

Mediawatch
RNZ
There's never a shortage of opinions on the media but Mediawatch looks at it all in detail for those keen to know more about the news - as well as those who work in media.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Dec 9, 2023 • 37min
Mediawatch for 10 December 2023
Parliamentary pomp and ceremony - but no honeymoon; 'From Paper to Platform'- media's online dependence; Todd Niall - local matters really matter
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details

Dec 9, 2023 • 21min
Todd Niall - local matters really matter
'Look ahead, not back' - the last words of Todd Niall after 46 years in daily journalism. The last of these were spent reporting the complicated and highly-contested issues afflicting Auckland and its supercity council. Unlike his other passion - yacht racing - that's not glamorous, but Todd tells Mediawatch local matters really do matter for every citizen. 'Look ahead, not back' - the final words of Todd Niall after 46 years in daily journalism, the last of which were spent reporting the complicated and highly-contested issues afflicting Auckland and its supercity council. Unlike his other passion - yacht racing - that's not glamorous, but Todd tells Mediawatch local matters really do matter for every citizen. Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details

Dec 6, 2023 • 29min
Midweek Mediawatch ‘Kin oath’ - new Parliament sworn in
Midweek Mediawatch - Mediawatch's weekly catch-up with Nights. Colin Peacock talked to Mark Leishman about the new government getting underway with plenty of ceremony, lots of protest - but no honeymoon. Also: Sky puts prices up; The Project comes to an end - and are letters to the editor on the way out?Midweek Mediawatch - Mediawatch's weekly catch-up with Nights. Colin Peacock talked to Mark Leishman about the new government getting underway with plenty of ceremony, lots of protest - but no honeymoon. Also: Sky puts prices up, The Project comes to an end - and are letters to the editor on the way out? Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details

Dec 2, 2023 • 17min
Mayor under pressure after rumour-based reports
Wellington's mayor is under pressure after acknowledging an alcohol problem. Her admission was prompted by media questions about drunken 'antics' based in part on a reported recording which no media outlet has yet confirmed - and which was contradicted by the only eye-witness on the record. Wellington's mayor is under pressure after acknowledging an alcohol problem. Her admission was prompted by media questions about drunken 'antics' based in part on a reported recording which no media outlet has yet confirmed - and which was contradicted by the only eye-witness on the record. 'Who wields the power?' asks the front page of this weekend's edition of the Wellington paper The Post above its ranking of the 50 most powerful people in and around the capital. Coming in at number seven was the city's mayor Tory Whanau - though The Post said that her status was "in jeopardy" because she admitted to a drinking problem this week following what The Post described as "weeks of torrid rumours" about her behavior.Just two days earlier, her behaviour one recent night out led the paper's front page. That story said Whanau was "again forced to defend allegations of drunken behavior in public" after what The Post understood was an incident that took place at a central Wellington bar two weekends ago - and was "rumored to have been recorded by a third party." And rumour was a key part of the story. Those who read to the end of it were left wondering what had happened that day at the bar - and who knew about it and who might have recorded or even seen the evidence of it. In her statement, Whanau said it was to "her great embarrassment and shame" that an "incident ... seemed to have been recorded." But The Post said that the co-owner of Havana bar was "perplexed" because he was there, and the mayor and her friends "weren't intoxicated." The Post's story may not have been a surprise to those who heard RNZ National's Checkpoint the day before. "Whanau has admitted to more drunken antics in a central city Bar. She has confirmed to RNZ she has a drinking problem after multiple council sources, including supporters of the mayor, told RNZ about footage showing her in an intoxicated state," host Lisa Owen told listeners. Whanau's full statement doesn't acknowledge any drunken 'antics.' Checkpoint said several sources confirmed the mayor was at the Havana bar on that day with friends "having a rowdy time ... and this has apparently been captured on video." …Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details

Dec 2, 2023 • 18min
Claims of media 'bribery' derail new government on day one
It didn't take long for Winston Peters' news media grievances to make headlines - and headaches - for the new government. Mediawatch looks at how the media reacted to his claims of media 'bribery' - and what he was hinting at. It didn't take long for Winston Peters' news media grievances to make headlines - and headaches - for the new government. Mediawatch looks at how the media reacted to his claims of media 'bribery' - and what he was hinting at. Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details

Dec 2, 2023 • 42min
Mediawatch for 3 December 2023
Claims of media 'bribery' derail new government on day one; politics shows off air just as politics hots up; mayor under pressure after rumour-based reports.Mediawatch looks at how Winston Peters' grievances against the media made headlines this week - as soon as the new government took power. Also: reports that have put Wellington's mayor under pressure - and why are all the weekly TV politics shows going off the air now, just as the new government gets going. Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details

Nov 29, 2023 • 27min
Midweek Mediawatch: Winston's war
In this week's edition of Midweek Mediawatch, Hayden Donnell talks to Mark Leishman about Winston Peters' war with the media, a new streaming app for Three, and Kim Hill's farewell to RNZ.In this week's edition of Midweek Mediawatch, Hayden Donnell talks to Mark Leishman about Winston Peters' war with the media, a new streaming app for Three, and Kim Hill's farewell to RNZ.Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details

