
Listener’s Songs of the week: New tracks from Charli XCX, Lorde, Georgia Gets By and Katchafire
Have a listen to the songs that caught our ears this week.
Have a listen to the songs that caught our ears this week.
A leaner NZIFF programme still offers promising local debuts and art cinema classics.
Remembering the concert that jump-started the Friends star’s career.
The best on the box - and new shows worth a watch.
The Utu veteran comes full circle with the film Ka Whawahi Tonu.
Aussie star leads comedy inspired by US woman who started a brothel in Whangārei.
The further steps in the life of Riley are laugh-out-loud funny.
Everyday NZers will duck and dive their way through The Traitors NZ's second season.
Why I made: Performer Penny Ashton on a “rambunctious rewrite” of Sense and Sensibility.
The Taste of Things focuses on the simple pleasures to be gained from making good food.
With director Mike Jonathan, Russell Baillie looks at different aspects of the film.
Songs of the week: June 23rd
Upstairs, Downstairs introduced NZ viewers to a raunchy new style of period drama.
Music: Georgia Lines stands apart from those who release “a banger” or “summer anthem."
Glen Powell and Adria Arjona turn true-crime caper into a high-calibre romantic comedy.
Red, White and Brass joins some of our best films in getting a live adaptation.
Julianne Moore stars in one of two new 16th-century TV dramas that revel in rudeness.
After his 2019 controversy, a phone call from the director may no longer be so desirable.
Arooj Aftab is on a roll with a third album, while La Luz broaden their retro style.
House of the Dragon’s first season included its fair share of what made GoT a phenomenon.
The team behind NZ’s polite TV whodunit ponders the returning show's 10th anniversary.
The Promised Land is an epic tale of struggle and survival.
Beatlemania in NZ: Revisiting pop culture’s big bang, 60 years on.
The Beatles tour was a landmark in our cultural history, but it nearly didn't happen.
Have a listen to the songs that caught our ears this week.
Lyttelton songwriter Mel Parsons’ starts national tour in the cold climes of Gore.
"The 66-year-old eloquently addresses ageing in another of his ever-changing moods."
Doco about Women’s World Cup of 1971 is a tribute to its forgotten players.
There’s no need for owners to love or list their homes when Phil Spencer comes calling.
Have a listen to the songs that caught our ears this week.