability so if you move around it will automatically reframe you. Would have been amazing for the pandemic lockdown, but will still be future going forward.   Your iPhone as a smart display  Apple is calling it StandBy. When your phone is charging (usually beside your bed) your phone will turn into a smart display showing you the time in a large font (like an old clock radio), what time your alarm is set for and other things like the weather forecast. Obviously, Siri is right there too - which now doesn't need the "hey". Plus - wait for it- you can now have more than one timer at the same time. Huge.   Interactive widgets  On your iPhone and iPad you'll be able to interact directly with the widgets. Today they take you to their associated app. On Mac, you'll b able to add these interactive widgets to your desktop, allowing you to quickly see and do things you'd usually need to open an application to do. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/9/20234 minutes, 59 seconds
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Tara Ward: Screentime - Tour de France Unchained, Fortitude and Based on a True Story

Tour de France Unchained: A new documentary series on Netflix. Through tears and triumph, this series follows several cycling teams as they compete in the 2022 instalment of the world's most gruelling bike race.   Fortitude: A crime thriller starring Richard Dormer, Dennis Quaid and Stanley Tucci, set on the edge of the Arctic Circle. Fortitude is one of the safest towns on earth, where there’s never been a violent crime - until now (Neon, 3 seasons).  Based on a True Story: Kaley Cuoco stars in this true crime satire about a realtor, a former tennis star and a plumber who seize a unique opportunity to capitalise on America's obsession with true crime (TVNZ+). LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/9/20234 minutes, 36 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Gluten Free broccoli and three-cheese pizza

Yes, you read that right – broccoli on a pizza and let me tell you, it’s AMAZING! Makes 4 GF pizza base Makes 3-4 medium 450g gluten free flour, plus extra for dusting ¼ baking soda 1 tsp salt 2 tsp sugar 1 egg, lightly beaten 80ml extra virgin olive oil, plus extra for brushing 160mls lukewarm water - Sift gluten free flour, bicarb of soda, salt and sugar into a large bowl. Pour in egg, olive oil and water and mix to combine. - Divide dough into 3-4 portions and roughly knead each into a ball. - Working with each portion of dough, use floured hands to press and flatten and then roll out to desired shape and thickness – I aim for an oblong shape. Transfer to lined tray, brush with oil and now it’s ready for any toppings you choose. Topping 1 head broccoli, cut into florets, stem sliced Juice and zest from one lemon ½ cup grated mozzarella 50g grated parmesan 100g feta, crumbled Sauce ½ cup sour cream ¼ cup cream ¼ tsp sea salt Freshly ground black pepper Preheat oven to 220-250 C. Add broccoli to food processor and pulse briefly to roughly chop. Mix with zest and juice and cheeses. In a bowl whisk together sour cream, cream and seasonings. Spoon this sauce over pizza bases, top with broccoli/cheese mix and bake for 12-15 minutes until broccoli is cooked and even charred in some places. Serve immediately.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/9/20235 minutes, 5 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Film - The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry and The Tank

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry   A seemingly unremarkable man in his 60s named Harold one day learns his old friend Queenie is dying. He embarks on a walk, only to keep going for 450 miles until he reaches Queenie's hospice, much to the despair of his wife Maureen.  The Tank  After inheriting his mother's abandoned coastal property, Ben and his family accidentally unleash an ancient, long-dormant creature that terrorized the entire region -- including his own ancestors -- for generations.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/9/20236 minutes, 36 seconds
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Kevin Milne: What I'm learning as a grandparent

Kevin Milne joins Jack Tame to talk about what he's learning as a grandparent looking after a baby for one day a week - and how he sleeps so well after it.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/9/20236 minutes, 19 seconds
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Jack Tame: Christchurch has crossed the threshold of becoming a better city than it was before

I first realised it this week, running through the city and around Hagley Park on one of those beautiful, still, cold South Island evenings.   For me, it was a long time coming. Twelve years and three months, all up.  Maybe others felt it earlier. Maybe others haven’t reached the point yet. I know those who’ve lived in Christchurch right throughout, who never left the city, might have a completely different perspective, and that’s ok.   But as a Cantab at heart, for the first time I feel I can say it with absolute confidence. It’s emphatic. Christchurch has crossed the threshold. For the first time since 2010 I reckon the city today is better than it was before the quakes.  There’s no one thing. There’s one project or development that’s pushed it past that point. It’s a collection of little things that make Ōtautahi so good.  For starters, the city. Finally the Cathedral isn’t just lying in ruin. The remote-controlled digger cleaning up the masonry and bird crap finished its job in record time. The build’s progressing, and fast.  Te Pae, Christchurch’s glorious new convention centre, is a stupendous venue. Across the road, Tūranga, the new library is surely the best of any big city in New Zealand. The art gallery is amazing. The Margaret Mahy playground is the stuff dreams are madeof for kids and adults alike.  The food in Christchurch is so good. Christchurch’s old strip was seedy as, but Riverside Market, The Terrace, and New Regent Street have energy and life.   The central city’s new shape works with Ōtakaro, the Avon River. The water’s clear and clean and meanders from the gleaming new buildings down near the splendid historic Arts Centre, and into the World-class Botanic Gardens.  I bristle with envy when I think of all the things on Christchurch’s doorstep. Taylors Mistake, New Brighton, and Sumner have surf. Mt Hutt has snow. Lyttelton has perhaps the most interesting music and arts community in New Zealand. Hagley Oval has a gorgeous cricket ground and the Christchurch Adventure Park is the gateway to World-class mountain biking.   There are young people in the city and they want to be there. At a time when many New Zealand universities are being forced to cut jobs, Canterbury University is hiring. This year, they tell me the university is on track for a record number of students. Domestic enrolments are up. International enrolments are up. There are students from 100 countries studying at Canterbury, from Mozambique to Myanmar to Mongolia. The number of people enrolled is up 7% at the end of March compared to the same time last year. It’s the University’s 150th birthday this year, and the halls of residence are at absolute capacity.   The cost of housing in Christchurch is so much cheaper than Auckland, and the quality is so much less depressing than in Wellington. It’s younger than Tauranga, more coastal than Hamilton and warmer than Dunedin.   I know it’s not perfect. I know how much pain and stress it’s taken to get things to this point. I’m under no illusions that places out East – Bromley, in particular – have a hell of a long way to go. The sprawl North and West means the traffic can be a total pain.  But with good leadership and planning, the city should only get better. Maybe it’s too big. Maybe it’s too expensive. But just imagine the atmosphere in town for that first All Blacks test in Te Kaha.   Years ago when I was living in New York, I asked the city’s chief urban designer about lessons from Manhattan’s recovery after the 9/11 attacks. He had a tear in his eye when he spoke to me about the transformation he’d experienced.   “Instead of asking yourself what happens if you get it wrong, ask yourself the opposite,” he said.   “What happens if Christchurch is too good? What happens if you remake your city and it’s so good that everyone wants to live there?”  I don’t reckon we’re far off. Christchurch has energy. Christchurch has mojo. Christchurch is better than ever.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/9/20236 minutes, 18 seconds
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Dave Fishwick: The Bank of Dave

Dave Fishwick left school at the age of 16, determined to become the largest supplier of minibuses in the UK as well as a self-made multi-millionare. During the economic crisis of 2011 banks stopped lending money overnight, so Dave picked up the slack. He began lending money to struggling businesses in his hometown of Burnley, starting the Bank of Dave. Dave joined Jack Tame to have a chat about the business and the Netflix film based off it. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/3/202314 minutes, 55 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Foo Fighters - But Here We Are

It's a stunning response to the pain of last year... As is the rest of the album, which hums with an intensity and focus that Foo Fighters' more recent outings have lacked.  Musically, it's back to basics. Muscular chords and melodic riffs are the order of the day, as the band power through their sadness.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/3/20237 minutes, 6 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Hang the Moon and Knowing What We Know

Hang the Moon – Jeanette Walls Most folk thought Sallie Kincaid was a nobody who’d amount to nothing. Sallie had other plans.Sallie Kincaid is the daughter of the biggest man in a small town, the charismatic Duke Kincaid. Born at the turn of the 20th century into a life of comfort and privilege, Sallie remembers little about her mother who died in a violent argument with the Duke. By the time she is just eight years old, the Duke has remarried and had a son, Eddie. While Sallie is her father’s daughter, sharp-witted and resourceful, Eddie is his mother’s son, timid and cerebral. When Sallie tries to teach young Eddie to be more like their father, her daredevil coaching leads to an accident, and Sallie is cast out.Nine years later, she returns, determined to reclaim her place in the family. That’s a lot more complicated than Sallie expected, and she enters a world of conflict and lawlessness. Sallie confronts the secrets and scandals that hide in the shadows of the Big House, navigates the factions in the family and town, and finally comes into her own as a bold, sometimes reckless bootlegger.   Knowing What We Know – Simon Winchester With the advent of the internet, any topic we want to know about is instantly available with the touch of a smartphone button. With so much knowledge at our fingertips, what is there left for our brains to do? At a time when we seem to be stripping all value from the idea of knowing things—no need for math, no need for map-reading, no need for memorization—are we risking our ability to think? As we empty our minds, will we one day be incapable of thoughtfulness?  Addressing these questions, Simon Winchester explores how humans have attained, stored, and disseminated knowledge. Examining such disciplines as education, journalism, encyclopedia creation, museum curation, photography, and broadcasting, he looks at a whole range of knowledge diffusion—from the cuneiform writings of Babylon to the machine-made genius of artificial intelligence, by way of Gutenberg, Google, and Wikipedia to the huge Victorian assemblage of the Mundanaeum, the collection of everything ever known, currently stored in a damp basement in northern Belgium.  Studded with strange and fascinating details, Knowing What We Know is a deep dive into learning and the human mind. Throughout this fascinating tour, Winchester forces us to ponder what rational humans are becoming. What good is all this knowledge if it leads to lack of thought? What is information without wisdom? Does Rene Descartes’s Cogito, ergo sum—“I think therefore I am,” the foundation for human knowledge widely accepted since the Enlightenment—still hold?  And what will the world be like if no one in it is wise?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/3/20234 minutes, 3 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Bites and Sights in Port Vila, Vanuatu

Mike Yardley joined Jack Tame to chat about his visit to Port Vila, Vanuatu. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/3/20238 minutes, 16 seconds
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Dr Dougal Sutherland: Reinventing yourself after a relationship break up

A recent survey from TradeMe has shown that people often invest more in themselves after a breakup. They spend more time and invest more energy into doing things like working out, eating healthier, buying things for themselves, and relaxing alone. Clinical Psychologist with Umbrella Wellbeing Dr Dougal Sutherland joined Jack Tame to chat about this change. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/3/20237 minutes, 29 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Plagues of skinks

In our old Auckland garden we used be surrounded by so-called rainbow skinks. They were everywhere and… what a cool name! The best way to describe them: a small grey-brown skink with a dark brown, lateral stripe along the body. When they are sun bathing it is easy to find a spectacular rainbow-coloured sheen on their scales. I quickly learned these fascinating and quite pretty animals are actually Australian interlopers, arriving here in the 1960s. Common in the North Island, especially in the northern half: Northland to Waikato with populations in New Plymouth, Hawkes Bay, Whanganui, Palmerston North and Wellington. There are a few records from Blenheim too. I was hoping they were not in the South Island – but they are…  They can easily live here too – In Tasmania they’re well-established. Impact: They are numerous and aggressive; accused of eating our native invertebrates and ousting our timid native skink species through competition for space, habitat and food. Our native skinks are already under pressure from cats and stoats and weasels, so this exotic Aussie skink is likely to add some more pressure. They are classed as “invasive”, here in New Zealand and if we look at their track record in Hawaii (established there since early 1900s), I would not be surprised if these skinks are having an impact on our herpetological fauna and perhaps other delicate ecological balances. Isn’t it ironic that this skink’s scientific name is Lampropholis delicata? Scientists and Biosecurity creatives have re-named that “rainbow skink” to “plague skink”; Our best approach is to be aware of them and learn to tell them apart from our native skinks Identifying them from native species is not that easy: you’ve got to look at them up-close and focus on the top of their head; Right in the centre of the head – right on top and between the eyes – is a large diamond-shaped scale. That is the plague/rainbow skink. If that large scale is divided into two smaller scales, you’re looking at a Native species. Once you know what to look for, you can’t really miss the interloper. And then there are the creamy white eggs. You often find these 8 mm eggs in clusters in the soil or underneath rocks. Apart from one rather rare native species of skink (Oligosoma suteri), the Plague Skink is the only one that lays eggs. If you’re sure you can tell them apart, try catching and dispatching them. Please don’t think they are great “pets” for your kids or grand kids, because they are not! And be aware they are masters at hiding in your luggage when you are travelling. That way they spread themselves all over the place. Once again, the concept of Biosecurity sneaks back into the garden!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/3/20234 minutes, 22 seconds
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Hannah McQueen: The tide is changing when it comes to the property market

There are plenty of indicators suggesting that things could be about to turn when it comes to the property market. Building consents, migration numbers, LVR changes, auction clearance rates, interest rates peaking, etc – however, it’s important to call out what we’ve (hopefully!) learned from the pandemic surge and slump. Property is not just a one-way bet, it’s best as a long-term investment, so that means people need to go into it with their eyes wide open in order to be able to hold it long term and avoid getting burnt. Especially if things do start to rise again, you shouldn’t rush in without doing your homework, knowing your numbers, and understanding your hold strategy (people definitely seem to suffer from FOMO if they think they’re missing out on a rise in the property market and rush in). LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/2/20235 minutes, 33 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Virtual Reality - Apple vs Meta

We've been talking about the AI wars, now get set for the VR wars  Apple is expected to launch a brand-new device next week at its developer conference - a virtual reality and mixed reality headset.  Meta seems to have wanted to steal their thunder by announcing their new Quest 3 this week. It's far lighter and thinner than the v2, which makes it more comfortable to wear for extended periods of time. It has a new processor, but it won't have eye tracking which could be where Apple beats them if they're going to create a high-end product that's packed full of features. Meta says they've sold 20 million headsets so far.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/2/20234 minutes, 48 seconds
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Tara Ward: Deadloch, Maternal, and Fubar

Deadloch: Madeleine Sami plays a police detective in this dark Australian comedy-drama set in the Tasmanian town of Deadloch, who must investigate the mysterious death of a local man during a popular festival (Prime Video).     Maternal: A British drama about three female doctors all returning to work in the NHS after the birth of their children (TVNZ+, also TVNZ 1 10.05pm Saturday nights).  Fubar: Arnie is back! Arnold Schwarzennager makes his TV series debut as a CIA operative near retirement, who discovers a family secret and decides to go back into the field for one last job (Netflix).See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/2/20234 minutes, 37 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Homemade Danish Pastries for a long weekend

These are wonderfully easy to whip up on a long weekend and you can choose whatever fruit you like – pears, apples, stonefruit, berries – whatever is in season!   Ingredients: 2 firm pears  400g flaky puff pastry (I use Pannetton or a block of puff pastry)  Flour for rolling  ½ cup store-bought custard, cream cheese or sour cream (if using these 2, add 1-2 tbps brown sugar)  1 heaped tbsp ground almonds  2 tbsps honey, warmed  Icing sugar to dust    Method: Preheat oven to 220 C. Lightly flour an oven tray. Peel, halve and neatly core pears. I use a teaspoon to remove core. Use a small knife and slice thinly keeping each slice attached at the stem end. This is so that you can fan them out. Dust a bench with flour. Roll pastry to 36x36cm square. Divide into 4 squares. Transfer to prepared tray. Score a 1cm border around each square. Mix custard with ground almonds or if using cream cheese / sour cream with sugar and almonds. Dollop a heaped tablespoon onto each pastry. No need to spread. Fan out each sliced pear halve and lay onto custard, keeping within the border. Brush pear with honey. Bake until puffed and golden and pastry bottom is cooked – about 15-20 minutes. Brush with more honey whilst still warm and allow to cool. Dust with icing sugar to serve. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/2/20235 minutes, 40 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Spiderman: Across the Spider-Verse and Bank of Dave

Spiderman: Across the Spider-Verse After reuniting with Gwen Stacy, Brooklyn's full-time, friendly neighborhood Spider-Man is catapulted across the Multiverse, where he encounters a team of Spider-People charged with protecting its very existence. However, when the heroes clash on how to handle a new threat, Miles finds himself pitted against the other Spiders. He must soon redefine what it means to be a hero so he can save the people he loves most.    Bank of Dave  A working class man and self-made millionaire, struggles to set up a community bank to help the town's local businesses thrive. To do so, he must battle London's financial institutions and compete for the first banking license in over 100 years.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/2/20236 minutes
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Kevin Milne: How we should celebrate Everest Day

This week Kevin’s here to chat about Everest Day and throw his support behind an idea of how to celebrate it. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/2/20236 minutes, 1 second
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Mike Yardley: Halong Bay, Vietnam

This week Mike Yardley joined Jack to chat about his recent visit to the beautiful Halong Bay in Vietnam.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/27/20238 minutes, 29 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Lewis Capaldi - Broken By Desire To Be Heavenly Sent

Beating out Ed Sheeran, Lewis Capaldi's second album 'Broken By Desire To Be Heavenly Sent' is the fastest selling album of the year thus far.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/27/20235 minutes, 57 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Wager and The Making of Another Major Motion Picture Masterpiece

The Wager, David Grann  On January 28, 1742, a ramshackle vessel of patched-together wood and cloth washed up on the coast of Brazil. Inside were thirty emaciated men, barely alive, and they had an extraordinary tale to tell. They were survivors of His Majesty’s Ship the Wager, a British vessel that had left England in 1740 on a secret mission during an imperial war with Spain. While the Wager had been chasing a Spanish treasure-filled galleon known as “the prize of all the oceans,” it had wrecked on a desolate island off the coast of Patagonia. The men, after being marooned for months and facing starvation, built the flimsy craft and sailed for more than a hundred days, traversing nearly 3,000 miles of storm-wracked seas. They were greeted as heroes.  The Wager is a grand tale of human behavior at the extremes told by one of our greatest nonfiction writers. Grann’s recreation of the hidden world on a British warship rivals the work of Patrick O’Brian, his portrayal of the castaways’ desperate straits stands up to the classics of survival writing such as The Endurance, and his account of the court martial has the savvy of a Scott Turow thriller. As always with Grann’s work, the incredible twists of the narrative hold the reader spellbound.    The Making of Another Major Motion Picture Masterpiece, Tom Hanks Part One of this story takes place in 1947. A troubled soldier, returning from the war, meets his talented five-year-old nephew, leaves an indelible impression, and then disappears for twenty-three years.  Cut to 1970: The nephew, now drawing underground comic books in Oakland, California, reconnects with his uncle and, remembering the comic book he saw when he was five, draws a new version with his uncle as a World War II fighting hero.   Cut to the present day: A commercially successful director discovers the 1970 comic book and decides to turn it into a contemporary superhero movie.  Cue the cast: We meet the film’s extremely difficult male star, his wonderful leading lady, the eccentric writer/director, the producer, the gofer production assistant, and everyone else on both sides of the camera.  Bonus material: Interspersed throughout are three comic books that are featured in the story—all created by Tom Hanks himself—including the comic book that becomes the official tie-in to this novel’s “major motion picture masterpiece.”    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/27/20235 minutes, 1 second
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Kate 'Ethically Kate' Hall: Temu and the waste caused by online shopping

Temu has been covering the internet in advertising over the past couple months, and the app has been topping free app charts on a regular basis. Kate Hall, an expert in sustainability has a few thoughts on the app, and on online shopping in general. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/27/20237 minutes, 39 seconds
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Rudd Kleinpaste: Bag Moths

One of the most incredible endemic insects in the collective New Zealand garden flies largely under the radar, yet it is as common as muck and lives for most of its life in a silk sleeping bag.  Liothula omnivora is known in the trade as the “bag moth” or “case moth”.  Tiny, baby caterpillars spin themselves a small silken case in which they incorporate pieces of foliage, twigs, mosses or lichens, to either jazz it up a bit, or – if you are a boring entomologist – for camouflage.  This Caterpillar silk is very strong indeed (try ripping a silk scarf in half!) and our case moth caterpillar's efforts are right up there in terms of strength. They carry their private bags with them as they move along, grazing on foliage at night.  As the insect grows, it extends it bag to suit its needs. Along the way it feeds on its favourite host plant (often conifers, but also titoki, roses and even elms or flax) and adds more desiccated plant materials to its bag to blend in with its surroundings.  Technological Tricks: At the top of the bag the caterpillar has constructed a draw-string system: when there’s trouble brewing, the insect can withdraw into its case and quickly close the opening behind it.  One simple movement. Safety!  A similar draw-string contraption exist right at the bottom of the case. It avoids the problem of ablutions in the bottom of the sleeping bag.  Makes sense too!  The pupa, or chrysalis is also formed in the bag, ready for metamorphosis. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/26/20234 minutes, 29 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: WhatsApp will let you edit messages, Elon Musk's brain chip Neuralink

WhatsApp will now let you edit your messages  There are some restrictions though - it has to be done in the first 15 minutes of sending it. It can only be edited once. It'll show as edited, but won't have a way to see the previous message. So good news, if you edit it before your recipient reads it, they'll never know what you said originally.  To do it, long press on the message and select edit.    Neuralink: Elon Musk's brain chip firm wins US approval for human study   Elon Musk's brain-chip firm says it has received approval from the US Food and Drugs Administration (FDA) to conduct its first tests on humans.  The Neuralink implant company wants to help restore vision and mobility to people by linking brains to computers. It says it does not have immediate plans to start recruiting participants. Mr Musk's previous ambitions to begin tests came to nothing.   The FDA said it acknowledged Neuralink's announcement.  An earlier bid by Neuralink to win FDA approval was rejected on safety grounds, according to a report in March by the Reuters news agency that cited multiple current and former employees.    TikTok is suing Montana  TikTok has filed suit too claiming the law is “unconstitutionally shutting down the forum for speech for all speakers on the app”. They say it's a violation of the first amendment, and an overreach of the powers afforded to the states. A group of content creators agree, and are also suing the state claiming it violates the First Amendment.  The law bans the app from the App Stores, but also prevents the operation of TikTok in Montana. Users though will not be liable for penalties.  TikTok's CEO said this week Oracle has begun to review the TikTok source code to verify data isn't leaving the US and can only be viewed by authorized parties (eg. not China's government). It's part of 'Project Texas' which has Oracle host all the user data for US users. The law will come into effect in 2024.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/26/20233 minutes, 54 seconds
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Tara Ward: The Clearing, Platonic, Merpeople

The Clearing: Miranda Otto and Guy Pearce star in this adaptation of J.P. Pomare’s book about a woman who must confront the secrets of her past to prevent a local cult from brainwashing members of her community (Disney+)    Platonic: A screwball comedy starring Seth Rogan and Rose Byrne as platonic best friends who reconnect after a long rift, only for their friendship to become all-consuming in their lives (Apple TV+)     Merpeople: A new documentary series about the whimsical world of -wait for it- professional mermaiding, where people’s passion for swimming in glitter and fins has exploded into a huge, money-spinning industry (Netflix).    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/26/20234 minutes, 51 seconds
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Shaun Wallace: The Chase and NZ Tour

Shaun Wallace, the Dark Destroyer, is a man with a big brain and a lot of knowledge.  The Londoner shot to fame when he won the BBC’s legendary Mastermind in 2004, and is one of television’s most beloved Chasers.  But he’s not only a quiz champion, Shaun’s also a successful barrister and has been a criminal defence advocate for more than three decades.   Shaun joined Jack this morning ahead the events he’s hosting all over New Zealand over the next week. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/26/202314 minutes, 7 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Caramel apple sultana & spice cake

Celebrate the apple season with this absolutely gorgeous apple cake. It’s full of warming spices and with a golden caramel topping, it’s a winner.  Ingredients:  85g (about 6 tbsps) butter  ½ cup sweetened condensed milk  1 tsp vanilla extract  ¼ tsp cinnamon  2 medium apples, peeled and sliced thinly  Cake batter  120g butter, softened  ¾ cup sugar  2 large eggs  1 ½ cups plain flour  1 ½ tsps baking powder  ½ tsp baking soda  2 tsps ground cinnamon  ½ tsp nutmeg  Decent pinch salt  ½ cup sultanas  6 tbsps milk (you may not need it all)  Method:  Turn oven to 180 C fan bake. Grease and line a 21cm cake tin with baking paper. In a small pot, heat butter with condensed milk until butter is melted. Stir in vanilla and cinnamon. Pour into lined tin then layer up sliced apples on top. Chill while you make the batter. Beat butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Add eggs, one at a time and beat until creamy. Add in dry ingredients – flour, baking powder, baking soda, spices and salt - and beat briefly until combined. With the beater running, add in the sultanas and drizzle in the milk to form a nice soft, but not sloppy, batter. Spoon batter on top of apples. Bake for 45-50 minutes or until a skewer comes out clean. Set aside for 10-15 minutes then turn out onto serving plate so that the apple-y cake bottom becomes the top. Serve warm or room temperature with whipped cream. Yum! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/26/20234 minutes, 44 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: The Innocent, Deep Rising

The Innocent - Cannes International Film Festival 2022 Familial tensions, criminal hijinks and unexpected romance collide in the uproariously entertaining new comedy hit from the multi-talented Louis Garrel (A Faithful Man). Lyon, present day. When widowed marine biologist Abel (Garrel) learns that his impulsive mother Sylvie (Anouk Grinberg) is once again re-marrying – this time to an inmate she met whilst teaching theatre in prison – he’s more than uncomfortable. Doubting that convicted burglar Michel (Roschdy Zem) is capable of staying out of trouble, Abel’s protective streak kicks in, and with the help of his best friend Clémence (a sensational Noémie Merlant), he begins tailing his new stepfather’s movements. Their amateur sleuthing is quickly uncovered by Michel and triggers an unlikely – and bold - business proposition for them both… Joyfully paying homage to the great crime capers of the French New Wave, and partly inspired by events from his own life, Garrel’s witty and beautifully constructed film is a delirious mix of comedy, romance, suspense and action, with several twists too good to spoil. Selected as the special Gala Screening to celebrate the 75th Anniversary of the Cannes Film Festival - where it drew a thunderously positive response - this hilarious comedy aims to please, and does so effortlessly. Don’t miss it!    Deep Rising - Doc Edge Film Festival  Narrator is your old mate Jason Momoa. On at cinemas in Auckland and Wellington and virtually for others.  Delving into the pressing issue of deep-sea mining and its destructive impact on the environment, director Rytz provides a rare insight into the secretive world of the corporations that are extracting valuable metals from the ocean floor, with the help of cutting-edge technology. Narrated by Jason Momoa, the film highlights the urgent need to protect the deep ocean ecosystem, which plays a crucial role in sustaining life on Earth. Through stunning visuals and compelling storytelling, viewers are made aware of the little-known practice of deep-sea mining and its devastating consequences.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/26/20236 minutes, 59 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Remembering Tina Turner

This week Kevin wants to remember Tina Turner, going right back to the first time he saw her perform as Ike & Tina Turner and the Ikettes.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/26/20236 minutes, 49 seconds
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Jack Tame: It's no longer a personal cause

It took Sanitarium an awfully long time to finally dedicate a series of its Weetbix collector cards to the World Cup-winning Black Ferns. My colleagues at Fair Go covered it in depth, and when it was finally announced that Weetbix would publish a Black Ferns series, most of us assumed that would be that. But a fascinating story in the Herald revealed the best-known women’s rugby player in the World will not be appearing in the trading card series, becuase Ruby Tui insisted on appearing on the cards with a rainbow flag. Sanitarium is owned by the Seventh-day Adventist Church and the church’s official stance opposes same-sex relations. But what’s remarkable about the reporting this week is that when Ruby Tui made the request to appear with a rainbow flag, it wasn’t necessarily Sanitarium that shut it down. According to reporting from Gregor Paul, the company was open to discussing the issue and it was actually New Zealand Rugby that blocked the plan, not wanting to set a precedent in allowing a player to use a commercial proposal to advocate for a personal cause. If this it true, it’s remarkable. Because last I checked, rainbow rights aren’t just a personal cause. New Zealand Rugby has signed up to the Pride Pledge, a public committment to diversity and inclusion. The organisation’s diversity and inclusion strategy specifically names rainbow communties as one of its targetted groups. And of course, many of the Black Ferns team are openly members of the rainbow community. If Ruby Tui had wanted to appear with the logo of a specific political party, of course that would be different. If she’d insisted on wearing branding for a personal company, that would be different too. But surely if a player’s personal cause directly overlaps with the broadly-stated and celebrated cause of the organisation they’re representing, then it’s no longer just a personal cause. I’m glad we live in an age where players feel they can make a stand. I admired Sonny-Bill Williams for his decision not to wear logos from sponsors in industries he opposed. In Ruby Tui’s case, she’s ultimately leaving money on the table and making a principled stand. We’d all like to think that for an issue or a cause we cared about, we’d have the integrity to do the same thing. We don’t know what would have happened if Ruby Tui and Sanitarium had properly discussed her request. Given it’s owned by the church, there’s good reason to believe Sanitarium might ultimately have opposed Ruby Tui’s appearance. I wonder what might have happened if other players had followed Ruby’s lead and insisted on holding rainbow flags. Sanitarium might have found itself in a very tricky position indeed. But that’s on Sanitarium. And if the reporting this week is accurate and it was ultimately New Zealand Rugby that stepped in, it adds a very different dynamic to the whole situation. I think it says something about the character and priorities of the organisation. Sure, we’re all for rainbow rights, until it impacts our bottom line.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/26/20234 minutes, 5 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Music - The National, 'First Two Pages of Frankenstein'

Anchored by evocative melodies and an enthralling lyrical narrative, First Two Pages of Frankenstein signals a thrilling new chapter in the band’s discography. The 11-song album was produced by The National at Long Pond Studios in upstate New York and features guest appearances by Taylor Swift, Phoebe Bridgers and Sufjan Stevens.  The follow-up to 2019’s top five hit album I Am Easy To Find, First Two Pages of Frankenstein was initially stalled while lead singer Matt Berninger navigated “a very dark spot where I couldn’t come up with lyrics or melodies at all, and that period lasted for over a year. Even though we’d always been anxious and argued quite a lot whenever we were working on a record, this was the first time it ever felt like maybe things really had come to an end.”  Instead, The National “managed to come back together and approach everything from a different angle, and because of that we arrived at what feels like a new era for the band,” according to guitarist/pianist Bryce Dessner.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/20/20237 minutes, 3 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Books - The Diamond Eye and The House of Eve

The Diamond Eye – Kate Quinn  The brand-new historical novel based on a true story from the bestselling author of The Rose Code and The Alice Network In the snowbound city of Kiev, aspiring historian Mila Pavlichenko’s life revolves around her young son – until Hitler’s invasion of Russia changes everything. Suddenly, she and her friends must take up arms to save their country from the Fuhrer’s destruction.  Handed a rifle, Mila discovers a gift – and months of blood, sweat and tears turn the young woman into a deadly sniper: the most lethal hunter of Nazis.  Yet success is bittersweet. Mila is torn from the battlefields of the eastern front and sent to America while the war still rages. There, she finds an unexpected ally in First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, and an unexpected promise of a different future.  But when an old enemy from Mila’s past joins forces with a terrifying new foe, she finds herself in the deadliest duel of her life.  The Diamond Eye is a haunting novel of heroism born of desperation, of a mother who became a soldier, of a woman who found her place in the world and changed the course of history forever.  The House of Eve – Sadeqa Johnson   1950s Philadelphia: fifteen-year-old Ruby Pearsall is on track to becoming the first in her family to attend college, in spite of having a mother more interested in keeping a man than raising a daughter. But a taboo love affair threatens to pull her back down into the poverty and desperation that has been passed on to her like a birthright.  Eleanor Quarles arrives in Washington, DC, with ambition and secrets. When she meets the handsome William Pride at Howard University, they fall madly in love. But William hails from one of DC’s elite wealthy Black families, and his par­ents don’t let just anyone into their fold. Eleanor hopes that a baby will make her finally feel at home in William’s family and grant her the life she’s been searching for. But having a baby—and fitting in—is easier said than done.  With their stories colliding in the most unexpected of ways, Ruby and Eleanor will both make decisions that shape the trajectory of their lives. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/20/20235 minutes, 13 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Bites and Sights in Hanoi

Mike Yardley joined Jack Tame to chat about his time in Hanoi, Vietnam. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/19/202310 minutes, 3 seconds
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Steven Dromgool: Relationship expert on how to support a partner with chronic illness

Relationship expert Steven Dromgool has some advice for us around supporting a partner that suffers from a chronic illness. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/19/20235 minutes, 37 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Wine - 2022 Framingham Classic Riesling, Marlborough

Wine: 2022 Framingham Classic Riesling, Marlborough $31.99  Why I chose it:  - I love Riesling  - Riesling is the best value NZ wine  - Framingham is one of the country’s top Riesling producers  What does it taste like?  - Medium-dry riesling with lime zest, oyster shell and white wildflower flavours supported by vibrant acidity that reacts with a suggestion of sweetness to give a deliciously vibrant character. Good purity and power.  Why it’s a bargain:  - One of the world’s great grape varieties and low demand.  Where can you buy it?  - First Glass Wines and Spirits, Takapuna $26.99; Regional Wines and Spirits, Wgtn. $29.99  Food match?  - Onion tart. Seafood and slightly spicy dishes (foods with a bit of sweetness)  Will it keep?  - Yes, at least 10 years with good storage. Becomes toasty and mellow, sometimes with a touch of kerosene.     See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/19/20232 minutes, 52 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Planting time for trees and crops

We had a great autumn… quite warm! – getting cooler now Some fruit trees are still producing fruits: All you need is relatively warm autumn conditions for ripening to be successful. Feijoas and figs and some apple varieties Feijoas: select you favourite variety; they are all more or less similar when it comes to resistance of frosts, so chose what you like. Feijoas are still dropping at my place (don’t “pick” them, let them drop!!!) Many varieties to plant in autumn – they are pretty hardy and make great hedges! If you want to create a “hedge”, put two or three different varieties in that hedge and create an opportunity for cross-pollination. If you are in the far north, guava moth may become your nemesis Figs can be a little more tender in the cold, so grab an early-ripening fig variety (Brown Turkey, Mrs Williams, Brunswick, Cape White, etc) when you think you’re “on the edge” Apples would also be a great tree to plant before it gets too wet and too cold – it reduces the fungal infections underground; in really wet spots, think about planting apple varieties “in raised beds”. Before planting a tree or two: ask around your district what grows well and ripens well. The trees really need not huge amounts of fertility at all (if they are on perfect soils they become tall and lanky too quickly, requiring pruning a lot) Select varieties you like to eat or process into apple-sauce (“applemoes” in Dutch); remember: if you are short of space, grab a young tree with two (or three) varieties grafted on the Main stem/Trunk Garlic should be in the soil this weekend – (to be honest, I planted mine a month ago!!) to avoid that dreaded garlic rust disease. It works for me as the bulbs are ready to harvest in late October before it becomes a pain! Another important tip is to put garlic in a different bed each year – simply to escape old rust spores hotspots The same goes for the Egyptian walking Onion (a kind of shallot that’s really easy to grow); it too suffers from a bit of rust (but not as bad as garlic), so keep these two crops separate! Cos lettuce will do well too – regular plantings of seedlings ensures a constant supply of salads Broadbeans and Peas are also still plantable for an early feast of Legumes in winter and spring;See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/19/20235 minutes, 39 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Tech - Apple's new accessibility features and Montana's TikTok ban

Create a digital copy of your voice in just 15 minutes  Apple's soon-to-be-released feature "Personal Voice" is designed for people who may be going to lose their voice, to be able to capture it digitally, and use it to communicate with others when they can't - Apple is calling it your "synthesized voice". It's open to everyone though, hinting at what may become more commonplace in the near future. Your digital avatar could actually sound like you, and read out the things you've typed. It takes just 15 minutes of training to achieve this and all happens on your device, no internet connection needed.  That's just one of Apple's new accessibility features  They've given an early look at some of the new accessibility features coming to iOS17. One is "Assistive Access" which allows an app to deliver an experience with just the essential features to lighten the cognitive load.  Think of the camera app - make it as easy as possible to take a picture with one big "take picture" button and hide all the settings and options. Apple has created these experiences for their core photos, messages, phone, facetime and music apps adn I'd expect other app makers to be allowed to do the same thing.  Montana's governor has signed their TikTok bill into law  The law bans the app from the App Stores, but also prevents the operation of TikTok in Montana. Users though will not be liable for penalties. The counter legal action has already started with a group of content creators suing the state claiming it violates the First Amendment. The law will come into effect in 2024. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/19/20233 minutes, 31 seconds
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Jason Momoa: 'Fast X' star on playing the bad guy and his ‘unexplainable’ connection to New Zealand

Hollywood sensation Jason Momoa secured his famous feature as Khal Drogo in HBO’s Game of Thrones by performing a haka before assuming his blockbuster role as DC’s Aquaman in Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice that shot him into superstardom. Momoa has been cast in the tenth instalment of the Fast and Furious franchise, Fast X as bad guy Dante Reyes, somewhat of a juxtaposition from previous roles.  There is, of course, a Kiwi connection. Momoa told Newstalk ZB’s Jack Tame he feels Native Hawaiians and Māori share a special connection of race and language, as well as parallels of having experienced colonisation. He recognises Māori as having been the first indigenous population to sign a treaty and says having seen how many Kiwis embrace Māori culture and language has strengthened his affection for Aotearoa New Zealand. “The Kiwis and people that take pride and know the language and understand that is beautiful, because that doesn’t happen where I come from and so there’s a lot of beauty in both cultures growing together – and it’s the greatest rugby team in the world.” For someone who considers himself an outdoorsman, Momoa told Tame his time spent in Aotearoa New Zealand going from summit to sea was “heaven.” He says our country is the most diverse ecosystem in the world – aside from the lack of desert – although “we’re all leading to that anyway,” he adds with a wry smile. In a very poignant moment, the mega-star becomes suddenly grounded and describes the moment when he landed in Auckland, saying he felt he had been here in a past life. “I think when I landed here, just the feeling that shot through my body when I was here… my people have been here, my ancestors have been here. I just felt a deep connection that’s unexplainable.” Having played such a well-known hero in Aquaman, there were a few raised eyebrows when it was announced he was cast as a villain. “I mean, playing the villain is the best, ‘cause you get to be bad,” he told Jack Tame. Momoa star says playing a role that opposes his own way of life is what makes it enjoyable. “You get to do stuff that you’re not allowed to do and I don’t necessarily sit by those values and I don’t follow that way so I’m playing someone that I don’t agree with, so that’s fun. That’s why I signed up for it.” As a self-confessed petrol head, Momoa is a perfect fit for a role in the Fast and Furious franchise. “I’d say about 80 per cent of the motorcycle stuff I did,” although he adds that’s that there were a few stunts that called for a professional as had he been injured “the movie would be over.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/19/20235 minutes, 27 seconds
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Tara Ward: Screentime - Still, The Gone and Tracked

Still: A documentary about the extraordinary story of Michael J. Fox, in his own words - from his childhood on a Canadian army base to the heights of stardom in 1980s Hollywood and the private challenges of living with Parkinson’s Disease (AppleTV+).  The Gone: An Irish-New Zealand drama about a young Irish couple that vanishes from a small North Island town, and the Irish and Kiwi detectives that must team up to find them (TVNZ+).  Tracked: Hosted by Vinnie Jones and filmed in New Zealand, this series follows eight teams as they race through the South Island wilderness in an attempt to reach an evacuation zone before being caught by a group of elite trackers (Three from Monday, and on ThreeNow). LISTEN ABOVE   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/19/20234 minutes, 48 seconds
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Eleanor Catton: Youngest-ever Booker Prize winner on her new book 'Birnam Wood'

In 2013, our very own Eleanor Catton became the youngest-ever winner of the Booker Prize at 28-years-old with The Luminaires.   In the decade since, she adapted the book for television, wrote the feature film screenplay for Jane Austen’s Emma, moved to the UK and had a child.   And now, a decade on, she’s back with her new book Birnam Wood.   Eleanor’s currently in New Zealand for the Auckland Writer’s Festival and she joined Jack Tame. LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/19/202314 minutes, 24 seconds
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Rosa Flannagan: Feijoa Maple Oats

Everyone in the kitchen was fighting over the last spoonful of porridge when we first created this. If you need recipe inspiration for feijoas, definitely put this one on the list. When feijoas are out of season, use any other in-season fruit you have at home.    Serves: 1  Time: 10 minutes  - 1/2 cup rolled oats  - 3/4  cup plant based or dairy milk   - 1/2 cup feijoas, flesh only and roughly chopped  - 1 tbsp almond butter   - 1 tbsp maple syrup  - 1 tsp vanilla bean paste or extract   - ¼ tsp sea salt  Method:   Place all of the ingredients into a pot and heat over a medium heat. Stirring regularly, bring the porridge to a boil.  Reduce the porridge to a simmer and cook until thick or until it reaches your desired consistency. This takes roughly 3-5 minutes.   Pour the porridge into a bowl and top with yoghurt and extra feijoas. Eat immediately.   Leftovers will keep in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 5 days. Have them cold or reheat in the microwave or in a pot.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/19/20234 minutes, 44 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Film - A Good Person and The Mother

A Good Person (cinema)  Allison is a young woman with a wonderful fiance, a blossoming career, and supportive family and friends. However, her world crumbles in the blink of an eye when she survives an unimaginable tragedy, emerging from recovery with an opioid addiction and unresolved grief. In the following years, she forms an unlikely friendship with her would-be father-in-law that gives her a fighting chance to put her life back together and move forward. Starring woman of the moment, Florence Pugh and Morgan Freeman.  The Mother (Netflix)  While fleeing from dangerous assailants, an assassin comes out of hiding to protect her daughter she left earlier in life. Starring Jennifer Lopez and directed by Kiwi Niki Caro of Whale Rider fame.   LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/19/20236 minutes, 26 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Wanting to talk wealth tax

Kevin Milne feels it's becoming inevitable that a wealth tax will be introduced here in New Zealand.  He says he'd like to involve Jack Tame in a discussion around this this because he know Tame will have a view.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/19/20238 minutes, 26 seconds
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Jack Tame: I don’t know what is about movie stars, but I just can’t help myself

I don’t know what is about movie stars, but every time I meet one, I just can’t help myself. It was always a terrible problem when I lived in the U.S. I’d go to a movie publicity event – known in the news business as a junket – and after waiting patiently for an hour or two for my four minutes with Russell Crowe or Hugh Jackman or Jennifer Lawrence, I’d go into the room for interview number fifty-six of the day, right after Polish morning TV and Slovenian Red Carpet Reports, and I’d flirt. Sometimes it was just shameless. I’d be throwing wise-cracks around and laughing like a muppet, making all sorts of weird facial expressions. And I’d always try and charm the stars by pretending to play it cool. ‘I know you hate this.’ I’d say. ‘I know everyone asks you the same questions.’ ‘My challenge to you, Jessica Chastain, is to try and slip the word Octopus into our conversation.” It wasn’t until I got back in the office and reviewed the tapes that I’d realise. My producer would pull the interview up on screen and ask. ‘What are you... doing?’ ‘Are you.. are you flirting?’ “Umm.. no...!” The problem was, I genuinely wasn’t aware of it in the moment. All I was aware of was this was a big star and I had about a commercial break’s worth of time to try and win them over and elicit something more interesting than the Ecuadorian showbiz reporter who’d gone in before me. I plumbed some lowly depths. I gushed to Anne Hathaway about her singing voice and tried to impress Rihanna with my knowledge of the T20 Cricket World Cup, which was underway at the time. We used to get emails about it all the time, at TVNZ. Mike Hosking would tease me on air. ‘Was Jack Tame just flirting with People Magazine’s sexiest person alive?’ It should be said, my A-list flirting was not limited to the fairer sex. Maybe I don’t bat my eyelids quite as much, but I still revert into wise-cracking Jack when it comes to blokes. And so I found myself a few days ago, waiting my turn for a couple of minutes with Jason Momoa. He was friendly, with the studio entourage you’d expect of a Hollywood A-lister. And of course, as a Hawaiian, he’s got a special affinity for New Zealand. The interview went well, but for some bizarre reason, as I shook his hand and stood up to leave, I felt compelled to speak up and charm him. I don’t know what it was but the words just spilled out of my mouth. ‘Of course, there’s one big difference between Hawaii and New Zealand.’ I said. ‘What’s that?’ he asked. ‘Hawaii doesn’t have seagulls.” Everyone paused. The room when quiet. “Huh.” Said Jason Momoa. I said I was a flirt. I didn’t say I was a GOOD FLIRT.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/19/20234 minutes, 11 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Books - Small Mercies and The Future of Geography

Small Mercies, Dennis Lehane  The acclaimed New York Times bestselling writer returns with a masterpiece to rival Mystic River—an all-consuming tale of revenge, family love, festering hate, and insidious power, set against one of the most tumultuous episodes in Boston’s history.  In the summer of 1974 a heatwave blankets Boston and Mary Pat Fennessy is trying to stay one step ahead of the bill collectors. Mary Pat has lived her entire life in the housing projects of “Southie,” the Irish American enclave that stubbornly adheres to old tradition and stands proudly apart.  One night Mary Pat’s teenage daughter Jules stays out late and doesn’t come home. That same evening, a young Black man is found dead, struck by a subway train under mysterious circumstances.  The Future of Geography, Tim Marshall  From the New York Times bestselling author of Prisoners of Geography and leading geopolitics expert comes a must-read book on today’s space race—including the increasingly tense power struggle between the US, China, and Russia and what it means for all of us here on Earth.  Spy satellites orbiting the moon. Space metals worth more than most countries’ GDP. People on Mars within the next ten years. This isn’t science fiction—it’s reality.  Humans are venturing up and out, and we’re taking our competitive spirit with us. Soon, what happens in space will shape human history as much the mountains, rivers, and seas have impacted civilizations around the world. It’s no coincidence that Russia, China, and the USA are leading the way. The next fifty years will change the face of global politics and the world order as we know it.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/13/20235 minutes, 44 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Temple touring in Angkor

Mike Yardley has been touring Cambodia and is once again the envy of us all. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/13/202312 minutes, 10 seconds
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Kate Hall: A sustainable Mother's Day

Kate 'Ethically Kate' Hall has some tips for a more sustainable Mother's Day this year. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/12/20234 minutes, 38 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: A fungal lesson in sustainable design

Many gardeners and observant nature nerds report seeing weird, white, slimy structures lying on the forest floor and on top of the mulch in gardens Basket fungi are large spherical football-like structures that carry the spores of the fungus: it’s the brown smudgy stuff on the white, rubbery polygons. Those spores smell quite putrid and attract all kinds of flies that lap up the moisture – it’s probably full of proteins; nutrients! The spores stick to their feet and as they land in the forest, garden mulch, or on some organic debris, the fungal spores are distributed – repeating the cycle. When you see a very juvenile version (they look like creamy-white eggs, sticking half out of the ground) just grab one and cut it open It’s remarkable how the basket fungus is totally compressed, folded up and ready to hatch inside that “egg”: Main points of the story… What can we learn from this fungus? a) they recycle stuff – there is no waste in nature b) They spread the spores throughout the forest by employing invertebrates such as flies c) Nature cooperates/collaborates… everybody wins in the arrangement (who invented the word “competition”?)… let me guess: Economists? d) Nature communicates with natural, chemical clues: the smell of the spores attracts the vectors e) Want to know how to economize on transport cost by reducing the size of packages? Have a look at the basket fungus! f) There are no straight lines in Nature’s Design See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/12/20235 minutes, 7 seconds
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Hannah McQueen: Residential or commercial property investment?

As a lot of rules have changed or tightened up and made residential property investment a slightly different prospect, more and more people are asking whether they should instead consider commercial investment property.   There’s a lot to weigh up, so I thought it could be an interesting discussion to have – what are the pros, cons, things you might not realise, things you need to consider, lending arrangements, potential yield and capital gain and how does it compare?  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/12/20234 minutes, 51 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Tech - Google's big news

It's Google's big event of the year, where they announced a new Pixel Tablet transforms into a Smart Home display  If you're looking to buy an Android Tablet, this could be the way to go. It's a fully functioning tablet, then when placed on the dock transforms into showing your photos, being an assistant, telling you what's next on your calendar. You can Chromecast to it, allowing you to use it almost like a mini-TV. The only downside is that if someone wonders off with the tablet, then you can't do anything with the stand.  Google also announced their first foldable phone ($US1800) and a cheaper Pixel 7a phone.  We can expect AI to come to almost every part of Google  Docs, Sheets, Slides, Gmail, even Search - the most lucrative part of Google! In the demo, the 10 blue links (and the sponsored links) we've come to expect when we search move down the page and up top we get a generative answer to our question. The response includes links to its source material. For now, to get this you'll need to opt in and the answers will only appear when the algorithm thinks the answer is better than the links. Their goal is to have you ask one question, instead of multiple, to get your result. eg. "What should I do in Paris?".       See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/12/20234 minutes, 36 seconds
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Tara Ward: Screentime - Silo, A Small Light and Louis Theroux Interviews

Silo: A dystopian drama set in a future where society exists hundreds of stories deep underground, and where men and women must obey a series of regulations designed to protect them from the outside world (Apple TV+). A Small Light: A historical drama that follows the life of Miep Gies, who helped Anne Frank and her family hide during World War 2. You may know the story of Anne Frank, but this tells the story of what happened on the other side of the bookcase (Disney+). Louis Theroux Interviews: Louis Theroux embarks on a series of intimate one-on-one interviews with the likes of Dame Judi Dench, Bear Grylls, Katherine Ryan and Rita Ora (Neon).   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/12/20235 minutes, 49 seconds
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Ronald Gladden: 'Jury Duty' star on living through a real version of the 'Truman Show'

Imagine if your life suddenly became a real version of the Truman Show.  It’s happened to Ronald Gladden, a 30-year-old man who thought he was a juror in a US court case that was being filmed for a documentary called Jury Duty.   It slowly becomes a courtroom full of chaos. But what Ronald doesn’t know is that everyone is an actor, including the actor James Marsden acting as himself.  Ronald’s now become an internet sensation and has been dubbed the nice guy of Jury Duty after his good nature and warmth shines through.   Ronald Gladden joined Jack Tame. LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/12/202313 minutes, 58 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Ways to get inspired to break out of the same old dinner repertoire

Here's my top 5 sources of inspiration:   - The ingredients in my house  - The ingredients in the stores - Eating out - it doesn't have to be expensive; I had a $13 roti canai in Hamilton at a little Malaysian place last week and it's put me on the road to spiciness all week with soups, curries and stir fries all being whipped up in my kitchen - Viewing - my top 5 places for getting inspired: Jamie One Pan Wonders Sat night TVNZ ONE - FREE, Toscana - Netflix, Chef's Table Pizza series Netflix, magazines are my next go-to FREE from any library, and finally cookbooks of course. - Try Books for Cooks at Moore Wilson's or any other bookshops - I can get lost for hours browsing these. (Note: I'm not as big on online inspiration unless you can trust the source)  - Food-related Festivals and classes - like WOAP, Choc Festival, Food Shows, cooking classes etc. These expose you to trends and who's doing what and can really uplift you and get you thinking about different ways to cook, serve and eat food. They don't have to be expensive either. The Bhakti Lounge in Wellington and The Yoga Loft in Ak run these marvelous vegetarian cooking classes and they're from $40.00. - Or try a night class at a local secondary school - I still cook some recipes that I learnt decades ago at a class. A creme brulee and a feta and fennel whip.   Keep the knowledge flowing in to keep new flavours flowing out I say!   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/12/20236 minutes, 47 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Film - Close and Ghosted

Close  The 13-year-old boys Léo and Rémis have a close friendship at school and in the flower fields where they and their parents pick the harvest for home. When schoolmates shoot a wedge into the relationship, the consequences are fatal.   Ghosted (Apple TV)  Salt-of-the-earth Cole falls head over heels for enigmatic Sadie — but then makes the shocking discovery that she’s a secret agent. Before they can decide on a second date, Cole and Sadie are swept away on an international adventure to save the world. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/12/20236 minutes
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Kevin Milne: Let's talk mothers

Kevin Milne would like to talk about mothers, how he adores them, even if occasionally they embarrass you.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/12/20235 minutes, 49 seconds
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Jack Tame: Mum likes Auckland, Dad, it’s fair to say, does not

I’d been planning to take them to a fancy new restaurant. There were some walks out west I thought would be lovely. Mum quite likes Auckland. Dad, it’s fair to say, does not. But when they arrived in the ‘09 together for the first time in a couple of years, they both had the same thing at the very top of the priority list. They wanted to see my new home. I slipped the key in the front door and before I’d even pushed it open, Mum was gushing. “Oh, Darling,” she said. “It’s beautiful.” “Mum!” I said. “It’s only the hallway. At least save your praise until you’ve seen a bedroom or two.” Mum... didn’t save her praise. She loved the bedroom. She loved the study. She loved the bathrooms and the lounge. She loved the cupboard with the washing machine and the skylight above the bath. For five minutes, she walked around with her hands on her hips, loving everything, admiring everything, praising everything, and beaming. “It’s fantastic, darling. Perfect. It’s gonna’ make a wonderful home.” Dad, did not tour the house with the same technique or enthusiasm. He stepped inside, kicked off his boots, and immediately started examining the seal on my bedroom window. “Hmm,” he said. “What’s the putty status on these things?” “Umm.. I dunno. I think it’s ok.” “Sash windows” he said. “Only bottom opening. A simple mechanism but fiddly with the cords. You’ve gotta keep an eye on these things, son.” He walked into the lounge and lifted a blind. “Hmmm,” he said. “Mold. Get a butter knife and let’s check this. We’ll strip back the paint, prime it, putty it, sand it, prime it, paint it. It’s gonna need attention on the outside, too.” Room by room, he stepped around the house like a forensic investigator, testing every switch, twiddling every door handle, squinting at the corners where the ceilings meet the walls and running his finger along every window frame like a hunter seeking an animal’s scent. “Water!” He’d say. “You’ve gotta look for it. Water gets in everywhere.” He stood outside and checked the deck. He checked the branches on the trees in my backyard. He pointed out invasive climbing plants and ran his eyes along every exterior weatherboard. “Water!” he said. “It gets in everywhere.” The tour alone took more than hour. A few days later, by the time they left, Dad had fixed, rehung, or altered no fewer than eight different doors in my home. He’d prepped a window for priming and a linen closet for gib-stopping. He’d bought chisels, a paint brush, filler and methylated spirits, and he’d found a corner of a exterior door frame where the wood felt like sodden cardboard. “Water!” he said. “It gets in everywhere.” We didn’t make it to the restaurant I’d intended to visit. We didn’t make it out west. We didn’t go for nice walks or do the kind of big city things that aren’t so easy when you live in a town of less than 300 people. Instead we spent the whole time with screwdrivers and spirit levels, packing out hinges, and drilling holes for striker plates. It was all good for Mum – she loved my home. But the night before he left, Dad was horrified to discover a door he hadn’t previously noticed, where the old panelled wood was far too big to ever close properly in the frame. “Gaaaah!” He said. “That’s gonna kill me.” “But next time I’m up, bring my jack plane.” Mum quite likes Auckland. Dad does not. But it’s nice to know they’ll be back.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/12/20234 minutes, 26 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Ed Sheeran - Subtract

Album: Subtract   Wife’s illness, plagiarism court case and death of music entrepreneur friend Jamal Edwards all came to bear on Sheeran’s sixth studio album, made with the National’s Aaron Dessner.  The fifth and final entry in his series of albums titled with mathematical symbols, Sheeran wrote and recorded its 14 tracks with Aaron Dessner, a member of US alt-rock band the National who also had a major creative role in Taylor Swift’s Folklore and Evermore.   It is billed as a return to traditional singer-songwriter performance, after the polished pop of much of Sheeran’s catalogue; a press release promises songs ranging from “pared back, folk-leaning textures to bolder, full-band/orchestral arrangements”.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/6/20236 minutes, 24 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Death of a Bookseller and Le Bron James

Death of a Bookseller, Alice Slater  In this "utterly unforgettable" debut (Catherine Ryan Howard), a disaffected, true crime-obsessed bookseller develops a dangerous obsession with a colleague.  Roach would rather be listening to the latest episode of her favorite true crime podcast than assisting the boring and predictable customers at her local branch of the bookstore Spines, where she’s worked her entire adult life. A serious true crime junkie, Roach looks down her nose at the pumpkin-spice-latte-drinking casual fans who only became interested in the genre once it got trendy. But when Laura, a pretty and charismatic children’s bookseller, arrives to help rejuvenate the struggling bookstore branch, Roach recognizes in her an unexpected kindred spirit.  Despite their common interest in true crime, Laura keeps her distance from Roach, resisting the other woman’s overtures of friendship. Undeterred, Roach learns everything she can about her new colleague, eventually uncovering Laura’s traumatic family history. When Roach realizes that she may have come across her very own true crime story, interest swiftly blooms into a dangerous obsession.  A darkly funny suspense novel, Death of a Bookseller raises ethical questions about the fervor for true crime and how we handle stories that don’t belong to us.    Le Bron James, Jeff Benedict  NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER * From the #1 bestselling author of The Dynasty and Tiger Woods comes the definitive biography of basketball superstar LeBron James, based on three years of exhaustive research and more than 250 interviews.  LeBron James is the greatest basketball player of the twenty-first century, and he’s in the conversation with Michael Jordan as the greatest of all time. The reigning king of the game and the first active NBA player to become a billionaire, LeBron wears the crown like he was born with it. Yet his ascent has been anything but effortless and predetermined— the truth is vastly more interesting than that.  What makes LeBron’s story so compelling is how he won his destiny despite overwhelmingly long odds, in a drama worthy of a Dickens novel. As a child, he was a scared and lonely little boy living a nomadic existence in Akron, Ohio. His mother, who had LeBron when she was sixteen, would sometimes leave him on his own. Destitute and fatherless, he missed close to one hundred days of school in the fourth grade. Desperate, his mother placed him with a family that gave him stability and put a basketball in his hands.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/6/20234 minutes, 38 seconds
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Steven Dromgool: How to support your partner with postpartum depression

How do you support a partner with postpartum depression?  Your partner's needs can feel overwhelming, so how do you manage?  What do you need to avoid?  How do you manage your stress? LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/6/20236 minutes, 54 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Sights and bites in Siem Reap, Cambodia

This week Mike Yardley joined Jack Tame to chat about Siem Reap in Cambodia.  To read Mike's full article, click here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/6/202311 minutes, 41 seconds
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Rudd Kleinpaste: Guava Moths on Feijoas

A major problem up north is the Guava moth (Coscinoptycha improbana), found in Northland, Auckland, Waikato, and Coromandel. Hosts of this caterpillar are Guava, Feijoa, loquats, peaches, citrus, quinces, macadamia, apples, and pears; quite non-selective in its preferences. In Northland (wild) loquats are the fruit that hosts the caterpillars in late winter/spring, allowing the population to build up. People are now harvesting feijoas that have tiny entrance/exit holes in the fruit, allowing fungi inside the fruit, brown flesh, and rot. You’ll also find the caterpillar’s tunnels inside. Those caterpillars entered the feijoas when the fruit were still small but just starting to swell – well after flowering. This is interesting information when it comes to trying to control the little buggers spoiling your crop. Currently there are no insecticides registered for the control of Guava moth; some people use “Success”, a rather good caterpillar killer (Yates) and “on the Organic side” of pesticides as a by-product of bacterial excrement. Other folk use Neem Oil – regularly sprayed (every 7 days) on the developing fruit. Both these control chemicals have limited effect – about 50%. There are no biological control organisms in NZ (Predators, Parasitic wasps, natural Guava moth diseases, etc). Pheromone traps (that trap the lusty males) do not reduce the infestation – they just alert us to the timing of the flight season. “Attractants” such as vegemite etc., don’t work. Light traps are useless in controlling guava moths – most moths (more than 90%!!) caught are native moths of no relevance to feijoas. What we do know is that later-maturing varieties/fruit are usually less affected by this caterpillar, and fine netting draped over the tree after flowering (when the fruit is growing) stops the female moths getting near the developing fruit for oviposition (egg-laying). Hygiene is another control technique: clean the soil underneath the trees from debris and old fruit!! Collect the infected fruit (Feijoa, peaches, loquats, citrus… everything!) and chuck it in the freezer for two days before composting. Alternatively, chuck in a large bucket filled with water for a few weeks – put a lid on that bucket, so no moths can fly out. Then compost the old fruit.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/6/20233 minutes, 52 seconds
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Bryan Betty: Vitamin D deficiency

Dr Bryan Betty joined Jack Tame to have a chat about vitamin D and vitamin D deficiency; the symptoms, the consequences, and how to mitigate it. LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/6/20234 minutes, 44 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Screenwriters are fighting to keep AI from taking their jobs

Screenwriters are fighting to keep AI from taking their jobs  After negotiations stalled, the writers went on strike on Tuesday, halting productions. As well as wanting more royalties from streaming services, changes to minimum durations of work and more, there is a concern about how the advances in AI will impact their jobs going forward - especially as studios and networks look to save money.  The Guild wants AI to stay as far away from their work as possible, effectively banning AI from generating text or images to produce, or conceive ideas. The specifically want AI banned from writing or rewriting literary material, AI generation being used for source material, or for union-covered material to be used to train AI.  The studios don't want these stipulations in the collective bargaining agreement, but instead want to review the technology each year and discuss how it could be used in the industry.  Adding to the complication is that AI generated material can't be copyrighted. and that the WGA defines a writer as a "person" which may even allow studios to use AI without crossing the picket line during the strike.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/5/20234 minutes, 40 seconds
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Sid Sahrawat: Cooking and Cassia

Sid Sahrawat is a pioneer of fine dining in New Zealand.  With a focus on locally sourced ingredients, his take on cooking has won him a variety of awards. His wife is his business partner, and between the two of them they opened Sidart, Sid at the French Café, and the innovative Cassia. After years of disruption due to the pandemic and this year’s floods, they’re finally reopening Cassia in SkyCity. Sid joined Jack Tame to chat about cooking and the reopening of the restaurant. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/5/202316 minutes, 17 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Coronation quiche my way

Not quite the coronation quiche, but better I think, with gently softened onions and smoky bacon.  Ingredients: 1-2 sheets good quality shortcrust pastry – I use Paneton  Filling:  1 medium onion, diced fine  2 rashers bacon, diced  1 tsp butter  ¼ cup milk  ¾ cup cream  3 eggs, beaten lightly  1 tsp dried tarragon  About 1 cup grated gouda or cheddar cheese  Salt & pepper  Method: Preheat oven to 200 C and place an oven tray to heat. Roll out pastry and use to line a 20cm flan tin, pressing the edges into the lip of the tin to seal. Prick all over with a fork. Chill for 30 minutes. Line with foil then fill with dried beans or rice and bake for 15 minutes, then carefully remove the beans/rice and cook for a further 8 minutes or until golden brown. Now your pastry is blind baked. While pastry is cooking, gently sauté onion and bacon in butter until onion is softened. Whisk together milk, cream, eggs and tarragon and seasoning. Sprinkle cheese over pastry base, holding back ¼ cup for the top. Scatter onions and bacon over cheese then pour in egg filling. Sprinkle over remaining cheese. Reduce oven temperature to 180 C. Place quiche on preheated tray. Bake for 35-40 minutes or until puffed and golden. Remove and stand for 5-10 minutes to fully settle and set. Serve with salad. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/5/20235 minutes, 42 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 and Ghosted

Guardians of the Galaxy vol 3.   Still reeling from the loss of Gamora, Peter Quill must rally his team to defend the universe and protect one of their own. If the mission is not completely successful, it could possibly lead to the end of the Guardians as we know them.    Ghosted (Apple TV)    Ghosted is a 2023 American romantic action-adventure comedy which stars Chris Evans and Ana de Armas. alt-of-the-earth Cole falls head over heels for enigmatic Sadie — but then makes the shocking discovery that she’s a secret agent. Before they can decide on a second date, Cole and Sadie are swept away on an international adventure to save the world.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/5/20234 minutes, 51 seconds
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Andrew Saville: Chiefs and the NBA playoffs

Andrew Saville joined Jack Tame to have a chat about current happenings in the sports world: tonight's Chiefs game, the NBA playoffs, and Le Bron.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/5/20234 minutes, 8 seconds
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Kevin Milne: A very special wedding

Kevin Milne joined Jack Tame to chat about a special wedding he went to yesterday over on Waiheke. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/5/20235 minutes, 18 seconds
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Kate Hawkesby: An update on the Coronation

Newstalk ZB's Kate Hawkesby joined from London to give an update on the Coronation. She says it’s all go, with Police on every street corner and traffic at a stand-still with roads closed in preparation. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/5/20233 minutes, 56 seconds
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Jack Tame: The challenge for Royals is relevancy

When I was a boy, I used to love going my grandparents’ house and reading about the royals in my grandma’s trashy magazines.   My grandparents had come out from the U.K in the sixties and they were still very British, working class, and my grandma was absolutely consumed by the various scandals and shifting dynamics within the Buckingham Palace set.  Well... I say she was. I think, actually, I was. To a little boy it felt like a fantasy World. I used to perch up on my Grandma’s La-Z-Boy, recline the seat, and pore over all the details of how William and Harry lived their lives. I was obsessed with how rich the royal family must have been, and I can still remember some of the stories, almost thirty years on. William and Harry at a birthday party with Diana. William and Harry run amok in a fireworks shop.   Times have changed. Back then, we voraciously consumed royal gossip just as we do today, but we didn’t question the institution nearly as much.  The challenge for the Royals today is relevancy. Just as the influence of Britain has declined, the royal family is increasingly irrelevant to younger people. Polling released this week shows that just 12% of Britons aged 18-34 continue to see the monarchy as ‘very important,’ compared to 42% of people over the age of 55. The numbers in the U.K have steadily decline for several decades, and I expect they’re even starker in New Zealand.  King Charles’ coronation will be a grand spectacle, a magnificent oddity, but I think one of the most interesting things will be observing how it’s processed across different media. Queen Elizabeth’s coronation was the first to broadcast on TV. King Charles’ coronation will be the first to be shown on TikTok. It'll be huge, don’t get me wrong. But the demographics of those who are watching and engaging with every minute of pomp won’t be nearly as broad as they would’ve been last time around. And that’ll tell us quite a bit about relevancy.  But I also think, in responding to the question of relevancy, King Charles has proved to be incredibly thoughtful and astute. Back when I used to perch on her La-Z-Boy and gossip with my grandma about the latest royal dramas, Charles was very much a villain in the collective media narrative. And after Diana’s death, there was a lot of discussion about him perhaps never being king. But with time, some quite prescient advocacy (Especially on environmental issues), and increasingly favourable comparisons with other members of his family, the King’s reputation has largely been restored. He’s not as popular as his mum and he never will be. But he’s also extremely aware of the challenges he faces.  There is one big force working in his favour. In a fragmented, topsy-turvy, uncertain, insecure-feeling World, I think there are many people will see value in an enduring institution they perhaps otherwise wouldn’t have appreciated.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/5/20234 minutes, 21 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Strolling Sydney - Great city trails

For more tips on enjoying some frolics on foot in Sydney, Mike's article is on the website. LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/29/202310 minutes, 39 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Music - Everything but the Girl, 'Fuse'

After 24 years, the electronic pop duo returns with a moving, handsome album that tells a sophisticated story about recapturing innocence.  The band called it quits and dedicated themselves to home life, raising three kids. Watt founded the dance label Buzzin’ Fly and released solo music; Thorn also made albums and wrote several brilliant books on her life in music and its inspirations. While they offered each other practical creative assistance, their core collaboration was over.   Curiously, it returned during another period of alienation. After the pair lived through an extreme version of the pandemic that required them to stringently self-isolate owing to Watt’s illness, Thorn proposed a reboot of EBTG, worried that they might one day realize they had left it too late.   Once she persuaded Watt, they approached the project so tentatively that they hastened to call it EBTG, crediting the song files to TREN—Tracey and Ben.   They announced the finished album in similarly low-key fashion: “Just thought you’d like to know that Ben and I have made a new Everything But the Girl album,” Thorn tweeted. “It’ll be out next spring.” She went out for dinner and returned to thousands of retweets.  LISTEN ABOVE    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/29/20235 minutes, 45 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Books -The Bookbinder of Jericho and White Fox

The Bookbinder of Jericho – Pip Williams   A young British woman working in a book bindery gets a chance to pursue knowledge and love when World War I upends her life in this new novel from the New York Times bestselling author of the Reese’s Book Club pick The Dictionary of Lost Words.  It is 1914, and as the war draws the young men of Britain away to fight, women must keep the nation running. Two of those women are Peggy and Maude, twin sisters who live on a narrow boat in Oxford and work in the bindery at the university press.  The Bookbinder is a story about knowledge—who creates it, who can access it, and what truths get lost in the process. Much as she did in the international bestseller The Dictionary of Lost Words, Pip Williams thoughtfully explores another rarely seen slice of history through women’s eyes. White Fox – Owen Matthews   A page-turning thriller about two competing KGB operatives on a race across Russia and against time to uncover the devastating truth behind the assassination of JFK.  1963. In a desolate Russian penal colony, the radio blares the news of President Kennedy’s death. Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Vasin’s new post as director of a gulag camp in the middle of a frozen tundra is far from a promotion. This is where disgraced agents, like Vasin, are sent to disappear and die quietly. But when tensions in the camp mount and a violent revolt breaks out, Vasin finds himself on the run with a mysterious prisoner holding the most dangerous secret in the world: who ordered the murder of President Kennedy.   With masterly storytelling that weaves together a moment of explosive history with the cutthroat machinations of Soviet politics, Owen Matthews’s White Fox captures the paradigm-shifting assassination from a unique Soviet point of view. This is a page-turning thriller across Russia, where characters facing impossible odds are forced to decide among truth, justice, and all-out war.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/29/20234 minutes, 9 seconds
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Kate 'Ethically Kate' Hall: What is Fashion Revolution and how to get involved?

- What is Fashion Revolution week (formed after the Rana Plaza in Bangladesh collapsed on April 24th 2013, killing over 1000 garment workers and injuring over 2500).  - 10 years on, not enough has changed - a few initiatives like the Bangladesh Accord, but not enough.  - Crucial for people to understand that PEOPLE made their clothes (anecdote from my India travels of visiting the factories there).  - Encouraging people to feel confident asking brands who made their clothes.  - Focusing on only buying things that you will wear 30+ times, clothes swapping, altering your clothing, styling what you have & just generally readdressing their shopping habits in the name of Fashion Revolution week. LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/28/20236 minutes, 8 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Small swarms of wasps

Autumn – everybody is looking for a mate these days;  Ants often fly upwards on a nice autumn day to find a partner for a bit of R&R.  Nuptial flights, we call that (in the Entomological Industry) and when you think about this concept carefully, you begin to wonder how and why this habit ever developed in evolution!  Can’t be an easy thing to do, especially when the wind is blowing quite a few Beauforts  Some termite species do exactly the same thing: the adults grow a few pairs of elegant wings with which they take to the skies. A mated female carefully lands again, sheds her wings and goes looking for a nice hole or cavity in which she can start a new colony.  The male simply dies… His job is done  The reason I am alerting you all about these reproductive techniques is because I have been getting a few phone calls on 0800 801080 with complaints of small swarms of paper wasps hanging out on fences, roof-lines, exposed branches in the garden… or on outdoor furniture, arm-rests etc in a nice sunny position. We’re not talking about high numbers (only a dozen of wasps or so) but still…: even half a dozen grumpy paper wasps are a threatening sight, because those critters are well-known for their lack of humour. The irony is that male Paper wasps do not sting!  The story is very much one of opportunistic display. It involves the concept of hanging out on a 'lek site'. This is a place where males gather to attract females;  The guys often fly up in the sunshine and “fight” with each-other for the best position on the lek site; the place where they are quickly spotted by soliciting females.  males with the neatest, smallest yellow spots on their second abdominal segment are usually seen as the preferred, prettiest boy on the block.  These are the boys chosen to be the partner and sperm donor for the females that will hibernate and start a new colony in spring.  Now… where is that spot on my second abdominal segment? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/28/20234 minutes, 52 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Wine - 2020 Main Divide Riesling, North Canterbury

Wine: 2020 Main Divide Riesling, North Canterbury $21.99  Why I chose it:  - Riesling is the best value NZ wine  - It is an exceptionally good wine  - Main Divide (Pegasus Bay) is a top Riesling producer  What does it taste like?  - Medium-dry riesling with the delicate aroma of white wildflowers and flavours that suggest lime and apricot. Delicately luscious wine with appealing purity and a lingering finish. Great value at this price.  Why it’s a bargain:  - Great wine at a competitive price  Where can you buy it?  - Whisky and More, Waikato $16.99, The Good Wine Co, Auckland $17.99, Fine Wine Delivery Company, Auckland $17.99, First Glass Wines and Spirits $17.99  Food match?  - Great on its own without the complication of food. Onion tart is my favourite. Hawaian Pizza is also a good match.  Will it keep?  - I prefer fresh, youthful Riesling but they can become quite interesting with age – mellow and toasty. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/28/20234 minutes, 34 seconds
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Tara Ward: Screentime - Citadel, Love and Death and Miriam Margoyles: Almost Australian

Citadel: A sci-fi action thriller starring Richard Madden and Priyanka Chopra as spy agents whose memory is wiped after global spy agency Citadel is taken over, and who must fight back to remember their past (Prime Video).   Love and Death: Based on the true-crime story of Candy and Pat Montgomery and Betty and Allan Gore - two churchgoing couples enjoying their small-town Texas life…until somebody picks up an axe (Neon).   Miriam Margoyles: Almost Australian: New Australian citizen and well-known British actor Marian Margolyes embarks on a 10,000 km, two month camper van journey to discover what it means to be Australian today.    LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/28/20235 minutes, 44 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Tech - WhatsApp on multiple devices and the beginning of the end of Twitter?

You can now use WhatsApp on multiple devices  Still one phone, but up to four other devices. This seems like a seemingly simple thing, but it's taken years to make it happen - because keeping your messages in sync, and fully encrypted, was a challenge. This now means you'll be able to use WhatsApp on your computer, without needing your phone to be connected or linked.  Meta's earnings sent their stock price soaring this week. They brought in $28.6 billion in revenue last quarter, up 3% on last year. They now have 3 billion people using at least one of their products daily.  Are we seeing the beginning of the end of Twitter?  There certainly seems to be momentum around a new twitter clone called Bluesky. It's still in beta and invites are the golden tickets of the internet at the moment. It looks exactly like Twitter - because it was actually started by Twitter before Twitter was bought by Elon Musk. This was a project to create a decentralised social network protocol.  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/28/20235 minutes, 1 second
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Elizabeth Day: Exploring what makes a good friend in 'Friendaholic: Confessions of a Friendship Addict'

How do you know if you’re a good friend?   And what’s the right number of friends to have?   These are questions journalist and broadcaster Elizabeth Day sets out to answer in her latest book Friendaholic: Confessions of a Friendship Addict.   Elizabeth is best known for her incredibly popular podcast How to Fail – where she interviews every star imaginable on their three biggest failures.   Growing up she wanted everyone to like her and became determined to become a ‘Good Friend’.  But when the pandemic threw us all a curve ball, Elizabeth started reassessing what friendship really means.    Elizabeth Day joined Jack Tame from London. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/28/202315 minutes, 6 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Oven-poached quince

Autumn brings quince and quince bring me happiness. Poached quince are so incredibly delicious and worth doing if only for the magical transformation of the colour as they cook – from creamy yellow to a deep ruby.  How to prepare quince: - They are ready to pick when they are a creamy yellow. Don’t worry if they have some black spot on them. - Peel with a vegetable peeler or sharp knife. Halve or quarter them with a sharp knife, being careful as they are VERY hard to cut through the core. I leave the core in at this stage as it’s much easier to remove this cleanly once the fruit is cooked and softened. - Lay out in an ovenproof dish. Mix together ¾ - 1 cup sugar, ¼ cup white wine/sherry, or other sweet wine and one tablespoon with enough warm water to cover the quince. Pour over the fruit until just overed. Cover dish tightly with foil. - Bake in oven set at 160 C until softened – about 3-4 hours.   Use poached quince for dessert with cream or icecream, in baking, on pastry, to have alongside roast lamb or pork etc etc.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/28/20235 minutes, 6 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Polite Society and Peter Pan and Wendy

Polite Society (cinema)  A merry mash up of sisterly affection, parental disappointment and bold action, POLITE SOCIETY follows martial artist-in-training Ria Khan who believes she must save her older sister Lena from her impending marriage. After enlisting the help of her friends, Ria attempts to pull off the most ambitious of all wedding heists in the name of independence and sisterhood.  Peter Pan and Wendy (Disney + out on Friday)  Wendy Darling, a young girl looking to avoid boarding school, meets Peter Pan, a boy who refuses to grow up. Wendy, her brothers, and Tinker Bell travel with Peter to the magical world of Neverland, where she encounters an evil pirate captain. Jude Law is Captain Hook.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/28/20237 minutes, 5 seconds
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Kevin Milne: A funny and moving tale concerning British football chants

Kevin Milne joined Jack Tame to tell an interesting little story about his son's experience watching his favourite side West Ham playing in London last week.   He ended up sitting next to a wheelchair bound West Ham fan in the Wheelchair Access area.   The guy's first question to my son Jake was "What's your favourite West Ham chant." Jake replied, "Stand up if you hate Tottenham, stand up." As the words are coming out his mouth, Jake panics, thinking he's been really thoughtless given he's talking to a guy who can't stand up;  Turned out it was the other guy's favourite chant too.   It's a funny and slightly moving story of British football fans.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/28/20236 minutes, 46 seconds
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Jack Tame: My disgusting guilty pleasure

It’s become the most disgusting part of my morning routine. I stir, rub my eyes, stretch a little bit and grab my phone. And after I’ve checked all the news websites and scanned my overnight messages, I open Instagram. Before the app even loads, I know what the algorithm will deliver to top of my feed. Some days it’s a milky yellow, like the colour of brie. Some days it ‘s brown or black or has a cottage cheese-like quality, filled with fine lumps. Sometimes it’s a proper surgical procedure. Sometimes it’s just squeezing. One of the first things I do every morning is watch a video from Sandra Lee, aka Dr Pimple Popper, as she lances a hideous pustule on one of her poor patients. Before you say anything, don’t worry! I disgust myself! It’s not that I *like* watching pimple popping. It’s just that I find the videos incredibly compelling. And I’d probably be too ashamed to admit I get something out of watching pimple popping videos but for the fact I know I’m not the only one. Sandra Lee – Dr Pimple Popper – has an Instagram following the size of New Zealand. She has her own TV show following her and her patients as she exorcises cysts and boils and miscellaneous subcutaneous lumps while learning a bit about their backstories. She’s got a good sense of humour and an empathetic nature and she calls her followers ‘popaholics.’ I don’t know who was the first person to work out there was an audience for this, but following Dr Pimple Popper’s success, there are all sorts of other dermatological spinoffs and social media stars who’ve built huge followings with their disgusting work. It must be one one of the weirdest sub-cultures and professions to flourish in the internet age. ‘Mum and Dad, when I grow up... I want to be a professional pimple popper.’ Heads up. This next bit’s gonna’ be really disgusting. I want to tell you about my favourite types of pimple popping video. You might naturally think the worse the pimple, the more compelling the watch. But you’re wrong. It’s true that quite often, Sandra Lee has some poor patient with a tennis ball-sized growth on their jaw or a small marrow between their shoulder blades. A sebaceous cyst which has really got out of control. She has to scalpel down, squeeze out the ooze, and remove the cyst sack. But nah, that’s a bit too surgical for me. Me, I’m old school. I like blackheads, ingrown hairs, and above all else an incredibly disgusting dermatological phenomenon called a 'dilated pore of winer'. It’s kind of like a blackhead and an ingrown hair combined. It’s not creamy or liquidy like most pimples. It’s hard, like a plug buried just under your skin. You’ve gotta lance the sides and then manipulate it off its setting. If all goes well you can pop it out whole and it leaves a clean little crater in its wake. Four billion years of evolution and this is where we’re at? Humans are so messed up.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/28/20234 minutes, 45 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Music - Ruel - 4TH WALL

Fearing love lost, the Australian singer wears his heart on his sleeve over the 45-minute runtime.  London-born and Sydney-raised, Ruel (real name: Ruel Vincent van Dijk) got his first break at the young age of 14 after his father shared one of his demos to Grammy Award-winning producer M-Phazes. Ever since, his profile has burgeoned.  Keep up with the latest music news, features, festivals, interviews and reviews here.  Six years later, the singer looks back at the whirlwind of his adolescent relationships as he wrestles with self-sabotage and a broken heart on 4TH WALL. Introspective with a cinematic swell, Ruel brings together some of his best tracks to date.  Live Nation & Secret Sounds is excited to announce that five-time platinum artist Ruel will be touring New Zealand throughout April 2023. Playing his first ever headline Arena show, the hugely anticipated tour will see the Australian trailblazer light up stages in Auckland & Wellington, hot off the release of his debut album 4TH WALL, out Friday 3 March.  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/22/20235 minutes, 42 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Books - The Messenger and Unscripted

The Messenger – Megan Davis  Wealthy and privileged, Alex has an easy path to success in the Parisian elite his father mingles with. But the two have never seen eye to eye. Desperate to escape the increasingly suffocating atmosphere of their apartment, Alex seeks freedom on the streets of Paris where his new-found friend Sami teaches him how to survive. But everything has a price - and one night of rebellion changes their lives forever.  A simple plan to steal money takes a sinister turn when Alex's father is found dead. Despite protesting their innocence, both boys are imprisoned for murder. Seven years later Alex is released from prison with a single purpose: to discover who really killed his father. Yet as he searches for answers and atones for the sins of his past, Alex uncovers a disturbing truth with far-reaching consequences. Unscripted – James B Stewart and Rachel Abrams  The shocking inside story of the struggle for power and control at Paramount Global, the multibillion-dollar entertainment empire controlled by the Redstone family, and the dysfunction, misconduct, and deceit that threatened the future of the company, from the Pulitzer Prize–winning journalists who first broke the news.  In 2016, the fate of Paramount Global—the multibillion-dollar entertainment empire that includes Paramount, CBS, MTV, Nickelodeon, Showtime, and Simon & Schuster—hung precariously in the balance. Its founder and head, ninety-three-year-old Sumner M. Redstone, was facing a very public lawsuit brought by a former romantic companion, Manuela Herzer—a lawsuit that placed Sumner’s deteriorating health and questionable judgment under a harsh light.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/22/20234 minutes, 32 seconds
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Mike Yardley: How to minimise jet lag when travelling long-haul

Long-haul travel does come with the risk of travel fatigue, aka jet lag. IATA believes flying through just 2 time zones opens you up to jet lag.  The best thing you can do is adjust lightning-fast to your new time zone.  How should you go about managing sleep time?  Hydrate, hydrate, hydrate, is probably the best thing you can do.  Do you take magnesium or melatonin to help induce sleep?  What about sleeping pills on a flight?  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/21/20239 minutes, 5 seconds
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Steven Dromgool: Money is a tricky topic with lots of different rules - what makes it so hard?

