This Saturday Morning, Karyn and Lucia talk Modernist Fiction on Lecture Me thanks to Blue Hills Books, and on Implausible Deniability the topic of the day is brain power, and Finn is back to help solve our problems on Dear Finn. Whakarongo mai nei. ~
Playlist
cumgirl8 – ahhhh!hhhh! (I don’t wanna go)
cumgirl8 – karma police
Stevie Wonder – Too High
Homebrew – 80 Down Scenic
Hayley Heynderickx – Foxglove
Andrew Bird, Madison Cunningham – Crying In The Night
Thandii – Are You Gonna Find It
Montell Fish – It’s Gonna Cost You
Alexandra Richards, JAIKO – Feel You
Sivle Talk – Bottom Feeder
Arthur Ahbez & The Flaming Ahbez – A Simple Medication
The Quarry Men – In Spite Of All The Danger (Anthology 1 Version)
The Beatles – Love Me Do
Tom Waits – Get behind The Mule – Spiritual
Goldie Boutilier – The Ways I Punish Myself
The Cure – Alone
Porridge Radio – A Hole In the Ground
Kris Kristofferson – Help Me Make It Through The Night
This week on Lecture Me, Bachelor of Arts student Lucia talks to Karyn about her lecture the Modernist turn in literature, how this changed fiction and Aotearoa's own preeminent modernist author Katherine Mansfield. Thanks to Blue Hills Books.
Stella demystifies the conception that us humans 'only use 10% of our brain power', tracks down the origin of this conception and talks sci-fi and eugenics experiments and theory of the early 20th century. Whakarongo mai nei.
Featuring a guest interview with Ladyhawke following the second lineup drop for The Others Way, Travelling Tunes with Dr Kirsten Zemke, and Breakfast Food with Lucinda Bennett!
Litia has returned from Fiji, and is back to tell us all about Nobody Wants This the new romcom series on Netflix starring Kristen Bell - it's juicy, silly and worth a binge!
Holy smokes! The second lineup drop for The Others Way is out of this world, listen back to Jonny chat to legend Ladyhawke about all the goodstuff lined up for this year's festival.
For Stage Direction this week, Alice Canton speaks to Ravi and Jayshri Ratnam about Tiffin Box on at Basement Theatre from the 8th-12th October. You can get tickets here.
Last Friday, the winner of the Walters Prize for 2024 was announced, as chosen by this year’s international judge Cameroonian Berlin-based Professor Bonaventure Soh Bejeng Ndikung.
The $50,000 Walters Prize - which is now awarded every three years - was decided this year between artists Owen Connors, Juliet Carpenter, Brett Graham and Ana Iti.
On Friday, artist Ana Iti (Te Rarawa) was announced as the winner for her sculpture and sound installation entitled ‘A resilient heart like the mānawa’, which is currently on display alongside the other candidate’s works at Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki.
Sofia caught up with Ana about celebrating the win, the creation process behind ‘A resilient heart like the mānawa’, and what’s next for her and her practic