
Hosking hits back: Winston is 'grumpy and bored'
Newstalk ZB broadcaster hits back at claims he is a "National Party stooge".
Newstalk ZB broadcaster hits back at claims he is a "National Party stooge".
Hosking is a National Party stooge, writes Winston Peters. So much so, his show should be counted against National's electoral advertising.
Air New Zealand says its experience with Warner Bros and The Hobbit helped it secure rights to the Sony Pictures movie Men In Black for the airline's latest safety video.
Weaker circulation sales reflected stable subscription revenue offset by "continued pressure on retail sales".
The Smalley debate brings up the importance for diversity in media. But empathy for minorities is just as important, writes Lee Suckling.
How long before one super-agency promotes film and TV alike?, asks John Drinnan.
One lucky Kiwi managed to add a cool $2 billion to their fortune this year.
Hollywood is as eager as ever for Chinese money, courting investors, including state-owned enterprises.
She used to be naughty and not nice, but now the broadcaster is living a much more proper life ... although there is the matter of the stationery.
British publishing firm Pearson is considering a sale of the Financial Times.
Finance Minister says Chinese counterparts have expressed concern to him, saying debate on foreign buyers more "hard-edged" in NZ than in other countries.
Archive footage of the Queen and Queen Mother apparently raising a Nazi salute in 1933 may have been inadvertently given to documentary makers filming a royal family tribute.
Surely it's the right of every celeb parent to choose to keep their babies out of the public domain, writes Kerre McIvor.
Woman's Day publishers have defended printing paparazzi photos of Dan Carter's 2-year-old son, saying the pictures were taken in a public place.
New TVNZ chairwoman Joan Withers describes TV One's rating success from 6pm to 7.30pm as "stunning".
The columnist and comedian will join Radio New Zealand. He's also worked as a food critic and Seven Sharp presenter.
The big winner at the PANZ Book Design Awards 2015 was Cardboard Cathedral by Andrew Barrie which won the best illustrated and best typography categories of the awards for designer Janson Chau and publisher Auckland University Press.
Dan and Honor Carter have called in lawyers after a women's magazine published paparazzi photos of their 2-year-old son.
The BBC does not use the word 'terrorists' to describe murdering Islamist fanatics
Joe Hockey has been awarded $200,000 in damages after it was ruled a poster and two Twitter messages defamed him.
Sean Plunket's comments describing Eleanor Catton as an "ungrateful hua" and a "traitor" were not in breach of broadcasting standards.
At an awards event, hosted by accounting firm EY, two of the Herald's reporters have been honored with top awards.
A parody of the Isis flag featuring sex toys in place of Arabic letters fooled CNN.
APN News & Media chief executive Michael Miller has resigned and has accepted the position of Executive Chairman of News Corp’s Australasian business.
The Spark-owned video-on-demand service Lightbox will be bidding for streaming rights for NRL games, forcing Sky to defend its stranglehold on mainstream TV sport.
One of country's most respected journalists and newsroom leaders take the reins of the weekday New Zealand Herald.
Former Seven Sharp presenter Jesse Mulligan has spoken out about his experience fronting the show, saying it was "hard to find a place to be useful".
Christopher Niesche writes: Nine chief executive David Gyngell said the profit downturn was a cyclical issue, "bump, not a hill". But is it?
Spark was this week given a lesson - if one were needed - that it is dangerous to mix with a toxic brand like the Whale Oil website, writes John Drinnan.