Crawley and Peter Lineham discuss Newsboys singer Michael Tait's fall from grace following accusations of sexual assault as well as the parallel industry of secular Christian music in the United States.
Recently, ACT Party Leader, David Seymour, announced the party’s position statement on climate, saying that if the Paris Agreement isn’t reformed, the country should leave the agreement.
The Paris Agreement, signed by New Zealand by the then National-led government in 2016, aims to keep the global average temperature rise to well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels, with an overall aim of keeping the temperature increase to 1.5°C. Currently, Aotearoa is one of 195 UN parties to adopt this framework.
If the country were to leave the Paris Agreement, the country would join the likes of the US, who signed an executive order to withdraw this year, and Iran, Libya, and Yemen, who have never formally joined the agreement.
For our weekly catchup with the ACT Party’s Simon Court, News and Editorial Director and Monday Wire Host Joel spoke to him about the Paris Agreement, and our future with this framework.
It's Monday Breakfast with Rosetta and Milly! On the show today: Fashun with Penelope Noir, Nate from Timeout is up for Loose Reads, and Jack Glacier chats about Flaura for Bosom Selecta. Whakarongo mai nei!
Today on Fashun, Pennie chats with Rosetta and Milly about Giorgio Armani, who sadly passed away last week and has left a huge legacy in the world on fashion. Whakarongo mai nei!
Sof speaks with Manchester-based artist Freak Slug ahead of her upcoming tour of Aotearoa and show at the Tuning Fork on 21 October. Whakarongo mai nei!
Jack Glacier is up in the studio for a kōrero with Rosetta and Milly about his show Flaura - which you can catch Saturdays 11pm-1am on the mighty b. Jack also shares a couple of epic new tracks from the Flaura compilation, set to drop on vinyl later this year. Whakarongo mai nei!
Recently, ACT Party Leader, David Seymour, announced the party’s position statement on climate, saying that if the Paris Agreement isn’t reformed, the country should leave the agreement.
The Paris Agreement, signed by New Zealand by the then National-led government in 2016, aims to keep the global average temperature rise to well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels, with an overall aim of keeping the temperature increase to 1.5°C. Currently, Aotearoa is one of 195 UN parties to adopt this framework.
If the country were to leave the Paris Agreement, the country would join the likes of the US, who signed an executive order to withdraw this year, and Iran, Libya, and Yemen, who have never formally joined the agreement.
For our weekly catchup with the ACT Party’s Simon Court, News and Editorial Director and Monday Wire Host Joel spoke to him about the Paris Agreement, and our future with this framework.
Last week, a study was published in the Sports Medicine Journal revealing that over an extended period, male high-level rugby players were more likely to develop Alzheimer’s disease or other neurodegenerative diseases than the general population.
This comes as increasing research and attention is being paid to head trauma, and the way it affects the individual long term.
Monday Wire Producer Alex spoke to Dr Stephanie D’Souza, co-author of the study and Senior lecturer at the University of Auckland, about the Study’s results, what they tell us about head and brain injuries, and what that means for New Zealand’s national sport.