Radio New Zealand National

Radio New Zealand National
Radio New Zealand National
RNZN logo.png
Broadcast area New ZealandNew Zealand
Frequency

AM: various List
FM: 101.0 MHz - 101.7 MHz
Freeview: Channel 50
Sky Digital: Channel 501
TelstraClear InHomeTV: Channel 501

Live Stream Windows Media
First air date 1925
Format Varied
Owner Radio New Zealand
Webcast [1]
Website http://www.radionz.co.nz/national

Radio New Zealand National (formerly National Radio) is a publicly-funded non-commercial New Zealand English language radio network operated by Radio New Zealand. It specialises in programmes dedicated to news, the arts, music, and New Zealand culture generally, including some material in the Māori language.

Contents

Programming

National's weekday output between 06:00 and midnight is characterized by the alternation of three extended news and current-affairs sequences–running for between one and three hours each–with three varied-content magazine-style programmes, each of which lasts for three to five hours.

Morning Report

Morning Report - Te Pūrongo o te Ata - Geoff Robinson and Simon Mercep - 06:00-09:00

Morning Report is Radio New Zealand National's long-running flagship breakfast programme. It is a three-hour news programme airing between 06:00 and 09:00 on weekdays. The programme consists of half-hourly news and weather updates from Radio New Zealand News and more in-depth coverage of the news between these updates.

News and weather bulletins are read by Nicola Wright from the Radio New Zealand News studio half hourly at 06:00, 06:30, 07:00, 07:30, 08:00 and 08:30. Brief recaps of top stories being followed by the Morning Report programme occur half hourly at 06:15, 06:45, 07:15, 07:45 and 08:15.

Specialised segments air at the same time every day. After the 06:00 news there are sports, Pacific, rural and Maori news bulletins. After the 06:30 news there is a summary of local newspapers, an update of traffic and a bulletin of business news. After the 07:30 news there is another traffic update and a further summary of local newspapers. Before the 08:30 news there is a business news bulletin. In the final fifteen minutes of the programme before 09.00 there is a further Maori news bulletin.

For the rest of the programme co-hosts Geoff Robinson and Simon Mercep interview news-makers and journalists, and introduce reports from the programme's correspondents and Radio New Zealand's reporters. The programme has a network of overseas correspondents and contacts, partly through Radio New Zealand's affiliation to the BBC and the ABC. It also has access to Radio New Zealand News reporters, specialist correspondents and a team in the Parliamentary press gallery.[1]

This programme broadcasts for eleven months of every year; Summer Report (07:00 to 9:00 summer weekday mornings) is its summer holiday replacement.

A feature of morning report are the 'bird calls' which occur on the hour during the programme. These feature the distinctive calls of many of the native birds of New Zealand. An attempt was made in 2004? to remove this from the show by management, claiming that it was dated, but listener feedback was such that the bird call database was enhanced and revamped, and these seem set to continue well into the future.

Nine to Noon

Nine to Noon - Kathryn Ryan - 09:00-12:00

Nine to Noon is a three hour programme of interviews with newsmakers, reviewers, writers, artists, comedians, correspondents, experts, commentators and others. Interviews are intermingled with short pieces of music and a daily book reading. The programme is currently hosted by Kathryn Ryan.

A five minute Radio New Zealand News bulletin, thirty second Radio New Zealand promo and thirty second MetService update begin each hour of the programme. Unlike other Radio New Zealand current affairs programmes like Morning Report and Checkpoint, however, there are no news updates at half past the hour. After a brief summary of what is still to come on the programme and a brief piece of music, the first feature of each hour usually begins at about eight past the hour.

Between approximately 09:08 and 09:45 each day Ryan will cover three leading news stories, interviewing newsmakers, journalists, experts and commentators. Government ministers are often among the guests. This news segment runs on from Morning Report, but covers longer-term social issues rather than daily current events. Items of music are often used to break up stories.

