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Audio on demand from selected shows

Latest bCasts

Stinky Grooves: Tuesday August 19, 2025

Stinky Grooves: Tuesday August 19, 2025 Stinky Grooves: Tuesday August 19, 2025, 245.04 MB
Tue 19 Aug 2025

Your weekly lazer pointer to lyrical largesse & melodic majesty

The One to Four with Gin: August 19, 2025

The One to Four with Gin: August 19, 2025 The One to Four with Gin: August 19, 2025, 229.65 MB
Tue 19 Aug 2025

Fighting the Winter blast with heaters from Simma, Giorgio Lopez & Stella, Rick Clarke feat. Jill Francis, Domino Slims, YAOB and Guinny to name just a few. 

Amendments to the Resources Management Act & the removal of reo Māori from the ‘Ready to Read’ phonic plus series w/ National Party MP Carl Bates: 19 August, 2025

Amendments to the Resources Management Act & the removal of reo Māori from the ‘Ready to Read’ phonic plus series w/ National Party MP Carl Bates: 19 August, 2025 Amendments to the Resources Management Act & the removal of reo Māori from the ‘Ready to Read’ phonic plus series w/ National Party MP Carl Bates: 19 August, 2025, 25.76 MB
Tue 19 Aug 2025

In recent weeks, the central government has pushed through numerous amendments to the Resource Management Act, in an effort to help streamline consent processes for corporations.

However, these changes— in particular ones surrounding freshwater planning and waterway pollution requirements — have been criticised especially by environmental advocates as disregarding the negative impacts to the environment and affording too much power to financial interests in the case of natural resource management.

As well, this past week Education Minister Erica Stanford announced a proposal to ban books with “too much” reo Māori in them from early learning materials in the ‘Ready to Read phonics scheme’. 

While she justifies the changes as being of genuine literary necessity for children’s learning, many have contended the changes as an act of racism against te reo Māori which asserts white supremacy in the education system.

Dear Science w/ Dr Cushla McGoverin: 19 August, 2025

Dear Science w/ Dr Cushla McGoverin: 19 August, 2025 Dear Science w/ Dr Cushla McGoverin: 19 August, 2025 , 40.1 MB
Tue 19 Aug 2025

For Dear Science this week, our expert, Dr Cushla McGoverin talks to us about Inca record keeping, the regeneration of snail eyes, and imaging embryo implantation.

Thanks Cushla for joining us, thank you MOTAT, and thank you science!

Dear Science w/ Dr Cushla McGoverin: 19 August, 2025

Dear Science w/ Dr Cushla McGoverin: 19 August, 2025 Dear Science w/ Dr Cushla McGoverin: 19 August, 2025 , 40.1 MB
Tue 19 Aug 2025

For Dear Science this week, our expert, Dr Cushla McGoverin talks to us about Inca record keeping, the regeneration of snail eyes, and imaging embryo implantation.

Thanks Cushla for joining us, thank you MOTAT, and thank you science!

95bFM Breakfast with Rosetta and Milly: Rātu August 19, 2025

95bFM Breakfast with Rosetta and Milly: Rātu August 19, 2025 95bFM Breakfast with Rosetta and Milly: Rātu August 19, 2025, 240.23 MB
Tue 19 Aug 2025

It's Rātu Brekkie! Today on the show: Isthmus'n That with Deputy Mayor Desley Simpson, a chat with the organisers of National Poetry Day, and Ready Steady Learn! Plus news, weather, surf, yarns, and plenty of gooood music. Whakarongo mai nei!

Ready Steady Learn w/ Chris Ogden: Rātu August 19, 2025

Ready Steady Learn w/ Chris Ogden: Rātu August 19, 2025 Ready Steady Learn w/ Chris Ogden: Rātu August 19, 2025, 125.36 MB
Tue 19 Aug 2025

Today on Ready Steady Learn, Associate Professor Chris Ogden speaks to Milly and Rosetta about his involvement in the Raising the Bar event in Auckland next Tuesday 26 August - which involves University of Auckland academics giving 20 talks in 10 central Auckland bars! His talk is on Global authoritarianism: how to spot it and how to stop it. Whakarongo mai nei!

Guest Interview w/ Phantom Billstickers National Poetry Day: Rātu August 19, 2025

Guest Interview w/ Phantom Billstickers National Poetry Day: Rātu August 19, 2025 Guest Interview w/ Phantom Billstickers National Poetry Day: Rātu August 19, 2025, 13.91 MB
Tue 19 Aug 2025

Friday August 22 is National Poetry Day, and to celebrate, Wordcore Wayfinders are producing Illuminated Horizons - a high-energy inter-arts event blending spoken word, music, movement, and projection. The event runs 22 August in West Auckland and includes 20+ artists across poetry, sound, and visual performance - and Christian Jensen, producer & Wordcore Wayfinders co-director is up in studio alongside performers Club Ruby, for a chat about the event! Whakarongo mai nei!

Chlöe Swarbrick banned from Parliament over Palestine speech and removing te reo Māori in children’s books w/ the ACT Party’s Simon Court: 18 August, 2025

Chlöe Swarbrick banned from Parliament over Palestine speech and removing te reo Māori in children’s books w/ the ACT Party’s Simon Court: 18 August, 2025 Chlöe Swarbrick banned from Parliament over Palestine speech and removing te reo Māori in children’s books w/ the ACT Party’s Simon Court: 18 August, 2025, 29.2 MB
Mon 18 Aug 2025

A couple of weeks ago in our weekly catch-up with the ACT Party’s Simon Court, we discussed multiple countries moving to formally recognise Palestinian Statehood, and what New Zealand’s plans were in this regard.

Last week, Foreign Minister, Winston Peters, said the country would carefully weigh its position over the next month in recognising the state of Palestine.

During a debate in Parliament, the government’s delay in recognising a Palestinian state, as opposed to other countries such as France, the UK, Canada, and Australia, led Green Party co-leader, Chlöe Swarbrick, to refer to the country as “outlier,” and called for the government MPs “with a spine” to “stand on the right side of history”. This led to her being ordered to leave Parliament by Speaker Gerry Brownlee, after refusing to apologise for her statement.

As well as this, last week, Education Minister, Erica Stanford, announced cancelling the early-reading book At the Marae from its Ready to Read Phonics Plus series. 

The government’s reasoning for this is through “mixed” evidence suggesting that learning both English and te reo Māori for young learners could confuse them.

The move has been widely criticised by linguists, academics, and educators, for being “an act of racism” and “white supremacy”.

For our weekly catch-up with the ACT Party’s Simon Court, Producer Castor spoke to Simon about both these topics, starting with recognising a Palestinian state.

Find out more about the Māori words which are a part of the official Oxford English Dictionary here