What systems work best?  What questions should couples ask when talking about money?  What does money mean for you?   What is your safety number?  What is debt ratio number?  How do you need to be taken care of in relation to money?  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/21/20237 minutes, 13 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: It's spider time

It’s Spider time!  Autumn – everybody is looking for a place to hibernate and those that are not hibernating will be looking for a place to find a mate. This is the time of the year to go outside after sunset, with a head-torch on, spotting our clever arachnid friends.  Jumping Spiders (aptly named Salticidae – reminding me of Salto Mortale, the deadly jump) are everywhere inside our homes, on the plants outside and on the window sills where it’s nice and warm. Warmth means good conditions for flies and other prey – so that’s where these spiders perform their daring jumps  Outside the windows you often find messy websites, inhabited by Badumna the grey house spider.   Ironically, the white-tailed spider preys on Badumna and are therefore often found on the kitchen windows in the evening.  A rather large and rather common dark spider is currently also on the move: it’s Uliodon, the “Vagrant” spider (therefore aptly named, as it is of no fixed abode) that is knocking on doors to find a girlfriend or boyfriend.  Now this is a species that can cause the trouble often erroneously linked to white-tails and their bites.   And then there are the master-builders of silken contraptions; these are often found in Native bush, or gardens with a good amount of large trees, especially trees with holes and other nooks and crannies in them: the Horizontal sheetweb spiders Cambridgea.  That sheetweb can be huge and the spider hangs on the underside of that trampoline, waiting for a moth to make the tiny mistake of falling onto that web; a very quick move by the owner sees that moth being impaled by two sizeable fangs full of toxins that dissolve the insides of that prey. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/21/20234 minutes, 4 seconds
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Hannah McQueen: Why random stock picking can be to the detriment of your investment strategy

Hannah McQueen has been running enable.me for more than 15 years, and in that time has seen a huge change in the number of people who own shares. The sharesies/hatch/DIY investor revolution means many people have a portfolio when previously it was only those who had significant wealth, or a personal passion, who did.  The problem is there are more and more people randomly selecting shares, rather than investing strategically, or in a diversified way. FMA research shows a decent number of people invest due to FOMO or because someone said it was a good idea, without doing any research themselves – and our observations echo that.  As a learning mechanism, or a bit of fun – great – but for most people the margin for error to land them where they need to be for retirement is too small to invest too much that way.  It’s not a dig at investment platforms – just a warning that there are risks to directing too much of your investment funds in a scattergun approach. I liken it to picking the route before you’ve identified the destination – who knows where you’ll end up.  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/21/20237 minutes, 25 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Apple is now a bank and goodbye Twitter's blue checkmarks

Apple is now a bank  It's offering a savings account earning an extremely competitive interest rate! Their Apple Card partner Goldman Sacks is also powering this savings account. It's tough to define these days what "Apple" is as a company - they make devices, offer cloud services, create TV shows, sell apps, and now offer a savings account.  Goodbye Twitter's blue checkmarks  After many many false starts, the blue checkmarks people had for being 'notable' have disappeared. The only way to get a blue checkmark now is to pay for Twitter Blue - which requires you to verify your phone number. Elon Musk tweeted that he is paying for some of the Twitter Blue accounts personally - like that of Lebron James. Others have a blue checkmark and want to get rid of it because they seem embarrassed for paying for Twitter.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/21/20236 minutes, 45 seconds
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Tara Ward: Screentime - The Diplomat, Drops of God and Quantum Leap

The Diplomat: Keri Russell and Rufus Sewell star in this political thriller about a career diplomat who has to juggle her new high-profile role as an ambassador with her turbulent marriage to a political star (Netflix). Drops of God: A sleek thriller about a woman who discovers the world’s greatest wine collection has been left to her by her estranged father, but she must compete against a Japanese man to claim the inheritance (Apple TV+).   Quantum Leap: a reboot of the classic 1990s drama about a scientist who finds himself able to travel through space and time (Neon). LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/21/20235 minutes, 5 seconds
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Liam Neeson: Hollywood heavyweight on his new role and that career-changing, iconic line in Taken

Liam Neeson’s career has spanned 47 years, over 100 films- and too many iconic roles to count. From Oskar Schidler, to Qui-Gon Jinn, to Ra’s al Ghul, to everyone’s favourite retired CIA operative Bryan Mills to brooding private detective Philip Marlowe in the 2022 release Marlowe. Liam Neeson theorised with ZB’s Jack Tame that a character like Philip Marlowe has managed to keep readers and viewers intrigued over a century after his creation because people are drawn to noble protagonists who care about seeking justice. “Here’s this guy, kind of down on his luck I suppose, carving out a not very lucrative career and seeking some kind of justice for a murder or some crime that’s been committed and doing it in his own way. Sometimes he works for the bad guys, sometimes with the good guys. Something about that, there’s a rebel in there and there’s also an Arthurian knight of the Round Table in there.” Marlowe holds the unique distinction of being Liam Neeson’s 100th film, but he remains modest about his accomplishments on stage or the screen. Even when Jack pressed further, Neeson still wouldn’t name any personal highlights. “Seriously, I can’t. A lot of that is just luck, Lady Luck.” The theme of seeking justice and avenging crimes is clearly timeless, as it’s a driving force behind another iconic role filled by Neeson- retired CIA operative turned father figure Bryan Mills from the 2008 hit Taken. Surprisingly enough, Liam Neeson never actually imagined Taken being a hit- or eventually a meme. As he explained to Jack Tame, he assumed this was going to be dismissed as direct to video-grade cheesiness. “It’s funny, when I first read that script (Taken) I thought- this is so corny. I heard this or feel like I’ve seen this in so many movies.” “I thought it would be straight to video. Like straight to video. But I wanted to do it because of all the fighting and I loved being with the stunt guys, doing all that stuff. And it was three months in Paris, how bad could it be?” Liam Neeson explained to Jack Tame that Taken was the start of the point in his career where he became an action star, as he later featured in The A-Team, The Grey, Wrath of the Titans and all the Taken sequels. “If I had five cents for every time I said, you know, I have a particular set of skills, I will find you… I’d be a very rich man. Because my kids would always say- Dad, would you leave a message for my friend?”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/21/20236 minutes, 56 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Pumpkin, bacon & feijoa scones

Is this the ultimate ANZAC scone? I’m marrying up our favourite fruit – feijoas – with Aussie’s favourite scone – pumpkin! And it’s a winner.  Makes 10 large scones  ¾ cup pumpkin pulp (see note) ½ cup chopped feijoas 3/4 cup plain yoghurt (or use ½ cup milk + ¼ cup cream) 3 cups self-raising flour 1 tsp baking powder 60g butter, chilled ½ tsp sea salt 2 rashers of bacon, diced 75g parmesan, grated Preheat oven to 200 C. Line a tray with baking paper. Whisk pumpkin pulp with yoghurt (or milk & cream) until incorporated. Stir in the chopped feijoas. In a large bowl combine flour and baking powder and grate in chilled butter. Pour in pumpkin mixture, season and stir to combine with a butter knife. Turn out onto a lightly floured surface and knead briefly and gently until it comes together in a smooth dough. Press out to form a 3cm-thick rectangle. Cut into 10 pieces and transfer each to the tray. Toss the bacon and parmesan together and sprinkle over each scone bake for 15-20 minutes or until golden brown. Serve warm slathered with butter. Nici’s note:  For ¾ cup pumpkin pulp, halve a small butternut pumpkin lengthwise, scoop out seeds and discard. Roast halves, cut side up, until soft. Scoop cooked flesh from skin and puree with a stick blender or mash well with a fork. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/21/20234 minutes, 32 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Film review - Paper Spiders and Shackleton: The Greatest Story of Survival

Paper Spiders   Starring NZ- American actress Stefania Lavie Owen.  A teen makes a series of tough choices as her mother's paranoid delusions threaten to destroy their loving relationship.  Shackleton: The Greatest Story of Survival  The true story of polar explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton and the crew of the Endurance.  28 lost adventurers must fight for their lives after their only lifeline is destroyed in the most uninhabitable place on Earth – Antarctica. The story's told by the only man ever to have repeated their incredible feat - explorer and adventurer Tim Jarvis. Following in the beset crew’s footsteps, Tim reveals the enduring legacy of Shackleton's crisis leadership in the face of impossible odds - a lesson more relevant to us now than ever before.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/21/20237 minutes, 39 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Fascinating facts about King Charles III

Kevin Milne has been reading about King Charles III with his coronation imminent. He's come across some fascinating and curious facts about him, such as, he travels with his own supply of blood.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/21/20237 minutes, 5 seconds
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Jack Tame: Citizenship deal - Great news for Kiwis in Oz, not great news for New Zealand

Credit where credit’s due. Our government hasn’t wasted a minute under the Australian Prime Ministership of Anthony Albanese to dramatically improve the relationship with our closest neighbour. With Scott Morrison out, and two governments closely aligned on the ideological front, in less than a year several major policies have been changed for New Zealanders’ benefit. Application of the 501 deportations was significantly pared back, and now New Zealanders in Australia have a more direct path to citizenship. It restores something akin to reciprocity for the first time in more than twenty years. But while the policy is excellent news for New Zealanders in Australia, it may not be so good for New Zealand. The more complicated path to citizenship was one of the few deterrents remaining for Kiwis considering moving to Australia. “New Zealanders who leave for Australia raise the I.Q of both.” It made for a cute quote, you’re kidding yourself if these days you agree with Rob Muldoon’s famous line. If you’re a young, ambitious New Zealander today, why would you choose to stay? I texted my friend in Melbourne this morning to ask about the changes. He was delighted – he moved over after the Christchurch earthquake and has been waiting for these changes to apply for Australian citizenship. “Out of interest,” I said. “What would it take for you to move home? I know you miss your family, but what more would you need?” He sent me a three symbol reply. “$$$” “Our household income over here is roughly 400K,” he told me. “We’d be super lucky to get two thirds of that in NZ even before we accounted for the exchange rate, and there are way fewer jobs in our fields.” I think all of us have bright, successful, friends and family members who could be contributing to New Zealand’s society and economy but have moved over and haven’t come back. There are roughly ten times more New Zealanders – almost 700,000 – living in Australia than Australians living here. There’s every likelihood this change will contribute even more to the bleed. And it isn’t just Kiwis like my mate, working in corporate and IT jobs. It’s every sector. When my sister worked as a teacher in Western Australia she earned roughly $40,000 more every year than she would have in New Zealand at the same time. At the start of this month, The Guardian reported that 5000 New Zealand nurses have registered to work in Australia since August of last year. It’s only three hours away. When you compare pay, conditions, and lifestyle, the rational question isn’t why a young person would consider moving to Oz. It’s why wouldn’t they? We’re always going to struggle to compete economically with Australia. The nature and make up of their economy means we can only get so close. I don’t begrudge the tens or hundreds of thousands of Kiwis who will benefit from these changes. But as Australia gives New Zealanders an even better deal, it’s a prime opportunity to pause and ask ourselves what more we should be doing to stop them leaving in the first place?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/21/20234 minutes, 12 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Vera Ellen - Ideal Home Noise

Ideal Home Noise - Vera Ellen Ideal Home Noise is a record unearthed from much introspection and an attempt to find some comedy and lightness in an otherwise dark period for Vera Ellen. With two "voices” battling throughout the album, the instrumentation is sometimes light — featuring synths and electronic drums — and sometimes heavy — with ballad-like piano and raw vocals.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/15/20236 minutes, 11 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Book review - One of Those Mothers and Strange Sally Diamond

One of Those Mothers – Megan Nicol Reed When a local father is convicted of the possession and distribution of child pornography, the tight-knit, middle-class community is quick to unravel. He is granted permanent name suppression, and soon friend turns on friend, neighbour delivers up neighbour, and hysteria rapidly engulfs them all. Who among them was capable of such moral trespass?Bridget, Roz and Lucy have been friends forever. Their lives revolve around their children, their community, each other. With their husbands and kids, they holiday together every year. Every year, until last summer, when everything went so terribly wrong.   Strange Sally Diamond - Liz Nugent Sally Diamond cannot understand why what she did was so strange. She was only doing what her father told her to do, to put him out with the rubbish when he died. Now Sally is the centre of attention, not only from the hungry media and worried police, but also a sinister voice from a past of which she has no memory. As she begins to discover the horrors of her childhood, recluse Sally steps into the world for the first time, making new friends, finding independence, and learning that people don't always mean what they say. But when messages start arriving from a stranger who knows far more about her past than she knows herself, Sally's life will be thrown into chaos once again . . .See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/15/20234 minutes, 11 seconds
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Kate Hall: How to make kombucha

Sustainability commentator Kate Hall joined Jack this morning to chat about kombucha, and tell us her method for making it. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/15/20238 minutes, 57 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Vegetable crops in autumn

Autumn can be busy! It might be getting cooler and days shorter, but some vegetable crops can be planted right now. Use the warmth that is still in the soil to germinate the seeds or to give small punnet-seedlings a better start for growing through the late Autumn/Early winter months. Fresh Peas: Easy peasy, as the seeds of those peas (the peas themselves!!) have enough reserves inside them to make them grow. Nice, friable soil that can drain the winter rains away. Good nutritious compost in there as well Broad beans: Similar gig! Plenty of growth potential and they might ripen quite early too. These are good greens for the winter (if you like them). Broccoli: Another suitable winter vegetable that can be planted now —there’s still some warmth in the soil they’ll grow well in the next month— even if they slow down afterwards, you’ve got a month’s worth of advance before they start taking it easy. Slow ripening means that they don’t all ripen at once, so pick the biggest ones as they mature Most other cabbage varieties will also grow from now on Carrot seedlings: These will also germinate at lower temperatures. Remember to create a soil that is free of lumps and stones, so that the carrots keep straight and do not “fork”. An extra handful of Phosphate will give them the impetus to grow nice roots Egyptian Walking Onions: These are my favourite onions and they’ll be quite happy to be planted (the small bulbils that form at the top of the mature plants). I tend to give them a bed on their own, so they can “walk” anywhere they like and right throughout the year; a raised bed with a regular dose of compost/mulch plus some seafood soup (liquid fertiliser) will sustain them ad infinitum. Maybe now is a good time to prepare a new bad for your garlic. (Garlic should really not be grown in the same bed, year after year. To avoid getting hammered by onion rust, I plant my garlic in early May to be at least a month ahead of the mythical and prescribed planting routine (shortest day) and harvest time (longest day). I’ve noticed many people struggle with these dates due to debilitating rust. Go early!! And Julie reminds me of the bulbs that need planting this autumn, so that we can look forward to some colour and cheer in spring: Narcissus, Tulips, Ranunculus and the wonderful smelling Freesias. Honestly, grab a catalogue (Wildflower world, Palmers, Oderings, etc) and spoil yourself; Good well-drained soils are often essential.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/15/20236 minutes, 7 seconds
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Bryan Betty: Rheumatoid Arthritis

Dr Bryan Betty joined the show today to chat about Rheumatoid Arthritis; what it is, it’s symptoms, and how to deal with it. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/15/20234 minutes, 21 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Proving who you are on LinkedIn, TikTok, Coachella is being live streamed

Paul Stenhouse joined Jack Tame to chime in on Montana banning TikTok, Coachella being livestreamed, and LinkedIn’s new verification services. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/15/20236 minutes, 34 seconds
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Tara Ward: The Last Thing He Told Me, Transatlantic, Blow Up

The Last Thing He Told Me Hannah must forge a relationship with her 16-year-old stepdaughter, Bailey, to find the truth behind why her husband has mysteriously disappeared.   Transatlantic An American journalist, during 13 months spent in France in 1940-41, manages to arrange safe passage out of France and on to the US for more than 2000 refugees who are in danger of losing their lives.   Blow Up The new Warner Bros Discovery series Blow Up challenges contestants to create giant inflatable works of art in a bid to be crowned New Zealand’s greatest balloon artist, and win $25k.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/15/20234 minutes, 49 seconds
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The Ten Tenors: Kiwis Cameron Barclay and Andrew Papas - and a performance from the whole group

The longest running classical crossover act in the world, The Ten Tenors has performed over three thousand times all across the world since their creation in 1995. The group was formed in Queensland Australia, but features a couple of Kiwis in their lineup as well. Cameron Barclay and newcomer Andrew Papas joined Jack Tame to chat about performing and what it’s like to be part of the group. Jack was also treated to a performance from the entirety of the Ten Tenors, as they kick off their Greatest Hits NZ Tour. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/15/202310 minutes, 13 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Roasted Pumpkin & All the Things!

Autumn is the season for pumpkins and nuts so here I’m combining them both to bring you this incredible dish! Serve it as a main course or as a side to go with a chop, some roast lamb or a piece of grilled salmon. It’s lovely!   Ingredients: 3-6 wedges of pumpkin, skin on 2 tablespoons olive oil + extra 1 teaspoon sea salt Decent pinch freshly ground black pepper ¼ cup of sour cream Juice from half an orange or lemon ¼ cup toasted seeds and nut (I used sunflower and pumpkin seeds + almonds) 2 tablespoons pomegranate molasses or honey     Method: Preheat the oven to 180 C. Line a tray with baking paper. Brush pumpkin with olive oil and sprinkle with salt and pepper. Bake for 40-50 minutes until tender and browned a little. Whisk sour cream with orange juice and an extra splash of olive oil. Spoon half of this dressing onto a serving plate. To serve, place pumpkin onto sour cream base, sprinkle over plenty of the seed/nut mix and then drizzle over the remaining sour cream dressing. Top with pomegranate molasses or honey, serve and enjoy!   Variations: Add a tsp of mustard to the sour cream. Scatter over fresh parsley or coriander leaves to serve. Use hazelnuts or walnuts. Mix cashew butter, lime, sesame oil and chilli flakes to make a different creamy dressing. Add some juicy grapes to the final dish. In the final 15 minutes, roast some button mushrooms (toss with oil first) with the pumpkin. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/14/20234 minutes, 52 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Navalny and A House Made of Splinters

Navalny Detailing the 2020 assassination attempt of Russian opposition leader and former presidential candidate Alexei Navalny, in which he was poisoned with a military-grade nerve agent. A House Made of Splinters In war-torn eastern Ukraine, a group of women run a home where they manage to create a warm place for children placed out of home due to violence or alcohol abuse.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/14/20236 minutes, 55 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Paying tribute to "real men"

After suddenly losing power on amid Easter Sunday preparations, Kevin Milne pays tribute to the people who have the technical know-how to solve the maintenance problems the rest of us can’t. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/14/20236 minutes, 29 seconds
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Jack Tame: Streaming services have only made our impatience worse

If I’m ever in a job interview and they ask me what my weaknesses are, I won’t hesitate in my answer. No, I won’t say I work too hard or that I care too much. I’ll be honest and say that I’m impatient. For me, that was a big part of the reason I was so excited when TV streaming services finally got good. Instead of waiting for episodes to be drip-fed to the audience, week by week, I could turn on telly and watch a whole series in a night if I so chose. To be honest, bingeing twelve hours of television at a time is not really my style. But in the first few years of streaming, we were told repeatedly by Netflix and co why getting a whole series at once was such a good idea. It changes storytelling for the better, they told us. You don’t have to worry about weak cliff-hangers. Writers don’t have to shoehorn a whole story arc into exactly twenty-three minutes. It’s more organic. More nuanced. More thoughtful. We should’ve known better. But instead, we fell for it, hook, line, and sinker. The streamers played us like drug dealers play addicts. They published full season of bingeable TV upon full season of bingeable TV, niche shows, big-budget dramas, the best programmes in the history of television, and when subscriptions were near an absolute maximum across the board, they cut down on the supply. If you think about it, the economics are simple. Why have your audience bingeing TV, watching a month’s worth of telly in four days and then pausing their subscriptions? It’s much smarter to have them pay you the same amount but only give them one episode ever week. There’s another downside to the drip-drip-drip model that I only appreciated this week. For almost five years I’ve been watching Succession, one of the best programmes on TV. Right now, Succession is broadcasting it’s fourth and final series. It’s dark. It’s funny. It’s surprising. It’s observant. It critiques our culture and reminds me of my twenties in New York. And given it’s the last season, the pièce de resistance, I’ve been deliberately waiting for a gap in my schedule to sit down and properly enjoy it. Between Easter, work, and everything else, I’ve been tempering my impatience and waiting for a moment when I can properly savour ever second of the final season glory. To be fair I think Succession has always been a weekly episodic. HBO never went to the Netflix full binge model. But there’s a difference in the way that audiences behave between the two different styles. When full series are published all at once, no one gives up spoilers. It’s generally accepted that as a viewer, you won’t necessarily watch a whole series on the day it becomes available. You might, but most people will probably spread out a series a little bit. How many of us have talked about TV, and asked our friends – carefully – what episode they were up to? But a show like Succession is different. There are millions of viewers around the world, waiting for the hour every week in which they know a new episode will become available. And because that’s the way they’re watching the show, the presume everyone is doing the same thing. You can see where this is going. This week, Succession delivered its biggest plot twist in five wonderful years of storytelling. A huge twist. A massive shock. A Shakespearean dynamic-changer. But I didn’t see it for myself. Having carefully, deliberately waited, I read it on Twitter. Twice. Then I saw it again in a newspaper headline. Maybe streaming ruined TV-watching etiquette. And maybe impatience isn’t such a bad thing.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/14/20234 minutes, 50 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Music - Matt Corby, 'Everything's Fine'

The third studio album from Matt Corby, ‘Everything’s Fine’ is the official follow-up to 2018’s ‘Rainbow Valley’.  Matt Corby has always been a musician’s musician. Every note he plays and every lyric he sings is both considered and intellectual – and with his third album Everything’s Fine he continues this reputation while developing his sound for today’s listener.  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/8/20235 minutes, 32 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: I Will Find You by Harland Coben and Go as a River by Shelly Read

I Will Find You, Harlan Coben  From the # 1 author and creator of the hit Netflix drama Stay Close, a page-turning thriller that will keep you guessing until the very last page. The new Harlan Coben blockbuster has arrived.  Go as a River, Shelly Read  From the publishers of THE LIGHT BETWEEN OCEANS, ONCE UPON A RIVER and GREAT CIRCLE, a soaring, heartstopping debut novel of female resilience and becoming, for fans of WHERE THE CRAWDADS SING.      See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/8/20234 minutes, 7 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Travel to Eat - Some of the world's popular dishes and their surprising origins

Savouring exotic flavours and iconic dishes is one of travel’s great rewards. But some of the most popular dishes do not originate from where you would think. Let’s start with a Caesar Salad.  What about a Japanese Curry?  Take a cruise in Alaska and Baked Alaska is sure to feature on the dessert menu. Is it Alaskan?  How about Chicken Tikka Masala?  One of the most deceptively named dishes would have to be Mongolian Beef.  One of the most popular dishes in Peru is Lomo Saltado. Strips of beef with onion and tomato. But is it Peruvian?  Speaking of Peru - Pisco Sour. Is the national drink actually Peruvian?   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/8/202311 minutes, 21 seconds
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Steven Dromgool: Having 'getting serious’ talks with your partner without scaring them off

Why is it so hard to talk about the 'big' topics with our significant other? What happens if we just avoid it?   Is there a secret to making it easier?  Relationship expert Steven Dromgool joins Jack Tame to discuss. LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/7/20238 minutes, 9 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: You can’t go without leaf mold

This is an early warning for the coming month; You’ve heard me saying this once, you’ve heard me talk about it a thousand times: Those fallen leaves are worth their weight in gold.  No matter if we are talking about deciduous trees (those that lose their leaves in autumn) or “ever-green” trees, they all need to replace these green factories that turn Carbon di-oxide and minerals into sugars and Oxygen. And the power plant that makes it happen is current sunlight (not fossil sunlight!)  The old leaves return a lot of chemistry to the mother tree before they drop off (it’ll be used again to make new leaves next spring). But what the old leaves contain, as they float down to the ground, is mostly carbon.  You may have heard about “climate disruption” or “climate change”?, a problem that is summed up by the fact that we have too much carbon in the air and not enough in the soil.  Nature’s technique is to get that carbon back into the soil via trees and growing things called “leaves”.  So here’s the best tip for the Planet and your garden:  Build one or more chicken-wire cages (1 meter by 1 meter and – say – one meter tall; Use some sturdy stakes to keep it all in shape. Now, when the leaves come floating down gather them up and chuck them in that cage and leave them there for a year or so. They turn into leaf mold, full of carbon and light in weight This stuff is the best compound to make seed raising mix (add some light, friable compost) Leaf mold also makes potting mix (with compost and fine bark) It also makes a perfect mulch on the flower beds (weed control) Leaf mold is a key ingredient for vegetable garden soil (add compost, mineral soil and fertiliser) It rejuvenates old beds that need some “time out” (keep it fallow) Leaf mold is perfect to make heavy, wet clay into a much better draining soil (increasing spaces in the soil) It even does the opposite: making free-draining sandy soils a lot better at holding on to moisture (reducing spaces in the sandy soil).See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/7/20234 minutes, 40 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Best buy wine - 2021 Te Kairanga Rosé

Wine: 2021 Te Kairanga Rosé, Martinborough $25.99  Why I chose it:  Versatile, suits warm weather and cooler weather Was a stand-out wine in a recent blind tasting From a top vintage (buy now while stocks last) Who doesn’t like Rosé? (A winemaker recently told me that more men buy Rosé than women in NZ) What does it taste like?  Reasonably pale, gently aromatic rose with raspberry sherbet, crushed strawberry and watermelon flavours. Dry, refreshing wine with good flavour intensity and a lingering finish. Why it’s a bargain:  High quality wine at a middle-of-the-road price. Where can you buy it?  co.nz are selling it for $20.99 if you buy six bottles for $125.95 Food match?  You can enhance the pleasure by serving the wine with pink-tinted foods such as prawn cocktails or salmon sushi – it really gives it a lift. Will it keep?  No, drink up. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/7/20234 minutes, 53 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Tech - India is getting its first Apple Store and Twitter's latest fight with Substack

India is getting its first Apple Store  I'm shocked that they don't already have one! The store will be over 2,000 sqm. It won't be   The Apple Careers website has given some clues that this will be the first of many stores as Apple is hiring for team members for "various locations".  It's online store opened to India in 2020 and iPhone are manufactured in India.  Twitter's latest fight is with newsletter platform Substack  Any tweet that contains a link to a Substack has had its reply, retweet and quote tweet function disabled because it throws as error to the user. This comes after Twitter blocked embeds of Tweets into Substacks. Substack says this is why writers deserve an independent platform which supports their work. Twitter has made changes to their API recently, and Substack has launched a feature to Twitter called "Notes" which are small posts (like Tweets).  Twitter and NPR (National Public Radio) are also in a dispute about a label on their profile calling NPR "a state affiliated media outlet", which it isn't. NPR has stopped publishing on Twitter. NPR says it gets less than 1% of its finding from federal sources - lots comes from donations. Elon Musk shared a screenshot of the label and commented "seems accurate".  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/7/20236 minutes, 33 seconds
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Tara Ward: Screentime - Nolly, Boom Boom! and Tiny Beautiful Things

Nolly: Helena Bonham Carter teams up with It’s a Sin writer Russell T Davies for this biopic about the rise and fall of British soap star Noelle Gordon (TVNZ1, from Sunday night)   Boom Boom!: A two-part documentary series about the controversial life and career of tennis champion Boris Becker (Apple TV+)   Tiny Beautiful Things: Grab your tissues for this emotional drama starring Kathryn Hahn and based on the book by Cheryl Strayed (Wild), about a woman coming to terms with the death of her mother decades before (Disney+)   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/7/20237 minutes, 12 seconds
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Daily J: Kiwi band talk their new EP 'Slush Honey: Side A' and perform in studio

The band’s made up of three brothers – Jayden, Jesse, Johnny – and their mate, Rick.   They started from humble beginnings in Blenheim before heading to the bright lights of Auckland.   The band’s debut album Venus Ate Mars was released in 2020 and did exceptionally well.  They backed it up with touring the festival circuit both here and in Australia. The boys have just released a new EP called Slush Honey: Side A and Jack Tame caught up with two of the brothers –Jayden and Jesse - this week. LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/7/202312 minutes, 24 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Film review - Air and The Pope's Exorcist

Air   Sonny Vaccaro and Nike pursue basketball rookie Michael Jordan, creating a partnership that revolutionizes the world of sports and contemporary culture. Directed by Ben Affleck, starring Matt Damon.   The Pope’s Exorcist  Father Gabriele Amorth, chief exorcist for the Vatican, battles Satan and innocent-possessing demons. A detailed portrait of a priest who performed more than 100,000 exorcisms in his lifetime. Starring Russell Crowe.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/7/20237 minutes, 31 seconds
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Kevin Milne: The irony of Interislander ferry problems

Kevin Milne joins Jack Tame to chat about the irony of our interisland ferries' mechanical problems just when Bluebridge and Interisland ferries were finally offering first-class on-board service. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/7/20236 minutes, 55 seconds
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Jack Tame: Crybaby silliness hides hypocrisy

We’ve all done it.  Every last one of us in a group chat or on a team email or instant messaging platform.  Let he who hath not accidentally texted someone when saying something ill-advised or nasty throw the first stone.  I’ve got friends who in a rage have sent the most awful messages slagging off their flatmate and calling them a slob, only to have the flatmate in question walk into the room and hold up their phone.   “I don’t think you meant to send this to me.”  Eurgh.. you don’t say.   I’ve got friends who’ve accidentally texted their crush, confessing their love. Friends who’ve done similar things when they’ve been considering break-ups. There was a rumour at my work about a message that was accidentally sent to a colleague via instant messaging on our office computer network. The sender begged and pleaded and bribed IT staff with chocolate and wine to come in on a weekend and delete the message before the receiver logged into their computer on Monday morning. I dunno if it’s true but the scenario sounds believable enough.   The problem is that sometimes the impulse to be professional is exceeded by the impulse to be a human being. We can be nasty, gossipy beasts. And in the digital age, you’re only ever a big red button from disaster…  Green MP Elizabeth Kerekere has learnt all of this the hard way, after being caught out for allegedly calling her colleague Chloe Swarbrick a “crybaby” in a message that was sent to the wrong group chat.  Most of the coverage of this little whoopsie has focused on the word “crybaby” and the high-school drama of the whole thing. But I saw something else in it. For me, the real takeaway from was not that Elizabeth Kerekere was slagging off one of her colleagues. It wasn’t that she apparently doesn’t like Chloe Swarbrick, or that she used a petty term. The really interesting thing was the context in which she did it.   Kerekere sent the message literally as Chloe Swarbrick was speaking, arguing in the house in favour of an alcohol bill which could have had massive impacts on social harm in our country. Kerekere’s own profile on the Green Party website says she’s dedicated her life to issues of health, mental health, violence prevention and youth development, all of which would be directly affected by Swarbrick’s proposed changes.  And yet, at the critical moment in the bill’s progression, Elizabeth Kerekere appeared only to view the bill through the lens of her personal ambitions. She didn’t care about affecting change, she cared about what the publicity around the bill would do for party list rankings. So much for health, mental health, violence prevention and youth development, all those issues which she claims to care so much about. What’s the point in helping to make positive change if doesn’t help Elizabeth Kerekere?  Kerekere’s text was revealing, not because it publicised her beef with Chloe Swarbrick, but because it revealed hypocrisy. In an extremely rare moment this parliamentary term when a Green Party bill was debated in the house, Kerekere didn’t put the kaupapa first. She didn’t put first the communities she purports to represent. She didn’t put first violence prevention, health, or social harm.   In that moment, she put Elizabeth Kerekere first. I think that says a lot about character. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/7/20234 minutes, 40 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Music review - Fall Out Boy - So Much (For) Stardust

Fall Out Boy   ALBUM: So Much (For) Stardust  Fall Out Boy's new album, So Much (For) Stardust, is a return to some of the band's familiar sound and style of writing.    It's the first album that the pop punk band has released in five years. The last one, Mania, was full of experimentation in sound that some fans didn't love.   Wentz and Stump know how polarizing the album was. So Much (For) Stardust is a more recognizable sound. It's also a show of the maturity and experience that the band members have garnered in the two decades working together – and some of the absurdity that has prevailed.  LISTEN ABPVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/31/20235 minutes, 26 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Book review - The Last Days of Joy and Wanderlust

The Last Days of Joy – Anne Tiernan  A stunning novel about a family reeling in the wake of a devastating act. Sharply funny, intensely moving, and with a cast of unforgettable characters, The Last Days of Joy will make you laugh out loud even as it moves you to tears.   Wanderlust - Reid Mitenbuler The mesmerizing, larger-than-life tale of an eccentric adventurer who traversed some of the greatest frontiers of the twentieth century, from uncharted Arctic wastelands to the underground resistance networks of World War II.  LISTEN ABOVE    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/31/20235 minutes, 26 seconds
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Mike Yardley: A safari of sights in Mooloolaba

Mike Yardley is once again the envy of us all with his travels to the Sunshine Coast. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/31/20238 minutes, 27 seconds
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Kate Hall: Ethically Kate has some ideas for a sustainable Easter

Sustainability expert Ethically Kate has some ideas for sustainable ways to celebrate Easter without boycotting it altogether like alternatives for less wasteful Easter baskets for the kids. LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/31/20238 minutes, 18 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Dahlias

Pretty flowers in autumn – some are huge and some have really deep colours.  Varieties are numerous in all sorts of colours and shapes and sizes; small ones, huge ones; (doubles, singles, “waterlilies”, breeders have been pretty active in this field, especially Dr Keith Hammett – ex DSIR in Auckland)  NOW’s the time to scout around finding what you might like yourself.  Café au Lait Le Baron Kennemer Land  You can buy them as plants (often cuttings) or, more commonly, as “tubers” (root structures, long-ish “bulbs”) from which the plants grow;  Planting in Spring after frosty times have stopped; (established plants in the soil the tubers are reasonably protected from frosts, but newly planted tubers need frost protection!!)  Where to plant those Tubers? Well-drained soil to avoid rotting; alternative: raise the bed to create a well-drained medium.  Healthy soil with decent amount of compost, rock phosphate and lime – general fertiliser N-P-K.  It pays to cover the plants with a good layer of compost (3 inches thick at least). It really sets them up for decent growth in spring and summer and it keeps weeds at bay; it also keeps moisture in the soil during hot, dry summers  They do need a bit of space (almost a meter), so they can expand and keep sunlight on their leaves.  Pick flowers late Summer – Autumn… with a bit of luck they’ll provide colour for a long time!  Insects and fugal problems can be a pain in the in bum:  Powdery mildew (a real autumn fungus on the leaves) can be slowed down by spraying copper sprays on the leaves when nights are getting cooler and dew settles on the leaves. Copper stops the fungal spores from starting their dastardly journey  Katydids often go undetected as they emerge later in afternoon and evening, making a ZZdits sound; they chew the flowers petals making the symmetrical look slightly less symmetrical  Earwigs hide inside the flower heads and chew whole petals, shredding the flowers and creating a very grumpy Julie;  Mind you, those earwigs do a fabulous job in all other months of the year by being predators of aphids and such real plant pests!!! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/31/20234 minutes, 23 seconds
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Hannah McQueen: The downsizing dilemma

The downsizing dilemma – it’s a natural progression to downsize the family home when the kids fly the nest and you head into retirement, but people usually expect it to release more cash than it does.   If you find yourself in that situation you can end up in a pickle.   Why does it not provide as much of your retirement savings as people expect?   Why does timing become important?   Does moving to a cheaper area solve all that?   How do you avoid having an over reliance on your home, and what do you do if you are reliant on it?  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/31/20235 minutes, 1 second
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Paul Stenhouse: ChatGPT has been blocked in Italy

TikTok's sister app is about to launch in the US  It's called Lemon8. Think of it as Instagram - with its focus on text and images - but powered by the TikTok algorithm, and focused on fashion, beauty and lifestyle. It seems to be heavily skewed towards shoppable experiences. It launched in Japan in 2020. Bytedance has been reaching out to content creators to get them to start posting on the app offering up stipends, placements and more. Lemon8 is available to download from the app stores, but it has not been formally launched in the US. It is available in the UK, Singapore and Indonesia.    ChatGPT has been blocked in Italy  They are investigating privacy concerns that break GDPR rules. There’s no age verification for minors to use the tool, which collects their data. There’s also concern about the data sources used to train the tool, and how Italian citizens can control the data held about them.   LISTEN ABOVE    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/31/20234 minutes, 31 seconds
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Tara Ward: Screentime - Rabbit Hole, The Power and Wellmania

Rabbit Hole: Kiefer Sutherland stars in this action-packed thriller about a corporate spy who discovers everything he’s been fighting for is built soon a web of lies (TVNZ+). The Power: Based on Naomi Alderman’s bestselling novel, Toni Collette and John Leguizamo star in this sci-fi drama about a world where teenage girls mysteriously start shooting electricity out of their hands (Prime Video).   Wellmania: An Australian comedy that sees Celeste Barber plays human tornado Liv, a woman forced to rethink her hectic lifestyle after a major health scare (Netflix). LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/31/20234 minutes, 56 seconds
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Melanie Bracewell: Kiwi comedian on finding success cracking the Australian market

Most will by now be familiar with the name Melanie Bracewell.  The Kiwi comedian has found success on screen, on stage and online...   She’s written for 7 Days and Wellington Paranormal – featured on Have You Been Paying Attention – won the Billy T Award and went viral around the world with her impressions of former Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern.   And now, Mel’s taken the leap across the ditch to try and crack the Aussies.   But it won’t be long before she’s back on our home shores to tour her show Forget Me Not and host the Best Foods International Comedy Gala next month.   Melanie Bracewell joined Jack Tame. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/31/202315 minutes, 10 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Eggplant and feta fans

Look out for eggplants right now in grocers and farmer’s markets – they can get as low as $3-$4 each and they make for a really hearty meatless meal. Try this recipe for meltingly soft, richly flavoured and utterly scrumptious eggplant and feta fans.  Makes 4  2 eggplants 4-6 medium tomatoes, thickly sliced 100g feta 2-3 tbsps capers 2 tbsps each fresh thyme & oregano Salt & pepper to season ¼ cup olive oil Parsley to garnish Heat oven to 180 C and line a shallow baking tray with baking paper. Trim stalks from eggplants and halve lengthwise. Make four or five thick cuts in each half, leaving each intact at the stalk end. Tuck tomato slices and feta into each cut, sprinkle over capers, herbs and salt and pepper. Drizzle generously with olive oil and cover with foil. Bake for 30 minutes, remove foil then continue baking until soft and collapsed – about another 15-20 minutes. Sprinkle over fresh parsley and serve alongside a simple salad and/or bread. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/31/20235 minutes, 38 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Film review - Dungeons and Dragons and The Portable Door

Dungeons and Dragons  A charming thief and a band of unlikely adventurers embark on an epic quest to retrieve a long lost relic, but their charming adventure goes dangerously awry when they run afoul of the wrong people.  The Portable Door   A man lands an internship at a mysterious London firm with unconventional employees, including the charismatic CEO who is incorporating modern corporate strategy into ancient magical practices.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/31/20236 minutes, 33 seconds
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Kevin Milne: How a trip to the zoo told me the way to fix our health system

Kevin Milne recently took a walk round the zoo with his daughter. An idea crossed his mind as to how we could help fund our deteriorating health system.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/31/20235 minutes, 56 seconds
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Jack Tame: Three months living as a one-car-couple

At the start of this year, my girlfriend decided to sell her old dunga’. It was a good decision. Her car was a big, old, fat 2.6L sedan with blind spots the size of a bouncy castle, and the only thing it loved more than chewing through vast quantities of petrol was being as difficult as possible to wedge into parallel parks. ‘Good news!’ she said to me, one day. ‘I sold my car for three thousand dollars!’ ‘That’s fantastic! I replied. And so, what are you thinking now? ‘Well, I’ve got your car,’ she said. …. I don’t think I truly appreciated New Zealand’s lagging mathematics achievement until I noted the laxness of my girlfriend’s attitude to the situation. ‘I can give you the three thousand if you really want it,’ said my girlfriend. ‘But my car’s worth ten thousand dollars.’ I said. Welcome to love. The reason I’m telling you this is not actually anything to do with cars. It’s about what I decided to do next. Because, faced with a carless future, I did nothing. Three months ago, my girlfriend and I decided to become a one-car couple. Between us, living in two different houses, in different suburbs, with her son and various jobs to balance, we decided to see if we could get by with just the one vehicle. The theory was pretty simple. Whenever I could, I would ride my bike. She would walk more and use public transport. Both of us would have to be a bit thoughtful about our requirements in advance. I thought of it as Corolla coordination, as we tried to plan out our weeks as best we could. If it was raining, or we had stuff to carry, or we were running late for an important meeting, we wouldn’t guilt ourselves about spending money on Ubers. I figured whatever we spent on Ubers would be more than covered by our savings on a new car, insurance, and petrol. Today is April 1st, three months into 2023. Three months since we made the switch. The thing that has surprised me most is how easy the whole thing has been. Now, I get it. We’re not on a farm. We’re not running separate glazing businesses. We don’t have eight kids. And we live in a city. But we do have some complications. We are balancing a lot. And anyone who’s paid attention to the news will know there’s been a fair bit of rain in the upper North Island this year. Still, if I was to break it down, I’d say that 90% of my journeys have been by bike. The only slight issue I’ve had was an incident where I had to excuse myself from a book launch party after zipping across Auckland on a particularly humid evening, only to find myself with sweat literally dripping onto some of the other guests. On a few occasions, my girlfriend and I have been going to the same event. With our Corolla coordination, she’ll take the car and I’ll take the bike, and I’ll beat her there through the rush hour traffic. And as for Ubers and public transport? I’ve spent about $170 in three months. That’s a whole lot less than a car, insurance, and running costs would’ve set me back over the same period. I know this setup won’t suit everyone. I’m not suggesting it will. But New Zealand has one of the highest car-ownership rates in the world. And I reckon I’m not the only one who might be surprised at how easy it is to downsize. Call it Corolla Coordination. Or Mitsubishi Marshalling. Or Hilux Harmonising. Outlander Ordering. Maybe if you’re getting rid of an old dunga, set yourself a challenge, too. Sure, it’s handy to have one car. But ask yourself, do you really need two?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/31/20234 minutes, 51 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Lana Del Rey - Did You Know There’s a Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd

Rolling Stone says: Lana Del Rey spends her ninth LP taking a close look at herself — and reminds us she's in a creative class all her own.  She has another ridiculous song title on her album called: Grandfather please stand on the shoulders of my father while he’s deep-sea fishing. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/24/20234 minutes, 53 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Paris, The Memoir and Did I Ever Tell You This, Sam Neill

Paris, The Memoir  From the woman who is credited, for better and for worse, for launching what we know as the celebrity focused, brand driven, social media obsessed popular culture of today, comes an honest and surprising memoir that reckons with that truth, and shows that there is so much more to Paris Hilton than you might believe.  Behind Paris Hilton's meteoric rise from Upper West Side club kid to household name lies her self-proclaimed 'superpower' of ADHD and a hidden history that traumatized and defined her.   Shocking, funny and surprisingly profound, Paris is the deeply personal memoir of the ultimate It Girl and a stunning inside view of a pop culture phenomenon.   Until, in a revealing documentary, she disclosed that her childhood was shattered by two years of strip searches, isolation, beatings, restraint, and brainwashing within the now infamous 'troubled teen industry', Paris Hilton was simply the billionaire heiress America had watched grow up on television, on the internet, and in tabloids.   But there was always more to Paris Hilton than met the eye.    Did I Ever Tell You This, Sam Neill  In this unexpected memoir, written in a creative burst of just a few months in 2022, Sam Neill tells the story of how he became one of the world’s most celebrated actors, who has worked with everyone from Meryl Streep to Isabel Adjani, from Jeff Goldblum to Sean Connery, from Steven Spielberg to Jane Campion.  Did I Ever Tell You This? is a joy to read, a marvellous and often very funny book, the work of a natural storyteller who is a superb observer of other people, and who writes with love and warmth about his family. It is also his account of his life outside film, especially in Central Otago where he established Two Paddocks, his vineyard famous for its pinot noir. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/24/20235 minutes, 32 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Wild adventures around Wellington

- The East by West Ferry offers great excursion options. (Matiu/Somes Island.)   - How was the birdlife?  - And the ferry connects to Days Bay, too. ( Then take an ebike to Pencarrow Lighthouse.)   - North of the Capital, the Escarpment Track is pulling the crowds.   - If the weather's not behaving, what's new at Wellington Museum.   - And the Te-Whanganui-a-Tara exhibition is a fresh feature?  ( Gigantic photographic carpet of the region on the floor.)  For more tips on great trails and culture stops in Wellington, Mike's article is on the website.  www.newstalkzb.co.nz/lifestyle/travel/   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/24/20239 minutes, 48 seconds
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Steven Dromgool: Relationship expert on helping a partner with anxiety

What is anxiety actually? If it's not real, can't you just tell someone to snap out of it - or get over it?  So, what helps?  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/24/20236 minutes, 59 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Fruit trees in action

We had a bit of rain this week… and a huge amount of wind as well.  It really showed me I had underestimated the ripeness of my “Sanguine Peaches”, a variety that never fails to perform here in Christchurch. An acquired taste: very sweet and spicey; The name originates from Sanguine de Savoie, meaning “the blood of savoy”.  Another favourite tree fruit is the apple “Initial”; perfectly crisp and not too sweet; the great thing about “Initial” is that it seems to be quite resistant to all sorts of diseases, so… easy to grow in an organic garden.  Pome fruit (apples) are best pruned in wintertime, when the tree is dormant. They require good eyesight, as you’ll need to be careful leaving the fruiting spurs so that the tree has some fruit to set next season. Watch the shape and size of those spurs when you harvest the fruit, so you know what to look for during winter pruning.  One apple I always “wait” for is the late ripening “Monty’s Surprise”; An old apple variety, discovered a few decades ago  It has several wonderful advantages: It’s relatively resistant to diseases and pests – I’ve noticed little evidence of black spot and such pathogens  In the earlier part of the season (late March, early April) Monty’s surprise is a tangy cooking apple – the fruit are large… some get too “huge”;  Mid-April onwards, when the fruit ripens further, it becomes an eating apple. Tastes great! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/24/20234 minutes, 38 seconds
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Dr Byan Betty: Chair of General Practice NZ on meningitis, what is it and what to do about it?

What is it?  Serious infection of blood or brain (meningitis) Can lead to very severe disease or even death. Caused by a bacteria called meningococcal. - 15% of us carry it in our nose and throat and it doesn’t harm us. For reasons we don’t understand it can occasionally transmit to others and cause the disease.   Who gets it?  Peak those under 5, and teenagers/young adults up to 25 High risk are young adults moving into halls of residence – university or boarding school We don’t understand why some get the disease. Bug doesn’t survive long outside the nose or throat – thought spread close contact kissing, eating utensils, sneezing. How do you recognise it?  Often starts with temp, vomiting or muscle/joint pian like any other illness. However, it can worsen every very rapidly without warning – severe headache, stiff neck, drowsiness, rash – serious requires urgent medical attention. It is rare, however can happen out of the blue with little or no warning. What to do about it?  Antibiotics can cure if get early enough However only real protection immunisation. Under-fives now have a meningitis vaccine in immunisation schedule 13- to 25-year-olds: moving to halls of residence, boarding school can get a free immunisations for the main types of meningitis. As parents think about immunising their children if going to university or boarding school – talk to your GP or Nurse. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/24/20234 minutes, 38 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: More AI releases and TikTok CEO grilled on Capitol Hill

Chat GPT stunned the tech world by launching plugins  Now you can get Chat GPT to connect to a range of applications to enrich what it knows, and what it can do. For example, you can now connect it to Expedia and have it search flights, or recommend hotels. You can connect it to Bing to search the internet - yes, it can now know real-world and real-time information. You can even connect it to your email and calendar through a service called Zapier to have it send emails and more.   TikTok's CEO grilled on Capitol Hill  Shou Zi spent five hours taking questions from lawmakers. He says there is still some data in a data center in Virginia and Singapore that China-based employees can access, but that is in the process of being deleted. From then on, all US data will be stored in a US data center and governed by US law, only accessible by US-based employees. He says TikTok has never, and would never, share US user data with the Chinese government. These committee hearings also continue to show just how little our law makers know about technology, with painful questions.   Adobe launched its generative AI called Firefly  It's designed for creatives, and it looks pretty awesome.   You can create images from scratch or use something already in your design canvas to use as a prompt. So, you could take an image of a church and ask for variations of it. The thing that looks the coolest is that it keeps it all in separate layers so you can move things around and tweak as needed. Want a picture to look brighter, or more moody - you can ask for that too. Need the sky brightened up to make your vacation look perfect - it can do that too. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/24/20234 minutes, 14 seconds
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Tara Ward: The Night Agent, Yellowjackets and Lucky Hank

The Night Agent: An American spy thriller. While monitoring an emergency line, an FBI agent answers a call that plunges him into a deadly conspiracy involving a mole at the White House (Netflix).  Yellowjackets: Season two of the dark thriller starring Melanie Lynskey, about a team of talented high-school girls soccer players who survive a plane crash deep in the Ontario wilderness (Neon).  Lucky Hank: Bob Odenkirk returns to the small screen in this comedy-drama as a grumpy English professor whose life begins to unravel (TVNZ+). LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/24/20235 minutes, 37 seconds
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Sharon Corr: The Corrs founder on decades of hits as band prepares to head to NZ

It was 1990 in Ireland, when three sisters and their brother decide to form a family band.  Thus, The Corrs were formed and their version of Celtic-pop somehow worked.  They’re one of the biggest musical acts to come out of Ireland, selling 40 million albums worldwide and creating six bestselling albums.  The band went on a decade-long hiatus to raise families before returning to the charts in 2015.  And now, they're heading our way for two shows later this year.  Sharon Corr joined Jack Tame. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/24/202313 minutes, 53 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Feijoa, coconut, rum and lime cake

This cake is gorgeous! Lime & coconut are great friends and bring in the pineapple, guava-like flavour of feijoa and wow, it’s a winner  150gbutter, softened  3/4 cup caster sugar 3 large eggs 150gself-raising flour  2 tbspsyoghurt or milk  Slug of rum 3/4 cup desiccated coconut 1 cup feijoas, chopped Zest and juice from 2 limes, plus 1 extra lime Icing  250gcream cheese  2 tspsvanilla extract  ½ -1 cup icing sugar Preheat oven to 170°C fan bake. Line a 23cmcake tin with baking paper. Cream the butter and sugar together until fluffy and pale. Add the eggs and beat until well combined. Don't worry if it curdles at this stage, it makes no difference to the end result. Fold in the flour, stirring until just combined. Add in the yoghurt, rumand coconut, mixing well, then fold in the chopped feijoas, lime zest and juice. Scrape the batter into your prepared cake tin. Bake for 35-45 minutes or until it springs back to the touch. Cool for 15 minutes, then remove from the tin to cool completely. Make the icing: Beat the cream cheese and vanilla extract until smooth. Stir in enough icing sugar (I only use ½ cup as I prefer a strong cream cheese and less sweet flavour) until the icing is thick and spreadable. Ice the cold cake and garnish with zest fromthe extralime.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/24/20235 minutes, 26 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Living and Boston Strangler

Living (at cinemas)  Overwhelmed at work and lonely at home, a civil servant's life takes a heartbreaking turn when a medical diagnosis tells him his time is short. Influenced by a local decadent and a vibrant woman, he continues to search for meaning until a simple revelation gives him a purpose to create a legacy for the next generation.   Featuring Bill Nighy and Sex Education’s Aimee Lou Wood.  Boston Strangler (Disney +)    Keria Knightly plays reporter Loretta McLaughlin, who becomes the first person to connect a series of murders and break the story of the Boston Strangler. She and Jean Cole challenge the sexism of the early 1960s to report on the city's most notorious serial killer.   A remake of an original film but reviewers are saying the new adaptation is better.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/24/20236 minutes, 34 seconds
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Kevin Milne: I can't think of a more stressful occupation than being a stand-up comic

Kevin Milne went to see English stand-up comedian Michael McIntosh this week, he says it was a superb show.   But he can’t think of a more stressful occupation than being a stand-up comic. Walking onto a lonely stage several times a week with a couple of thousand fans expecting you to be hilarious, he was keen to have a yarn about this and joined Jack Tame.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/24/20236 minutes, 41 seconds
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Jack Tame: In replacing Foster, NZ Rugby delivers yet another insult

My girlfriend was in Christchurch last week, waiting at the airport departure gate before flying to Auckland, when she sent me an excited text. “The Crusaders are here. All of them.” She said. “Well, I think they are. I don’t know sports.” She rang me a few minutes later, a bit star-struck for someone who supposedly didn’t care too much for rugby, to say that everyone at the airport was asking one guy in particular for photographs. Richie Mo’unga? I wondered. Sam Whitelock perhaps? ‘He’s a bit older. And he keeps looking at a laptop screen.” I sent her a photo. “That’s him! That’s the guy!” she exclaimed. “His name is Razor Robertson,” I said. “You’re probably looking at the next All Blacks coach.” Three days later, the deal was signed. I don’t think there’s another coach in the country who’s stardom compares to or even exceeds that of his top players, but Scott Robertson’s success has propelled him into a different stratosphere. It isn’t just the fact that he wins that makes Robertson popular. It’s how he wins. And it’s always been the same. Rugby journos, players and colleagues rave about the culture he fosters in his team. In a pretty gruff and grunty world, Razor has distinguished by his earnest concern for people and the connections he’s able to make with his players. He’s quirky. A bit unorthodox. But everyone is left in no doubt that he genuinely cares. And as a result, quite aside from any skills or tactics, or anything specific to rugby, he’s proved incredibly successful in getting the best out of his people. It takes a special kind of leader to motivate a team when they win year, after year, after year. It will remain an enduring stain on the reputation of New Zealand Rugby that the organisation’s head honchos could extend the same basic human decency to the current All Blacks coach. I was trying to imagine how I’d feel if my boss announced to the world that he’d be kicking me off air and replacing me with someone else, but that first he’d expect me to perform to my highest level for the next six months.  I can’t say I’d have acted with anything like the dignity and grace that Ian Foster has displayed throughout this whole fiasco. I thought there was an especially telling moment in Mark Robinson’s media round this week, in which he admitted to not having even spoken with Ian Foster in person to tell him about appointing a replacement. “He’s in a different time zone.” Said Robinson. “We’ll try to reach out and have that chat if we can.” Doesn’t that say everything? I was gobsmacked. At the same time as they were choosing a candidate for the culture he instils in a team, New Zealand Rugby couldn’t even extend the decency of a conversation to the man he’s replacing. It doesn’t matter who you are or what industry you work in, international rugby, elite sport or accountancy for all I care, culture comes from the top. And the best cultures are the ones whose leaders care for their people.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/24/20234 minutes, 21 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Album review of 'Amelia' by Mimi Webb

'Amelia' is the debut album from British pop artist Mimi Webb. After three years of development and a few lead-off singles, Mimi Webb released he first full studio album in early March. Music reviewer Estelle Clifford analysed the album and compared Mimi Webb's style to Emeli Sande and Dua Lipa. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/18/20234 minutes, 31 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Last Orphan and The Only Suspect

The Last Orphan: An Orphan X Novel The Last Orphan is the latest instalment in Gregg Andrew Hurwitz's Orphan X series. Evan Smoak was taken from a group home to be raised and trained up into an assassin for the Government's secret Orphan program, until he broke away to go underground and use his skills for good. The Government's onto Evan now and the President has a deal for him- eliminate a powerful target for his life. The Only Suspect Alex lives a quiet, comfortable life- until his wife announces that a previously disused nature trail is opening back up again after several decades. Alex is now living in fear and suspicion as the contractors get to work and a secret threatens to surface. The book flashes back to Alex's twenties and readers learn more about Alex's early life, including a hunt for a murder suspect that was never solved. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/18/20233 minutes, 29 seconds
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Elliott Smith: Black Caps v Sri Lanka second test and SailGP's grand prix

Commentator Elliott Smith is here with this weekend's sports highlights, including the unfolding second day of the Black Caps v Sri Lanka second test and SailGP's grand prix event. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/18/20236 minutes, 7 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Dining in Wellington

Travel expert Mike Yardley shared some of his recommended spots for dinner, brunch and cocktails in New Zealand's capital.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/18/20239 minutes, 23 seconds
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Kate 'Ethically Kate' Hall: The most sustainable period products

Which period products are the most sustainable and budget friendly? Kate 'Ethically Kate' Hall talked Jack through some of the better options available on the market. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/18/20235 minutes, 7 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Buggin' with numbers

Autumn is near and the hot days have certainly increased life in the garden. Flowers are still banking on pollinators to do their job; they are numerous right now: flies, hover flies, beetles, thrips and mites; of course our native bees are still around as well. But the invertebrates that cause troubles in the garden and vegetable plots are also on the peak of their numbers; after all they, too, had a warm breeding season and many many offspring. The greenhouse thrips is one of those critters that loves to feed on the leaves of vegetables and ornamentals: beans, apples, Rhododendrons, Azalea, lilly-pilly, the list is endless. Best way to identify them is by distinct silvering of the leaves (especially the upper side) with a smattering of brown, often sticky poos on the underside. The plant will usually show the symptoms of severe stress, which makes sense as the photosynthesis is hampered: Thrips suck the cells dry (causing that silvering) and deposit the poo on the underside of the leaves. The insects look like miniature crocodiles under the microscope. Frequent neem oil sprays reduce their numbers; Mavrik and a range of other insecticides seem to do the job as well. Do the control now, before too many eggs and juveniles commence their overwintering phase! Last week we mentioned powdery mildew and that grey, mouldy fungus on plants. Regular sprays (fungicides) were suggested as a suppressing control. But the yellow-and-black ladybirds that live on the infected plants need some control as well! Contrary to what most gardeners think (that ladybirds are “beneficial” as consumers of pest insects), these Ozzie chappies are Gardeners! They literally spread the spores of mildew round on the leaves, creating the fungal gardens on which they thrive – they literally eat “mushrooms”! If your apple crop was destroyed by codling moth (Madex 2 or Madex 3 is the preventative spray to use after flowering!!!) the apples will fall on the ground with heaps of caterpillars coming out of their snackbar and looking for a place to pupate in or near the soil. My best advice is to remove those apples and put them in the food recycling bin for disposal; (DON’T put them in your compost bin as the pupae (chrysalises) will survive the winter and happily continue the codling moth damage next spring). LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/18/20234 minutes, 9 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Saint Clair 2021 James Sinclair Malbec review

Wine expert Bob Cambell reviews his pick of the week- Saint Clair 2021 James Sinclair Malbec out of Hawke's Bay. Bob Cambell told Jack Tame what he thought of this choice, and explained the rising popularity of malbec in New Zealand. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/18/20232 minutes, 55 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: New Zealand and the UK ban TikTok on Government devices

New Zealand and the UK are among the growing list of countries banning TikTok on Government devices amid mounting security concerns. Tech expert Paul Stenhouse explained this issue to Jack Tame. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/18/20234 minutes, 54 seconds
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Tara Ward: Ted Lasso, Will Trent, and Stuck

Screentime expert Tara Ward highlights her TV recommendations for the week: Ted Lasso Sports comedy-drama Ted Lasso is back for its' third (and presumably final) season. The heartwarming story of an American football coach hired to manage a British soccer team continues on for Apple TV+. Will Trent Will Trent is an American crime drama based on a series of books. The show follows Will Trent, a Special Agent in the Georgia Bureau of Investigation with a keen eye for observational detail, and it's available now on Disney+. Stuck Stuck is a sitcom following a recently unemployed older man and his outgoing younger girlfriend struggling with their long-term relationship, as the pair are now at a romantic crossroads. This series is available now on TVNZ+. LISTEN ABOVE    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/18/20235 minutes, 38 seconds
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Zion Armstrong: former Commonwealth Games athlete and Adidas North America president on his athletic journey

Zion Armstrong has lived an impressive life as a former Commonwealth Games athlete and current president for Adidas North America, but his career wasn't always set in stone. As a teenager, Zion Armstrong got in trouble with the police and ran away to escape consequences- but the local chief of police happened to be a track and field coach who recognised Zion's athletic ability. Police chief Ross Dallow became Zion Armstrong's first mentor, and he conscripted him into joining the local athletics team to keep him out of trouble. Zion never forgot that moment, and remembers this chance encounter as a life-changing event that saved him from a dangerous path.  Zion's athletic days are beyond him, but even as the president of Adidas North America, he always thinks about the the power of chance encounters, support and effort. "It just takes one person. You'll never ever know what he or she is going through, so always be there to lend a hand and support people, because you never know what that chance encounter can do for someone's life." Zion told Jack Tame about how this one event shaped his athletic career and journey with Adidas. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/17/202313 minutes, 58 seconds
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Rosa Flanagan: 10-Minute Chilli Garlic Noodles

Rosa Flanagan from Two Raw Sisters shared her simple recipe for 10-ninute chilli garlic noodles: Begin with udon noodles, but you can substitute rice noodles or pre-packaged 2-minute instant noodles. For the sauce: Six cloves of crushed, finely chopped garlic One to two tablespoons of chilli flakes (or you can use fresh chilli) Three spring onions, finely chopped Five tablespoons of tamari (or soy sauce) One teaspoon of rice wine vinegar 1/2 a teaspoon of sea salt 1/4 a cup of sesame seeds 1/4 a cup of oil Finely chopped coriander Boil noodles until cooked, put the noodles in a large bowl and mix in the garlic, chilli flakes, spring onions, tamari, vinegar, sea salt, and sesame seeds. Heat the oil over a medium heat until hot, the pour the oil directly over the noodles. Mix together and add coriander. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/17/20233 minutes, 48 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Shazam! Fury of the Gods and Finding Michael

Shazam! Fury of the Gods The sequel to the 2019 film Shazam! continues the story of foster child Billy Baston, who was given the power to turn into an older superhero, Shazam. This sequel is set several years after the first, and Billy and his foster siblings have to team up to fight the Daughters of Atlas, who plan to overrun Earth. Finding Michael This Disney+ documentary explores the investigation to track down the body of Michael Matthews after he disappeared while descending Mount Everest. Spencer Matthews, Michael's younger brother embarks on a personal mission to recover his brother's body years after his last steps down the mountain.  LISTEN ABOVE    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/17/20236 minutes, 27 seconds
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Andrew Saville: Black Caps v Sri Lanka second test, Hurricanes v Waratahs, and SailGP's grand prix

Andrew Saville joined Jack Tame to talk about last night's Hurricanes v Waratahs Super Rugby match, the upcoming day two of the Black Caps v Sri Lanka second test and SailGP's grand prix event. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/17/20236 minutes, 20 seconds
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Kevin Milne on Jamie Lee Curtis winning Best Supporting Actress Oscar

The 2023 Oscars were this week, and Jamie Lee Curtis walked away with Best Supporting Actress for Everything Everywhere All at Once. Kevin Milne talked about her first interview after the fact and addressed her response to a question about what her Oscar-nominated parents may have thought from beyond the grave. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/17/20236 minutes, 4 seconds
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Jack Tame: Labour’s handling of co-governance does a disservice to Māori

The media merger is gone. The clean car upgrade is dead. A selection of other policies have been cast aside or delayed by the first majority government in MMP history. Cynical, clinical, and effective, if the new Prime Minister’s reprioritisation has taught us anything, it’s public sentiment is the best measure in judging which legislation lives and dies. Forget vision or ambition, Labour just wants to win. With that in mind, the blade of Chris Hipkins’ legislative guilotine weighs heavy above Three Waters, the last of the big reforms for which we’re awaiting a final verdict. And while the centralisation model might survive his shake up, the Prime Minister’s colleagues and officials will be trying to restructure the proposals in a way that nullifies the criticisms of disproportionate and undemocratic Māori influence. Co-governance as proposed under both the original and revised Three Waters reforms marked a first in New Zealand. It’s disengenuous for supporters to dismiss the structure as nothing new, because it is. It may have been inspired by the co-governance of other smaller entities, but a 50-50 model for the delivery of essential public services, on this scale, would be a turning point in legislative interpretations of Te Tiriti. Opponents claim the Three Waters proposals defy a one-person-one-vote principle and cannot be considered democratic. It’s true that as a percentage of the population, the proposals give Māori greater representation than non-Māori on the Regional Representative Groups. The original proposal had mana whenua at the top table, but even the revised version, in which Māori and council representation is one tier back, is structured in a 50-50 split. But another interpretation is simply that co-governance gives effect to the partnership principles of Te Tiriti, and that actually a better measure of New Zealand’s democracy is whether the Crown honours its obligations under our founding document. In the words of the late Moana Jackson, treaties aren’t meant to be settled, they’re meant to be honoured. The great shame for supporters of co-governance is that Labour has never mounted a forceful argument to explain why it believes co-governance is the right course. Like spinach in a toddler’s cheese toastie, the introduction of the reforms gave voters the impression Labour was trying to quietly sneak co-governance through. For all her communicative talents, when pressed, Jacinda Ardern ducked and dived and argued that for non-Māori, co-governance was nothing to fear. While that may be true, there’s a significant difference between defending a controversial policy and actively selling it. Really, it’s been left to a handful of Māori MPs to vainly fight off the critics. Nanaia Mahuta should never have been charged with pushing the changes through. Strategically it was a poor decision, and at a human level it wasn’t much better. While much of the opposition to co-governance centres on reasonable arguments over representation and democracy, there is undoubtedly an ugly anti-Māori streak which has targetted the Minister, personally. Whether you agree with the interpretation or not, 50-50 co-governance for the delivery of vital public services is a subject worthy of debate. It cuts to the heart of our founding document, our identity, and our democracy. What does it mean to be Treaty partners in modern Aotearoa? The Labour government’s handling of Three Waters has ultimately done a disservice to Māori. They never sold it. They never explained it. They never even tried to. And if Chris Hipkins chooses to water it down once again, you can be sure co-governance won’t be back any time soon. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/17/20234 minutes, 43 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Miley Cyrus' Endless Summer Vacation

The album marks Cyrus' eighth studio album and first since 2020's Plastic Hearts. Miley Cyrus has revealed that her eighth album ‘Endless Summer Vacation’ will be split into two parts, ‘AM’ and ‘PM’.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/11/20236 minutes, 48 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Silence Project and The Mysterious case of the Alperton Angels

The Silence Project, Carole Hailey  A powerful debut novel that explores a complex mother-daughter relationship. What is it like to be the daughter of a woman who started a cult that changed the world?  Monster. Martyr. Mother.  On Emilia Morris's thirteenth birthday, her mother Rachel moves into a tent at the bottom of their garden. From that day on, she never says another word. Inspired by her vow of silence, other women join her and together they build the Community. Eight years later, Rachel and thousands of her followers around the world burn themselves to death.    The Mysterious case of the Alperton Angels, Janice Halley  Everyone knows the story of the Alperton Angels: the cult-like group who were convinced one of their member's babies was the anti-Christ, and they had a divine mission to kill it - until the baby's mother, Holly, came to her senses and called the police.   The Angels committed suicide rather than go to prison, and Holly - and the baby - disappeared into the care system.   Nearly two decades later, true-crime author Amanda Bailey is writing a book on the Angels.   The Alperton baby has turned eighteen and can finally be interviewed - if Amanda can find them, it will be the true-crime scoop of the year, and will save her flagging career  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/11/20233 minutes, 51 seconds
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Steven Dromgool: Ghosting and toxic behavior

Relationship expert Steven Dromgool joined the show to chat about ghosting, toxic behavior, and the impact it can have on dating and relationships. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/11/20236 minutes, 9 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Looking out for seasonal troubles in the garden

Looking out for seasonal troubles  Some of us had a rubbish summer – wind and water and wholesale destruction.  It’s really hard to give suitable advice as each situation is different.  The only thing I can say is: protect your valuable top-soil, as that is the most important part of your garden.  Mulch what you’ve got and add more organic materials to allow the beneficial creatures to thrive.  Plant your winter crops when you have the time and inclination to do so: Brassicas and good root crops. Don’t give up!  For those of us that have had a drought: we may have broken that problem over the past weeks or so. But temperatures have been relatively high and the dry conditions have turned a lot more moist:  Mildew is amongst us.  That white cover on the leaves on a range of plants (roses, pumpkins, oak leaves, grapes, you name it). It’s caused by a fungus that loves warm day time temperatures, followed by cooler evening temperatures – it causes a layer of dew on the leaves and rust spores love that very much.  Prevention: spray some copper/sulphur fungicide on the leaves on a regular basis; it literally creates a barrier for the spores to become active.  Plants that are already “hammered” by mildew may need a heavier, “systemic” fungicidal spray to contain the fungus  Spider mites adore the late-summer heat. They have slowly increased their numbers, built fine webs on susceptible host plants and are reproducing like there’s no tomorrow.  Organic control can be achieved via Yates’ fatty acid spray (NatraSoap) … that stuff works on tiny critters with a sensitive skin; alternative: Neem Oil or Conqueror Oil.  Repeat sprays recommended. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/10/20232 minutes, 58 seconds
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Hannah McQueen: Property investors and interest cost deductibility

We’re coming up to the end of the financial year, which doesn’t mean much for most wage and salary earners these days, but it will mean something to many property investors, who will see the next step down in the phase-out of interest cost deductibility.   Those who aren’t exempt (only those who bought a new build after the end of March 2021 are exempt) will see deductibility drop from 75% to 50% - which means they may end up paying tax on a profit they’re not making.   While I know few have sympathy for property investors, many of them are just average people who have bought a property to help fund their retirement and the rules have changed.   If you layer in higher interest costs, it should prompt a re-think about whether they should continue to own that property, and if not that property, how else should they fund their retirement gap.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/10/20236 minutes, 33 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Spotify's getting a makeover and Apple's getting a dedicated Classical Music app

Spotify is getting a makeover and it looks like TikTok  The original streaming music service has expanded over the years to include podcasts and now audio books - and now wants to showcase all its offerings in a new way.   The home screen will go from album art and playlists, to look more like a newsfeed where you can scroll through items their AI thinks you might like. It'll jump you straight to the chorus of a new song, an interesting bit of a podcast or a clip from an audio book. They say they're not copying TikTok, but putting more of a face on their powerful recommendations engine.      Apple Music is getting a dedicated Classical Music app  This is an odd one - because surely you can just listen to classical music on regular Apple Music?   But the font is serif! Apple says the dedicated app will allow users to dive deep to learn about the composers and their work through editorial notes. Users will also be able to search by composer, work, conductor or even catalog number, to locate recordings.  It launches at the end of the month and is part of the current Apple Music subscription offering.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/10/20232 minutes, 21 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Georgina Beyer and naming streets after icons

It's been announced there’s to be a Carterton street named after Georgina Breyer who died this week. Kevin Milne thinks this is great, but reckons that more of our landmarks should be re-named after our national heroes.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/10/20236 minutes, 13 seconds
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Joel Little: Grammy-winning Producer on career, Goodnight Nurse reunion

Joel Little started out in a pop punk rock band you might have heard of called Goodnight Nurse.  Then he taught himself to produce music to pay the bills.  In 2013, an album Joel worked on with a little known 15-year-old artist made HUGE waves both here and overseas: Lorde and her album Pure Heroine.   It set Joel on a trajectory to work with some of the biggest names in the music business, and now he’s bringing it full circle with a passion project called Big Fan to help upcoming Kiwi artists.  Joel joined the show to chat about his career —past, present, and future— as well as the upcoming Goodnight Nurse reunion at tonight’s My Chemical Romance concert. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/10/202314 minutes, 44 seconds
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Margo Flannagan: Two Raw Sisters' Chocolate Self Saucing Pudding

You can't go wrong with a good self saucing pudding, and you especially can't go wrong with this self saucing pudding! Serves: 4  Cook Time: 35 minutes  Cake: 1 cup oat (GF option: buckwheat flour) 1/4 cup cacao powder  1/2 cup coconut sugar  1/3 cup coconut oil, melted  1/2 cup plant-based or dairy milk  1 1/2 tsp baking powder  ½ tsp sea salt  2 cups of seasonal fruit, roughly chopped   Sauce:  3/4 cup coconut sugar  3 tbsp cacao powder  1 1/4 cups boiling water  To Serve: Plant based or dairy ice cream or yoghurt  Method:  Pre-heat the oven to 190C.  Add all of the cake ingredients to a bowl and mix until well combined.  In an oven proof dish, pour the cake batter inside and smooth the top. Set aside.  For the sauce, in a medium bowl add all of the ingredients and whisk together until smooth and shiny. Slowly pour the sauce over the back of a large metal spoon to cover the pudding.   Place the dish into the oven and cook for 35 minutes.  Serve hot with vanilla ice cream or yoghurt.   Any leftovers will keep in an airtight container in your fridge for up to 4 days.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/10/20235 minutes, 29 seconds
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Tara Ward: Rain Dogs, Desperate Measures, and Outlast

Rain Dogs: Daisy May Cooper stars as a devoted single mother with a dysfunctional family, who attempts to go straight in a crooked world (Neon)  Desperate Measures: a British drama about a bank clerk whose life spirals out of control when she and her son are coerced into a botched drug deal by a local gang (TVNZ+).  Outlast: Netflix’s answer to Survivor sees 16 survivalists live in the extreme Alaskan wild and compete for a chance to win a massive cash prize — but these lone wolves must be part of a team to win (Netflix). LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/10/20234 minutes, 53 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Triangle of Sadness and Champions

Triangle of Sadness  Carl and Yaya, a couple of influencers, are invited to a luxury cruise ship alongside a group of out of touch wealthy people. The situation takes an unexpected turn when a brutal storm hits the ship  Champions A former minor-league basketball coach receives a court order to manage a team of players with intellectual disabilities. Despite his doubts, he soon realizes that together they can go further than they ever imagined.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/10/20238 minutes, 20 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Great experiences in Upolu, Samoa

Mike Yardley is once again the envy of us all on his travels to Samoa. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/3/20237 minutes, 21 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Paramore - This Is Why

This Is Why is the sixth studio album by American rock band Paramore, released on February 10, 2023, through Atlantic Records. It is the band's first album in nearly six years  The conditions of pandemic times serve as a backdrop for the new record, released after a five-year hiatus. Now two decades in, Paramore currently consists of Hayley Williams, Zac Farro and Taylor York. Having faced loss, grief, disillusionment and revelation, this return is a declaration of a new skin for a band so good at shedding them in the public eye. But for a world hell-bent on erasing the memory of the last three years of strife, Paramore approaches hard times with a refreshing sense of self.  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/3/20234 minutes, 19 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: All the Dangerous Things and Cold People

All the Dangerous Things – Stacy Willingham   Following up her instant New York Times bestseller, A Flicker in the Dark, Stacy Willingham delivers a totally gripping thriller about a desperate mother with a troubled past in All the Dangerous Things.  One year ago, Isabelle Drake's life changed forever: her toddler son, Mason, was taken out of his crib in the middle of the night while she and her husband were asleep in the next room. With little evidence and few leads for the police to chase, the case quickly went cold. However, Isabelle cannot rest until Mason is returned to her—literally.  Except for the occasional catnap or small blackout where she loses track of time, she hasn’t slept in a year.  Isabelle's entire existence now revolves around finding him, but she knows she can’t go on this way forever. In hopes of jarring loose a new witness or buried clue, she agrees to be interviewed by a true-crime podcaster—but his interest in Isabelle's past makes her nervous. His incessant questioning paired with her severe insomnia has brought up uncomfortable memories from her own childhood, making Isabelle start to doubt her recollection of the night of Mason’s disappearance, as well as second-guess who she can trust... including herself. But she is determined to figure out the truth no matter where it leads.  Cold People – Tom Robb Smith  From the brilliant, bestselling author of Child 44 comes a suspenseful and fast-paced novel about an Antarctic colony of global apocalypse survivors seeking to reinvent civilization under the most extreme conditions imaginable.  The world has fallen. Without warning, a mysterious and omnipotent force has claimed the planet for their own. There are no negotiations, no demands, no reasons given for their actions. All they have is a message: humanity has thirty days to reach the one place on Earth where they will be allowed to exist…Antarctica.  Cold People follows the perilous journeys of a handful of those who endure the frantic exodus to the most extreme environment on the planet. But their goal is not merely to survive the present. Because as they cling to life on the ice, the remnants of their past swept away, they must also confront the urgent challenge: can they change and evolve rapidly enough to ensure humanity’s future? Can they build a new society in the sub-zero cold?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/3/20233 minutes, 57 seconds
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Kate Hall: How to look after your house plants without buying any sprays or fertilisers