At 09:45 around Ryan will play a further piece of music before taking a live cross to a foreign correspondent who will provide freelance commentary on regional issues in their part of the world. Similar segments have subsequently featured on Morning Report, Newstalk ZB, Radio Live, and New Zealand's Rhema. Europe correspondent Seamus Kearney or Middle East correspondent Irris Makler feature on Mondays, United States correspondents Jack Hitt or Richard Adams appear on Tuesdays, Australia correspondents Paul Barclay or Ray Moynihan are interviewed on Wednesdays, United Kingdom correspondents Matthew Parris, Jon Dennis, Kate Adie or Michael White may be Thursday and Pacific Islands correspondent Mike Field or Asia correspondent Phil O'Sullivan will finish the hour on Friday.

After the hourly news at approximately 10:08 Ryan will do her Feature Interview of the day. The programme website claims this twenty minute interview slot "profiles a wide range of interesting people who stimulate new ideas and debate". Many notable names have featured in this timeslot. For instance, former Prime Minister Helen Clark and former Green Party MP Sue Bradford both used this timeslot to do resignation interviews.

After the feature interview is finished and a further piece of music has been played, the remainder of the hour is dedicated to literature. Scheduled at 10:30, but often starting as late as 10:40, is an interview with a freelance book reviewer who will discuss a particular book, or a selection of particular kinds of books, until 10:45. In accordance with station tradition, a fifteen minute uninterrupted book reading, produced in-house by Radio New Zealand Drama, will be played between 10:45 and Radio New Zealand News at 11:00.

Between 11:08 and 11:25 Ryan reads listener feedback, and then starts a discussion on a given field. On Monday, a political discussion is held between right-wing commentator Matthew Hooton and leftist unionist Andrew Campbell. On Tuesdays Rod Oram discusses business issues for fifteen minutes; New Zealand Herald colleague Fran O'Sullivan appears in his absence. Marty Duda presents a music artist of the week on Wednesdays; on Thursdays, Nat Torkington, Steve McCabe and others present news from the world of technology; Manu Taylor introduces new music on Friday.

Between 11:25 and 11:45 a specialist guest is featured. On Mondays a guest chef will provide a recipe, and John Hawkesby will provide a wine match for the dish. This segments varies on other days of the week - currently a legal expert appears on Wednesday, psychologist and parenting expert Nigel Latta appears every second Thursday and journalist Joseph Ramanos discusses sport on Friday.

Ryan is joined by various commentators to round out the programme between 11:45 and 12:00 after previewing the next programme and playing a further piece of music. Tommy Honey or travel journalist Kennedy Warne appear Monday, Denis Welch critiques the media on Tuesday, Graeme Tuckett reviews films on Wednesday, Simon Wilson reviews television programmes on Thursday and on Friday comedian Te Radar and either Michele A'Court, Irene Pink, Gemma Gracewood, Jackie Brown, Elisabeth Easther or Pinky Agnew provide a comic review of the past week.[2]

Since January 2009, Nine to Noon has been replaced for a one month Christmas and summer break by Summer Noelle (10:00 - 12:00 summer weekdays), a similar format magazine programme presented by Noelle McCarthy. The programme includes interviews with newsmakers, reviewers, scientists, celebrity commentators, artists and actors, live in-studio performances by bands and artists, and musical selections from McCarthy and McKenzie. The timeslot previously featured The Best of Nine to Noon.

Midday Report

Midday Report - 12:00-13:00

Midday Report is produced by Radio New Zealand News. It begins with a fifteen minute comprehensive news bulletin with recent reports filed from RNZ, BBC and ABC correspondents. This is a generic news bulletin: the first six minutes is simulcast on Radio New Zealand Concert and there is no consistent presenter. This is followed by a variety of specialist bulletins, including a two minute long-range weather forecast from MetService, a ten minute business news bulletin, a three minute sports bulletin, an eight minute rural news bulletin and a sixteen minute World Watch world news bulletin.

On public holidays and summer holidays, the programme airs between 12:00 and 12:30, including the 12:00 news plus sport and World Watch.

Afternoons

Afternoons - Jim Mora - 13:00-17:00

Afternoons is a magazine-style programme produced by Meredith McGrath, Jimmy Stewart and Chris Reid. Noelle McCarthy, Wayne Mowat, Paul Brennan, and Chris Whitta are substitute hosts. Produced and presented from Radio New Zealand's Hobson Street studios in Auckland, the programme includes a wide variety of music, special interest and Maori language features, a mixture of serious and light-hearted current affairs interviews, a strong component of viewer feedback and an hour-long celebrity panel discussion of news between 16:00 and 17:00.

