RNZ National
This article may rely excessively on sources too closely associated with the subject, potentially preventing the article from being verifiable and neutral. (September 2014) |
File:RNZN logo.png | |
Broadcast area | New Zealand |
---|---|
Frequency | |
Programming | |
Format | Varied |
Ownership | |
Owner | Radio New Zealand |
History | |
First air date | 1925 |
Links | |
Webcast | Live stream |
Website | Official website |
RNZ National or Radio New Zealand National (Māori: Te Reo Irirangi o Aotearoa National), known as National Radio until 2007, is a publicly funded non-commercial New Zealand English-language radio network operated by Radio New Zealand. It specialises in programmes dedicated to news, the arts, music, and New Zealand culture generally, including some material in the Māori language. Historically the programme was broadcast on the (AM) "YA" stations 1YA, 2YA, 3YA and 4YA in the main centres.
In 2013, RNZ National had a 10.3 per cent market share, the highest nationwide and up from 9.1 per cent in 2009. Market share peaked at 11.1 per cent in 2011, probably due to Christchurch earthquake coverage. 493,000 people listen to RNZ National over the course of a week – the second-largest cumulative audience.[1]
Programming
National's weekday output between 06:00 and midnight is characterized by the alternation of three extended news and current-affairs sequences, running for between one and three hours each, with three varied-content magazine-style programmes, each of which lasts for three to five hours. News updates are read live-to-air every hour, and by a continuity announcer outside these times. Polling by Radio New Zealand suggests Morning Report, Nine to Noon, The Panel, Checkpoint, Nights, Saturday Morning and Sunday Morning have larger audiences than any other programme in their timeslot.[2]
Morning Report
Morning Report (Te Pūrongo o te Ata) is RNZ National's long-running flagship breakfast programme. It has aired in the 06:00 to 09:00 weekday timeslot consistently since its premiere in April 1975, and has broadcast longer programmes following major events like the September 11 attacks. The programme consists of half-hourly news and weather updates, quarter-hourly headlines, interviews, voice reports and specialist bulletins. It has an estimated 349,000 listeners.[3] The programme broadcasts for eleven months of every year; Summer Report airs with a similar format during late December and early January.
Sports, Pacific, rural and Māori news bulletin air in the programme's further half-hour. Local newspaper headlines, traffic updates and business news air after 6.30, and more traffic updates and newspaper headlines air after 7.30. Additional business and Māori news air the programme's final hour. Co-hosts Guyon Espiner and Susie Fergusson interview news-makers, correspondents and reporters, and introduce voice reports from local staff, the BBC, the ABC and other international affiliates.[4] The station's famous "bird calls" of distinctive native New Zealand birds end the show at 09.00.
Nine to Noon
Nine to Noon is a three-hour programme of interviews with newsmakers, reviewers, writers, artists, comedians, correspondents, experts, commentators and others. The programme is currently hosted by Kathryn Ryan. The first hour of the programme features three long-form current affairs interviews, music and a foreign correspondent. The second hour includes a feature-length interview, a freelance book reviewer and a book reading. Prime Minister Helen Clark and former Green Party MP Sue Bradford announced their resignation on the programme. The final hour includes a panel discussion, topical expert and a reviewer. Regular contributors include John Hawkesby, Nigel Latta, Joseph Ramanos, Rod Oram, Simon Wilson, Te Radar and Michele A'Court.[5]
Since January 2009, Nine to Noon has been replaced for a one-month Christmas and summer break by Summer Noelle (10:00 - 12:00 summer weekdays), a similar format magazine programme presented by Noelle McCarthy up until 2011; but from 2011 she was replaced by fill-in host Lynn Freeman and new co-host Sonja Sly. The programme includes interviews with newsmakers, reviewers, scientists, celebrity commentators, artists and actors, live in-studio performances by bands and artists, and musical selections. The timeslot previously featured The Best of Nine to Noon.