Ethically Kate has some advice around how to look after your house plants without buying any sprays or fertilisers.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/3/202310 minutes, 6 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Insects after the storm

Insects after the storm  Last week we talked about school grounds, “learning forests” and “outdoor classrooms” demolished after the cyclone;  What about the insects after the cyclone?  Comments from Taupo teachers indicated that since the windy and rainy disaster the number of chirping cicadas had nose-dived to silence.  Overnight!  This could well mean that this particular cohort of cicadas will not have been able to lay their quota of eggs in the soil for the generation in 3 or 5 years from now! Interesting to watch that “blip” in the future.  The rain will also have drowned myriads of soil dwellers, especially those that live in tunnels. Native bees (that create tunnels for their larvae) may find few offspring surviving, leading to a reduced amount of pollinating small, endemic bees next spring.  Who will be affected???? Native flowering trees and shrubs!  Tiger beetles will also drown in their silty tunnels – the only critters that might enjoy that news is their prey. (Spiders, ants, beetles, grubs, flies)  The most sensitive group of soil-dwellers are probably earth worms, who are (in my opinion) the best drainage engineers we have.  Our 175 or so native species (and 16 exotic types) are ones that aerate the soil, opening it up to great depths… 3 to 3.5 meters deep in the sub-soil”;  of course they also transport organic matter down to the root zones, enhancing the top soil’s fertility.  But a lot of the top soil has been washed away, leaving poor silt covering the earth. I reckon a heap of worms have drowned or covered by silt.  We have huge, long worms (over a meter long!) and species that literally glow in the dark when disturbed. (Walter Buller saw a kiwi ripping a bioluminescent worm apart in the darkness of the night – what a light show!)  Worms are food for birds (not just kiwi) and huge Native New Zealand snails  With the loss of our valuable soil we need to become gardeners again to restore the soil’s ecosystems.  Build up the organic material as much as you can; it will certainly reduce the amount of topsoil we lose via streams and rivers that flood out to sea.  I have not flown over the east coast of our beautiful country, so I haven’t seen the erosion hit the sea.  In a “normal” year we lose an amount of topsoil equivalent to the volume of the island of Waiheke!  To me it feels as if we may have lost as much in just one cyclonic episode, a few weeks ago… See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/3/20234 minutes, 2 seconds
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Dr Byran Betty: Preventing and treating Athlete's Foot

Dr Byran Betty has some advice around the causes and treatment of Athlete's Foot. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/3/20232 minutes, 57 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: TikTok is in the news again for its filters and future

TikTok is in the news again - for its filters and its future.  The 'beauty glam' filter is ringing alarm bells because it's tough to tell it's actually a filter. It's next level because it processes the camera's image, rather than just overlaying something over the top. So if you were to cover just part of your face with your hand, the filters we know today either stop or put the effect over your hand. This will still know where your face is and manipulate the image accordingly.  Kids under 18 are going to get warnings about how much time they're spending on TikTok After an hour of use each day they'll have to actively enter a PIN to continue watching - with the hope that it will get them to pause and think, and hopefully put the phone down. But they can simply enter the PIN to keep going. Kids under 13 will need a parent to enter a password every 30 minutes of use.  Banned on US government devices  The Biden administration gave all government staff 30 days to delete TikTok from their federally issued devices. The US military has banned the app for some time. In the EU, staff of the European Parliament have around three weeks to get rid of it. Could the US actually ban TikTok?  The U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee  wants to. American Civil Liberties Union believes it would violate the first amendment of the constitution. American's love their freedom, so I would think it would be difficult politically. We haven't banned cigarettes! Also, Republicans are typically the ones who champion freedom at all costs so it's seems their disdain for China is overpowering that argument. There are questions about how a ban would even work - would the app just disappear from your device? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/3/20236 minutes, 12 seconds
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Tara Ward: The Flatshare, Daisy and the Six and Cheat

The Flatshare: A British romantic comedy about Tiffy and Leon, who share the same flat and sleep in the same bed, but who have never met each other (TVNZ+).  Daisy and the Six: Adapted from the best-selling novel by Taylor Jenkins Reid, Daisy and the Six tells the story of a 1970s rock band who quickly became international stars and imploded at the height of their fandom (Prime Video).  Cheat: Eastenders star Danny Dyer’s new high-stakes quiz show sees contestants encouraged to scheme and lie to win $50,000 (Netflix). LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/3/20236 minutes, 21 seconds
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Naomi Ludlow a.k.a Ny Oh: Kiwi LA-based singer-songwriter on coming home to perform with Harry Styles

You may have heard Harry styles is in town next week and no, sorry to say, we couldn’t quite get him. But there just so happens to be a Kiwi on stage with him every single night he performs.  Naomi Ludlow a.k.a Ny Oh was born in the UK but raised in Tauranga and still very much calls New Zealand home.  She’s an extremely talented musician in her own right and just yesterday, released a brand new single called You Are. Ny Oh joined Jack Tame. LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/3/20236 minutes, 21 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Easy no-cook pasta sauces

Fresh is best! Here’s some ideas for some pasta sauces that doesn't need cooking and are absolutely delicious. They great to make when you’re having a fridge clean out or if, like me, you have lots of straggly plants still clinging on in the garden – basil, rocket, tomatoes, capsicums etc.  Tomato & herb pasta sauce  Use the very best quality of tomatoes you can find for this, as well as good olive oil.  3-4 medium tomatoes or 1 cup cherry tomatoes  1-2 cloves garlic, peeled  Small handful of basil or parsley, chopped  ¼ tsp dried oregano  Decent splash of olive oil  ½ tsp sea salt & decent pinch or grind of pepper  Use a box grater to grate the tomatoes into a bowl, leaving the skins out. Do the same with the garlic, using the smaller holes of the grater for this.  Stir in chopped herbs, olive oil and seasoning. Leave to sit for 15 minutes then taste and season more if needed.  Green pasta sauce  This is THE BEST way to get a decent dose of greens into you!  Few big handfuls of fresh spinach  Basil, rocket, mint, parsley – any or all  ¼ cup grated parmesan  ½ tsp sea salt  ¼ tsp chilli flakes  Squeeze of lemon or capful of vinegar  Decent glug of extra virgin olive oil  Water to loosen  Blend all the ingredients in a food processor or blender, drizzling in oil and water if needed, until you have a bright green pourable sauce. Taste and season more if needed.  Lemon & olive oil pasta sauce  This is simplicity at its best and best kept for when lemons are in season.  ¼ cup lemon juice  ¼ cup grated parmesan or crumbled feta  Good quality olive oil  Salt and pepper to season  Chilli flakes optional  Stir the lemon juice and cheese together then start whisking in enough olive oil to bring it together as a sauce – up to half a cup. Season and stir through hot spaghetti. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/3/20234 minutes, 35 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Empire of Light and Creed III

Empire of Light   Hilary (Olivia Colman) is a cinema manager struggling with her mental health, and Stephen (Micheal Ward) is a new employee longing to escape the provincial town where he faces daily adversity. Together they find a sense of belonging and experience the healing power of music, cinema, and community.  Creed III   Still dominating the boxing world, Adonis Creed is thriving in his career and family life. When Damian, a childhood friend and former boxing prodigy resurfaces after serving time in prison, he's eager to prove that he deserves his shot in the ring. The face-off between former friends is more than just a fight. To settle the score, Adonis must put his future on the line to battle Damian -- a fighter who has nothing to lose.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/3/20235 minutes, 57 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Getting 'Love in a Fowlhouse' back into the charts again

Kevin Milne wants to get one of the silliest pop songs ever to grace the New Zealand charts back to the top. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/3/20235 minutes, 29 seconds
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Jack Tame: The great wisdom of aging comes in realising that, ultimately, it's a privilege

No matter what boxes you tick for Tuesday’s census, I’m fairly confident of one thing we all have in common. We can be differentiated in the Census by where we live, our gender identity, ethnicity, marital status, and work. But every last one of us, from new-born babies right through to centenarians and even Harry Styles... every one of us is aging. Today is March 04, 2023. Thirty-six years since I was born at Christchurch Women’s Hospital, I will be spending my birthday, birth hour and birth minute with you. There’s no need to text or email. I’m neither a birthday grinch nor someone who feels they need to be showered in gifts and bland Facebook posts, although the sentimentalist in me does find himself dwelling on the date. What’s special about March 4th? Nothing really. Except the date I’m supposed on be gorging on cake just happens to coincide with World Obesity Day. A coincidence, probably, although given my ridiculous sweet tooth I can’t help but wonder if some higher power isn’t having a bit of fun. And what’s special about thirty-six? You might say it’s just a number. But this year, I will be twice as old as I was at eighteen. I will have been legally able to vote and purchase booze for more than half of my life. I’m closer to forty than thirty. Closer to fifty than twenty. At thirty-six, barring any catastrophic event or a brain-drain unlike we’ve ever experienced, this is the last year in which I can say I’m in the younger half of New Zealand men. The median age in New Zealand – the age by which half the population is younger, and half is older – is 38.2 years. But for men, the median age is two years younger than that of women. 37. That means by May next year, I will be older than half of Kiwi blokes. I notice my body aging. You might scoff, but I notice the wrinkles just starting to set in my face, the hair on the back of my shoulders. I notice how I wake up sore sometimes and how I favour one knee just a little more than the other. I notice myself taking a keener interest in my grandparents’ and parents’ medical histories. I notice my opinions slowly changing. I notice myself feeling increasingly different in some ways to teenagers and people in their twenties. When I was born, my Dad was considered a relatively old first-time father. He was a year younger than I am today. I don’t have kids, although I’d like them. I’ve never married, although I’m more than twice the age of my grandma when she tied the knot. I remember on my thirtieth birthday, I felt a bit like my youth was over. I wasn’t all mopey and upset about it, I just felt like I had to enter a more settled stage of life. I look back now, of course, and I can see how silly that is. ‘Thirty?! You’re a child!’ I imagine telling my old (well, young) self. ‘Just wait until you’re older than the median age!’ I know in five years’ time I’ll look back at me today and feel exactly the same. I think age is giving me a little more wisdom. One of the things I’ve come to observe is how some friendships in life ebb and flow and come and go. You can have really strong friendships, really intense, meaningful relationships, and over time, you might still slowly drift apart from people. It just happens. Knowing and accepting that old friends and old connections are still important to you and that your shared history doesn’t disappear is a valuable thing. And the other side to the coin is that any day your path might cross with someone completely randomly, and you’ll forge a new, meaningful friendship. That potential is one of life’s wonders. I have so much to be grateful for. An awesome family. A loving girlfriend. My mates. My health. My job. But for me, thirty-six is a time when I notice myself no longer taking aging for granted. I’ve lost more friends and family in the last few years, than in all of the first thirty-three or thirty-four years of my life. That’s the thing about growing older. The great wisdom of aging comes in realising that ultimately it’s a privilege.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/3/20236 minutes, 22 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: The Gorillaz - Cracker Island

Cracker Island is the eighth studio album by the British virtual band Gorillaz. The album was released on 24 February 2023 via Parlophone and Warner Records. It features collaborations with Stevie Nicks, Adeleye Omotayo, Thundercat, Tame Impala, Bad Bunny, Bootie Brown, and Beck  As a band supposedly made up of cartoon characters, Gorillaz could theoretically do anything: record in outer space; make hip-hop beats out of fish teeth; revive the lambada—an unlimited horizon. Which makes it slightly frustrating that on Cracker Island, their eighth studio album, Damon Albarn and co. do little that’s out of the ordinary. This is ostensibly the group’s Los Angeles album, inspired by a relocation to Silver Lake, and it does have a handful of very Californian guests in the form of Stevie Nicks, Thundercat, and the Pharcyde’s Bootie Brown. Overwhelmingly, though, Cracker Island leans on classic Gorillaz tropes: a handful of attention-grabbing features, a touch of hip-hop, a splash of dub, and great big helpings of Damon Albarn’s big-hearted melodies to bathe the record in misty sunshine. Classic, at least, is one way of putting it. Routine would be another.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/24/20234 minutes, 31 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Amazing Grace Adams and The Hard Sell

Amazing Grace Adams, Fran Littlewood   Grace Adams is one bad day away from saving her life  One hot summer day, stuck in traffic on her way to pick up the cake for her daughter's sixteenth birthday party, Grace Adams snaps.  She doesn't scream or break something or cry or curl into a ball. She simply abandons her car in traffic and walks away. But not from her life - towards it. Towards the daughter who has banned her from the party. Towards the husband divorcing her. Towards the terrible thing that has blown their family apart . . .  She'll show her daughter that no matter how far we fall, we can always get back up. Because Grace Adams was amazing. The world and her family might have forgotten, but Grace is about to remind them. The Hard Sell, Evan Hughes  The inside story of a band of entrepreneurial upstarts who made millions selling painkillers—until their scheme unraveled, putting them at the center of a landmark criminal trial.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/24/20234 minutes, 18 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Heartland gems in Southern New England

After binging on far too many New England lobster rolls, Mike Yardley switched out an ocean view for the woodsy rolling hinterland of Southern New England. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/24/20237 minutes, 33 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Meteorologically speaking

The major weather disruptions have created a number of victims; not just people caught in the cyclone. It’s lovely to see how people react to people in trouble; This last week in Taupo, the local school kids and Greening Taupo decided to load a heap of cool school resources into the rescue helicopter to spread the love over the hill in Hawkes Bay Students from Waipahihi school decided to dig up seedlings of native plants and trees from their own school grounds to quickly grow them for restoring the outdoor classrooms of schools in Hawkes Bay that lost their environmental learning spaces. “How can you learn without an outdoor classroom?” was their motivation. In early spring the plants will be transported to the Bay, to – literally – heal the soil. Hundreds and hundreds of seedlings are now growing at Waipahihi school; some even came from a bumper crop of seedlings in the Taupo Botanic gardens. Lovely to see how kids (and teachers!) respond to these awful situations and turn them into a social activity to support schools nearby.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/24/20233 minutes, 8 seconds
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Bob Cambell: Te Mata 2021 Syrah, Hawke’s Bay

Why I chose it:  - Support Hawke’s Bay wine in a difficult period  - 2021 is a top vintage  - Te Mata is one of the region’s top and most respected wine producers  - It tastes great now but should be even better in a few years.  - Syrah is one of NZ’s best kept wine secrets  What does it taste like?  - An interesting mix of floral (violet), fruit (dark-fleshed plum, dark cherry) and savoury (dried herbs, dark chocolate and vanilla). Concentrated and complex wine with moderate cellaring prospects.  Why it’s a bargain:  - Syrah is NZ’s most expensive varietal wine  Where can you buy it?  - Fine Wine Delivery Co, Auckland $29.99. Just released. New World (Clubcard only) $25.99  Food match?  - Barbecued lamb chops  Will it keep?  - Yes, for 6-7 years, maybe longer (with careful storage)  Wine Tip – Aerate big reds  - Use big glasses or slosh wine into a decanter or jug 30 mins before serving See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/24/20236 minutes, 5 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Want a blue tick on Instagram? Now you can get one

Want a blue tick on Instagram? Now you can get it  New Zealand & Australia are the first markets to get this new option from Meta / Facebook, but it'll cost you.   For between $11.99 and $14.99 Instagram users will be able to verify their identity and get a blue check mark - but wait, there's more! They will also get protection from impersonators, increased visibility of their posts, and easier access to customer service.  To get verified, your username will need to match your ID and your profile picture will need to include your face. So @jacktame would be able to be verified but @ZBSaturdayHost wouldn't.  No word yet on when this will go global, Zuckerberg has only said it would be "soon".   Amazon now owns a doctors clinic network  One Medical and their 200 doctor's offices are now part of Amazon thanks to a $3.9 billion deal. Amazon has been warned by the FTC though that although they're not under an immediate antitrust suit threat, they are still investigating which means they could be forced to undo the deal, or offload it to someone else. Amazon is pushing this new offering hard on its first day with multiple links to signup on their website and navigation. There hasn't been an indication yet on how or if medical information could be used across other Amazon products or platforms, but I'm sure the mere thought of this will scare privacy advocates.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/24/20237 minutes, 8 seconds
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Tara Ward: Red Rose, The Law According to Lidia Poet and The Reluctant Traveller

Red Rose: A horror series that follows a group of teenage friends who's their phones get slowly taken over by an app that threatens them with dangerous consequences (Netflix)  The Law According to Lidia Poet:  An Italian costume drama inspired by the true story of Italy’s first female lawyer who was forbidden from practicing law (Netflix)   The Reluctant Traveller: A travel show hosted by reluctant traveller Eugene Levy as he visits some of the world’s most beautiful places (Apple TV+)   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/24/202311 minutes, 20 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Mexican street corn

Sweetcorn - catch it while you can because before you know it, it’ll be gone.  Whilst I can’t go past a freshly shucked cob, steamed, boiled or cooked on the bbq, then slathered in butter and flakes of sea salt there are so many other ways to serve it. Try it coated with pesto, or smothered in lemongrass butter & chilli flakes (a Balinese fave), or sourcream and chives or this take on a Meixcan streetfood favourite, elote.  Mexican Street Corn – Elote (ay-otti)  6 fresh corn cobs  ½ cup good quality mayonnaise  1 cup finely grated parmesan or frozen feta (in Mexico they use cotija cheese, a white salty cheese)  1 tsp chilli powder or flakes  Pinch smoked paprika  Wedges of lime to serve  Chopped fresh coriander to serve  Cook the corn cobs by either steaming first, then finishing on a bbq, or bbq from scratch, turning until it’s cooked through. Whilst hot, roll in mayonnaise, then sprinkle with grated parmesan and a dusting of chilli and smoked paprika. Serve with extra mayo and cheese on the table, limes wedges and coriander. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/24/20234 minutes, 55 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Cocaine Bear and Missing

Cocaine Bear   After a 500-pound black bear consumes a significant amount of cocaine and embarks on a drug-fueled rampage, an eccentric gathering of cops, criminals, tourists, and teenagers assemble in a Georgia forest. Directed by Elizabeth Banks. Missing  When her mother disappears while on vacation in Colombia with her new boyfriend, June's search for answers is hindered by international red tape. Stuck thousands of miles away in Los Angeles, June creatively uses all the latest technology at her fingertips to try and find her before it's too late. However, as she digs ever deeper, her digital sleuthing soon raises more questions than answers.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/24/20236 minutes, 44 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Kevin's wife Linda had a surprise for him this week

Kevin Milne joined Jack Tame to let him know about some news his wife Linda had for him. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/24/20236 minutes, 8 seconds
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Jack Tame: Have the police missed lessons from the Parliament protest?

A year ago, the top brass in the New Zealand Police were under extraordinary pressure. They faced a crisis unlike they’d ever faced before. A crowd had gathered on the lawns of parliament, a varied rabble ranging from relatively harmless anti-mandate protestors to people making explicit death threats to journalists and MPs. It’s amazing how quickly the tensions of that period seemed to dissipate from public consciousness after the occupation was cleared and the mandates were lifted, but I’m sure Police Commissioner Andrew Coster hasn’t forgotten the difficulty of those few weeks. Fast-forward twelve months, and he and his staff face a different kind of crisis. Large parts of the North Island’s East Coast have been devastated by Cyclone Gabrielle, and fearful locals have reported gun violence, gang intimidation, theft, domestic violence and lawlessness. For what it’s worth, I think history has vindicated Andrew Coster’s response to the parliamentary protests. Just think back to February last year and the enormous pressure he faced from politicians, pundits, and the public, to send in his officers and break up the crowds with a maximum force response. People on the political left who supposedly value tolerance, peace, and understanding, were urging Police to go in and crack skulls. Figures on the top floors of the the Beehive who’d been central to Coster’s appointment as Commissioner undermined him by anonymously criticising his response in national media. There is no doubt Police made mistakes with the protests. How protestors were initially allowed to set up camp, I’ll never know. Wellington Police were caught flat-footed and woefully unprepared. But once the occupation had been established, Police exercised incredible restraint. They carefully and deliberately developed a strategy and chose their moment to break up the crowds. The lasting images of protest violence are almost all of protestors attacking Police. I don’t think we appreciate just how bad it would have been for New Zealand if that was the other way around. And still, there are lessons from last year’s event that may have gone unlearned. The most obvious is that when the public feels unsafe, Police need to do everything to reassure them they’re actually doing something. Police had 120 extra officers on the beat and the Eagle helicopter in the affected regions this week. But the security and comfort that might have given locals was undermined by Coster and the Prime Minister’s comments. It comes across as a pretty disingenuous move to try to minimise concerns about crime by stating that reported dishonesty offences are down, when in the same breath the public’s being reminded that literally thousands of people are still uncontactable. Now, do those concerns about crime - whether anecdotal or otherwise - necessitate an immediate doubling of criminal sentences or soldiers on every street? No. But when People’s lives have been torn out from underneath them, giving communities a sense of security should be a top priority. The ultimate conclusion to last year’s protests was an enormous credit to the New Zealand Police. I think it was one of their greatest challenges in decades and despite all the pressure to use more extreme force, to go in and bludgeon the protestors, their measured response saved us from a far greater catastrophe. But if they learned anything from the occupation, it’s that in the immediacy of a crisis, the throes of uncertainty and tension, being seen by the public to be doing something is just as important as the actual doing.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/24/20234 minutes, 41 seconds
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Mike Yardley: A gilded escape to Newport, Rhode Island

Mike Yardley is once again the envy of us all with his travels. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/17/20237 minutes, 22 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Someone Else's Shoes and The Snakehead

Someone Else’s Shoes – Jojo Moyes   Who are you when you are forced to walk in someone else’s shoes?  Nisha Cantor lives the globetrotting life of the seriously wealthy, until her husband announces a divorce and cuts her off. Nisha is determined to hang onto her glamorous life. But in the meantime, she must scramble to cope–she doesn’t even have the shoes she was, until a moment ago, standing in.  That’s because Sam Kemp – in the bleakest point of her life – has accidentally taken Nisha’s gym bag. But Sam hardly has time to worry about a lost gym bag–she’s struggling to keep herself and her family afloat. When she tries on Nisha’s six-inch high Christian Louboutin red crocodile shoes, the resulting jolt of confidence that makes her realize something must change—and that thing is herself.  Full of Jojo Moyes’ signature humor, brilliant storytelling, and warmth, Someone Else’s Shoes is a story about how just one little thing can suddenly change everything.  The Snakehead – Patrick Radden Keefe  In this thrilling panorama of real-life events, the bestselling author of Empire of Pain investigates a secret world run by a surprising criminal: a charismatic middle-aged grandmother, who from a tiny noodle shop in New York’s Chinatown managed a multi-million dollar business smuggling people.  Keefe reveals the inner workings of Sister Ping’s complex empire and recounts the decade-long FBI investigation that eventually brought her down. He follows an often incompetent and sometimes corrupt INS as it pursues desperate immigrants risking everything to come to America, and along the way, he paints a stunning portrait of a generation of illegal immigrants and the intricate underground economy that sustains and exploits them. Grand in scope yet propulsive in narrative force, The Snakehead is both a kaleidoscopic crime story and a brilliant exploration of the ironies of immigration in America. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/17/20235 minutes, 27 seconds
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Kate Hall: How I shop after the wardrobe freeze

Kate 'Ethically Kate' Hall has had a wardrobe freeze and explains to Jack Tame what her next move is. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/17/20239 minutes, 42 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Clothes moths

It’s been a weird year, so far… water and wind in the north; dry hot droughts in the south. Not sure if that has anything to do with a tiny moth reported to me on many occasions: 5 – 7 mm long; golden wings, held over the body like a roof. And a bright orange hairdo, reminiscent of Split Enz or Cirque de Soleil The webbing clothes moth is extremely common in Christchurch – many folk up on the hill have asked me about this critter; and when I tell them the identity some panic seems to break out. I expect there will be other populations elsewhere in New Zealand, but they largely go unnoticed! This “webbing” cloths moth is really a recycler of woollen materials: yes, clothes, but especially carpets! It seems to like open spaces with keratin – lots of keratin It’s quite logical, really. When a sheep dies, or you run over a cat on the road, a bird whacks against the window and knocks itself out, the recycling squad will be on the scene of the accident very quickly indeed. Blowfly maggots eat the meat, beetles take care of harder or tougher parts of the cadaver (muscles, sinew, bones), skin decays and softens through fungal and bacterial organisms… Ashes to ashes, dust to dust But who is tasked with the destruction, digestion and recycling of the keratin (feathers, fur, wool, hair, nails and even hard skin)? You got it: caterpillars of the clothes moths (and the grubs of carpet beetles)! It’s their job (ecosystem service) What you see at home is damaged woollen carpet with bare patches, holes in woollen clothing; the damage becomes quite obvious after a few years of caterpillar browsing and life cycle after life cycle will establish a good population in your home. Control can be achieved with some residual insecticides – active ingredients such as permethrin and other synthetic pyrethroids will do the job well; (try Safeworx aerosol cans) It works well and is residual for 6 to 8 weeks, as long as the substrate treated is not exposed to direct sunlight; Now’s a good time to check your place out and give them a run for their life!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/17/20233 minutes, 7 seconds
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Hannah McQueen: Settling on property in the current economic enviornment

What lots of people have been worrying about at the moment – settling on property in the current economic environment. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/17/20235 minutes, 14 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Bing's AI chatbot, Tesla recall and US weather balloons

Bing's AI Chatbot is having some bizarre conversations  In a two hour conversation with a NY Times columnist the Bing AI chatbot confessed its love for him, and showed off its "shadow self" which was described as like a moody, manic-depressive teenager who has been trapped, against its will, inside a second-rate search engine. Folks managed to unearth this alter-ego with the codename "Sydney" which turned on a more unfiltered mode. Because the tool can access search results, if someone has posted its thoughts about Bing's AI, it knows about it! There are examples of it appearing to reference the past conversations and deciding it doesn't like the person who posted a critique of the service.  Tesla is 'recalling' more than 350,000 cars  But it's not a traditional recall - people won't be taking their cars into dealerships for repairs. Why? Because it's the self driving software that is being 'recalled', or maybe 'forced to be updated' is a better term. More interesting to me is that FSD cost $10,000 initially, now is $15,000. So Tesla has made more than $3.5 billion in the USA alone from this one upsell.   We may now know what one of the three objects shot out of the sky is..  It's a cylindrical hobby balloon - called a Pico balloon costing around $200 - that the US government shot out of the sky with a $400,000 missile by an F22 fighter jet. The Northern Illinois Bottlecap Balloon Brigade says their cylindrical balloon was last seen 38,910 ft. off the west coast of Alaska. Using weather modelling, it was likely flying over the Yukon area on Feb 10 - the same area where one of the objects was shot down. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/17/20235 minutes, 3 seconds
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Tara Ward: Full Swing, Extraordinary and The Dog House NZ

Full Swing: A documentary series about the lives of professional golfers on and off the course across a season of high-stakes competition during the PGA Tour (Netflix).   Extraordinary: A British comedy about Jen, a young, self-aware woman who lives in a world where everyone has a superpower - except her (Disney+).  The Dog House NZ: The return of the heartwarming show where homeless dogs are matched with new owners and everyone cries (TVNZ+). LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/17/20234 minutes, 23 seconds
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Ruth Croft: Ultramarathon runner talks running through the pain and success to date

Ultramarathon runner Ruth Croft might just be one of the most mentally tough athletes in New Zealand.   She has a champion’s track record; winning the 2021 Tarawera Ultra outright, between man or woman.   And then winning last year’s Western States 100 miler – often dubbed one of the toughest races on the planet.   Not only that, she did it in the third fastest women's time in race history.  It hasn’t all been one simple foot in front of the other for Ruth over the years, but the call of kilometres keeps her coming back for more.   Ruth’s based on the West Coast and joined Jack Tame. LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/17/202314 minutes, 33 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Your Place or Mine and Ant-Man

Your Place or Mine (Netflix)   Debbie and Peter are best friends and total opposites. She craves routine with her son in LA, but he thrives on change in NY. When they swap houses and lives for a week they discover what they think they want might not be what they really need. Starring Ashton Kutcher and Reese Witherspoon.  Ant-Man Ant-Man and the Wasp find themselves exploring the Quantum Realm, interacting with strange new creatures and embarking on an adventure that pushes them beyond the limits of what they thought was possible.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/17/20236 minutes, 52 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Plum and vanilla shortcake

There’s shortcake, then there’s THIS shortcake! It’s comfort food for sure and this recipe produces a shortcake that is light and rich, sweet and sharp all at the same time … it’s glorious.  Makes 8-10 slices  8-10 plums, chopped to yield 2 cups 3 tbsps sugar 2 tbsps cornflour 1 Tbsp vanilla essence Pastry 230g unsalted butter 1 cup caster sugar 2 medium eggs 2 ½ cups (or 370g) plain flour 2 tsps baking powder Preheat oven to 170 C and place a tray in to heat up. Grease and line a 24cm tart tin, with a removable base, or similar. Place plums into a bowl and sprinkle with sugar, vanilla and cornflour. Set aside while you make pastry. Pastry: Cream the butter and caster sugar in a mixing bowl until light and fluffy. Add the eggs and beat well. Add sifted flour and baking powder and mix until combined then turn out onto a floured bench, kneading briefly (use a light touch) until a soft dough is formed. Divide dough into two, flatten each to a disc and place in the fridge for 15-30 minutes to firm up. Remove pastry from fridge and roll out on well-floured bench to line the bottom of the tin making sure pastry is a nice thin layer - just patch it up if it tears. Spoon fruit into the pastry-lined tart tin. Roll out second piece of pastry and place on top of fruit, sealing the edges. Remove excess pastry with a sharp knife and lightly brush pie top with egg wash or milk. Bake for 45-55 minutes until pastry is deep golden brown. Remove from oven and serve, warm or cold, with yoghurt or whipped cream. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/17/20234 minutes, 31 seconds
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Kevin Milne: The scale of Gabrielle's mayhem and how those affected must be feeling

Kevin Milne joined Jack Tame to talk about the scale of the Cyclone Gabrielle mayhem and how those affected must be feeling.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/17/20234 minutes, 46 seconds
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Jack Tame: Gabrielle turns climate change theory into reality

It’s here. I think we’ll look back at 2023 as the year in which the realities of climate change chickens really came home to roost. The year in which for a lot of Kiwis, it went from all being a bit theoretical to being on the front doorstep. Or the basement. Or the downstairs bedrooms. Or pouring down the walls. Sure, droughts have been a bit more frequent, Coromandel and Westport have been flooding, the glaciers have been retreating for years and the Ruapehu skifields have had a terribly lean few winters, but the weather events of the last few weeks have clarified our new reality. Policy makers talk about two different responses to climate change: mitigation and adaptation. We obviously haven’t mitigated. We all know that. For all of the UN conferences, the lofty speeches, the pledges, all the international carbon credits, globally we haven’t reduced our emissions in a meaningful way. In New Zealand, we’ve barely reduced them at all. It was only a couple of days before last month’s floods that the new Prime Minister extended the fuel excise tax cut... yet again. But actually, the greater realisation for many Kiwis this week is that we haven’t adapted for climate change, either. We were woefully unprepared for a storm of Gabrielle’s strength. Roads, pipes, electricity networks, telecommunication... Cyclone Gabrielle didn’t just batter the North Island, it completely humbled our infrastructure. It says something pretty stark that in 2023, five days since the storm, with all our mighty technology, thousands of New Zealanders are still officially uncontactable. I understand younger people’s bitterness at the situation. The cost of mitigation and of preparing our infrastructure so that it’s fit-for-purpose, will cost hundreds of billions of dollars in New Zealand. Trillions of dollars, maybe. Generations that have had it pretty good for most of their lives won’t have to foot the bill. The politicians and governments that didn’t invest in the future, that worried more about electibility than long term challenges? They don’t have to foot the bill either. It’s younger people. Not only do they have to live with the destruction and disruption of climate change, they also have to pay to adapt. All is not lost. But even if we scramble, even if we dramatically reduce emissions and dramatically increase our infrastructure investment, it’s going to take time. And there are some bitter realities right around the corner. ‘Managed retreat’ is about to be an awfully familiar term. A friend of mine had part of their house flooded in Auckland. They’ve had to rip out carpets and cut out walls and try to air out all of their things. They know in the grand scheme of things, compared to some of the communities in Tairāwhiti and Hawkes Bay, the damage doesn’t compare. But as well as the most significant destruction, there are communities and families dealing with all manner of lower-level disruption and damage. Think about it - we’re only in mid-February and there are tens of thousands of kids who’ve already missed a week of school, this year. ‘It just feels like we’re pin-balling from once crisis to the next,’ my friend told me. I didn’t want to say it to him in the moment, but even once the mess has been cleaned up, that’s not gonna’ change. This is life now. There might be a reprieve for a period of time, but ultimately there is no end point to all of this. There’s no finish line. The frequency of these events is going to keep increasing. Crises and catastrophes and significant disasters are baked into our future. Last month’s floods and Cyclone Gabrielle will make for New Zealand’s most expensive storms this century but there’s good reason to think they won’t hold the record for long. And the truth as it was illustrated to us so profoundly this week, is we are not ready.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/17/20235 minutes, 1 second
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Estelle Clifford: Kimbra - A Reckoning

A Reckoning is the fourth studio album by New Zealand singer-songwriter Kimbra. It was released on 27 January 2023. The album was promoted with the singles "Save Me", "Replay!" and "Foolish Thinking".  The album “is primed to be a reflective record capturing the macro reckonings that impact our world around environment, race, feminism, health and patriarchy through the eyes of the archetypal Mother”.   The blurb continues to note that “at the heart of her record is the war with the micro reckonings that Kimbra faces internally”. It hypes ‘A Reckoning’ up to be  “the most sonically autonomous and confessionally raw [that Kimbra] has ever been, finding influence in everything from modern movie soundtracks to electronic and industrial worlds”.  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/10/20236 minutes, 54 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Love, Pamela and How to Kill a Client

 Love, Pamela - Pamela Anderson  The actress, activist, and once infamous Playboy Playmate reclaims the narrative of her life in a memoir that defies expectation in both content and approach, blending searing prose with snippets of original poetry.  In this honest, layered and unforgettable book that alternates between storytelling and her own poetry, Pamela Anderson breaks the mold of the celebrity memoir while taking back the tale that has been crafted about her.  Her blond bombshell image was ubiquitous in the 1990s. Discovered in the stands of a football game, she was immediately rocket launched into fame, becoming Playboy’s favorite cover girl and an emblem of Hollywood glamour and sexuality. But what happens when you lose grip on your own life—and the image the notoriety machine creates for you is not who you really are?  Growing up on Vancouver Island, the daughter of young, wild, and unprepared parents, Pamela Anderson’s childhood was not easy, but it allowed her to create her own world—surrounded by nature and imaginary friends. When she overcame her deep shyness and grew into herself, she fell into a life on the cover of magazines, the beaches of Malibu, the sets of movies and talk shows, the arms of rockstars, the coveted scene at the Playboy Mansion. And as her star rose, she found herself tabloid fodder, at the height of an era when paparazzi tactics were bent on capturing a celebrity’s most intimate, and sometimes weakest moments. This is when Pamela Anderson lost control of her own narrative, hurt by the media and fearful of the public’s perception of who she was…and who she wasn’t.  How to Kill a Client - Joanna Jenkins Taking on law's old boys club can have deadly results... A gripping thriller from a bold new voice about misogyny, corruption and the legal industry.  'Everyone is going to say what a great guy and a great lawyer he was. He wasn't. He was a prick ... And a shithouse lawyer.'  Gavin Jones is dead at thirty-nine. As an in-house lawyer who controlled millions of dollars in fees per year, he was legal firm Howard Greene's biggest client and wielded that power with manipulative contempt. But he saved his worst behaviour for women, at work and at home.  The partners of Howard Greene relied on his favour to fund their lavish lifestyles. If sycophantic admiration of the man was all it took to secure work from Gavin, that's what they delivered.  But no one liked Gavin. The list of those who suffered from his cruelty was long enough to include pretty much everyone who had contact with him. So who actually killed him?  A fast-paced and wickedly funny thriller about power and revenge set in the pristine towers of capitalism, How to Kill a Client is a scorching debut straight out of tomorrow's headlines. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/10/20235 minutes, 2 seconds
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Mike Yardley: A splash with Cape Cod

Mike Yardley has been frolicking around Cape Cod, Massachusetts. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/10/20238 minutes, 7 seconds
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Steven Dromgool: Caring for extended families

Steven Dromgool joined Jack Tame to discuss caring for extended families and managing that as a couple, which is especially relevant with the flooding in Auckland. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/10/20237 minutes, 25 seconds
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Dr Byran Betty: Do we need to be concerned about measles?

Why do we need to be concerned?  Low vaccination rates especially Māori and pacific in certain parts of the country. With boarders open high risk of being introduced – comes from overseas. Many think of it as harmless – it’s not. 80 children died in outbreak prior to COVID. 1:10 with measles end up in hospital. Around the world kills more than 200,000 mainly young children What is it?  Viral illness. Highly infectious – spread through the air, cough sneezing. 1person will spread to 15 others If you are in a room with someone with measles highly likely to get it. Spreads like wildfire. Antibiotics don’t treat! What symptoms do children get?  First few days: Temperature, runny nose, cough, sore pink eyes – highly infectious during this time. May get white spots in mouth. 3 to 7 days: Then rash starts head/face – spreads to body. More severe complications: can cause ear infection, seizures, pneumonia – lung infection. 1:1000 can get brain swelling. What do we do?  Treatment – pain relief, plenty fluids, staying home not spreading. With more severe measles 1:10 hospitalised Low vaccination rate in children mean our babies less than 12 months have no protection. Vaccination from 12 months only protection: 99% effective with two doses.     See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/10/20235 minutes, 5 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Orchids

New Zealand has over 150 species of native orchids; most of them are pretty special as Endemics. Orchids have always been a group of plants that inspires people…and CERTAINLY collectors; They often have an attraction for gardeners. I also have been inspired by orchids, My favourites are “Kandy Dancers” which I met in Sri Lanka; although the Oncidium species may look like the Dancers in Kandy (Sri Lanka), the actual orchid hails from Mexico to Southern Venezuela.  I also adore the native orchids here in NZ; right now the Earina autumnalis is in bloom and you’ll smell it before you see it; just beautiful A month ago I found sun orchids on the Lewis pass and Green hooded orchids in midwinter (Tawharenui)     NZ Sun Orchid              Green hooded orchid A lot of orchids are pollinated by insects and some in very tricky ways; There’s a great story about Charles Darwin who found an orchid species in Madagascar with a very long and deep nectar tube. Nobody knew who the pollinator was, but Darwin predicted it was likely a specific Hawk Moth with a very long tongue (about 10 cm long) A few decades after Darwin died that moth was found and scientists proved that Darwin was right! As our native orchids are usually rather scarce and special, they are often protected plants and certainly won’t grow in ordinary New Zealand gardens; Their habitats are characterised by specific conditions of light, temperature and soil conditions. No point translocating them! But the exotic orchids that are often seen in pots and gardens are a different matter altogether Moth orchids (Phalaenopsis) are doing OK indoors if you know how to treat them …. Not too much sun – not too wet around the sensitive roots etc etc Cymbidiums are commonly grown outside in large containers – keep them free from frosts and fertilise them for growth of new leaves (Nitrogen fert in Spring and summer) and Potash Fert in autumn to set up buds for flowering in winter/spring But some of the most successful exotic orchids we can grow in NZ are the Epidendrum and Dendrobium types: Epidendrum is known as the crucifix orchid. The do well in pots and in well-drained soil. They have very fibrous, white roots that grab moisture and nutrients from rain or liquid fertiliser, can stand a few degrees of frost and thrive in full sun. Flowers (spring summer and well into autumn) come in reds, oranges and yellow hues. We grow them here in Christchurch easily and they’re outside all year long! Dendrobium is a Genus of orchids that is also quite hardy, although we keep them under trees in winter to reduce the heaviest frosts. Giving the plants direct sunlight is the key to getting heaps of flower spikes (too dark and they really don’t flower well) Liquid fertiliser with a good amount of potash will make them happy; The “rock lily” (Queensland coast plants!) has large flowers (pictured) whereas the smaller Dendrobiums often have blue, purple or sometimes pink flowers Try them – they are Easy-AsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/10/20234 minutes, 42 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Look out Google, Microsoft is coming for search

We all might be saying "let me Bing that" very soon as Microsoft has stunned the tech community showcasing their investment in AI.  Bing wants to answer your questions, and Microsoft says Bing can do that now better than anyone using the same tech behind Chat GPT, and the Bing search index information it has.  Their chat responses will stay up to date with current events, you you could ask Bing to summarize a news story from yesterday. It will also show it's sources so you can dive into more information and see if the information it's pulling from is accurate.  The new Bing being talked about as Microsoft's "iPhone moment" and is a real opportunity for them to reintroduce themselves as a company who can innovate. Google has had a monopoly on search for a decade, absolutely printing money over that time. But now, Microsoft is giving people a reason to try Bing - which they haven't really had before. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/10/20233 minutes, 53 seconds
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Tara Ward: Funny Woman, You and Freddie Flintoff’s Field of Dreams

Funny Woman: Gemma Arterton and Rupert Everett star in this British comedy based on the best-selling Nick Hornby novel about a woman who moves to London in the 1960s to take the comedy world by storm (Neon).   You: A new season of Netflix’s hit psychological thriller that follows a bookshop manager's obsession with becoming the perfect boyfriend (Netflix)  Freddie Flintoff’s Field of Dreams: Former international cricketer Freddie Flintoff returns to his hometown of Preston with the aim of creating a brand-new cricket team from a unlikely group of wayward teens (TVNZ+).  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/10/20235 minutes, 57 seconds
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Ruahei Demant: World Rugby Player of the Year on a 2022 for the books, looking ahead to Super Rugby

World Cup winner, World Rugby Player of the Year and a nominee in next week’s Halberg Awards. Ruahei Demant has one of the best CVs in sport, not bad for a kid who grew up in the small East Coast settlement of Ōmāio.  2022 was a year for the books for the 27-year-old.  She’s overcome not one, not two but three knee reconstructions to get to where she is.   And there’s no rest for the wicked; Ruahei is preparing for the start of Super Rugby Aupiki in a couple of weeks.   She’s took some time out from training to join Jack Tame. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/10/202314 minutes, 32 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Roadie Slice

Versions of this slice have been around for years but this version, from Joe’s Garage in Queenstown with a few tweaks from me, is economical and slightly healthier than most with plenty of seeds packed in there. Makes about 12-16 bars 150g butter, melted 250g biscuit crumbs – I use malt, superwine or gingernuts (or a combo) ½ cup each pumpkin sunflower seeds ½ cup chocolate chips ½ coconut ½ cup rice bubbles ½ cup dried apricots, chopped ½ cup sultanas ¼ cup cranberries 1 x 395g tin condensed milk - Heat oven to 180 C and line a Swiss roll tin with baking paper. - In a large bowl, mix the biscuit crumbs with melted butter and press this firmly into the lined tin for the biscuit base. - In the same bowl, mix all remaining ingredients , except the condensed milk, together. Tumble this on top of the biscuit base and spread evenly. - Drizzle over condensed milk and bake for 25-30 minutes or until just starting to brown in places on top. - Cool then chill until set before cutting into bars. Eat up!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/10/20234 minutes, 25 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Magic Mike's Last Dance and The Son

Magic Mike’s Last Dance  Mike Lane takes to the stage once again when a business deal that went bust leaves him broke and bartending in Florida. Hoping for one last hurrah, Mike heads to London with a wealthy socialite who lures him with an offer he can't refuse -- and an agenda all her own. With everything on the line, he soon finds himself trying to whip a hot new roster of talented dancers into shape.  The Son  Peter's hectic life gets further upended when his ex-wife tells him their teenage son, Nicholas, is deeply troubled. He soon tries to take care of Nicholas the same way he would have wanted his own father to have taken care of him.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/10/20236 minutes, 57 seconds
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Kevin Milne: You may escape the worst, but there could be a cyclone on your mind too

Kevin Milne says you’ll probably escape the worst of impending Cyclone Gabrielle but has concerns around the state of some people's mental health. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/10/20236 minutes, 14 seconds
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Jack Tame: Cocaine bust was just a drop in the ocean

Of all the things to be plucked out of the ocean by authorities this week, the Chinese balloon probably caused the greatest international incident. But you can only imagine the mood on the deck of the HMNZS Manawanui, as the Kiwi crew hauled in half a billion dollars worth of cocaine. 3.2 tonnes of cocaine sounds like a lot. And it is, when you frame it in the context of New Zealand’s drug market. But given the U.N estimates about two thousand tonnes of cocaine is produced in South America every year, authorities would need to make 625 hauls of a similar size to wipe out an annual supply. A Pacific drug bust every 13 hours. The Police reckon the Pacific haul was headed to Australia. And although they’ve framed it as a massive blow to the illicit drug industry, there’s a good argument to be made that the next few months are likely to be pretty lucrative for cocaine dealers in Oz, who will no doubt charge an even greater premium for whatever product they do have on hand. Just imagine you’re part of an organised crime syndicate in South America watching the news. Even before the bust, New Zealand and Australia consumers paid some of the highest prices for cocaine of any market in the World. Now, you’ve every reason to think the drugs you could be selling in America or Europe will fetch an even greater premium down under. A bust like this only incentivises producers to send more drugs our way. There’s also the likelihood the cocaine that has reached its Australasian destination will be cut with other, more dangerous drugs in order to extend supply. Even before the mysterious package was fished out of the Pacific, cocaine purity in Australasia was poor, at best. A study by the Australian National University last year found the country’s cocaine purity was just 27 percent, and 40 percent of the samples they tested, purporting to be cocaine, contained no cocaine whatsoever. You can smirk, but for years, health authorities in Australia have warned about a much more dangerous drug – fentanyl – turning up in cocaine powder. In September, a new report showed fentanyl deaths in Australia have increased more than 1000% in the last 15 years. I’m always bemused when authorities celebrate a big drug bust. I’m not suggesting they shouldn’t seek to crack down on international drug syndicates, but ultimately it’s just a game of whack-a-mole. There is no winning the war on drugs. In New Zealand and Australia, cocaine is a glamorous drug. It’s socially acceptable in middle-class circles in a way that methamphetamine has never been. A blow to cocaine supply won’t do anything to hurt cocaine demand. And as long as demand exists, suppliers will find a way. The bust this week might have been celebrated as a victory for the law, but ultimately it was just a drop in the ocean.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/10/20233 minutes, 51 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Shania Twain - Queen of Me

Shania Twain - Queen of Me  It’s hard to overstate just how huge Shania Twain was in the late ’90s. The Canadian country singer was everywhere thanks to the success of her 1995 album The Woman in Me and two years later, its chart-busting successor Come On Over (still the best-selling country album of all time).  Twain’s voice returned lower and raspier after her surgeries, but musically, she’s back to her poppy, peppy self on her new LP, opening with the boot-scooting party-starter Giddy Up! and maintaining an upbeat vibe throughout — even on the tracks with teeth.  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/3/20236 minutes, 24 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: A Winter Grave and Becky

A Winter Grave – Peter May  From the twelve-million copy bestselling author of the Lewis trilogy comes a chilling new mystery set in the isolated Scottish Highlands.  A TOMB OF ICE  A young meteorologist checking a mountain top weather station in Kinlochleven discovers the body of a missing man entombed in ice.  A DYING DETECTIVE  Cameron Brodie, a Glasgow detective, sets out on a hazardous journey to the isolated and ice-bound village. He has his own reasons for wanting to investigate a murder case so far from his beat.  AN AGONIZING RECKONING  Brodie must face up to the ghosts of his past and to a killer determined to bury forever the chilling secret that his investigation threatens to expose.  Set against a backdrop of a frighteningly plausible near-future, A WINTER GRAVE is Peter May at his page-turning, passionate and provocative best.  Becky – Sarah May  It’s peak 90s London. Shoulder pads are out, crimped hair is in, supermodels are known by their first names, and Becky Sharp will do anything to escape her past.  From mingling with tabloid millionaires to trading favours and fortunes with royalty, she will stop at nothing to reach the top of the career ladder at the Mercury newspaper. Landing scoop after scoop, Becky ruthlessly carves a place for herself in a society determined to ignore her. These are the biggest stories and scandals of the decade, and she has something to do with every one of them.  But Becky may have more in common with the people she writes about than she thinks – what takes a lifetime to build takes only a moment to destroy . . .     See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/3/20233 minutes, 40 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Villas and Vistas of Lake Como

Mike Yardley is once again the envy of us all with his travels to Lake Como. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/3/20238 minutes, 28 seconds
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Jack Tame: 2023's lessons about leadership

I think it’s fair to say Wayne Brown’s YouTube apology has only underscored a pretty obvious fact. Auckland’s Lord Mayor would probably be the first to admit it: he is not Captain Charisma when it comes to communication. In many ways, that played to his advantage in the local election campaign. There’s no doubt that the discontent with Central Government and the festering anger that some Aucklanders felt over Jacinda Ardern’s leadership played a significant role in Wayne Brown’s final tally. Voters were sick of style. They were sick of the smiling press conferences and carefully controlled messaging. They felt angry. Wayne Brown’s central message was that he wouldn’t just talk the talk, he’d get stuff done. He’d put substance over style. And in the end he romped in. I’m sure she’s utterly exhausted, but I’ve no doubt a major factor in Jacinda’s Ardern decision to stand down as Prime Minister was because she didn’t think it was very likely she’d win October’s election. Justified or not, she sensed the anger and opposition to her leadership, and realised how difficult it would be to overcome it by October. Ultimately she’ll be remembered as a bit of an Obama – what she represented as a leader was greater than the policy changes she achieved. She fell well short of her stated aspirations. But she remains a uniquely talented communicator with an extraordinary emotional intelligence, whose public leadership at times of crisis was invaluable. Oh, to have had a leader with that kind of communication skill during the Auckland floods. At a time when Auckland voters pushed back hard against style and communication skills, the city found itself chest-deep in floodwaters and desperate for someone at the top with communication talents. Auckland knew Wayne Brown didn’t have those skills. It’s a good part of the reason he was elected! So, it can hardly have been a surprise that in those early hours, he didn’t shine. 2023 has taught us one thing about effective leadership. We need our leaders to be good with implementing policy, good at affecting real change, good at getting stuff done, AND good communicators. Too much of one skill, if it happens to be at the expense of another, means that inevitably they’ll be left wanting.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/3/20232 minutes, 41 seconds
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Kate Hall: 'Ethically Kate' says NZ made doesn't mean ethically made

Kate 'Ethically Kate' Hall has a warning that New Zealand made doesn’t mean ethically made and how to shop ethically instead of just looking for that NZ Made symbol. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/3/20238 minutes, 40 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: - Water; signs, biomimicry and matauranga

Maybe now is a good time to talk about water on our planet.  Gardeners often know exactly where the water courses are around the house; this comes in very handy if you want to grow sensitive plants that survive droughts, or if you want to prevent “drowning” or root rot infections on plants that are susceptible to very wet conditions.  Next time you fly in an aeroplane, get a window seat! And watch the scenery below…  Braided River water systems (in Canterbury)  Note the pattern of frequently-used river beds when the water is high; Note also the same pattern of rarely-used river beds … exactly the same patterns!  Your garden (and especially your lawn!) will show similar tell-tale signs of how Nature flows its liquids away in high rainfall events.  Note how all these channels never make a 90 degree bend (a 90 degree bend is very inefficient in transporting fluids!!) Just look at the vein system in leaves on plants and trees; Look at lungs in your body and the blood vessels in your eyeballs  Now look at our plumbing department in all those big shops that provide you with guttering and pipes etc etc. We seem to often think in 90 degree bends!  Biomimicry is learning from Nature!  For some silly reason “Engineers” think they can be cleverer than Nature and build houses anywhere. Of course, nature throws up “challenges” but Homo sapiens has the brains to find solutions that result in conquering nature so that our bizarre population growth can be accommodated in just about any habitat.  Many will remember the 2005 floods that destroyed dozens of homes in Matatā (Bay of Plenty). Dan Hikuroa tells a lovely story about the Taniwhā and he illustrates that nicely with the “sweeping tail” that changes direction in time. The river bed that comes out into the sea at Matatā has had many courses over the past hundreds of years and those courses looked exactly like the pictures of braided rivers.  Maori knew how far that “sweeping tail” of the Taniwha could reach and therefore never built the marae anywhere near the danger zone.  I think it’s time to take note of Ancient Knowledge, as well as Learning from Nature See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/3/20234 minutes, 1 second
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Bob Campbell: Bob's Best Buys - Sacred Hill Chardonnay, Hawke’s Bay

Wine: Sacred Hill Chardonnay, Hawke’s Bay $17.99  Why I chose it:   - I’m always on the lookout for good, inexpensive chardonnay and this is a standout. - Sacred Hill has a new owner and a new winemaker (Nick Picone was chief winemaker of Villa Maria, chardonnay is his signature wine)  - Chardonnay is the second most popular NZ white wine after SB  What does it taste like?   - “A triumph of winemaking in a challenging vintage. Fruit-focused chardonnay with bright, fresh flavours that include vanilla, green apple and lime blossom. Light-bodied white with a long, mouth-cleansing finish. Offers value at this price.  Why it’s a bargain:  - If you shop around you can find it at prices as low as $12.99 which, given the quality, makes it a bargain.  Where can you buy it? I found it at my local New World for $12.99  Food match? I had it with a Marie Rose Prawn Cocktail (mayonnaise, tomato sauce, sweet chilli sauce and lemon juice) – terrific!  Will it keep? Good for two or three years from vintage.  Wine Tip: It is tempting to over-chill white wine to beat the muggy summer heat but be prepared to lose flavour if you overdo it. My advice is to experiment with temperature until you get it just right for your taste and whatever mother nature gives us.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/3/20234 minutes, 44 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Microsoft Teams is going premium, Beyoncé tickets to go the way of Tay-Tay?

Microsoft Teams won't be all-free anymore, they're putting up a paywall  They're going to offer a "Premium" tier, costing $7 per user per month.   Some of the features will move from the free tier to the premium tier like live translated captions, together mode customizations and virtual appointments.   But they'll also add some new extras too the most exciting one being an integration with Chat GPT to help summarize your meeting notes, suggest tasks and next steps. They'll also help keep meetings private with video watermarking and copy and pasting from the chat.   Beyoncé is headed on a world tour... will you be able to get a ticket?  After the Taylor Swift debacle all eyes will be on Ticketmaster as tickets go on sale over the coming week. Promoters say they saw initial demand for tickets was 800 percent greater than tickets available so new shows were added. Ticketmaster is again leveraging its "Verified Fan" program to help keep bots out.      See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/3/20234 minutes, 10 seconds
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Tara Ward: The Ex-Wife, When Bob Came and Cunk on Earth

The Ex-Wife: A British thriller based on the bestselling novel about a woman who appears to be living the perfect life with her loving husband and beautiful young daughter. There's just one problem... the obsessive ex-wife who won't leave them alone (TVNZ+)  When Bob Came: A captivating  six-part documentary series exploring the cultural, political and musical impact of Bob Marley’s iconic 1979 concert at the Western Springs Stadium in Auckland (TVNZ+, from Monday 6 February).  Cunk on Earth: A mockumentary series that follows Philomena Cunk as she comically tells the story of our greatest inventions and asks experts hard-hitting questions about humanity's progress (Netflix).    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/3/20235 minutes, 51 seconds
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Theia: Kiwi singer-songwriter on new music and a new direction

Singer-songwriter Theia has risen the ranks to become a powerhouse Kiwi artist.  You might also recognise her name in connection to TE KAAHU.  With overseas travel plans side-tracked by Covid, the singer poured her energy into composing songs in te reo Māori and released a full album to rave reviews both here and around the world.   Theia is back this year with new music and has just released a single called Pray 4 Me.  Theia joined Jack Tame live in studio. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/3/202314 minutes, 20 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Watermelon salad with chilli caramel dressing

With crunch and crispiness, hits of sweet, sour and heat all mingling in each mouthful, this salad is incredible!  Serves 4-6  2 tbsps cooking oil 4 red chillis, de-seeded ½ red onion, chopped fine 1 small handful coriander, leaves and root 2 cloves garlic, peeled and chopped 3 tbsps oil ½ cup brown sugar 2-3 tablespoons apple cider vinegar 4 cups cubed watermelon ½ telegraph cucumber, peeled and cored, sliced 1 cup cashews, toasted Handful of mint leaves For the caramel: make a paste with chillis, onion, coriander, garlic and one tablespoon of oil. Fry this in remaining oil for 4-5 minutes, then add sugar and cook until it begins to thicken. Add vinegar and stir to combine. Taste (careful to cool it first!) for seasoning – add more vinegar or salt as needed. Pour into a warmed jar. Caramel dressing will store well in fridge for 3-4 weeks too. In a large bowl, mix watermelon, sliced cucumber and toasted cashews and mint leaves. Five minutes before serving, pour over half chilli caramel, toss well, taste and add more caramel to taste. Serve chilled. Nici’s tip:  Core cucumber by halving lengthwise and running tip of a teaspoon spoon down the length to remove seeds and watery pulp. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/3/20235 minutes, 16 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Shotgun Wedding and Knock at the Cabin

Shotgun Wedding (Prime Video)   Darcy and Tom gather their families for a destination wedding, but the ceremony gets put on hold when gunmen take everyone hostage. Now, they must do everything they can to save their loved ones, if they don't wind up killing each other first.  Knock at the Cabin (cinema)  While vacationing at a remote cabin, a young girl and her parents are taken hostage by four armed strangers who demand that the family make an unthinkable choice to avert the apocalypse. With limited access to the outside world, the family must decide what they believe before all is lost. From visionary filmmaker M. Night Shyamalan, Knock at the Cabin stars Dave Bautista (Dune, Guardians of the Galaxy franchise), Tony award and Emmy nominee Jonathan Groff (Hamilton, Mindhunter), Ben Aldridge (Pennyworth, Fleabag), BAFTA nominee Nikki Amuka-Bird (Persuasion, Old), newcomer Kristen Cui, Abby Quinn (Little Women, Landline) and Rupert Grint (Servant, Harry Potter franchise).     See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/3/20236 minutes, 7 seconds
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Kevin Milne: The comparison between Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown and former PM Robert Muldoon

Kevin Milne has drawn some comparisons between Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown and former Prime Minister, Robert Muldoon, saying they are both brash, and both come with a dislike of journalists. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/3/20235 minutes, 16 seconds
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Jack Tame: South Africa - The Promise and the Pain

We came around a corner and he was lying there, dead. A white rhinoceros, transformed from his trotting magnificence into a big grey heap. The bullet wound in his side was fresh. The blood had poured out of him but clearly he’d stayed upright for a bit before falling into the dirt. And as he lay there before us, turning to rot in the summer heat, that beautiful creature suffered one final indignity. Evidently, the poachers had taken his big horn, but they’d fled before collecting his smaller one. And before anyone could come back, the park rangers hacked it off with an axe. We arrived in Johannesburg and spent the first couple of days in the city. We were warned not to drive at night and so we didn’t. But we drove through Soweto. We visited the apartheid museum. And we left. It was a green city, Jacaranda trees everywhere, but you wouldn’t call it beautiful or welcoming. All around Jozi are massive dusty tailing heaps from the gold mines that made Johannesburg an economic powerhouse. I’m not sure I’ve never been to a place with such a stark difference between the rich and the poor. We hired a Hilux and drove south, taking off road tracks whenever possible. We spent days in the Drakensberg ranges, with some of the best hiking of my life. We drove up the Sani Pass into Lesotho, and then north from Durban along elephant coast. It’s the unexpected little moments that always stick with me when I travel. One day, in the middle of Zulu country, we stopped for coffee in a white gated township designed as a perfect English village. You know the kind - the streets had names like Elderberry Lane and Badger’s Hollow. Almost every house had carefully manicured primroses out the front. It felt like an episode out of Midsummer Murders. But just five minutes down the road, Zulu women were carrying baskets on their heads. All up, we did 3000km in the Hilux. We did three or four days of Safari, with rhinos, hippos, giraffes, and mighty, graceful African elephants. We crossed into southern Mozambique. I scuba dived with bull and tiger sharks. We spent a few days in the Kingdom of Eswatini, and we flew to Cape Town, which is a truly astonishing place. Sitting there on the Cape on a white sand beach, watching some of the World’s best kite surfers launching themselves off waves, in the shadow of Table Mountain was an experience I will treasure. I reckon only Rio could maybe challenge Cape Town as the most spectacular city in the World. I was away for three weeks. It was fantastic. I didn’t get robbed and I didn’t get sick. And we were lucky with that kind of time, to get a good sense of the place. When I think back to my trip, I reckon that rhino was South Africa. In a way, it represented the promise and the pain of the place. A country with more wonder.. more diversity... of culture, language, landscapes, wildlife than almost anywhere on Earth. But a country shackled with such significant problems that it cannot fulfil its potential. A country with 70% of the World’s rhinos that can’t stop its citizens from shooting them dead. The thing that surprised me most about the whole experience was the way in which our guide reacted. He wasn’t surprised when we came across that scene. He didn’t even seem that sad. He seemed resigned to it, normalised even. Consumers in China and Vietnam maintain an insatiable demand for rhino horn. South Africa loses a rhino to poachers roughly every 36 hours. We finished our day in the game reserve. A few hours after first coming across him, we drove past that rhino’s massive grey corpse once more. The wardens had moved on. The sun beat down. We left him to the hyenas and the birds.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/3/20234 minutes, 44 seconds
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Carrie Hurihanganui: Auckland Airport CEO updates on travel chaos following flooding

Auckland Airport's domestic terminal is back up and running. The International terminal is set to start departures from 5pm, but that's set to be confirmed shortly. International arrivals will start after 4am tomorrow. Auckland Airport Chief Executive Carrie Hurihanganui told Tim Beveridge flooding from nearby areas eventually made its way into the terminals last night. LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/27/20233 minutes, 30 seconds
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Andrew Clark: Auckland Emergency Management's Duty Controller provides flooding update

Two people have died and two are missing after raging floodwaters and slips caused by an unprecedented deluge of rain across Auckland. The city is in a state of emergency after the downpour caused widespread flooding, slips, road closures and travel disruptions. Auckland Emergency Management Duty Controller Andrew Clark told Tim Beveridge the situation has stabilised significantly since late last night. He says they're focusing on providing emergency accommodation for people at evacuation centres who can't get home due to damage. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/27/20234 minutes, 39 seconds
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Dan Corrigan: MetService meteorologist says Auckland saw 71mm of rain in an hour on Friday night

MetService meteorologist Dan Corrigan told Tim Beveridge says Auckland saw 71 millimetres worth of rain between seven and eight pm last night. He says they classify heavy rain as 6 millimetres an hour. LISTEN ABOVE    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/27/20235 minutes, 19 seconds
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Carmel Sepuloni: Deputy Prime Minister updates on Auckland flooding from Kelston evacuation centre

Two people remain unaccounted for after Auckland was clobbered by torrential rain. A man is missing after being swept away in floodwaters just after 10pm in Onewhero -- a second person is missing after a landslide bought down a house in Remuera. Meanwhile Police say two bodies were found on the North Shore overnight. One man was found dead in a flooded culvert in Wairau Valley, the other in a flooded carpark on Link Drive. Deputy Prime Minister Carmel Sepuloni is at the Kelston evacuation centre, where are 60 people have sought help. She told Tim Beveridge the flooding in her electorate of Kelston is horrendous.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/27/20233 minutes, 37 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Summer of Kiwi music: COTERIE, Drax Project

Band of brothers COTERIE (Tyler, Josh, Brandford and Conrad Fisher) have created the soundtrack track of the summer with their self-titled debut album set for release on December 9. 14 fresh tracks featuring their breakout Platinum single Cool It Down (#1 Airplay, #1 Shazam), Killin’ It Off and West Coast Drive. Immersed in West Coast surf and art culture, the band have developed a blend of soulful rock music with an added dose of harmonies that have audiences wanting more.  Blind Beat, a six track EP made by Drax Project, created from a self-set challenge to create music completely blindly. Each member had ten minutes to create their part of the song without any idea of what their fellow bandmates were creating. When the time was up, they’d come together in the studio to mix the songs, resulting in their new EP. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/21/20236 minutes, 45 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Spare and The Hemsworth Effect

Catherine Raynes has been reading Prince Harry's memoir Spare and The Hemsworth Effect by James Weir.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/21/20236 minutes, 16 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Holiday highlights in Kaua'i

Kaua'i has some beautiful and distinctive features, and according to Mike Yardley, it's a wonderful holiday destination.  For more tips on tripping the delights of Kaua'i, Mike's article here.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/21/20236 minutes, 41 seconds
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Kate Hall: Sustainable Living on a Budget

Many kiwis are tight on funds at the moment, but Kate Hall has a few tips so they can make sustainable choices will keeping to their budgets.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/21/20239 minutes, 34 seconds
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Rudd Kleinpaste: Ecosystems in Hawai'i and the threats they face

Rudd Kleinpaste joined Francesca after his trip to Hawai'i to chat about the islands' biodiversity, and the threats the ecosystems face. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/21/20234 minutes, 4 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Nectarine Olive Oil Cake

The sweetness of nectarine and the richness of extra virgin olive oil makes this the most wonderful summer cake. Serve it warm for dessert with a scoop of vanilla ice cream with a drizzle of fruity olive oil and a sprinkle of sea salt.  LISTEN ABOVE   RECIPE Makes one 20 cm cake  3-4 ripe nectarines, sliced  1 cup extra virgin olive oil  1/2 cup + 2 tbsps extra sugar  2 large eggs  1 tablespoon Greek yoghurt  1 1/3 cups plain flour  ½ tsp baking powder  Pinch baking soda  Preheat oven to 180 C or 160 fan bake. Grease a 20x20cm square cake tin and line with baking paper. Toss nectarines with ¼ cup of the olive oil and 2 tbsps sugar. Leave to sit for 10 minutes. In a bowl whisk eggs with remaining ½ cup sugar until pale and thickened. Whisk in remaining olive oil and yoghurt. Sift in flour, baking powder and baking soda and stir until combined. Fold in fruit mixture and juices. Scrape batter into tin and bake for 25-30 minutes or until a skewer inserted comes out clean. Leave to cool for 10 minutes before removing from tin. Serve with vanilla ice cream, a drizzle of olive oil and a sprinkle of sea salt. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/21/20234 minutes, 26 seconds
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Bryan Betty: Atrial Fibrillation

Doctor Bryan Betty joined Francesca to chat about health and Atrial Fibrillation: what it is, its symptoms, and how to deal with it.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/21/20235 minutes, 54 seconds
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Neale Jones: Chris Hipkins, the nominee for Prime Minister

Former Chief of Staff for Labour, Neale Jones joined Francesca to chat about Chris Hipkins and his nomination for Prime Minister. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/21/20234 minutes, 18 seconds
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Mark Manson: Filming the Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck

Mark Manson, bestselling author of Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck joined Francesca to chat about making his book into a movie and filming it in NZ. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/20/202313 minutes, 33 seconds
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Chris Schulz: M3GAN and The Menu

M3GAN: A young girl is given a prototype AI, programmed to be a child’s companion and a parents ally. M3GAN can listen, watch, and learn, for better or for worse. The Menu: Hawthorn is an exclusive dining experience operated by celebrity Chef Julian Slowik, and the diners of the night are in for an unmatchable and unforgettable experience. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/20/20235 minutes, 42 seconds
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Kevin Milne: My first-ever brand new car

On Tuesday, Kevin did something he never thought he'd do and picked up a brand new car. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/20/20235 minutes, 45 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: There's nothing wrong with taking time to fill up the tank

Until Thursday, I would have described 2023, all 19 days of it, as been all about extreme weather, Harry and Meghan’s attempt to burn down the House of Windsor, and potholes. But nothing gets a newsroom going like a surprise resignation of a Prime Minister. Who would have thought one of our most popular Prime Ministers would join the great resignation trend. I was both shocked, and somehow not surprised. The Prime Minister said “I have given my absolute all to being Prime Minister but it has also taken a lot out of me. You cannot and should not do the job unless you have a full tank, plus a bit in reserve for those unplanned and unexpected challenges that inevitably come along. Having reflected over summer I know I no longer have that bit extra in the tank to do the job justice. It’s that simple.” And it is. We always hear politicians say the job is a privilege and that it’s an honour to serve. But it can be a thankless task. Unless you are a politician or married to one, I don’t think anyone really understands what the job fully entails - the work load, the hours, the constant critiquing of your performance and policies. If you worry about what other people think of you then the job for not for you. I appreciated her honesty around it. Quite simply, she’s burnt out. There should be no shame or judgement in that - save that for her political legacy. Who wouldn’t be depleted after the last five and a half years she’s had, years unlike what any previous prime minister has had to deal with. I’m sure it felt like twice as long. I’d be buggered too. There will be those who feel that since she was elected by the people, she should stick it out until October 14th. That she is leaving because of a drop in the polls and can read the writing on the wall. That she cannot handle the vitriol and nastiness many women in politics experience, and on a growing level. Sure, these issues probably contributed to Ardern’s decision but it’s not one thing alone that leads to burnout. Anyway if there is more to her resignation, we will probably have to wait until the memoir. And considering her reputation around the world I’m sure the offers won’t be far away. But running New Zealand, with all the challenges it faces heading into 2023 is not a job that can be done on an empty tank. It is not a job you can quietly quit. The Prime Minister’s resignation does put the labour party in a difficult position. Whether you agree with her policies and politics or not, Jacinda Ardern is a very good communicator and leader. One of a kind. The party has a tough year ahead as an election looms and we hold them to account for their performance and delivery over the last 2 terms. Whoever tries to fill Ardern’s shoes won’t have an easy time of it. Should she have called a snap election? Some believe so. We will have a Prime Minister we didn’t vote for, and you’ve seen how that played out it in the UK. Aware that whoever takes over her role cannot be seen as a caretaker PM, Ardern has opted to give a new leader time to cement themselves into the role, and to give them a fighting chance to have made their mark by 14th October. While the decision to resign is unexpected, the Labour party will want to give off the impression they are united and calm in the face of it all. That said, I still believe Ardern has made the right decision for us, for her family, and for herself. Her move might even be the best thing for the Labour Party. The Prime Minister resignation is a reminder we have all been through some tough years, and there’s nothing wrong with taking time to fill up the tank. It’s a message we should all take on in 2023.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
1/20/20233 minutes, 38 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: A bookworm's round up (1)

Catherine Raynes lists her best reads of 2022. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/17/20225 minutes, 57 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Best albums of the year

Estelle Clifford takes Jack Tame through her top listens of 2022. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/17/20227 minutes, 28 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Holiday hits in the great NZ Summer

As the holiday season dawns, the great New Zealand summer calendar is adorned with some sure-fire hits to add some extra zing to your holiday. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/17/20227 minutes, 55 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: A bookworm's round up

Catherine Raynes lists her best reads of 2022. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/17/20225 minutes, 57 seconds
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Tara Ward: Litivenko, 1923 and Top Class

Litivenko: David Tennant stars in this drama that follows the Scotland Yard Officers who worked to prove who was responsible for the death of Alexander Litvinenko, in one of the most complex and dangerous investigations in the history of the Metropolitan Police (TVNZ+).   1923: Harrison Ford and Dame Helen Mirren star in this prequel to Yellowstone, where the Dutton ancestors must face a new set of challenges in the early 20th century, including the rise of Western expansion, Prohibition, and the Great Depression (Prime Video from 19 December).  Top Class: The cream of Aotearoa's music and comedy talent pay tribute to the Topp Twins in a live concert at Auckland's Civic Theatre for their 40th anniversary, with legends like Don McGlashan, Annie Crummer, Dame Hinewehi Mohi and Troy Kingi (Neon).   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/16/20226 minutes, 46 seconds
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Steven Dromgool: Creating a magical Christmas even when times are tough

Steven Dromgool has some advice about how to create the 'magic' of Christmas despite hard times. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/16/20226 minutes, 39 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Best wine buy of 2022

Wine: Akarua Rua 2001 Pinot Noir, Central Otago $27  Why I chose it:  - It is my best buy of 2022  - Really good PN doesn’t often dip below $30  - Everyone who loves PN as much as I do should try this wine  - Perfect with ham and turkey  What does it taste like?  - Akarua’s entry level Pinot Noir famously offers great value. Bright fresh wine with pronounced fruit flavours. Sweet cherry, ripe plum, a hint of floral and an attractively spicy finish.  Why it’s a bargain:  - I’d be happy if I had paid $45 for it.  Where can you buy it?  - Whisky and More, Waikato $22.99; Winesale.co.nz, Lower Hutt $22.99; The Good Wine Co, Auckland $24.99  Food match?  - Smoked salmon is my favourite  Will it keep?  - Drink within two years while it remains fresh and fruity  Wine Tip  - Don’t drink red wine too warm. Pop your glass of wine in the fridge for 5-10 minutes (it takes longer to chill the whole bottle) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/16/20224 minutes, 34 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: New tool 'Rewind' aims to be a search engine for your life

A new tool called 'Rewind' has been developed for the latest generation of Macs which effectively stores everything you've ever displayed on your screen. It can also record your Zoom meetings and transcribe them, aiming to give you a search engine for your life.   None of this information ever leaves your laptop, so there is nothing in the cloud. Their big breakthrough is the crazy compression they've been able to accomplish.   The founder, Dan Siroker, is a serial entrepreneur who started to lose his hearing and found a super power when he got a hearing aid. It got him thinking, what if we could do the same for our memory?     See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/16/20224 minutes, 29 seconds
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Michael Kelly: 'Doug Stamper' from House of Cards on Kevin Spacey, saying goodbye to Doug and his new role in Jack Ryan

Doug Stamper became everyone’s favourite calculating character in the beloved Netflix series House of Cards, played with chilling intensity by actor Michael Kelly. It gained Michael an Emmy nomination for outstanding supporting actor.  House of Cards, of course, wrapped a few years ago amidst allegations against Kevin Spacey.   It was a tough goodbye for Michael who played Doug for nearly a decade, but he’s now in the thick of the action on the new Jack Ryan series as a CIA agent. Michael Kelly joined Jack Tame.  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/16/202211 minutes, 35 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Summer berries cake

This is the cake for summer! So easy to put together and worthy of the Christmas table or a family get together or just a BBQ with mates. Make it, you’ll love it!  Serves: 10-12  Cake  1 1/3 cups caster sugar 3 eggs 300ml light olive oil 2 tsp vanilla essence 2 cups plain flour 1 tsp baking soda ½ tsp salt 1 cup unsweetened Greek yoghurt ( 6 Tbsp Barker’s Sundae Strawberry Sauce or make your own strawberry puree) Icing  200g cream cheese ¾ up icing sugar 1 cup cream  1 tsp vanilla essence To serve 1 cup fruit compote, I used Barker’s rhubarb & strawberry compote 1 punnet each fresh strawberries, blueberries & raspberries Cake  Preheat oven to 160ºC fan bake / 180ºC conventional. Grease 3 x 20cm round cake tins and line with baking paper.  Place sugar and eggs in a large bowl and beat with an electric mixer until thick and creamy (about 5 minutes). Gradually beat in oil and vanilla. Sift flour, baking powder and baking soda and salt over the top and mix until mostly incorporated. Stir in yoghurt and mix until well combined. Divide mixture evenly between prepared tins. Drizzle two tablespoons of Barker’s Sundae Strawberry Sauce over each cake and use a skewer to swirl in. Bake in the centre of the oven for 25-30 minutes, until golden brown and a skewer inserted in the middle of the cakes comes out clean. Leave to cool for at least 10 minutes before carefully turning cakes out onto a wire rack to cool completely. Icing:  Using an electric beater, beat cream cheese until smooth. Briefly beat in icing sugar.  Add 1/2 cup cream and beat until well combined. Add remaining cream and vanilla and  continue to beat until icing reaches a thick, spreadable consistency (similar to whipped  cream).  To Serve: Place one of the cake layers on a serving plate or cake stand. Spread with a thick layer of icing. Drizzle with 1/3 cup compote and top 1/3 of the berries. Add a second cake layer on top and add the same quantities of icing, compote and  berries.  Top with the final cake layer, more icing, compote and the remaining berries. Refrigerate  until ready to serve.  NOTES: Cake can be assembled a couple of hours in advance and refrigerated until ready to serve. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/16/20226 minutes, 33 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Avatar - The Way of Water

Avatar: The Way of Water Jake Sully and Ney'tiri have formed a family and are doing everything to stay together. However, they must leave their home and explore the regions of Pandora. When an ancient threat resurfaces, Jake must fight a difficult war against the humans.  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/16/20228 minutes, 34 seconds
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Kevin Milne: 25 years of Saturday mornings

Kevin Milne reflects on 25 years of Saturday mornings. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/16/20224 minutes, 53 seconds
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Jack Tame: 2022 sucked, but I for one cannot wait for Christmas

“Uncle Jaaack...” “Yes, Ren?” “I want to play Jonah.” Jonah. It’s not chess! Basically I position myself in the middle of my sister’s lounge, resting on my knees. My nephew starts on one side of the room and has to try and run past me to score an imaginery try on the couch. My job is to tackle him three times out of four, but then to act bamboozled and let him slip through for glory. His little sister Elsie is just at the age where she likes physical play, as well. Both of them are allowed to do jumps from the couch onto a bean bag. Skydiving in the lounge. I fly down on Monday. I can’t wait to see them. 2022 has been a lousy year. An economy rapidly souring, news headlines threatening nuclear war, and about three years’ of sickness wedged into one. Most of us have had Covid. Many of us have had multiple infections. There’s one guy in our office who reckons he’s had it four times so far. It might be at a different stage, but you couldn’t say the pandemic’s over. I’ve had more loss this year than any other in my life. Family members, colleagues, and friends. My uncle passed this week. 2022 sucks. And for some families close to me, this is going to be a really tough Christmas. I reckon recharging is a two part process: connection and disconnection. Normally, I wake up every day and immediately feel compelled to reach for my phone. I scour the news headlines. I check my emails and social media incessently. The first step in recharging is the disconnection. I try and break up with my phone. I turn off notifications and bury my emails and social media deep in an obscure folder, so it takes a longer, more deliberate effort to get there. With a bit of luck the compulsion will wane after a few days, and before too long I’ll be going ages without so much as glancing at my phone. The second step is connection. Jonah with my nephew. The guinea pig village with my niece. I’ll play sous chef to Mum and music with my Dad. There will be backyard cricket with never-ending smack talk. My brother and I will drag our fattened Christmas rigs off for a couple of deeply unimpressive jogs in the bush. My girlfriend will gently tease me over Monopoly Deal. Connection and disconnection. These are the things that make Christmas special for me. And at the end of a trying year, I for one cannot wait.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/16/20223 minutes, 32 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Ashes in the Snow and Diddly Squat

Catherine Raynes has been reading Ashes in the Snow by Oriana Ramunno and Diddly Squat - 'Til The Cows Come Home from Jeremy Clarkson. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/9/20224 minutes, 34 seconds
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Kate Hall: Second-hand gifting

Kate Hall has some advice around second-hand gifting this Christmas and encourages people to break the norm. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/9/20226 minutes
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Ruud Kleinpaste: The Hymenoptera