Mora and the production crew have developed a number of regular weekly and daily features. Since 2008 Mora has asked viewers to vote on The Best Song Ever Written, and he plays a different response at the start of every show. From Monday to Thursday the first hour is a music and history programme called Reeling in the Years. On Friday between 13:00 and 14:00 New Zealand musicians perform live in one of the Radio New Zealand studios on a show called New Zealand Live. Other features include science feature 8 Months to Mars, small town feature Your Call, New Zealand, and a daily science, environment and health slot at 15:45.[3]

Jim Mora was introduced to increase the ratings and broaden the appeal of the struggling afternoon slot. He was already well-known as a television presenter, voice-over announcer, journalist, television writer and former radio announcer, particularly for his role as host of Mucking In. His show replaced a collection of afternoon programmes, including magazine show In Touch with New Zealand with Wayne Mowat.[4] The 14:00 to 15:00 music component of that programme, Mowat's Music, now airs late on Saturday and Sunday nights. Mowat now works as a producer and presenter of music programmes on National and as a newsreader for Radio New Zealand News.[5]

On public holidays and over the one month Christmas and summer break, Kellee Howson, Phil O'Brien and Simon Morris present music variety programme Matinee Idle from the end of any 12:00 news programming through to the news at 17:00. The programme includes a large component of audience comments and recommendations, as well as a daily theme between 13:00 and 14:00.[6]

Checkpoint

Checkpoint - Mary Wilson - 17:00-19:00

Mary Wilson presents Radio New Zealand National's drive time news programme. It includes live interviews with newsmakers and correspondents on national and international news stories, as well as half-hourly news and weather updates and daily specialist segments. First broadcast in 1967, the programme is the longest-running news broadcast on radio or television in New Zealand.

The programme includes a six minute news and weather bulletin at 17:00 and 18:00, an approximately three minute business bulletin at around 17:22 and 18:22, a three minute news and weather bulletin at 17:30 and 18:30, an approximately three minute sports bulletin at around 17:33 and 18:33, and a two and a half minute Maori affairs bulletin, Waatea, at around 17:46 and 18:46. The first hour has a greater emphasis on domestic issues, the second hour has more of an international focus and the programme overall pays particular attention to political issues that have arisen during the day.[7]

World news reports and special pre-recorded programming replaces Checkpoint on public holidays and during three weeks of the summer holiday.

Nights

Nights - Bryan Crump - 19:00-24:00

Radio New Zealand National's weeknight evening programme focuses on ideas and music. In the first three hours interviews with guests and regular commentators are intermingled with pre-recorded specialty programmes from RNZ, the ABC in Australia and the BBC in the UK, music and hourly news bulletins. The fourth hour is dedicated to news coverage, and the fifth hour includes a half hour music programme and an additional feature.

Four regular features air most evenings on the programme. Mondays to Thursdays between 20:15 and 20:45, Windows of the World is a nightly timeslot for documentaries by public radio broadcasters from around the world. The second is the News at 10, a fifteen minute extended news bulletin starting at 22:00. This is followed by Late Edition between 22:15 and 22:45, a half hour of highlights from Radio New Zealand News current affairs programmes Morning Report, Nine to Noon and Checkpoint. Dateline Pacific, the daily Pacific Islands news programme from Radio New Zealand International, is broadcast between 22:45 and 23:00.

Monday's programme emphasises world affairs and sports news. The first hour features interviews with special guests and music. After Windows of the World, Crump holds a discussion on sports issues at 20:45, called The Final Whistle, with New Zealand sports journalists Joseph Romanos or Penny Miles, American journalist Helene Elliott or British journalist Richard Fleming. Radio New Zealand News current affairs programme Insight begins 21:06, and at 21:40 Crump is joined by one of the programme's international correspondents. These include Tara Fitzgerald from Mexico, Dorothy Wickham from Solomon Islands, Emma Moore from China, Mahtab Haider from Bangladesh, Andra Suciu from Romania, Daniel Kalinaki from Uganda, Steven Lang from South Africa and Ross Bragg from Canada. In the final hour, Beale St Caravan, a live blues concert, follows the news at 11:06pm.

