π Hello beautiful humans, step inside as Eli hurls you into the genre washing machine for 3 hours. Thank you as always for checking in with the show. More indie/alternative flavours with a tendancy for the 2000-2015 period on this show, slightly less electronica.. for now. π A few technical hiccups and sloppyness, so thank you for bareing with that :) See you next week.
π Kia ora gorgeous humans. Step inside three hours of all the flavours, fast and slow, hard and soft, unplugged and very plugged - old, new, retro, cool, and everything in between. If you're wanting to get your feet tapping you can skip straight to the final hour. As always see you same time next week. Thank you for tuning in at anypoint during todays show, it was incredibly fun and thank you to those of you who called or texted in, really feeling the love on a of a dark day.
Also if you're wanting something to do tomorrow, myself and some other amazing bFM dj's are rolling out at shadows bar from 5-10pm tomorrow night (Friday 21st July, 2023)
π Thank you for tuning in wonderful humans, 3 hours of genre free tunes. We start off slow, have some time for reflection (for Matariki) ~1hr 40 minutes in and then put the foot on the gas for the final hour. See you all next week and have a beautiful Matariki, sending lots of love π
π A three hour trip around the genre mill. Quiet stuff, dubby stuff, faster stuff, sad stuff, happy stuff, Robert Pattinson.
Obtuse Tune of the Week: FKA Twigs - cellophane Live Before the Entertainment Guide: Joni Mitchell - Coyote (Live at Forum, Montreal, QC, Canada, 12/4/1975)
playlist is also available here for streaming on spotify. (But if you listen and like, please consider supporting on bandcamp / otherwise <3)
Milly takes you through a great three hours of radio, with Club Ruby making an appearance for Friday Live, brought to you by NZ ON Air Musicwith thanks to McLeod's Brewery. Whakarongo mai nei for good vibes all round!
Breast Cancer Foundation New Zealand has recently expressed concerns about the impact of COVID-19 lockdowns on breast cancer diagnoses.
Jessica Hopkins spoke to chief executive Ah-Leen Rayner, who says that there are at least 133 women who donβt know they have breast cancer right now because lockdowns prevented them from getting the mammogram that would have diagnosed them.
Cancer Control Agency Te Aho o Te Kahu released a report today aimed at measuring the gap that patients have been looking to close for years. The report found there were 18 cancer related medicines with significant benefits that New Zealanders did not have access to.
Joe spoke to the Chief Executive of the Breast Cancer Foundation, Ah-Leen Rayner, on the matter.