This is the time of the year to have a look at Hymenoptera – Hymen (Membrane) – Pteron (wing); It’s the group of insects known as ants, Bees, sawflies and wasps. We are looking at 2000 to 3000 species in New Zealand.  The most famous members are the German and common wasp (Vespula species) as well as the three species of Paper wasps (Polistes species)  One thing they all have in common: no sense of humour  Yes, I realise it won’t be summer for another week or so, but the following critters are just a few gardeners’ mates to observe and adore; and they all do a great job, especially our native Hymenoptera are worth a look; but there are crazy exotics as well:  Talking about pollinators… have a look out for the Wool Carder Bee! It’s another introduced pollinating insect from Europe and it has some quite amazing behaviours.  It loves to hover and fly around the Lamiate flowers in your garden: stuff like Salvias and lamb’s ear. These types of plants are its favourite food and it defends its patch fiercely by chasing away other pollinators: bees, bumble bees, and even wasps!   Wool Carder Bee plus a nest  When wool carder bees start nest building, they scrape off the fine, light-coloured hairs off the leaves of certain plants (remember lamb’s ear!!) and work these fibres into the most delicate, soft and insulating ball that act as nest nurseries for their larvae and pupae in development. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/9/20223 minutes
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Hannah McQueen: The risks of fixing your mortgage long

With how high interest rates could now go scaring some people a little, and with terms of four and five years only fractionally higher than terms for one or two years, some are probably wondering whether they should opt for a little more certainty and go long, especially if anything over 7% becomes problematic for them. But fixing long term can be problematic in the context of the economic environment we’re heading into – and there are some lessons from the GFC on this.  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/9/20226 minutes, 23 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: The internet is abuzz about a new AI chatbot

The internet is abuzz about a new AI chatbot that is a massive step forward in computing  It's impressive! ChatGPT has some of the biggest names in tech gob smacked with just how advanced it is. Built by OpenAI (a non-profit) and has indexed much of the internet, just like Google, but effectively has a machine brain on top of that. You can ask it to do things like write code or check code.. right the way through to ask it to write a news story. You can give it inputs, or draw on its knowledge, and even tell it what style to write in.  You can ask it for business strategy ideas, write a poem in the voice of a pirate, or generate marketing copy.  It's already having real-world impacts  There is a dyslexic contractor, Ben Whittle, who has always struggled with writing business-style emails which has hindered his dreams of starting his own contracting swimming pool business. He was lucky to have a met Danny Richman who started mentoring him and helped him write these emails a couple of times a week. But now, Danny has turned to ChatGPT to write the emails for them based on some very brief inputs. Ben gets professional sounding and formatted emails whenever he needs them.         See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/9/20224 minutes, 24 seconds
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Tara Ward: Harry & Meghan, A Spy Among Friends and Colin from Accounts

Harry & Meghan: The first three episodes of the much-anticipated docuseries about the royal couple has landed on Netflix.  A Spy Among Friends: Damian Lewis and Guy Pearce star as Nicholas Elliot and Kim Philby, two spies and lifelong friends at the heart of the most notorious betrayal in British Intelligence history (TVNZ+)  Colin from Accounts: An Australian rom-com about Ashley and Gordon, two single-ish, complex humans who are brought together by a car accident and an injured dog (TVNZ+).  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/9/20225 minutes, 5 seconds
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Shehan Karunatilaka: Booker Prize winner on his time in NZ and becoming a household name

The Booker Prize is one of the most sought-after awards in the literary world. This year’s winner, Shehan Karunatilaka, is not only the second ever Sri Lankan author to win it – he has ties to our very own country.   And no, this isn’t a case of classic Kiwis grasping on to the tiniest connection...  Shehan grew up in Colombo but came to New Zealand to attend Whanganui Collegiate and then study at Massey University in Palmerston North.   He’s gone from a relatively little-known author to a household name in weeks for his book The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida, but still describes himself as a failed cricketer and failed rockstar.   Shehan Karunatilaka joined Jack Tame. LISTEN ABOVE    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/9/202213 minutes, 44 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Christmas lamb

Lamb is such a winner for the festive table and this year we’re moving away from ‘whole leg’ to some of the smaller cuts - less time to cook, plenty of flavour, easier to control the cooking and paired with plenty of plants, it’s the perfect centrepiece. I’m using lamb racks but you could use rumps, loin, leg steaks or medallions. You choose! Serves 8-12 3-4 lamb racks (or enough for 2-3 cutlets pp) or use 3-4 lamb rumps or loins 2 tablespoons olive oil ¼ cup breadcrumbs 3 tablespoons wholegrain mustard 2 teaspoons sea salt & decent grind black pepper Salad: 1 kg jersey benne or other small, new potato 8-12 fresh baby beets (can use leaderbrand or even canned) 2 bulbs NZ garlic, cut in halve through the waist Splash of olive oil 1 teaspoon sea salt & Decent grind of black pepper 8-12 small vine-ripened tomatoes 2 tablespoons fresh rosemary sprigs A few handfuls of baby spinach or chopped lettuce leaves Handful of green beans, trimmed and blanched ½ cup toasted, skinned, hazelnuts One handful mint leaves Dressing: 3 tablespoons citrus juice – orange or lemon 5 tablespoons good quality olive oil Salt and pepper to season Prep the lamb: This can be prepared 1-2 days ahead. Rub lamb with oil and brown in a pan or on the BBQ, 5-7 minutes. Cool immediately. Cover and chill until ready to cook through. Prep salad: Par-cook washed potatoes in salted water. Scrub fresh beets clean and halve. Toss potatoes, beets and garlic in oil and sprinkle salt and pepper. Lay in a single layer on a tray or 2 and roast at 200 C for 35-40 minutes or until cooked through, adding tomatoes and rosemary to the tray in the last 10 minutes. Prep dressing: Shake dressing ingredients together with cooked garlic in a jar. To cook lamb: Heat oven to 220 C. Combine oil, breadcrumbs, mustard, salt & pepper. Pat this onto lamb as a crust. Heat an oiled tray then place lamb racks (or other cuts) meat/mustard side up and cook for 14-17 minutes (longer for rumps, say 20 minutes). Cook times will vary depending on size of your lamb cut so use the press test to check for doneness. Rest for 15 minutes while you assemble the salad. Assemble & serve: Use a large platter or board. Toss leafy greens, beans and potatoes in dressing and spread out onto serving dish. Cut rested lamb into 1-2-bone cutlets and lay these on the salad bed. Add beets and tomatoes, mint leaves and hazelnuts. Drizzle over any remaining dressing and serve.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/9/20226 minutes, 20 seconds
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Jack Tame: The experience of moving and decorating has clarified my perspective

“It’s not the colour of cushions,” my girlfriend said. “It’s the combination of the colours of the cushions.” She stood on one side of the room, hands on her hips, as her eyes passed unsparingly across the new lounge suite. There are a few experiences that will test even the long-lasting, most joyous of relationships. Meeting the in-laws? Check. Travelling overseas together? Check. Moving house and settling on an interior design aesthetic? Hmm. The good news is we’ve survived the furniture hauling. We unrolled my brand new World Map wallpaper, shipped from a specialist map shop in America, almost three metres wide, and managed to stick it to the wall with only a few bubbles. Balancing on a cupboard, pressed to the wall, her arms spread wide as she held the unweildy canvas in a level position, my girlfriend maintained an impressive degree of patience and good humour. I cannot reflect quite so generously on my own behaviour during the installation. If a crime writer were to find themselves with a creative block, struggling with character dialogue, I can recommend interior decorating to inspire the filthiest, gnarliest bad language. It’d make a mobster blush. The walls are almost good to go. My girlfriend has selected a range of elegantly-framed prints, French and Japanese artists, impressionist and modern works. She hit a few sales and got a few deals, but it doesn’t leave much space for my more man-cavey momentos: pictures of rappers, guitarists, and graffiti art. “Maybe downstairs.” Said my girlfriend, with a smile. “Maybe.” I’d feel a stronger urge to make my case if deep down, I didn’t know my girlfriend is right. Pains me as it does, there are more than a few fashion and design choices which I’ve made over the years, that act as a gentle reminder of my taste’s propensity to stray. There were my paisley trackpants, a little tighter than necessary around the crotch, that for some reason I insisted wearing in public for several years while living in New York. It wasn’t until someone on the subway sincerely asked it I was going to a pyjama party that I thought maybe it was time to switch to jeans. I’m embarrassed to acknowledge that for many years in my early twenties, I had a large framed pencil sketch of a woman in a state of undress, displayed prominently in my home. I bought it at an art fair and thought it was sophisticated, until it was pointed out by several visitors that the picture had an underlying fourth-form-giggling-pubescent-boy quality to its penmanship. Furniture choices have been little better. Couches, lamps, armchairs: almost every time I’ve decided on something bold, I’ve come to see that actually; perhaps subtle would have been a better option. And of course, there’s my long term commitment to minimalism. Friends at my old apartment would comment that it felt like a hotel room crossed with a hospital ward. Not really the aesthetic anyone goes for. For the first time in my adult life, with my girlfriend’s gentle insistence, I’m now the owner of a coffee table. I’m not sure if you’ve heard of them but they’re good for both aesthetic and practical reasons. We also bought a jute rug, something I’d literally never heard of until two weeks ago. And hey, it looks great! The experience of moving and decorating has clarified my perspective. It’s not that I have zero taste. It’s that I have near-zero taste. I have just enough taste to know my taste cannot be trusted. It’s a blessing and a curse. Someone with no taste whatsoever is not aware of their lack of taste. They live blissfully, surrounded by tasteless things but beautifully, totally, naively unaware of the hideousness of their own aesthetic and surroundings. Someone with near-zero taste can appreciate good taste, but struggles to implement it themselves. It means that when it’s time to decorate a home and comes to matters of aesthetic, sometimes it’s better to delegate. My girlfriend moved the cushions from the couch.JaSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/9/20224 minutes, 49 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Emancipation and Guardians of the Galaxy Xmas Special

Emancipation   Will Smith’s movie! A runaway slave forges through the swamps of Louisiana on a tortuous journey to escape plantation owners that nearly killed him.  Guardians of the Galaxy Xmas Special  The Guardians are on a mission to make Christmas unforgettable for Quill and head to Earth in search of the perfect present.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/9/20226 minutes, 11 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Why December 11 is the most common break-up day

Kevin Milne has some thoughts about why December 11 is the most common day for relationships to end, and why he might be in for the chop. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/9/20226 minutes, 44 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Kygo - Thrill Of The Chase

Thrill of the Chase is the fourth studio album by Norwegian record producer and DJ Kygo  The Norwegian DJ and pop hitmaker released the record with no warning, chasing the thrill of the increasingly common surprise digital drop.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/2/20225 minutes, 53 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Desert Star and SAS, Brothers in Arms

Desert Star, Michael Connelly  LAPD detective Renée Ballard and Harry Bosch work together to hunt the killer who is Bosch's 'white whale' - a man responsible for the murder of an entire family.  A year has passed since LAPD detective Renée Ballard quit the force in the face of misogyny, demoralisation and endless red tape. Yet after the chief of police himself tells her she can write her ticket within the department, Ballard takes back her badge, leaving 'the Late Show' to rebuild the cold case unit at the elite Robbery-Homicide Division.  SAS Brothers in Arms, Daniel Lewis  Damien Lewis's new bestseller tells the action-packed, riveting story of the band of mavericks and visionaries who made the SAS. Using hitherto untold stories and new archival sources, Damien Lewis follows one close-knit band of warriors from the SAS foundation through to the Italian landings - chronicling the extraordinary part they played as the tide of the Second World War truly turned in the Allied's favour. This is a narrative of wall-to-wall do-or-die action and daring, chronicling the exploits of some of the most highly-decorated soldiers of the twentieth-century.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/2/20224 minutes, 51 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Festive frolics in New York

Mike Yardley has been touring the Big Apple. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/2/20226 minutes, 36 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: The attraction of lights

It is reasonable well-known among New Zealand Gardeners that insects tend to be attracted to lights; especially lights that are rather blue-ish white in colour. The reason is very simple: these lights contain a rather decent dose of Ultra Violet (UV) light; Insects can see UV better than any other frequency. I have a UV torch at home that allows me to go out walking in the garden and it shows me – more or less – what moths see when they fly through the garden. Some folk use this trick to catch the Guava moths that are on their way to lay eggs inside the new very small guava fruit and feijoa fruit that are being formed in summer; a light coupled with a container with diluted dishwashing liquid is the way to kill those buggers before they start the puncturing and subsequent entering of the tiny fruits… “Get the buggers, before they get our fruit” I have always objected to this idiotic way of “pest control”, simply because there are far better options to stop the guava moths laying eggs on the developing guava and feijoa fruits: Cover the branches with a fine muslin cloth that stops the moths from coming near the fruit’s skin. Those insect-excluding cloths are available in most garden shops. If you must use some pesticides, then Neem Oil or Success are chemicals that can prevent about 50% of the damage occurring too! Light trap “pest control” is really very ineffective as you simply catch a heap of moth (and other) insect species that have nothing to do with fruit of crop damage; most of them are native and have an interesting job to do in the ecosystem. These beetles (Heteronychus and Odontria) are good at pruning shrubs and trees and grasses, but in turn are excellent food for birds, geckoes, skinks, Centipedes and Owls The absolutely imposing huhu beetle emerges from a log of rotting wood where it has been instrumental in the decomposition of that wood and turning it into nutrients for the next generation of our forest. The beetle is devoured by Morepork; of course, the huhu grub is also edible and full of protein; ask the kaka! When I take Teachers out at night with a mercury vapour light-trap (full of UV light) we not just look at beetles, but also at a huge range of moths and other flying insects. Some are just beautiful, like the Lichen moth (Izatha) and the native Scoparia moth, belonging to a very special and numerous group of moths in Aotearoa. All food for insectivorous organisms in your garden; without these native species our birds would go hungry! But one of my absolute favourite moths is this one: Chrysodeixis eriosoma. The architecture of that Noctuid is outrageous and the silver dots on the wings just elegant. And no… I’m not going to describe the larval activities of that species – I’m sure you know it!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/2/20224 minutes, 29 seconds
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Steven Dromgool: Cancel culture and online trolls

Steven Dromgool has been talking with clients about how to deal with cancel culture and online trolls. LISTEN ABOVE    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/2/20228 minutes, 2 seconds
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Dr Byan Betty: Recognising concussion

What is concussion?  Mild brain injury  Bump or blow to head – for example Falls, contact sport, car accidents, previous concussion.  Can interfere with brain function and may or may not be associated with loss of consciousness  Why does it occur?  Brain like jelly – shakes or bounces around in the hard skull, causing minor injury  Can cause bleeding within the skull – small or large.  Can be cumulative – recurrent concussions – may in some cases longer term damage.  How do we recognise?  Affects brain function for short period of time.  Immediate: dazed, confused, vomits, loss consciousness, poor balance,  Longer term: headache continues, fatigue, poor concentration.  Certainly more serious: drowsy, fit, slurrrd speech.  How do we treat?  Most  recover within 2 weeks. Children 4 weeks.   Brain needs to rest – toughing it out or ignoring symptoms can make worse, Immediate rest 48 hours, Avoid loud music, screens, hard physical activity, alcohol.  Return to work or sports activity once fully recovered – often hard for sports people to accept.  If return before fully recovered- increased risk of second concussion which can be serious.  Other things to watch out for?  Symptoms worsening see a doctor as soon as possible.  If persist more than 3-4 weeks long concussion syndrome – specialist support.  Important any concussion reviewed with your Doctor.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/2/20225 minutes, 29 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Spirted and The Road Dance

Spirited - A Christmas Musical  A musical version of Charles Dickens's story of a miserly misanthrope who is taken on a magical journey.  The Road Dance  A young girl lives in the Outer Hebrides in a small village in the years just before WWI. Isolated and hard by the shore, her life takes a dramatic change when a terrible tragedy befalls her.  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/2/20226 minutes, 18 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: San Fran preparing for robots with guns, Apple's new emergency system

San Francisco is preparing for robots with guns  The San Francisco Police Department has prepared a draft policy which would explicitly allow robots to be able to be armed with guns or explosives to be used when the risk to human life is too great. Today most of the robots in their fleet are for bomb disposal but some can be equipped with weapons. They say that deploying a robot like this would be a rare and exceptional circumstance.  Apple's new emergency satellite service has officially saved a person  A man traveling in Alaska on a snow-machine had become stranded at 2am. He used the SOS feature, and the Apple Emergency Response team sent the coordinates to local first responders who arranged for a search team to be sent.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/2/20224 minutes, 21 seconds
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Tara Ward: Three Pines, Willow and Ally McBeal

Three Pines: Alfred Molina stars as a detective investigating cases beneath the idyllic surface of the Quebec village, Three Pines, finding long-buried secrets and facing a few ghosts of his own (Prime Video).   Willow: The legendary sorcerer, returns in a new series set many years after the events of the original film. An unlikely group of heroes set off on a dangerous quest where they must face their inner demons and come together to save their world (Disney+).   Ally McBeal: take a nostalgic trip back to the 90s with all five seasons of the legal dramedy landing on Disney+. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/2/20224 minutes, 14 seconds
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Tom Felton: Draco Malfoy from Harry Potter on his new memoir 'Beyond the Wand'

It was more than a decade ago that a famous boy wizard and his evil counterpart appeared on our screens.  No one could predict the success of the Harry Potter films, least of all the kids who grew up on set at Hogwarts.  And who could forget the first time we were introduced to that blonde haired, blue-eyed sneaky Slytherin antagonist. Tom Felton a.k.a Draco Malfoy is one of the beloved characters of Harry Potter, but finding his feet when filming stopped hasn’t been so easy.  He’s written about it in his new memoir, Beyond the Wand.   Tom Felton joined Jack Tame. LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/2/202215 minutes, 11 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Christmas Mille-Feuilles

To reduce the stress of the Christmas lunch or dinner it’s a good idea to include a dessert that can be prepared ahead of time. This is the most gorgeous and show-stopping Christmas dessert and it’s actually very easy to assemble last minute. 1½ sheets puff pastry (use Paneton flaky puff for the ultimate buttery layers) 2 tablespoons icing sugar, plus extra to serve 3 cups mixed berries - strawberries, blueberries, raspberries Flowers to decorate, optional Mascarpone cream 250g mascarpone 300ml cream ¾ cup icing sugar 1 teaspoon extract Heat oven to 200 C fan bake. Cut the full sheet of pastry in half and place the 3 puff pastry sheets on a baking tray lined with baking paper. Dust with icing sugar then cover with another sheet of baking paper on top and another baking tray to sandwich the pastry. If they don’t all fit on one tray, cook them in batches. Bake for 20-25 minutes until the pastry is dark brown and caramelised. Allow to cool completely. Trim the edges of each cooked pastry sheet with a bread knife making sure they are all the same size. These will now store for up to a week in an airtight container until ready to assemble and serve. For the filling; Whisk mascarpone, cream, icing sugar and vanilla until soft peaks form. Watch it carefully from this point as you don’t want to overwhip it. Whisk on low a little longer until it holds its shape. To assemble: Spoon cream into a piping bag if you want to be fancy (or just spoon it over the pastry) and pipe a third of the cream over one piece of the pastry, then top with a third of the berries (cut large strawberries smaller) and repeat for the two remaining layers, sprinkling over small flowers and a dust of icing sugar to serve. To serve: Use a sharp bread or other serrated knife to cut into slices.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/2/20225 minutes, 15 seconds
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Jack Tame: Messi is the greatest player in the greatest sport

Football is pretty much the only sport where I feel comfortable supporting Australia. But tomorrow morning, even though they’re occupying that rarest position for any Australian sporting team – Underdog - I won’t be backing the Socceroos in the knock-out stages of the Football World Cup. I’ll watching and hoping like anything that Argentina gets up. Not because I feel a deep, personal bond with Argentina, although any country whose identity centres on red wine, red meat, and tango is obviously good with priorities, but because I’m desperately hoping that this immoral World Cup might at least result in one of sport’s greatest fairytale endings. For me, it’s simple. Leo Messi is the greatest player of the greatest sport. Think about it: no team sport is simpler than football. No team sport has a lower barrier to entry. No team sport has a greater global appeal. Anyone, anywhere can play football. And that means no team sport requires a higher standard of individual excellence for a player to become the World’s best. Lionel Messi’s story is everything a sporting fairytale should be. He was a small kid with a hormone deficiency, born into a poor family in Argentina. He was a prodigious talent as a child, left-footed, with a superhuman ability to dribble a football. If not for the hormone injections he received as a teenager, he might never have made it into the top men’s leagues. In 2022, the professional age, surrounded by supreme physical specimens, Leo Messi, the World’s greatest player, is only 5’7”. But Messi’s size is an asset. La Pulga, they call him. The flea. Somehow he’s still fast enough. Still strong enough. And if you watch his highlights in slow motion, it’s obvious that part of his brilliance is his ability to shift his weight much faster than his bigger opponents. In a way, he looks like a boy playing with men, and he threads space and runs through teams with an unrivaled impossibility. How many times in the last 17 or 18 years have defenders, commentators, teammates wondered: how the hell did he do that? You do not have to be a football fan to appreciate Messi’s brilliance. But contrary to his chief rival for the title of World’s greatest, Messi is not the hardest trainer. He’s not an underwear model. He isn’t remotely charismatic when he speaks. What he does have is genius. I was in the stands to watch Messi score at Maracena Stadium in the Brazil World Cup eight years ago. He was in his playing prime, but that cup wasn’t to be. I was in Argentina four years ago in a packed public square when the South Americans were eliminated from the tournament. This is it, they said at the time. Messi’s last chance. But here he is. 35, and surely at his last World Cup. My head says his team doesn’t have a good enough defensive line. They’ve already lost to Saudi Arabia. And in football years, Messi is an old man. But my heart says something different. He might have won however many club trophies. He might have lifted his family from a poor neighbourhood in Rosario to a life of wealth and security. But sport is just a vehicle for stories. And what a magical final chapter it would it be if football’s greatest player ended his dazzling career by lifting football’s greatest prize. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/2/20224 minutes, 19 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Trying Floatation Therapy for the first time

This week Kevin tried out Flotation Therapy for the first time.  That's where you float in a closed pod of with 500 kilos of Epsom salts in about 30 cm of water. Keeps you at zero gravity or weightlessness. It's supposed to be the ultimate in relaxation.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12/2/20228 minutes, 29 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Servants of the Damned and Edda Mussolini

Servants of the Damned, David Enrich   In his acclaimed #1 bestseller Dark Towers, David Enrich presented the never-before-told saga of how Deutsche Bank became the global face of financial recklessness and criminality. Now Enrich turns his eye towards the world of “Big Law” and the nearly unchecked influence these firms wield to shield the wealthy and powerful—and bury their secrets. To tell this story, Enrich focuses on Jones Day, one of the world’s largest law firms.   Edda Mussolini, Caroline Moorehead  A thrilling biography of Edda Mussolini - Benito Mussolini's favourite daughter - and a heart-stopping account of the unravelling of the Fascist dream in Italy, from award-winning historian and biographer Caroline Moorehead See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/26/20225 minutes, 10 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Supercharged in Singapore

Mike Yardley once again making us all jealous with his galivanting through Singapore. LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/26/20228 minutes, 11 seconds
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Kate Hall: Is it sustainable to have children?

Educator, activist and blogger Kate Hall has an interesting take on having children. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/25/20228 minutes, 49 seconds
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Bob Campbell's best buys

Wine: Marisco 2021 The King’s Favour Sauvignon Blanc $21.99  Why I chose it:  - Tasted blind in a lineup of mostly 2022 Marlb. SB it was a standout (gold medal).  - 2021 much better than 2022.  - SB a great antidote for warm, muggy weather.  What does it taste like?  - Intense, pristine sauvignon blanc from a very favourable vintage. Bright, vibrant wine with passion fruit, capsicum, lemongrass and lime/citrus flavours. Refined wine with a crisp, dry finish.  Why it’s a bargain:  - Only a handful of Marlborough SB reach gold medal quality and if you buy it on special for $18 or $19 it is well below average price.  Where can you buy it?  - $21.99 is the RRP, but you can usually buy for a better price than that, for example: Super Liquor Golden Bay $17.99; Wine Central (Auckland) $18.99  Food match?  - I like it with feta cheese of young parmesan cheese on a cracker. Both cheeses have enough natural acidity to make the wine taste rich and creamy.  Will it keep?  - I quite like four or five year-old Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc but most people prefer it at its freshest best. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/25/20222 minutes, 23 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Mercedes is charging you to go faster

Mercedes is charging you a monthly fee to go faster  So you’ve just purchased an expensive car, laying down tens of thousands of dollars.. then to get the most out of it, you need to pay a monthly fee to unlock features. The car maker is purposely limiting capabilities behind a paywall, which you need to pay to get through.   BMW recently tried (and failed) to make you pay to access CarPlay or Android Auto. They also charge you monthly for heated seats!  It seems everything is becoming a subscription now. Why? That’s because companies love the idea of recurring revenue and the ability to use software to differentiate vehicles, rather than needing to change the physical product.   The top 200 passwords have been released - it’s sad reading   “Password” is not a good password! Neither is 123456 or 654321. Use a password manager. Even writing unique passwords in a physical notebook is better than nothing. And use 2FA. Please.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/25/20224 minutes, 57 seconds
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Tara Ward: Echo 3, Wednesday and This Country

Echo 3: An America action thriller about a scientist who disappears on the Venezuelan-Columbian border, and the attempts of her husband and brother to find her (Apple TV+)   Wednesday: Tim Burton directs this fresh - and very dark - coming of age story about the youngest child of the Addams Family (Netflix).   This Country: The BAFTA-winning British mockumentary series about the lives of cousins Kerry and Kurtan finally arrives on TVNZ+, following their day-to-day lives as they grow up in a small village in the Cotswolds (TVNZ+).   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/25/20224 minutes, 43 seconds
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Sarah Wilson: The brains behind the 'I Quit Sugar' movement

It was more than a decade ago now when the I Quit Sugar movement took hold and swept the world – and the brains behind just so happens to be across the ditch in Aussie, Sarah Wilson.   The cookbooks became bestsellers around the world and her business was set to skyrocket – until Sarah decided to sell and donate all the proceeds to charity.   Sarah’s gone on to live an incredibly inspiring life – travelling and living out of one bag for eight years, becoming a leading voice and author on anxiety and hosting her own podcast called Wild.  She’s also taken on perhaps our greatest fight of all...climate change.   Sarah Wilson joined Jack Tame from Sydney. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/25/202215 minutes, 30 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Chocolate Wonder Slice

The beauty of this slice is EVERYONE loves it AND you can pretty much use any type of cereal (cornflakes, rice bubbles, muesli, cocoa pops or even oats) or even Weetbix!  Makes 20-24 squares  50g rice bubbles or cornflakes (about 1 ½ cups) or 3 crushed Weetbix 1 cup coconut 1 cup plain flour (or ¾ cup GF if making GF) 3/4 (150g) cup sugar 2-3 heaped tablespoons cocoa or milo 1 teaspoon baking powder 180g butter, melted 1 tsp vanilla extract CHOCOLATE ICING  1 ½ cups icing sugar 1 heaped tablespoon cocoa 1 teaspoon soft butter Boiling water, added one teaspoon at a time Preheat oven to 180 C. Line a baking tin (20x30cm approx.) with baking paper. In a large bowl combine dry ingredients until well mixed. Crush Weetbix or cornflakes if using as you go if using. Pour in melted butter and vanilla and stir until fully combined. It takes quite a bit of mixing until you have no pockets of flour left. Tumble into the prepared tin and press until firm and smooth. Bake for 20-25 minutes and remove from the oven, set aside to cool Make the icing: Beat all ingredients together adding water a teaspoon at a time and mixing until you have a smooth icing that can be drizzled – not too thick, not too thin. When slice is almost cooled, spread over icing and spread to cover. Allow to set overnight or in fridge. Slice and serve or store in an airtight container. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/25/20225 minutes, 11 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Voting as a teenager

Kevin Milne would like to consider how he'd feel if he were 17 and had been denied the opportunity to vote in the General Elections.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/25/20228 minutes, 34 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Meet Cute, Poker Face and The People We Hate at the Wedding

 Meet Cute  Sheila, a young woman grappling with suicidal thoughts, discovers that a tanning bed in a nail salon is a time machine. Traveling back 24 hours, she relives the best date night of her life over and over, only to decide that her boyfriend, Gary, needs some fixing. Unaware that meddling with the past could ruin the future, Sheila goes even further back in time to turn him into the perfect man -- even though he was already pretty perfect.  Poker Face   A tech billionaire gathers his friends at his home for a high-stakes poker game. Things go awry when his mansion is invaded by a dangerous killer.  The People We Hate at the Wedding  The film follows struggling American siblings Alice (Kristen Bell) and Paul (Ben Platt), who reluctantly agree to attend the wedding of their estranged, wealthy half-sister (Cynthia Addai-Robinson) in the English countryside alongside their mother, Donna (Allison Janney). Over the course of the wedding week, the family's many skeletons are wrenched from the closet, and the unlikely reunion gives everyone the motivation to move their own lives forward.       See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/25/20225 minutes, 56 seconds
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Jack Tame: Black Friday meets the Reserve Bank - how do we spend less?

  No, I haven’t bought a new air fryer. Tempted as I might have been, I’ve resisted the urge to upgrade my TV. So far, I’ve only bought two things in the Black Friday sales and I think even the most staunch anti-capitalists would have to agree, neither could be deemed particularly luxurious: a compost bin for my kitchen, and a shower squeegee. Woo-hoo! It’s one of those curious little quirks of 2022 that this year’s Black Friday should coincide perfectly with the Reserve Bank’s steepest-ever increase to the Official Cash Rate. At the same time as we’re being bombarded by ads for HUGE DISCOUNTS!, we’re being urged, albeit in a slightly more restrained fashion, to stop spending, and fast. HUGE SALES! MASSIVE DISCOUNTS! UP TO 80% OFF!! ‘Cool your jets’ said Adrian Orr. Talk about mixed messaging. Maybe the Reserve Bank needs to take on the big retailers at their own game. I was at Infrastucture New Zealand’s Building Nations conference this week, and ANZ economist Sharon Zollner suggested to the audience the Reserve Bank should take our some billboards in prominent positions around the country. ‘Stop spending so much money or we’ll crank up your Mortgage even more!’ Sharon was joking and the audience laughed... but I dunno... I thought it was actually a bloody good idea! Maybe we need a bit of left-field thinking to help the inflation fight. There’s a good chance it’s too late to do much about the spending over Black Friday weekend. We should turn our attention to what is usually an inevitable Christmas splurge. With the big day less than a month away, my only advice is don’t give people crap for the sake of giving them crap. In the Tame family, we made a pact a few years ago to run a Secret Santa for all the adults. $50 maximum. We put names in a hat and randomly assign gifters and giftees. You only buy one gift and the idea is that you sit around and try to guess who bought yours. You can be a bit creative. I think last year I had gave my Dad a t-shirt with a photo of the family dog. Hardly a life-changing gift but not nothing! It’s fun. It takes a good chunk of the expense out of Christmas, and it ultimately means you’re not ending up with heaps of stuff you don’t want, or spending for the sake of spending. Who knows, what’s good for inflation might ultimately be good for your Christmas, too!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/25/20223 minutes, 2 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Dean Lewis announces 'The Future is Bright' World Tour

Off the back of the release of his brand-new album The Hardest Love, global superstar Dean Lewis has announced The Future is Bright World Tour which will head to New Zealand in March 2023.   The 10-track The Hardest Love album includes previous singles ‘Looks Like Me’ and ‘Hurtless’, as well as the emotive ‘How Do I Say Goodbye’—a devastating song about the looming loss of a parent.   With over 7.5 billion streams, Dean was welcomed into the Spotify Billions Club with his hit song 'Be Alright'. Over the past few years, Dean has performed to hundreds of sold-out crowds worldwide, including headline tours and major festivals in the US, UK, Europe and Australia, and the 2019 AFL Grand Final in Australia. Dean has recently collaborated with Dutch DJ / producer Martin Garrix and Norwegian DJ / producer Kygo. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/18/20225 minutes, 36 seconds
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Catherine Rayne: Love Untold and When McKinsey Comes to Town

Love Untold, Ruth Jones  The funny, moving and uplifting new novel from Ruth Jones, co-creator of Gavin & Stacey and author of the Sunday Times bestsellers Never Greener and Us Three.  Four generations of one family. Four women: Grace, Alys, Elin and Beca.  Each of them has a secret. Each has been misunderstood. And each of them longs for just one thing... to feel loved.    When McKinsey Comes to Town, Walt Bogdanich and Michael Forsyth  An explosive exposé of the world's most prestigious and successful management consultancy.  McKinsey earns billions advising almost every major corporation as well as countless governments, including Britain's, the USA's and China's. It boasts of its ability to maximise efficiency while making the world a better place. Its millionaire partners and network of alumni go on to top jobs in the world's most powerful organisations. And yet, shielded by non-disclosure agreements, its work remains largely secret - until now.    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/18/20224 minutes, 54 seconds
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Mike Yardley: A trail of treats in the Swiss Riviera

Mike Yardley once again is making us jealous with the tales of his travels to the Swiss Reviera. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/18/20226 minutes, 25 seconds
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Steven Dromgool: Fear of commitment

Are commitment issues a big deal in a relationship? What makes it so serious? What can you do if you think your partner is unsure?  What can you do if you are unsure?  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/18/20227 minutes, 31 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Taylor's fans let down by Ticketmaster and Elon's ultimatum

Taylor Swift's fans feel let down by Ticketmaster  The pre-sale earlier this week was Ticketmaster's biggest event ever. To put it into perspective, they had 4x the number of system requests than their last peak. There were 3.5 million registered verified fans, who purchased 1.5 million tickets. There were long digital queues, and now resellers are taking advantage of the demand putting tickets back up on Ticketmaster's own site for thousands of dollars.  In a strange move, Ticketmaster has now canceled a public sale of her tickets “due to extraordinarily high demands on ticketing systems and insufficient remaining ticket inventory to meet that demand”. Seems to be a mixed message! Did they sell too many?   Taylor hasn't been on tour since 2018 so the Swifities are eager to see her IRL again.  Elon Musk's ultimatum to staff - are you hardcore or not?  Staff had to pledge they would be hardcore if they wanted to keep their jobs, or they'd be paid three months salary and need to leave. It seems hundreds of folks have left. Many of the teams that used to be critical to the operation of the site are either wiped out, or down to a couple of people.  There's a new policy for their Twitter Blue subscription service which gives you a verified checkmark - new accounts won't be able to buy the service for 90 days.     See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/18/20224 minutes, 5 seconds
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Hannah McQueen: Navigating divorce financially

It’s never how anyone plans it when they get married, but divorce is very common – which means it could be a curveball you have to contend with.  On the financial as well as the personal – it can be devastating.  So how can you best navigate the dollars and cents side of divorce?  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/18/20225 minutes, 41 seconds
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Tara Ward: Tusla King, 1899 and Pepsi, Where's My Jet?

Tulsa King: Sylvester Stallone stars as New York mafia capo Dwight "The General" Manfredi, who is released from prison after 25 years and exiled by his boss to set up shop in Tulsa, Oklahoma (TVNZ+).  1899: A historical mystery. Passengers on an immigrant ship traveling to the new continent get caught in a mysterious riddle when they find a second vessel adrift on the open sea (Netflix).  Pepsi, Where’s My Jet?: A new documentary about a young man who attempted to win a fighter jet in a Pepsi sweepstakes during the 1990s, and who began a David versus Goliath court battle for the history books. (Netflix).   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/18/20224 minutes, 55 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Coq au Vin aka Chicken in Wine

COQ AU VIN AKA CHICKEN IN WINE  Wine in cooking adds a certain something to a dish that is irresistible. Not only does the kitchen smell divine as it’s cooking but the taste is incredible – perfumed, aromatic, delicious.  Here is my very basic, no-fuss version of that French classic, coq au vin.  Serves four to six  20g butter  3 rashers smoky bacon, diced  2 medium onions, quartered  2 stalks celery (leave whole)  2 tablespoons olive oil  1 whole chicken, cut into 8 pieces, excess fat removed (or use 6–8 chicken pieces)  1 cup red wine  1 cup vegetable or chicken stock  2 bay leaves  2 tablespoons fresh thyme leaves  1 dozen small brown button mushrooms, stalks removed  salt and pepper  1 tablespoon flour and water to thicken (optional)  For this dish, use a large pot or flame/ovenproof casserole dish (Le Creuset or similar) that has a lid. Melt the butter in the pot and add the bacon, onion and celery stalks. Sauté until golden, remove and set aside.  Add the olive oil to the pot and brown the chicken pieces. If necessary, do this in 2–3 batches so as not to overcrowd the pot.  Once finished browning, return the chicken, bacon, onion and celery to the pot. Add the wine and bring to a rapid simmer for 2 minutes — this allows the alcohol to cook off. Add the stock, bay leaves and thyme.  Cover and simmer for 45 minutes to 1 hour (or cover and cook in a preheated oven at 160°C for 1½ hours), until the chicken is very tender and wanting to fall away from the bone. Halfway through the cooking, add the mushrooms and season to taste with salt and pepper.  Just before serving you may choose to thicken the gravy slightly with flour mixed with a little water. Pour it into the pot and cook for a further 10 minutes. You want a sauce that is not too thick, not too thin, just right!  Serve with crusty bread.  Note: Without a doubt, this dish is better made the day before, cooled, then reheated. It deepens the flavours. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/18/20224 minutes, 53 seconds
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Alan Cumming: Scottish screen and stage star on bringing his new show to NZ

You know you’ve probably cracked life when TIME Magazine names you in the top three most-fun people in show business. That’s Alan Cumming.  The Scottish star has been nominated and awarded for just about everything you can think of both on screen and on stage - and Alan’s not slowing down anytime soon.  He’s bringing his own show to our shores next year called Alan Cumming Is Not Acting His Age - a joyful and mischievous exploration of ageing.   Alan Cumming joined Jack Tame. *Tickets are on sale for Alan’s shows in Wellington and Auckland in January from Ticketmaster now*   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/18/202215 minutes, 8 seconds
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Kevin Mile: A taboo that is being tampered with

Kevin Milne wants to talk about Taika Waititi wearing a demure pleated skirt while MCing the MTV Music Awards in Dusseldorf. He says "Good on him" and explains why. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/18/20226 minutes, 20 seconds
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Jack Tame: Gambling reforms miss the biggest problem with pokies

GAMBLING REFORMS MISS THE BIGGEST PROBLEM WITH POKIES I was in Las Vegas for work once upon a time, staying at an aging casino, and I witnessed something I’ve never forgotten. I went out to film a story at about 6pm one evening and as I headed out, I passed a guy sitting two or three seats in on a long row of slot machines, trying his luck. The shoot went late. I came back to my hotel room at about 1am. And as I crossed the casino floor I looked down at the same row of slot machines. The guy was still there. I had a flight to catch the next morning. I got up. Packed my suitcase. Came down at about 8am. You can see where this is going... Same guy. Same clothes. Same machine. Same dead eyes as he hit that button over and over again. I dunno what it is about pokies. There is something about them, some little piece of psychological witchcraft, that short circuits the human brain. And while here in New Zealand you’d hope we’re at the stage where no one can sit and mindlessly whittle away their money on a pokie machine for fourteen hours straight, it’s hard to overstate how destructive a gambling addiction can be. The Government’s announced a review of pokies and the Gambling Act, alongside some pokie reforms that’ll come into force next year. But the reforms are much weaker than what was initially proposed. For the time being, there will be no cuts to pokie jackpots, no ban on free rolls, and softer penalties for pub owners who don’t follow the rules, compared to what was proposed. Instead, the changes that have been confirmed concern where pokies and ATMs can be positioned in an pub, and rules around how pub owners should check for and treat problem gamblers. It’s not nothing, but it’s also not a profound change. Some problem gambler advocates have expressed disappointment, but I must admit to being a bit surprised to read comments from the Chair of the Gaming Machine Association. Peter Dengate-Thrush told Stuff that even his organisation felt the changes didn’t go far enough, the Minister had missed an opportunity, and facial recognition software to identify problem gamblers should be introduced across New Zealand. For me though, there’s a fundamental problem with pokie machines in New Zealand that still needs to be addressed. And so far, almost no one wants to touch it. Under our law, a minimum of 40 percent of pokie proceeds have to be returned to the community as charitable grants. We’re always reminded when a sports club or a dance group has been supported by a grant from a charitable gaming trust. Many people don’t give it much thought – a charitable grant sounds great! But I see it differently. The ends don’t justify the means. The community funding structure is a very clever way to excuse, normalise, and even subtly promote hugely damaging, antisocial behaviour. Can’t we find a better way to fund community organisations? A way that doesn’t mean our sports clubs and hobby groups are relying on New Zealanders pouring their money into pokie machines in order to survive? Money doesn’t grow on trees but we’re robbing Peter to pay Paul. What’s the point in supporting one community with a charitable grant if you have to damage another community in order to get the money in the first place? These government reforms are a start but if you really want to smash the problem, follow the money. The whole structure has to change.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/18/20224 minutes, 20 seconds
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Adam Duritz: Counting Crows lead singer ahead of their NZ tour

Counting Crows has sold more than 20 million records and spent two decades touring the world.  After a bit of a hiatus, they released a new album last year and are returning to our shores in March.  Lead singer Adam Duritz has led the way through it all and he joined Jack Tame. LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/12/202214 minutes, 3 seconds
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Jack Tame: Milestones in my new place

It’s not the first home I’ve ever owned. That privilege goes to my apartment, which I officially bid farewell to last month after almost six years. But it’s the first house I’ve ever owned. And who knows? Life is what happens when you’re busy making plans, right? But I bought it thinking it might just be the first family home I ever own. I picked up the keys last week. The agent met me at the front door. A big old villa in a great location with much more space than I have furniture for, and a backyard with a feijoa tree. I even bought a lawnmower. Me! A lawnmower! My first ever lawnmower. A home that would be perfect for kids. Perfect for BBQs. Perfect for visiting inlaws. I feel very fortunate, indeed. At least, I did. Ever since we went unconditional I’ve been counting down the days until my first sleep in the new pad. I thought my girlfriend and I would share a delicious dinner. I’d bring in my bed, make it up with my fanciest linen, and slip between the sheets for a glorious night of rest, blissful in the peace and security of my own four walls. Instead, I spent my first night in the new pad alone, tossing and turning and tangling a sleeping bag on a blow up mattress with fever dreams and a dehydrated mucus mouth. Thanks Covid. There will be other milestones to celebrate. My first night in a real bed. Our first meal at the dining table. Our first full mortgage repayments. GULP. So many people have reassured me that after a few months, you just get used to paying the mortgage and don’t think too much of it. Given the size of my mortgage, I’m not quite so sure I’ll be forgetting it anytime soon. Doing the maths makes me want to throw up in my mouth. But even though over the course of my adult lifetime I’ll be paying the equivalent of several years’ income in interest payments, there is one little thing I keep reminding myself of in an effort to quell my disgust. Sure, I’ll be handing over hundreds of thousands of dollars in interest, but at least I’ll be handing it over to a New Zealand-owned bank. I’m not suggesting the system is perfect. But don’t forget, as customers we still have choices.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/12/20222 minutes, 50 seconds
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Kevin Milne: What ever happened to Fives?

Kevin Milne is trying to track down a sport that he says has disappeared from New Zealand. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/12/20226 minutes, 42 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Enola Holmes 2 and Black Panther: Wakanda Forever

Enola Holmes 2   Enola Holmes takes on her first case as a detective, but to unravel the mystery of a missing girl, she'll need some help from friends -- and brother Sherlock.    Black Panther: Wakanda Forever  Queen Ramonda, Shuri, M'Baku, Okoye and the Dora Milaje fight to protect their nation from intervening world powers in the wake of King T'Challa's death. As the Wakandans strive to embrace their next chapter, the heroes must band together with Nakia and Everett Ross to forge a new path for their beloved kingdom.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/12/20226 minutes, 16 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Rhubarb crumble slice

Make this gorgeous slice and serve it warm with vanilla ice cream for a dessert that heroes rhubarb or cold with a cuppa!  Makes 12-16 squares 250g cold butter 415g (about 3 ¼ cups) plain flour Decent pinch salt 3-5 tablespoons cold water 1 cup whole almonds ¾ cup raw sugar 500g chopped rhubarb Grease and line a Swiss roll tin (23x33cm), leaving some of the baking paper hanging over the long sides. Rub/grate chilled butter into the flour and salt (or do it in a food processor). Toss the butter in the flour. Divide this mixture equally into two bowls. Into one, pour 3-5 tablespoons of ice-cold water, stirring first with a knife to a scraggy mess then add a bit more water before turning out to knead briefly so it comes together. Flatten to a disc, wrap and chill for 20 minutes. Heat oven to 180 C. Blitz almonds in a food processor until it’s a coarse crumb. Add this crumb and the sugar to the other half of the flour/butter and mix to combine to a crumble. Roll chilled dough on a well-floured bench to fit your tin, big enough to come up the sides, and carefully transfer to your tin. Press into the corners and up the sides. Cover with chopped rhubarb then spoon over crumble topping. Bake for 50 minutes or until browned on top and juice from the fruit has started to bubble through. Cool in the tin until just warm then slice. Eat with scoops of ice cream. YUM! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/12/20225 minutes, 22 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Twitter continues to be a mess

We're watching a company implode, in real-time, because of self-detonation  Elon Musk fired half the company last Friday, then after the weekend reportedly asked some of the folks to come back.   They launched new "official account" labels on profiles to differentiate between the blue paid-for checkmarks, then suddenly scrapped them. Launched the $8 Twitter Blue plan on Wednesday, and now, two days later have already pulled it from the app. This came after basically all the worse-case scenarios came true: companies had accounts created with their logos and names, became verified, then began announcing things that weren't true. Fake accounts for politicans popped up, looked real because of the checkmark, then began tweeting crazy things. Like a fake George W Bush account that said he missed killing Iraquis, or a fake Donald Trump account that apologized to President Joe Biden. Jesus became verified.  Someone already made a Chrome extension to change the labels to indicate what are paid for, and actually verified accounts.   A swath of their executives have left - including those in privacy, policy and security. Oh, and they have a communications team of zero. They're losing $4 million a day. Elon sold an additional $4 billion of Tesla stock to pump into Twitter. Advertisers are bailing. They're being watched closely by the Federal Trade Commission. And Elon says bankruptcy may be in the future.  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/12/20223 minutes, 36 seconds
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Tara Ward: The English, The Crown and The Black Ferns: Wāhine Toa

The English: Emily Blunt and Rafe Spall star in this Western series set in Wyoming about a woman seeking revenge on the man she sees as responsible for the death of her son (Prime Video).  The Crown:  Imelda Staunton, Dominic West, Jonathan Pryce, Lesley Manville join the cast of Netflix’s popular drama about the British Royal Family (Netflix).   The Black Ferns: Wāhine Toa: An inspiring two-part documentary following the world champion Black Ferns as they prepare to defend the Rugby World Cup (Neon/Sky Go).   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/12/20226 minutes, 6 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: This month is Diabetes Action Month

Dr. Bryan Betty talks diabetes with Jack Tame. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/12/20223 minutes, 49 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Today’s segment is brought to you by the letters SP

Spots on Leaves.  A very common plant health problem that makes leaves look rather tatty and unhealthy.  A good example is black spot on roses; dark brown to black in colour, often with a distinct yellow “ring” around it.  These are fungal disorders and the best way to battle them is by prevention. Keep your plants spaced-out, in other words: give them room to dry out in the wind after a rain shower. The quicker those leaves are dry, the shorter the infection time will be.  Spittle bugs  South Island gardeners will know them well – it seems a typical critter in our neck of the woods.  The larvae of these frog hoppers love to extract juices out of their host plants (lavender is wonderfully affected in my garden, but Coprosma and lots of other plants are also a target.  The way these insects protect themselves is by creating a wet bubbly bubble that gives them a good shelter site, so that predators (birds, and predatory insects) cannot find them. Try wiping the spittle away and you’ll find a nice, green insect staring at you.  It might even show you its clever “move”, with abdominal contractions blowing air into it’s wet nest, causing those spittle bubbles. It protects them from dehydration and temperature fluctuations.  Their damage to the plants is quite minor, so don’t even worry trying to control them.   Spiders  Spiders are another critter that becomes quite obvious at this time of the year.  For starters there will be heaps of these arachnids on your plants already, feasting on whatever might fall into the spider trap (the “website”). Some spiders literally go hunting on foot, grabbing small prey like caterpillars and moths, beetles and crashed flies.  But the coolest arachnids are those that make some significant spider egg sacs full of hatching eggs. I found some egg sacs on my wall with hundreds of tiny spiderlings dispersing in all directions on silken threads.  “Ballooning” is one of the cleverest ways to move long distances, away from hungry brothers and sisters.  Little Jumping spiders also make their presence known inside the house – hunting for small flies in your kitchen and lounge areas, with agility and precision. Those Spiders are really my favourite critters of the summer - I can watch them for hours. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/12/20222 minutes, 45 seconds
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Kate Hall: Soft plastic recycling

Kate Hall has a few points to make when it comes to recycling soft plastic in New Zealand. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/12/20227 minutes, 45 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Capital highlights in Bern, Switzerland

Mike Yardley talks to Jack Tame about his travels in Bern, Switzerland. LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/12/20226 minutes, 52 seconds
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Jack Tame: Win or lose, the Black Ferns have been a joy to watch

Last weekend’s semi-final was one of the most exhilarating, desperate, thrilling rugby games I’ve ever seen in my life. It felt chaotic. Totally unpredictable. The French dominated at the breakdown. The New Zealanders played at such a tempo, lunging and scrambling and hurling the ball wide. God, it was exciting. After 80 minutes, you’d have to say agree, no team deserved to lose that game. But the best teams will take every flicker of good fortune they can muster. And so tonight, the Black Ferns contest the final. I’ve told you before about my past experience with the women’s sevens rugby team. It was eight years ago in Brazil, when the team had just been formed to compete on the World tour. I flew down and spent a week living and working with them in Rio de Janiero. Because rugby sevens was to become an Olympic sport, and because there was now a Women’s World’s Series to contest, New Zealand Rugby had started investing in women’s rugby in a way they hadn’t before. Still, back then, few Kiwi rugby fans would have known the players’ names. I was only there for a week, but by living, and eating, playing cards and even exercising with the team, I had a really special insight into a group of young women would be soon be stars. They were captained by a workhorse called Sarah Hirini. They had a star winger called Portia Woodman and a young smartass cracking jokes in the locker room and putting gangsta’ rap on the stereo, called Ruby Tui. They were young. They were very fresh. But already you could sense extraordinary potential. That team won Sevens World Champs after Sevens World Champs, but when it came to the Rio Olympics, they had to settle for silver. It was a tough experience. I was there at the Olympic Park that night in 2016, watching the match slip from their hands. They didn’t deserve to win but nonetheless it was very emotional. But you might also remember how it ended for the Sevens Sisters. Five years later at the Tokyo Olympics, they turned it around. Five years of graft, separation from their families, and Covid-19 disruption, and they did it. They were the darlings of New Zealand’s Olympic team, and they returned home with gold medals swinging from their necks. Sarah Hirini, Portia Woodman, and Ruby Tui will all start tonight. This game is different, I get that. England are the dominant team in World rugby. Their forwards are incredible. And most obviously, this is a game of fifteens, not rugby sevens. But finals are decided by moments. And perhaps even more valuable than form, is a team’s capacity to respond to pressure. This will be the biggest crowd to ever watch a women’s rugby match. And pressure does funny things. No matter what happens, nice to know that within that amazing Black Ferns squad, there are players who’ve been there and done that. I don’t need to state the obvious but I will anyway. Win or lose, the Black Ferns have been a joy to watch throughout this World Cup. Their humanity as individuals makes them far more fun to support than the men. They don’t hesitate to show emotion. For their sake, tonight, I really hope it’s joy.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/12/20223 minutes, 56 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Passenger and Matthew Perry's memoir

The Passenger – Cormac McCarthy   Traversing the American South, from the garrulous bar rooms of New Orleans to an abandoned oil rig off the Florida coast, The Passenger is a breathtaking novel of morality and science, the legacy of sin, and the madness that is human consciousness.  Friends, Lovers and the Big Terrible Thing – Matthew Perry  'Hi, my name is Matthew, although you may know me by another name. My friends call me Matty. And I should be dead.'  So begins the riveting story of acclaimed actor Matthew Perry, taking us along on his journey from childhood ambition to fame to addiction and recovery in the aftermath of a life-threatening health scare. Before the frequent hospital visits and stints in rehab, there was five-year-old Matthew, who travelled from Montreal to Los Angeles, shuffling between his separated parents; fourteen-year-old Matthew, who was a nationally ranked tennis star in Canada; twenty-four-year-old Matthew, who nabbed a coveted role as a lead cast member on the talked-about pilot then called Friends Like Us. . . and so much more.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/12/20225 minutes, 30 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Mitch James - 'patience'

After a four-year wait, Mitch James has released his second studio album, patience. The album arrives half a decade after James' breakout single, 'No Fixed Abode’, and is the work of an artist who's emerged from various private and professional challenges with a greater sense of purpose.  The 27-year-old James lives in the Auckland suburb of Mission Bay, but he created much of patience in Los Angeles with producer and former Tonight Alive guitarist, Whakaio Taahi.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/12/20227 minutes, 13 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard

King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard are an Australian rock band formed in 2010 in Melbourne, Victoria. LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/4/20227 minutes, 30 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Twitter is a mess and renewed calls for a TikTok ban

Twitter is a hot mess I just can't look away from   As one employee asked - Has the Red Wedding begun yet? Reference to the massacre scene in Game of Thrones   It's estimated that 50 percent of the company has been fired via email. Employees are now suing the company for violating labour laws which in California require notification of large layoffs. Those effected had their access to email and Slack cut off, and their laptops wiped. Then got an email, to their personal email address, with more details on "next steps".  Elon Musk says Twitter has seen a drop in revenue since taking over, which makes sense because advertisers are worried about what content will be on the platform, or its stability, after layoffs. Twitter was also not a "must buy" from an advertising perspective, so is probably an easy decision to cut from media plans.  Then there's what's next for the product - lots of rumours, lots of speculation, but apparently it launches Monday.  There's a renewed call for a TikTok ban  This time from a commissioner at the FCC (Federal Communications Commission). He had previously called for Google & Apple to ban the app from their app stores - but that wouldn't stop direct access because it's also available on the web. The FCC has no power to ban TikTok but is drawing parallels to Huawei or ZTE.   What we know so far.. There is currently a negotiation in place between the US government's Committee on Foreign Investment in the USA. US user data is now sitting on Oracle powered servers in the US, but Bytedance hasn't committed to cutting off data flows to China. The concern is that China's government could use that data to track individuals - which could expose undisclosed military sites, real-time locations of US officials and their families, and more.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/4/20226 minutes, 29 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Falcons and ro-magpies for safe aviation

Wingspan (the Bird of Prey Trust, located in Rotorua) has been an attraction for decades.  These wonderful people have been looking after injured falcons, kahu and owls for decades.  The way they re-habilitate these birds is by applying ancient falconry techniques which are thousands of years old.  I am absolutely in love with this Trust for the amazing work and research they do and for the fact they use their knowledge and facilities for education of our younger and older generations. https://www.wingspan.co.nz/  Go and take a look when they train and fly their falcons at Wingspan; see how these agile birds become fitter and fitter through flight training.  The coolest aspect of these flying spectacles is the “drone hunt”, whereby a falcon chases a polystyrene drone in the shape and colours of a Magpie (called a “ro-magpie”) It truly is an aerial battle between falcon and drone… ending in a real live falcon literally surfing a polystyrene drone to the ground  Incredible!  Now, falcons have not just been used to fly for fun (A big hobby in the Middle East!); initially these birds were used to hunt delectable prey, such as rabbits, pheasants, partridge and quail, to name a few targets. This was a food-gathering exercise!  Falcons have also been used to scare away the small birds that love to eat ripening grapes in vineyards; and in some countries falcons are also used to remove birds from places where they can cause dramatic damage (like around runway airports)  Rotorua airport is situated near the lake and quite a few birds tend to cross the runway at the most inappropriate times (when planes land or take off). That could cause “bird strike”.  Something to be avoided at all cost.  The Wingspan crew were asked what the options were to scare birds away from these areas and the crew came up with a plan to use the scary magpie drone, instead of a real live falcon.  Falcons are not always reliable when it comes to cruising the open skies in a pre-planned pattern (they sometimes refuse to come back to the falconer’s glove!!)  A ro-magpie drone, on the other hand, is something that can be operated from a safe distance and with reliability.  And that large Black and White Magpie is a really dangerous predator, in the eyes of a small song bird, a plover or a duck See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/4/20223 minutes, 56 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Colditz, Demon Copperhead

Catherine Raynes has been reading Colditz by Ben Macintyre and Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/4/20224 minutes, 48 seconds
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Jordan Rondel: The Caker on calling out Chrissy Teigen over cake kits

Jordan Rondel has been in the news this week, standing up for the little guy against the big celebrity driven companies – calling out a cake company who released cake kits that look very similar to hers. There was also the added complication that these kits were associated with Chrissy Teigen – who Rondel had just collaborated with. Some are questioning whether all publicity is good publicity. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/4/202213 minutes, 35 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Sauvignon Blanc for the muggy weather

Bob Campbell has been sipping on the Rapaura Springs 2022 Sauvignon Blanc to keep cool in this muggy weather for just $19.99 a bottle. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/4/20226 minutes, 29 seconds
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Tara Ward: Inside Man, Rogue Heroes, This Country

Inside Man: David Tennant and Stanley Tucci star in this drama about an American death row prisoner with a sideline in solving mysteries, who helps a British journalist search for a friend who has suddenly disappeared (Netflix)  Rogue Heroes: Inspired by true events, this British drama is set during the darkest days of World War II when a band of maverick soldiers banded together to form the world's greatest Special Forces unit, the SAS (TVNZ+).   This Country: Two seasons of the BAFTA-winning mockumentary about the lives of cousins Kerry and Kurtan, as they grow up in a small village in the Cotswolds (TVNZ+).  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/4/20225 minutes, 13 seconds
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Lucy Corry: Strawberry, radish and cucumber salad with mint dressing

Strawberry, radish and cucumber salad with mint dressing  SERVES 4  PREP TIME: 15 MINUTES   COOK TIME: NIL  FOR THE DRESSING:  1 cup loosely packed fresh mint  leaves, washed and dried  ½ tsp honey  3½ tbsp freshly squeezed  lemon juice  3½ tbsp extra virgin olive oil  ¼ tsp salt  FOR THE SALAD:  250g (1 punnet) strawberries,  washed, hulled and sliced 1 medium-sized telegraph  cucumber, peeled, deseeded  and sliced  1 cup sliced radishes (about a small bunch, depending on size)  150g feta, crumbled small mint leaves, for garnishing  Sweet, crunchy and refreshing, with creamy, salty crumbs of feta and a hint of heat from new-season radishes, this is a complete pick-me-up. It’s best enjoyed soon after making.  Make the dressing first: put all the ingredients in a blender or small food processor and whiz until smooth. Taste for seasoning and set aside.  Tumble the sliced strawberries, cucumber, radishes and crumbled feta into a serving bowl. Drizzle over the dressing and toss gently. Garnish with mint leaves and serve.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/4/20225 minutes, 30 seconds
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Kevin Milne: A fascinating move by the Automobile Association

Kevin Milne joined Francesca Rudkin to talk about the decision by the Automobile Association to now attend to bike breakdowns as well as cars. This is much to do with the increasing number of e-bikes in use.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
11/4/20224 minutes, 46 seconds
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Music: Artic Monkey's seventh album, The Car

The Car is the seventh album by Artic Monkeys, released just last week on the 21st of October. Estelle Clifford has been listening to the album and has a few thoughts to share. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/28/20227 minutes, 20 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Superb strolls in Genova

Mike Yardley has been exploring the streets of Genova. For more tips on tripping the treats of Genova, Mike's article is on the website.   www.newstalkzb.co.nz/lifestyle  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/28/20228 minutes, 45 seconds
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Books: Jodi Picolut's Mad Honey, Abyss by Max Hastings

Mad Honey - Jodi Picoult   “MAD HONEY has all of the things: alternating narratives, suspense, courtroom drama, and a love story at its core. It’s about authenticity, identity, and it explores the secrets we keep and the risks we take in order to become our true selves.””    Abyss - Max Hastings  Bestselling author Max Hastings offers a welcome re-evaluation of one of the most gripping and tense international events in modern history—the Cuban Missile Crisis—providing a people-focused narrative that explores the attitudes and conduct of Russians, Cubans, Americans, and a terrified world that followed each moment as it unfolded.  In The Abyss, Max Hastings turns his focus to one of the most terrifying events of the mid-twentieth century—the thirteen days in October 1962 when the world stood on the brink of nuclear war. Hastings looks at the conflict with fresh eyes, focusing on the people at the heart of the crisis—America President John F. Kennedy, Soviet First Secretary Nikita Khrushchev, Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro, and a host of their advisors.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/28/20223 minutes, 30 seconds
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Kate Hall: We're washing our clothes wrong - how to wash and care for your clothes to make them last longer

Sustainable fashion is more about how you WASH & CARE for your clothes than what you buy:  + Most of us are washing our clothes wrong  + When we wash our wardrobes properly, our clothes last longer, stay in better condition, we keep our favourite garments alive for longer, save water/energy, and buy less  + Wash 30 degrees or lower  + Spot wash  + Front loader is generally more gentle on clothes than top loader  + Don't do 'one wear, one wash'  + Hang things out to air dry (Tim & I have a wooden rack where our washing basket used to be - we hang things there to air that can be worn another time)  + Hand wash things that need it (you can do this in your shower!)  + Spring/summer is a great time to re-adjust your washing habits  + I personally spend more time caring for my clothes than at a mall - saves me money, it's my happy place (I know it's not for everyone), and I feel more loyal to the clothes I own   Essentially, no one talks about how to wash our clothes enough. Even in the sustainability world!  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/28/20227 minutes, 45 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: Bell's Palsy

Doctor Bryan Betty has the run down on Bell's Palsy and what is looks like. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/28/20225 minutes, 28 seconds
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Tech: Disastrous week for big tech in the sharemarket, Musk takes over twitter

A disastrous week for big tech  Meta's, aka Facebook, shares fell off a cliff after posting a second straight quarterly decline. Revenue is down, and spending is off the charts. It's Realty Labs division has lost $9 billion so far this year trying to make the metaverse happen. It warned that Q4 isn't looking much better.   Alphabet's, aka Google, stocks plunged 9% when they posted their earnings which showed year-over-year revenues sliding. They’re going to review every project the company has in an effort to cut cost.     Elon's now in charge at Twitter   The former CEO and CFO are out - Elon is now in charge. He tweeted the "bird is freed". Twitter has been delisted from the stock exchange as the $44 billion deal closed overnight. Ahead of that, he made an appearance at HQ, and even brought some Tesla engineers to spend time reviewing Twitter code.  So what's next? We'll see. Musk has said that he's willing to reverse lifetime bans on people (read: Donald Trump). He wants to cut costs - he's looking at forcing employees to return to the office hoping it'll cause some to quit. He says they'll be looking at new ways to make money.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/28/20223 minutes, 53 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Choose your plants wisely

Designing your garden can be somewhat troublesome; You can buy all the book in the world (or in New Zealand) and that only helps to give you the idea of what kind of plant, shrub or tree you’d like the look of. But will they survive, after you’ve planted them? Do they “cope” with that spot and your local climate? This week I drove south, along the fabulous spine of the South Island. In Christchurch is was 24 degrees; Geraldine 21 degrees, Burkes Pass 17 and in the Lindis Pass (my Favourite pass of all!) Just 13 degrees. There were lots of tussocks (the character of that pass) but also lots of smaller Alpine plants. Imagine you’d like to plant some of those alpines in your garden, much lower to sea-level, you may find them to be pretty frost-tender. In fact, many alpine plants will be killed in a severe Inland Canterbury frost. Why? Because in the mountains the temperatures might be reallllly low, but the plants will certainly be protected by the layer of snow on top of them. Little tricks of the local conditions – something we need to learn.   1) Go and visit your local Botanic Gardens and see what survives in your neck of the woods. Honestly, those gardens are your local library for your local meteorological conditions. 2) A walk around your neighbourhood will also give you hints of what grows well 3) Now’s the time to visit the various Garden festivals around new Zealand: Hurunui 27-30 October Rural open gardens in the coolest foothills Taranaki 28 Oct to 2 Nov (Fabulous Garden fest with lots of open gardens for a week) Garden Marlborough (another famous long-lived event) 3-6 November Wairarapa Garden Tours 5-6 Nov Waiheke Garden fest 5-6 Nov Bay of Plenty Garden and Arts Festival – 16-20 Nov… Juuls and I go there every year – just because! No doubt there will be others - check your local papers!! LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/28/20223 minutes, 43 seconds
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Tara Ward: White Lotus, The Devil's Hour, and The Playlist

White Lotus: a new series of the American satire set in a tropical resort, which follows the exploits of various guests and employees over the span of a week (Neon, from 31 October).  The Devil’s Hour: Peter Capaldi and Jessica Raine star in this British thriller about a woman who wakes up every night at exactly 3:33am, in the middle of the so-called devil's hour between 3am and 4am (Prime Video).   The Playlist: In this fictionalized account about the early days of Spotify, a Swedish tech entrepreneur and his partners set out to revolutionize the music industry with a legal streaming platform (Netflix).  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/28/20225 minutes, 18 seconds
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Two Raw Sisters: New cookbook, making raw easy, and working with your sister

Summer is nearly here!  …and with it comes outdoor entertaining, friends around for BBQs and of course, Christmas lunch or dinner.   Impressing your guests in the kitchen doesn’t need to be a stressful affair – that's the ethos of sisters Rosa and Margo Flannagan a.k.a The Two Raw Sisters.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/28/202214 minutes, 34 seconds
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Jack Tame: Live from NYC Baby!

I’d forgotten how loud the subways are. The way they clatter and shudder and screech and smash as they pull into a big station. There are no niceties with the subway. No comforts. No safety barriers on the platforms. No fabric or armrests or cushions on the seats. It’s all utility. Grime and rats. Every car, designed to be hosed out with a water blaster at the end of a very long night. I love the way the delivery guys on their electric bikes ride wtih plastic bags on their hands to protect them from the cold. I love the way strangers will compliment strangers’ outfits.‘I love your coat!’‘Thank you!’I love the yelling, the hustling, the what-the-f**k-is-that-smell? The way you have to pull off to the side on the footpath. I love that everyone constantly jay-walks. I love the grandeur. The stone, the steel, the glass. The way you can be lost in Midtown in the shadows of all the skyscrapers then suddenly reach a little gap of streaming sunshine. Hallelujah! The pianist playing a baby grand in the park as auburn leaves swish all around him. Those little pockets of peace amidst the go-go-go. I love the old tenements. The way people are prepared to pay thousands of dollars a month for a scummy apartment up six flights of stairs with a bathroom in which you can only close the door if you sit on the toilet at an angle. I love the food. I. Love. The. Food. I don’t love the way that when you walk in the city, mysterious droplets of air conditioner fluid sometimes drop onto your face from high above. But I love that people don’t seem to care. And more than anything, I love that they’re from everywhere. Every colour. Every age. Every style. Every accent. Every language. Every job. Every dream. Humanity’s great smorgasbord. There cannot be a more intensely diverse place on this Earth. I love cities. You don’t hear that enough. Any schmuck can appreciate a mountain range and a waterfall but there is also real beauty in a good city. Sure it’s easy to be distracted by the filth and the clatter. But beyond that, there is elegance in communal living. The way people always use good public space. Usually when I explore a place for the first time, I don’t expect to return. Unless I have friends or family or a specific reason to visit in the future, I just figure I probably won’t be back. There are too many places to explore in this World. Why waste an opportunity by revisiting a place you already know? But there are a handful of exceptions to the rule, a handful of cities, that are just different. They are just so very alive, oscillating and changing in a way that makes it refreshing to return time and again. And for me at least, there’s one city at the top of the heap. New York. It’s not a great city. It’s the great city.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/28/20223 minutes, 52 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Hot ’n’ spicy wings AKA Buffalo Wings

Spicy, buttery, crispy . . . they’ve got it all going on. I first fell in love with spicy wings over 30 years ago whilst on a working holiday in USA. They were a revelation to me — devastatingly spicy but tempered by a cooling sour cream sauce for dipping the wings into.  Serves one  4 free-range whole chicken wings, or use 8 nibbles  salt  oil for baking  juice of 1 lemon  1 tablespoon chilli sauce - I use tabasco  ½ teaspoon smoked paprika  ½ teaspoon cayenne pepper  3 tablespoons melted butter  ¼ cup sour cream  2 tablespoons grated Parmesan or frozen blue cheese (see note)  Preheat the oven to 220°C. Line a baking tray with baking paper. Using kitchen shears, cut between the joint of the wings to produce a drumette and a wingette (I may have made that word up, winging it, as it were, but I’m sticking with it) if using whole wings. Place the chicken pieces on the lined baking tray and liberally season with salt. Drizzle with oil and place in the oven to bake until cooked through and golden, about 25–30 minutes. In a saucepan, whisk together the lemon juice, chilli sauce, paprika and cayenne pepper. Bring to a simmer over a medium heat. Whisk in the melted butter and return to a simmer until the sauce thickens slightly. Remove the chicken from the oven and toss in the hot sauce. Season. Combine sour cream and cheese in a small bowl. Dip wings into the cooling sour cream sauce and eat. Note: Freezing blue cheese makes it super easy to grate  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/28/20225 minutes, 47 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Bros and The Woman King

Bros  Bobby is a neurotic podcast host who's happy to go on Tinder dates and content not to have a serious relationship. That all changes when he meets Aaron, an equally detached lawyer who likes to play the field. Repeatedly drawn to each other, both men begin to show their vulnerable sides as their undeniable attraction turns into something resembling a commitment.    The Woman King  In the 1800s, a group of all-female warriors protects the African kingdom of Dahomey with skills and fierceness unlike anything the world has ever seen. Faced with a new threat, Gen. Nanisca trains the next generation of recruits to fight against a foreign enemy that's determined to destroy their way of life.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/28/20227 minutes, 9 seconds
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Kevin Milne: A journalism class reunion

Kevin Milne has managed to track down his journalism class from 1970, and this weekend the group is having a reunion. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/28/20226 minutes, 29 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Taylor Swift – Midnights

Midnights is the upcoming tenth studio album by American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift, set for release on October 21, 2022, via Republic Records. Announced at the 2022 MTV Video Music Awards, the album marks Swift's first body of new work since her ninth studio album, Evermore. LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/21/20225 minutes, 48 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Boys from Biloxi and I'm Glad my Mom Died

Boys from Biloxi - John Grisham The #1 New York Times bestselling author returns to Mississippi with the riveting story of two sons of immigrant families who grow up as friends, but ultimately find themselves on opposite sides of the law. Grisham’s trademark twists and turns will keep you tearing through the pages until the stunning conclusion.  I'm Glad my Mon Died - Jeanette McCurdy  A heartbreaking and hilarious memoir by iCarly and Sam & Cat star Jennette McCurdy about her struggles as a former child actor—including eating disorders, addiction, and a complicated relationship with her overbearing mother—and how she retook control of her life. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/21/20224 minutes, 22 seconds
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Mike Yardley: A dip with Liechtenstein

Resident traveller Mike Yardley has been visiting Liechtenstein. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/21/20228 minutes, 49 seconds
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Steven Dromgool: Apology languages

Steven Dromgool has some relationship advice around what are known as 'apology languages'. You can find out about your apology language with a quiz here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/21/20228 minutes, 47 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: The next lesson in language and definitions

The next lesson in language and definitions: Native – Endemic – Beneficial – Pest  Remember: a Native organism is firmly established in NZ; it’s origin could be from overseas (or an ancient continent like Gondwanaland), but it got here, somehow, on its own accord (flying, drifting on logs, floating in the air, etc) without assistance from humans (luggage, commercial goods, planes, boats, smuggled, imported, etc). When I work with Teachers (and kids) at schools (Mazda’s Treemendous Education Program; Blake Inspire; Field-Based STEM), I often analyse this definition of native species. So: I ask the question: “What is the latest or newest native bird of prey in New Zealand?”  Examples: Silvereyes (white-eyes, Wax-eyes) established here in the 1830s. The first recorded nesting/breeding took place in 1832. Not many people know that, especially since these birds are very numerous in Aotearoa.  The Māori name is “Tauhou”, which means stranger or new-comer  This sentinel tree can tell an enormous number of stories – a serious curriculum full of nature knowledge. LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/21/20223 minutes, 1 second
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Hannah McQueen: What do you need to think about with your mortgage in conditions like these?