Tuesday's programme has an academic slant. Tuesdays nights begin with half an hour of music and interviews followed by The Sampler, a new music review programme hosted by Nick Bollinger. After Windows on the World, Crump has a social sciences discussion with one of five specialists at 20:45. This may be philosophy with Ann Kerwin, political systems with Brian Roper (A Nation's Administration), religion with Paul Morris from Victoria University (Prayers), energy with Ralph Sims (Ignition) or economics with Neville Bennett (Dollars and Sense). At 21:06 the Tuesday Feature is a documentary, recorded panel discussion or recorded lecture series; this may be the same as the Sunday Feature at 16:06 the following Sunday. Charlie Gillett's World of Music from the BBC World Service airs at 23:06, followed by Bedtime Story.

An arts focus is evident throughout Wednesday's programme. Music and interviews air until At the Movies, a long-running film review programme hosted by Simon Morris, at 19:30. At 20:45, after Windows on the World, Crumnp hears jazz reviews from Fergus Barrowman (Offbeat), music history with Wayne Mowat (Hit Parade), arts news with Emma Bugden (Gallery), classical musical reviews with Kate Mead (The Podium) DVD reviews with Miles Buckingham (Small Screen Cinema) and poetry with Chris Price (A Leaf of Words). Theatre hour Curtain Call after 21:00 includes Garrison Keillor's Radio Show; the Jazz Hour after 23:00 includes Round Midnight, Jazz Footprint, and Jazz at Lincoln Centre.

Thursday evenings have a science theme. Music and interviews lead up the long-running Spectrum series, a documentary series about ordinary people in New Zealand. After Windows of the World, Crump dedicates the 20:45 to 21:00 timeslot to science. He speaks to Jean Fleming on human biology (Body Parts), Erick Brenstrem on world weather (Barometer), Alan Gilmore on astronomy (Starry Starry Night), Craig Stevens on oceanography (Salty Water), Hamish Campbell on geology (Hot Rocks) and Dennis McCaughan on mathematics (Primarily Numbers). At 21:06, Radio New Zealand's half-hour weekly science and environment programme, Our Changing World, is aired, followed by music and interviews until 22:00. The Music Mix, a programme about contemporary music, airs at 23:06.

Friday evening's programme has a more laid-back, music-centred style. Music leads up to 19:40 when a timeslot called Flash includes brief reports like NZ Society, music report The Vault and Asian Report. The second hour, Spotlight, includes music interviews and excerpts from recorded concerts. In the third hour Country Life, Radio New Zealand's weekly rural news and current affairs programme, premieres; it is rebroadcast at 07:06 on Saturday mornings. At 23:06 the programme's final hour of the week, Friday Finale, is dedicated to music performances and short music documentaries.[8]

On public holidays, during a four week Christmas and summer break, or on days when Crump is on leave, Chris Whitta or Warwick Burke present.

Overnights

The All Night Programme - Vicki McKay or Lloyd Scott - 00:00-06:00

Vicki McKay and Lloyd Scott present Radio New Zealand National's six hour overnight variety magazine, The All Night Programme, every morning from midnight. Each hour features a four minute bulletin from Radio New Zealand News and the latest weather forecast issued by MetService. The programme then features various pieces of music, specialist programmes and highlight interviews, and provides updates on sporting events and breaking news stories. Repeats of interviews and music from Kim Hill Saturday mornings and Chris Laidlaw Sunday mornings feature alongside repeats of segments of other programmes, and specialist programming from Radio New Zealand, the BBC World Service, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation and other programme producers.

