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Friday 19 January 2018 Rāmere 19 Kohi-tātea 2018

Programmes are subject to change.

  • 12:04 AM. All Night Programme

    Including: 12:05 Music after Midnight; 12:30 Black Sheep (RNZ); 1:05 The Evidence: Does sharing our lives with animals lead to new diseases?(BBC); 2.05; The Long Way Home (RNZ); 2:30 The Sampler (RNZ); 3:05 Naked in Budapest by Heather Hapeta (7 of 7, RNZ); 3:30 The Why Factor (BBC); 4:25 Eyewitness(RNZ); 4:35 Vegetable orchestra(RNZ); 4:50 Fly Sprays(RNZ); 5:10 Kathleen’s Antarctica by Richard Huber (2 of 2, RNZ)  5:45 Witness (BBC)

  • 6:00 AM. Breakfast with Cynthia Morahan

    An early miscellany of music, stories and random thoughts including:
    6:14 Witness: History as told by the people who were there (BBC)
    6:35 One Quick Question Rapid answers to listeners’ queries (RNZ)
    6:45 50 Things That Made the Modern Economy: Intellectual Property Tim Harford tells the fascinating stories of 50 inventions, ideas and innovations which have helped create the economic world. (BBC)
    7:10 Stripped Down AUT student Georgina Treleaven dives into the world of pole fitness and  discovers what lies beyond the strip club in her very own "pole journey".

  • 8:00 AM. Summer Report with Alex Perrottet

    An hour of summer news and information, including interviews with the newsmakers, plus sport, business, weather and features

  • 9:06 AM. Summer Times with Megan Whelan

    A holiday season of interviews, features, music and stories including at 10:30 The Halfmen of O by Maurice Gee, told by Lloyd Scott (RNZ)

  • Noon The World at Noon

    A roundup of today's news and sport

  • 12:12 PM. Worldwatch

    The stories behind the international headlines

  • 12:28 PM. Matinee Idle with Phil O'Brien and Simon Morris

    An afternoon of alleged music and dubious entertainment (RNZ)

  • 5:00 PM. Five O'clock Report

  • 5:30 PM. Outspoken

    Current affairs with RNZ's most experienced correspondents (RNZ)

  • 6:06 PM. Encounters

    Richard Denniss: 'Every time we waste money, we count it as wealth'
    Many of us can't seem to stop spending money we don't have, to buy things we don't need, to impress people we don't know – according to economist and author Richard Denniss. And he says to stem this tide of waste we need to become more – not less – materialistic, taking pleasure in the things we own already, and buying only things we truly value. We should treasure, repair and find a new home for our belongings when we have no more need for them, he says, not just discard them as rubbish. . (RNZ)

    Ross Greene: Are we over punishing ourkids?
    Most people use a pretty basic formula for disciplining kids: good behaviour = reward, bad behaviour = consequences (like time out or punishment). But psychologist Ross Greene believes giving kids negative consequences only leads to more bad behaviour. Instead, adults need to work with kids to figure out why they misbehave and working on a solution together.The method he’s devised – Collaborative & Proactive Solutions – has had remarkable results in schools. . (RNZ)

  • 7:06 PM. Summer Science

    Crowdscience
    A BBC World Service programme that takes listener questions about life, Earth and the universe to researchers hunting for answers at the frontiers of knowledge (BBC)

  • 8:05 PM. The Compass

    On the Black Sea #5: Sailors of Sevastopol
    The mountainous peninsula of Crimea sits astride the Black Sea - a unique fusion of cultures and for centuries a strategic prize for successive empires. Hundreds of thousands died when Russia, Turkey, Britain and France fought over Crimea in the 19th Century.  Tim Whewell visits Crimea to discover how Russia is entrenching its control - and re-equipping its key naval base of Sevastopol, the focus of the 19th Century fighting - and in response, NATO is stepping up its naval exercises in the Black Sea. Is a sea now being dangerously re-militarised? (BBC)

  • 8:06 PM. The Compass

    On the Black Sea #5: Sailors of Sevastopol
    The mountainous peninsula of Crimea sits astride the Black Sea - a unique fusion of cultures and for centuries a strategic prize for successive empires. Hundreds of thousands died when Russia, Turkey, Britain and France fought over Crimea in the 19th Century.  Tim Whewell visits Crimea to discover how Russia is entrenching its control - and re-equipping its key naval base of Sevastopol, the focus of the 19th Century fighting - and in response, NATO is stepping up its naval exercises in the Black Sea. Is a sea now being dangerously re-militarised? (BBC)

  • 8:30 PM. Spotlight

    The NZ Music Scene (RNZ)

  • 9:06 PM. The Best of Country Life

    Memorable scenes, people and places in rural New Zealand (RNZ)

  • 10:00 PM. The 10 O'clock Report

    A roundup of today's news and sport

  • 10:30 PM. 50 Things That Made the Modern Economy

    Intellectual Property: Tim Harford tells the fascinating stories of 50 inventions, ideas and innovations which have helped create the economic world (BBC)

  • 10:45 PM. For God's Sake Saddle Me A Donkey by Dinah Priestley

    Streaking Through Europe: Dinah Priestley recalls how a small group of travelling New Zealanders came to dine with the Maharaja of Bharatpur (19 of 19, RNZ)

  • 11:06 PM. The Mixtape

    (RNZ)

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