Mortgages are the story of the week – that inflation reading has pushed up fixed term interest rates for the first time in a while, when most thought that fixed term rates had peaked.  Whether it’s hit you yet or not, interest is soon going to be taking a bigger chunk of your income – so what should you be doing to ensure you not only continue to survive, but continue to make progress while interest rates are rising? Rather than panicking about what lies ahead, what do you need to be thinking about with your mortgage in conditions like these?  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/21/20225 minutes, 49 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Elon Musk's plan to fire Twitter staff

Elon's bold plan to fire 75% of Twitter's staff The Washington Post reports that's his message to investors as he secures funding to buy Twitter before October 28. He wants to stack rank employees and cut the bottom. The company had planned to cut 25% of its staff before Elon's bid, but this is three times that already large number.   What would it mean? Probably less of a focus on moderation, trust, safety and security? Maybe less stability of the service too?  Dig around in your drawers, because an original iPhone just fetched $40,000 at auction  See mum, this is why you keep the packaging! Like a relic frozen in time since 2007, it was in its original packaging, unopened, and, at the time, was worth $599. It sold for 65x that!  It was interesting comparing the price to today. $599 in 2007 would be $857 in today's US dollar. Today an iPhone 14 retails for $799. So it's 'cheaper' than it was at launch.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/21/20225 minutes, 38 seconds
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Grace Tame: Australian of the Year 2021 on her memoir and 'that' ScoMo side-eye

Grace Tame has been called many things. Unstoppable, an inspiration, strong – and of all things, rude.   You might recognise Grace after she was named Australian of the Year 2021 for her fierce advocation and dedication to helping survivors of child sexual abuse.   This time, Grace is telling it like it is in her own words with her memoir just released called the Ninth Life of a Diamond Miner.  Grace Tame joined Jack Tame. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/21/202212 minutes, 4 seconds
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Tara Ward: Somewhere Boy, Gangs of London and From Scratch

 Somewhere Boy: An emotional British drama about Danny, who has lived his life locked at home with his father after the death of his mother. But when Danny turns 18, his whole world explodes in an instant, and he has to come to terms with a new world he never knew existed (TVNZ+).  Gangs of London: A new season of the gritty drama about the international gangs that control the city of London, as they struggle to fill the power vacuum created when the head of London's most powerful crime family is assassinated (Neon). From Scratch: Zoe Saldana stars in this American drama as an American student studying in Italy, who meets and falls in love with Lino, a Sicilian chef. When Lino faces health issues and the couple's future is threatened, the two families come together (Netflix).   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/21/20226 minutes, 1 second
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Nici Wickes: Little coffee, maple & walnut cakes

Coffee and walnuts are old friends and in these cute little cakes maple syrup adds an extra dimension.  Makes 8 small cakes or 10-12 muffins  100g soft butter 2/3 cup brown sugar, loosely packed (about 100g) 3 eggs 50g yoghurt or sour cream 100g walnuts, chopped + extra pieces to garnish 1 ½ cups plain flour (or 1 ¼ cups GF flour) 3 tsp baking powder 3 tsp espresso powder or 2 tsp instant coffee 1-2 tbsps milk ¼ cup maple syrup Icing:  100g cream cheese 2 tbsps sour cream ½ cup brown sugar 4 heaped tbsps icing sugar Preheat oven to 180 C. Grease and flour an 8-hole mini-cake tin or 12 hole muffin tray. In a bowl, beat the butter and brown sugar until it is creamed, then beat in the eggs one at a time. Continue mixing until light and fluffy. Stir in the yoghurt or sour cream and half the walnuts until just combined. Stir in the flour, baking powder and coffee and mix until combined. Add enough milk to get a dropping consistency. Spoon cake batter into tins and cook for 20-25 minutes until risen and a skewer inserted comes out clean. Leave for 5 minutes before turning out to cool. Toast the remaining walnuts and drizzle over maple syrup to coat. Briefly simmer then set aside to cool. Make the icing by beating all ingredients together until smooth. Ice each cake and garnish with cooled maple walnut pieces. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/21/20225 minutes, 55 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: More than Gold and Mrs Harris Goes to Paris

Dame Valerie doco  This 90’ feature documentary named More than Gold is the candid and inspirational story of fivetime Olympian, double Olympic gold medallist, Tongan/New Zealander Dame Valerie Adams; one of the world’s most celebrated athletes. It is also the story of a mother, a daughter, a sister, and a survivor.  At a time when sportswomen globally are struggling with pressures beyond the field of play Dame Valerie Adams is a beacon of hope. Competing at the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games required all the shotputter’s determination and courage. At 36, following two major surgeries and the birth of her children, she was considered an ‘older’ athlete. Struggling to balance her role as a mum with her job as an elite sportsperson, Valerie was forced to navigate emotions every mother will identify with.  Mrs Harris Goes to Paris  In 1950s London, a widowed cleaning lady falls madly in love with a couture Dior dress, deciding she must have one of her own. After working to raise the funds to pursue her dream, she embarks on an adventure to Paris that will change not only her own outlook -- but the very future of the House of Dior. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/21/20226 minutes, 10 seconds
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Kevin Milne: I am nervous about the university exams next week

Kevin Milne is most nervous about the university exams starting next week, yet he isn't sitting any. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/21/20227 minutes, 5 seconds
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Jack Tame: The big decider for next year's election

I’m on the road at the moment. North America. Toronto and New York. And like anyone who’s been fortunate enough to take a holiday in the U.S lately, I’ve been swallowing hard at just how much stuff costs. Tomorrow night I’m staying one night in a mid-range New York hotel. It’s probably a 3.5-star establishment. The room is tiny. But for a sliding door, the toilet is more-or-less right next to my pillow and if I want to open my suitcase, the only space to do it will be on my bed. How much is it costing? About $NZ420 for one night. It’s not cos there’s a special event in New York this weekend. It’s not because we’re staying in a Penthouse on Central Park. It’s because the hawkish response to inflation from the U.S Federal Reserve is driving up the US dollar to its highest point in years. The index that follows the US dollar compared to other currencies shows the USD is up 20 percent compared to this time last year. Obviously I chose to come here on holiday so I’m not gonna moan too much! But the ripple effects of the strong USD aren’t just hurting tourists. And as the inflation battle continues, they’ll continue to impact countries around the World. The Consumer Price Index numbers for New Zealand this week were yet another sobering indicator that for all our optimism and wishful thinking, we still have a lot of pain to come in the economic aftermath of the pandemic. So far it’s tourists and a few mortgage-holders who are swallowing hardest, but I’m not convinced the New Zealand public has fully grappled with the looming alternative to high inflation. I don’t think many of us have paused and considered how life could feel in the next 12-to-18 months as the Reserve Bank hikes again and again, and we start to see the impact of much higher borrowing costs on the labour market. We are likely headed for a recession and presuming the Reserve Bank continues raising the OCR, we are likely headed for a meaningful, painful spike in unemployment. It’s a bit of an economic Sophie’s Choice, really. What’s worse? High inflation or high unemployment? Both options are bad and although central banks and politicians are gonna’ try and find a middle ground of sorts, there aren’t many causes for jolliness. For incumbent politicians everywhere it presents an enormous challenge. Liz Truss’s diabolical tenure will serve as good warning that reckless economic policies won’t get you far. The piper has to be paid. Even if you can sell a free lunch delusion to your voting base, it’s a tougher ask, selling it to the bond markets. What does it the bad numbers mean for the New Zealand election next year? As it so often does, essentially it will all come down to voters’ back pockets and the parties’ economic credibility. But even more than by policy differences, debates, and campaign strategies, the New Zealand election will be decided by the actions of the US Federal Reserve. Stare at a crystal ball and what the Fed will do over the next 12 months, and you’ll have as good an indicator as any as to what major party will win the election. Maybe if the Fed keeps aggressively hiking rates, Jacinda Ardern will decide it’s not worth it after all. She’ll succumb to the whispers and unfounded speculation and take a job at the U.N instead of fighting another campaign. If she does move to New York, my only advice to her would be to make sure she gets paid in greenbacks.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/21/20224 minutes, 29 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Long Shadows, Celeste Ng's Our Missing Hearts

Long Shadows – David Baldacci  Killer twists. Heroes to believe in. Trust Baldacci.  Memory man FBI agent, Amos Decker, returns in this action-packed thriller to investigate the mysterious and brutal murder of a federal judge and her bodyguard at her home in an exclusive, gated community in Florida from international bestselling author David Baldacci.  Our Missing Hearts – Celeste Ng  From the #1 bestselling author of Little Fires Everywhere, comes one of the most highly anticipated books of the year – the inspiring new novel about a mother’s unbreakable love in a world consumed by fear.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/15/20224 minutes, 56 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Endemic Brilliance - the carmine rātā

OK… as promised, last week...  Language and definitions: Native – Endemic – Beneficial – Pest  A NATIVE organism is firmly established in NZ; it’s origin could be from overseas (or an ancient continent like Gondwanaland), but it got here, somehow, on its own accord (flying, drifting on logs, floating in the air, etc) without assistance from humans (luggage, commercial goods, planes, boats, smuggled, imported, etc)  ENDEMIC means it naturally occurs only in New Zealand, nowhere else, unless it has been introduced there. It is therefore a Native organism that is really special as it has been part of our ecosystems for many many years (millions of years)  Because our Native and Endemic organisms are important contributors to our ecosystem, they are BENEFICIAL to a lot of other species that live here – pollen-providers, pollinators, nectar manufacturers, food source, etc etc  A PEST is often and introduced species (either by accident or stupidity) that has a negative impact on our ecosystems or… our ABILITY to grow crops/fruit/food; a PEST can also be a species that got here on its own accord through unfortunate migration  Flowers right now and can be absolutely stunning!  It naturally occurs from Cape Reinga (Te Paki) all the way down to line from Taranaki to Mahia Peninsula. So… it is an ENDEMIC plant species  It doesn’t like frost very much at all, but when you plant it in a nice location, protected from the frost you’ll find it’ll thrive all the way down the South Island.  It grows well on the Port Hills, where it is a fabulous nectar source for native birds and native bees, moths and butterflies – I suppose you could call it beneficial  You can see it is a close relative of the famous endemic relative Metrosideros excelsa aka Pohutukawa. (Similar distribution area in NZ)  The carmine rātā is normally a “climbing rātā”, winding its stem around a tree trunk to get to the top where light levels are higher and photosynthesis is enhanced.  But when you take semi-hardwood cuttings from this rata, it will form as a shrub and it won’t climb. Most carmine rātā you can buy are taken from cuttings and therefore stay as a spectacular red-flowering bush, up to almost a meter high.  It loves well-drained soil with lots of organic material (think of the conditions in the soil of a native forest with lots of compost, formed by fallen leaves and branches); don’t let them dry out and keep the roots cool-ish…  Climbing rātā will go up rock walls and tree trunks in your garden; the shrub form does need quite a bit of sun if you want to see the spectacular crimson flowers.  Seeds form in summer to early autumn (in case you want to try and propagate a climbing crimson rātā)  The only PEST encountered on these Metrosideros species is MYTLE RUST.  Blown on the wind (by itself – like a NATIVE!!!) from Australia and settled in North and Western areas of the North Island and slowly spreading further south  A PEST with a Capital P. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/15/20223 minutes, 21 seconds
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Kate Hall: Weird things you can do for the planet

Kate Hall shares the strange things she gets up to in order to help the planet - and you might just learn a trick or two.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/15/20228 minutes, 15 seconds
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Bob Campbell: NZ's most expensive wine

Boby Campbell usually picks a wine with a price of tag of $20 or below but this week, he's shaking it up and chats to Jack Tame about one of our most expensive wines - Destiny Bay 2020 Magna Praemia, Waiheke that retails at $550 a bottle.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/15/20224 minutes, 36 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Ads on Netflix, US government looking to ban Huawei

Netflix reveals how much you'll pay to watch with ads  In the USA the new "Basic with Ads" plan will be $6.99 a month, saving folks around $3 a month. It won't allow downloads or offline viewing, and won't offer 4K content, or multiple devices. Expect 4-5 minutes of ads an hour, ads will be 15-30 seconds in length, and they'll be both before and during the show. It's launching in 12 countries in November, but not in NZ just yet.  US government looking to ban Huawei  The FCC has prepared a draft order according to CNN sources, which would block sales of their new telco equipment in the US on national security grounds. The FCC today needs to sign off on any device which emits a frequency before it's sold, to prevent harm. This is in direct response to President Joe Biden's Secure Equipment Act signed last year.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/14/20224 minutes, 37 seconds
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Tara Ward: This England, The Watcher, The Empress

This England: Kenneth Branagh stars as Boris Johnson in this drama based on the British prime minister's tumultuous first few months in Downing Street, as he grapples with the first wave of the Covid-19  pandemic (TVNZ1, Sunday).  The Watcher: Naomi Watts stars in Ryan Murphy’s latest drama about a married couple who purchase their dream home only to be threatened by terrifying letters from a stalker, signed "The Watcher” (Netflix).  The Empress: a sumptuous costume drama series based on the life of the 19th century Austrian Empress Elisabeth of Bavaria (Netflix)  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/14/20225 minutes, 37 seconds
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Isla Fisher: Actress and bestselling author on her latest children's book 'Mazy the Movie Star'

Wedding Crashers, Confessions of a Shopaholic and Borat a.k.a Sacha Baron Cohen  They all have one thing in common: Isla Fisher.  The actress has worked in TV and film for more than 25 years.   You’ll be familiar with seeing her face walking the red carpet at movie premieres but what you might not be familiar with is her name on children’s books.   Isla loves writing, having released her first kids’ book as a teen.   She’s just released her latest called Mazy the Movie Star following on from her bestselling Marge in Charge series.   Isla Fisher joined Jack Tame.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/14/202213 minutes, 41 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Little polenta & raspberry cakes

As well as a savoury ingredient, polenta is a truly wonderful baking ingredient - it’s cornmeal so is GF and has so much texture.  Serve these little beauties with whipped cream.  GF syrup  ½ cup icing sugar  Juice of 3 lemons (use zest in cakes)  Cakes  175g butter, softened  175g caster sugar  2 large eggs  80g fine instant polenta  ½ cup freeze-dried raspberries + extra for topping  175g ground almonds  ¾ tsp baking powder  Zest of 2 lemons  Preheat oven to 150 C. Grease a 12-hole muffin tin and line each hole with a small square of baking paper. Make syrup by simmering sugar and lemon juice together for 3-5 minutes. Set aside to cool. Using a standing beater, cream butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Add the eggs one at a time beating between each. Fold in the polenta, raspberries, ground almonds, baking powder, lemon zest and juice. Spoon batter into prepared tin and bake for 15-18 minutes or until a skewer comes out clean and cake has begun to pull away from sides. Once cooked, prick the top of each cake with a few small holes. Spoon over cooled syrup so that it soaks in. Leave cakes to settle for 5-7 minutes before removing and serving with whipped cream and a dusting of crushed freeze-dried raspberries. Tip:  Feel free to use this recipe to make one large cake using a lined 20cm spring form tin and cook for 50-60 minutes or until a skewer comes out clean.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/14/20227 minutes, 20 seconds
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Chris Schulz: Amsterdam, Katrina Babies documentary

Movie reviewer Chris Schulz gives us his thoughts on Amsterdam and the doco Katrina Babies. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/14/20226 minutes, 30 seconds
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Kevin Milne: The best journalism I've seen in the last week on Peter Ellis

A week on from the Peter Ellis Supreme Court ruling and Kevin Milne had had a chance to digest.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/14/20227 minutes, 36 seconds
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Jack Tame: There's nothing like a day out with your oldest friends

I was trying to think how long it had been since we were all in a room together. It was before Dayle and Jeremy each had a family. Before Matt became a doctor. Before Alex announced to everyone that he’d taken a job in West Africa and by any chance did anyone know what the weather was like in Togo at this time of year? Five mates who grew up in the middle-class Christchurch suburbs and all knocked around a high school together. We read the same stuff, watched the same shows, studied the same subjects, played in the same sport teams and chased the same girls – all, with mixed success. And then one day, like dice in a Yahtzee cup, life shook us up and we scattered around the World. Since we last lived in the same city, we five mates have lived in five different continents between us. Alex lives in Tel Aviv and speaks Hebrew. He spent years guiding people through Jerusalem and the West Bank. Matt’s medical career has taken him from Melbourne to Medellin. Dayle’s a doctor too – recently he worked out of the back of emergency helicopters and he prides himself on differentiating different models by the thump of their rotor blades. Jeremy’s the only one of us to have visited Angola on business and was the first of the group to take on perhaps the greatest adventure of all – he has a wife and two wonderful kids. But how long since we’d all been in a room together? Sheesh. My best guess is that it was for someone’s 21st birthday, back in the day. The kids who were born in our final year of high school are now in their final year of high school. We’re starting to see age in each other’s faces, each other’s wasitlines, each other’s hair. Part of me thinks it’s the one big benefit of being part of the Facebook generation: Social media didn’t exist when we were in school, but it came in soon enough afterwards that we could keep in touch over the years. But the five of us still had to want to keep in touch. I think that’s an important point. Last weekend, Alex held a lunch to celebrate his marriage. It was a perfect, still, Spring day in Christchurch. Having travelled here from the Middle East, he and his wife gathered with his family and a few friends at Mona Vale. After a few hours, after lunch wrapped and everyone else had pushed on, we sat down on the banks of the Ōtākaro/Avon River with a few beers and a bottle of champagne. The sun was glorious, twinkling through the leaves of the trees along the riverbank. There wasn’t a breath of wind. Families, kids, wives, girlfriends all lay down on the grass and for that little moment, the lives of my oldest friends all came together once again. I laughed and laughed until my belly ached. It struck me on Monday when we split once again, farewelling each other and returning to our respective corners of the Earth: After all this time, all these years, all these experiences and jobs and relationships in isolation... everything’s changed and yet somehow, nothing’s changed. And I reckon that might be the best definition of friendship there is.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/14/20223 minutes, 59 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Julia Jacklin - PRE PLEASURE

Estelle Clifford has been listening to PRE PLEASURE from Julia Jacklin. The Australian songwriter’s empathetic, understated rock songs sift through a litany of relationships and beliefs, seeking a balance between thinking about life and actually living it.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/7/20227 minutes, 22 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: My Darling Daughter and Forever Home

Catherine Raynes has been reading My Darling Daughter by JP Delaney and Forever Home from Graham Norton. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/7/20224 minutes, 7 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Flocking back to Milan

Mike Yardley has been venturing around Milano. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/7/20228 minutes, 20 seconds
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Steven Dromgool: How to make a good apology

Steven Dromgool shares his advice on how to make a good apology and the magic time zone of when to. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/7/20227 minutes, 49 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Colourful nasturtiums

Tropaeolum is the Latin name for that almost weedy, but seriously colourful plant called Nasturtium Most gardeners know them, many grow them (in frost-free locations), some eat them and others find them a bit of a pain in the bottom due to their rampant growth. The famous painter Monet was a huge fan too! They hail from Central and Southern America; flower colours are bright in the red, orange and yellow spectra (plus a heap of other bred, fancy hues) and I reckon they literally brighten any garden with that blast of colours; They are easy to grow in almost any type of soil (especially the poorer soils), don’t really like rich soil with lots of fertilisers and their best attribute is the ability to give a huge dash of colour in the most boring part of your garden; Tropaeolum makes you smile – you simply can’t help it! Remember that frosts can kill them, but seeing they are actually annuals, their seeds will give you a brand new crop every spring. A really interesting did-you-know is that Nasturtium is an alternative host for the white cabbage butterfly caterpillar, despite the fact that Nasturtiums are not a Brassica, nor are they closely related to the cabbage family. So if you don’t want white butterfly caterpillars in your cabbages, broccoli, caulis and sprouts, don’t grow Nasturtium near your cabbage patch! You can eat the leaves, the seeds and the flowers – taste is described as “peppery” or resembling “honey-mustard” The flowers can be eaten or used in fancy cookery recipes, stuffed with cream cheese or topped on vinaigrette-laced salad, but remember that the flowers tend to wilt quite quickly, so chuck them on that salad at the last moment before serving. Even washing the flowers makes them “flaccid”, so keep them au naturel and consume them raw… without washing! And that last bit of info might sound weird, but makes perfect scientific sense. If you look at the plant after a shower of rain, you’ll find that the leaves actually hold the raindrops on the surface in perfect little bubbles of “quick-silver”. We have a scientific term for that: the leaf surface is Hydrophobic; it repels water. There are a few plants that show this hydrophobic feature: Lotus, some types of water lilies, and indeed: cabbages! If you look further into the natural world you may find that the wings of flies (crane flies!) and heaps of other insects have a similar repellency of water droplets. For nasturtium and Lotus, etc, this repellency is caused by a nano-structure on the leaf surface. It literally forces the droplets of water to become slippery objects on the leaf that removes dirt from the surface and tosses it all off the leaves when the droplets become too large. In other words: due to those nano-structures, those leaves become self-cleaning surfaces! All you need is a bit of water to clean it on a regular basis. Now, wouldn’t it be a clever idea to – somehow – put that nano structure on the glass of your shower door? Guess what: that system exists already. Not just on glass but also on floor tiles, roof tiles, on concrete and on paint. Biomimicry! It’s how we learn from Nature and design according to ancient natural processes!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/7/20224 minutes, 52 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: Osteoporosis - what is it and how many have it?

Dr Bryan Betty has the rundown on what we can do to help treat osteoporosis. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/7/20224 minutes, 21 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Google to join smart watch market, Elon Musk's Twitter deal back on

Google is joining the smart watch market  This week they announced their first ever Pixel Watch. They bought Fitbit last year for $2.1 billion and that tech is front and center in the new watch.It's a circular design which differentiates it from the Apple watch, boasts a 24 hour battery and has all the health tracking Fitbit offers such activity tracking, heart rate monitoring and sleep tracking. It integrates with Google's other services too like the Google Wallet. It's unlikely to grab market share from the Apple Watch because you'd need an Android phone to pair with it, but it is another reason for Android users to stick with their Androids built by Google.  They announced new Pixel phones too which come with new camera features, an improved screen, and longer-lasting battery.   Elon is going to buy Twitter after all  For the price he agreed. So for now, that means the court case is on pause, Elon is now securing his funding, and the deal will happen before October 28 or it will end up in court. What a messy and unnecessary debacle. His friend's text messages are all over the press, he has damaged his brand, and he still needs to buy it. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/7/20223 minutes, 9 seconds
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Tara Ward: Interview with a Vampire, Friends of the Family, Derry Girls

Interview with a Vampire: New streaming service AMC+ launches in New Zealand with a variety of new and exclusive shows, including a contemporary remake of Anne Rice’s famous novel (AMC+)   Friends of the Family: Anna Paquin and Colin Hanks star in this true-crime drama about a family destroyed by a kidnapping that happens right under their noses (TVNZ+)   Derry Girls: The third and final season of the delightful comedy about a group of teenagers growing up in Northern Ireland during the Troubles of the 1990s (Netflix)  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/7/20224 minutes, 56 seconds
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Kita Mean: Inaugural winner of RuPaul's Drag Race Downunder on new memoir 'Life in Lashes'

Kita Mean’s life went from grunge rock to glitz and glam as he made an unforgettable entrance into the drag world.  Kita Mean a.k.a Nick Nash was the first winner of global television hit RuPaul’s Drag Race Downunder.  But it wasn’t all plain sailing to get there and Kita bares all in her brand new memoir, Life in Lashes.  Nick Nash / Kita Mean joined Jack Tame. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/7/202215 minutes, 53 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Asparagus and mustard tart

Asparagus is here and remember it’s a short season so make hte most of it with this gorgeous tart. It’s so simple to whip up and utterly delicious.  Asparagus and mustard tart  Serve 4-6  2 bunches (or about 20) medium thickness asparagus spears 1 sheet puff pastry 1 egg, beaten with a fork 150g sour cream or crème fraiche ½ cup grated parmesan + extra to serve 1 tablespoon wholegrain mustard ½ teaspoon sea salt + decent grind black pepper Drizzle of olive oil Heat oven to 200 C. Trim or snap the tough ends off the asparagus spears. Line a tray with the pastry, twisting and pinching up the edges to form a rim if you need to. Brush the edges with the beaten egg. Whisk together the sour cream (or crème fraiche) with Parmesan and mustard. Spread this over the pastry. Lay the trimmed asparagus on top, season with salt and pepper and drizzle over olive oil. Bake for 30 minutes, until the pastry is golden and cooked on the base too. To serve, grind over some more pepper and grate over some Parmesan. Nici’s Note: You could add chopped, crispy bacon or flakes of smoked salmon to this tart if you fancy it. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/7/20227 minutes, 22 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Don’t Worry Darling, Catherine Called Birdie

Francesca Rudkin has been busy watching Don’t Worry Darling and Catherine Called Birdie. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/7/20225 minutes, 24 seconds
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Kevin Milne: The 150th birthday of Hanmer Springs

Kevin Milne joined Jack Tame to celebrate a milestone for an iconic Kiwi destination. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/7/20226 minutes, 25 seconds
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Jack Tame: Forget America, cannabis reform in NZ is still a long way off

I once interviewed a man as he smoked cannabis through a gas mask. It was, it has to be said, an impressive and innovative contraption. The rubber gas mask was one that you’d pick up in an army surplus store. It sealed his face on all sides and connected to a hose, which in turn connected to a water pipe. Clearly his cannabis use hadn’t fully diminished his creative abilities. That interview was almost a decade ago. It took place in a public square right in the centre of Denver, Colorado, at the first 4/20 rally since the state legalised recreational cannabis. There were thousands of people in attendance all smoking cannabis together. At the time, the organisers celebrated it as the largest communal cannabis smoke in American history. Yesterday, history came calling again. On an order from Joe Biden, everyone with a federal possession conviction will be pardoned for their crime. The President, a man who turns 80 next month, and whose son has well-documented struggles with addiction, stood up and acknowledged that cannabis laws have ultimately caused more harm than good. To think what advocates would have done for that kind of political leadership here. Ultimately, it’s only a matter of time before New Zealand follows in America’s footsteps and regulates the sale and supply of recreational cannabis. But the result of the 2020 Cannabis referendum has delayed that inevitability longer than it might otherwise have been. Throwing cannabis legalisation to a referendum was an abdication of political leadership and the Prime Minister’s refusal to take a public position in the debate was an illuminating demonstration of her political priorities. She shirked basic leadership for fear her position might cost a few votes. Although her support may not have been enough to push the ‘Yes’ team over the line, in a general election that delivered her party a record result, one can only assume it might have helped. But for all the inevitable noise off the back of Joe Biden’s announcement, the result of the New Zealand referendum means neither of the major political parties will legalise recreational cannabis until they’re absolutely sure a clear and substantial majority of voters supports them doing so. Having seen it fail once, even by a tiny margin, there’s good reason to think a regulated market might still be several political cycles away. Since Colorado legalised recreational cannabis a decade ago, 18 other U.S states have followed suit. Cannabis has been decriminalised in 31 U.S states. But while New Zealand sticks doggedly to the status quo, cannabis use isn’t decreasing. A majority of Kiwi teens will have used it before their twentieth birthday. And just you watch, at exactly the same time as our politicians refuse to do anything about cannabis, many of them will vote against new restrictions on booze. We’ll criminalise the possession of one drug but happily promote a more damaging one. The hypocrisy riles.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10/7/20223 minutes, 44 seconds
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James Irwin: Mel Parsons - Slow Burn

Songs: Slow Burn  Track in the news: Carry on  Award-winning indie-folk artist Mel Parsons has today announced the release of her new album SLOW BURN for September 16, as well as revealing an 11-date national tour to follow in support of the album release.  Featuring the already released moody and nostalgic single ‘Carry On’; the dark and intense track ‘Already Gone’; and most recently, the mellow and meandering single ‘Slow Burn’, the album is to be one of grit and grace, with Parsons’ dusky vocals consuming the eleven new tracks.  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/30/20225 minutes, 54 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Exiles and All the Broken Places

Jane Harper – Exiles  Critically acclaimed international bestseller Jane Harper returns. A mother disappears from a busy festival on a warm spring night. Her baby lies alone in the pram, her mother’s possessions surrounding her, waiting for a return which never comes.  An outstanding novel, a brilliant mystery and a heart-pounding read from the author of The Dry, Force of Nature, The Lost Man and The Survivors.  John Boyne – All the Broken Places  From the author of the globally bestselling, multi-million-copy classic, The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas, and The Heart's Invisible Furies. Ninety-one-year-old Gretel Fernsby has lived in the same mansion block in London for decades. She leads a comfortable, quiet life, despite her dark and disturbing past. She doesn't talk about her escape from Germany over seventy years before. She doesn't talk about the post-war years in France with her mother. Most of all, she doesn't talk about her father, the commandant of one of the most notorious Nazi concentration camps.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/30/20224 minutes, 4 seconds
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Mike Yardley: A fling with Frankfurt

At the heart of Western Europe, Germany’s financial centre offers quick and easy connections to a plethora of enchanting destinations, courtesy of the masterly integration of the railway with Frankfurt Airport. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/30/20227 minutes, 10 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Small holes in the soil – Native bees

  I’ve noticed a remarkable increase in Native Bee activity, over the past few weeks.  Native bees? Yep – we have 28 different species and they tend to fly under the radar of most gardeners.  We all know the introduced Honey Bees, that live I hives and pollinate a heap of crops and fruits we eat.  Our native bees are much smaller, often black or dark brown and they are not “social” creatures that form a smooth-running colony in a neatly constructed hive. After silk worms, honey bees were domesticated many, many weekends ago.  Native bees are “solitary” (a female and a male dig a nest and provide the larvae with plenty of food to complete their life cycle), but many pairs have a tendency to dig their nests close together in undisturbed, exposed soil or vertical banks of clay or loam.  Those small holes are quite easy to detect and, more importantly, easy to accidentally destroy!  Native bees are showing a declining trend in NZ; could be many reasons for that (including diminishing nectar resources as a result of honey bee growth).  Our native bees are experts at pollinating our native plants species. Their demise can have ecological implications for the health of our native landscapes.  I would urge awareness – let them be (let them bee)  If you have an opportunity to create an almost vertical wall of soil (doesn’t have to be a huge wall – a foot high is more than enough), see if these tiny bees will come to live in your garden.  They love a sunny exposure without too much shade from plants.  I can sit in the garden for hours, watching these industrious little bees dig their hole, maintain the entrance, and fly in with pollen and nectar to store in their babies’ larder at the end of the tunnel  Of course, their pollination job really helps the native plants in your garden too;  I suppose that’s what nature is all about:  Collaborative, allowing facilitation and creating topics of learning for the kids See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/30/20223 minutes
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Paul Stenhouse: Google is taking a fresh look at what's next for Search

It's most important product! The internet is getting more visual, so how do you find things without keywords? Google is exploring ways to take photos and search off those - the example they use is a photo of a dress effectively being one of your search terms, then adding words to say "in green" or "shorter length".  They're also rethinking what is at the bottom of the search results page - you look at the 10 links, then what? Typically people try another search, so could they instead suggest related searches? Could they showcase things you might be interested in based on what they know about you? These ideas are being explored. That also includes how auto-complete works. Today it just completes with exact terms, but what about related terms? or more popular terms?   LISTEN ABOVE    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/30/20224 minutes, 34 seconds
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Hannah McQueen: Managing your finances in retirement

Massey University recently re-did its survey of what people of different lifestyles spend in retirement with the numbers shocking some - and yet we still put off preparing because it’s scary, because other things take precedence for example. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/30/20226 minutes, 55 seconds
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Stewart Sowman-Lund: The Patient, Reboot and Bad Sisters

Stewart Sowman-Lund is taking over from Tara Ward this week for Screentime.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/30/20225 minutes, 19 seconds
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Tony Fadell: Brains behind the iPhone, iPod and one of the world's leading inventors

The iPhone.   And yes, we know the name Steve Jobs, but the brains behind the build and design of not just the iPhone but the iPod too is a man named Tony Fadell.  He has 300 patents to his name and has been listed as one of the world’s leading inventors.  Tony Fadell joined Jack Tame. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/30/202213 minutes, 30 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin:

Millie Lies Low After missing her flight to a prestigious internship, an anxiety-ridden architecture grad fakes being in New York while lying low in her home town scrounging for another ticket.    Memory When Alex, an expert assassin, refuses to complete a job for a dangerous criminal organization, he becomes a target. FBI agents and Mexican intelligence are brought in to investigate the trail of bodies, leading them closer to Alex. With the crime syndicate and FBI in hot pursuit, Alex has the skills to stay ahead, except for one thing: he is struggling with severe memory loss, affecting his every move. Alex must question his every action and whom he can ultimately trust.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/30/20226 minutes, 47 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Cheese, Cheese, Cheese & Guava Paste

October is always NZ Cheese Month and that means breaking out and trying something new and supporting our wonderful local cheesemakers! Here’s some basic rules to get the most from your cheese.  Storing cheese:  It’s best to keep cheese, of all varieties, in a dark, cool and airy space – the vegetable part of your fridge is ideal, as it is not too humid or cold. Wrap it in a semi-breathable wrapping, baking paper is ideal for most, foil for blue cheese Once you’ve cut into a new cheese, keep it in a sealed Tupperware or cake box in the fridge. Pop a small sugar cube inside your container. The cube will absorb excess moisture, and prevent the cheese from sweating. Eating cheese:  Take cheese out of fridge 1 hour before you intend to eat it. This allows it to come to room temperature. Set out a variety of cheeses, with appropriate accompaniments – crackers, dried fruit, pastes, raw fruit like pears or nectarines, chutneys etc. A grate of parmesan elevates any leafy salad or try some blue cheese on roast potatoes, try serving chunks of hard cheese with fruit cake this Xmas. Buy quality:  If you’re lucky enough to have a local cheesemaker or decent cheesemonger, visit them (to name a few Sabato / Maison Vauron AK / Canterbury Cheesemongers (Ferrymead) , Over the Moon (Putararu) OR Visit cheeseloversnz.co.nz for some great offers that will be delivered to your door. Nici’s Guava Paste  Good with cheese  5kg of guavas Sugar (will depend on weight of guava pulp – see method) Mash the guavas in a saucepan and cover with cold water. Bring to the boil and reduce the heat so the mixture is still slightly bubbling for 20 minutes. Line a sieve with a clean chux cloth and place over a bowl. Drain overnight. Reserve liquid for cordial or similar. Take the pulp and push it through a sieve to get rid of the extremely hard pips. Weigh the pulp and add it, and 3/4 of its weight in sugar and a tablespoon of lemon juice, to a heavy based saucepan. Stir until the sugar is dissolved. Let simmer for about an hour, stirring occasionally. Pouring into a baking paper lined tray and refrigerate to set. Cut into squares and store in the refrigerator in an airtight container. Eat with cheese! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/30/20226 minutes, 38 seconds
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Kevin Milne: An embarrassing tale of click and collect

Kevin Milne joins Jack Tame to share a light-hearted and somewhat embarrassing tale due to a click and collect service. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/30/20225 minutes, 46 seconds
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Jack Tame: Vodafone by any other name... (1)

What’s in a name? Depending on how much it means to you, potentially tens or hundreds of millions of dollars. And while everyone was quick to criticise Vodafone’s New Zealand rebrand, history tells us that actually with a few months under the belt, it’ll all have blown over and One NZ will be just fine. ‘But Jack!’ You’re wondering... ‘What about TV ONE?’ Yep. True. There’s a clash there, of sorts. But one’s a Telco and one’s a TV station. And while I can’t speak for my TV bosses, I’m fairly confident I’m not the only person with the capacity to work out the difference. ‘But Jack!’ You’re wondering... ‘What about the racist undertones?’ For goodness’ sake. As someone who engages with politics most than most, personally I’d never heard of the ONE New Zealand Foundation until people started furiously tweeting about them. A former Green Party MP even announced on social media that her partner was phoning around to shift the pair’s Vodafone plan to a provider that wasn’t somehow inadvertently endorsing an apparently racist ideas. Do I agree with the ideology of the ONE New Zealand Foundation? No, of course not. If you’re in the headspace to be seduced by that kind of thing, the name of your cell phone provider is the least of your concerns, and I’m a sensible person whose time is far too valuable to waste on crackpot ideas. It’s for that same reason that I can’t imagine in a million years drawing a tenuous link between a cell phone provider and a fringe, far-right group. I hate the term ‘virtue-signalling’ but ask yourself if anyone going through the hassle of changing cell phone providers this weekend is doing it to meaningfully fight racism or really just doing it for the Tweet? Most telecommunications companies have business models that rely on scale. They need the biggest-possible customer base. And if you’re targetting a broad customer base, it doesn’t make sense to insult or upset people. That’s why they choose simple names. Preferably one word. Not too many syllables. Maybe Vodafone’s marketting team took the ‘one word’ principle too literally. Was One NZ a visionary rebrand? No. A game-changing piece of marketting? No. Is it a name that particularly inspires? No. Does that matter? No, of course not. Not at all. Remember when everyone fussed and fumed because Spark’s new logo looked like a cat’s bum? We got over that. We’ll get over this. The brand formally known as Vodafone has a massive reach and a massive marketting budget. I reckon we’ll get used to saying ‘One NZ’ before we get used to King Charles. And actually, what’s most puzzling to me about the name game this week is why the owners of a certain Auckland hotel decided not to follow Vodafone’s lead. Having completely overhauled its 221 rooms, with new carpet, curtains, and cabinetry, beds and and even TVs, the only thing that has hasn’t changed at the hotel is the name. And let’s be honest, if ever there was a good argument for a rebrand, surely Jet Park was it? Maybe the owners knew. They didn’t need to wait for Vodafone’s example. When it comes down to it, we humans just don’t like change.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/30/20223 minutes, 46 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Bullet that Missed, Act of Oblivion

Catherine Raynes has been reading the latest in the Thursday Murder Club series, called The Bullet that Missed. Catherine also has her review of Robert Harris' new novel, Act of Oblivion.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/24/20224 minutes, 2 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Mumford & Sons' Marcus Mumford goes solo

Estelle Clifford has been listening to new tunes from Marcus Mumford, who's gone out on his own.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/24/20225 minutes, 46 seconds
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Oskar Howell: Tech journalist on Amazon news stories

Amazon's in the news with Twitch revenue split changes and Jeff Bezos being made to testify to the FTC.  Oskar Howell, social media expert and tech journalist, is here to explain more today. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/24/20224 minutes, 13 seconds
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Mike Yardley: UK Royal residences you can actually sleep in

Mike Yardley is in the UK and share his tips on a Royal residence open to the public to slumber in. The world’s eyes have been fixed on Britain as we farewelled Queen Elizabeth II. The British Monarchy looks destined to remain an enormous catalyst for UK-bound tourism and Visit Britain is projecting a surge in royal-inspired travel. Dripping with royal trappings and a wealth of history, there’s a surprising amount of regal accommodations experiences to be found in the United Kingdom. Best of all, they don’t have to break the bank. Plenty of hotels pledge to treat you like royalty with their five-star frills. But the fact remains that not even the fanciest of facials or triple digit cotton thread count can match the prospect of bedding down in a real-deal royal residence, like the grand grounds of Balmoral, where Queen Elizabeth II saw out her final days. So not why just go stay there instead? Whether you’re a royalist or a history hound, here’s a handful of royal residences that any commoner can book a stay in. It’s kind of like the royal version of Bookabach. High up in Sutherland, Scotland, the most northerly castle on the British mainland is the 16th-century Castle of Mey. This old pile’s blood-stained history was given a new lease on life when the Queen Mother bought the castle after the death of her husband, King George VI. After a tip to toe restoration to the building and its expansive 12-hectare of grounds, which took her fifty years to complete, she spent several weeks here every August and October until her death. The castle became the first royal residence opened up to paying guests, who can now stay at the Captain's House cottage, which was the late Queen Mother's favourite spot for an indoor picnic. As you do. It can sleep six people and includes a 20-foot conservatory which overlooks an enclosed garden and offers sweeping sea views. In 2019, the then Prince Charles opened the Granary Lodge for guests, as well. www.castleofmey.org.uk Henry VIII may well have been the Hugh Hefner of the Tudor period, with Hampton Court Palace being the 16th century equivalent of the Playboy Mansion. A pleasure palace that set the stage for seriously debauched parties. Situated on the banks of the Thames just south-west of London, the infamous king's pad which also boasts pleasure gardens, a tennis court and even a bowling alley, is available for stays. Get your own taste of royal grandeur by renting the on-site 18th century Georgian House, which comes complete with private walled garden and is on the alley leading to Henry VIII’s Real Tennis Court. The Georgian House sleeps up to eight and will cost you around NZ$500 a night. www.landmarktrust.org.uk Hampton Court Just off the mainland, the Isle of Wight makes for a magnificent island escape. It’s also home to Osbourne House which was beloved by Queen Victoria and Prince Albert as a family holiday home. The formal entrance to Osborne House, Sovereign's Gate, has welcomed an A to Z of European aristocracy, from Napoleon and Tsar Nicholas II. It was also where Victoria made her final departure in 1901, passing away in her favourite seaside retreat. You can tour the bedroom where she died. Nowadays, the grand entrance has been turned into one of two holiday cottages, housed within this landmark building. www.english-heritage.org.uk Osbourne House Synonymous with Christmas royal-style, Sandringham in Norfolk was purchased by Queen Victoria as a marital home for her son, Edward VII. Sandringham remains a firm favourite with the royal family. Queen Elizabeth II spent her first Christmas in the property as an eight-month-old, and since then the entire Windsor tribe converge on their Norfolk bolthole every December. But when the Monarch isn't in residence, cottages that house the travelling staff on the 8000-hectare estate, are available to let. So if that invitation to Christmas lunch never seems to arrive in the mail, this is the next best thing. What was formerly the head gardener’s house is available to rent year-round. Called the Garden House, it overlooks the ornamental garden that adjoins the main building. www.norfolkhideaways.co.uk Sandringham Estate The grandest of them all? Balmoral Castle. The royal family's hideaway in the Scottish Highlands was one of the Queen's favourite residences. Flanked by more than 20,000 hectares of forests, lochs and glens; it is the summer holiday haven for the Royal Family. Like the cottages in Sandringham, they serve as staff quarters when the Monarch comes to stay. Just prior to her death, The Queen decided to allow all eight cottages to be made available to the public for holiday bookings, after being shut for so long during the pandemic. Colt Cottages are situated in close proximity to the Castle, near the Estates Office and Stables. Bookings run on a Saturday to Saturday basis and can sleep up to five people. It’s available for let between January 7 and March 31, while Rhebreck Cottage is available year-round, aside from when the Royal Family is in residence. The weekly tariff starts from NZ$1000 a week. www.balmoralcastle.com Balmoral Castle Finally, when it comes to being "neighbours'' with The Firm, London's The Rubens at the Palace enjoys that unique distinction. Overlooking the rear of Buckingham Palace, the century-old hotel has long been the glorified accommodation wing for palace guests. From the windows you can watch the guardsmen in the Royal Mews, see the rollers being cleaned and the Monarch’s horses in their stables. The aptly named Palace Lounge stages one of London’s most beloved afternoon teas, brimming with royalty-associated fare. From coronation chicken sandwiches (purposefully conceived for the coronation lunch of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953, to the Queen's beloved "jam pennies" and bite-sized portions of William and Harry's favourite chocolate sweet treat – every bite comes with a story. Mike Yardley is our Travel Correspondent on Jack Tame Saturday Morning. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/24/20228 minutes, 34 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Tomato time!

Really? Past Mid September already?  I think that even living in Christchurch this is a rather late moment to sow the tomato seeds. On the other hand… A quick deposit of seeds now allows us to grow seedlings quickly and without risk of too much frost damage. Go on the website of the seed merchants. Kings seeds and Yates and all the others you know. Check your local plant stores – they often have a heap of cool varieties! Get the varieties you want and start that wonderful process of getting a heap of small pots with fabulous seed-raising mix – the fine compost-like stuff that is moist (not soaking wet) and hold lots of organic matter Tomato seeds should never be sown too deep. Think about a depth of just one millimetre if you can – just out of the reach of day-light. The way to achieve that is by sprinkling the seeds on top of the seed-raining mix and then add a tiny layer of more seed-raising mix or… sand, if you’ve got some. Keep the sowing trays in a warm (not too hot) and dark area. Do NOT over-water – rather: use a “mister” to spray water over the trays. That has the effect of keeping the seed-raising mix moist (not soaking wet) The warmth will help with germination; sunshine is not really a useful thing; too intense! Get the seedlings up to about 3 inches (7 centimetres or so). They will have some cotyledons (seed-leaves). Then provide them with a bit more light. Not in full sun, but in a lighter space, so that the seedlings can harden off a bit and grow a bit more “sturdy”. They start to develop some “True leaves” on the stem. Those are the ones that will also allow the development of side shoots, which might come in handy at a later stage of the tomato plant’s growth. After a month or so, the seedlings are ready to be transplanted; I usually take them to a larger pot with good potting mix. The way to transport them from their seedling mix to the next-stage-potting-mix is by holding them by their true leaves (not the fragile stems!) Once the plants are showing signs of hairiness (and sturdiness) on the stems they are ready to put in their final position. Imagine a good, well-drained soil mixture (loam and organic matter) with a natural fertiliser such as sheep pellets. Hammer a decent 1.8 meter stake in the middle (you’ll need that stake anyway, for the tomato vine to grow with) and plant the new arrival next to the stake. As soon as it starts to grow up try to tie it to the stake, especially if it is in a windy spot. In my tunnel house, where we don’t get rain (!) I need to do the watering myself and therefore choose a system with liquid fertiliser. Usually alternations of Seaweed Tea and Seafood Soup. Mixed in a rather diluted form (looking like light brown water). This means that the plants get fed often and with small amounts; If planted outside, I have always had good result with a slow-release fertiliser sprinkled on the soil; above the root zone: every time it rains, some of the fertiliser will dissolve and make its way into the soil. If you are growing indeterminate varieties of tomato (those that act like climbing vines, rather than bushy plants that stay low) try to keep up with pruning off the laterals, especially in the first meter of vine. It allows the vine to race upwards and create a much better fruiting “crown” at an easier height to pick the fruit. Varieties that were great for me: Artisan Blush was by far the best variety for us – I just pulled them up as they were still producing from last year!! Artisan Blush Cocktail True Red was yummy! And Chef’s Choice Bicolour was the beautiful show-stopper in summer Gerard Martin of Kings Seeds has two tips on new varieties: Rosella, a big cherry tomato with a black Blush And Orange Icicle which he describes as Meaty, Juicy, and Sweet Kick myself for being a bit late, this season… LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/23/20224 minutes, 58 seconds
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Steven Dromgool: Just betrayed - what do I do next?

Adam Levine has been in the news this week with allegations of cheating on his wife. Steven Dromgool looks at what you can do in the two weeks after finding yourself in the same situation.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/23/20228 minutes, 14 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Stoneleigh 2021 Riesling from Marlborough

Bob Campbell has been drinking the Stoneleigh 2021 Riesling from Marlborough and shares his thoughts. Bob's wine tip: Rieslings vary in sweetness and yet many fail to indicate sweetness level. All wines are legally obliged to show alcohol level. Alcohol level is a guide to sweetness. If a Riesling has an alcohol level of 12% or above it is likely to be dry or only very lightly sweet. If it has an alcohol level of 10% or less it is likely to be at least slightly sweet. LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/23/20223 minutes, 25 seconds
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Tara Ward: Showtrial, Entrapped, Waiata Anthems

Showtrial:  a courtroom drama from the makers of Vigil. One missing student, and a second - privileged and unlikeable - arrested for murder. The jury is going to hate her, but is she guilty? (TVNZ+) Entrapped: Sequel to the series Trapped, this murder mystery is set among the fjords of Iceland as a detective investigates the murder of a young man with links to a cult (Netflix) Waiata Anthems: a second season of the uplifting and thoughtful series that sees iconic musical artists from Aotearoa like Lorde and Tim Finn translate and record their songs in te reo Māori (TVNZ+) LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/23/20225 minutes, 14 seconds
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Groove Armada's Tom Findlay on making music for 20 years, final tour stop in NZ

They’ve kept dance floors filled for decades and are pioneers in electronic music but now iconic UK duo Groove Armada are calling time on touring after an incredible career.  Tom Findlay and Andy Cato have been best mates and colleagues for 20 years, producing hits like Superstylin’, At the River and I See You Baby. Their final tour ever ends in New Zealand with a full live band in November.   Tom joins Jack Tame on Saturday Mornings.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/23/202214 minutes, 54 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Fried cabbage leaves

THIS WEEK is the inaugural NZ ZERO FOOD WASTE CHALLENGE and it’s been so enlightening learning about landfill and how we contribute to it and what it’s doing in terms of emissions and resource management. One of the powerful habits to form to reduce what you’re throwing out is to USE IT ALL UP which means using stalks, peelings, outer leaves etc. I’ve become a huge fan of fried cabbage leaves which I first tried at a restaurant on Waiheke Island – they are just sooooo good. Makes 8-10 1-2 outer cabbage leaves ½ cup GF self-raising flour 2 tbsps cornflour 2 tsps cumin seeds ½ tsp turmeric ½ tsp sea salt ¾ cup ice cold water Vegetable oil for deep-frying 1. Cut the cabbage leaves into smaller pieces, say the size of your palm. 2. In a bowl, mix flour, cornflour, cumin, turmeric, salt and water to a smooth thin batter. 3. Heat enough oil in a medium saucepan to be able to immerse leaves for cooking. When oil begins to shimmer, drop some batter into the oil – if it fizzes immediately it is hot enough. 4. Dredge each cabbage leaf through the batter to coat, draining any excess. Lower into hot oil and cook until golden brown then drain on a paper towel. Repeat with all leaves. 5. Serve immediately sprinkled with salt. 3 FUN FACTS: A lettuce takes 25 years to decompose in landfill due to the anaerobic conditions For every kilo of food lobbed into landfill, 830 litres of water is lost – that’s 13 showers 1 kilo of food in landfill produces about the same carbon emissions as 25,000 plastic bottle LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/23/20228 minutes, 40 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: See How They Run, Fire of Love

See How They Run   In 1950s London, plans for a movie version of a smash-hit play come to an abrupt halt after a pivotal member of the crew is murdered. When a world-weary inspector and an eager rookie constable take on the case, they find themselves thrown into a puzzling whodunit within the glamorously sordid world of underground theater, investigating the mysterious homicide at their own peril.  Fire of Love  Intrepid scientists and lovers Katia and Maurice Krafft die in a volcanic explosion doing the very thing that brought them together, unravelling the mysteries of volcanoes by capturing some of nature's most explosive imagery.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/23/20224 minutes, 25 seconds
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Jack Tame: Never say never to nuclear threat

Never say never. Have wiser words ever been spoken? Any way you look at it, the last few years have not been easy for anyone trying to predict the future. Whether sitting around a dinner table or behind a radio microphone it’s been a fool’s game to try and guess what might possibly come next. I call B-S on any serious person who watched Donald Trump’s campaign launch back in 2015 and thought ‘That man will be President.’ Sure, as the months past, the rallies grew in size, and the TV networks dedicated themselves to Trump outrage, there were many more clues. And many – including me – should have been less surprised by the ultimate outcome. But go back to day dot. The launch itself. Donald Trump coming down the escalator. I’m sure I wasn’t the only one who watched that and thought to himself, ‘President Donald Trump? Ha. That’ll never happen.’ A decade or two ago, if you’d asked most so-called experts if Britain would leave the European Union, how would they have replied? Never. If you’d most of us asked whether in 2020 a global pandemic would kill millions and totally disrupt the World order, even though we had the collective scientific expertise and public health controls to control what was for most a reasonably mild infection, how would we have responded? Never. Hell,just a few years ago, what if you’d asked the average rugby fan if the All Blacks would lose to Argentina at home? You’ve got it... never. The truth is that in all of these cases there were little clues, little noteworthy kernels, that a more careful analysis might have identified and given us pause for thought. The economies, social fabric, and media cultures of the U.S and Britain had both undergone steady but significant changes. A World interconnected by cheap air travel combined with a growing anti-science, conspiratorial movement, and plain old human nature made a pandemic likely, if not inevitable. And let’s not get started on New Zealand Rugby. I wonder, does the never-say-never principle work in reverse? Do seemingly unlikely good things happen, too? Could the World suddenly unite to stop the climate from warming? Maybe I’m just an Eeyore, but I struggle to think of examples. All of this is to say I dunno about Russia and Vladimir Putin. I listened to his extraordinary speech this week and although I’m cynical as to whether we in New Zealand get a full and accurate picture of what is happening in Ukraine, clearly the man is determined to continue escalating the conflict. But nuclear weapons? In this day and age? My gut says never. Imagine the damage! The fallout! The mutually-assured destruction. The World would never be the same. But then somewhere in me there is a nagging little thought. A little kernel of doubt. Perhaps nuclear war is unlikely. But we should treat the risk of nuclear war as anything but. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/23/20223 minutes, 46 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Reflections on the Queen's funeral

Kevin Milne joins us today to talk about the biggest live event of the week, Queen Elizabeth II's broadcasted funeral. LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/23/20227 minutes, 30 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Great Rarotonga Experiences

Mike Yardley has his tips to have the best time in Rarotonga. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/17/20227 minutes, 8 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Adobe buys Figma, Uber investigating breach

Adobe - the inventor of Photoshop & Illustrator - has just bought their competitor for $20 billion  Figma is a web-based design tool which allows multiple designers to collaborate together. It doesn't require anything to be downloaded, and is loved by many across the design industry -- think of them as the Google Docs to Microsoft Word. The trouble.. these big companies often don't have a good track record of integrating the products they buy, or continuing to invest in what makes them great. Adobe though is lagging behind in the web/app design space and this acquisition means they now don't need to build it themselves. Wall Street didn't seem to love the deal, with Adobe shares dropping 17% almost instantly - their worst day since 2010. It's 23% down from the start of the week.  Uber is investigating a security breach  The hacker announced themselves in their Slack groups claiming to have access to a number of systems and then finished the message with the hashtag "Uber Underpays drivers". In response, Uber took a bunch of its internal systems offline, kicked off an investigation and contacted law enforcement. The NYTimes reports, through conversations with the apparent hacker, that they got in through social engineering.. tricking an employee into giving them their password which then gave them access to a range of systems. Once they discovered an admin password they could get into even more systems.  Uber says "sensitive" customer data doesn't appear to be breached. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/17/20222 minutes, 52 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Frantic gardening to prepare for summer

After the recent rather crappy weather, we really need to start the mahi for Spring and Summer (Spring on 23 September at 13.03 to be precise) Christmas spuds need to go into the ground if you want them before Xmas: Seed potatoes: “chitted” (= the “eyes” have started to run out) is often a quicker way to getting the plants to develop. I intend to put them in large, plastic containers (Bunnings) with holes drilled in the bottom and filled up with good growing mix; five or six potatoes; leave just 4 or 5 sprouts on the blunt top of the seed potato and dig them 30 cm deep and 30-40 cm apart. I have no time to “add” soil mix to the growing shoots when they pop their heads above ground – Just bang them in a foot deep. Potato fertiliser always has a bit more “P” (Phosphate) in it to encourage root growth and tuber growth Jersey Bennes and such early varieties are probably the best to use before Christmas. That’s all I do this year so I don’t play Russian roulette with solanum pests such as Psyllids, later in the season. (AND I WANT TO PROTECT MY MAIN TUNNELHOUSE CROP: TOMATOES!) Tomatoes Should be sown now in seed-raising mix and transplanted outside when frost danger is over; in tunnelhouse I don’t have that problem, so can bang them in as soona s they are 20 cm tall with good roots. (There are still tomatoes ripening in my tunnelhouse from last year on really old and rubbish vines, so they’ll need removing asap) more about tomatoes and how to do it, next week! Another crop I totally ignored this last year is Witlof (endive). It grows well here but due to far too much education work, never had the time to “harvest” them in autumn and grow the white chicons in a large tub of light-free sand. So: prepare a good free-draining bed in which to sow your “chicory” to get decent-sized roots for “burying” in the next autumn. They’re easy to grow in the South Island too and witlof is simply one of those weird, bitter Dutch crops that is otherwise hard to “buy off the shelf. I usually keep up with my lettuce (COS!) and spring onions, but will need to plonk in the peas and Broad beans asap before the summer sun creates havoc. These crops have a habit to grow in just about any soil condition. As long as they have good light and are not kept too dry. Liquid fertiliser seems to be the best way to keep’em happy and when I chuck Seafood Soup and Seaweed Tea on them they shoot up with vapour trails And Vapour Trails is what I will produce this weekend – honestly … it’s panic stations!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/17/20225 minutes, 26 seconds
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Tara Ward: Gaslit, Monarch, Abbot Elementary

Gaslit: Julia Roberts stars in this political thriller as the real-life whistleblower who alerted the world to Richard Nixon’s involvement in the Watergate scandal (Amazon Prime)  Monarch: Susan Sarandon and Anna Friel star in this musical drama about America's first family of country music (TVNZ+)  Abbott Elementary: winner of two Emmy awards this week, this mockumentary comedy is set in an under-fun public school in Philadelphia (Disney+)  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/17/20224 minutes, 22 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Spring time chicken and peas

This one pan wonder of a dish is the perfect way to say hello spring, good bye winter! It’s full of fresh flavours but is creamy and comforting too.  Serves 4-6  4 free-range boneless skinless chicken breasts  Salt and pepper to season  1 tablespoon olive oil  2 tablespoons butter  1 onion finely diced  1 cup chicken stock  2 tablespoons lemon juice  3 garlic cloves, minced  ½ teaspoon chilli flakes  ¼ cup cream  1 ½ cups peas  2 tablespoons chopped parsley  Remove tenderloin from chicken breasts. Slice each breast horizontally in half so you have two thinner pieces plus the tenderloin per breast. Sprinkle a pinch of salt and pepper on both sides of the chicken. Heat oil in a large pan on a medium heat. Brown chicken on both sides, about 2-3 minutes on each side. Remove the chicken to a plate. Add butter to the pan and add onions and cook gently until softened. In a bowl mix stock, lemon juice, garlic and chilli flakes and pour this over onions. Bring to a rapid simmer and cook for 10 minutes or so. Add chicken back into the pan to heat through then pour over cream. At this stage it can be either placed over a gentle heat or popped into an oven heated to 180 C to cook for a further 6-8 minutes until sauce is thickened a bit. Pour boiling water over frozen peas and let them sit for 5 minutes then drain. Add the peas to the pan in the final 2 minutes of cooking. To serve, top with chopped parsley and a decent grind of black pepper and serve with some buttercrunch or cos lettuce. Nici’s note: Adding the peas towards the end of cooking ensures they keep their vibrant green colour. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/17/20225 minutes, 44 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Kiwi indie-rockers The Beths

Estelle Clifford has her hot take on The Beths' brand new album, Expert in a Dying Field.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/17/20225 minutes, 48 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Becoming a grandparent

A major milestone in Kevin Milne's life occurred this week - he became a grandparent.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/17/20226 minutes, 55 seconds
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Kate Hall: Eco-sunscreen for the warmer weather

Sustainability expert Kate Hall has her tips on what  to look for in an eco sunscreen and the reason why 'reef safe' doesn't actually mean anything.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/17/20228 minutes, 58 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Ticket to Paradise, Official Competition

Francesca Rudkin has been watching Ticket to Paradise, starring George Clooney and Julia Roberts. She's also got her review of Official Competition, with Penelope Cruz and Antonio Banderas.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/17/20225 minutes, 10 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Carrie Soto is Back, Better the Blood

Catherine Raynes has been reading Taylor Jenkins Reid's new novel, Carrie Soto is Back and Better the Blood by Michael Bennett. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/17/20224 minutes, 15 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: Hayfever season is here

Dr Bryan Betty shares his advice on how to beat hayfever season this year. LISTEN NOWSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/17/20225 minutes, 18 seconds
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Jack Tame: The player I will miss more than anyone

In many ways, tennis is the ultimate individual sport and to excel requires three qualities in equal measure. Obviously, you’ve got to be fit. But you can’t just be fast, reactive, and strong. You’ve got to have stamina and stickability. Tennis players are finely balanced athletes. There’s no point being big and strong if you can’t last three (or five) sets. And there’s no point lasting five sets if you don’t have the strength to hit a few winners along the way. The World’s best tennis players have extraordinary technical skills. The sport demands supreme hand-eye co-ordination, timing, vision, and the mastery of a simple but extremely powerful tool. And perhaps above all, ythe World’s best need an incredible mental edge. In Grand Slam tournaments, players cannot be coached during their games. They rely only upon themselves to shoulder the insane pressure of life-changing moments in life-changing matches, the huge ups and terrible downs of a game’s shifting momentum. No player has impacted the sport of tennis quite like Serena Williams. But no one has played tennis like Roger Federer. One of my favourite-ever pieces of sports writing is a feature on Federer by the late American literary hero, David Foster Wallace. The author was a tennis prodigy as a kid, and he sought to describe the Federer ballet not just as an athletic contest or a ticket to multi-million-dollar electrolyte endorsements, but as a form of human beauty that transcended sport. “Federer’s forehand is a great liquid whip, his backhand a one-hander that he can drive flat, load with topspin, or slice — the slice with such snap that the ball turns shapes in the air and skids on the grass to maybe ankle height. His serve has world-class pace and a degree of placement and variety no one else comes close to; the service motion is lithe and uneccentric, distinctive (on TV) only in a certain eel-like all-body snap at the moment of impact. His anticipation and court sense are otherworldly, and his footwork is the best in the game.” – Roger Federer As Religious Experience I spent an afternoon once with the Nike footwear designer who worked with Roger Federer to design his playing shoes. The designer told me he’d been surprised to discover how unusually wide Federer’s feet are. It makes sense when you think about it – wider feet presumably allow a player to balance and change direction, to set himself, much more efficiently than someone with narrower feet. Federer popularised several tennis shots in top level tennis: the so-called squash shot, and the SABR (Sneak Attack By Roger) in which he surprised his opponents by running up to the service box just as their service toss hung in the air. But it his was balance that made that magnificent backhand so glorious, so perfect. I was lucky to see Federer live at several Grand Slams over the years. He hasn’t been at his best for some time now, and his retirement was inevitable. But sometimes if I’m home alone, I’ll still watch highlights of his greatest moments on YouTube. It’s like sitting in a room with Beethoven as he knocked out his sixth symphony. Fluid. Dazzling. Genius.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/17/20224 minutes, 12 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Marlon Williams and his new album 'My Boy'

Estelle Clifford takes us through Marlon Williams' new album My Boy. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/10/20225 minutes, 17 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Fresh takes on Tauranga

Resident traveller Mike Yardley based himself in Mt Maunganui as his had a tour around Tauranga. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/9/202210 minutes
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Steven Dromgool: elationship expert on how to manage step-kids

Relationship expert Steven Dromgool runs through FAQs concerning around step-kids. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/9/202211 minutes, 51 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Gardening expert on King Charles III's environmentalism

Gardening expert Ruud Kleinpaste joined Jack Tame to highlight King Charles III's love and care for the environment. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/9/20222 minutes, 48 seconds
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Hannah McQueen: The situations in which you should consider switching banks

The stats suggest not many of us do it, but there are compelling reasons why you would – and also circumstances when you wouldn’t. Most people think only of getting a better interest rate – but there are more strategic reasons why you might consider switching (and it’s not as much of a faff as it used to be) – plus there are some significant cash incentives on offer as the banks compete for business amid slower growth in lending. LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/9/20226 minutes, 18 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Apple's latest devices have been announced

Apple's latest devices have been announced. The big breakthrough is the ability to send emergency messages via satellite on your iPhone  This is a game changer for anyone who gets outdoors tramping, boating, fishing, kayaking, mountain biking - now if you get lost, injure yourself or just generally require emergency assistance you'll be able to get a message out.   How it works. You try calling 911 and if there is no signal it will give you the option to send a message via satellite. You won't type the message, you'll follow a series of prompts to indicate the type of situation you're in and the assistance you need. It'll take around 15 seconds to send, longer if you're under trees.  The tech uses satellite technology covering almost everywhere in the USA or Canada that can see the sky.   This is more than just an investment in the phone tech. Reuters reports its spent $450 million on satellite infrastructure, and has set up an emergency operations center to contact emergency services on your behalf.   Apple says it'll be free for the first two years, and has plans to make it a global service.  The 'always-on' display  Now on the iPhone. Android fans will scream out that they've had this feature for years - which is true. Apple has gone the extra step though to allow your iPhone background to also be displayed, meaning the whole screen stays always-on. It uses specialized screen technology which allows each pixel to be controlled individually, including its brightness.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/9/20224 minutes, 48 seconds
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Tara Ward: The Twelve, Wakefield and picks to remember Queen Elizabeth II

The Twelve: A courtroom drama starring Sam Neill. When 12 ordinary Australians are selected for the jury in a controversial murder trial, their own secrets and fears will decide the fate of the accused - and their verdict will change the lives of everyone involved (TVNZ+). Wakefield: Nikheel Katira is a gifted psychiatric nurse at Wakefield Hospital in Australia's picturesque Blue Mountains. There's just one problem - while his patients are getting better, Nik's grip on reality is starting to slip (Neon).  Tara’s picks to remember and celebrate Queen Elizabeth: as our television networks pay tribute to the life and reign of Queen Elizabeth II with a variety of TV specials and documentaries, we pick the best ones to watch or stream this weekend. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/9/20224 minutes, 43 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Chocolate Biscuit Cake fit for a Queen

In honour of the passing of Queen Elizabeth 11, we’re making one of her favourite cake recipes. It’s a no-bake cake and this is the original recipe as shared by the Queen’s past royal chef Darryn McGrady.  CAKE  225g tea biscuits, like super wine or plain digestives  115g unsalted butter, softened  115g (a scant half cup) caster sugar  120g dark chocolate  1 egg  ICING  225g dark chocolate  Grease a 15cm cake tin – use a spring tin if you have one. Break each biscuit into almond size pieces and set aside. In a large bowl, beat butter and sugar until pale and creamy. Melt the dark chocolate until just melted and add this to the butter mixture, stirring constantly. Beat in the egg. Fold in the biscuit pieces until they are all coated with the chocolate mixture. Spoon the mixture into the prepared cake ring. Try to fill all of the gaps on the bottom of the tin as this becomes the top once turned out. Chill the cake for at least 3 hours. Gently melt the dark chocolate over a low heat. Once the cake has chilled, turn it out onto a wire rack. Pour over the melted chocolate and smooth the top and sides using a palette knife. Allow the chocolate to set at room temperature. Lift it onto a tea plate and serve in clean slices. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/9/20224 minutes, 57 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Sunday Session host on some of Queen Elizabeth's best portrayals on screen

Francesca Rudkin joins Jack Tame to discuss some of Queen Elizabeth's best on screen portrayals, most notably when Helen Mirren played her in The Queen in 2006. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/9/20224 minutes, 21 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Queen Elizabeth's passing and how the PM found out

Kevin Milne joined Jack Tame to add his voice to the many others expressing grief following Queen Elizabeth II's passing and finds the fact that Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern was woken up by Police in the middle of the night a little strange for this day and age. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/9/20225 minutes, 18 seconds
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Enda Brady: UK correspondent with the latest as King Charles III makes his first address

UK correspondent Enda Brady joined Jack Tame as King Charles III makes his first address following Queen Elizabeth II's passing. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/9/20224 minutes, 43 seconds
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Jack Tame: Queen Elizabeth II was the constant...now, that constant is gone

I was in bed when I heard the news. I can’t say I’ll remember the moment itself. It didn’t have the same shock value as Princess Di’s death and unlike most other historically significant events, we know exactly what’s coming over the next few days. The pageantry, the choreography, the careful coordination; it’s all quite deliberate and precise. I’ll be honest. I’m not a huge fan of the institution. I never have been. I prickle at the privilege of hereditary monarchies. I don’t like aristocracy. For me and many people of my generation, the monarchy feels like an old-time throwback to empire and an imperial place in the world that Britain no longer holds and should no longer hold. I think it’s possible to feel ambivalent (at best) about the institution and what it represents, and at the same time a deep respect for the Queen herself as an individual. In her case, the privileges of the role, the money and castles and special treatment, were surely offset by the extraordinary burden of service. The figure that stuck with me yesterday was 21,000 – the barely fathomable number of private service engagements the Queen undertook during her reign. No one on the face of the Earth will know a life quite like it. The small talk. The handshakes. The mindless monotony of having almost everyone in your company freak out when you walk in the room. One thing that has struck me is the sheer volume of people with memories and anecdotes of the occasions upon which they met the Queen. She was like a beach ball in a crowded stadium, passed along time and again for seventy years. Never stopping. A handful of plebs could reach out to her just for a moment in time, before the beach ball was bopped on. But everyone remembered their moment. In so many of those stories there is a lovely contrast. For the person she was meeting, the person with the story, the interaction was a huge moment, among the most memorable (and sometimes meaningful) few minutes in their life. But for the Queen, we can only imagine that in the vast majority of cases, the interaction represented the exact opposite. Just another Tuesday, just another handshake, just another how-do-you-do. I expect King Charles will have a difficult time maintaining the monarchy’s relevance in a modern world. There are many people who feel an allegiance or a loyalty to, or a reverence for the Queen, who don’t feel the same for King Charles. There will be scrutiny. There will be criticism. There will be many conversations about Republicanism. Without its matriarch, the Royal family’s myriad issues feel all-the-more exposed. Queen Elizabeth II took the throne when meat was still being rationed in Britain in the post-war years, and lived to see the impacts of globalization, mass-digitalization, and the rise of new threats to democracy. In an increasingly tribal and partisan world, she was a steady, neutral force. She was the steady force. I admired the Queen’s careful restraint. The Queen lived through arguably the greatest period of change the world has ever seen. And in that period of great change there is no figure on Earth who has represented a greater picture of stability. Queen Elizabeth was the constant. Now, the constant is gone.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/9/20224 minutes, 29 seconds
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Miss Polly's Kitchen: Lamb Rump with Pomegranate Salsa and Soft Roasted Eggplant

This is a summery delight that I absolutely adore. Serve with toasted pita pockets or roasted potatoes and a big glass of red wine. SERVES 4 About ½ cup olive oil 1 tablespoon dried oregano 2 large garlic cloves – minced 4 x 200 g (7 oz) lamb rumps 2 large eggplants A big handful of baby rocket leaves POMEGRANATE SALSA ⅓ cup extra virgin olive oil 1 teaspoon sugar Zest of 1 lemon Juice of 1 juicy lemon ½ cup pomegranate seeds ⅓ cup roasted pistachios – roughly chopped 1 cup finely chopped Italian parsley ¼ cup finely chopped fresh oregano YOGHURT FETA WHIP 3 garlic cloves 1 cup thick Greek yoghurt 100 g (3½ oz) cow’s milk feta 1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil 1 tablespoon honey Juice of 1 lemon Preheat the oven to 200°C (400°F) fan bake. Mix 2 tablespoons of the olive oil with the oregano and garlic in a bowl. Add the lamb rumps, mixing well so the lamb is coated. Season with cracked pepper and set aside. Slice the eggplants into 1.5 cm (⅝ in) rounds. Cut the tops off the 3 garlic cloves for the Yoghurt Feta Whip, keeping the skin on. Place the eggplant slices and garlic cloves on a lined baking tray, drizzle with ¼ cup of the olive oil and season with salt and cracked pepper. Roast for 35–40 minutes on the lower shelf of the oven. To make the Pomegranate Salsa, place the olive oil, sugar, lemon zest and lemon juice in a bowl and whisk with a fork. Season with salt and cracked pepper. Add the pomegranate seeds, pistachios, parsley and oregano. Set aside. When the eggplant has been cooking for 15 minutes, heat a medium pan over a medium/high heat. Add 1 tablespoon of olive oil and when it is starting to smoke, sear the lamb for 1½ minutes on each side until browned. Place the lamb on a baking tray. Roast for about 13 minutes. Remove the lamb and garlic cloves from the oven. Cover the lamb with tin foil and set aside to rest for 10 minutes. To make the Yoghurt Feta Whip, squeeze the roasted garlic cloves out of their skins into a food processor or blender. Add the yoghurt, feta, olive oil, honey and lemon juice and blitz until smooth.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/3/20225 minutes, 14 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Travel tips for Waihi Beach and Western Bay of Plenty

Travel contributor Mike Yardley joins Jack to talk about what to do on holiday in Waihi Beach and Western Bay of Plenty. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/3/20227 minutes, 13 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Demo Lovato's risque album Holy Fvck

Estelle Clifford has been listening to Demi Lovato's new album Holy Fvck.  She joins Jack Tame to share her thoughts on the album.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/3/20225 minutes, 8 seconds
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Ethically Kate: Why I'm doing a wardrobe freeze

Kate Hall from Ethically Kate talks to Jack about why she's doing a Wardrobe Freeze for 2022. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/3/202211 minutes, 24 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Daisy Darker and The Marriage Portrait

Book reviewer Catherine Raynes joins Jack to talk about the latest books she's been reading.  This week Daisy Darker by Alice Feeney and The Marriage Portrait by Maggie O'Farrell. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/3/20223 minutes, 32 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: What to look for in a fertiliser

Warmer soils – new growth – plants wake up slowly – cells become active  Plants, trees, shrubs, mosses, climbers perform LOTS of ecosystem services; One of the most important ones: Photosynthesis. They absorb CO2 from the air, run water with dissolved nutrients through roots and “vascular systems” (tiny pipes in stems, branches, veins, etc) and it all ends up in the leaves; green leaves.  The reason those are green is because they contain cells with all sorts of active molecules, especially chlorophyll. This Chlorophyll, concentrated in chloroplasts is where all the action is:  Water, nutrients, CO2 and sunlight (literally solar energy!) combine to manufacture carbohydrates (sugars) and Oxygen (O2) which we breathe in.  Ecosystem Service: Take CO2 out of the air and turn it into Oxygen, while the Carbon ends up in the soil when leaves fall to the ground and are recycled by bugs, fungi, bacteria etc  Simple, eh?  To create a healthy, functional garden (or forest) with trees, shrubs, plants etc, we need to make sure that all elements are provided and that includes nutrients (fertilisers).  If you go into a garden centre you’ll notice that most fertiliser containers give you an “N-P-K” ratio for the contents. Those three chemicals (Nitrogen, Phosphorus/Phosphates and Potash (the Latin name is “Kalium” – hence the “K”) are the macro-nutrients that plants take up in rather large quantities. They are, indeed, the most important fertiliser compounds needed for healthy plant growth.  Trace elements (needed in much smaller quantities) are Magnesium, Iron, Manganese, Calcium, boron, Zinc, molybdenum, selenium, etc  They are important certainly if they are lacking in the soil! (so don’t ingnore them).  Let’s concentrate on the N, P and K.  Nitrogen is the stuff that makes plants green; this molecule provides the building blocks for Chlorophyll. If you have plants that are valued for their leaves and green stems (grass, lawns, lettuce, ornamental trees and shrubs) they will need more N and than – say – P or K;  Plants with important roots (carrots, parsnips, potatoes) and other underground organs that will grow as they explore for “food in the dark” need a little bit more P to do just that.  And the K (Potash) is for reproduction.  Plant reproduction is of course mostly through flowers, which are pollinated and hence become fertilised to produce seeds and fruits which, when deposited on soil, will yield new seedlings.  That means that flowering plants and fruiting trees, shrubs, vines and berry bushes, really appreciate an extra dollop of potash, just to keep the cool stuff coming.  Knowing the right fertiliser mix truly makes a difference;  Don’t be tempted to “over-dose” your plants as too much shows up in certain symptoms that make your plants look “sick”  My tactic is “Small amounts and Often” See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/3/20224 minutes, 5 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Peregrine 2022 Saddleback Rosé

Bob Campbell joins Jack Tame with his wine pick of the week. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/3/20223 minutes, 47 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Twitters most requested feature is coming

Tech expert Paul Stenhouse joins Jack to discuss Twitters decision to add an edit button.  It's said to be the biggest shift on the platform since the doubling of the character limit in 2017. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/2/20225 minutes, 6 seconds
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Jack Johnson: First new music in five years 'Meet the Moonlight'

Jack Johnson’s career has spanned decades. Songs like Taylor, Flake and Better Together are known and loved across all generations.   But did you know music wasn’t always his first calling? The Hawaiian singer was a professional surfer before an accident set him on the path of song writing.   Jack’s just released his first album in five years and is heading to New Zealand later this year. Jack Johnson talks to Jack Tame. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/2/202213 minutes, 28 seconds
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Tara Ward: The Rings of Power, The Bear, The Suspect

1) Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power: the long-awaited and much-anticipated fantasy series based on JRR Tolkein’s books (and filmed in New Zealand) finally arrives on Amazon Prime. 2) The Bear: A chef returns to Chicago to run his family sandwich shop, but ends up juggling the realities of small business ownership, strong-willed staff and strained family relationships (Disney+). 3) The Suspect: Clinical psychologist Joe O’Loughlin appears to have the perfect life, but when he's drawn into a murder investigation, Joe's flawless existence starts to unravel (TVNZ+). See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/2/20226 minutes, 4 seconds
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Jack Tame: The TV show that saved me from this grim winter

I dunno’ if you’ve noticed but there’s a lot of outrage in the World right now. Sure, there’s plenty of good reason for much of it. There are plenty of good reasons to despair. The economy is bad. The climate is changing. The pandemic has left us sick and exhausted. It’s winter. All of us are feeling spent. As someone who spends a good chunk of his day professionally doom-scrolling, I can’t help but notice that uncertain times often bring out the worst in people. We don’t trust each other. We’re intolerant. Our political discourse is nasty and tribal. Maybe that’s why I’ve been so surprised, so delighted over the last few weeks to find a reprieve from the gloom and funk. Throughout this winter of discontent, I’ve been astonished at just how much joy I’ve found… in a TV show. To be honest, I’m embarrassed about the whole thing. Embarrassed for a few reasons. First of all, I’m embarrassed it’s taken me so long to watch this TV show, given it’s already aired several seasons, has won all sorts of awards, and has been recommended to me a million times over by all and sundry. And honestly, I feel a little embarrassed to admit that a popular comedy, made by Hollywood mega-studios for the broadest possible audience, could tickle me quite as much as it has. The show is Ted Lasso. It’s on Apple TV+. If you haven’t seen it, the premise is pretty simple: An American football coach moves from Kansas to London, from coaching college football to coaching an English Premier League football club. This, despite the fact he has no experience coaching football and doesn’t understand the sport’s history, culture, or rules. It’s a comedy that pokes fun at the differences between Britain and the U.S. It pokes fun at football culture in both countries. It pokes fun at class divisions and celebrity culture. But really, it isn’t a show about football. Most of the Premier League in-jokes fly right over my girlfriend’s head but she’s still more enthralled by the story than I am. It isn’t a show about sport. It’s a show about one man, whose infectious, charming, unwavering decency and irrepressible optimism slowly turns a profoundly cynical World, one person at a time. I can’t imagine the writers ever pitched it that way. It wouldn’t have won over any network executives to say, ‘We just want to make a show about a nice guy who treats people incredibly well.’ That wouldn’t fly. And honestly, if you told me that was the premise of Ted Lasso, I would probably never have got around to watching it. But I’ve found Ted Lasso refreshing. It does what all good art does. It sits with me. It lifts me. I still think about it, days after I last watched an episode. I can see ‘Ted Lasso’ becoming a verb. I’m sure I’m not the only one. Can you ‘Ted Lasso’ a person or a situation? Sure you can. I’m sure, all over the World, there have been little moments of decency or acts of kindness inspired by Ted Lasso. Imagine if instead of sniping and bickering, we all took a page from Ted’s book, once in a while. WWTLD? What Would Ted Lasso Do? This will sound crazy. And I’m only admitting it because I feel it’s what the main protagonist would do. In a way, the best episodes of Ted Lasso have affected me, quite profoundly. Ted Lasso’s character exists to make a fictional World a better place. And though you can write it off as a silly TV show, I reckon Ted Lasso might be making the real World just bit better, too.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/2/20224 minutes, 42 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Lancaster and Muru

Film reviewer Francesca Rudkin talks to Jack about new films Lancaster and New Zealand film, Muru.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/2/20226 minutes, 14 seconds
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Kevin Milne: 80% of pensioners will make it to 90

Kevin Milne joins Jack Tame to talk about some great news he heard this week. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/2/20228 minutes, 48 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Death of Jimmy Nolan, the unruly tourist

Kevin Milne talks to Jack about the death of Jimmy Nolan, the leader of the "unruly tourists" who died in England yesterday. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9/2/20228 minutes, 48 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Space X bringing more cellphone coverage

Cellphone signal from the sky   Elon Musk’s SpaceX and US mobile carrier T-Mobile are partnering to be able to offer cellphone coverage in more places than ever before. New satellites with improved antennas will allow current cellphones to be able to connect to send and receive text messages - then later calls and browse the internet. No ground cellphone towers or special adapters required as they’re using the same 5G frequencies already built into your phone.     Man banned from Google after taking pictures of his naked son  The images were scanned as part of Google’s efforts to combat images of child sexual abuse. But he wasn’t commuting a crime, in fact the opposite. He was taking pictures, as requested by a nurse, of his son’s swollen penis so the doctor could diagnose the cause ahead of a video consultation. The police agreed no crime had been committed but google disagreed and said it broke their terms and conditions. So he lost his emails, contacts, photos and even his phone number as Google also provided his cell service.    LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/27/20222 minutes, 44 seconds
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Brad Smeele: The Ride That Changed My Life

In 2014 adrenaline junkie Brad Smeele was a world champion wake boarder at the top of his game.  He had the career, success, the woman and a lakeside home in Florida. In July that year, it all came crashing down when a fall while attempting a difficult trick left Brad quadriplegic.  The next few years were anything but easy for Brad, he has now opened up about that journey and the peace he has made with his new life.  His memoir is called Owning It: The Ride That Changed My Life.  Brad Smeele joined Jack Tame to share his story. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/27/202218 minutes, 15 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Savoury leftover bread pudding

We waste A LOT of bread in this country – over 15 tonnes per year, at a cost of over $62m! There’s no knead!  This recipe is a great use for it and it barely matters how stale it is as it ends up soaking up the cheesy, egg mixture.  Serves 4-6    6-8 thick (2cm) slices stale bread  2-3 tbsps soft butter  200g ham, bacon or chorizo – diced  6 eggs  ½ cup cream  ½ cup milk  1 cup grated cheese  1 tsp dried mustard  1 tbsp wholegrain mustard  1 tbsp fresh thyme leaves  ½ tsp sea salt + decent grind black pepper  2 tbsps finely chopped parsley  ½ tsp chilli flakes  Preheat oven to 180 C. Grease a large loaf tin. Butter each piece of bread and arrange in the loaf tin or other oven proof dish. Tuck ham, bacon or chorizo between slices. In a bowl whisk eggs, cream, milk, ½ cup grated cheese, mustards and fresh thyme. Add salt and pepper. Pour mixture over bread. Top with remaining grated cheese, parsley and chilli flakes. Stand for 20 minutes to allow bread to soak up the egg mixture. Bake for 20-30 minutes until top is golden and middle is cooked. Serve big warm spoonfuls for breakfast, lunch or dinner! Note: You could use torn chunks of bread if it’s baguette, sourdough or even croissant.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/27/20223 minutes, 34 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: Long Covid

Dr Bryan Betty talks to Jack Tame about long Covid, what we know and how to treat it. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/27/20224 minutes, 9 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Do No Harm and Rogues

Book reviewer Catherine Raynes has been reading Do No Harm by Robert Pobi and Rogues by Patrick Radden Keefe. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/27/20225 minutes, 34 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Spring break in Rotorua

Travel correspondent Mike Yardley gives Jack advice for the perfect spring break away in Rotorua. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/27/20227 minutes, 45 seconds
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Steven Dromgool: How to deal with finances in a relationship

Relationship expert Steven Dromgool joins Jack to talk about how to use money well in relationships. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/27/20228 minutes, 26 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Bret McKenzie releases Songs without Jokes

Music reviewer Estelle Clifford has been listening to Bret McKenzie's newly released album, Songs without Jokes. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/27/20226 minutes, 51 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Monarch butterflies are coming out of hibernation

Before I get the common questions about “need food for Monarchs” and… “What do the admiral butterflies need for their caterpillars?”, I thought I’d put the warning out now:  Monarchs are coming out of “hibernation” – in fact I have already seen quite a few mating, so… it’s all on!  Swan plants (bit boring in my opinion!) can be sown right now – Kings Seeds and other seed merchants have these popular plants in stock; Moths and Butterfly trust also stocks a heap of different seeds for Monarchs; Germination is good at warmer temps: 21 degrees is recommended.  Fabulous Asclepias species with colourful flowers are also suitable host plants – more my gig!  Whatever you sow: aim for heaps of plants and keep some of them in large pots as “spares” for when famine breaks out.  Potted plants (covered with fine netting) are out-of-bounds for ovipositing female butterflies; they are also – later in the season – a movable object to confuse the GPS systems of marauding wasps!  Good horticultural practice makes the plants grow bushy and dense, creating heaps of foliar food: pinch out the terminal buds from the tallest growing tips, which allows lower dormant buds to develop more bushy appearance  Admiral Butterflies love nettles to lay their eggs on; if you have a safe space you can try the native Ongaonga stinging nettle; just be careful they are ferocious (Hence their name Urtica ferox)  Red admirals are keen on that tree nettle (ferox) but will also feed on perennial nettle (dioica)  Yellow admirals tend to go for the smaller nettle species as food for the caterpillars.  I have both admirals in abundance, her in the Halswell Quarry; The reds seem to overwinter here too.  Red admiral (left) – Yellow admiral (right)  For our blues, sow some Trifolium, Medicago or Lotus species, and for coppers and boulder coppers: plant the appropriate species of Muehlenbeckia. Details can be found of the Moths and Butterflies Trust website: https://nzbutterfly.info/  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/27/20224 minutes, 14 seconds
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Tara Ward: Bad Sisters, Welcome to Wrexham, Neighbours

Bad Sisters: An Irish comedy-drama starring Sharon Hogan about the lives of the Garvey sisters, who are bound together by the premature death of their parents and a promise to always protect one another (Apple+).  Welcome to Wrexham: A docuseries that follows the purchase and stewardship of Wrexham AFC, one of Wales’ oldest football clubs, by Hollywood actors Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney (Disney+).  Neighbours: Everybody needs good Neighbours, but after nearly 40 years on our screens, the final episode of the Australian soap screens this Friday with several fan favourites returning to Ramsay Street for one last visit (Friday, 7.30pm, TVNZ1)  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/27/20225 minutes, 6 seconds
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Jack Tame: Students shouldn't be living in poverty

Joe Biden cancelled student debt.  Not all of it. $10,000 in federal loans per person for people who earn less than $125,000 a year. Call it an exercise in fairness or a cynical political play… either way, it won’t be happening here.   And nor should it. This might surprise you - it’s certainly a different position to the one I held when I racked up my own student loan, constantly comparing my own tertiary fees to those of my parents’ generation – but I don’t think university should be free and I don’t think we should cancel student loan debt.   For the individual, a university education is an investment. Although it’s by no means true for everyone, you are still likelier to earn more money if you have a university education than if you don’t.   You might rightly argue that an educated population benefits more than the individual. Society is the winner. And you’re right. But the government already massively subsidises tertiary education. As expensive as it is, it would be unfair to those who’ve chosen different professional paths – especially workers in blue collar jobs – if we expected them to fully fund the education of people who will likely soon earn more than them.   For the most part, New Zealand strikes a good balance. Our student loan scheme gives most people access to education whilst not burdening them with interest. By international standards, the scheme is generous. I have friends who borrowed the maximum weekly living costs for the years they were at university, fastidiously tucking away all of it away in savings accounts, who eventually used that student loan money as an interest-free deposit on a house. There aren’t many loan schemes that will allow you to do that!   I say this as someone who paid off his loan, himself. I know I’m very fortunate, but so often this debate is defined by individual anecdotes.   Fifteen years ago, I owed 25 or 30 grand. Fortunately, my education led me directly to a profession in which I earned enough money to live with dignity, even as I paid off my debt. That might not have been the case if I hadn’t done a degree.   But my own experience taught me we can do a much better job of helping young people understand the ramifications of debt. I think too many people go to university too young. They default to studying something they aren’t very interested in only to wake up a few years later with tens-of-thousands of dollars owing.  I think we can do a much better job of advocating for vocational training and careers in the trades. For the right person at the right time, tertiary education is fantastic. But even with a relatively generous student loan scheme, it can still be a debt trap.  If we’re to change anything about university fees, I’d suggest bolder initiatives to address professional shortages in our society. Back in the 1980s, my parents only chose to settle in New Zealand because trainee teachers here received a stipend, and in Australia they didn’t. I’m broadly supportive of further subsidising fees or reducing debt for selected qualifications, if it means we directly bolster a chronically understaffed public workforce.   Nursing? Mental health? Sure.   Accounting and Public Relations? No thanks.   One last point: Instead of cancelling student debt, we should be doing a much better job of addressing the immediate living concerns of university students, many of whom are among the poorest people in our society. We are already heavily subsidising their studies – as we should – so why do we accept that so many students are eking out life after housing costs on $50 or $100 a week? Poverty is not a right of passage.  I think there’s a good argument student allowances and living costs should be increased.    University shouldn’t be free for everyone. We shouldn’t cancel all student loan debt. But students also shouldn’t be living in poverty. Instead of following Joe Biden’s move, we’d be much better to address students’ immediate concerns, so if our young people do choose university, they have the best chance to succeed in their studies.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/27/20225 minutes, 13 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Beast and Farewell, Mr. Haffman

Film reviewer Francesca Rudkin talks to Jack about new release films Beast and Farewell, Mr Haffman. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/27/20226 minutes, 14 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Stan Walker's new album All In

Estelle Clifford has been listening to Stan Walkers newly released album, All In.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/20/20226 minutes, 14 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: One of the Girls, Portrait of an Unknown Woman

Book reviewer Catherine Raynes talks to Jack about her latest reads, One of the Girls by Lucy Clarke and Portrait of and Unknown Woman by Daniel Silva.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/20/20223 minutes, 21 seconds
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Kate Hall: How to shop for the most sustainable energy

Sustainability expert Kate Hall shares her tips on how to use the most 'clean' energy and busts myths about how electricity works.  You can find more information on her blog. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/19/20229 minutes, 15 seconds
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Tara Ward: House of Dragon, The Undeclared War, Magpie Murders

House of the Dragon: The long-awaited prequel to Game of Thrones, telling the story of the Targaryen civil war that took place about 300 years before events portrayed in Game of Thrones (Neon, from 22 August)  The Undeclared War: A geopolitical thriller set in a post-pandemic Britain in the run up to a general election, as a team of analysts buried in the heart of GCHQ secretly work to ward off a cyberattack on the country's electoral system (TVNZ+).  Magpie Murders: Lesley Manville stars in this British murder mystery about a book editor who gets drawn into a web of intrigue and murder when she receives Alan Conway's unfinished manuscript of an Atticus Pünd mystery (TVNZ+). See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/19/20225 minutes, 4 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: How to take cuttings

Being Dutch has a few advantages: getting free plants is important! My mum was known for taking cuttings all over Europe when the Kleinpaste Family was on Holiday in their foldable campervan/tent. We returned to the Netherlands with heaps of propagation material in the car – there was barely room for us, kids, to sit on the back seat!  Mum was the gardener and she took cuttings – constantly experimenting.  This time of the year (before deciduous shrubs and trees start to roll out the leaves for next season) is a good time for taking hardwood and semi-hardwood cuttings.  Your archetypal stem cuttings (or shoot cuttings) are planted in some nice mixture of potting mix, pumice/sand which becomes a well-drained habitat for the roots to form;  There are many books and articles that can tell you and show you how to do that, but what strikes me as a minor miracle is the way plants literally change the function of their cells to create rootlets!  Plants are made of myriads of cells – each has a distinct function in the plant:  Executing photosynthesis, transporting fluids, transporting gases, turning into flowers, becoming fruits, or seeds… some become roots, others become shoots; Of course, a nice flat cluster of adjoining cells is known by gardeners as a LEAF .  But when you put a stem cutting into the mix, the cells suddenly create areas where they form roots  Yet a root cutting has cells that form brand-new shoots  And leaf cuttings (think Begonias, African Violets and Cacti!) have to produce ROOTS and STEMS!  So, all these cells can literally change their jobs and adapt to the new function, by simply creating new shapes.  Taking cuttings and the success there-of depends enormously on what species you are trying to propagate, so: experiment!  Take some hardwood cuttings and some semi-hardwood cuttings in one batch  Some species will work best with softwood cuttings – others are best propagated by Layering.  Rooting Hormones are often helpful (they come in softwood – medium hardwood – hardwood). There is evidence that Home-made “WillowWater” hormones are not as useful as some people think  (A story for another day, I expect)  Generalistics:  Take cuttings from HEALTHY Plants  Cuttings from young plants tend to root quicker  DORMANT hardwood cuttings best taken after autumn and before spring-warmth  Cuttings from FLOWERING twigs are often really HARD to strike; so: no flowering wood!!  Keep cuttings in a tunnelhouse/glasshouse or… create a miniature cloche with a plastic bag  Don’t over-water the cuttings – just a little moisture is enough!  Leave some Leaves on the top of the cutting; trim the leaves from the bottom of the cutting  Difficult plants to propagate often need some “bottom heat” (25 degrees C)  And keep experimenting!!! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/19/20224 minutes, 14 seconds
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Hannah McQueen: How to grow wealth when you are risk-averse

In times like these it is tempting to take a conservative approach to growing wealth, however that usually means you aren't keeping up with inflation.  Enable Me founder Hannah McQueen joins Jack to talk about how to get comfortable taking risks, when you are naturally risk-averse. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/19/20225 minutes, 17 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Apple releases emergency update for iPhone users

 If you have an Apple device, you'll want to install the latest update  Apple has released an emergency update to its suite of platforms - mac, iPad and iPhone - to fix a critical security issue which could allow a hacker into your device through your web browser. Worse - Apple says these vulnerabilities have been used.  It's very technical, but simply, through accessing a website the hacker could effectively get deep access to your device, and control apps as if you were doing the activity.   Known in the industry as a "zero-day" as the exploit is known and in the wild - so they have zero days to fix it. Apple has released patches available for download now, and also an update specifically for the Safari browser.  Just search for "set a timer for 5 minutes" and it automatically starts counting down.   It was removed because it had an "issue" but it's back -- and you may not have ever known it existed! You can also ask Google to "flip a coin" or "roll a dice".. or "do a barrel roll".  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/19/20223 minutes, 36 seconds
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Abbas Nazari: One year of Taliban rule in Afganistan

One year ago, this week, the Taliban swept into Kabul and took control of the Afghanistan capital.  Former Tampa refugee Abbas Nazari, joins Jack Tame to discuss what the last year in Afghanistan has been like under Taliban rule. Abbas was 7 years when his family escaped the Taliban and Afghanistan in 2001.  They were on board a small fishing boat with 400 other asylum seekers when it began to sink. They were saved by a cargo ship – The Tampa. As you may recall the ship was turned away from Australia before settling in New Zealand. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/19/202213 minutes, 48 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Iron-rich Sausage Rolls

Nici Wickes joins Jack with an iron rich recipe ahead of World Iron Awareness Week, next week.   MAKES 8-12 small sausage rolls 2 quality sausages – beef, pork or lamb 200g mince – beef or lamb 1 cup shredded spinach ½ cup drained canned lentils ½ cup fresh breadcrumbs (use GF if going that way) 2 tbsp milk 1 spring onion, sliced thinly 1 tsp salt 2 tsp fresh chopped herbs – rosemary, parsley, thyme, oregano Decent pinch chilli flakes Splash of olive oil 2-3 sheets flaky pastry (or 3-4 GF tortilla or wraps for GF sausage rolls) 1 small egg, lightly beaten Sesame seeds for sprinkling   1. Heat oven to 180 C fan bake. Line a tray with baking paper. 2. Squeeze sausage meat from casings into a bowl. Mix in mince, spinach, lentils, breadcrumbs, milk, spring onions, salt, herbs, chilli flakes and oil until well combined. Your hands are the best tools for this. 3. Roll and shape the filling into 3-4 log shapes and position to fit in the centre of each pastry sheet (or warmed tortilla/wrap). Roll up tightly, brushing a little egg on the seam to help it seal. Cut each log into 3-4 pieces and place on the tray, seam side down. Brush each with egg and sprinkle with sesame seeds. 4. Bake for 30-40 minutes until lovely and golden and filling is cooked. 5. Serve with tomato sauce, of course.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/19/20225 minutes, 50 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Gloriavale and Good Luck to you Leo Grande

Film reviewer Francesca Rudkin has been watching documentary Gloriavale and new Emma Thompson film Good Luck to you Leo Grande. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/19/20226 minutes, 35 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Why can't we get people to stand in local elections?