Nov 25, 2023 • 6min
Not the greatest story ever told
The three political coalition partners finally sealed the deal on Friday, bringing to an end more than 40 days of limbo - and Shane Jones' biblical quotes. Never has so much been said by so many political reporters with so little information for so long. It wasn't exactly season 4 of Borgen. The three political coalition partners finally sealed the deal on Friday, bringing to an end more than 40 days of limbo - and Shane Jones' biblical quotes. Never has so much been said by so many political reporters with so little information for so long. It wasn't exactly season 4 of Borgen. Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details

Nov 25, 2023 • 16min
Watchdog warns media laws need urgent upgrade
The chief of the country's most powerful media watchdog says we need new laws now to hold media to account in future. The outgoing government had a plan for one single body to oversee rules for all media, including the internet, but that slow-moving overhaul looks stalled. What does the Broadcasting Standards Authority want from our new rulers? The chief of the country's most powerful media watchdog says we need new laws now to hold media to account in future. The outgoing government had a plan for one single body to oversee rules for all media, including the internet, but that slow-moving overhaul looks stalled.What does the Broadcasting Standards Authority want from our new rulers? This week the Broadcasting Standards Authority (BSA) issued its latest batch of rulings for this year on formal complaints it received earlier in 2023. It's an interesting bunch. The Authority declined to determine one about Country Calendar depicting deer being hunted and shot and processed at an abattoir - just the reality of life in Aotearoa New Zealand, the Authority decided. It also declined to determine a complaint about undecided people being excluded from TVNZ's pre- election opinion polls - and one alleging a character described as "effing annoying" in a book review on RNZ's Nine to Noon breached standards for offensive and disturbing content. (To be clear, "effing annoying" is exactly what was said on air - not the f-word variant itself) But the Authority did uphold a complaint against Newstalk ZB host Mike Hosking, who told listeners during a teachers strike "people who go on strike have always been on full pay. They're supported by the unions'". Mike HoskingThat was "materially inaccurate" and misleading the Authority said - even though some listeners did get in touch afterwards who knew that wasn't right. A majority of the Authority also upheld, though only in part, a complaint about a discussion on TVNZ's Marae show about freedom of expression in the wake of provocateur Posie Parker's visit to New Zealand. Rainbow community activist Shaneel Lal had "strayed into the realm of personal attack," the BSA said - though not all its members considered it a breach of standards. The BSA also considered a complaint about Mediawatch which was a response to our analysis of another decision made by another media complaints body. The Media Council had found a Stuff news report about the safety of puberty blockers lacked balance. The BSA found the live Midweek Mediawatch discussion about that was sufficiently balanced and focused on the implications of the decision for journalists and it did not result in unfairness…Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details

Nov 25, 2023 • 14min
Music journalism all but vanishes from our media
This week the country's biggest arts funding agency published a plan to boost coverage of culture which has been dwindling in our media. Music reviews and writing used to be eagerly-read and hotly-contested in our papers and magazines. We ask a former entertainment editor where that went and what could bring it back.This week the country's biggest arts funding agency published a plan to boost coverage of culture which has been dwindling in our media.Music reviews and writing used to be eagerly read and hotly contested in our papers and magazines. We ask a former entertainment editor where that went and what could bring it back.Back in July, arts funding outfit Creative New Zealand inadvertently picked a pretty intense week to release a new survey called Visibility Matters - which showed media coverage of culture was dwindling.One day earlier the media published a flood of stories about the crimes of multi-millionaire arts patron Sir James Wallace - described by many in the media as a "worst kept secret" while his name was suppressed. But the Visibility Matters survey's finding that arts and culture got just half of the space in our media that is devoted to sport these days - that was not news to people in the arts. That report was prompted in part by longtime arts writer Mark Amery, now the co-host of RNZ's Culture 101, every Sunday at 1pm here on RNZ National. At the time he told Mediawatch one of the problems was that arts events with a PR push behind them did get coverage in advance - but critical analysis of them was harder to find. "Too much preview, not enough review" in other words. Creative New Zealand followed up Visibility Matters with another report this week - New Mirrors - all about ways to strengthen arts and culture media in Aotearoa New Zealand.It suggests setting up a new funding pool devoted specifically to culture reporting and establishing an agency modelled on the Science Media Centre, aimed at helping news outlets facilitate and organise their arts coverage. Chris Schulz, a former entertainment editor for The New Zealand Herald and Stuff, is relieved that others are jumping on the bandwagon he boarded some months ago.He's written several times about the dearth of music journalism in New Zealand on his Substack blog Boiler Room, noting that several major music festivals received no mainstream media coverage, and musicians are struggling to get more than a single interview after releasing albums.That marks a stark change from when he started in journalism…Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details