The programme has a regular daily schedule. In the first half hour McKay or Scott reads the latest news update, previews the night ahead, and plays a selection of music in a timeslot called Music after Midnight. Specialist programmes air at 12:30: Discovery from the BBC World Service on Mondays, The Strand from the BBC World Service on Tuesdays, Insight from Radio New Zealand on Wednesdays, Spectrum from Radio New Zealand on Thursday, and Radio New Zealand disability affairs programme One in Five on Friday. Music and a specialist programme air after news at 01:00: Radio New Zealand's Te Ahi Kaa Mondays at 01:05, Radio New Zealand's Primary People Tuesdays at 01:15, BBC World Service timeslot From the World Wednesdays at 01:15, BBC World Service's Digital Planet Thursdays at 01:15, and Radio New Zealand programme Ideas Fridays at 01:05. Music and a specialist programme also air after news at 02:00, including BBC World Service's The Forum Wednesdays at 02:05, Radio New Zealand's Playing Favourites music segment Thursdays at 02:05 and The Sampler on Fridays at 02:05. A daily reading follows news at 03:00; these readings have previously aired at 10:45. A specialist programme or segment airs at 03:30: including a Radio New Zealand science timeslot on Mondays, Radio New Zealand's An Authors Views and Diversions on Tuesdays and Wednesdays respectively, BBC World Service programme The Strand on Thursdays, and Radio New Zealand Canterbury Tales on Fridays. BBC World Service's Global Business airs at 04:30. Radio New Zealand's He Rourou airs at 05:10 Mondays to Friday. Before 06:00 McKay or Scott is joined by the hosts of Morning Report for a preview, and then looks back at the day in history.

On Saturdays Music after Midnight is followed by Laugh Track comedy segment at 12:30, BBC World Service documentary timeslot From the World at 01:05, Waiata Maori Music at 02:35, a reading at 03:05, Radio New Zealand News This Week at 03:35, and Radio New Zealand News Asian Report at 05:35. on Sundays Music after Midnight precedes Radio New Zealand's Our Changing World at 01:05, Radio New Zealand's Touchstone at 02:06, Hymns with Maureen Garing at 02:30, a reading at 03:05, a New Zealand books timeslot at 03:30, BBC World Service's One Planet at 04:30, and Radio New Zealand News Auckland Stories at 05:45.

Saturdays

Saturdays - Kim Hill - 08:00-12:00

Saturdays on Radio New Zealand National begin with two pre-recorded programmes - children's story hour Storytime after the 06:00 news and rural news and current affairs programme Country Life after the 07:00 news. Storytime, produced by Radio New Zealand Drama, consists of excerpts from New Zealand children's fiction titles being read by New Zealand actors.[9] About fifty children's stores are read for the programme every year[10] by the likes of Robyn Malcolm and Lloyd Scott.[11] Country Life, presented by Susan Murray and Dempsey Woodley, with production assistance from Carol Stiles and Cosmo Kentish-Barnes, is Radio New Zealand's rural affairs programme. It combines coverage of stories covered in Midday Report Rural News with documentaries and reports.[12]

National's flagship weekend programme is magazine Saturday Morning, currently hosted by Kim Hill and produced by Mark Cubey. The show, previously hosted by Brian Edwards as Top of the Morning (1994–1999) and John Campbell as Saturday Morning (1999–2002), covers science, literature, music, current issues and other topics.[13] The programme is defined as "entertainment" by Radio New Zealand; it therefore has no relationship with Radio New Zealand News and has no obligation to be impartial.[14]

Between 12:00 and 14:00, Simon Morton presents and Richard Scott produces consumer programme This Way Up - a programme about "the things we use and consume". The programme covers how things are invented, designed, manufactured and consumed, with particular emphasis on technology and food production. A Funky Chicken Farm, a Backyard Bee Hive and a Veggie iPlot have been set up by Morton and Scott since the programme was started in 2006, and the programme regularly updates how each of these is going. Since 2009, television spin-off Use as Directed, also hosted by Simon Morton, has been broadcast on TVNZ6.[15]

Between 14:00 and 17:00, Kirsten Johnstone presents music programme Music 101. Emma Smith, Kirsten Johnstone and Liisa McMillan co-produce a programme about music and music events both in New Zealand and around the world. The programme includes interviews with contemporary musicians and people in the music industry, live sessions, recorded concerts and requests of commercial and non-commercial music alike. Trevor Reekie's behind-the-scenes show Access All Areas, and selections from Nick Bollinger's music review show The Sampler and contemporary music show The Music Mix are included; a half hour live recording, Musical Chairs musician profile or music documentary will air after 16:00. Music 101 draws its name from National being on a frequency of approximately 101FM in most markets. .[16]