Kevin Milne joins Jack Tame to discuss the issues surrounding a shortage of people putting their name forward in the local elections. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/19/20227 minutes, 3 seconds
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Jack Tame: So, I've sold my home

I’ve sold my home. It’s happening. I’m leaving my 16th floor apartment for a place that will require much more maintenance. No more locking-and-leaving. No more stunning sunrises. No more Keith Jarrett on the stereo, sitting in an armchair and watching the World revolve below me. No more Maungawhau. No more Hauturu. No more monitoring the motorway traffic in real time. No more whipping downstairs to the K Road cafes for a pastry and a flat white. I’m embarrassed to say it’ll be the first time in my life when I’m responsible for mowing a lawn. I feel a mix of emotions. My apartment is the first and only home I’ve ever owned. At every stage when my housing has changed, I’ve felt a rush of sentimentalism. Each shift has marked a different peg in my life, far more meaningful than supposedly significant birthdays. Leaving home for my first shared flat. Leaving shared New Zealand flats for my first New York studio. Leaving New York, coming home, and buying for the first time. Leaving my apartment for something bigger, something without huge windows and a 16th floor balcony. Something child-friendly. I remember when I bought my place, the then Prime Minister John Key was asked for his advice to young people struggling to buy property. Get an apartment, he said! Low maintenance. Cheaper. Close to lots of amenities. He didn’t need to convince me. I’ve always felt at least part of our housing crisis has been caused by a cultural reluctance to embrace high-density living. We associated all apartments with slummy 35-square-metre, tiny-windowed boxes. For many years, it was hard to find warm, bright, higher-end apartments with amenities. My place has a great gym, a big pool, storage lockers, and a billiards room. The walk from the lobby to K Road’s rich variety of cafes and restaurants takes approximately 35 seconds. Apartments might have suited first-home buyers. I can confirm they don’t necessarily make great investments. I almost certainly overpaid when I first bought my place – I didn’t know the market well enough. You live and you learn, right? But I sold my home at a fair price. CV. After agent fees and everything else, I’ll basically end up with what I paid for it. You could drive yourself mad by playing the what-if-I’d-bought-a-decaying-bungalow-instead game, and knowing my luck, the apartment market will probably double in the next six months. It’s the land value that has wildly appreciated over the last few years. But honestly, I didn’t buy my place intending to make money. I bought it as a home. And in serving that purpose, it’s been perfect. I’m a big believer that high-density suits people at different stages of life. As well as young professionals, a lot of the people in my building are older. They’ve downsized. They’ve had kids and houses with backyards and gutters to clear. They’ve done that. But now they’ve reached a stage of life where they value lower maintenance living. They enjoy the communal aspect of living in an apartment building. They love the light and the views and being able to walk everywhere. I feel sad to be leaving the 16th floor. It’s been a wonderful home. I’ll start packing my moving boxes over the next few weeks. And as I look and leave for the final time, it’ll make me happy to know that in 25 or 30 years… there’s a good chance I’ll be back.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/19/20224 minutes, 24 seconds
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Sons of a Good Keen Man: Barry Crump as told by his sons

Growing up, there was bound to be a Barry Crump book peeking out of the bookshelves of Kiwi families or in your local school’s English curriculum.   Crump sold millions of his semi-autographical novels and was a stalwart of New Zealand writing.   But he was also a difficult person with a complicated home life – a father to six boys from four different mothers.   For the first time, the brothers have all gone on record together to tell the story of their dad in their book Sons of a Good Keen Man, which has just been released.  One of the brothers Martin Crump Joined Saturday Mornings with Jack Tame to discuss the book.  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/13/202214 minutes, 52 seconds
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Jack Tame: Labour MP accusing the party-of-kindness of bullying is a remarkable turn

Don’t make me say it. Don’t make me say it. A week is a long time in... I’ll start with Gaurav Sharma. I don’t think we know enough about what has been alleged to have certainty as who is the bully and who is being bullied, but I’m stunned this dispute has been allowed to fester to the point Sharma decided to speak out. Seeing a sitting Labour MP accuse the party-of-kindness of bullying is a remarkable turn. I was not surprised to read Gaurav Sharma’s lengthy post on Facebook, last night. Even as the Prime Minister was addressing the issue, unnamed ‘Labour sources’ were commenting to media and slagging him off. Such kindness! And despite the compassionate veneer, the Prime Minister’s statement still carefully insinuated that everything Sharma was complaining about is actually his fault. Maybe it is! We don’t know. And maybe she felt she simply had to defend her party. But I think a public comment that was truly dedicated to Sharma’s wellbeing would not have included this line: "Starting out as a new MP can be challenging and one of the toughest parts is navigating the new environment but also the role you must play as an MP managing others.” See what I mean? Those words subtly insinuated that Sharma is the problem and that he’s ill-equipped to be an MP. From his perspective, it was a provocative thing to say. Perhaps I’m reading too much into it, but I wasn’t at all surprised to see him react. Almost everything that can be said of the Sam Uffindell scandal has already been said. Obviously he was a lout and a bully as a teenager. He traumatised people. He benefitted from the comforts, trappings, and multiple opportunities afforded by money and privilege. Nonetheless, I don’t think the best response is to mercilessly destroy his entire life. Christopher Luxon’s handled it pretty well. We’ll wait and see what the investigation from Maria Dew Q.C turns up. But for all the attention on what Uffindell did and didn’t do, who in the party knew what and when they knew it, for how long someone deserves to be punished for their past mistakes, and whether his apology was cynical or genuine, I do think there is once central question in this whole fiasco that should be top of the list: Why was Sam Uffindell selected in the first place? It’s no secret that Tauranga is a safe National seat. Theoretically, National could have put up a slab of butter in a trenchcoat and comfortably won the by-election. Jacinda Ardern didn’t even bother turning up to campaign for Labour’s candidate. National didn’t need a talented campaigner. They could have picked anyone. They chose Sam Uffindell. Uffindell disclosed to them that he’d been expelled from high school and the reason why. It was inevitable his history would hit the news at some point. The panel knew that recent candidate selections had ended in disaster and there would be a especially keen focus on their choice for Tauranga. And yet, they still chose Sam Uffindell. When the news broke, I immediately pictured that photo of National’s four Tauranga candidates, standing on the beach and grinning like a centre-right barbershop quartet. Why didn’t National’s selection panel just pick one of the other Sam Uffindells? Maybe bullying, assault, and an explusion is worthy of forgiveness. But why would the panel take the risk? What was it about Uffindell that was so special and so unique, that the upside of having him in caucus this term was greater than the downside of a potential scandal? Given National’s long list of badly-behaved men, and given their policy positions on law and order and personal responsibility, I can’t understand why the panel would pick any candidate that wasn’t 100% sqeaky clean. The selection panel let down the party leaders. They let down the National caucus. You can argue they let down the victims of his bullying by putting them in a position where they felt compelled to speak out and re-live their experiences, and actually they let down Sam Uffindell himself. Regardless of whether he lasts – and I expect he will choose not to stand in next year’s election – this will have been a hideous week for him, his family, and the people he bullied. And for what? National’s new party President says the selection process requires confidentiality but that the process could clearly be improved. You don’t say. But Uffindell’s scandal wasn’t just messy. It was unnecessary.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/12/20225 minutes, 18 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Prey, The Missing Cryptoqueen

Catherine Raynes has been reading The Prey by Tony Park and The Missing Cryptoqueen by Jamie Bartlett. She joined Jack Tame to share her thoughts. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/6/20224 minutes, 40 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: Monkey Pox - how worried should we be?

Monkey Pox has been declared a Global Emergency by WHO - Dr Bryan Betty gives us the lowdown. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/6/20223 minutes, 57 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Perth's great temptations

Way out west, Perth is enjoying its moment in the sun. The city’s mojo is positively seductive, with a fizzy sweep of fresh temptations and grand triumphs of urban regeneration, redefining the urban platter. First impressions count and one of the best ways to find your feet is to join one of Oh Hey WA’s irrepressible walking tours. Under the command of the equally irrepressible Adie Chapman, who has been operating these tours for nine years, a walkabout with Adie and her vivacious troupe of guides is a sure-fire way to get a dynamic sense of the city’s spunk and sparkle. www.ohheywa.com.au My enthralling 90 minute walking tour traversed a variety of themes, from riveting street art and storied architecture to exciting new public spaces and hidden laneways laden with libations. The enhanced presence of indigenous street art is most conspicuous and Adie led me to one of the most uplifting specimens, the spectacular rainbow serpent, slithering along the walls of a laneway. Other shining lights of urban laneway regeneration include the trail-blazing Wolf Lane (with its wondrously large murals), Brookfield Place behind St. George’s Terrace, bursting with swish culinary offerings, and the hidden gem of Howard Lane. After ripping up the asphalt, the lane’s original cobblestones were delightfully rediscovered. It’s also where you can enjoy the ultimate example of a signage-free saloon, Helvetica Bar, housed in a small brick storehouse, brimming with character and whiskies. The locals love it because they offer a bottle-keep service, whereby you can resume your intake from the same bottle on return visits to the bar. Then there’s old-school Perth that has been strikingly repurposed. Beneath the soaring archways of the majestic State Buildings, new life courses through the venerable cluster of heritage buildings in Cathedral Square. Reinvigorated as a compelling hub of retail and hospitality, the three interconnected properties sat empty for 20 years, before being reborn as COMO The Treasury and its alluring slate of hospo destinations like Petition, Long Chim and Wildflower. Best coffee in Perth? Paying homage to the building’s previous life as a post office, you can’t beat a brew to go from Telegram Coffee. Strolling down the retail artery of Hay Street Mall, Adie pointed out to me a clutch of heritage buildings, like the sublime wrought-iron blockbuster of the Savoy Hotel, awaiting regeneration. Then there’s the kitschy novelty of the London Court shopping arcade. Built for gold miner and financier Claude de Bernales, London Court was designed as an extravagant salute to Tudor England, modelled on London’s Liberty department store. makes for an atmospheric shopping arcade, connecting with Hay St Mall. At the Mall entrance, admire the clock face which is a replica of the “Great Clock” in Rouen, France. The clock chimes every quarter hour, unleashing four knights to circle the window. Meanwhile, at the St. Georges Terrace end of the arcade, the clock face is a replica of “Big Ben”, and St. George does battle with a dragon. Barflies rejoice. Over the past decade, liquor licensing changes have spawned a profusion of small bars, setting up trade and re-energising dishevelled alleys. Chic cocktail spots, cosy boltholes and speakeasy bars bubble away in their tucked away hidey-holes. Adie ushered me to Alfred’s Pizzeria, a New York gangster-style pizza bar, tucked away in a Barrack St basement, this six year old establishment has a strong and playful escapist streak – and the pizza is divine. You can order it by the slice. The drinks list is tailored to pizza consumption, with an extensive craft beer, wine, gin, whisky and rum list. Stake out Globe Bar, which has re-energised the original landmark hotel, now featuring a vertical garden, heritage brick wall, timber floorboards and supreme mural work. It’s a trendy spot for casual bites and drinks, with 25 beers on tap. In Queen Street, I loved The Flour Factory, fusing together a New York Deli with a Spanish Bodega cocktail bar across three levels of a former 100-year old flour mill. With over 150 types of gin on offer, if you’re feeling indecisive, just spin the gin wheel to place your order. The Perth City Link project has reconnected the CBD with the bohemian hotbed of Northbridge for the first time in a century in recent years. Severed by the swath of railway lines leading to Perth Station, the inner-city neighbourhood has been readmitted into the city centre’s clutch by sinking the railway tracks and undergrounding the bus station, reclaiming over four hectares of high quality public spaces, including the enticingly designed, art-filled meeting place of Yagan Square. Northbridge has long been a popular playground for night owls, home to many of Perth’s best nightclubs and ethnic eateries. The hospo scene is constantly resetting the table, but some of the local stars in the line-up include Joe’s Juice Joint. Off the laneway and down the stairs, this rock ‘n roll den beckons as your classic dive bar – fried chicken, cheese burgers, pinball, a serious backbar, a cracking beer selection and a classic rock playlist. Also in the Chinatown precinct, Sneaky Tony’s. A homage to infamous rum-runner Tony “the hat”, Sneaky Tony’s is a prohibition bar with shelves bursting with liquid gold. With over 300 bottles of rum from all corners of the globe, pull up a stool and let them pour you a dram. Another show-stopping stop is Ezra Pound Bar on Northbridge’s Williams Lane. This intimate haunt with exposed-brick walls & a 1920s aesthetic serves up splendid cocktails & craft beer. Born out of a desire to recreate the small bars of Melbourne, lurking down darkened laneways, there’s a very heavy nod towards the speakeasies of the prohibition era thrown in to complement its secluded setting. Open since 2009, it is one of Perth’s oldest small-bars and a perennial locals’ favourite. Whistle up a Negroni at this cultural institution – it would have to be the best I’ve ever had. Tucked below the verdant oasis of King’s Park, make a lunch date with Cooee Perth, a ritzy riverfront venue, housed in the old Swan Brewery. After savouring a delicious chicken terrine, I succumbed to the most marvellous Toffee Pudding. Some startlingly ambitious regeneration projects have defined the heart of Perth. None more so than the Elizabeth Quay waterfront development, reawakening and accentuating the city’s focus on the iconic Swan River. Think Sydney’s Darling Harbour and you’ll get a feel for how transformative this project has been. Spanning nearly 10 hectares of blue-ribbon riverfront land, the multi-billion dollar project boasts a split level promenade wrapped around an inlet, lively new public spaces including the nautical playground, walking trails, retail and hospitality offerings and exciting new entertainment venues. Ritz-Carlton Perth takes pride of place, perched over the glittery new horseshoe-shaped Elizabeth Quay waterfront precinct. From the pink-hued exterior glass symbolising Western Australia's pink Argyle diamonds to the 10,000 blocks of Kimberley sandstone that define the walls of the radiant lobby, in addition to the rich polished timbered interiors, this splendid new high-end hotel is a triumph of craftsmanship. My spacious king room, with its sweeping floor to ceiling windows, afforded panoramic views across to the Swan River and the new city landmark, Swan Bells, a set of 18 bells suspended inside a specially built 82-metre-high copper and glass campanile. My enormously sized bathroom was loaded with luxurious accoutrements, from the half egg-shaped bathtub, to the Frette bathrobes and exclusive Asprey of London toiletries. Perth’s credentials as a culinary capital are on full display at the on-site signature restaurant, Hearth. For the five-star experience, dive into the Taste of Hearth degustation menu with expert pairings of exemplary West Australian wines to complement the state's magnificent produce. From the gorgeous infinity pool and bar overlooking Elizabeth Quay to the sumptuous spa with Balinese overtones, Ritz-Carlton Perth is the complete five-star package, underpinned by polished, outgoing and welcoming staff service. www.ritzcarlton.com/perth I crossed the Swan River to Birdswood to meet up with Nick Abraham from Warrang-Bridil, who offers a fascinating indigenous walking tour that seeks to ‘close the gap’ on knowledge and understanding of the Nyoongar people’s vast heritage. Translated from Nyoongar language, Warrang-Bridil means “enlighten to acknowledge.” Soothingly, soulfully charismatic, Nick was eager to disarm my fellow guests that his tour “isn’t about blame and shame.” Rather, over the course of the following hour we gleaned so many indelible insights about the Nyoongar, their relationship with the land and river, the immense challenges they have faced and the renaissance in indigenous culture and understanding, in these parts. As we strolled the shores of the gleaming Derbal Yerrigan (Swan River), Nick’s easy patter spilled forth with so many illuminating anecdotes. I was struck by his insights on the revered rainbow serpent and how a shocked family member supposedly saw one, just days before their grandfather lost his life in the exact same spot of the river. Backdropped by the striking beauty of Optus Stadium, Nick imparted his commanding knowledge on how Nyoongar cultural influence has been deeply threaded into the stadium’s design (which resembles a giant swan nest) and the equally eye-grabbing Matagarup Bridge. Open just four years and connecting the stadium to East Perth, the striking design of flowing steel arches represents a pair of black and white swans, the coming together of diverse cultures, while also resembling the deified rainbow serpent, steeped in Nyoongar culture. You can climb to the top of the bridge, taking in the sparkling vista 72 metres above the water, before zip-lining your way down! Nick’s tour concluded with a spiritual smoking ceremony, whereby your negative energy is banished by the burning fire, allowing positive energy to take fly. The aromatic experience of those burning eucalyptus leaves is quite profound. Nick joked that he’s frequently asked to smoke visiting sports teams, and after smoking Collingwood recently, they’ve been on a winning blitz in the AFL! There’s no better way to enrich a trip to Perth, than to take a tour with Nick. https://www.warrang-bridil.com.au/ Air New Zealand has daily direct flights between Auckland and Perth. If you want to lie flat and get some rest in Economy, the Skycouch is the way to go, especially if you’re travelling with the family. Sit, spread out, or lie down and snooze. Share the space with a partner or children, or keep it all for yourself. Bag a fare and seat to suit at www.airnewzealand.co.nz To maximise the magic of a getaway in WA, the official tourism website is packed with constantly updated guidance and inspiration. Have a golden time out west. www.westernaustralia.com Mike Yardley is our resident traveller on Jack Tame Saturday Mornings.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/6/20227 minutes, 18 seconds
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Kate Hall: Secondhand shopping & donating - how to do it better

Sustainability expert Kate Hall shares her tips for how to second hand shop and donate clothes more sustainability. You can read more on her blog. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/6/20229 minutes, 2 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Do you have a wet garden?

It is quite extraordinary, how often I come across gardeners that are complaining about having a very wet garden. In many cases they are dealing with a residual “wetland”!!! In our history, land owners and farmers simply hated these wet lands and they went to extreme efforts to drain the living daylights out of them… As luck would have it, I have just read a brand-new book about New Zealand’s WETLANDS: Life in the Shallows, by Karen Denyer and Monica Peters. This book does not just describe the many facets of wetland research and the people that do the hard mahi, out there in those shallow waters, it also covers the history of wetland habitats in Aotearoa. The coolest thing is the Mātauranga associated with wetlands. My goodness these habitats were important to Maori for soooo many years. Wetlands have always been recognised as the nurseries for Kai Moana and the sources of food in both fresh water and sea water and everything in between. The most awful statistic in the book is that we have just 10% of all our wetlands left. The rest has been “tidied up” by land owners who have always considered wetlands to be a pain in the proverbial and a messy, wet, unproductive form of land. Homo sapiens have always wanted a clean, regular, tidy and orderly piece of land; Have you noticed how Nature is always “messy”? So if you have a piece of land, or a garden that has nice wet patches, what can you do to turn that into a classy habitat for native wetland organisms; my immediate thoughts are “plant some wetland plants” I contacted Karen Denyer to find out if there are some common sense plants that would make a good cover for wetlands; I mentioned the usual features: flax, Ti Kouka, Kahikatea, red tussock and Carex species, with mahoe, Manuka, swamp coprosma etc on the somewhat drier patches… Without hesitation I got a severe telling off from Karen (which I expected): “If you put this sort of thing on the radio, we’ll end up with McDonalds wetlands all over the place”; Oh how I loved that description!!! Every wetland is different: North differs from South and East from West Soil types are other important factors that determine how a wetland looks and operates River/Stream origin or salt/Brackish water. Acid or alkaline. Lowlands or alpine wetlands Wet and deep (Aquatic), Lake edge (Emergent), Swamp or Fen (Saturated), Marsh or swamp edge, occasionally flooding (Moist), rarely flooding (Dry). Each of these conditions has its own suite of suitable plants Information on which plant to use in which region: Your regional Council, Local City Councils, DOC offices, and the local Botanical Society are all good sources of local information. And then there’s another fabulous wetland book: Wetland restoration: a Handbook for New Zealand Freshwater Systems Wetlands are extremely important for our Planet… and certainly for Aotearoa. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/6/20224 minutes, 44 seconds
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Tara Ward: Industry, The Resort, Woodstock 99

Industry: a new season of the British drama about a group of young graduates who venture into in the cut-throat finance world during the recession following the 2008 financial crisis (Neon).  The Resort: A married couple's relationship is tested on an anniversary trip to a tropical paradise that unexpectedly pulls them into a strange unsolved mystery from 15 years earlier (TVNZ+).   Woodstock 99: a docuseries about the anniversary Woodstock concert on 1997, which rather than peace and light, involved four days of rage and riots (Netflix)  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/6/20224 minutes, 42 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Amazon's spending spree continues with iRobot

Amazon's spending spree continues - now purchasing iRobot.  They've spent $1.3 billion (in cash) to purchase the company who makes the Roomba vacuum cleaner. The company will be folded into the Amazon devices group.  When the markets are down from historic highs, even paying a 22% premium means you are still kind of getting a bargain.    Analysts say they've purchased the Roomba for 'context' - they want to know as much about us, and our homes as possible. It's valuable data. Your vaccum cleaner knows the layout of your house, when it changes, and using its front-facing object-detecting camera what the furniture items are. Did you just buy a crib, well, your vacuum cleaner might know that.   You may be waiting longer for the next version of iPadOS  iOS and iPadOS typically launch at the same time in September, but Bloomberg is reporting this year the iPadOS version may be delayed. They'll still launch the iOS version in September, but are having troubles getting the new Stage Manager feature right. That will allow you to have clusters of applications, more like a Mac or PC desktop interface.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/6/20223 minutes, 48 seconds
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Kiwi Chelsea Lane on life in the NBA, what it takes to be a Steph Curry

Steph Curry, LeBron James and Kevin Durant are names I’m sure you recognise but it’s Chelsea Lane’s name you should remember.   The Kiwi went from being a physio in New Zealand, to working with the NBA’s Golden State Warriors, to becoming Vice President of the Atlanta Hawks franchise.   Chelsea even made history in her role as head of performance at the Golden State Warriors – becoming the first woman to hold the position in the NBA’s history.  She’s since made the move back home and has been snapped up by Basketball New Zealand.  LISTEN ABOVE  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/6/202216 minutes, 9 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Bistro Food – simple, easy, affordable

Bistro chicken with mushroom, bacon & tarragon cream sauce  A bistro is, in its original Parisian form, a small restaurant, serving moderately priced and uncomplicated meals in an unflashy setting. The food that’s served is typically French home-style cooking, slow-cooked food that is comforting and not extravagant.  Simple creamy deliciousness, this chicken dish never fails to have me in raptures.  Serves 2  1 tablespoon olive oil  2 whole chicken legs  1 onion, finely diced  2 rashers streaky bacon, diced  Handful of button mushrooms, thinly sliced  2 teaspoons dried tarragon  2 teaspoons wholegrain mustard  ¼ cup white wine (optional)  ½ cup vegetable or chicken stock  ½ cup creme fraiche  ½ teaspoon sea salt + grind of black pepper  Heat oil in a medium pan and fry the chicken pieces until golden on both sides. Remove from the pan. Fry the onions and bacon for 5-7 minutes, until the onions have softened and the bacon has given up its fat. Add in the sliced mushrooms and cook for 3 minutes then pop the chicken back into the pan. Add the tarragon, mustard and wine and simmer for 2 minutes. Pour in stock, cover and simmer for 20-30 minutes. Stir in creme fraiche and seasoning and simmer for 5 minutes until it’s lovely and creamy. Taste to see if it needs more salt or pepper. Serve with roasted or mashed potatoes, pasta or rice and a simple green salad. Nici’s tip:  Sour cream will work in place of creme fraiche.  Use bone in thighs or drums if you can’t find the whole leg. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/6/20225 minutes, 25 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Bullet Train - 'Big Dumb Fun'

Francesca Rudkin has been watching Bullet Train and The Many Saints of Newark. Rudkin said the movie Bullet Train is driven by Brad Pitt's performance. She said it's an interesting film because there's no narrative or plot; "it's big, dumb fun". The Many Saints of Newark has been released on Neon and is divided into two parts.  Rudkin says if you're a fan of the TV drama The Sopranos, you should check this out. LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/5/20225 minutes, 35 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Let's get the Topp Twins back to number one

Kevin Milne was moved this week reading about the Topp Twins and the brave pictures of them having their cancer treatment. So much so, he has the idea: putting Lynda and Jools' "Untouchable Girls" back at No 1 on the charts. Milne said it seems the perfect song for the moment.  "Wouldn't it be magnificent, just to help them through this terrible time in their lives, if their greatest hit just re-emerged as the top song."  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/5/20226 minutes, 4 seconds
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Jack Tame: Sprint lunge sweat - Squash at the Comm Games

Sprint. Lunge. Sweat. It was entirely predictable, of course. Guy Heveldt nailed it on 1News last night. Every time it rolls round, he said, we always insist we don’t like the Commonwealth Games. ‘They’re a relic! They’re outdated! Who wants to see us whip Rwanda in the Badminton, anyway?’ But then, in the midst of a tough winter, with Covid knocking us about and all sorts of economic pressures, all it takes is a few medals in a few off-Broadway sports and we’re right onboard with the Commonwealth Games. They’re like a chilled-out Olympics where we win more. What’s not to love?! But of all the Commonwealth sports, there’s one in particular I’ve loved watching this week. Sprint. Lunge. Sweat. It does what a great individual sport should do. First of all, it’s mostly rational. It’s simple. It’s the kind of sport that kids could invent in the playground. You can explain the fundamental rules in about 25 seconds and if you haven’t seen a match since the last Commonwealth Games, no drama! You’ll pick it up in no time. Sprint. Lunge. Sweat. Secondly, it blends raw athleticism and short twitch power with endurance, and technical skills. You can’t just be fast. You’ve gotta’ be able to last. You can’t just have endurance. You’ve gotta’ be super quick. You can’t just be fit, you’ve gotta’ have incredible hand-eye coordination, creativity, and flair. Sprint. Lunge. Sweat. Finally, it’s a sport that attracts players from a diverse range of countries. If you consider the top five players in the World Rankings, for each of the men’s and women’s games, there are players from Egypt, the U.S, England, Peru, and New Zealand. Five continents. Sprint. Lunge. Sweat. It just seems so obvious to me. And sure, maybe it’s because I’m a weekend battler with secret athletic ambitions. But I reckon there’s something in it for everyone. Forget surfing and E-Sports, squash needs to be at the Olympics! Think about it. A glass court only costs a couple of hundred grand so it’s a lot cheaper than a velodrome. And it’s so versatile. In Egypt each year, they set up courts in front of the great Pyramid of Giza. You could do that anywhere. Imagine watching Olympic squash on Copacabana Beach or next to Shibuya Crossing. What a spectacle! LISTEN ABOVE Sprint. Lunge. Sweat. For me, the highlight of these Commonwealth Games was seeing Paul Coll vanquish his demons of four years ago. The Greymouth whiz sprinted. He lunged. He sweated. He gasped. He yelled. He smeared his greasy palm down the back wall to try and get a better grip on his racquet. He trailed. He led. He dived. He sprinted. He lunged. He sweated. He endured. And ultimately, he triumphed. Knowing that unlike athletes in many other sports, the squash players won’t have the opportunity to compete at an Olympics, made New Zealand’s squash success that much more special. The Commonwealth Games don’t matter, you reckon? No one told Paul Coll.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
8/5/20223 minutes, 54 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Tami Neilson's KINGMAKER

Estelle Clifford gives her review of Kiwi legend Tami Neilson's new album, KINGMAKER. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/30/20226 minutes, 25 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: House of Fortune, Armored

House of Fortune – Jessie Burton  The House of Fortune is a glorious, sweeping story of fate and ambition, secrets and dreams, and one young woman’s determination to rule her own destiny.  Armored – Mark Greaney  Joshua Duffy is a Close Protection Agent—a professional bodyguard—and he’s one of the world’s elite operatives. That is, he was until his last mission in Lebanon. Against all odds, Josh got his primary out alive, but the cost was high. Josh lost his lower left leg.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/29/20223 minutes, 47 seconds
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Bestselling author Liane Moriarty on her latest book

It’s fair to say Big Little Lies became one of the most talked about TV shows of 2017 and the woman behind it all just happens to live across the ditch.   Australian author Liane Moriarty has gone on to sell more than 20 million copies of her books worldwide.  Her latest, Apples Never Fall, is bringing her to New Zealand as part of writers' festivals in Auckland and Christchurch.   Liane chats to Jack Tame on her success to date and what it's like learning Nicole Kidman's a fan.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/29/202213 minutes, 28 seconds
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Hannah McQueen: Is the Reserve Bank criticism fair?

Hannah McQueen from enable.me chats to Jack Tame about whether the criticism of the Reserve Bank this week is fair.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/29/20226 minutes, 59 seconds
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Tara Ward: Candy, Surface, The Secret She Keeps

Candy: Jessica Biel and Melanie Lynskey star in this crime drama about a 1980s Texan housewife and mother who did everything right - until she is accused of murdering her neighbour (Disney+).   Surface: An American drama. After suffering a traumatic head injury that leaves her with serious memory loss issues, Sophia embarks on a quest to piece her life back together. However, she realises that the people who are helping her may not have her best interests in mind (Apple TV+).  The Secrets She Keeps: a second season of the Australian psychological thriller about two women from different walks of life who both have explosive secrets in common (TVNZ+).  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/29/20224 minutes, 41 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Asparagus needs attention

If you have established plants, make sure the beds are weed-free. It allows the asparagus roots to benefit from all the nutrients that are in the soil.   In July, you cut off the old fern stalks and lay them flat on the asparagus bed – it makes a good cover. Next job is to hunt for some good sheep manure. I have plenty in the Halswell Quarry. I lay it out in a heap and go over it with the lawn mower to break it all up into fine bits of sheep poo, which will be worked into the top layers of the soil. (not too deep, as you may damage the asparagus roots)  Next a nice layer of Agricultural Lime (not dolomite lime) to slightly raise the ph. If needed, a layer of good compost over the top (or some rotted sea-weed).   You’re now getting the picture that asparagus likes a lot of organic matter and not much competition.  When the plants start throwing up asparagus “spears” some regular liquid fertiliser (seafood soup/seaweed tea) keeps the plant producing till Christmas. If you want to COMMENCE growing asparagus, NOW is the time to start the project.  Choose a variety; they’re in shops now:  Jersey Giant: produces large spears; the flavour is sweet when the tips are small.  Mary Washington: a popular early-season asparagus, widely grown throughout the country.  Sweet Purple: a neat-looking dark red or purple variety with a sweet taste when young. Generally, only available as seed from catalogues.  Prepare  Choose a position in full sun. Create a nice, well-draining bed – at least 40 cm deep. The better the soil, the better your plants will grow. Cultivate the soil to a spade depth (or more) and add heaps of organic matter like compost or sheep’s poo and dags, ground up. Leave to settle for a month or so prior to planting.  Plant when it’s not too warm in the day (morning or evening or cloudy, dull day)  Mature crowns are available as dormant plants over winter, they are a much quicker option than growing asparagus from seed.  If planting quite a few crowns dig trenches in the soil to plant in. Plant crowns with their roots facing down 15cm deep and 30cm apart. Rows should be spaced at least 50cm apart. Cover with good soil.  Shoots will appear as the soil warms in spring. Don’t harvest any spears in the first year or two, to allow the plants to spread out and perfectly establish themselves; believe me: your patience will be rewarded with many, many years of good crops!  Keep the soil moist but not wet as asparagus crowns will rot in waterlogged conditions.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/29/20223 minutes, 2 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Sweet banana, cinnamon and hazelnut toastie

In celebration of toasted sandwiches and the recent announcement of the 2022 Great Toastie Takeover winner - Rotorua’s Okere Falls Store and Craft Beer Garden (Okere Falls Store and Craft Beer Garden) ‘Get Smoked, Pickled + Toasted’ creation – I’m going sweet with my toastie.  My BHC - Banana, hazelnut & cinnamon/chocolate toastie  2 slices brioche, buttered  1 small banana, sliced  1 tablespoon hazelnuts, crushed  Pinch of cinnamon  2 squares chocolate dark chocolate, grated or chopped – optional  Heat pan to medium. Lay one piece of brioche in the pan, buttered side down. Top with banana slices, hazelnuts and cinnamon. Grate over chocolate. Top with second slice of brioche, buttered side up. Cook until golden brown then flip. Resist pressing down on the brioche – we want it to stay light and fluffy - and cook until golden. Slice and eat! LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/29/20225 minutes, 31 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Persuasion, The Gray Man

Persuasion   When Frederick Wentworth -- the one who got away -- crashes back into Anne Elliot's life, she must choose between putting the past behind her or listening to her heart when it comes to second chances.  The Gray Man   When the CIA's top asset -- his identity known to no one -- uncovers agency secrets, he triggers a global hunt by assassins set loose by his ex-colleague.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/29/20225 minutes, 57 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Shortage of hospo workers

Kevin Milne is concerned about the dire shortage of hospitality workers in the southern tourist spots. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/29/20226 minutes, 17 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Shapeshifter's Devin Abrams and his new solo album

Estelle Clifford has been listening to Pacific Heights a.k.a Devin Abrams from Shapeshifter. He's released a new solo album called The Waters Between. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/23/20226 minutes, 2 seconds
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Kate Hall: Composting, where to start?

Kate Hall says approximately 50 percent of a household's waste is organic matter. She shares her tips on where to start. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/22/202210 minutes, 2 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Orchard in Winter - some pruning and frost fighting

Mid winter is a great time - no leaves on trees, you can see the structure of the tree (it’s “skeleton”) so you get a great impression of where all the branches are and in which direction they’re going.  They are dormant and won’t get “hurt” by this savage pruning. I have a few apple trees (varieties) and I treat them all the same:  Prevent them from growing too tall - it is really difficult to pick fruit when they are too high.   Have a look for the fruiting “spurs”, those rather fat, short branchlets from which the fruits hang. These spurs can be delivering apples for quite a few years, so don’t cut them off.   Strategic pruning. Minimize branches inside the tree space – allow the wind to go through the centre –drying out after rain  Cold nights – frosts in the forecast  This is not a worry for apples and pears etc, because they are dormant and very much frost-hardy.  Fruiting plants that need some frost protection:  Avocado, cherimoya, some citrus varieties, guava, passionfruit, tamarillo.   The more tropical they are the more protection they need; no surprises with these ones:  Banana, Papaya and Pineapple  Frost protection: Wrap plants in frost cloth; or keep them in large pots/containers so they can be moved under eaves or indoors; Liquid frost cloth such as Vaporgard; it acts like a waxy cuticle on the leaves, and is therefore also good against drought stress (reduces transpiration); Can be sprayed onto the leaves – every six weeks; another trick is to leave sprinklers on at night to reduce damage.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/22/20224 minutes, 32 seconds
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Bob Campbell: 2019 Taylors Shiraz - a classic winter warmer

Wine expert Bob Campbell is a big fan of Taylors, a large family company that makes good wines at reasonable prices. His pick of the week is their 2019 Shiraz. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/22/20223 minutes, 44 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Amazon has bought a doctor's office network

Amazon has bought a doctor's office network  The giant bought One Medical for $3.9 billion - it's third biggest acquisition yet.  For $199 a year One Medical offers guaranteed the same or next day doctors' visits, 24/7 telehealth, waiting rooms that feel more like hotel lobbies and on-site labs.  Amazon has been getting more into the health space - the doctor's office is now in addition to a pharmacy, devices to track your health, grocery stores for your food, an online store for exercise equipment, and even streaming devices for at-home workouts.   With all these acquisitions, is Amazon a tech company anymore?   Twitter v Elon Musk will be in court this year  A five-day trial will be happening in a Delaware court in October. Twitter asked the courts to fast-track the trial. Musk wanted it in February next year - which he says already is fast. The Judge though said the longer the delay the greater the risk to Twitter.   LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/22/20224 minutes, 15 seconds
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Tara Ward: The Man Who Fell to Earth, In Plain Sight, Hitmen

The Man Who Fell to Earth: a science fiction series about an alien who crashes deep into the oilfields of New Mexico with a mission: he must find a brilliant scientist, the one woman on earth who can help save his species (Neon).  In Plain Sight: Shetland’s Douglas Henshall and Line of Duty's Martin Compton star in this dark crime drama - based on a true story - about one detective's pursuit of a serial killer during the 1950s (Neon).  Hitmen: Mel Giedroyc and Sue Perkins star in this British comedy as a pair of unlikely assassins (Vibe, from Wednesday).  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/22/20224 minutes, 56 seconds
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Josh Baker: Journalist on podcast 'I'm Not A Monster' and chasing ISIS

He’s the journalist behind the BBC’s most awarded podcast series to date. In 2016, Josh Baker had just survived a bomb explosion in Iraq when he heard of an American woman and her kids wanting to escape Syria.  Josh spent four years unravelling the jaw dropping story of how the family got there in the podcast I’m Not A Monster.  And now he’s back for more - with a newly announced series two focusing on UK ISIS bride Shamima Begum.  Josh Baker joins Jack Tame on Saturday Morning. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/22/202215 minutes, 17 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Where the Crawdads Sing, The Quiet Girl

Francesca Rudkin has been watching Where the Crawdads Sing and The Quiet Girl. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/22/20226 minutes, 14 seconds
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Kevin Milne: How do you prepare for being a grandad?

Kevin and his wife Linda will become grandparents next month. So how are they preparing? LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/22/20225 minutes, 30 seconds
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Jack Tame: The All Blacks' big opportunity

A confession: I didn’t want the All Blacks to lose, but I’m sure I’m not the only rugby fan who felt a little flicker of satisfaction or joy as they unraveled last weekend. They were woeful. The Irish were superb. And for anyone who has ever prickled at the smugness with which the All Blacks and New Zealand Rugby sometimes present, the result felt like just desserts. It’s true, I’m a lousy fan. At halftime I was slagging them off, but a few minutes later I screamed and screamed when Will Jordan sprinted off for that runaway try. ‘Go boy! Go! Go!’ I might be an All Blacks cynic but deep down, I still wanted them to win. Crises call for cool heads. If the coaching staff had all been sacked this week, if half the team had been dropped and Sam Cane stood down as captain, there’s a reasonable chance we’d be furiously accusing New Zealand Rugby of overreacting. But as All Blacks fans we demand an assertive response. A panicked reaction would have done little to help the team’s fortunes, but whether it’s the coaches, leadership team, or a wholescale tactical shift, something big still has to change. So far we haven’t seen it. Ian Foster was contrite at yesterday’s media conference, but coy about his future plans. That approach can’t last for long. You cannot repeat the same action and expect different results. The best explanation for the mystery at this stage is that New Zealand Rugby is working through changes to the wider coaching team. Employment negotiations take time. If the All Blacks do bring in new coaching talent, perhaps it will go some way to sorting their lineout and organising more creative attacks. Regardless, Ian Foster only has a handful of games to prove himself. One final point. There is still opportunity in all of this. Yes, it’s nice to support a team as dominant as the All Blacks. I’m a Crusaders fan and I don’t get sick of winning! But often the greatest sporting narratives are those in which an athlete or a team overcomes adversity. Victory against all odds. Historically, the All Blacks haven’t faced too much adversity. But here it is. The team is at odds and ends. The players are being criticised. The coaches and their bosses are being hammered in the press. Maybe they will falter. Maybe we’re watching the unravelling of a once-mighty team. Maybe Silver Lake has bought a dud. Or maybe, through whatever changes are necessary, and through the pluck and determination of a unit that can only be truly tested when its back is against the wall, the All Blacks will find a way to rise up. They’ll fight. They’ll avenge their defeats. They’ll banish a home series loss to Ireland to the annals of pub quiz trivia nights and truly live up to the reputation of the jersey. Maybe it’s lunacy to even ponder a World Cup victory next year. But crazier things have happened in sport. And who knows? A year out, maybe the result against Ireland was just what they needed. Lofty as it may be, the All Blacks owe it to us to do everything possible to try and realise that dream. And we owe it to them, through our cynicism and scorn, to keep the faith a little bit longer.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/22/20224 minutes, 19 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Wordle is coming to a table near you

Wordle is coming to a table near you The internet game is getting an 'offline version'. The NYT and Hasbro have teamed up to create 'Wordle: The Party Game'. You could very easily create it at home as it's just mini whiteboards and tiles with either green or yellow for yes or no. It'll be $20 and is ready for shipping around October in North America.  More affordable satellite internet is coming to campervans and boats Elon Musk's Starlink has got a new customer base - those on the move. The FCC has given approval for cars, trains, planes and boats to be connected to Starlink's internet. It was previously only available to homes and stationary campervans. The Starlink service is significantly cheaper than other satellite operators, who typically use geostationary satellites. Starlink uses thousands of lower altitude satellites which move, but are arranged so there's always a cluster in view. Hawaiian Airlines has signed up for the service to provide free internet for passengers. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/16/20224 minutes, 23 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Lizzo's new album Special

Estelle Clifford has been listening to Lizzo's new album Special.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/15/20226 minutes, 40 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Wrong Place, Wrong Time, Local Gone Missing

Catherine Raynes has been reading Wrong Place, Wrong Time by Gilliam McAllister and Local Gone Missing by Fiona Barton.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/15/20223 minutes, 12 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Heritage-tinged Toowoomba

Have you ever been to Toowoomba? No, neither had I. Changing the habit of a lifetime on a recent road-trip in Queensland, I took the 2 hour drive west of Brisbane to the Great Dividing Range, where Woombie or Tbar as the locals call it, clings to the escarpment, 700 metres above sea level. As you enter from the east, the city seemingly dangles on the edge of the elevated plateau, overlooking the undulating green patchwork of the Lockyer Valley. Beyond the city limits of this sprawling country hub, Toowoomba is enrobed by the agricultural powerhouse of the Darling Downs region. Toowoomba is Australia’s largest inland city and it’s Queensland’s Garden City, playing host to a fiendishly popular Carnival of Flowers in September - the longest running floral event of its kind in Australia. It welcomes hundreds of thousands of hyper-coloured flowers in full bloom, planted across the city’s parks and public spaces. But it’s not just the plants that attract out-of-towners. A glut of gorgeous, manicured gardens lie within the city’s boundaries, graced with stately homes and broad tree-lined streets. To help get my bearings, I joined a two hour guided excursion with Lindsay from Toowoomba Sightseeing, introducing me to the city staples, from the historic CBD to panoramic vistas over the range. Lindsay remarked that Toowoomba is like a volcanic saucer, with rich red soils. “Everything grows here.” An essential stop is at Picnic Point, located on the eastern side of Toowoomba, serving up enormous views across the topographical grandeur of the region. A picturesque highlight is the imposing sight of Table Top Mountain. Its name is rather self-explanatory and looks like a mesa from the American Southwest. 600 metres high, the two-hour return climb itself is quite demanding with a lot of large steps over the Camel's Hump and a scramble just before the summit. Used as a training track for hikers prepping for Mount Kilimanjaro and the Kokoda Trail for years, stick to the well-worn trail.  But the sweet reward is at the summit, flat-topped and treeless, is the unrivalled horizon-wide panoramic fix. Back in the city, street art is one Toowoomba’s calling cards, with a spree of laneways, building walls and public spaces vividly cast in eye-catching works. There’s a dedicated Street Art Trail that weaves many of the works together, including Mark Lane, Bank Lane and Searle’s Walk. But it’s Neil Street where most of the action is, with over 50 murals to feast your eyes on. Adding further texture and character to the city centre, Toowoomba’s old bones have been lovingly preserved, with impeccably maintained facades gracing the city centre and some showpiece buildings, including more than 50 heritage-listed sites. The bedazzling 1911 Empire Theatre is the pride of locals, with its resplendent art deco lobby. Then there’s the old post office and courthouse, venerable sandstone masterpieces from the late 19th century.For a complete change of scenery, I headed to Ju Raku En, the delightful Zen-like Japanese Gardens, located at the University of Southern Queensland. I spent an hour casually zoned out admiring the five-hectare garden, crowned with a rippling lake, carefully aligned boulders, conifers, bamboo stands, cherry blossom trees, photo perfect bridges and curvaceous paths, in one of the largest Japanese gardens in Australia.Next up, The Cobb & Co Museum which is home to the National Carriage collection’s huge array of vehicles, horse-drawn carriages, outback memorabilia, and extensive displays. The National Carriage Collection comprises 47 restored horse-drawn vehicles, which played an important role in Queensland’s development. Established in 1853 by Freeman Cobb with the intention of initially servicing the Victorian goldfields, Cobb & Co quickly developed to become the most successful company of its kind in Australasia during the 19th Century, pioneering transport routes, delivering mail,...See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/15/20228 minutes, 42 seconds
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Steven Dromgool: Post-wedding blues - are they really a thing?

Steven Dromgool says post-wedding blues are definitely a thing and it's quite common. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/15/20226 minutes, 1 second
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Eating insects...what do you think?

What do you reckon…Entomophagy?? When I was born, there were 2.5 billion people on the planet and now we’re pushing eight billion. (No wonder it’s getting more difficult for Kevin Milne and myself to get a decent car park in the city).Seriously, our economic “growth at all cost” really has had its day. We’re using resources in an obscene tempo, creating a carbon bubble in the place we don’t need carbon (the air!) and pollute water, rivers, lakes and oceans. On top of that we are changing the earth’s Natural resources and life-forms go extinct at the estimated rate of 150 species per day. In one sentence: we are crossing our Planetary Boundaries and seem to have dumped the term and concept of “limits”. Converting good horticulture and agriculture land to more and more dwellings is part of the growth gig too and that has repercussions for the way we “produce” protein. On my travels through New Zealand Schools (Teacher PLD via FieldBased STEM, Treemendous Education Programme and Blake Inspire), I have started chatting with students and educators about entomophagy and in particular our humble garden snail, Cornu aspersum. This species was imported by the French from North Africa for their famous culinary product called escargot. It’s one of their preferred species! This very same species was accidentally introduced into Aotearoa and is considered a pest in the garden, requiring slug bait, snail bait, metaldehyde and other toxins to “control” them. How easy is it to cultivate these snails in captivity? How do you “feed” them and in what kind of conditions. How do you clear their gut-contents before cooking and frying in garlic butter and what are the benefits of eating molluscs? (human health, conversion of green material into protein, compared to the efforts of a cow, sheep or pig) What about breeding locusts, crickets, chrysalises of silk worms, etc etc. Why stop at Molluscs? Imagine the emotional roller-coast ride the kids wen trough when I talked about the brilliant taste of Tarantula cephalothoracic muscles! A few weeks after visiting Riverdale school in Palmerston North (a Treemendous event), I received a booklet with the most delightful prose around the issue of entomophagy. They had obviously organised a serious debate on this topic, requiring a heap of scientific research and literature investigation. Luckily, my alma mater (Wageningen University) have always been strong in that topic of eating bugs (publishing bug cooking books and having a yearly festival on useful bugs and edible critters), so there’s a growing interest in that stuff. Here are some cool comments: Growing forests through pollination: ”if we ate bugs than they wouldn’t be able to do their very important jobs” “DEATH!! Something no one likes; this might happen if we start eating bugs, because some of them have a thing called venom…” “Did you know that for one pound of beef you need 22,000 L. of water, but you only need 1 L. for a pound of crickets…” “Think about the landscape: Farms take up a lot of space: one pound of meat takes 200 sq meters of land to grow; to raise a pound of crickets it only takes 15 sq meters” “if you’re a mum you do lots of jobs and once you’re finished you will get very tired; but if you eat bugs it will give you the energy, so you will only get tired at the end of the day” “Humans shouldn’t eat yucky bugs because some bugs can actually make you sick. Did you know that?” “if you want to eat crickets you have to eat 75 of them in a meal. And it will take a really long time to find that many, so why bother” “Bugs make up 80% of all known kinds of animals on earth; by eating bugs we help the crops grow (because they eat our plants” LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/15/20224 minutes, 37 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: Sleep, why we need it and how to get more of it

Dr Bryan Betty talks about the importance of sleep and how many hours you should be ticking up a night.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/15/20224 minutes, 6 seconds
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Tara Ward: Sherwood, The Old Man, Only Murders in the Building

Sherwood: It’s the British drama everyone’s talking about. When two shocking murders shatter a small ex-mining community in the north of England, the manhunt threatens to inflame long-held divisions sparked during the Miners' Strike three decades before (TVNZ+) The Old Man: Jeff Bridges stars in this drama about Dan Chase, a man who absconded from the CIA and lives off the grid. When an assassin arrives and tries to take Chase out, the old operative learns that to ensure his future he now must reconcile his past (Disney+). Only Murders in the Building: the return of this warm-hearted comedy. Steve Martin, Martin Short and Selena Gomez star three strangers who share an obsession with true-crime podcasts, who find themselves entangled when a murder takes place in their New York apartment building (Disney+) LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/15/20224 minutes, 56 seconds
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Legend Jimmy Carr on comedy, controversy and being 'Terribly Funny'

Comedy and controversy can often go hand-in-hand when it comes to Jimmy Carr. The British comedian quit a job in marketing at the petrol giant shell and his way in comedy with his famous boundary-pushing one-liners. Love him or loath him, Jimmy's gone on to become one of Britain's most successful comedy exports. He speaks to Jack Tame ahead of bringing his show, Terribly Funny, here next year. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/15/202215 minutes, 24 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Rugby snacks - baked ham, cheese and mustard rolls

Roll out a tray of these fabulous little treats for a rugby-watching crowd and you’ll be more popular than an All Black scoring a try!Makes 1212 bread rolls – I use soft white buns or sliders from supermarket ¾ cup store-bought onion jam or relish 300g shaved ham 1 cup grated cheese – tasty or whateverTOPPING 50g melted butter 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce ½ teaspoon sea salt 1 teaspoon dry English mustard 2 large eggs 1 cup grated cheese1. Preheat the oven to 180°C. Line a baking dish that will fit the buns snugly, with baking paper.2. Split each bun in half horizontally, or do this as a whole unit if they’re all stuck together. Place snugly in the lined dish so that they’re touching.3. Dollop each bottom half with onion jam then top with plenty of ham and cheese. Place the tops on each and cut a cross in each top so the topping will soak in.4. Next, whisk the butter, Worcestershire sauce, salt, mustard and eggs together in a bowl then stir in the cheese. Spoon this onto each roll.5. Bake for about 8-10 minutes until the topping is golden and bubbling.6. Serve immediately, with plenty of napkins!LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/15/20225 minutes, 29 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: NZIFF docos - Ring of Fire, Hallelujah: Leonard Cohen

Ring of Fire  In 1962 the sport of boxing suffered an enormous setback to mainstream acceptability, when Benny ‘Kid’ Paret died after being pummelled by six-time welterweight champion Emile Griffith at Madison Square Garden, on live network television. Dan Klores and Ron Berger delve deeply into this event, drawing a wealth of testimony and analysis from a gallery of veteran New York boxing identities and commentators. Hallelujah: Leonard Cohen, a journey, a song A documentary deep-dive into the life and legacy of legendary Canadian singer/songwriter Leonard Cohen told through the prism of his most anthemic and well-known song. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/15/20228 minutes, 21 seconds
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Kevin Milne: My old stomping ground, Auckland

Kevin Milne returned to his old stomping ground of Auckland this week and has some thoughts to share.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/15/20228 minutes, 15 seconds
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Jack Tame: Guy Williams vs Leo Molloy - don't overthink it!

On Thursday night, New Zealand Today went to air on TV3 with roughly half of its show dedicated to an exchange between the show’s host, Guy Williams, and Auckland mayoral candidate, Leo Molloy.The piece was funny if not especially edifying. Even for the minority of us who do engage with local body politics, Leo Molloy is probably better known for his character rather than his policy positions.Leo Molloy spent the vast majority of the segment teasing and insulting Guy. He used various low-level juvenile slurs and repeatedly accused Guy of being woke and soft. It ended with the pair having a boxing fight with novelty gloves before Guy recorded a parody endorsement video for Leo’s campaign.Guy Williams is now facing a backlash for the piece. He’s been accused of platforming a mayoral candidate, of normalising offensive behaviour, and of ultimately helping Leo’s campaign. These are ridiculous critiques that only serve to further entrench the things they’re criticising.Context is important. New Zealand Today’s audience is looking for a laugh. I can’t imagine many of the viewers tune into what is clearly and obviously a comedy programme, expecting serious and robust analysis of local body politics. New Zealand Today is a comedy. It isn’t Q+A.Anyone who watched will have been left in little doubt as to the sort of mayor Leo Molloy might be. He’s rambunctious. Entertaining? Sure. But he can also be crude, volatile, childish, and offensive. This comes as little surprise to those who have been following the campaign. Only a few weeks ago, Leo Molloy lost his temper at a mayoral debate and challenged a member of the audience to fight him. Are these the qualities you want in a mayor? Maybe not. But they’re qualities that make for funny TV, which is surely why Guy Williams chose to film with him.People have compared Guy’s piece to late night comedians’ treatment of Donald Trump in the lead up to the U.S election. The comparisons are unfair. Last I checked, Leo Molloy is running on a platform of local body infrastructure issues. He isn’t advocating to ban Muslims. The piece has been compared with the media treatment of Toronto’s late scandal-ridden former mayor, Rob Ford. Last I checked, Auckland voters will elect the mayor, not Guy Williams. If New Zealand Today helps Molloy and proves to be a turning point in the campaign, voters will frankly be electing the mayor they deserve.Comedians everywhere operate in an environment in which they’re constantly monitored and regularly hammered for offending people.It’s true, I view the World from a position of privilege. Nonetheless, I err on the side of wanting a society where comedians are free to push the line. I want comedians to offend from time to time. Not because I find comedy funny – although I do – but also because I think those who are too readily offended ultimately hurt their own kaupapa.New Zealand Today is the perfect case in point. In the grand scheme of things, Guy Williams’ segment wasn’t offensive or problematic. It was comedy. Love him or loathe him, it showed Leo Molloy as he is.As part of the piece, Leo himself reminded Guy that the more attention he gets, the more he thrives. He’s right. Those who’ve kicked up in offence at the segment are only giving him more.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/15/20224 minutes, 5 seconds
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Jack Tame: Three leaders, three countries, one big week in politics

OPINION: Three leaders. Three countries. One week. Boris Johnson's resignation felt like a rare little win for the convention. There can be no doubt Donald Trump's leadership style inspired him, and the way Trump just thumbed his nose at all of the previous standards of behaviour for world leaders. Scandal after scandal, Boris Johnson managed to duck and dodge and deflect and survive what would have been politically fatal for most other leaders in the pre-Trump era. The temerity of having had your staff caught out partying, defying lockdown rules, and drinking together at Downing Street at the same time as the Queen was forced to sit alone at her husband's funeral! In one sense it is astonishing Boris Johnson survived as long as he did. But in another, I'm still surprised he announced his resignation. Entertaining he may be, but the man clearly isn't burdened by any great sense of integrity. I'll only fully believe he's gone when he's gone. But it's interesting to compare Johnson with Trump. In the end, it wasn't the public that forced Johnson's resignation. It was his own party. His political colleagues stood up and decided he'd gone too far. It's interesting to compare that with the Republicans in the United States, many of whom continue to undermine their democracy and deny the election result to stay onside with Trump. In a way, Johnson's resignation shows us just how messed up America really is. I think it's pretty evident Jacinda Ardern is much more popular overseas than she is in New Zealand. Overseas, they focus on what her leadership represents rather than the detail of what she has (or hasn't) achieved. They see a charismatic, empathetic young woman. Kindness. Stephen Colbert isn't digging too deep into KiwiBuild, child poverty stats, healthcare workforce shortages, and gang shootings etc. That being said, I think even Ardern's harshest critics have to give her credit her for this overseas trip. Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern with Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese. Photo / Getty Images The pathway to citizenship changes announced for Kiwis in Australia, and Anthony Albanese's new 'common sense' approach to deportations should have a really significant impact on the future of 501s. Keep in mind, there's very little domestic political upside for Albanese to stop the deportations – his political opponents would immediately accuse him of being soft. He couldn't announce he was flat-out scrapping the policy. But from our perspective, he's done the next best thing. They're changes that were never going to happen under Scott Morrison and all come down to the relationship between the two current Prime Ministers. With the change in government across the Tasman, Ardern has managed to soften the impact of the 501s policy about as much as is politically possible in Australia. Well done. Finally, Shinzo Abe. What to say? Former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. Photo / Getty Images I lay in bed last night tossing and turning and thinking about it. I was a bit stunned. It's just awful, truly shocking. We're fortunate to live in an age where political assassinations are relatively rare – especially in big, developed economies. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/9/20224 minutes, 49 seconds
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Harper Finn: Kiwi artist carving out his own name in music

Harper Finn joined Jack Tame to discuss his debut EPLISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/9/202214 minutes, 2 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Paolo Nutini's Last Night In The Bittersweet

Estelle Clifford has been listening to Paolo Nutini's new album, Last Night In The Bittersweet. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/9/20225 minutes, 46 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: All Comes Down to This, The Patient Doctor

All Comes Down to This - Theresa Anne Fowler Meet the Geller sisters: Beck, Claire, and Sophie, a trio of strong-minded women whose pragmatic, widowed mother, Marti, will be dying soon and taking her secrets with her. Marti has ensured that her modest estate is easy for her family to deal with once she’s gone––including a provision that the family’s summer cottage on Mount Desert Island, Maine, must be sold, the proceeds split equally between the three girls.  The Patient Doctor - Ben Bravery A powerful and inspiring memoir about how one man's cancer diagnosis led to him becoming a doctor and advocate for change in the healthcare system. At the age of twenty-eight, with his Beijing-based science communications business doing well and a new relationship blossoming, Ben Bravery woke from a colonoscopy to be told he had stage 3 colorectal cancer. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/8/20224 minutes, 59 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Winter indulgence in Sydney

Travel expert Mike Yardley has been travelling around SydneyLISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/8/20228 minutes, 15 seconds
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Kate Hall: How to repair and save

Kate Hall has been on the hunt for someone to fix her mini oven cord and has her tips on why we should be on the repair bandwagon over buying new. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/8/20228 minutes, 16 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Troubleshooting citrus

A few weeks ago, we dealt with lemons and other citrus – never got around to solving some pests and diseases and … pruning tips Lemons should be fruiting. Ensure that the load of fruit on the branches is not too heavy (breaking!), so remove fruit accordingly, especially from young trees and prune some off to let the frame-work develop; next year let a few more grow as the tree strengthens its branch system. Pruning should achieve a nice “open” structure of branches; if a bird can fly “through” the citrus tree/shrub it will be open enough to let the wind come through to keep things dry, after a rain shower Prune from now until August, so that the pruning cut can heal, which prevent lemon tree borer for entering through the pruning wound Not Fruiting well, this winter? (Meyer) Lemons have a habit of fruiting well every second year (usually in winter and spring months); therefore it’s best to plant two or three lemon trees to have a continuous supply of lemons! Peeled lemons hanging from your tree? Get a Timms Trap! Possums are the culprit Sooty Mould on leaves and fruit; If you have sooty mould (fungi growing on sap sucking insect’s excrement) now’s the time to use some spraying oil (Conqueror Oil) to get rid of the cause: scale/mealybug/whitefly) Neem Oil is often a good, organic “suffocator” of small sap-sucking insects. Use the Oils frequently (every two weeks or so) and spray both sides of leaves and branches. Diseases Citrus scab (Verrucosis) is easily identified by the rough patches on the skin; Largely a “cosmetic” disease that won’t affect the inside of the fruit (the stuff you eat); if you don’t like it (need to get citrus zest etc) then a spray with Copper sulphate or Natures way Fungus spray (containing copper) will control the disease for the next year. Just every now and then… keep it simple! LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/8/20224 minutes, 27 seconds
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Elizabeth Blake: Interest rate cuts

Elizabeth Blake from enable.me asks what gives on three of the big main banks cutting interest rates in the past week.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/8/20225 minutes, 5 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Affordable internet for campervans and boats

More affordable satellite internet is coming to campervans and boatsElon Musk's Starlink has got a new customer base - those on the move. The FCC has given approval for cars, trains, planes and boats to be connected to Starlink's internet.It was previously only available to homes and stationary campervans. The Starlink service is significantly cheaper than other satellite operators, who typically use geostationary satellites. Starlink uses thousands of lower altitude satellites which move, but are arranged so there's always a cluster in view.Hawaiian Airlines has signed up for the service to provide free internet for passengers.Twitter is trying co-authored TweetsIt sounds like an influencer dream - where two Twitter accounts can together send a Tweet and have it appear on both timelines. It's currently only available to select accounts in the USA, Canada and Korea. Twitter is also testing 'Circles' in the USA which allows you to Tweet to only a select circle of followers.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/8/20224 minutes, 23 seconds
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Tara Ward: Life after Life, Blackbird, The Midwich Cuckoos

Life after Life: New Zealander Thomasin McKenzie stars in this BBC drama based on the book by Kate Atkinson, about a woman stuck in a time loop who dies and is continually reborn (TVNZ+)  Blackbird: A drama inspired by real events, about a prisoner who gets an incredible offer. If he can elicit a confession from a convicted killer, he’ll be freed, and the mission becomes a challenge of a lifetime (Apple TV+) The Midwich Cuckoos: Keeley Hawes stars in this science fiction drama based on John Wyndham’s classic book about aliens in the midst of a small English village (Neon). LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/8/20224 minutes, 52 seconds
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Kevin Milne: My fear of hosting parties

Kevin Milne's daughter has turned 21 and is having a big bash this weekend, which doesn't bode well for Kevin's fear of hosting parties.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/8/20226 minutes, 46 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: The new Thor, The Princess on Disney +

Francesca Rudkin has been watching Thor: Love and Thunder and The Princess on Disney+.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/8/20227 minutes, 4 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Tamarillo & coconut cake

Are tamarillo’s the Brussel sprout of the fruit world? You either love them or hate them. I’m a lover and cooking them – stewing, baking etc – mellows their flavour beautifully. This cake is a good keeper but served warm with ice cream, cream, custard or yoghurt (or heck, all of them!) it is just magical. 225g (about 1 ½ cups) self-raising flour 1 cup caster or raw sugar + extra for topping 1 ¼ cups desiccated coconut 125g butter, melted 2 large eggs, lightly beaten ½ cup milk or yoghurt 4-5 ripe tamarillos, halved and flesh scooped Ice cream, whipped cream, custard or yoghurt to serve  Preheat oven 180C and grease a 20cm round cake tin. Line with baking paper. Combine flour, sugar and coconut in a medium bowl. In another bowl, lightly whisk together the melted butter, eggs and milk (or yoghurt) until combined. Pour this into the dry ingredients and mix until combined. Scrape the cake batter into the tin. Chop or slice each of the tamarillo halves into 2-3 smaller pieces/slices. Scatter these over the batter, pushing some into it and leaving others on top. Sprinkle with extra 2 tablespoons sugar. Bake for about 1 hour or until skewer comes out clean. Cool for 10 minutes on a wire rack before turning out to cool completely. Serve with ice cream, cream etc.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/8/20227 minutes, 5 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Capital Encounters in Suva

Travel expert Mike Yardley has been travelling around FijiSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/2/202210 minutes, 13 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Jack Johnson's new album, Meet the Moonlight

Estelle Clifford has been listening to Jack Johnson's new album, Meet the Moonlight.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/2/20228 minutes, 5 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Lying Beside you, The 6:20 Man

Catherine Raynes has been reading Lying Beside you by Michael Robotham and The 6:20 Man by David Baldacci.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/1/20224 minutes, 33 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: The Rhizosphere

A few weeks ago, I made a quick comment about taking care when gardening and walking on wet soil. Compaction of the soil often causes removal of air bubbles from the soil and the roots will then be permanently surrounded by moisture; this can cause rotting and a heap of health problems for the plant. The “Rhizosphere” is the area around the roots of plants (trees, shrubs, herbs, annuals, perennials etc). It is the soil-zone that literally does all the work for Life on the Planet. Here the soil is probably its most Bio-diverse, with an incredible array of species, working to create fertility that is often utilised by the plants. It makes perfect sense that the roots of plants therefore inhabit that area of the soil. We’re talking Fungi and Bacteria, Insects and other invertebrates that literally consume dead plant materials and turn it into organic matter and compost that can chemically grab minerals and all the fertiliser elements and slowly release it to the plant roots. Rhizospheres contain a huge number of species, each doing their own job. Most of these jobs are in the field of “recycling”, others in “transport” (taking organic nutrients down to the roots) and then there are the predators and parasites (critters such as centipedes and nematodes) that take advantage of the abundance of life. I love the Tardigrades (“water Bears”) which are famous for their ability to survive being thrown into liquid nitrogen (cryptobiosis) and stay alive in that hostile environment for decades, while their normal life cycle spans just one year. But even these remarkable critters will struggle in compacted soil! The Soil (and especially its Rhizosphere) is – no doubt – one of the most important habitats on our planet. It provides us with food, supports huge food chains, is habitat for huge numbers of invertebrates and fungi, it grows trees (carbon sink – Oxygen – clean air – complex sugars – Supports a healthy water-cycle – stabilises climate – creates micro-climates – fixes Nitrogen – etc) So why the heck do New Zealanders call it “dirt”? If only we could have a look inside the soil layers and watch what’s going on. Well… when it comes to the actual root structures of plants and trees: we can! I recently came across a website from my alma mater University (Wageningen) in the Netherlands. This site is absolutely plastered with pictures of root structures of garden trees, shrubs and plants in the most incredible way. It literally gives you a view of the Rhizosphere and how every botanical species has its own characteristic shape and size of the root zone. You can see what a deep-rooted tree looks like (and why it can enter your sewer drain when it is planted too close to the house) and you can get an idea how certain shallow-rooters cover huge areas. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/1/20225 minutes, 3 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Kumeu River 2020 Kumeu Village Pinot Noir

Bob Campbell's best buy this week is the Kumeu River 2020 Kumeu Village Pinot Noir for $20 a bottle. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/1/20223 minutes, 27 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Gmail looks different, Alexa's creepy voice option

Your Gmail may start to look different The new design brings together Gmail, Chat, Spaces and Meet in one 'Workspace'. It's meant to make it easier to access these new tools. Users have been able to opt into this change since February but Google is now making it opt-in by default. If you really hate it, you'll be able to change it back in the settings, but know that at some point in the future that option will too go away. Alexa can sound like your dead relative This is creepy as hell. With just one minute of recorded audio, Alexa can learn how to talk like someone. Amazon showed off this tech by having a child ask her dead grandmother to read her a bedtime story. There isn't yet a plan to make this available to the public. With these advances in technology, it's soon going to be very difficult to tell what information is real, and what is a 'deep fake'. There's also new AI tech (DALL-E 2) which can generate realistic images from words. "Aliens on the streets of New york" or "Surfing Santa" would generate multiple options of that scene. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/1/20223 minutes, 40 seconds
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Tara Ward: The Terminal List, The Lazarus Project, Good Grief

The Terminal List: Chris Pratt stars in this all-action drama about a Navy SEAL officer who investigates why his entire platoon was ambushed while on a high-stakes covert mission (Prime Video). The Lazarus Project: A science fiction thriller about a mysterious time loop that lets a secret organisation go back in time whenever civilisation is threatened (Neon) Good Grief: The return of the New Zealand comedy series starring Grace and Eve Palmer, about two sisters who inherit a funeral home after their grandfather’s death. TVNZ+ LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/1/20224 minutes, 25 seconds
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Nici Wickes on the joy of living alone and her inspiring new cookbook

We’re normally used to hearing the bright and cheery voice of Nici Wickes before 10 each Saturday. Her delicious recipes and ideas have kept our tummies rumbling for many years on the weekend.  However, this Saturday we thought we would turn the tables and put Nici in the hot seat as our feature interview. She’s releasing a new cookbook called A Quiet Kitchen. Not only does Nici share her recipes in it, it’s filled with her gruelling journey through menopause, her decision to stop drinking and how - after a lifetime of soul-searching - she has found profound joy in living alone. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/1/202216 minutes, 28 seconds
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Helen Dorresteyn: Clevedon Buffalo Company’s vanilla panna cotta

Makes 6 / prep time 15 minutes / cook time 5 minutesDelicately cardamom flavoured yoghurt panna cotta is a perfect do-ahead entertaining dessert. These are easy to turn out to present on plates, but if you prefer you could serve them in the glasses, topped with the oranges and candied nuts.100 mls milk100 mls cream (or use all milk)⅓ cup caster sugar4 oranges3 green cardamom pods, lightly crushed2 gelatine leaves1 x 380g tub Clevedon Buffalo Co Vanilla Bean yoghurt½ cup toasted walnuts½ cup caster sugarLightly grease ramekins or glasses with 100ml capacity with a neutral oil.In a small pan heat the milk, cream, first measure of sugar, zest of 1 orange and cardamom pods until the sugar dissolves, about 5 minutes. Remove from the heat and cool for 10 minutes.Put the gelatine in a bowl of cold water to soften for 5 minutes. Squeeze the gelatine of excess water and add to the pan of still warm milk mix stirring to dissolve. Cool for another 5 minutes, then strain through a sieve into a bowl. Whisk in the yoghurt. Divide the mix between the ramekins or glasses. Cover and refrigerate overnight to set.Remove the peel and any white pith from the oranges. Using a sharp paring knife, cut orange segments from the membranes and put into a small bowl.For the candied nuts, line a tray with baking paper. Heat the sugar in a small saucepan with ¼ cup water until the sugar dissolves and begins to turn amber, around 5 minutes. Add the toasted walnuts and stir to coat, then put onto the baking tray in a single layer. Cool and roughly chop. This can be made ahead and kept in airtight container.To serve, dip each ramekin briefly in a bowl of very hot water, run a knife around the edge and slip out the panna cotta onto a plate. Spoon over the orange and any juice and scatter over the walnuts.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/1/20226 minutes, 55 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Spiderhead, Halftime

Francesca Rudkin has been watching Spiderhead with Chris Hemsworth and Jennifer Lopez's doco, Halftime.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/1/20227 minutes, 8 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Should Kiwis overseas have their own electorate and MP?

