Navigation for Station navigation

Featured stories

Vincent Deary: Why rest is vital to beat burnout

18 May 2024

When recovering from burnout it's essential to prioritise rest. says clinical fatigue specialist Vincent Deary. Audio

Saturday 18 May 2024

Available Audio (8)

8:10 New Caledonia unrest explained

Police have used tear gas and stun grenades on rioters at an airport near Nouméa as the unrest and rioting in New Caledonia goes into its sixth day. Five people, including two police officers, have died and hundreds of people are injured amid clashes between authorities and pro-independence protesters. They were sparked by anger at a proposed new law that would allow French residents who have lived in New Caledonia for more than 10 years to vote - which some say will weaken the indigenous Kanak vote. Correspondent for Islands Business Magazine, Nic Maclennan, who has been covering this story for decades, explains the back-story.

French soldiers of the 8th Marine Infantry Regiment (8e RIMa) secure the Magenta airport in Noumea, France's Pacific territory of New Caledonia, on May 17, 2024. France deployed troops to New Caledonia's ports and international airport, banned TikTok and imposed a state of emergency on May 16 after three nights of clashes that have left four dead and hundreds wounded. Pro-independence, largely indigenous protests against a French plan to impose new voting rules on its Pacific archipelago have spiralled into the deadliest violence since the 1980s, with a police officer among several killed by gunfire. (Photo by Delphine Mayeur / AFP)

Photo: AFP/Delphine Mayeur

8.35 Jonathan Rauch: Allowing free speech

Jonathan Rauch

Jonathan Rauch Photo: Supplied

American author Jonathan Rauch argues free speech and robust criticism should be encouraged and defended, even when it's racist, sexist or causes hurt.  

A gay, Jewish writer and thinker Rauch admits free speech can do harm, but argues minorities are better off in a society where free speech is embraced.

Rauch has been visiting NZ at the invitation of the Free Speech Union discussing the necessity of academic freedom.

He's a senior fellow in the Governance Studies programme at the Brookings Institute, the author of eight books and many articles on public policy, culture, government, and LGBT rights. 

9.05 Connie Walker: Stolen, murdered and ignored, Indigenous women

Award-winning Canadian investigative journalist Connie Walker had been telling stories about missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls for years, and wondering why they received so little attention.

All this changed with her true-crime podcasts. Missing & Murdered and Stolen have been wildly popular, the latter winning a Pulitzer Prize and a Peabody Award.

But despite the prizes and the millions of followers, in a climate where profitability is prioritised over important journalism Stolen is being axed by Spotify beyond the current third series. 

Connie Walker

Connie Walker Photo: Jordana Bermudez

9.30 Vincent Deary: Why rest is vital to beat burnout

The incremental stresses of modern life can easily build, to kill joy, and tip us towards physical and psychological burnout.

It's tempting to "push on" but Prof Vincent Deary argues we need to accept our capacity to carry stress is finite and work harder at resting - a skill most of us need to consciously practice.

The professor of psychology at the UK's Northumbria University and clinical fatigue specialist's new book is How We Break: Navigating the Wear and Tear of Living. It's an exploration of our varying responses to the corrosive pressures of daily life, especially work, and an ode to the necessity of rest, recovery and the lost art of convalescence.

collage of Vincent Deary and the cover of his book "How we Break"

Prof Vincent Deary Photo: Jochen Braun

10:05 Joy Womack: the American ballerina who danced for Russia

American ballet dancer Joy Womack

American ballet dancer Joy Womack. Photo: Robert Paka

At just fifteen years old Joy Womack left her family home in Texas and travelled to Moscow to follow her dream of becoming a Prima Ballerina at the world-renowned Bolshoi Ballet Company. 

In the face of incredible challenges, she became the first American to graduate from the Bolshoi Ballet Academy's punishing training program with a red diploma, and the second American woman to sign a contract with the Bolshoi Ballet. 

Womack's captivating story has been made into a movie by the New Zealand filmmaking team of James Napier Robertson and Tom Hern. The biopic Joika, which is currently screening in NZ cinemas, stars actress and classically trained dancer Talia Ryder, and the real Womack served as choreographer and consultant. 

10.45 Singer Hollie Smith unveils her debut art exhibition

Many people will be familiar with the name Hollie Smith, she is one of the country's most successful music artists with three #1 debuting solo albums, and a slew of awards under her belt. But in recent years the singer has been pursuing another artistic endeavour.

Next month, Smith will be opening her debut exhibition entitled 'It's Not Music', a collection of oil paintings that present the human form at its most raw and vulnerable. Her paintings - which have never been seen outside the members of her family and friends - will be shown alongside some of photographic slides by her grandfather, a former president of the Dunedin Photography Exhibition.

'It's Not Music' is showing at Eyes On Fire Gallery in central Auckland from 6th till 27th June.

Hollie Smith in the studio with her artworks.

Hollie Smith in the studio with her artworks. Photo: Supplied

11:05 Playing Favourites with Dame Jane Campion

In 2022 Dame Jane Campion made history as the first woman to win Academy Awards for both directing and screenwriting. She was already household name here in Aotearoa, for her films The Piano and An Angel At My Table.

The 2022 Best Director Oscar for The Power of the Dog, which was filmed in Central Otago, added to her large collection of awards including a Palme d'Or, two BAFTAs, two Golden Globes and a Silver Lion award at the Venice International Film Festival.

Dame Jane joins Susie to talk about her life and career and share some of her favourite music.

She is appearing in-conversation with Emily Perkins at the Auckland Writers Festival on Sunday 19 May.

Jane Campion

Photo: supplied by Auckland Writers Festival

 

Books featured on this programme:

How We Break: Navigating the Wear and Tear of Living
By Vincent Deary
ISBN: 9780241008355
Published by Allen Lane

 

Playlist

Song: Korukutia//Bathe in the River
Artist: Hollie Smith with Don McGlashen
Time played: 11:45

Song:  Child Standing
Artist: Hollie Smith
Time played: 11:58

Jane Campion Playing Favourites:

Song: Must be talking to an Angel
Artist: Eurythmics
Time played: 11:18

Song: Weather With You
Artist: Crowded House
Time played: 11:25

Song: Dreams
Song: Fleetwood Mac    
Time played: 11:35

Song: Orawa
Artist: Richard Tognetti and Australian Chamber Orchestra playing Orawa by Wojceich Kilar .
Time played: 11:45

Song: Joga - Emotional Emergency (Top Of The Lake)
Artist: Georgi Kay
Time played: 11:57