Glen Scanlon
The duchess and her Stubbies-wearing hubby
In the 1980s, Carters Beach, south of Westport, had a dairy, a playing field, a kids’ fort and miles of beach. As far as Glen Scanlon was concerned, it was a small slice of heaven.
Swear words and slurs - what's offensive on TV and radio?
Are New Zealanders' attitudes towards offensive language changing? A recent survey by the Broadcasting Standards Authority seems to suggest they might be. Audio
Swear words and slurs - what's offensive on TV and radio?
Are New Zealanders' attitudes towards offensive language changing? A recent survey by the Broadcasting Standards Authority seems to suggest they might be.
AudioUsing te reo Māori not in breach of broadcasting standards
Using te reo Māori on air is not in breach of the country's broadcasting standards.
This comes from a recent Broadcasting Standards Authority decision following a complaint about TVNZ using te reo… Audio
The Perfect Roast Potato Round 2: The Reckoning
Glen Scanlon learned the secret of making perfect roast potato from his mum, "the queen of cooking potatoes". Video
Glen Scanlon: what it's like to be an identical twin
This week RNZ's Head of Digital Glen Scanlon sent out an unusual email to staff explaining that if he looks blankly at you or you spot him with an unfamiliar woman and child, it's not him, it's his… Audio
Tech companies are increasingly dictating what we see on-line
Why the chronological feed is dying, and tech companies are increasingly dictating what people consume and when. Since we all started using the internet, the information we've got through twitter… Audio
Competitive consumption for kids
Wanton destruction is rife on the child birthday circuit. And the primary warhead of choice is the party bag, not the birthday cake.
Golden moments from NZ vs the West Indies
With New Zealand set to meet the West Indies in their do-or-die clash, Glen Scanlon revisits a golden time.
Cattongate: Let the book do the talking
With "Cattongate" in full swing, Radio New Zealand's Glen Scanlon allows Eleanor Catton's prize-winning novel to speak for its author. Audio