Music 101 is followed by two hours of news programming and five hours of music programming evening Saturday evening. Political affairs programme Focus on Politics and Pacific Islands affairs programme Tangata o te Moana air after 17:00; Great Encounters provides a selection of the most popular interviews from the past week after 18:00, Peter Fry hosts music and comedy programme Saturday Night from 19:00 and Wayne Mowat presents music history programme Wayne's Music after 23:00.[17]

Sundays

Sundays - Chris Laidlaw - 08:00-12:00

Sundays, like Saturdays, begin with two hours of pre-recorded programming. Storytime's second weekly hour begins at 06:08 Sundays; Hymns and Weekend Worldwatch follow another news update at 07:04. Hymns is a twenty five minute compilation of hymns performed and recorded in New Zealand churches which is presented and produced by Maureen Garing. Weekend Worldwatch is a thirty minute programme of the latest news reports from Radio New Zealand News affiliates, primarily the Australian Broadcasting Corporation and British Broadcasting Corporation; it is the weekend edition of the Midday Report world news segment.[18]

From 08:00 to 12:00, Rhodes Scholar Chris Laidlaw presents and Christine Cessford produces an entertainment programme of interviews, regular features, documentaries and music, Sunday Mornings. In the first hour a repeat of Radio New Zealand News current affairs programme Insight is followed by the day's first feature interview. In the second hour media review programme MediaWatch is followed by a second feature interview. In the third hour Laidlaw is joined by the Sunday Group panel to discuss topical issues until 10:40; Trevor Reekie's short music programme Hidden Treasures and reading of listener feedback round out the hour. In the final hour the academic timeslot Ideas explores "a range of philosophical, social, historical or environmental ideas", taking the form of a studio discussion, a documentary presented and produced by Jeremy Rose and Chris Laidlaw, a broadcast of The Forum from BBC World Service, or a broadcast of another documentary.[19]

From 12:00 to 16:00, arts journalist Lyn Freeman and film and music reviewer Simon Morris present and produce The Arts on Sunday, with Christine Cessford as their roving reporter. After the half-hour Spectrum series has aired in its traditional 12:15 timeslot, the rest of the afternoon is dedicated to art, theatre, film, comedy, literature, dance, entertainment and music. An arts news summary and two interviews or reports precede a news update and Simon Morris' movie review programme At the Movies at 13:00. An additional three interviews or reports lead up to a news update and a half-hour interview with a comedian about their favourite comedy at 14:00. A further three interviews or reports fill out the end of the third hour until the 15:00 news and a Sunday Theatre feature.[20]

From 16:00 to 20:00, the 4 til 6 programming block includes a variety of specialist programming. After the 16:00 news, the Sunday Feature is an hour-long local or international documentary. Philosophy and spirituality programme Touchstone and Maori music programme Waiata follow the news at 17:00; Maori news programme Te Ahi Kaa follows the news at 18:00. The final hour includes disability affairs programme One in Five with Mike Gourley, and BBC World Service arts programme The Strand.[21]

Oral historian and archivist Jim Sullivan presents two hours of history and historic music between 20:00 and 22:00 each Sunday evening, called Sounds Historical. Sullivan plays material from the Radio New Zealand Sound Arhives, plays oral histories he has recorded in the past, interviews New Zealand historians about their research, and asks listeners to contribute their own memories.[22] At 22:00 the fifteen-minute News at Ten bulletin is followed by a repeat airing of MediaWatch from Laidlaw's Sunday morning programme and Wayne Mowat's music history programme, Wayne's Music, rounds off the evening from 22:50.[23]

Broadcasting

Radio New Zealand National's programming is distributed via several means.