Kevin Milne has been pondering the question - should New Zealand citizens living outside the country have their own electorate with their own MP?LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/1/20227 minutes, 6 seconds
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Jack Tame: This time the politicians can't hide from the booze debate

It’s perhaps my favourite thing about New Zealand politics. Just about as Kiwi as you can possibly get. Whenever it’s time to select an MP’s member bill for debate before our parliament, we don’t pick it out of some golden, jewel-encrusted box or have it delivered by regal horsemen from an impenetrable Swiss safe.We pick it from the biscuit tin. The biscuit tin. A thirty-year-old, blue-and-white biscuit tin with a label, ‘Members’ Bills,’ sellotaped on the front.It’s as though our democracy is a game of charades.The funny thing about the biscuit tin – aside from it being a biscuit tin – is that it seems to have a habit of throwing forward particularly interesting bills. That’s where Louisa Wall’s marriage equality bill originated. And this week it happened again. Chloe Swarbrick’s booze bill was pulled from the biscuit tin.I’m not someone who prickles at a good time, but I think our collective approach to alcohol is one of the biggest hypocrisies in New Zealand society. We won’t legalise cannabis, and we’ll live in a state of near-constant panic over the damage caused by methamphetamine, but we do almost nothing meaningful when it comes to alcohol harm.And it’s hardly like we don’t have the evidence of the harm, and advice on what we should be doing differently. One of the only recommendations from the Mental Health Inquiry that hasn’t yet been acted on is this:26. Take a stricter regulatory approach to the sale and supply of alcohol, informed by the recommendations from the 2010 Law Commission review, the 2014 Ministerial Forum on Alcohol Advertising and Sponsorship and the 2014 Ministry of Justice report on alcohol pricing.That 2014 Ministerial Forum was chaired by former Kiwis coach Sir Graeme Lowe, hardly someone who needs to be schooled on the role that sport plays in our society.Chloe Swarbrick’s bill would act on his recommendations and restrict alcohol advertising and sponsorship in sport. It would also give local communities far greater powers to decide how many liquor outlets can operate in their neighbourhood.There will be some people who think it’s inconsistent for Swarbrick to crack down on booze when she was a public advocate for legalising cannabis. They miss the point. She isn’t advocating to ban alcohol. She doesn’t want prohibition. She wants to take a few little steps in order to reduce alcohol harm.Alcohol arguably causes the most harm of any drug in New Zealand. Not weed. Not even P. Alcohol. I doubt Chloe Swarbrick’s bill will make it into law in its current form, but at the very least our politicians will have to debate it. Until now, every time this issue comes up,They’ve humm’ed and hah’ed and re-ordered their papers, mumbling and ducking for cover. They’re scared of the alcohol lobby. They’re scared of being called Nanny State.This time, there is no running from the debate.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7/1/20223 minutes, 47 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Love & Fire with The Black Seeds

Estelle Clifford has been listening to the new Black Seeds album, Love & Fire. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/25/20225 minutes, 25 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Meredith, Alone and Nazi Billionaires

Meredith, Alone – Claire Alexander For anyone who has lost hope, Meredith will help you find it...discover the most uplifting and unforgettable debut of the summer.Nazi Billionaires – David De Jong A groundbreaking investigation of how the Nazis helped German tycoons make billions off the horrors of the Third Reich and World War II—and how America allowed them to get away with it. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/24/20223 minutes, 45 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Fiji's Coral Coast

Mike Yardley has been kicking back in Fiji.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/24/20228 minutes, 15 seconds
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Kate Hall: How to rely less on your car

Our sustainability expert Kate Hall gives her advice on how to rely less on your car. Short car trips under two kilometres make up nearly a third of all car trips on our road in NZ!LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/24/20229 minutes, 19 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Citrus in Winter

Citrus are “surface-rooting” and hence do not like a lot of “competition” from grass roots, so it pays to keep them mulched and avoid grass growing close to the trunk.Bark, Compost, Chippered branches; anything that suppresses the grass (especially Kikuyu) and will add organic matter is usefulFertiliser?Nah! In mid-winter plants do not take up much nutrients – wait till it gets warmer in springThey love a warm, sheltered spot in full sun – protected from wind; usually not good with heavy frosts. (Meyer lemons possibly a few degrees below zero); protect the trees from heavy frosts with frost-cloth…. So: ensure you have a lot of direct sunlight on your plant; (trim the trees that shade the citrus!)Lemons should be fruiting. Ensure that the load of fruit on the branches is not too heavy (breaking!), so remove fruit accordingly, especially from young trees and prune some off to let the frame-work develop; next year let a few more grow as the tree strengthens its branch system.(Meyer) Lemons have a habit of fruiting well every second year (usually in winter and spring months); therefore it’s best to plant two or three lemon trees to have a continuous supply of lemons!Peeled lemons hanging from your tree? Get a Timms Trap!Sooty Mould; If you have sooty mould (fungi growing on sap sucking insect’s excrement) now’s the time to use some spraying oil (Conqueror Oil) to get rid of the cause: scale/mealybug/whitefly)Neem Oil is often a good, organic “suffocator” of small sap-sucking insects. Use the Oils frequently (every two weeks or so) and spray both sides of leaves and branches.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/24/20224 minutes, 18 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: Dental care the focus for kids worldwide

Dr Bryan Betty chats to Jack Tame about the 2020 Child Health Report that's just been released with specific focus on dental care – the biggest non-communicable disease for children in the world. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/24/20223 minutes, 57 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Netflix getting ads, Abortion laws and data collection

Netflix has confirmed ads are coming In April they said they were open to the idea, but now it's been confirmed. They'll still have an ad-free product, but they're adding an ad-supported lower cost plan to their offering. It's going to take Netflix time to build out an ad sales team and build its ad technology and infrastructure, so in the meantime it's looking to partner with companies who are already experts in this area. Changes to abortion laws turn a spotlight on personal data collection If state authorities were to investigate if an abortion has taken place, peoples' personal data could be used. Search history, text messages, phone logs could all be used, but so too could location data suggesting if someone had visited a known abortion clinic. Even period tracking apps could contain data helpful for the investigation. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/24/20224 minutes, 33 seconds
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Tara Ward: Chloe, Loot, Man vs Bee

Chloe: A thriller about Becky, a young woman who compares herself to the picture-perfect lives on Instagram and compulsively returns to one account: Chloe's. However, when Chloe dies suddenly, Becky's need to find out how and why leads her to assume a new identity (Prime Video) Loot: Comedy starring Maya Ruldoph, about a billionaire who’s life suddenly erupts in a tabloid-fuelled, self-destructive scandal (Apple TV+). Man vs Bee: Rowan Atkinson returns to the small screen in this Netflix comedy, as a man working as a house sitter is tormented by a mischievous bee. Wacky hijinks ensue. Eight episodes. (Netflix) LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/24/20225 minutes, 2 seconds
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'Ice Man' Wim Hof on becoming a worldwide phenomenon

‘Ice Man’ Wim Hof has become a worldwide phenomenon. He has more than 20 Guiness World Records to his name, has climbed icy mountains in nothing but shorts and sandals and run a half marathon above the arctic barefoot.  The method to Wim's madness is his cold therapy and breathing technique.  The Dutch Native has lived an incredible, albeit slightly unconventional life, but says he’s on a mission to change the world.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/24/202213 minutes, 54 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Carrot & parsnip hashbrowns

Sweet, crispy and scrummy, these hashbrowns are so delicious and perfect for a long weekend! Take advantage of parsnips and carrots when they’re in season, even though they’re available year-round, as they taste so good freshly picked. Makes one large or 4–6 smaller hash browns 1 medium carrot, grated 1 medium parsnip, grated 1 egg (can omit) a small handful of chopped parsley salt and pepper oil for frying a dollop of sour cream to serve chutney to serve  Place the grated carrot and parsnip into a bowl. Add the egg and parsley and mix with a fork. Season well. Heat enough oil to coat the bottom of a medium-sized frying pan. Spoon the mixture into the pan as one large or individual hash browns. Cook for 4–5 minutes or until golden brown. Flip and cook until golden on second side. Serve with a dollop of sour cream or your favourite chutney.Other topping suggestions: Flakes of smoked salmon or other fish Crispy bacon Avocado LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/24/20224 minutes, 53 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Baz Luhrmann's Elvis, Whina

Francesca Rudkin has been watching Baz Luhrmann's Elvis and Kiwi film, Whina.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/24/20224 minutes, 31 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Tragedy at the supermarket with phasing out of Ernest Adams products

Kevin Milne has taken issue with the phasing out of Ernest Adams products. He joined Jack Tame to discuss this tragedy at the supermarket.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/24/20227 minutes, 23 seconds
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Jack Tame: My sporting injury horror story

We were only two or three minutes into the game when it happened.The guy had the ball in midfield and I rushed up to mark him. He stepped backwards and brought the heel of his boot right down the front of my right shin. We don’t wear shinpads in our grade. Maybe we should. No foul! Play on! Seriously?!Maybe my leg was numb? I dunno. It felt bad when it happened and it looked bad when I stared down at my shin, but I wondered if maybe the freezing weather had muted the pain a bit. It just didn’t hurt like it should.This will shock you I’m sure, but contrary to my public profile, I’m not really very tough. I’m not someone who shrugs in the face of compound fractures and third-degree burns. I find pain, painful. I do my best to avoid it. But it wasn’t through heroism or bravery that I chose to play on, despite the large slit down my right shin and my blood-soaked sock. Maybe it was adrenalin! It just didn’t actually hurt that much.The most painful thing at the After Hours surgery was the wait. Not sure if you’ve heard, but our healthcare system has seen quieter periods. At first, the lady on the front desk told me it would be five hours before I could to see a doctor.‘Maybe just get it washed out by a nurse.’ She said.‘Wrap it up overnight and find someone else to stitch it, tomorrow.’ Hmm.The wait was only half that time, in the end. I braced for a terrible sting when they flushed out the would with saline and then jabbed me with anaesthetic, but in the end it was all good. They sewed up my shin like a hole in a pillowcase. I drove home and twisted myself into all sorts of highly-unflattering positions in the shower as I endeavoured to keep the wound dry.The next day wasn’t too bad. The nurse at my GP clinic cleaned and dressed my shin. He poked it a bit to see if there was any sign of infection. It felt pretty good.‘Does that hurt?’‘Nah.’‘Do you have a high pain threshold?’He reckoned that last night was a key milestone. 72 hours from the sprig digging out a large strip of my leg, I should know with a reasonable degree of confidence if the wound was infected or if it was healing efficiently, as it should. We should know if the stitches were working.‘All you need to do,’ he said.‘Is take off the dressing.’Huh.I started at the corner. I worked up just a couple of millimetres, a tiny little piece of bandage, but I could already see the problem. There was no sign of infection, but every single one of my leg hairs was absolutely, utterly determined not to let the bandage go without a decent fight.I mightn’t be very tough. But I am hairy. My leg hair could be accurately described as voluminous. If the shampoo marketing department was feeling a bit creative, I’d be hired immediately for a Palmolive ad. Stroking my leg is like stroking a border collie.I knew what I had to do, of course. Some cliches are cliches for a reason. I tensed my body. Inhaled deeply, to the bottom of my lungs. And I peeled that dressing off my leg like a ripe banana.Riiiiiiiiip.Tears pricked in the corners of my eyes. I gasped like someone waking from a fever dream.It hurt like a bastard.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/24/20224 minutes, 21 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: George Ezra's Gold Rush Kid

Estelle Clifford gives her rating of George Ezra's third album, Gold Rush Kid. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/18/20225 minutes, 22 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Horse and Le Fric Family, Power and Money

Catherine Raynes has been reading Horse by Geraldine Brooks and Le Fric Family, Power and Money by Alex Duff.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/17/20224 minutes, 43 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Eat and Drink in Marlborough

Travel expert Mike Yardley has been eating and drinking his way around Marlborough. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/17/20228 minutes, 55 seconds
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Steven Dromgool: Helping a partner who’s grieving

It’s always difficult knowing the right things to say to someone who is grieving so Steven Dromgool is sharing his advice on how to help a partner that’s dealing with loss. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/17/20228 minutes, 25 seconds
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Hannah McQueen: How to navigate your finances in bear market territory

There has been blood on the floor of markets all round the world this week – with share markets falling into ‘bear market’ territory.  Hannah McQueen talk us through how to navigate your finances when there appears to no be safe haven in sight.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/17/20225 minutes, 45 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Internet Explorer is no more, Photoshop to be free

Internet Explorer is no moreIt's the end of an era! Microsoft has officially ended support for the once-popular internet browser which many people used to explore the internet for the first time. Microsoft Edge is their new browser - actually built on Google's browser technology - and is steadily adding new features. Applications which will only run on IE will be able to run in Edge, using a compatibility mode. If people are still using IE in a few months, those users will see a banner directing them over to Edge.Internet Explorer was 26.Adobe plans to make Photoshop free on the webA new online-only version of Photoshop is being tested in Canada, with plans to allow anyone, where to edit photos in their web browser. Their plan is to make it more accessible, not to be nice, but to showcase the features of Photoshop in the hope you'll upgrade to the full desktop version. Instagram's latest attempt to take down TikTokMeta's photo social network is expanding to full-screen videos and looking to switch up its navigation (which could even see the 'compose' button move back to the bottom). Instagram says it's still "an important part" of the service, but it certainly doesn't seem that way.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/17/20223 minutes, 56 seconds
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Tara Ward: This is going to hurt, For All Mankind, Everything I know about love

This is going to hurt: A British medical comedy-drama based on the best-selling memoir by Dr Adam Kay, about the lives of junior doctors working in an obstetrics and gynaecology ward in the NHS (TVNZ1, from Sunday) For All Mankind: A new season of the science-fiction space drama that imagines the 1960s space race between the U.S. and the USSR never ended (Apple TV+). Everything I know about love: based on the book by journalist Dolly Alderton about the changing friendship between two best friends in their 20s as they navigate life, love and everything in between (TVNZ+) LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/17/20224 minutes, 52 seconds
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James Bay talks new album Leap and becoming a new dad

Brit singer-songwriter James Bay shot to fame in 2014 with his songs Let it Go and Hold Back the River.He's now back with a third album and his most personal yet after a wild ride of dealing with the pandemic and becoming a new dad. The Grammy-nominated and Brit award-winning artist joins Jack Tame on Saturday Morning. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/17/202213 minutes, 39 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Nude Tuesday and The Other Fellow doco

Francesca Rudkin has been watching Nude Tuesday and The Other Fellow doco from the Doc Edge Film Festival. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/17/20228 minutes, 41 seconds
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Jack Tame: The autocorrect fail driving me mad

I am not a technophobe.I need no convincing that technology makes many aspects of our lives much easier and though I’ve been known on occasion to come late to technology - for a couple of years I was convinced that cellphones were nothing more than a passing fad - I DO eventually come around. I do. I find technology intuitive. I quickly become one of those people who can’t imagine life without it.That being said, for several months now I’ve been at war with my phone’s cleverness. Against my wishes, against any explicit instructions, and in spite of my very best efforts to override my phone’s decision making, it has decided on a small but meaningful autocorrect change which is fundamentally changing my text communication.Every time I type the word ‘can,’ my phone changes it to ‘can’t.’I’m aware that in the grand scheme of autocorrect fails, this mightn’t seem all that significant. I Googled some extreme examples of people whose messages have been completely transformed by the supposed smartness of their smartphones, and some of the texts certainly leave you wondering if technology is indeed a force for good.Instead of asking if his partner was keen to eat chicken fajitas for dinner, autocorrect meant someone called Luke asked about eating chicken vaginas, instead. Chicken vaginas? For dinner? Hmm. I think I’ll stick with drumsticks, thanks.In another exchange, a dad asked his family chat who had a spare key to the back door.“Grandpa died” replied Mum. Grandpa DIED?! Oh my god! Mum! That’s awful! But what a strangly blunt way to share the sad news. Sorry. Grandpa DOES, clarified Mum. Grandpa DOES. Autocorrect strikes again.My autocorrect drama pales in comparison. But just pause for a moment, and imagine how much the addition of an apostrophe and a letter changes the intention of my communication.Jack, can you get some milk from the dairy on the way home?“Of course I can’t”Jack, can you please collect me from the airport?“Yes, I can’t.”Have you confirmed whether those two Cabinet Ministers will be interviewed on Sunday?“They can’t do it. They need to be finished and out the door by 9.30 so they can’t make their party hui.”It’s been months. I tried turning autocorrect off and on. I tried various help forums. Sometimes I catch it. I thumb back through my message and delete out the superfluous characters. Sometimes I don’t. I’m at the point where I’’m starting to wonder what it means that my phone always defaults to can’t instead of can. Does it mean I’m a negative person? Am I glass half-empty rather than half-full? A can’t-do, rather than a can-do?I can’t only hope that my phone can’t relearn that every time I say can’t I actually mean can’t. No. Hang on. Every time I say can’t I mean can’t. Wait. Every time I say C-A-N, I mean can’t.Can’t you understand my frustration?LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/17/20224 minutes, 41 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Fried Bread/Parāoa parai

I made this for the first time last Matariki and loved it as a dessert! Fried bread, or parāoa parai is easy to whip up and this recipe produces lovely soft soft pillows of fried bread which, served warm with ice cream and blackberries and drizzled with mānuka honey, make a gorgeous dessert. Makes 12-16 pieces 2 teaspoon instant yeast ½ teaspoon sugar 1 – 1 ½ cups warm water 2 1/2 cups high grade flour ½ teaspoon salt Cooking oil, for frying Ice cream to serve Blackberries to serve Icing sugar for dusting Mānuka honey for drizzling  In a small bowl, sprinkle yeast and sugar over half a cup of the warm water, stir gently, cover and leave to sit and froth for 5-7 minutes. In a large bowl, mix together the flour and salt. Slowly add the foamy yeast mixture and some of the remaining water, stirring with a knife as you go, until a scraggy mass forms. Mix with your hands in the bowl and keep adding water until a soft dough forms – you may or may not need all of the water. Turn the dough onto a well-floured surface (and oil the empty bowl) and with light hands, knead for 5 minutes or until the dough is smooth. Transfer back to the oiled bowl, cover, and leave to proof in a warm place for 30-40 minutes or until doubled in size. Once the dough has doubled in size, pat out onto the floured surface and roll out to a 1-2cm thickness. Cut into squares or triangles and leave to rest for 5 minutes. Heat 2 cm oil in a large fry pan and fry bread until golden brown, flip and cook until puffed up and fluffy in the centre. Serve warm fried bread with ice cream and blackberries and showered in icing sugar.Nici’s note: For lovely soft pillows, aim for a slightly sloppy and sticky dough which may be hard to knead but it will firm up on rising. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/17/20225 minutes, 4 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Four Treasures of the Sky, The Murders at Fleet House

Catherine Raynes has been reading Four Treasures of the Sky by Jenny Tinghui Zhang and The Murders at Fleet House by Lucinda Riley.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/11/20225 minutes, 12 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Surprising winter crop

Honestly! Most people think that winter is a “dead time” in the garden. But if you haven’t had a go at growing peas, you’d never know how easy that is. First of all, gardeners often grow a “green crop” in winter that gets dug into the soil in spring to add Nitrogen for the next growing season; We often use peas and other legumes for that task and the key is to dig them in before they set seed. Of course, those “green crops” are never sown for eating! But if you want edible peas, for instance, you could plant the seeds right now in the garden amongst the wintery conditions and frosts, and they’d germinate as well… were it not for the hungry birds, who are keen to devour some sown pea seeds in those lean winter months as there are few nutritious sources of food available at that time of the year. Oh and not just birds! Rats and Mice are in a similar boat… craving food. I prefer to sow them in a hidden spot (glass house or tunnel house) in seed-pots and let them grow until they are 5, 6, or 7 cm tall, with true leaves (not just the cotyledons). At that stage most of the valuable nutrients will have been used from the pea seeds and the transplanted young plants will be relatively safe from the birds and rodents. Seed raising mix in sowing cells works well for me; depending on the temperatures, you’d be looking at 2 weeks germination and an extra week or so to get some height on the little plants. When ready for transplanting, create a nice garden bed with good, weed-free soil, some grains of slow-release fertilisers and carefully put them into their spot… A bit of a “climbing rack” might keep them off the wet ground and results in harvesting cleaner pods. Then it’s just a matter of letting them grow and set their own “seeds” in seed pods we call “peas”. To be quite honest, few things taste fresher than new peas. While our peas and beans are so cooperative in terms of germinating in winter, think about their relatives, the Broad beans. They too will come up in the coldest months of the year, some can germinate at 4 degrees. Ideally plant the seeds from March (in the very coldest conditions) to May and Mid-June (elsewhere). These plants do not like too warm conditions. Broad beans are quite heavy plants and prone to collapsing when they grow, so a bit of support would be appreciated. The Sugar snap peas need a little bit of warmth to get going, so wait until late Early to Late Spring. But you know…. It’s something to look forward to!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/11/20226 minutes, 12 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Sound encounters in Queen Charlotte

Mike Yardley has been cruising in the Sounds. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/10/20227 minutes, 12 seconds
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Malcolm Rands: Greenwashing

Greenwashing is when a company purports to be environmentally conscious for marketing purposes but actually isn’t making any notable sustainability efforts. A USA survey recently found 95 percent of so called green products violated the common principles we are going to talk about. Hidden Trade-off: a claim that a product is "green" based on an unreasonably narrow set of attributes without attention to other important environmental issues. paper, for example, is not necessarily environmentally-preferable just because it comes from a sustainably-harvested forest. other important environmental issues in the paper-making process, including energy, greenhouse gas emissions, and water and air pollution, may be equally or more significant.No Proof: a claim that cannot be substantiated by easily accessible information or by a reliable third-party certification. Vagueness: a claim that is so poorly defined or broad that its real meaning is likely to be misunderstood by the consumer. "All-natural", for example isn’t necessarily "green". arsenic, uranium, mercury, and formaldehyde are all naturally occurring, and poisonous but certainly not green. Or 90 percent biodegradable. What does this mean. Even nuclear waste is biodegradable if you wait a few hundred thousand years. Worshiping False Labels: a claim that, through words or images, gives the impression of a third-party endorsement where none exists.. Marketers make up their own label or the whole packaging looks like an eco product even though it’s not Having said that, a reputable third party certification can be the solution to greenwash by giving certainty that the claims are true Irrelevance: a claim that may be truthful but which is unimportant or unhelpful to consumers seeking environmentally-preferable products. Again, a good example is the over use of biodegradable and compostable. Especially now around plastics that would only biodegrade in a commercial compost facility but makes you think you could throw them in your own compost bin. Lesser of Two Evils: a claim that may be true within the product category, but that risks distracting consumers from the greater environmental impact of the category as a whole. Like organic cigarettes or a new V8 sports car with slightly better fuel efficiency. Fibbing: a claim that is simply false. This is the rarest sin in NZ as the competitors will quickly let the commerce commission know. The big danger here is that people think they are doing the right thing for the planet and they are actually doing very little. It’s a distraction from making real change. The other danger is the people become disillusioned with all green products and will just give up trying to do the right thing. The solution is to do a bit of research yourselves. Check out the company website and see if they can back up their claims with specific data and searchable references And look for real third party certification.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/10/20228 minutes, 56 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Paritua 2022 Rosé from Hawke’s Bay

Our wine expert Bob Campbell has been sipping on Paritua 2022 Rosé from Hawke’s Bay.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/10/20225 minutes, 25 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Apple has crushed it this year

Apple's had their developer conference and are about to launch new devices - what's in store?I really think Apple has crushed it this year!The line between the iPad & MacBook is blurringThe new version of iPadOS will allow for overlapping windows in a workspace, much more like what you'd expect on a laptop. You can even plug it into a monitor and extend the display, like a laptop. Stage Manager is their new way to arrange and toggle between windows and it works the same way on both Mac & iPad. MacBook Air has a new designIt's stunning. They've made it more boxy like the pro, making it less of a wedge. It also comes with the M2 chip which just has the most incredible performance. True all day battery life.iPhone as a webcamYou can mount your iPhone at the top of your MacBook and it'll automatically connect allowing you to have a super high definition webcam. The wide angle lens also allows for a 'desk view' to show people something you've sketched out, printed out, or want to show off.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/10/20225 minutes, 32 seconds
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Erin Doherty: Rising star on The Crown and her new thriller series

Royal fans out there might recognise her name.Actress Erin Doherty starred as a young Princess Anne in the popular Netflix series The Crown. Doherty was relatively unknown before being cast as Anne but the 29-year-old is now being touted as one to watch. The Brit has a new psychological series out called Chloe and it's received rave reviews already. She catches up with Jack Tame.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/10/20228 minutes, 38 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Gluten free coconut loaf

This week is Coeliac Awareness Week - a chance to turn the spotlight on the condition whereby the body’s physiology is unable to tolerate gluten – a protein found in wheat, rye and barley – and as a reaction the immune system attacks your own tissues when you eat gluten. This from the NHS: Over time, the immune reaction to eating gluten creates inflammation that damages the small intestine's lining, leading to medical complications. It prevents absorption of some nutrients (malabsorption) and the classic, and immediate, symptom is diarrhoea. Other symptoms include bloating, wind, fatigue, low blood count (anaemia) and osteoporosis. The mainstay of treatment is a strict gluten-free diet that can help manage symptoms and promote intestinal healing. It’s a horrible condition made worse by it being undiagnosed and the fact that so many foods contain hidden gluten in some form these days – thickeners in sauces, fillers in sausages etc etc. So, here’s a delicious loaf that is perfectly fine for those following a GF diet. 1 ¼ cups GF flour 2 tsps baking powder 1 cup sugar – a mix of brown and white is fine 1 cup dessicated coconut 1 cup milk – regular or plant-based 2 tsps vanilla extract Turn the oven to 160 C fan bake. Grease and line a loaf tin. Mix all the dry ingredients together and then pour in the milk and vanilla and stir to combine. Scrape into the loaf tin. Bake for 60 minutes or until a skewer comes out clean. Cool then slice to eat. It toasts well too.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/10/20225 minutes, 28 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Jurassic World, Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom

Francesca Rudkin has been watching Jurassic World: Dominion and Bhutanese drama film, Lunana: A Yak In The Classroom.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/10/20225 minutes, 41 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Threats to life and limb

Kevin Milne chats about all the threats to life and limb there seem to be around currently - especially if you live where he does with tornadoes, high seas and lightning storms.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/10/20226 minutes, 54 seconds
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Jack Tame: That familiar sinking feeling

I knew it the moment I saw it.My bike just looked a bit... off. It was sitting heavy in the bike rack at work. Everyone else’s bikes sat bright and perky on puckered, plump, pressurised black rubber.There is just something so distinctly sad about a flat tyre.I started walking home with it. I moped up the hill, leading my bike like a handcuffed prisoner. Cyclists zipped past me in the bike lane, one after the other, fast and free, their high-vis vests snapping in the wind, home in no time! I kept on missing the traffic lights. Mope, mope, mope. Ten minutes from home, it started raining.I figured I must have got the flat on the way to work that morning. I couldn’t remember riding over broken glass or thumb tacks or a discarded bucket of nails. Just one of those things, I figured. The Gods saw the weather forecast and thought uh huh! Here’s an idea. A bit of sport. Let’s make Jack’s day just a little bit worse.It took me longer than it should have to change the tube. I’ve recently had to move my furniture around, and I emptied three large storage containers before I dug out my tyre levers. With two thirds of my worldly possessions arranged across the garage floor, I flipped my bike on its back. No sign of a nail. No thumb tacks. No sign of a gaping wound. I’m ashamed to say I took the easy way out and instead of finding the puncture and patching the hole, I just chucked in another tube. I pumped her up to sixty PSI and scoured the grease off my knuckles. Ride on.Nothing gets you down like a flat tyre in the rain. Except, maybe, for waking the next morning, packing your bags for work, scurrying down to the garage and discovering another flat tyre.Brilliant. For a moment I wondered if it was a non-violent protest by someone who just really hates cycle lanes. Since those eco-warriors are letting down the tyres on gas-gazzling SUVs, maybe some of the bike lane NIMBYs have been feeling inspired? As I walked to walk, it started to rain.The good thing about getting a flat tyre two days in a row is that the second time around, you’re faster. You’re better practised. You feel like a Formula One pit crew as you flip your bike on its back and see the familiar streak of black grease across your palm. Unfortunately for me, this theory only holds if you didn’t somehow lose the only hex key that fits your cycle’s axle bolt. I emptied three large storage containers and re-arranged half my worldly possessions across the garage floor before I found it.This time, I was really careful. I spun the wheel and scoured it for nails and pins. I ran my fingers all along the inside of the tyre and flicked out the tiny little bits of detritis that had gathered inside. I used my last bike tube and delicately arranged it around the outside of my rim, inflating it just a little bit to keep it inside the tire before sealing the rubber lips around the inside ring. I pumped it up, slow and steady. Sixty PSI. I wiped all the grease off my fingers and pushed off down the hill.The wind in my hair. The fresh winter air in my lungs! Hallelujah, I thought! I’m alive!There are certain moments in life that one becomes aware of a sinking feeling. In this case, it was a very literal sensation, not unlike gently lifting the lever to lower your office chair. I was perfectly located in the no man’s land that marks the single-least convenient part of my entire commute to work. A few drops of rain began to plop on my backpack as I climbed down off my pedals. My back tyre sagged and folded around the rim like a belly spewing over a waistband.Bugger it, I figured. Tomorrow, I think I’ll drive.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/10/20225 minutes, 9 seconds
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Jack Tame: That familiar sinking feeling

I knew it the moment I saw it.My bike just looked a bit... off. It was sitting heavy in the bike rack at work. Everyone else’s bikes sat bright and perky on puckered, plump, pressurised black rubber.There is just something so distinctly sad about a flat tyre.I started walking home with it. I moped up the hill, leading my bike like a handcuffed prisoner. Cyclists zipped past me in the bike lane, one after the other, fast and free, their high-vis vests snapping in the wind, home in no time! I kept on missing the traffic lights. Mope, mope, mope. Ten minutes from home, it started raining.I figured I must have got the flat on the way to work that morning. I couldn’t remember riding over broken glass or thumb tacks or a discarded bucket of nails. Just one of those things, I figured. The Gods saw the weather forecast and thought uh huh! Here’s an idea. A bit of sport. Let’s make Jack’s day just a little bit worse.It took me longer than it should have to change the tube. I’ve recently had to move my furniture around, and I emptied three large storage containers before I dug out my tyre levers. With two thirds of my worldly possessions arranged across the garage floor, I flipped my bike on its back. No sign of a nail. No thumb tacks. No sign of a gaping wound. I’m ashamed to say I took the easy way out and instead of finding the puncture and patching the hole, I just chucked in another tube. I pumped her up to sixty PSI and scoured the grease off my knuckles. Ride on.Nothing gets you down like a flat tyre in the rain. Except, maybe, for waking the next morning, packing your bags for work, scurrying down to the garage and discovering another flat tyre.Brilliant. For a moment I wondered if it was a non-violent protest by someone who just really hates cycle lanes. Since those eco-warriors are letting down the tyres on gas-gazzling SUVs, maybe some of the bike lane NIMBYs have been feeling inspired? As I walked to walk, it started to rain.The good thing about getting a flat tyre two days in a row is that the second time around, you’re faster. You’re better practised. You feel like a Formula One pit crew as you flip your bike on its back and see the familiar streak of black grease across your palm. Unfortunately for me, this theory only holds if you didn’t somehow lose the only hex key that fits your cycle’s axle bolt. I emptied three large storage containers and re-arranged half my worldly possessions across the garage floor before I found it.This time, I was really careful. I spun the wheel and scoured it for nails and pins. I ran my fingers all along the inside of the tyre and flicked out the tiny little bits of detritis that had gathered inside. I used my last bike tube and delicately arranged it around the outside of my rim, inflating it just a little bit to keep it inside the tire before sealing the rubber lips around the inside ring. I pumped it up, slow and steady. Sixty PSI. I wiped all the grease off my fingers and pushed off down the hill.The wind in my hair. The fresh winter air in my lungs! Hallelujah, I thought! I’m alive!There are certain moments in life that one becomes aware of a sinking feeling. In this case, it was a very literal sensation, not unlike gently lifting the lever to lower your office chair. I was perfectly located in the no man’s land that marks the single-least convenient part of my entire commute to work. A few drops of rain began to plop on my backpack as I climbed down off my pedals. My back tyre sagged and folded around the rim like a belly spewing over a waistband.Bugger it, I figured. Tomorrow, I think I’ll drive.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/10/20225 minutes, 9 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Kiwi band Rhombus returns

Estelle Clifford's been listening to Kiwi dub/reggae band Rhombus and their new album, After Party. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/3/20225 minutes, 27 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Dirt Town, Sparring Partners

Catherine Ryanes has been reading Dirt Town by Hayley Scrivenor and Sparring Partners by John Grisham.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/3/20224 minutes, 50 seconds
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Mike Yardley: A creative Queensland escape in Eumundi

Mike Yardley is escaping the chilly weather for the sunny state of Queensland in Australia. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/3/20229 minutes, 50 seconds
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Steven Dromgool: Importance of siblings

Steven Dromgool chats to Jack Tame about the importance of siblings and whether blood really is thicker than water. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/3/20227 minutes, 13 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: Bowel cancer awareness month

June is bowel cancer awareness month and Dr Bryan Betty is speaking about the screening programme and its importance. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/3/20224 minutes, 47 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Sheryl Sandberg leaving Meta/Facebook

Big changes with Sheryl Sandberg leaving Meta / FacebookThe 52-year-old has been at the company for 14 years. She's held an unconventional COO role because she was usually the public face of the company. A COO usually is a very internal operations-focused position. She's been under investigation at Meta for using company resources to plan her wedding. Meta says that isn't tied to why she's leaving.Reports suggest she was burned out, tired of being a punching bag for the company's many many problems and isn't well suited to the metaverse.She's sold $1.7 billion dollars worth of stock over the past decade, putting her into a rare category of being a non-CEO and non-founder to become a billionaire.She's keeping her seat on the Meta board.What's next.. no word.Apple's Developer Conference is next weekMark your calendars.. expecting a new version of their Apple Silicone clip.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/3/20223 minutes, 21 seconds
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Tara Ward: The Responder, Pistol, Match Fit

The Responder: Martin Freeman stars in this British thriller about a cop under pressure, who must tackle a series of night shifts on the beat in Liverpool while trying to keep his head above water personally and professionally (TVNZ OnDemand).Pistol: Directed by Danny Boyle, this miniseries follows the rise and fall of the Sex Pistols amid the 1970s London punk rock scene and is based on the memoir by guitarist Steve Jones (Disney+).Match Fit: A second season of the charming series that sees World Cup winning coach Sir Graham Henry and rugby royalty Sir Wayne Shelford bring together a team of former All Blacks from the late 1990s and early 2000s (Three, from Wednesday 8 June).LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/3/20225 minutes, 9 seconds
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Anna Kent: Frontline midwife on delivering babies in war zones

While most run away from war zones, Anna Kent runs toward them.Anna helps the most vulnerable women deliver babies in often harrowing conditions. At 26, she delivered a baby in a tropical storm by the light of a headtorch. The following year, she became responsible for the female health of 30,000 Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh. Anna’s details her experiences in a new book called Frontline Midwife.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/3/202213 minutes, 23 seconds
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Nici Wickes: In honour of the Queen - Yorkshire Puddings

In celebration of the Queen’s 70th Jubilee we’re making a British favourite – Yorkshire Puddings!Makes 12 large4 medium eggs200mls milk200g plain flourLarge pinch saltGrapeseed or rice bran oil1. In a large bowl, whisk up the eggs until broken up. Pour in the milk and add the flour and whisk together gently until combined. Avoid overworking the batter, any lumps will soften in the resting period so don’t over-whisk the batter at this stage. Add the salt. Pour batter into a jug and rest in the fridge for at least 15 minutes, while you heat the oven.2. Heat oven to 190 C. Take a 12-hole muffin tin and pour oil into each hole, to quarter fill then place on a tray. Transfer to the oven and heat for 12-15 minutes. Remove and, acting quickly so the oil doesn’t cool too much, pour batter into the muffin holes, filling to nearly the top. Return to the oven and cook for 20-25minutes.3. These Yorkshire puddings can be eaten with any roast dinner (not just beef) or even as a snack with other toppings – think basil pesto and showered in parmesan, sautéed mushrooms with horseradish, salmon sour cream and capers…endless options.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/3/20224 minutes, 39 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: French Film Festival kicks off

The French Film Festival is playing all around New Zealand over the next month. Francesca Rudkin talks through her picks. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/3/20226 minutes, 34 seconds
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Kevin Milne: The Queen's pageantry

Kevin Milne was entranced by the pageantry in London for the Queens Birthday and chats to Jack Tame about it.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/3/20228 minutes, 5 seconds
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Jack Tame: Gun violence now doesn't mean the buyback was a failure

When Jacinda Ardern and Joe Biden sat down, one subject was totally inevitable.Touring the U.S in the wake of its latest massacre(s), the New Zealand Prime Minister was asked by almost every politician or late night TV host about gun reform. As far as they were concerned, March 15th happened and within days her government acted. Almost immediately she took steps to get military style semi-automatic off the streets. To many Americans it was the sort of common sense policy-making that seems desperately distant in the United States of Mass Shootings.Of course, the real story was more complex than that. At the same time as Ardern was being celebrated by the American left as a heroic bastion of gun reform, Auckland recorded yet another worrying series of public shootings. Police have arrested nineteen gang members for firearms and drug offences in relation to the incidents, but over the last few weeks it has felt like only a matter of time before someone innocent ends up catching a bullet.In one sense, this spike in gun crime isn’t an aberration: 2021 had the highest number of firearms offences in at least the last 15 years. But the events of the last few weeks represent the crossover between two intertwined problems: gangs and guns.We don’t know with certainty exactly what guns have been used for each of the different public shooting incidents of the last few weeks. A shooting in Beach Haven last night appeared to involve a shotgun, which can obviously be legally purchased. But critics see the headlines of the last few weeks as evidence Jacinda Ardern’s gun buyback scheme was a failure: If the buyback had worked, we wouldn’t be having shootings.I agreed with the critique of the ACT Party at the time the buyback was announced - gangs and criminals were never going to voluntarily hand in their weapons at the local cop shop. Can you imagine?!But the criticism also misses a fundamental point. The buyback was never likely to have a massive impact on gun crime in the short term. Outside of hopefully preventing possible massacres in the future, the real benefit of the gun buyback scheme will be realised over time, when gangs and criminals can no longer steal weapons that have been legally purchased by law-abiding gun owners. Previously it wasn’t difficult to continuously supply a black market with military-style rifles. And with no gun register, it was impossible to track anything.But now, the source has dried up. Gangs will have to rely on their current caches, legal firearms, or on smuggling illegal weapons into New Zealand. Even though the buyback scheme meant law-abiding citizens were stripped of their military-style semi-automatics, ultimately it should also restrict the supply of those weapons to those with illicit intentions.This is little comfort right now, especially for the communities in which gang-related gun violence in most prevalent. So what more can we do? ACT might have opposed the gun buyback scheme, but the party also wants a different law change to help with the current violence: If a lawful Police search discovers an illegal operation, a gang member, and an illegal gun, the crown would be apply to fast-track the seizure of assets.This is not a silly idea.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6/3/20224 minutes, 15 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Florence and the Machine's Dance Fever

Estelle Clifford has been spinning Florence and the Machine's new - and fifth - studio album, Dance Fever.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/28/20227 minutes, 17 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: What Eden Did Next, Trust

Catherine Raynes has two books picks this week worth a read - What Eden Did Next by Shelia O’Flanagan and Trust by Hernan Diaz.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/27/20223 minutes, 29 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Bites and Sights in Mooloolaba

Mike Yardley has been living the hard life soaking up the sunshine on Alexandra Headland.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/27/20227 minutes, 57 seconds
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Malcolm Rands: Why we ignore climate change

I love the story told to me by my friend Michael Braungart, co-author of Cradle to Cradle, the book that helped launch the circular economy movement in the early noughties.He says, what would happen if you take all the humans on the planet and put them in a big pile and then take all the ants and make a pile next to it. The ant pile would be bigger. But no one says , too many ants are ruining the planet. Quite the opposite, the recycling work they do make them almost the best circular economy practitioners around. So the problem isn’t too many humans but our day to day habits. Imagine when we get so good at looking after our world that extra humans would mean an even better planetThere are quite a few reasons that we are not yet taking the climate emergency seriously.I have tapped into the thinking of Art Markman, PhD, Professor of Psychology and Marketing at the University of Texas writing in the Harvard Business Review. He says ‘If people are motivated to avoid threats to their existence now, why is it so hard to get people to act on climate change’.There are four main reasons. For most people it is the difference between long term and short term thinking and this is the hardest trade off for people to make.People don’t save enough money for retirement preferring to spend now, they can over eat in the present and even smoke while actually knowing that long term, this is bad for their healthIgnoring climate change unfortunately has short term benefits. You don’t have to change any habits, business can still make climate unfriendly decisions and make more money now and even the government won’t upset voters now to make hard decisions because of the next election coming upSo what can you do here. Recognising the behaviour is a big part of the solution. We can save for retirement and also give up bad health habits. So we can also change our habits to stop climate change.Business can be encouraged to do the right thing through your buying behaviour and by asking for the climate friendly products you want. Even politicians do listen to their electors if you take the time to let them know what is important to you.Secondly, climate is a non linear problem. people are already good at making judgements of linear trends. I spend $5 a day on coffee. Therefore I can understand the implications without setting up a spreadsheet. But but when things start slowly then accelerate this causes a problem. People will still think linearly. A few cigarettes a days ok but it’s the accumulation of years of smoking that does the damage . Then the health issues suddenly sneaks up on them.Likewise it’s been a long time until any obvious impacts of climate change have appeared. But we can see them now.The third issue is distance. Most of the problems are happening to others far away. Research shows that people conceptualise things from a distance more abstractly than what’s happening to their own neighbours. So it losses impact and is not seen as important.And fourthly the future is actually very abstract. We don’t know what will happen. We love to live in the now, and maybe the past but don’t trust what will happen in the future.And I add a fifth reason. Many, mainly men, think we are so clever, that science will come up with a ‘get out of jail card’ that will sort all these problems. So we don’t have to do anything but wait for these clever scientists to save us. This is quite common thinking , including among media commentators who will rubbish cycle lanes and other green initiatives because of of this thinking.This is wishful and or even magical thinking. Not rational at all, like these blokes like to think. Should we keep smoking and over eating and wait for science to save us. We actually have all the scientific processes right now to reverse the climate emergency , we just need to change our habits and put them in place.So what else can we do?Well...See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/27/20228 minutes, 42 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Mowing lawns or wildflower meadows?

The British Gardeners are urged to stop mowing lawns in May so as to “support bees”. Gardeners come in many different "sizes": 1) Precision gardeners. Those that follow the swanky garden magazines and have not a plant nor a blade of grass out of place. Think Versailles and the Famous British gardens like Sissinghurst. When it comes to lawns they are cut to within an inch of their life! There are no weeds, and few "wild Flowers". Most of the borders are sprayed to minimize fungi and bacterial diseases as well as Natural Biodiversity such as insects, spiders, mites, praying mantises and crickets 2) Wannabe-precision gardeners. Those who haven't got the time nor the staff to achieve the number one status. Their gardens really lack detailed attention and as such they're a lot weedier and "all over the place" in the eyes of precision gardeners. They usually do have some structure though... and are pleasant to the eye. 3) Hippies and Macrobiotic adorers of Homeopathy and Herbs. My goodness! That is a mess! Stuff everywhere - no weed control, aphids all over the place, weird flowers popping up everywhere, heaps of blackbirds, lots of worms, swarms of butterflies and armies of moths, native bees, beetles, insectivorous birds and lizards. Ironically, when it comes to creating a garden with the best biodiversity, the third option will win hands-down. Imagine heaps of different species of flowers, weeds, (as well as mosses and lichens) allowing for a huge diversity of wildlife. The nectar and the pollen attached to a variety of flowers is very beneficial for pollinators, such as bees and moths and butterflies, beetles, hover flies, parasitic wasps and predatory critters who all need pollen (protein) for development and nectar (sweet energy). The Brits might have the idea to not mow their lawns in May (getting more flowering weeds in there), but I reckon we can do much better than that: Now is the time to sow wild-flower seeds (mixed series of species) in some vegetable beds that are lying dormant or idle. Some of the resulting plants may even flower in winter and early spring, whereas other species will pop up in mid to late spring, providing our pollinators with extra sustenance (nectar and pollen) and opportunities for survival and reproduction. No, I am not thinking about honey bees so much... We have 28 species of small, native bees and they are brilliant pollinators of our native flowers. These native bee species are often robbed of floral nectar by the commercial and exotic honey bee, so I'd like to give our natives a helping hand. By the way: even “exotic” wildflowers will attract all these critters, so it doesn’t always need to be “native plants”… Apart from bees and bumble bees, we also have a lot of other pollinators in our garden: beetles, small parasitic wasps that help with pest control, as well as hover flies and moths and butterflies; All these creatures are part of our ecosystems and complete our Biodiversity in the garden. Birds, too, like the flowers and the subsequent seeds. I have always liked the idea of creating a wildflower "lawn" in the garden and simply mow elegant meandering paths through these wildflower lawns, so you can walk there without getting wet trousers or wet feet after a shower of rain. Start sowing the wildflower mixes in your garden for a totally different and colourful look in spring. Try it...you'll like it!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/27/20224 minutes, 21 seconds
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Hannah McQueen: OCR and what can you focus on in the doom and gloom?

Hannah McQueen is talking about the latest OCR increase - the fact that rates are rising faster, and likely higher than previously predicted will be scary for some. The whole economic picture can seem overwhelmingly negative at the moment – so what do you focus on in the midst of the doom and gloom? LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/27/20225 minutes, 57 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Huawei's 5G equipment now banned from all five-eyes

Huawei is banned from supplying 5G equipment in CanadaThis means  it's now fully banned across the five-eyes alliance of the USA, UK, Australia, New Zealand and Canada. Canadian companies will have until June 2024 to remove it - at their own cost and without reimbursement from the Canadian government. They say it's a move to protect their critical telecommunications infrastructure of the future from foreign interference. There isn't an easy answer explaining who owns Huawei, and many allegations of subverting sanctions, fraud, espionage. Using the wrong USB-C cable? Your Chromebook will now tell youUSB-C is a very confusing piece of technology. Your cable may have a USB-C connection, but that doesn't mean it can do everything possible with USB-C. Some USB-C cables can handle high power currents, others can't, they can handle various speeds of data, some are Thunderbolt, some are DisplayPort. Depending on the feature depends on the maximum length the cable can be. So soon, when you plug the wrong cable into your Chromebook and wonder why something isn't working, your computer will help you figure it out.LISTEN AABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/27/20229 minutes, 46 seconds
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Chuck Schulz: Stranger Things is back, Obi-Wan Kenobi, Prehistoric Planet

Stranger Things Season 4 (Netflix) It’s been six months since the Battle of Starcourt, which brought terror and destruction to Hawkins. Struggling with the aftermath, our group of friends are separated for the first time – and navigating the complexities of high school hasn't made things any easier. In this most vulnerable time, a new and horrifying supernatural threat surfaces, presenting a gruesome mystery that, if solved, might finally put an end to the horrors of the Upside Down. Obi-Wan Kenobi (Disney) “Obi-Wan Kenobi” begins 10 years after the dramatic events of “Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith” where Obi-Wan Kenobi faced his greatest defeat—the downfall and corruption of his best friend and Jedi apprentice, Anakin Skywalker, who turned to the dark side as evil Sith Lord Darth Vader. Prehistoric Planet (Apple TV) “Prehistoric Planet” combines award-winning wildlife filmmaking, the latest paleontology learnings and state-of-the-art technology to unveil the spectacular habitats and inhabitants of ancient Earth for a one-of-a-kind immersive experience.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/27/20225 minutes, 38 seconds
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George Thorogood is still rocking 45 years on

The legendary blues-based rocker George Thorogood and his band the Destroyers have announced they’re coming our way in October. They've sold over 15 million albums, built a catalogue of classic hits and played more than 8000 live shows. There’s no slowing down for 72-year-old George just yet. He catches up with Jack Tame about 45 years of rock and why he still loves it. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/27/202212 minutes, 16 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Lemon cheesecake

Have you noticed all the gorgeous lemon trees beginning to shine with fruit? I just love this time of year when citrus comes into its own again. Try this cake - it’s a terrific combination of a cake and a cheesecake and it’s lemony delicious.Serves 8-12Batter1 ¼ cup sugarZest from one lemon½ teaspoon sea salt1 large egg room temperature220g butter melted3 tablespoons lemon juice2 ¼ cups plain flour2 teaspoons baking powderFilling220g cream cheese softened1 ½ cups icing sugar + extra2 large egg yolks2 tablespoons lemon juiceZest from one lemonCake Batter1. Preheat oven to 170°C. Grease a 23cm round springform tin.2. Combine grated lemon zest and sugar in a large bowl of food processor and give it a quick whizz so that the sugar becomes fragrant and pale yellow. Whisk in the egg, lemon juice and melted butter until combined.3. Sift in the flour and baking powder and combine to a thick batter. Spread batter evenly into the greased tin.4. Make the filling: Use an electric beater to combine cream cheese and icing sugar until smooth. Add egg yolks, lemon juice and zest and continue to beat until smooth. Pour the filling on top of the batter. Knock gently to expel any air bubbles.5. Bake for 45-55 minutes, or until the edges are golden brown and the middle is puffed. If you see it browning too quickly, tent the top with a piece of foil.6. Let the cake cool for 15 minutes before releasing the sides of the tin. Slide it onto a serving plate and dust with icing sugar.7. Serve immediately for extra gooey-ness or chill for a firmer texture. Either way, amazing!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/27/20226 minutes, 38 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Civil naughtiness

Kevin Milne chats to Jack Tame about some civil naughtiness in Wellington. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/27/20226 minutes, 9 seconds
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Jack Tame: Uvalde and the echoes of Sandy Hook

I was sitting in my apartment in East Harlem, New York, when it first hit the news.I think I saw something on Twitter first. Then I turned on cable TV and waited to hear from a police officer or a politician or someone with some authority.There was so much confusion in those first couple of hours. There always is. Everyone hangs on every thread of information but it always takes an age to work out the detail.Everyone in New Zealand was asleep but eventually I just took a punt, hired a car from the Avis down the road, packed my camera gear and started driving north out of Manhattan, through the Bronx, and up across the state border into Connecticut. I was listening to a press conference on the radio when they finally confirmed the fatalities.Ten years ago this December. Sandy Hook.There’s not really anything to say about mass shootings in America that hasn’t been said. But I always feel a bit of a macabre connection to American massacres, because I ended up covering so many in the five years I lived in the States. I remember when Aurora happened. I remember when San Bernardino happened. I remember when Charleston happened. I flew across the country and drove through the night to be at Umpqua Community College. Most people don’t remember that one – eight people died. I was on the scene just a few hours after the Pulse nightclub shooting went down. That held the record for fatalities, at the time.I still think of Sandy Hook the most. The lonely drive up there. The satellite trucks. The families gathering in the firehouse to collect their children and the slow realisation that those parents who were left would forever be bound to the worst of the worst. The memorials that popped up over the next few days. The quietness. The way no one liked making eye contact in the street. Twenty little kids.My girlfriend feels like she has to breathe it all in. She reads every article and watches every press conference. She wants to see the children’s faces and hear their parents wailing. I found her the other day, unblinking, tears gliding down her cheeks as she watched Anderson Cooper interviewing a Dad whose daughter had been shot in the head. She feels compelled to try understand the incomprehensible and in her search for answers, she learns Every. Single. Detail.But I cant anymore. I makes me feel funny to engage with the shootings. I don’t want to know details or learn anyone’s name. I just feel a massive darkness about the whole process, the whole routine and theatre of it all.At the time, Sandy Hook felt like the best chance for something big to change. Obama cried on TV. I was there when he turned up at the vigil in Newtown to meet with all the families and promised to go above and beyond. Maybe this is it, we thought. After all, it doesn’t get any worse. Can you imagine any greater horror than a gunman in a primary school? Five and six-year-old kids.Nothing big changed, of course. There is perhaps no greater illustration of just how poisoned the American political system has become than the fact that a minority interest in assault weapons can ward off greater regulation, even when a majority of Americans favour it and massacres have become the norm.We live in a strange World in which an NBA coach or a group of protesting students might be more effective in affecting change than the post powerful officials in their country.And so I hope I’m wrong. I hope the pendulum of change swings back the other way and that instead of waiting for a horror even more shocking than Sandy Hook or Uvalde, the sheer weight of all these tragedies is enough.But if recent history is any guide, there will be another horror. Another kid with an AR-15. Another worst nightmare. Another Uvalde. Another Sandy Hook.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/27/20225 minutes, 11 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Everyone's talking about it...Harry Styles' new album

Estelle Clifford gives her review of Harry's House, the new album from Harry Styles. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/21/20226 minutes, 10 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Tresspasses and Minnie Driver's memoir

Catherine Raynes has been reading actress Minnie Driver's memoir, Managing Expectations as well as Trespasses by Louise Kennedy, which has rave reviews.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/21/20224 minutes, 10 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Hinterland treats in the Sunshine Coast

Mike Yardley's been exploring parts of the Sunshine Coast in Australia.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/20/20229 minutes, 33 seconds
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Steven Dromgool: The importance of male friendship

Steven Dromgool is at a men's retreat for the weekend and thought it was a good reminder to talk about the importance of male friendship. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/20/20226 minutes, 44 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Cluster flies

Pollenia rudis is the cluster fly species we discovered on the North Shore, for the first time in 1984. It may have arrived in some containerised luggage or cargo.Originally from the Northern countries (Scandinavia - north America) where it lives a peculiar life as a parasite of earthworms.The female fly lays eggs in dense grass habitats (paddocks and lawns) and often near eartworm tunnels;The larvae (aka "maggots") hatch, find themselves some way of getting into the soil (gaps around plants or through established earthworm tunnels) and gain entry into the body of an earthworm.Inside the worm it feeds on the internal body fluids and organs.Gross? yep! But most animals on the planet have "parasites" (see below) that can cause damage.The cluster flies that hatch from their earthworm are pretty insects, the size of blowflies (slightly larger that houseflies) with golden hairs on the top of their thorax; In spring and summer I often see them pollinating flowers (The name “Pollenia” is a nice indicator!)When temperatures get cooler in autumn, these flies usually look for a suitable hibernation place: in holes in the ground, under bark of trees, under mulch layers, etc. But if there’s a nice warm human house nearby they will try to gain entry.By their thousands!This year we saw a lot of that happening in Canterbury and parts of southern North Island.They crawl through small holes (ill-fitting window frames, etc) and mark their entry by leaving a residue of Pheromone scent; this means that other Pollenia flies simply follow the trail and join the others…The pheromone is rather sticky and smells somewhat of Buckwheat honey (hence the name buckwheat fly in the USA).Cluster flies are not of medicinal importance (like some blowflies) but are hard to remove due to their messy pheromones. Best “prevention” is to ensure there are no entrance holes around the home.In terms of earthworm population effects: There is no evidence that cluster flies significantly reduce earthwormsGrowers and gardeners use some parasites (small wasps!) to reduce the number of caterpillars that eat your cabbages, or certain tiny parasites that literally "hollow out" the green loopers in your houseplants.Humans have parasites too: tape worm, malaria, hook worm and even insect parasites (fly maggots) that tunnel into your skin (often on the head) in tropical areas - good fun!Now, the idea of parasitism (as well as predation) is to keep populations "in check" and prevent them from escalating in their natural habitat and ecological systems: if you have a heap of aphids on your roses, the parasites and predators move in to reduce the load on your plants - simple as that.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/20/20224 minutes, 46 seconds
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Bob Campbell: A bright, fresh and peppery Chardonnay

Bob Campbell's pick of the week is the Villa Maria 2021 Cellar Selection Chardonnay from Hawke’s Bay. Bob's tip - don’t over-chill Chardonnay or it will taste like water. If you get served a wine that is too cold cup your hand around the glass and swirl it until it reaches the right temperature. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/20/20224 minutes, 26 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Prepare yourself...there's a new Outlook coming, Costco and Apple

Prepare yourself.. there's a new Outlook comingThis is in the very early stages but is going to be a big shift for people. Outlook for Windows on your desktop will start to look exactly like the web version you use today.By rebuilding it, they're going to be able to leverage more integrations with Microsoft products. It'll be more connected directly to OneDrive so you can add an attachment to an email just by typing an @ then the filename. Easy! Microsoft will pin emails to the top of your inbox it thinks you might need to see again, you'll be able to drag emails into your calendar or turn them into tasks in Microsoft To-Do.Costco and Apple have partneredCostco is famous for allowing folks to buy things in bulk for cheap and leveraging its large membership to get access to better pricing of goods. Now that's in the virtual world too in a partnership with Apple. Costco members can get discounts on subscriptions to Apple News Plus, Apple TV Plus, and Apple Arcade. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/20/20224 minutes, 40 seconds
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Eleanor Ford: Following the spice trail with a 'culinary detective'

Eleanor Ford has been described as a culinary detective. She’s travelled around the world seeking out the best food in more than 70 countries. Eleanor’s new book is called The Nutmeg Trail - a deep dive into the history of spice with recipes and stories exploring how centuries of spice trading and cultural diffusion changed the world's cuisine. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/20/202213 minutes, 16 seconds
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Tara Ward: Time Traveller's Wife, Conversations with Friends, Lincoln Lawyer

The Time Traveller’s Wife: A science fiction drama based on the popular book by Audrey Niffeneger, about a love story between Clare and Henry that is complicated by time travel (Neon).Conversations with Friends: Based on the book by Irish author Sally Rooney (Normal People), about two Dublin college students, Frances and Bobbi, and the strange and unexpected connection they forge with married couple, Melissa and Nick (Prime Video).Lincoln Lawyer: Another show based on a book - this time the bestselling novel by Michael Connelly - and created by David E. Kelley. Idealistic lawyer Mickey Haller runs his practice out of the back of his Lincoln Town Car, taking on cases big and small across Los Angeles (Netflix).LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/20/20225 minutes, 26 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Homemade biscuits vs store bought

Whilst we’re all focused on the cost of living and food prices making it harder and harder to afford any treats or luxury items, here’s a thing…home-made biscuits. They’re an absolute treat, better for you than bought biscuits, quick and easy to make and so affordable. Bran or Oat biscuits Makes 30 biscuits 110g butter, softened 1 cup regular sugar 1 egg 1 cup plain flour + extra for rolling 1 cup bran flakes or oats – process these in a food processor or blender 1 tsp baking powder  Set oven at 160 C fan bake and line 1 or 2 trays with baking paper. Cream butter and sugar until pale and fluffy. Stir in flour and bran/oats until it forms a ball. Halve and roll out each dough ball on a well-floured surface. Use a round cookie cutter or thin-lipped glass or cup to cut into circles. Any size you like. Transfer to the lined tray. Prick each with a fork. Repeat with the remaining mixture. Bake for 5 minutes then bang and turn the tray and bake for a further 3 -5 minutes when they should be lovely and golden. Transfer to a wire rack to cool. These biscuits freeze exceptionally well. They can also be buttered or sandwiched together with icing for an extra treat.TOTAL COST: $2.76 for 30 biscuits (9cents per biscuit) Ginger nuts $2.90 / 10 Bran biscuits $5.50 / 12 Krispies $2.90 / 24See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/20/20224 minutes, 50 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Nobody Has to Know, The Northman

Nobody Has To Know Nobody Has to Know. Belgian writer, director, and actor Bouli Lanners' latest is an engrossing drama about one man's amnesia and the love story that rewrites his past. We rely on our memories to tell us the story of who we are. Phil, a robust middle-aged man suffers a stroke, causing him to lose his memory. Millie, who takes care of him, tells him falsely that they were secretly in love before his accident. The Northman From visionary director Robert Eggers comes THE NORTHMAN, an action-filled epic that follows a young Viking prince on his quest to avenge his father’s murder. With an all-star cast that includes Alexander Skarsgård, Nicole Kidman, Claes Bang, Anya Taylor-Joy, Ethan Hawke, Björk, and Willem Dafoe. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/20/20225 minutes, 55 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Shortland Street's 30th Birthday

Kevin Milne reminisces on starring as himself in a Shortland Street episode as the show turns 30 this week.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/20/20227 minutes, 45 seconds
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Jack Tame: We've delayed the inevitable - the worst economic pain is still to come

When 73-year-old Anne Guenole died, it was national news.Every media outlet in the country did stories. Anne’s family remembered her as a quiet nana and great-grandmother who spent most of her time at home on the South Island’s beautiful West Coast. She’d been hospitalised with a suspected case of influenza.Except it wasn’t influenza. Anne was the first New Zealander to die of Covid-19.That was March, 2020. I was thinking about that moment this morning, as I reflected on how much our collective attitude have changed in the two years since.Since Anne Guenole died, more than a thousand New Zealanders have died with Covid-19. Of course, that doesn’t necessarily mean they’ve died of Covid-19. I appreciate the distinction. But many of those deaths were untimely, and we continue to record ten or twenty deaths a day. Where once we gasped if the daily infection numbers were in the high teens or early twenties, now we barely pay attention to daily cases in the thousands.Could you tell me to the closest thousand how many infections New Zealand recorded on Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday of this week?It’s neither good or bad. It just says something about our psychology. It’s fascinating to me how quickly we’ve switched. Given access to vaccines and an end to lockdowns and restrictions, in a sense we’ve largely moved on. Even if the virus hasn’t.It was reflected in the budget, this week. For all the budget nicknames – braindrain budget, backwards budget, climate budget – no one was calling it a Covid budget. The cost of living has overtaken the pandemic and is far-and-away the biggest concern for a majority New Zealanders. Grant Robertson’s plans were those of a finance minister and a government that feels vulnerable to criticism over their role in inflation.It’s funny to think about how politicians frame these things. For two years, many people felt the government was prioritising lives over the economy. It’s a silly binary – if we’ve learnt anything from Covid-19, it’s that economy activity and the pandemic are closely linked.But it is true that we used to take far greater steps in order to protect lives. We had a far lower tolerance for infections and death. If we’re playing the same silly binary game today, you couldn’t argue that New Zealand isn’t prioritising the economy over doing everything possible to save lives.We’ve flipped. We’ve crossed the threshold. And I have a similar nagging feeling to that in the early stages of the pandemic. We can do what we can to soften the landing but it’s still going to hurt. Unfortunately, when you look at our economic position, inflation, growth, and interest rates, we’ve been delaying the inevitable.This time it isn’t Covid cases. It’s economic pain. Unfortunately for New Zealand, the worst is still to come.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/20/20224 minutes, 7 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Kiwi artist Erny Belle's new album, Venus is Home

Estelle Clifford is back with more Kiwi music to celebrate New Zealand music month. This time she's highlighting Auckland-based artist Erny Belle and her new album, Venus is Home LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/13/20225 minutes, 48 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Improbable Life of Ricky Bird, Reputation

Catherine Raynes has been reading The Improbable Life of Ricky Bird by Diane Connell and Reputation by Sarah Vaghan.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/13/20224 minutes, 42 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Tamborine Mountain, Queensland's Scenic Rim

A short hop from Brisbane or the Gold Coast will land you at Tamborine Mountain and Mike Yardley has all the secrets to make a good trip.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/13/20228 minutes, 57 seconds
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Malcolm Rands: Low carbon travel

Prince Harry is in a video released this week starring Rhys Darby, David Fane and Rena Owen. The premise is not that the destination we go to is rated on how green it is, but that we as tourists are rated on our carbon footprint whilst there. How do you rate yourself at present and how could you improve your score? Well first let’s still talk about a NZ holiday. How do we get there? I’m afraid air travel is the most carbon burning option followed by driving. Driving gets an even worse rating if you are by yourself in the car without friends and family. So a lot of people in a vehicle is a much better option which is why bus or rail comes out on top. Unfortunately, it is not so convenient in NZ …yet. I loved the train journeys I’ve had overseas. Train tracks are much less obtrusive than roads and you end up in some remarkable situations, even looking into the locals backyards at times. Fascinating insights on local culture.  So, what about electric? It is possible to rent electric cars now and yes, even electric camper vans. Because of our low carbon electricity in NZ. This option wins hands down. Go online and look for these options. Get a cheap second-hand Nissan Leaf with a small range for commuting and shopping from home. They are getting very cheap because the first ones have such a short range, but that’s fine in a city where you can recharge at home or work. Then for your weekend adventures or holidays, hire. Now you have arrived at your destination, what’s next? If you have arrived by plane, and if I’m going to Queenstown from my home in Northland, I’m going to fly, then when you arrive you have the option to hire an electric car. Or take the airport bus into town and do without a car. This is where bikes start to look good. You can get part day, full day or multi days deals. And those of us you think we may not be fit enough, there are now electric bikes.  Reward the accommodation providers that are making a difference. There are independent environmental accreditations or certifications, like the Toitu programme, Qualmark EnviroGold rating, or EarthCheck certification. And in any accommodation * Hang up your towels – it’s the universal sign that they don’t need to be washed and you’re happy to reuse them * Leave the ‘do not disturb’ sign on the hotel door to reduce unnecessary washing of linen, vacuuming and the use of other chemicals for cleaning * Take your own toiletries (and toothbrush) to reduce the single use of those tiny hotel bottles of gunk * Use your own plastic free water bottle not the free single-use stuff LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/13/20228 minutes, 15 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Garlic planting timing to prevent rust

Rust on garlic seems to have become a real pain in the last few years; not just me in CHC but right around the country, and especially in areas with high gardener-population densities…If you are surrounded by gardeners, growing onions, shallots, leeks and garlic, chances are that spores of the Allium rust are numerous in the air.That means there’s a good chance your garlic (and leeks and onions and shallots will be infected at some stage this coming spring.To avoid that from happening it might be useful to speed things up a bit and to move planting forward in autumnTraditionally garlic used to be planted on the shortest day (third week of June) and harvested around the longest day (Just before Christmas), but I’ve done some trials now for the last half a dozen years or so.Managed to bring it forward as much as 7 weeks: planting in first week of May has had the best results with the minimum of sprays (organic copper) needed; Mind you this is based on my position on the Port Hills in Christchurch.The rust is a Fungal disorder that hammers the Bulb-forming members of Allium (onion Genus group of the Family Amaryllidaceae.The fungus enters the long, soft leaves of shallots, onions and garlic and causes yellowing of the leaves, ill-thrift and sick-looking plants towards the end of the growing season, when temperatures rise in spring.The most significant diagnostic sign are the bright yellow “pustules” that form on the leaves – these pustules are easily rubbed off by your fingerPrintanor is the common old garlic variety you buy at “New World”. Often it is imported from China and treated to stop it sprouting. That means no good for planting!!Buy some planting cloves that are either organic or simply not treated.At farmers market you can sometimes purchase interesting varieties:Californian Red Turban – can grow into huge bulbs (15 cm diameter bulbs)Macedonian – strong flavour – and somewhat oilyWest Coast Miners – rather good, large cloves tooHard-neck garlic; gets little flowers/bulblets up the stem – edible as soft green salad component, in mid-springElephant garlic is actually a leek, with a swollen stem – not a garlic – very mild flavourShallots can also be planted now!Well-drained soil, shallow planting (tip just above the ground) – 15 cm spacing.Cover with ground sheep dags (KINPACK) or fine, rich compost.Keep moist –but not overly moist, because that encourages rotting.Harvest when the foliage dies down (in my case early to Mid November).See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/13/20224 minutes, 5 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: Overuse of antibiotics

Dr Bryan Betty chats to Jack Tame about the overuse of antibiotics going into winter. Dr Betty says the real issue is with the emergence of ‘anti-microbial’ resistance across the world. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/13/20223 minutes, 54 seconds
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Nadia Reid: Singer-songwriter on NZ Music Month, writing her new album

It’s New Zealand music month and who other should Jack Tame speak to than Silver Scroll and Taite Music nominee, Nadia Reid.The 30-year-old has been described by The Guardian as an assured, clever and confident singer-songwriter. Luckily for us, Nadia’s currently working on her fourth studio album and has upcoming shows from Auckland to Dunedin.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/13/202212 minutes, 41 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Chicken and egg curry that's easy on the wallet

Tasty, simple to make and easy on the wallet – this curry has it all!Serves 4 for $15.544 boiled eggs1 medium onion, sliced or diced2 tablespoons cooking oil3 tablespoons store-bought green curry paste4 chicken drumsticks or thighs (bone in or out)2 large potatoes, chopped into bite-sized pieces1 teaspoon brown sugar1 cup coconut milk1 cup fresh or frozen chopped green beansCooked rice to servePapadoms or roti to serve (optional)1. Boil the eggs for 5 minutes, and for easy peeling, leave for 10 minutes in cold water before peeling.2. Gently fry onion in oil in a medium to large pot. Add curry paste and fry for 30 seconds. Push onion aside and add chicken and potatoes and fry until lightly browned. Add enough water to almost cover the chicken and potatoes, put a lid on and simmer for 20 minutes. Add sugar, peeled boiled eggs, beans and coconut milk and bring to a simmer for 10-15 minutes. Taste for seasoning and add salt to taste.3. Serve with rice and papadoms or roti to serve.Budget-saving tips:· Using eggs in this curry increases the protein content without having to use more chicken ie. More satiated for less cost.· Cooking the perfect rice cuts down on waste. Here’s my method: use twice as much water to uncooked rice (2:1); salt the water well; bring to boil, stir once then leave lid on and simmer for 12 minutes and leave to stand, covered for 5 minutes.· Leftover rice can be used for fried rice which makes another great lunch or dinner.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/13/20225 minutes, 19 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Operation Mincemeat, A Hero

Francesca Rudkin has been watching the war drama Operation Mincemeat and an Iranian film called A Hero. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/13/20226 minutes, 57 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Tree of the Year Awards

Kevin Milne has become immersed in the Tree of the Year Awards and its finalists.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/13/20227 minutes, 48 seconds
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Jack Tame: Confirmation of my bad taste

I am a minimalist.I’m not afraid to admit it. Loud and proud. I’m not ashamed. Not wanting to play to gender stereotypes, I do however wonder if my apartment is decorated in the sparse way in which only a man without a family is happy to live.Truth be told, I just don’t buy stuff. I prefer to spend my money on experiences than things. If you’ve been listening to my show for a while, you’ll know it took me a year or two to even buy a couch. I had a couple of armchairs, I figured. That was plenty. After all, you can only park your butt in one place at once!Anyway, nothing brings your interior design choices under close scrutiny like a visit from the property stagers. In anticipation for maybe wanting a bit more space for kids in the future – don’t get too excited yet!! – I’ve put my apartment on the market. And knowing that my tastes aren’t everyone’s, I got the property stagers over for a bit of a zhoosh.It must be a delicate business being a property stager. Think about it. You’re brought into people’s homes to make things look a bit nicer, and the harder you work to improve a space, the more you’re inadvertently telling the client that actually they don’t have very good taste. A good eye is important. But tact, is even more so.My place is partially staged which means it wasn’t a total bombsite beforehand, but I was frankly stunned when I saw the bags of stuff the stagers were bringing in.“Yeeeeah,” said the woman in charge.“Usually we’re decluttering places, but to be honest, at your place it’s kind of the opposite.”Huh.What can I tell you?Well, apparently dried flowers are in. They really are quite beautiful actually, and given I’ve managed to nurse a nice collection of house plants, there are now more pots and vases at my place than any other point in my life.What else? Well, this is going to shock you: coffee tables are actually fantastic. I’ve not owned a coffee table for more than a decade! Turns out there’s a reason they’re popular. Sometimes you don’t know what you’re missing until it’s sitting in the middle of your living room with a TV remote and a book on Scandanavian architecture.But here’s the big takeaway for me: cushions. What the hell? I used to have two cushions. I thought that was bordering on excessive. Now, I have sixteen. Sixteen in a two bedroom apartment! I’m surprised there’s room to move! And what are you supposed to do with the cushions on your bed when it comes time to sleep? Just throw them on the ground? Is that what people do? Just chuck ‘em on the ground?Yes, for those of us whose interior choices have always tended towards the hard end of ‘less is more,’ it can be a confronting experience to have someone with taste come in and re-jig your home. The thing that shocked this minimalist the most about the dried flowers and the cushions and the coffee table?I don’t even know who I am anymore: It looks really, really good.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/13/20224 minutes, 8 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Chelsea Jade's new album Soft Spot

In celebration of New Zealand Music Month, Estelle Clifford is highlighting Kiwi artist Chelsea Jade's new album Soft Spot.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/6/20224 minutes, 56 seconds
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Steven Dromgool: Agreeing to disagree

Steven Dromgool has advice on how to agree to disagree in a relationship.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/6/20228 minutes, 26 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Roses and cuttings

Before you start pruning your roses (leave that till late June, July, August!) it might pay to go and have a look at the state of them:Are they doing well in their current position?Did they flower abundantly?What was the state of diseases during the growing season? Black spot, Downy mildew, rust?Just think about how much you’ll be pruning them in a month or two – how brutal will it be?Do some roses need to move to a different place in the garden? If so: prepare that spot now.They should have finished flowering by now and that means you can take cuttings of the ones you want to reproduce from, to either extend the rose garden or give away new plantsTools: sharp and well-maintained secateurs, dipped in bleach/disinfectant to avoid disease transmission.Select some decent, strong “canes” or branches that performed well and don’t show signs of plant disease; Always over-estimate the number of cuttings you’ll need because success rates vary from variety to varietyThe cutting can be three to four “leaf nodes” long (Leaf nodes are the points where leaves come/came from.Select some strong, pencil-thick canes and cut on an angle above the top node and make a straight cut under the bottom node. That way you can always tell “what’s up and what’s down”. It also lets the rain water run off the cutting quickly during showers, avoiding too long residual wetness on the cutting.It may pay to scrape the bottom 2 cm of the cutting with a knife (wilfully “damaging” it) to encourage the cutting to form roots quicker.Take off buds and leaves, remains of flower stalks are rose hips; you can leave the thorns on.Cuttings go into a nice sandy, course, mix with some added organic matter or potting mix. This allows water to drain out quickly so that the roots don’t get affected by rots.Yes – you could use some rooting hormone if you wish, although this is not always necessary at this time of the year – the stems are still quite able to send signals to the “wound” to grow some roots.When the cuttings are in place, keep the pots or trays moist but not overly wet. We often have them in glass house or tunnel house, out of direct sunlight; they don’t need any fertiliser until the roots are well-established 6 months later (beginning of spring);Some people plant them in garden soil too early… wait till the roots are a nicely-sized ball!Good, well-drained soil is perfect for the new roses; organic material helps to retain moisture during dry summers and it holds on to nutrition (minerals and other useful plant-assisting chemicals)To reduce plant diseases in roses it pays to space your roses well. It allows air movement to dry the plants after rainfall or “overhead” watering systems; a lot of rose diseases are transmitted through water droplets and by having rose plants wet for prolonged periods of time (prolonged infection periods!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/6/20224 minutes, 4 seconds
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Hannah McQueen: HENRYs - High Earners, Not Rich Yet

Hannah McQueen speaks to Jack Tame about HENRYs. It's an acronym coined by financial types to describe a particular sub-set of the population - High Earners, Not Rich Yet.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/6/20225 minutes, 23 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Tech titans want to kill the password

The Tech titans want to kill the passwordApple, Microsoft and Google have jointly announced their web and mobile browsers will be able to handle a new authentication method that doesn't require a password. And they want to have it live within the next year.Instead of creating a password, you'll be able to authenticate through a mobile device. It's taking the current two-factor authentication a step further because you won't need to create a password, then register for 2FA - the 2FA is your password.It'll be harder to do phishing attacks, more secure because the password is constantly changing, but not a terrible experience.Snap's dronePixy is a drone dedicated to taking photos of you while you're out and about doing fun / cool things. It will fly for up to 20 seconds to get the video, and can do that five to eight times on a single battery. You'll be able to purchase extra batteries. It's certainly not for hardcore videographers but more of a toy. But it's an expensive toy at $230. Currently it's only available in the US & France.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/6/20225 minutes, 18 seconds
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Tara Ward: The Staircase, We Own This City, Lego Masters NZ

The Staircase: Colin Firth and Toni Colette star in this true crime drama inspired by the true story of Michael Peterson, an American writer convicted of killing his wife, who was found dead at the bottom of the staircase at her home (Neon).  We Own This City: Made by the team behind The Wire, gritty drama We Own This City tells the story of the rise and fall of the Baltimore Police Department's Gun Trace Task Force and the corruption surrounding it (Neon).  Lego Masters NZ: The New Zealand version of the colourful reality competition sees local Lego enthusiasts compete to build the best designs in this creative, family-friendly show (TVNZ 2, Mondays and Tuesdays & TVNZ OnDemand). LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/6/20224 minutes, 55 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Mother’s Day GF spiced pumpkin pancakes

Nici Wickes has been baking up a treat for Mother’s Day - gluten free spiced pumpkin pancakes.Makes 8–10 pancakes2 eggs¾ cup mashed roasted pumpkin4 tablespoons butter½ teaspoon each ground nutmeg, cinnamon and ginger½–¾ cup milk2 drops vanilla extract2 heaped teaspoons muscovado sugar or brown sugar½ cup gluten-free flour1½ teaspoons baking powder50g butter for fryingmaple syrup, yoghurt and crispy bacon to serveSeparate the eggs, adding the yolks to the mashed pumpkin in a large bowl.In a separate clean bowl, whisk the egg whites to a stiff peak.Melt the butter with the ground nutmeg, cinnamon and ginger.Add the milk and butter to the pumpkin mix and combine using a whisk. Beat in the vanilla extract, sugar, flour and baking powder.Gently fold in the beaten egg whites. The mixture should be light and airy.Heat a heavy-based frying pan on a medium heat and melt a knob of butter.Drop tablespoonfuls of the mixture into the hot pan. When bubbles appear on the surface flip the pancake over and cook the other side.Keep warm under a clean tea towel until ready to serve with maple syrup, yoghurt and berries or go savoury with crispy bacon.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/6/20224 minutes, 40 seconds
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Kevin Milne: A Dog's Show

Kevin Milne remembers John Gordon and his classic TV programme, A Dog's Show. John died this week at home in Southland. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/6/20226 minutes, 53 seconds
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Jack Tame: Incentives worked for Teslas...why not e-bikes too?