Terrestrial AM

Area Transmitter Frequency (kHz)
Kaitaia Waipapakauri 837
Kaikohe Ohaeawai 981
Whangarei Otaika 837
Auckland Henderson 756
Hamilton Eureka 1143
Tauranga Paengaroa 819
Tokoroa Wiltsdown 729
Rotorua Tihiotonga 1188
Gisborne Wainui 1314
Hawke's Bay Opapa 630
New Plymouth Bell Block 918
Palmerston North Kairanga 1449
Masterton Waingawa 1071
Wanganui
Kapiti
Wellington
Blenheim
Titahi Bay 567
Nelson Stoke 1116
Westport Cape Foulwind 1458
Christchurch Gebbies Pass 675
Timaru Fairview 918
Queenstown Kelvin Heights 1134
Alexandra Alexandra 639
Dunedin Highcliff 810
Invercargill Dacre 720

[24]

FM Frequencies

Radio New Zealand National was the first station in New Zealand to incorporate the Radio Data System in its FM signal. Some FM stations are 101FM state-owned public service frequencies and some are owned by non-profit community organisations.

Radio New Zealand National still broadcasts its FM signal in mono, but the on-line service is available in stereo.

North Island

South Island

Other islands

Other broadcasting methods

References

  1. ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Programmes A-Z: Morning Report". 2008-01-01. http://www.freeviewnz.tv/site/news_article/media_works_announce_new_freeview_channel. Retrieved 2009-09-17. 
  2. ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Nine to Noon". 2008-01-01. http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/ninetonoon/about. Retrieved 2009-09-17. 
  3. ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Afternoons". 2008-01-01. http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/afternoons/about. Retrieved 2009-09-17. 
  4. ^ "New Zealand Listener Meets Jim Mora". 2008-01-01. http://www.listener.co.nz/issue/3406/features/4533/jim_mora,1.html;jsessionid=F0273E090142A3DD53DBFBF4A4186BE4. Retrieved 2009-09-17. 
  5. ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Wayne's Music". 2008-01-01. http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/waynesmusic. Retrieved 2009-09-17. 
  6. ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Matinee Idle". 2008-01-01. http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/matineeidle. Retrieved 2009-09-17. 
  7. ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Checkpoint". 2008-01-01. http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/checkpoint. Retrieved 2009-09-17. 
  8. ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Nights". 2008-01-01. http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/nights. Retrieved 2009-09-17. /about
  9. ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Storytime". 2008-01-01. http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/storytime. Retrieved 2009-09-17. 
  10. ^ "Radio New Zealand Drama". 2008-01-01. http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/drama/dramainfo. Retrieved 2009-09-17. 
  11. ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Storytime". 2008-01-01. http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/storytime. Retrieved 2009-09-17. 
  12. ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Country Life". 2008-01-01. http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/countrylife. Retrieved 2009-09-17. 
  13. ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Saturday". 2008-01-01. http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/saturday. Retrieved 2009-09-17. 
  14. ^ "Plunket argues Radio New Zealand discriminated against him". 2008-01-01. http://www.3news.co.nz/Plunket-argues-Radio-New-Zealand-discriminated-against-him/tabid/209/articleID/126025/Default.aspx. Retrieved 2009-09-17. 
  15. ^ "Radio New Zealand National: This Way Up". 2008-01-01. http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/thiswayup. Retrieved 2009-09-17. 
  16. ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Music 101". 2008-01-01. http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/music101. Retrieved 2009-09-17. 
  17. ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Schedule". 2008-01-01. http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/schedules/. Retrieved 2009-09-17. 
  18. ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Schedule". 2008-01-01. http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/schedules/. Retrieved 2009-09-17. 
  19. ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Sunday". 2008-01-01. http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/sunday. Retrieved 2009-09-17. 
  20. ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Arts on Sunday". 2008-01-01. http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/artsonsunday. Retrieved 2009-09-17. 
  21. ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Schedules". 2008-01-01. http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/schedules/. Retrieved 2009-09-17. 
  22. ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Sounds Historical". 2008-01-01. http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/soundshistorical. Retrieved 2009-09-17. 
  23. ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Schedule". 2008-01-01. http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/schedules/. Retrieved 2009-09-17. 
  24. ^ http://fmscan.org/net.php?r=m&m=s&itu=NZL&pxf=RNZ+National

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