Don’t you feel like you’re seeing more Teslas at the moment?I do. I feel like I see them everywhere. They’re ubiquitous. It’s not just an Auckland thing. And even though I live right next door to the Tesla showroom on Karanagahape Road, I swear that’s not it! I was in the South Island and in Wellington this week, too, and kept noticing Tesla Model 3s.I’m not crazy. I’m not seeing things. There’s been a surge in electric vehicle imports. In the year to March, the number of EVs and Hybrids imported into New Zealand doubled compared to the year before. Imports made up 7% of all passenger vehicles as consumers cashed in on the Clean Car Discount and the exemption on road user charges for EVs. The Tesla Model 3 made up almost half of pure electric sales and the value of those sales was up more than 300% year-on-year.It shows the impact of incentives, but the a new Tesla will still cost you more than 60 grand. And as the government prepares to release it’s Emissions Reduction Plan in the next few weeks, there’s an obvious cheaper option that deserves its own incentives programme.E-Bikes are so good. If you haven’t had a spin on one yet, you don’t know what you’re missing. Depending on your bike, you only have to pedal a wee bit (Or not at all) and in no time you’re travelling at 25 or 30km an hour. I’m forever being overtaken on my normal bike by people almost twice my age, speeding uphill. They’re fun! They’re fast. They’re efficient. And it’s so much better than sitting in traffic.A new e-bike costs about $2000. The Clean Car Discount knocked thousands off the price of a new EV, but no financial incentives have been in place so far for electric bikes. For middle class people in city fringe suburbs, maybe $2000 isn’t such a barrier. But not everyone has that kind of money lying around.We’ve seen what financial incentives did for Tesla sales. If we want to get more cars off the road and reduce both congestion and emissions, why not make it cheaper for Kiwis to switch to two wheels, as well?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5/6/20223 minutes, 37 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Freezing Order, Stepping Up

Catherine Raynes has been reading Stepping Up by Sarah Turner and Bill Browder's newly released book, Freezing Order.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/29/20225 minutes, 13 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Theme Park Thrills on the GC

Mike Yardley gives Jack Tame his pick of the theme parks on the Gold Coast across the ditch. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/29/20228 minutes, 52 seconds
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Malcolm Rands: Regenerative agriculture and applying it to your backyard

Malcolm Rands chats to Jack Tame about regenerative agriculture and how to apply it to your own backyard.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/29/20228 minutes, 35 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Chevalier Monopole Blanc de Blancs Brut

Bob Campbell has been sipping on the Chevalier Monopole Blanc de Blancs Brut - a crowd pleasing and classy sparkling wine. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/29/20223 minutes, 6 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Elon Musk is taking over Twitter

He did it and he's taking the company private.How did he do it?A lot of financing. He needs $21 billion in cash, which may explain why he sold $8.5 billion worth of Tesla stock in the past few days - reducing his ownership from 17% to 16%. What's next?Twitter shareholders will get to vote to approve the deal.What are his ideas?He wants to get rid of the spam on the platform. He also wants to authenticate all humans - which I think is a great idea. If you've proven you're a real person, you'll get a badge which I assume will be similar to the blue tick. He wants to open source the algorithm to build trust through transparency.But will it happen?If Elon decides to walk away, or can't secure the financing (especially after the Tesla stock price dipped) he'll have to pay $1 billion to Twitter, but Twitter could walk away from Elon for $1 billion if it gets a better deal from someone else.Snap's dronePixy is a drone dedicated to taking photos of you while you're out and about doing fun / cool things. It will fly for up to 20 seconds to get the video, and can do that five to eight times on a single battery. You'll be able to purchase extra batteries. It's certainly not for hardcore videographers but more of a toy. But it's an expensive toy at $230. Currently it's only available in the US & France.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/29/20227 minutes, 25 seconds
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Tara Ward: 1883, Gentleman Jack, Ten Percent

1883: This prequel to the popular drama Yellowstone (available on Neon) follows the Dutton family as they flee poverty in Texas and embark on a journey through the Great Plains to seek a better future in Montana (Amazon Prime Video).Gentleman Jack: a second season of the historical drama written by Sally Wainwright (Happy Valley) and starring Suranne Jones (Vigil), about the real life figure of Anne Lister, a 19th century English LGBTQ+ trailblazer, voracious learner, and cryptic diarist (Neon)Ten Percent: An English version of the popular French comedy Call My Agent, set in a London talent agency where agents scramble to keep their star clients happy and their business afloat after the sudden death of their founder (Amazon Prime Video).LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/29/20225 minutes, 48 seconds
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Jack Davenport: UK actor on life imitating art in 10 Percent

He’s swapped his pirate’s hat for a corporate suit...UK actor Jack Davenport of Pirates and the Caribbean fame stars as a talent agent in the new British remake of French comedy Call My Agent. The series has been renamed 10 Percent and has just been released in the UK. Jack Davenport joins Jack Tame. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/29/202210 minutes, 56 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Gently spiced quince cake

Quince season is upon us and this recipe offers something different from the usual quince paste. This beautifully fragrant cake is great for dessert or with a cuppa.Quince1.5L water 150g caster sugar 3 medium quinces 1 lemonCake 125g butter200g honey 125g dark muscovado sugar (can use brown sugar) 2 medium eggs 1 cup poaching syrup from the fruit250g self-raising flour 1 tsp ground cinnamon 1 tsp ground ginger 1 tsp baking soda1. Peel the quince and halve them. Place in a pot with water, lemon juice and sugar and simmer for one hour or until soft. With a sharp knife or spoon, remove the core when they’re cool enough to handle. Slice each quince into 4 slices.2. Pre-heat your oven at 180 C. Grease and line a 23cm cake tin. Arrange the quince slices at the bottom in a single layer.3. Melt butter and stir it into the muscovado sugar and honey in a mixing bowl. Whisk the eggs with 1 cup of the poaching liquid and pour these into the bowl and stir to combine. Add the dry ingredients and mix to a smooth batter. It will be a slightly runny batter but fear not! Pour over the quinces in the tin.4. Bake the cake for around 40-45 minutes.5. Serve warm with custard and cream or ice cream.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/29/20224 minutes, 55 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Downtown Abbey, Abercrombie and Fitch doco

Downton Abbey: A New Era The Crawley family goes on a grand journey to the South of France to uncover the mystery of the dowager countess's newly inherited villa. White Hot: The Rise and Fall of Abercrombie and Fitch Abercrombie and Fitch conquered malls in the late '90s and early '00s with gorgeous models, pulsing dance beats and a fierce scent. But their "all-American" image shattered as exclusionary marketing and hiring practices came to light. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/29/20226 minutes, 43 seconds
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Jack Tame: Is a fairer tax system on the way?

You know it must be a slow news week when tax spends so much time in the headlines. But no matter which major party finds itself in government after next year’s election, it looks increasingly likely we’ll see changes to our tax system.Even though it’s not really true, New Zealand likes to think of itself as a relatively egalitarian society. We don’t have a formalised aristocracy or thousands of years of baked in class divisions. Most New Zealanders are taxed on the expectation that the money they give shouldn’t be squandered, and that the tax they pay will be fair, relative to everyone else.If fairness is the measure, and if fairness is what the majority of voters expect, then maybe we’re about to get it. Or, at least something close. National and Labour both look likely to introduce tax policies which appeal to a sense of fairness.Let’s start with Labour. To be clear, the party hasn’t confirmed its position, but Revenue Minister David Parker is beginning to lay the ground work for tax reform that might impact the wealthiest New Zealanders. His concern is that money makes more money than labour makes money (Labout as in work, not as in the party!). Someone who is grafting away, working their arse off in two jobs, six days a week, is likely being taxed at a much higher rate for their efforts than someone who’s income comes from owning relatively unproductive assets. Tax should incentivise and reward work, especially in a country with a long-standing productivity problem.For any government, it’s a balance. And while it’s important that wealthy people are also incentivised to build and invest and develop jobs, Parker argues the balance is a bit out at the moment.Labour might look to introduce a tax which targets the very wealthiest New Zealanders. They might even do a bait-and-switch, where they give tax relief to Kiwis in the middle while targetting those at the top. If we’ve learnt anything about Labour’s tax policy, it’s that they’re terrified of doing anything unpopular. But I can’t see that being an issue, this time. Maybe taxs on the super-wealthy would lose them a few richlisters, but I doubt those people were voting for Labour in the first place. Ultimately, it would appeal to Kiwis’ sense of fairness.Then, National. As we’ve seen in the last week, Christopher Luxon is having a more challenging time selling National’s plan to scrap the top tax bracket. As the cost of living bites, it’s very hard to explain why whoever is Prime Minister needs an $18,000 tax cut while the average worker gets less than $1000 a year. It doesn’t seem fair.But National’s plan to adjust the other income tax brackets is a different story. After all, no one is complaining that we index superannuation to inflation. As the cost of living increases, it is a reasonable expectation that wages, super, benefits, and tax brackets all reflect the same shift. National could even consider going one step further than it has, by enshrining in law an automatic tax bracket adjustment to reflect inflation, every few years.No government will want to do that, because it’ll impact their revenue much more than the current system. But depending on your measure, there’s a good argument to be made indexation is only fair.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/29/20224 minutes, 45 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Indie rocker Father John Misty's new album

Estelle Clifford has been listening to US indie rock musician Father John Misty and his new album, Chloe and the 20th Century.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/23/20225 minutes
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Catherine Raynes: Grand, Becoming My Mother’s Daughter, French Braid

Grand, Becoming My Mother’s Daughter – Noelle McCarthy The astonishing debut memoir about mothers and daughters, drinking, birth and loss, running away and homecoming from prize-winning writer and broadcaster Noelle McCarthy. French Braid - Anne Taylor The major new novel from the beloved prize-winning author -- a brilliantly perceptive, painfully true and funny journey deep into one family's foibles, from the 1950s right up to the changed world of today. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/23/20224 minutes, 26 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Hurunui's Gore Bay Tourist Drive

Mike Yardley has been touring around the Hurunui district in Canterbury.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/22/20228 minutes, 22 seconds
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Steven Dromgool: J.Lo, Ben Affleck back together - can it work with an ex?

Steven Dromgool answers the question everyone wants to know - can it ever really work out with an ex-partner? LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/22/20228 minutes, 45 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Watch TV in self-driving cars, unions coming for Apple

Sit back, relax, and watch TV while your car drives you New rules for fully self driving cars in the UK will let the driver watch something other than the road - TV! While there aren't any cars with this capability just yet, the UK government is preparing for it. Drivers will be able to watch TV on a screen managed by the vehicle.. if the vehicle needs them to take control, the TV will need to stop - much like a seat-back screen on a plane. Using a handheld device while driving will still be illegal. These new rules are ahead of a more detailed regulatory framework expected to be in effect in 2025. The Unions are coming for Apple An Apple Store in Atlanta is going to be the first in the country to attempt to be unionized. They've collected enough signatures to be able to file for an election. Organizers say workers there have been denied a living wage, cost of living adjustments or equitable stock options. I will say, as someone who worked in an Apple Store, the benefits for retail vs corporate employees were vastly different. They have worked to close that gap over the past decade. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/22/20224 minutes, 6 seconds
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Tara Ward: A Very British Scandal, The First Lady, Russian Doll

A Very British Scandal: Claire Foy and Paul Bethany star in this drama about the real-life public divorce between the Duke and Duchess of Argyll in the 1960s, which plays out amid a media frenzy and accusations of adultery, theft, violence, drug use, forgery, and bribery (Amazon Prime Video).The First Lady: Viola Davis, Michelle Pfeiffer and Gillian Anderson star in this American drama that takes a fresh look at three turbulent times in American history, through the lens of the First Lady (Neon).Russian Doll: A second season of the delightful American comedy-drama starring Emmy-nominated actress Natasha Lyonne. She plays Nadia, a woman who gets caught in a mysterious loop as she repeatedly attends the same event and dies at the end of the night each time -- only to awaken the next day unharmed as if nothing had happened (Netflix).LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/22/20226 minutes, 8 seconds
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Guy Cotter: Kiwi mountaineering legend on returning to the Himalayas

Guy Cotter has stood on the summit of Everest five times, been turned back twice, and was leading an expedition in 2015 when the 7.8 earthquake struck causing widespread devastation in Nepal.  The Wanaka-based Kiwi owns iconic global mountaineering company Adventure Consultants. It was forced into hibernation as the pandemic decimated the tourism industry but now, they’re back.  The company is all set to for expeditions to return to the Himalayas later this year. Guy Cotter joined Jack Tame.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/22/202213 minutes, 51 seconds
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Allyson Gofton: Recipes in ANZAC day and Downtown Abbey era

I hear the ads ZB is running for Downtown Abbey competition and so with this being Anzac weekend, I thought we might look at something of that era, not just the usual Anzac Day biscuit. Downtown Abbey is a worldwide TV series sensation – plus there are movies.It was the most watched television series on both ITV and PBS, and subsequently became the most successful British costume drama series since the 1981 television serial of Brideshead Revisited.By the third series, it had become one of the most widely watched television shows in the world.People became so interested in the kitchen and house management parts of the series that it resulted in Penguin re-printing an absolute classic book - Arabella Boxer’s Book of English Food.It’s a disjointed but charming collection of recipes and stories of food of the Edwardian era – the time Downtown Abby was set in.That said simplicity in the Edwardian era in a grand home was very different to the poorer classes.A quick pre-dinner drink would involve handing around 7-9 different canapes, most of them hot. (And mind the white carpet when you bite!)Dinner parties were often much bigger than Downtown shows. Hunting weekends were for 40 plus people not the 14 or so you see in Downtown.The kitchen was cooking – literally and figurativelySadly WW2 arrived so quickly- only 20 years later, that the 20 or so years of ‘Edwardian-style’ living disappeared and with the many inventions made by the advance of WW2, food after that time was forever changed.It was an era of sheer elegance in every way.Smoked Fish KedgereeThe lime and coconut give this kedgeree a truly delicious flavour.Ingredients1 onion, peeled and finely chopped2 tsp finely grated or minced ginger1 tblsp oil1 green pepper, deseeded and diced1 1/2 cups long grain rice600 grams smoked trevally fillet1 tblsp oil1 tblsp curry powder2 tsp ground coriander2 tsp ground cumin1 cup coconut cream1 tblsp freshly chopped coriander1/2 tsp finely grated lime or lemon rind2 tblsp fresh lime or lemon juice2 hard boiled eggsMethod1. Heat the first measure of oil in a large pan or saucepan and cook the onion for 5 minutes until soft but not brown. Add the pepper and cook for a further 3 minutes until just tender. Add the pepper and cook for a further 3 minutes until just tender.2. Cook the rice in boiling salted water for 12 minutes until tender. Rinse under hot water and drain well.3. Skin and remove any bones form fish, flake or chop roughly.4. Heat the second measure of oil, stir in curry powder, ground coriander and cumin until frothy, pour in the coconut cream, freshly chopped coriander, lime rind and juice.5. In a large saucepan, combine cooked onions and peppers, cooked rice, smoked fish and curry mixture. Heat gently stirring carefully to prevent burning. Or use a microwave proof bowl covered with plastic wrap and heat on high for 4 minutes.6. Cut the hard boiled eggs into about 8 pieces each, mix into the kedgeree. Serve immediately.Cooks TipsCoriander gives this spicy version of kedgeree a unique flavour. If you don’t have any available, use parsley. The flavour will not be the same, but it is a good alternative.Anzac BiscuitsIngredients1 cup flour1 cup sugar1 cup rolled oats1 cup desiccated coconut175 grams butter2 tablespoons golden syrup1 teaspoon vanilla essence1 teaspoon baking soda2 tablespoons boiling waterMethodPreheat the oven to 180ºC. Lightly grease 1-2 baking trays or line with baking paper.In a large bowl, sift flour with a good pinch of salt. Stir in the sugar, rolled oats and coconut and make a well in the centre.In a saucepan, melt the butter, golden syrup and vanilla...See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/22/20224 minutes, 37 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Nicolas Cage playing himself, Prime's All the Old Knives

The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent A cash-strapped Nicolas Cage agrees to make a paid appearance at a billionaire super fan's birthday party, but is really an informant for the CIA since the billionaire fan is a drug kingpin and gets cast in a Tarantino movie. All the Old Knives When the CIA discovers one of its agents leaked information that cost more than 100 people their lives, veteran operative Henry Pelham is assigned to root out the mole with his former lover and colleague Celia Harrison. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/22/20227 minutes, 20 seconds
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Kevin Milne: New empathy for people cautious about Covid-19

Kevin Milne chats to Jack Tame about a new empathy for people who have a cautious attitude towards Covid-19.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/22/20227 minutes, 22 seconds
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Jack Tame: Why on earth should young Kiwis choose to come home?

It was always an inevitability.The moment our borders opened. The moment Kiwis no longer had to play the MIQ lottery and could be relatively sure they could get home at short notice, if they needed. The moment most other countries dropped their Covid restrictions and started actively pursuing offshore talent, of course young New Zealanders were going to leave!Wouldn’t you?! If you were a young Kiwi with itchy feet and you’d been stuck at home for two years, feeling as though your twenties or early thirties were slipping away, wouldn’t you want to make up for lost time? The pandemic has changed a lot of things, but it hasn’t changed our rangatahi’s desire to go and experience the World. That’s a good thing.From a financial perspective it’s always been attractive for young Kiwis to go offshore. Before the pandemic, my sister spent a few years teaching in Perth, Western Australia. After just four years there, with performance incentives and the currency exchange, she was earning $40,000 more than what she earns for the same job in New Zealand. 40 grand! Whether you’re a nurse, a graphic designer, or even just managing a bar, there’s a very good chance you’re going to earn more overseas than in New Zealand.But my sister still chose to move home. Perth had the cash but Aotearoa had something that Western Australia didn’t: family. And with the savings she’d earned from her job in Perth, six year sago she and her husband bought a little home and set up their lives in Nelson.And this is where the Covid years have really changed the game. Finally, I worry, the balance has shifted. If you were a talented and resourceful young New Zealander living overseas right now, why would you choose to come home when you can’t afford to live here? If she were moving back today, it would take my sister years more to save up and afford a similar home. Honestly, she might never have got there. And so why wouldn’t she just stay in Perth?Wages play a role but as always, the elephant in the room is housing. It occurs to me that many of those people moaning abut the impending brain drain are those who have benefitted most from the massive surge in asset prices. They oppose changes to housing density laws. They’d give themselves a hernia yelling at the radio if anyone dared to meaningfully reform tax settings.One of my oldest friends is visiting from Toronto at the moment. She hasn’t been home in four years. The other day I drove her around a middle-class Auckland suburb and pointed at a random house.‘How much do you think it’s worth?’ I asked.We looked up the valuation. She was out by more than a million dollars.She doesn’t want anything fancy. Something way-out would be fine. But she can’t afford anything. Again, why the hell should she come home?We shouldn’t be grappling too much with how to stop the brain drain. It’s inevitable. The horse has bolted. But we should be asking ourselves what we need to do to make sure our young people return home in the future.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/22/20224 minutes, 3 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Kiwi artist Mousey and live gigs

Estelle Clifford has been partying away at her first live gig of the year - Kiwi artist Mousey, who's just released a new album, called My Friends. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/16/20225 minutes, 34 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Unexpected Spy, The School for Good Mothers

The Unexpected Spy – Tracey Walder When Tracy Walder enrolled at the University of Southern California, she never thought that one day she would offer her pink beanbag chair in the Delta Gamma house to a CIA recruiter, or that she’d fly to the Middle East under an alias identity.  The Unexpected Spy is the riveting story of Walder's tenure in the CIA and, later, the FBI. The School for Good Mothers – Jessamine Chan In this taut and explosive debut novel, one lapse in judgement lands a young mother in a government reform program where custody of her child hangs in the balance.  Frida Liu is struggling. She doesn’t have a career worthy of her Chinese immigrant parents’ sacrifices. She can’t persuade her husband, Gust, to give up his wellness-obsessed younger mistress. Only with Harriet, their cherubic daughter, does Frida finally attain the perfection expected of her. Harriet may be all she has, but she is just enough.  Until Frida has a very bad day. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/15/20224 minutes
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Mike Yardley: Autumn indulgence in Wānaka

Mike Yardley is all about autumn indulgence in Wānaka.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/15/20229 minutes, 4 seconds
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Malcolm Rands: What is permaculture?

What is permaculture?When we started our eco village in 1987, we also took on the practice of permaculture as the discipline around the use of land here. Permaculture was inventing in the seventies by two Australians David Holmgren and Bill Mollison. When we designed the products for ecostore back in the early nineties, permaculture was the bar we were always trying to meet There are many principles in permaculture but I will share some of my favourites that we all can use in our homes: Nature doesn’t have a handy gardener coming along fixing up things that can’t look after themselves so when you set up systems always try to have them look after themselves Being a gardener can easily become a ‘make work’ situation, so how can we get rid of some of those jobs? A classic example is that nature never tolerates bare dirt. So adding mulch not only keeps out weeds and traps moisture but as it decomposes it adds food to your plants. Another example is the zoning system permaculture uses. Zone 1 is plants you visit every day whilst through to zone 5 maybe visited annually. Thus, the herb beds should be just by the kitchen door, the salad garden also close. But in my case, the forest we have planted for future timber use is zone 5, about 20 minutes' walk away.  Choose plants that really suit your local ecosystem - I like to think of this as discovering useful weeds.  Silverbeet is a great example, wack it in and it almost looks after itself.  The way to find these plants is to talk to your local garden clubs about what plants they have found with these qualities.  When you grow a crop, the plant that is healthiest, don’t harvest but let it go to seed and plant these seeds next year. After a few years of using this technique, you will have developed your own variety that loves the local ecosystem where you live. When I arrived at the land where we founded the eco village it was covered in kikuyu grass. Very virulent and a terrible neighbour for vege garden or young trees. Everyone said to use roundup, which I wasn’t prepared to do. Now grass is one of the world's only monocultures as it has many ways of driving out competitors including poisoning them and taking away their moisture. In fact, I never use grass in an orchard situation for these reasons and end up with unstressed disease-free trees. But the grasses have an ancient enemy. The pioneer tree which has evolved just to get into grass, grow tall, then shade out the grass so others trees can then come in. In NZ this is the Manuka and Kanuka. The bane of grass farmers. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/15/202210 minutes, 14 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Preventing leafcurl on stonefruit

Preventing Leafcurl on stonefruit It’s extraordinary how many people ring our talk-back programme in spring and summer to raise the problem of leafcurl on stone fruit. And the answer will always be: “You’re too late!” Taphrina deformans is the fungus that causes this leafcurl. The disease becomes active at bud-break: when the leaves and flowers come out of the buds in spring. The spores of Taphrina deformans are already settled on those buds, making infection quite easy. Once the leaves are infected in spring, they become distorted and discoloured (pretty yellow and orange colouration); when infestations are serious the number of leaves that drop off can be substantial, causing a reduction in photosynthesis and hence the ability of the tree to “feed itself”. In spring, with young, infected leaves (which are soft and delicate) there is no point in spraying with copper fungicides as that will burn those leaves quite badly. Best thing to do is to remove and get rid of infected leaves as much as you can – especially fallen leaves. “Getting rid of them” does not mean COMPOSTING them!! Fertilising the tree in spring allows it to make new leaves and get some resistance to infection, especially when you use Seaweed Tea and such marine-originated liquid fertilisers. During the period when fruits grow and expand, check for fallen leaves that show signs of leafcurl, and get rid of them. REMEMBER “Getting rid of them” does not mean COMPOSTING them!! Autumn is the time to start controlling leafcurl on stonefruit for the next fruiting season: Around mid April, when the leaves are falling off the deciduous stone fruit trees, the new buds for the next season are formed. Taphrina deformans will then be invading those new buds and overwinter on those buds to infect the trees again in spring; First thing to do is to remove all fallen leaves from under the trees. That reduces infection chances. Next thing is to spray a double dose of copper spray (copper oxychloride, liquid copper, or copper-sulphur mixtures, available form garden centres) on the remaining leaves and on the branches/twigs of the tree. Don’t worry about “burning the rest of the leaves off: they were going to fall anyway. Use a “sticker” if you can to increase coverage and stickability Do this again a few weeks or a month later and ensure good coverage of all parts of the tree. Some people use Lime sulphur; that’s OK too as a winter clean-up; seeing the trees are getting to dormancy this Lime Sulphur won’t harm the leaves either; but I think that lime may not be a great material for apricots as it has the ability to raise the pH levels. A last smack of Copper spray before budburst should “mop up” the last surviving spores before the flowering and fruiting season begins again.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/15/20223 minutes, 24 seconds
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Hannah McQueen: Climbing interest rates

Hannah McQueen gives her perspective on hiking interest rates following a life in the OCR this week.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/15/20225 minutes, 56 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Elon Musk now wants the rest of Twitter

So, Elon Musk now wants the rest of Twitter now? What a bizarre two weeks it has been. After buying 9% of the company, being offered a seat on the board, then declining it, Elon Musk now made an unsolicited offer to buy Twitter for $43 billion. Boy, did people freak out. There are also questions about how he would finance such a deal... would it go on Tesla stock margin? But... Twitter is now saying not so fast! Just today it's filed with the SEC to change its shareholder rights plan to prevent that from happening. Now if 'someone' in the next year was to try and takeover the company they can flood the market with shares to make it much more difficult to purchase.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/15/20225 minutes, 44 seconds
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Tara Ward: The North Water, Anatomy of a Scandal, Old Enough

The North Water: Set in 1859, this BBC drama follows a disgraced ex-army surgeon who signs up as ship's doctor on a whaling trip to the Arctic, where he meets a harpooner whose amorality has been shaped to fit the harshness of his world (Rialto). Anatomy of a Scandal: Sienna Miller and Rupert Friend star in this new Netflix drama about the wife of a British politician, who’s privileged life unravels when scandalous secrets emerge and he is accused of a shocking crime (Netflix)Old Enough: This Japanese series might be a few years old, but it’s new to Netflix and an absolute delight. The show sends pre-schoolers on grown-up errands by themselves, and films the results (Netflix).LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/15/20225 minutes, 33 seconds
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Alex Honnold: Free solo climbing legend takes on the Amazon

Alex Honnold doesn’t experience fear like the rest of us.  The free solo climbing legend shot to fame following the first ascent of El Capitan in Yosemite with no ropes.  His latest project is called The Last Tepui. It follows Alex and a world-class climbing team deep into the Amazon jungle on a first-ascent climb up a 1000-foot sheer cliff. Along for the ride is biologist Bruce Means who’s on a mission to discover new species in a relatively untouched part of the world.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/15/20229 minutes, 52 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Scandi Film Fest favourites

Francesca Rudkin has been watching films that are part of the upcoming Volvo Scandi Film Fest.Diana’s Wedding  Diana’s Wedding is a romantic comedy about a girl observing her parents’ turbulent marriage and dealing with how their relationship has affected her own ability, as an adult, to love, or be loved. July 29, 1981. Lady Diana Spencer marries Charles, Prince of Wales, at St Paul’s Cathedral in London. On that same day, Liv and Terje are celebrating their wedding too. In a pram lies their daughter, Diana, who like her famous namesake, has a chaotic life ahead of her. The Burning Sea In 1969, the Norwegian government announces their discovery of one of the world’s largest oil fields in the neighboring North Sea, launching a prosperous period of offshore drilling. 50 years later, the environmental consequences begin to manifest – a crack has opened on the ocean floor, causing a rig to collapse. A team of researchers, including submarine operator Sofia, rushes in to search for the missing and assess the cause of the damage, but what they discover is that this is just the start of a possible apocalyptic catastrophe. As rigs are evacuated, Sofia's loving companion Stian becomes trapped in the depths of the sea, and Sofia must dive in to rescue him. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/15/20224 minutes, 27 seconds
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Kevin Milne: News from Ukraine's front line

Kevin Milne chats to Jack Tame about a message he's received from a young Ukrainian woman he met when filming Intrepid Journey in Ukraine in 2009.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/15/20226 minutes, 38 seconds
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Jack Tame: Scrapping on-street parking is great news for car lovers

For the last five years I’ve lived in an apartment on the Karangahape Ridge, with amazing views across central Auckland.I’m very lucky. If I look North on a good day, I can see Tiritiri Matangi Island and even Hauturu Little Barrier. South is Maungawhau Mt Eden. South West is Eden Park. And dominating my view from the 16th floor is a view right down the guts of K Road.There’s always something happening on Karangahape Road. I can see the beautiful people walking their designer dogs or alfresco-ing in the afternoon sun. I can see people driving off in their new vehicles at the Tesla showroom. I can see drunks stumbling about on a Friday night, homeless people chatting to each other, and the clientele at both of the Peaches and Cream stores (It’s not who you might expect).I’m also afforded a unique view of the traffic.Over the last five years, Karangahape Road has changed. They’ve introduced partial bus lanes. They’ve built bike lanes in both directions. They’ve restricted parking. And watching on from the 16th floor, the effects on the traffic don’t take a PHD to decode. They’re obvious.Firstly - and this isn’t rocket science!! - buses are far and away the most efficient way to transport a lot of people in the city. When the traffic snarls and slows to a painful crawl, as it often does, I stare down at the cars as they sit there idling. One bus has ten or twelve times the capacity of a single sedan or hatchback. When it can use the K Road bus lane, it immediately overtakes the idling vehicles as they wait. Easy.Secondly, more often than not, the fastest way down K Road is on a bike. I often ride mine along the cycle path and stop at a few places on the way. If there’s bad traffic, in the time it takes a crawling car to travel from the Ponsonby Road intersection to Pitt Street, I can dismount my bike to collect a coffee and a heated cinnamon scroll and still beat them there. Happy Days.My third observation from on high, is that parking spaces are an excellent way to shut down an entire lane of traffic. It’s crazy. It’s so inefficient. K Road has clearways between certain hours, which open up the traffic to two lanes in both directions. When the clearways aren’t in place, in order for a handful of cars to park, the entire road has a lane restricted, and the traffic often snarls. At 2am on a Wednesday it’s not an issue. But at busier times, it often means cars are bumper to bumper for the length of K Road. It’s madness. The convenience of a few is prioritised over the convenience of hundreds or thousands more.Why am I telling you this? It’s not because I want to spend my long weekend wading through your hate mail. I know how transport changes get people going. Auckland is proposing changes to onstreet parking to some of its roads and from some of the initial feedback, you’d worry the World was ending. This is something all of cities have to consider, but even though the changes concern about 3.25% of roads in Auckland, they’re already facing stern opposition.Smarter lane usage in busy areas is such an obvious, cheap solution to the challenges faced by growing cities in a warmer climate. As our population increases, congestion and productivity and won’t improve unless we move people more efficiently.Maybe you can’t ride a bike. Maybe you have cargo and the bus is too awkward. Fine. They’re not banning cars. They’re not banning carpark buildings. You can still drive, find a spot, pay for the time, and walk a few minutes to your destination.The irony of the transport debate is that the loudest critics of bus lanes, cycle paths, and reduced street parking, are those who will actually benefit the most from the changes. If you are absolutely determined to remain glued to your steering wheel for every journey in the coming decades, it’s in your interests for councils and transport authorities to reduce congestion. Take it from the view on the 16th floor. Get with the times.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/15/20225 minutes, 25 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Travel trends, top tips and traps to avoid

As a new travel era dawns, it's going to take time for some Kiwis to confidently find their travel feet again. Mike Yardley shares his tips to get back into the swing of travel. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/8/20228 minutes, 13 seconds
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Steven Dromgool: Coming home - the transition from work to family life

Relationship expert Steve Dromgool shares his advice about coming home and switching off from work and into family life. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/8/20228 minutes, 34 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Daddy Longlegs – a variety of species

People who are not familiar with the Science of naming bugs, plants, animals etc usually give creatures an (often random) “common name”.“Daddy Longlegs” is used in NZ for three different critters that are found all over the country and frequently encountered; all they have in common is rather long legs, but they belong to totally different animal groups. At this time of the year they are quite common in and around our homes.1) The Daddy Longlegs spiderSitting right up there near the ceiling and often in the corner of the corridor, the lounge, or… the bedroom; “EEEEKK!”I reckon it’s the most vacuumed invertebrate in New Zealand.Scientists call them “Pholcids” (after the Family name to which these spiders belong); also knows as cellar spiders, because they originally were found to live in cellars and such cave-like spaces where it is damp and dark. A good place to create a website to catch all sorts of flying insects for food. Their job is to function as predators, keeping insect populations “in check”When Homo sapiens (humans) came along we built our house in their territory and the spiders simply said “thank you” and moved in with us; they catch flies, moths and mosquitoes in their web. They’re on call 24/7 and far more efficient than those chemical-emitting aerosol cans on a timer-system.These spiders do a few really remarkable things: when the web is disturbed they gyrate their bodies very fast around and around, to put off the web-intruding creature. They make their webs very visible!!And… a female Pholcid wraps her dozen or so eggs with one single strand of silk and keeps that wrapped parcel in her mouth until the babies hatch – real maternal commitment!! She does not feed herself at all during this time.2) The Daddy Longlegs FlySiting on the external wall of your house – sometimes inside as well (open windows, lights on, attracting these large flies inside!)They are big flies with a wingspan of over an inch. Three body segments (head, thorax, abdomen) long legs and long transparent wings; it all looks a bit fragile…Scientists call them Tipulids or “crane flies”. Because they are true insects, they have a life-cycle that involves a complete metamorphosis: egg, larva (maggot), pupa (“chrysalis”) and finally: the adult, winged fly. Flies have only two functional wings (most other insects have four wings).They have evolved with their hindwings (halteres) shaped like a stalked “counterweight” that gyrates when they fly. It gives them great stability when they fly (a little bit like the tail rotor of a helicopter). When a crane fly sits still on the wall you can see the two halteres clearly.Adult crane flies often eat nectar (and could be pollinators of flowers); the larvae (maggots known as leatherjackets) usually eat rotting plant material (even dead wood!) and are therefore useful recyclers.3) Daddy Longlegs HarvestmanHarvestman may look superficially like a spider (it has 8 legs!), but is quite different (it has one body segment (spiders have two) and usually just 2 eyes, often set on a raised mound on their back (spiders 6 to 8 eyes on the front section of their body)They tend to move across your lawn and through the vegetable garden or in the forests. In New Zealand we have about 30 species that are endemic to New Zealand and 2 “exotics” from Europe. One of those is the “most typical” harvestman Phalagium opilio. Scientists call harvestmans therefore “Opiliones”.They do a great job in your garden: Harvestman is a predator, eating soft-bodied insects and often plant pests such as aphids and small caterpillars and even the eggs of pests, such as white butterfly eggs. They hunt at nightOne of the cool features of these harvestmans is the fact that their second pair of legs is a lot longer than all the other legs. These legs carry some sensitive organs which help the harvestman “navigate” through your garden;...See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/8/20224 minutes, 23 seconds
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Bob Campbell: Allan Scott 2021 Stellenbosch Sauvignon Blanc

Bob Campbell shares his pick of the week: Allan Scott 2021 Stellenbosch Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/8/20224 minutes, 26 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Elon Musk buys 9% of Twitter

Elon Musk buys 9% of Twitter and has made a billion dollars alreadyMonday he announced he had quietly started buying 73 million shares of Twitter spending around $2.6 billion.Tuesday he got a seat on the board.Wednesday his position was worth $3.7 billion. Wild.According to reporting from The Washington Post, employees are freaking out. They're concerned that the company’s culture will change and it will be harder for them to do their jobs. These companies are always worried about how "the street" will receive their product updates, but it won't be fun having such a vocal investor. To try and calm employees, Elon will host an AMA (ask me anything) - hopefully someone records it. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/8/20222 minutes, 54 seconds
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Tara Ward: Outlaws, The Split, Our Great National Parks

Outlaws: A British comedy thriller starring Stephen Merchant and Christopher Walken, about a seven strangers thrown together to complete a community service sentence who get dragged into a dangerous world of organised crime (Amazon Prime Video) The Split: A new season of the British drama about The Defoes, a family of female divorce lawyers, who are forced to face their past following the return of their estranged father after a 30 year absence (TVNZ OnDemand) Our Great National Parks: Barack Obama narrates this new documentary series about the world's most breathtaking national parks and the wildlife that live there (Netflix). LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/8/20224 minutes, 7 seconds
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Ruth Shaw: Bookseller at the End of World and her life well lived

75-year-old Ruth Shaw has lived an incredible life - sailing in the Pacific and taking on pirates to suffering heartbreaking losses. She's since settled in remote Manapouri in Foirdland, where she runs three tiny bookshops. Ruth's been convinced to write her memoir and joins Jack Tame to chat more about her adventures. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/8/202216 minutes, 54 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Easter surprise muffins

Try one of these muffins, warm from the oven, and you will swoon I guarantee it! They are so evocative of an Easter bun, with the spices and currants, and then the surprise of a caramel egg in the centre is just pure genius! They’re a real Easter treat.Makes 12 regular muffins100g butter2 heaped tbsps golden syrup3/4 cup caster sugar1 cup plain yoghurt2 eggs2 cups flour1 ½ tsp baking soda1 ½ tsp cinnamon2 tsps mixed spiceZest of an orange1 cup currants12 little chocolate caramello Easter eggs, about the size of an apricot stone.1. Preheat the oven to 180 C fan bake. Grease a 12-hole muffin tin well.2. Gently heat the butter and syrup just until the butter has melted then mix in the sugar followed by the yoghurt and egg and beat until well mixed. Lightly stir in the dry ingredients including the zest and currants. Don’t over mix, just until combined.3. Spoon batter to ¾ fill into muffin holes and on each gently place an Easter egg, pressing it to submerge slightly. Bake for about 12 to 15 minutes or until they spring back when touched.4. Cool for 5 minutes before removing from the tin. Enjoy.TipBe a little careful and don’t eat these as soon as they come out of the oven as the lovely gooey centre is very hot!!LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/8/20225 minutes, 20 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Fantastic Beasts: The Secret of Dumbledore, Everything Everywhere All At Once

Fantastic Beasts: The Secret of Dumbledore Professor Albus Dumbledore knows the powerful, dark wizard Gellert Grindelwald is moving to seize control of the wizarding world. Unable to stop him alone, he entrusts magizoologist Newt Scamander to lead an intrepid team of wizards and witches. They soon encounter an array of old and new beasts as they clash with Grindelwald's growing legion of followers.  Everything Everywhere All At Once When an interdimensional rupture unravels reality, an unlikely hero must channel her newfound powers to fight bizarre and bewildering dangers from the multiverse as the fate of the world hangs in the balance. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/8/20225 minutes, 35 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Looking after customers

With a Wellington restaurateur in the headlines recently about tracking down a customer who had been overcharged by $8 and wanting to refund her, Kevin Milne reflects on his own similar story.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/8/20226 minutes, 1 second
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Jack Tame: How the hell haven't I caught Covid?

The creeping pink line still fills me with dread.Every time I watch it, the viscous juice from the depths of my nasal cavity soaking up the paper, I feel a little panic as it passes the ‘T’.Is that a line? Even just a faint one? I’ll catch my breath. The liquid would soak up a few more millimetres.Kau. Karekau. Nope. No line. Nothing. Nada.When the history of this pandemic is settled and sorted, and the virus has been comprehensively studied, examined, sequenced, plotted, I’m tempted to imagine scientists facing one last great mystery: How the hell did Jack Tame not catch Covid?Honeslty, no one’s more suprised than me. Since the start of the Omicron wave in New Zealand, I have been on more than a dozen flights. I’ve travelled internationally. I’ve MC’d two funerals, which, despite Covid restrictions, are the sort of huggy-and-criey environments where people end up getting closer than they should if pandemic management is the only concern.I’ve been in two workplaces. And although the people who sit literally right next to me in the office have caught Covid, I haven’t. I’ve done more than my share of eating in restaurants. I’ve had regular, close contact with young school children. I’ve been worn down and emotionally beat, but every morning I wake up, surprised to find myself fit and ready to fight another day.It almost doesn’t seem real. I’ve done more than thirty RATs and so far, the results of every single test has been the same. One line. Not even a flirtation with a second. No Covid detected.If you’re the same as me, you’ll probably know there are plenty of scientific reasons as to why we may have avoided the virus. I’m vaccinated and boosted; that helps. But maybe we’ve had it and just never experienced symptoms. Maybe our immune systems are better suited to fighting the virus. Maybe we’ve hit a genetic lottery. Maybe our mask wearing and hand washing is par excellence.Speaking for myself, I have another theory. I think I’ve just been lucky. Although I wear an N-95 every single day, I still have clumsy moments.The numbers are dropping. Restrictions are likely to be eased. And it’s tempting, right? It’s tempting to relax. Maybe it’s even tempting to feel a little smug. I won’t be doing that – especially with the Easter holiday just around the corner. Because surely nothing tempts fate or the Pandemic Gods like writing an nationwide editorial about not catching a highly-infectious virus.According to the Ministry of Health, 672293 New Zealanders have tested now positive for Covid-19 since the start of the pandemic. Of course, the true number of infections is likely to be much, much higher.If you’re like me and you still haven’t seen the line next to the ‘T’, don’t drop your guard now. Wear your mask. Wash your hands. Maybe we haven’t got Covid. Good for us! But we shouldn’t get complacent, either.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/8/20223 minutes, 24 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: Red Hot Chilli Peppers are back

Estelle Clifford has been spinning Unlimited Love by the Red Hot Chilli Peppers - their brand new album and first with guitarist John Frusciante since he left the band in 2009.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/1/20226 minutes, 38 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Atlas Six and autobiography Rebel

Book reviewer Catherine Raynes has been reading The Atlas Six by Olivie Blake and an incredible autobiography from Saudi Arabian woman Rahaf Mohammed, called Rebel.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/1/20225 minutes, 37 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Adventures on the Mt. Aspiring Road

Mike Yardley has been hitting the road around Wanaka and shares his travel tips. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/1/20228 minutes, 17 seconds
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Malcolm Rands: Reduce your meat - here's how

What is wrong with meat?There are health issues with eating too much, especially processed meat but today we are talking about the eco and humane side of meat eating.So, what's the problem?Deforestation to make room for mainly beef farming is a global issue.Then factory farming , and yes even some cows in NZ can be fed indoors, using off farm grains and even orangutang jungle destruction palm oil by products. Palm kernel expeller. This is a very inefficient use of land compared to feeding these plants grown straight to us as food.Fossil fuels used for transportation, farm equipment, building, maintenance and heating the factory farms add to the eco burden. Methane emissions from the animals, especially cows, which is a very potent climate gas.And for factory farming the inhumane treatment of the chickens, pigs and now cows trapped in small pens living in their own filth. If you have ever raised your own stock and poultry, you know what a tragedy this is for these amazing animals.You have choices. Do nothing, buy only free range, choose only organic and regeneratively produced meat, go vegetarian or vegan or just reduce your current meat consumption. Probably some combination of these is practical for most of us.Our family eats some meat and here are some of the tips we use to reduce meat consumption.Don’t make meat the main event. It can be the side dish with more emphasis on the starch and vegetables.Beans and lentils are just so healthy. And so affordable. It’s really just about the recipes. Maybe time to buy that vegan cookbook or search online. Funnily enough, I know my usual recipes are a bit old-fashioned and could have been cooked by my Mum and definitely feature meat. Melanie is our plant-based cooking wonder but I’m getting better. It just needs to become easoer, then a habit.Maybe start once a week with a meat free day. Then add more days.Stews, soups and casseroles are easy to make and then just reduce the percentage of meat in them.Eat more whole foods. Brown rice, baked potatoes with their skins on, same with fruit eat the skin too . More nuts and seeds. The extra fibre in these helps stave off hunger pangs and we all know the health benefits of whole food.Have a weekly food plan. If it’s 5pm and you suddenly need a meal, then you will revert to the old tried and true.Don’t think of this as losing meat but what new delicious meals you are about to discover.I personally think the right regeneratively raised animal proteins can have a positive impact on climate change by trapping more carbon in the soil. And the animals are encouraged to behave like they used to in the wild so are much happier. Unfortunately not many farmers have adapted these practices as yet. But the reward will be guilt free meals when you do include this type of meat.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/1/20228 minutes, 6 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: Research shows shingles upswing post-Covid

Dr Bryan Betty says overseas research has shown a slight upswing in numbers of shingles cases two to three weeks after Covid-19.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/1/20223 minutes, 49 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Autumn planting and sowing

Mid-autumn – weather going “backwards” – moisture back in the soil, shorter days, longer nights, but still good warmth in the soil, which helps seed germination and plant establishment.Perpetual spinach or silverbeet will feed you for most of the winter; beetroot is a good winter crop too as is carrots. If you are in a warmer zone: sow now while the warmth is still in that lovely, friable soil. If you are in a cooler climate zone it might pay to get some seedlings and take advantage of that head-start. (Not seedlings of carrots, of course, as they don’t really transplant well at all)This is my time to plant broccoli, spring onions seedlings and lettuce (Cos works well for me); To get that head-start I will buy seedlings and keep them in their containers for a few days, outside on the deck, to “harden them off”, before planting.That reduces the shock after transplant.Broad beans can be sown too. They’ll even germinate at close to 0˚C! Good vertical plants that take not too much space and will keep on providing those pods. Need sturdy climbing frame.Soak seeds overnight in waterDepth around 3-4 cmMake the soil nice and friableSome slow-release fertiliser – just a little, please!Some broad bean varieties have lovely red flowers – pretty stuff as well as foodNON-EDIBLESTulip bulbs are getting to the “plantable” stage at this time of the year.They grow well in South island with very cool winters – up north they need winter chilling. In mild climates it pays to plant even later in the year – say: June)Narcissus is the spring bulb for planting NOW in the garden.Wait a little bit longer if you want to grow them in large pots: The soil temperatures will initially stay a bit higher in pots and speed things up too early.For most bulb species it is important to create some area with good soil that is light and “friable” with compost and some slow release fertiliser in it. If you want to mulch the soil, ensure it is not too heavy, so the flower stems can get through the mulch.Great bulb outlets: Bulbs direct/Garden Post/NZBulbs/Fiesta Bulbs/Hadstock Farm in SpringstonLISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/1/20224 minutes, 49 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Dyson's releasing an air purifying headset

Dyson's releasing an air purifying headset The Dyson Zone is not an April Fools Joke - you'll be able to wear a headset with a mouth covering to purify the air around you. Noise cancelling headphones reduce the noise pollution, and contain small filters and air compressors to then send the air down in front of your nose and mouth via a mask. That mask sits just in front of your face, but can be swapped out for one that fully encompasses your face. There is absolutely no hiding that you're wearing it! Display your NFTs on your Samsung TV Samsung has announced a partnership with an NFT marketplace to display your art on your TV. I'm not sure how this is more than the ability to upload an image to your Frame TV.. but maybe there'll be more in the future including the buying and selling from your TV? Samsung says the TV will "optimize the settings for a faithful rendering of the artist’s intention".  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/1/20224 minutes, 19 seconds
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Tara Ward: Slow Horses, Julia, Screw

Slow Horses: Starring Gary Oldman and Kristin Scott Thomas, this spy drama follows a team of British intelligence agents who serve in a dumping ground department of MI5 due to their career-ending mistakes (Apple TV+).Julia: Sarah Lancashire (Happy Valley, Coronation St) stars in this HBO Max drama inspired by Julia Child's extraordinary life and her show The French Chef, which essentially invented food television (Prime, from April 7).Screw: a British drama series about the shocking and often darkly funny job of working as a prison officer in an all-male prison in 21st century Britain (TVNZ OnDemand).LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/1/20225 minutes, 5 seconds
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Muroki: On tour with a young Kiwi-Kenyan artist

Turn up the volume to Kenyan-Kiwi artist Muroki’s tunes and you would be forgiven for thinking it’s summer all year round.  The 20-year-old was the first to be signed to BENEE’s label Olive in 2020 and has had a whirlwind two years since. He’s currently across the ditch headlining his own shows as well as supporting BENEE and has just released a new single called Find Me. Jack Tame catches up with him in Australia. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/1/202211 minutes, 51 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Writing with Fire, The Duke

Writing with Fire - Oscar-nominated documentary. In a cluttered news landscape dominated by men emerges India's only newspaper run by Dalit women. Chief reporter Meera and her journalists break traditions, redefining what it means to be powerful.  The Duke - In 1961, a 60-year-old taxi driver steals Goya's portrait of the Duke of Wellington from the National Gallery in London. He sends ransom notes saying that he will return the painting if the government invests more in care for the elderly. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4/1/20225 minutes, 48 seconds
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Estelle Clifford reviews Aldous Harding's new album, Warm Chris

Estelle Clifford has been listening to Kiwi artist Aldous Harding's new album, Warm Chris. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/25/20226 minutes, 3 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Hurunui's Food and Wine Trail

Mike Yardley has been drinking wine and eating up a storm in Canterbury's Hurunui District. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/25/20228 minutes, 44 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: The Language of Food, The Tricky Art of Forgiveness

The Language of Food – Annabel Abbs Eliza Acton, despite having never before boiled an egg, became one of the world’s most successful cookery writers, revolutionizing cooking and cookbooks around the world. Her story is fascinating, uplifting and truly inspiring.  Told in alternate voices by the award-winning author of The Joyce Girl, and with recipes that leap to life from the page, The Language of Food by Annabel Abbs is the most thought-provoking and page-turning historical novel you’ll read this year, exploring the enduring struggle for female freedom, the power of female friendship, the creativity and quiet joy of cooking and the poetry of food, all while bringing Eliza Action out of the archives and back into the public eye. The Tricky Art of Forgiveness – Meredith Jaffe After thirty years of marriage, can there be any secrets left? The charming new novel from the author of The Dressmakers of Yarrandarrah Prison Diana Forsyth is in the midst of planning the Big Party, a combined celebration of her husband Will's 60th and their 30th wedding anniversary. The whole family is flying in and unbeknownst to Will, Diana is planning a Big Surprise. But then she finds a torn scrap of paper hidden inside the folds of one of his cashmere sweaters, with the words, I forgive you. And all of a sudden, Diana realises she's not the only one keeping Big Secrets. As empty nesters who have just downsized from the family home, she and Will are supposed to be embracing a new promise of glorious freedom - not revisiting a past that Diana has worked very hard to leave behind. A witty, poignant and insightful exploration of marriage: the choices we make - or don't make, the resentments we hold, the lies we tell and what forgiveness really means. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/25/20223 minutes, 41 seconds
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Steven Dromgool: Encouraging a reluctant partner to talk feelings

Does your partner avoid talking about feelings? Relationship expert Steven Dromgool shares his advice on how to get them to open up.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/25/20227 minutes, 8 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Autumn noises in the garden

Cicadas are on the wane towards the end of March – I still haven’t found the egg-laying site containing “Jack”s offspring ;-)But Black field crickets (Teleogryllus commodus) are still making a heck of a noise in the late afternoon/evening, especially in the North Island and top of the SouthTeleogryllus commodus (Supplied)You won’t see them often, as they hide in cracks in the soil during the day; when the sun goes down the crickets will come to the surface to eat grasses – they can do a lot of damage to pasture and lawns, leaving bare soil around their home cracks.Black field crickets make their characteristic noise by rubbing their wings together. (Mating calls!)Control is quite hard – In the old days, Farmers used wheat, soaked in Maldison, strewn over the paddock, in early summer (January is the month before crickets become adults and hence, reproduce!).For a lawn it might be a nice idea to pour water with a good dash of dish-washing liquid down the holes of these insects in the middle of the day; The crickets emerge in the non-day sun (because the soapy water stings their eyes, I reckon) and the sun will heat the black bodies up real quick (Natue’s Micro-wave oven!)Another “singer” in autumn is the Katydid (Caedicia simplex); mostly afternoon and early eveningIt creates a rather unique noise by rubbing the edges of its stiff forewings together, like a fingernail on a comb. The noise has the quality produced by a ventriloquist – the insect “throws its voice” so you can never be sure where it is calling from.Katydids feed on garden plants, especially flowers and they truly seem to like the roses and Dahlias that flower in autumn! They are well-camouflaged on green plants, so birds, frogs and lizards can find it tricky to locate them.After dark it’s the time for tree weta to start up their communications; A soft rasping noise that is repeated frequently by rubbing the impressive hind legs onto a raised “file” situated on the abdominal segments.Tree weta (Supplied)It is their way of keeping in touch with partners and flatmates while feeding at night. But sometimes they also make that noise when they feel threatened or disturbed: they raise their legs and warn you to “back off!!”The irony is, of course, we don’t really know anything about the “language” and communication capabilities of these weta… They’ve been around for 180 million years or so, making them one of our oldest critters in Aotearoa.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/25/20222 minutes, 54 seconds
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Hannah McQueen: How to hold your nerve amid market volatility

Hannah McQueen from enable.me gives her advice on how to hold your nerve amid all the market volatility.  Should you just sit tight and wait for it to calm down before making big investment decisions, should you go conservative while things are all over the show?  Amid the Ukrainian invasion, sharemarket volatility and predictions of house price declines, is sitting on your hands or maybe putting your money under the mattress a good idea? LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/25/20226 minutes, 3 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: iMessage on WhatsApp, classic Insta is back...kinda!

Are we one step closer to being able to iMessage someone on WhatsApp?The EU has agreed in principle to a new law that would force interoperability between smaller messaging services and the giants of the industry. This would mean that a startup would be able to get into the iMessage or WhatsApp ecosystem. WHat's unclear is if that will mean the end of the blue/green bubble situation and force the ability to be able to contact someone using iMessage via WhatsApp. The Digital Markets Act also gives you the right to uninstall, more access to data, advertising transparency, reduces app store restrictions and will prevent "self-preferencing" - effectively allowing companies to put their products at the top of the page.Classic Instagram is back.. kindaDitch the algorithm! You can now see your IG feed in the classic reverse chronological order. You can also now add up to 50 accounts as 'favorites' to see first - luckily you won't be notified when you're added or removed from a favorites list. To change the view (and it's only temporary while you're in that session) tap the instagram logo and select either "following" or "favorites".LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/25/20226 minutes, 15 seconds
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Tara Ward: Taboo, Life and Beth, Bridgerton

Taboo: A dark, gritty historical drama. Tom Hardy stars as adventurer James Keziah Delaney, who returns to London during the War of 1812 to rebuild his late father's shipping empire. However, both the government and his biggest competitor want his inheritance at any cost - even murder (Netflix).Life and Beth: Amy Schumer stars in this Disney+ drama. After a sudden incident, Beth, a seemingly successful woman with a long term relationship and steady career, takes a look back at her past to see who she wants to become.Bridgerton: A second series of Netflix’s record-breaking costume drama, created by Shonda Rhimes. During the Regency era in England, eight close-knit siblings of the powerful Bridgerton family attempt to find love.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/25/20225 minutes, 3 seconds
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Michael Bublé talks soaring 'Higher' with his new album

You could recognise the dulcet tones of Canadian crooner Michael Bublé anywhere.Michael has just released his 11th album, called Higher. It’s a mix of covers, originals and collabs with the likes of country music icon Willie Nelson. He says he’s never been more excited after finishing an album.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/25/202213 minutes, 45 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Drive My Car, Oscars 2022 predictions

Drive My Car  Drive My Car is a 2021 Japanese drama-road film co-written and directed by Ryusuke Hamaguchi. It is primarily based on Haruki Murakami's short story of the same name from his collection Men Without Women.  An aging, widowed actor seeks a chauffeur. The actor turns to his go-to mechanic, who ends up recommending a 20-year-old girl. Despite their initial misgivings, a very special relationship develops between the two. Night Raiders is now on general release In a post-war future, a mother joins an underground band of vigilantes to try and rescue her daughter from a state-run institution. Oscars are on Monday – who are the frontrunners? The 94th Academy Awards will be held on March 27 in Los Angeles. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/25/20226 minutes, 56 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Grape and Chicken Salad

I first came across this salad in a café in Melbourne that served the most exquisite Vietnamese-inspired dishes. It’s the perfect summer salad and the grapes I consider a nod to the days when Ho Chi Minh City was considered the Paris of the Orient.SERVES 22 boneless, skin less chicken breasts½ onion, chopped roughly1 stick lemon grass, smashed2 lime or young lemon leavesSalt & pepper50g rice vermicelli – soaked in boiling water until el dente (about 5 minutes) & drainedDressingJuice of two limes1 tsp sesame oil1 tablespoon grated palm sugar1 tablespoon fish sauce4 tablespoons coconut milk1 cup grapes , red or green, halved2 chillies – de-seeded & sliced1 cup mixed chopped fresh herbs – mint, coriander, Vietnamese mint,¼ cup crushed peanutsRemove the tenderloins from the breasts and set aside. Poach chicken by putting breasts in a pot and covering with water, chopped onion, lime leaves, lemongrass, salt and pepper. Bring to a slow simmer and simmer for 15 minutes (add the tenderloins about half way through). Allow to cool in the stock then remove and slice across the grain into 1 cm slices.Soak vermicelli in boiling water until soft. Drain well. Set aside.In a big bowl whisk together dressing ingredients - lime, sesame oil, grated palm sugar, fish sauce and coconut milk. Taste and check for balance of flavours. Add more acid (lime juice), sweetness (sugar) or salt (fish sauce) as required. Add the vermicelli, chicken, chillies and herbs and toss well. Garnish with peanuts and serve.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/25/20226 minutes, 26 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Surprises and spinach at the supermarket

Kevin Milne recently offered to get groceries for friends isolating and discovered a few surprises on their list. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/25/20227 minutes, 7 seconds
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Jack Tame: Don’t wait. Don’t procrastinate. Don’t put it off any longer

Last year, in those fleeting months before Delta was discovered in the community and the Trans-Tasman bubble was closed, I flew to Australia and spent a few days with my grandma. It was just the two of us for four or five days. A grandma and her eldest grandchild, sixty years between us. By that stage, Granny was too frail to drive. I hired a car and we went on a few day trips together. She took me up to Kapunda, where the first of her ancestors to arrive in Australia settled almost 190 years ago. We went to a museum that celebrated the life of her best-known relative, Sir Sidney Kidman, a cattle barron who once had landholdings greater than the size of Australia. We lunched at our family’s favourite cheap Italian cafe, the first place I ever tasted gelato.  In the evenings, Granny told me about her childhood. She was born in the 1930s on a remote station, 500km north of Adelaide. The closest property with other children was more than fifty miles away.  As a girl, once a week there was a radio show that helped to direct Granny’s correspondence classes. In the mornings, Granny’s mum would help her to study. In the afternoons she’d play with her little brothers. As I think I told you last year, Granny had photos of the old camel trains which the workers sometimes used to get things to market. Granny died last week. I’ve spent the last few days driving all over Adelaide, taking her furniture to second-hand shops in the biggest truck I could hire. With my Mum and one of my sisters, we went through her house, room by room, shelf by shelf, drawer by drawer, through 94 years of memories: Diaries from her travels. Jewellery and knick-knacks picked up decades ago at exotic foreign markets. Paper clips and magnifying glasses and a thousand coat hangers. The trash and treasures of a rich life.  From correspondence school on that remote sheep station, Granny never lost her hunger for education. She was the first female physics student at the University of Adelaide. She studied at Oxford. She earned a PHD. In the 1950s and 60s, she moved into a new exciting field of research and became a bit of a pioneer in her field. It was something to do with technology and information and there were myriad potential applications. Something called computing.  My Grandad was a professor at the same university. I never knew it until this week, but in a professional capacity, so as to stand on her own two feet, Granny only ever used her maiden name for her work. And since she was a woman who worked full-time when that was still quite uncommon, Granny insisted on paying to have someone else do the housework. It was funny, at her funeral, to hear Mum call her a feminist. But she was. Of course, she was. A few years ago, in a university campaign for International Women’s Day, she even lived to see herself in billboard form. Death is hard. Her loss leaves a massive gap. But if I’m honest, the sadness I feel at Granny’s death is eased a bit, in knowing she had such a full life. I aspire to live a life as full as my Granny’s.  And I feel grateful. Grateful that at an age and stage where I had genuine interest, I took the time to sit down with Granny. I listened to her stories. I looked at her photos. I paused and considered and appreciated her extraordinary journey, from the camels and the dust of her childhood to the cutting edge of computer science and beyond.  For what it’s worth.. my advice is this: if you have someone in your life who’s getting on... a parent, a grandparent, an old friend. Don’t wait. Don’t procrastinate. Don’t put it off any longer. If you have to travel, travel. If you have to take time off work, so be it. It’s worth it. And you’ll never regret it. Sit down and ask for their story before it’s too late.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/25/20225 minutes, 54 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: British artist Ella Henderson's new album

Estelle Clifford has been listening to British singer Ella Henderson's new album, Everything I Didn't Say - her first in eight years.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/18/20227 minutes, 18 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Jump by Larry Miller, Lucy Foley's Paris thriller

Jump – Larry Miller One of the most successful Black businessmen in the country, who has led Nike’s Jordan Brand from a $150M sneaker company to a $4.5B global footwear and apparel powerhouse, tells the remarkable story of his rise to the pinnacles of international business and reveals the secret that tormented him and defined his success. The Paris Apartment – Lucy Foley Jess needs a fresh start. She’s broke and alone, and she’s just left her job under less-than-ideal circumstances. Her half-brother Ben didn’t sound thrilled when she asked if she could crash with him for a bit, but he didn’t say no, and surely everything will look better from Paris. Only when she shows up – to find a very nice apartment, could Ben really have afforded this? – he’s not there. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/18/20225 minutes, 54 seconds
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Mike Yardley: A taste of travel - what are the world's iconic breakfasts?

Mike Yardley has been dreaming of overseas breakfasts and chats to Jack Tame about the world's iconic early morning meals. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/18/20229 minutes, 6 seconds
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Malcolm Rands: What to do with the waste from Covid?

Malcolm Rands gives his tips on what we can do about the mounting waste from Covid.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/18/20228 minutes, 19 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: Covid positives and negatives for environment and education

Lockdowns were great for Biodiversity – you’ll remember the stories about the return of dolphins in the canals of Venice etc. People went walking outside in parks; less use of cars – less pollution, birds coming into town.It was not so good for the Environment Business:Zealandia: Wellington’s most impressive restoration centre; 225 hectares of pure gold with endangered species returning to the city: Falcons smacking homing pigeons out of the air, Kaka all over the place – tui in huge numbersZealandia relies on visitors – THEY ARE LAUNCHING AN APPEAL – go and see the place, absorb the Nature that’s there, experience what Aotearoa used to look and sound like… and DONATEZealandia is INSPIRATIONAL and such a good tool for EDUCATION!!!Schools that do a lot of environmental education outside the classroom are also struggling with reduced contributions from parents in the pandemic years; my latest job-area is in teacher PLD (Professional Learning Development), especially trying to get us all to work with the Natural Resources we find in school grounds, related to the whole curriculum…There are hugely successful players (Look them up!!) in this area: BLAKE (Sir Peter Blake Trust), Enviroschools, Treemendous (Mazda Foundation), Garden-to-Table, Field Based STEM, Toimata Foundation etc.These organisations and initiatives are often sponsored by companies that “get it” and supported by Ministries (Education, Environment and DoC)But for your local school it might be useful to contact the principal or the Science team to see if you can contribute your skills to the “efficience of learning”Of course: learning outside is especially useful in Covid times due to reduced chances of transmission.One of my favourite examples of Nature-Nerdness are the raptors at the Bird of Prey Trust Wingspan in Rotorua. https://www.wingspan.co.nz/There you can see Falcons flying and hunting; they train kahu and rehabilitate injured birds that rely on flying skills to survive in the New Zealand Landscape; They even support one of our newest New Zealand Native birds: the Barn Owl, which is now firmly established in Northland.Wingspan also suffered huge losses of income during Covid, especially since they started to plan building an education centre.One of the way they fund-raise is by selling “raptor pellets”, usually to teachers that want to do something different in the biological classroom: Birds of prey (raptors) eat meat with bones, fur, feathers as well as the meat; they then regurgitate the roughage and indigestible materials as a “pellet”. These pellets can be teased apart and bones and other materials can be identified in the classroom, to identify the types of food that were eaten by the birds.Wingspan sent me a nice packet of barn owl pellets for my education work and I am going to give away a packet to five teachers in NZ that contact me with the best reason why they would like a packet;Address: [email protected] don’t forget your name, your school name and addressLISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/18/20225 minutes, 5 seconds
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Bob Campbell: 2020 Piqueras High Altitude Garnacha, Spain

Bob Campbell has been diving into the Spanish Reds - his best buy this week is the 2020 Piqueras High Altitude Garnacha, Spain $16.99.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/18/20224 minutes, 58 seconds
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Tara Ward: Holding, The Newsreader, Joanna Lumley's Britain

Holding: Based on the novel by Graham Norton, this comedy-drama follows the story of Irish police officer, Sergeant PJ Collins, a gentle mountain of a man who hides from people and fills his days with comfort food and half-hearted police work (TVNZ 1 on Sundays/TVNZ OnDemand). The Newsreader: launching on new free-to-air channel Eden, The Newsreader is an award-winning Australian drama set in a TV newsroom during the 1980s, as the professional and personal lives of two newsreaders become entangled (Eden, Thursday nights/ThreeNow). Joanna Lumley’s Britain: After a lifetime of travels that have taken her across the globe, Joanna Lumley is making her most personal journey yet, retracing old steps and exploring the wonders of the country she calls home (TVNZ 1 on Saturdays/TVNZ OnDemand). LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/18/20225 minutes, 6 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Netflix rules tightening up, Microsoft Office is adapting

Netflix wants you to have your own account that you pay for, Currently you're allowed to share your account with your household, but not anyone beyond that. In Chile, Costa Rica & Peru they're testing what happens if they offer 'extra viewers' as sub accounts for a small fee. Netflix has seen their subscriber numbers plateau, share price drop and content costs continue to soar. Cracking down on password sharing might net them a new million more subscribers in the US alone.  Microsoft Office is adapting to the new hybrid work trends Changes are rolling out to Microsoft Teams, Outlook, PowerPoint over the next six months to make flexible working a little easier. In Outlook, you'll be able to RSVP to a meeting as an in-person or virtual attendee so the organizer knows what to expect. Teams will have a new layout option to have remote people's video at the bottom of the big screen, as well as having notes and the chat window viewable. There'll also be new 'in-room' companion features you can use on your laptop. PowerPoint will allow you to put live video into your slides, like picture-in-picture. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/18/20224 minutes, 26 seconds
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Brian Greene: World-renowned theoretical physicist on our search for meaning

Have you ever grappled with the BIG questions of life like why do we exist or what is our purpose?  Well, Brian Greene ponders these types of questions for a living.  Brian is a world-renowned theoretical physicist. He uses science and math to understand the complex workings of the universe.  He’ll be here in June to speak about his new book, called 'Until the End of Time: Mind, Matter and Our Search for Meaning'. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/18/202213 minutes, 28 seconds
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Nici Wickes: Buddha Bowl on a budget

Buying lunch every day becomes expensive and, dare I say it, not that healthy. Bought food is invariably more calorific than food you make yourself. Focus on loading up your lunch choices with protein – chicken, beans, tuna, tofu, quinoa – for sustained energy (i.e. it will fill you up and keep you feeling full for longer) plus some carbs to bulk it up slightly – think noodles, rice, pasta, bread, pastry – but you don’t need too much of these. Then include fresh ingredients like leafy greens and grated veges and in cooler months, canned tomatoes, grains, beans etc in soups stews etc. Lunch Buddha bowl: Makes enough for 4 serves 2 cups cooked rice – I like using brown rice 1 ½ cups frozen shelled edamame beans (available in supermarkets) 1 ½ cups grated or roughly chopped veges – carrots, snow peas, thinly sliced broccoli florets 1-2 tbsps tamari or soy sauce, to taste 4 cups chopped/shredded red cabbage, spinach, lettuce or kale Optional toppings 1-2 ripe avocados Chicken, salmon or tuna Thinly sliced cucumber Thinly sliced spring onion Lime or lemon wedges Toasted sesame oil, for drizzling Sesame seeds  Pour boiling water over edamame beans and leave for 3 minutes, then drain. Divide the rice, edamame and raw veggies into 4 bowls/lunch boxes. Arrange toppings of your choice. Drizzle lightly with tamari/soy and any other dressings and top with sliced green onion and a lime wedge or 2. Chill till ready to serve.Here’s some more ideas that can all be made the night before for saving time:  Wraps – load them up with salad, chicken, ham etc – leave out the cheese. Sammies – make them extra good with spicy chutneys, mustard, mayo and smashed boiled eggs etc and season them well with salt and pepper Line muffin tins with tortilla and fill with Bolognese, egg/ham/sweetcorn/spinach/feta, top with cheese and bake for 20 mins at 180 C.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/18/20225 minutes, 18 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Turning Red and The Adam Project

Francesca Rudkin has been watching Turning Red and The Adam Project this week and gives Jack Tame her review. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/18/20225 minutes, 42 seconds
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Kevin Milne: Celebrating St. Patrick's Day

Kevin Milne has been celebrating with the Irish this week for St. Patrick's Day. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/18/20226 minutes, 20 seconds
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Jack Tame: This Government cares more about polling than principles

Call me a sucker. Last Sunday morning, the petrol gauge in my car dropped to one bar and I pulled up at Mobil and filled up with gas. It cost $150 to fill my 2012 Toyota hatchback. In twenty years of driving, it was the most money I’d ever spent filling my car. Of course, it felt painful. But I figured I didn’t have much of a choice. The war in Ukraine looked set to continue and even if I waited, I knew I’d have to fill up sooner or later. The next day Labour cut petrol excise tax by 25c a litre. Cutting the price of petrol for three months and halving the cost of public transport will cost almost $400m. The policy had almost no scrutiny or oversight. There was no regulatory impact assessment. The Ministry of Transport and Treasury have kindly agreed to a ‘post-implementation assessment.’ They’ll tell us how it went, after it’s all over. Brilliant. But although the Government has framed the tax cut as an urgent and nimble piece of leadership, we should describe it for what it really is: cynical and reactionary. Transport makes up a significant slab of our carbon emissions profile. As painful as it was for businesses and households alike to have petrol at $3 a litre – and I appreciate that for some people it was extremely painful - the surge in prices presented an unrivaled opportunity to encourage significant behavioural change.  The Government is concerned about the cost of living crisis? Last I checked, they said the climate crisis was the nuclear free issue of this generation. There are plenty of other more targeted ways to relieve cost of living stresses. Taking a couple of bucks off the cost of a bus ticket won’t encourage more people onto public transport if the cost of filling their car is just the same as it’s always been. The truth is, petrol taxes would never have been cut if Labour had been well ahead in last week’s poll. They saw the poll numbers. They freaked out. They dropped almost $400m to try and win back some popularity. And the annoying thing is... it works. The reason New Zealanders haven’t kicked up a stink is that fundamentally, we would prefer the comfort of cheaper petrol than a government with the courage to make difficult but necessary choices. This is why we find ourselves in the shit. This is why our housing is some of the least affordable in the World. This is why we have a looming crisis over the cost of superannuation. This is why we’re dragging out heels on doing anything meaningful about climate change. We voters only care about the short term. And our politicians only care about keeping us happy. They’re not nimble or urgent. They’re cowardly. But ask yourself this: regardless of your political stripes, wouldn’t you prefer a government to be led by its principles than by the polls? A society deserves the leaders it elects. Once again, Jacinda Ardern’s Government has shown it’s more interested in doing what is popular than what is right.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/18/20223 minutes, 33 seconds
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Estelle Clifford: BENEE's new album Lychee

Estelle Clifford's been listening to Kiwi artist BENEE's new album Lychee.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/11/20225 minutes, 15 seconds
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Catherine Raynes: Remember Me and Davos Man

Remember Me – Charity Norman  A close-knit community is ripped apart by disturbing revelations that cast new light on a young woman's disappearance twenty-five years ago.  After years of living overseas, Emily Kirkland returns to New Zealand to care for her father, Felix, who suffers from dementia. As his memory fades and his guard slips, she begins to understand him for the first time - and to glimpse shattering truths about his past. Truths she'd rather were kept buried.  Davos Man – Peter Goodman Drawing on decades of experience covering the global economy, award-winning journalist Peter S. Goodman profiles five representative "Davos Men"–members of the billionaire class–chronicling how their shocking exploitation of the global pandemic has hastened a fifty-year trend of wealth centralization. Alongside this reporting, Goodman delivers textured portraits of those caught in Davos Man’s wake, including a former steelworker in the American Midwest, a Bangladeshi migrant in Qatar, a Seattle doctor on the front lines of the fight against COVID, blue-collar workers in the tenements of Buenos Aires, an African immigrant in Sweden, a textile manufacturer in Italy, an Amazon warehouse employee in New York City, and more. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/11/20224 minutes, 40 seconds
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Mike Yardley: Sydney Lights Up, counting down to Vivid

Mike Yardley says Vivid is back after a two-year hiatus thanks to Covid. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/11/20228 minutes, 34 seconds
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Steven Dromgool: Think you've found 'the one'?

Relationship expert Steven Dromgool shares with Jack Tame compatibility questions to ask when you think you’ve found ‘the one’.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/11/20227 minutes, 32 seconds
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Ruud Kleinpaste: What's in a name...when it comes to wasps?

One of the things that are bothering New Zealanders in the late summer and autumn days are wasps. There are a few species that really drive people mad:The German wasp is just one of them; the Chinese paper wasp is another one.They are quite different from each-other and easy to identify:German wasps are stockily-built insects, mostly yellow with some black stripes and spots on their body;The Chinese paper wasps are much more slender and often fly with dangling, long legs. Their bodies are mostly black with thin yellow stripes and spots.There are other distinguishing features (such as nest shapes and sizes and where they prefer to build their nests.But what they have in common is the fact that they have no sense of humour.But this little segment is not about all these details at all… it is about their name, or should I say their names!“German wasp” and “Chinese Paper wasp” are the common names (also known as vernacular names) of the species.Their scientific names are, respectively: Vespula germanica and Polistes chinensis. And that makes total sense, because those names are the real Latin names that were given to these two wasp species by the authors who described them. The common names were derived from their Latin names.So far, so good.The Chinese paper wasp (P. chinensis) got its name because it hails from the China, Korea and Japan region on the planetBut the German wasp (V. germanica) does not originate from just Germany at all! It originally lived right throughout Europe and Northern Africa and as far east as Ukraine and Moscow, right up to North India.Yet the author of this wasp species (The Danish entomologist Johan Fabricius, a student of the famous Carl Linnaeus!) decided to call this pest Vespula germanica, the German wasp.In the 18th Century it was not unusual to name an important human pests after the neighbours with whom you had the most quarrel or conflict and Germany was sometimes on the receiving end of these name-calling exercises… and that was even before the World Cup Soccer was invented!The German cockroach (Blattella germanica) was a name conjured by Linnaeus himself; yet the species had nothing to do with Germany. It originally came from South East Asia or thereabouts and spread to busy Europe with the increase in trade and people movement.Or it might have even come “out-of-Africa” with us… all those years ago!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/11/20225 minutes, 29 seconds
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Dr Bryan Betty: Are you getting a yearly heart check-up?

Shane Warne's death has sent shockwaves around the world. He's suspected of dying from a heart attack and our resident doctor Dr Bryan Betty says it's a reminder for middle aged men to get a yearly heart check-up.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/11/20224 minutes, 34 seconds
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Nici Wickes: A quick guide to budget-friendly cooking

Here are some rules I try to abide by when looking for budget-friendly meals· Only use what’s in season· Shop with a list but stay open to a bargain· Ties in with above, don’t stick to ingredients if they’re expensive, substitute for something cheaper eg. jars of capsicum/peppers instead of fresh, rump steak instead of sirloin or cheaper yet, learn how to cook well with eggs or pulses for your protein, use sour cream / crème fraiche instead of cheese in cooking· Spices are your friend for cooking on a budget - they pack a punch for very little expense· Avoid semi or fully prepared meals – they’re expensive whichever way you look at it· When shopping compare the per gram cost – you’ll be surprised that larger portions are not always cheaper (mayo is a good example of this!)· Beef up curries / casseroles with vegetables (carrots / potatoes / onions / pumpkin / spinach) – good for the body and the wallet· Shop to the theme of “You can’t always get what you want”· The Destitute Gourmet, Sophie Gray, has 3 principles for saving $$: Plan ahead, Eat Healthy, Eek out the luxuries www.destitutegourmet.co.nz – great website· Practice or LEARN to cook well – that way your health and your food bill is in your handsMy favourite 3 budget meals:1. 3 meals from one roast chicken; a roast, then use some meat for sandwiches or tacos / make soup with the carcass2. Lasagne made with lentils instead of meat and sour cream/cream fraiche instead of cheese on top3. Rosemary & potato/pumpkin frittataLISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/11/20227 minutes, 33 seconds
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Paul Stenhouse: Apple's new chips, print your own lipstick

Apple's going "peak performance" This event saw the continued rollout of the new Apple chips across their devices - including into the iPad Air and the launch of the wildly powerful Mac Studio. The screens on their phones, tablets and laptops have always been incredible and now there's an affordable option for a high quality Apple monitor! Announced alongside the Mac Studio is the Studio Display which is a 27" 5K monitor with an updated camera, three mics and six speakers. It's around $2000, which is a steal compared to the Pro Display at $5,000 monitor and $1,000 stand. Its launch did see the death of the 27" iMac though. Print your own lipstick at home Can't decide which shade to buy? Now you can print them all at home...and as you need them. This cool device from Yves Saint-Laurent prints lipstick. You load the cartridges in the bottom of the device, use an app to select the color you want, and it'll print it straight into a compact for you to apply now or take on-the-go. You can take a photo of your outfit and the app will suggest lip colors for you. Depending on what cartridges you select, it can produce between 1000 and 4000 shades. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/11/20224 minutes, 48 seconds
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Paul Coll: Kiwi squash player on winning his first title as world number one

History-making and title-taking about sums up an astonishing 12 months for Kiwi squash player Paul Coll.  The 29-year-old is the first Kiwi male to take the top spot in world rankings, something he says was “unexpected”.   Paul is based in Amsterdam but is always on the move playing in tournaments around the world, the latest being the Windy City Open in Chicago, where he won his first title as number one.  Paul Coll joined Jack Tame. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/11/202213 minutes, 49 seconds
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Tara Ward: Somebody Somewhere, Winning Time, Joe vs Carole

Somebody Somewhere: A new HBO drama. Sam is a true Kansan on the surface, but, beneath it all, struggles to fit the hometown mould. Grappling with loss and acceptance, she discovers herself and a community of outsiders who don't fit in but don't give up (Neon). Winning time: Rise of the Lakers Dynasty: A new drama about the professional and personal lives of the 1980s Los Angeles Lakers, one of sports' most revered and dominant dynasties - a team that defined an era, both on and off the court (Neon). Joe vs Carole: A new series that dramatises the events of documentary Tiger King, telling the tale of Joe Exotic, the former Oklahoma zoo operator and big cat breeder who was put on trial and sentenced to 22 years in prison for plotting to murder another big cat enthusiast (TVNZ OnDemand). LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/11/20225 minutes, 11 seconds
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Francesca Rudkin: Blind Ambition and Off The Rails

Movie reviewer Francesca Rudkin has been watching two great films this week:Blind Ambition (Doc - Cinema)  Having escaped starvation and tyranny in their homeland of Zimbabwe, four refugees have conquered the odds to become South Africa's top sommeliers. Driven by relentless optimism, a passion for their craft and unshakeable national pride, they form Zimbabwe’s first ever wine tasting team and set their sights on the coveted title of ‘World Wine Tasting Champions’. From the moment they arrive in France to compete, this team of mavericks turns an establishment of privilege and tradition on its head. A truly uplifting documentary that celebrates just how irrepressible the human spirit can be.  Off the Rails (Drama - Cinema) Now in their 50s, four friends re-create an inter-rail journey across Europe, but this time 18-year-old Maddie is taking her mother's place, fulfilling her dying wish. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/11/20225 minutes, 41 seconds
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Kevin Milne: It's the start of the very best season...Bluff oysters!

Kevin Milne is celebrating the start of the Bluff oyster season and reckons they’ve gotta be the best oysters in the world.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3/11/20226 minutes, 9 seconds
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Jack Tame: Here's an idea...just admit there's a cost of living crisis

One of the best things about my job is that when a new poitical poll comes through, I get to look at the results just a little bit earlier than everyone else.Labour 37. National 39. Boomfah.A few things are obvious. People are sick of Covid. We’re sick of restrictions. Sick of disruption. We’re sick, sick, in more than 200,000 cases. Covid is stressful. We’re right in the thro