Afternoons
Radio New Zealand's Midday Report is an hour-long series of bulletins. It includes a six-minute general news bulletin, nine-minute further news bulletin, two-minute long-range weather forecast, ten-minute business bulletin, three-minute sports bulletin, eight-minute rural bulletin and sixteen-minute world news bulletin. Local voice reports and reports from BBC, ABC and other international affiliates feature heavily. On public holidays and summer holidays, a half-hour programme includes news, weather and world news.
National's magazine-style afternoon programme is hosted by Jesse Milligan. Previous and substitute hosts have included Jim Mora, Noelle McCarthy, Finlay MacDonald, Paul Brennan, Chris Whitta and Simon Mercep. It is broadcast from Radio New Zealand's Auckland studios, and includes features like The Best Song Ever Written, Reeling in the Years, Your Call New Zealand, science interviews and a live performance segment called New Zealand Live.[6][7]
On public holidays and over the one-month Christmas and summer break, Kelle Howson, Phil O'Brien and Simon Morris present music variety programme Matinee Idle in the afternoon slot. It includes a large component of audience comments and recommendations, as well as a daily theme hour.[8] In Touch with New Zealand with Wayne Mowat previously aired in the afternoon slot. [9]
Checkpoint
John Campbell presents RNZ National's flagship drive time news programme, Checkpoint from Auckland's studios and it is also streamed live on Radio New Zealand's website. It includes live interviews with newsmakers and correspondents on national and international news stories, as well as half-hourly news and weather updates and daily specialist segments. First broadcast in 1967, the programme is the longest-running news broadcast on radio or television in New Zealand.
The programme includes six-minute news bulletins on the hour and six minute news and sports bulletins on the half hour. The first hour has a greater emphasis on domestic issues, the second hour has more of an international focus and the programme overall pays particular attention to political issues that have arisen during the day.[10] World news reports and special pre-recorded programming replaces Checkpoint on public holidays and during three weeks of the summer holiday.
Nights
RNZ National's weeknight evening programme focuses on ideas and music. In the first three hours interviews with guests and regular commentators are intermingled with pre-recorded specialty programmes from RNZ, the ABC in Australia and the BBC in the UK, music and hourly news bulletins. The fourth hour is dedicated to news coverage, and the fifth hour includes a half-hour music programme and an additional feature. Mondays to Thursdays between 20:15 and 20:45, Windows of the World is a nightly timeslot for documentaries by public radio broadcasters from around the world. The second is the News at 10, a fifteen-minute extended news bulletin starting at 22:00. This is followed by Late Edition between 22:15 and 22:45, a half-hour of highlights from RNZ News current affairs programmes Morning Report, Nine to Noon and Checkpoint. Dateline Pacific, the daily Pacific Islands news programme from Radio New Zealand International, is broadcast between 22:45 and 23:00.
Monday's programme emphasises world affairs and sports news. The first hour features interviews with special guests and music. After Windows of the World, Crump holds a discussion on sports issues at 20:45, called The Final Whistle, with New Zealand sports journalists Joseph Romanos or Penny Miles, American journalist Helene Elliott or British journalist Richard Fleming. RNZ News current affairs programme Insight begins 21:06, and at 21:40 Crump is joined by one of the programme's international correspondents. These include Tara Fitzgerald from Mexico, Dorothy Wickham from Solomon Islands, Emma Moore from China, Mahtab Haider from Bangladesh, Andra Suciu from Romania, Daniel Kalinaki from Uganda, Steven Lang from South Africa and Ross Bragg from Canada. In the final hour, Beale St Caravan, a live blues concert, follows the news at 11:06pm.
Tuesday's programme has an academic slant. Tuesdays nights begin with half an hour of music and interviews followed by The Sampler, a new music review programme hosted by Nick Bollinger. After Windows on the World, Crump has a social sciences discussion with one of five specialists at 20:45. This may be philosophy with Ann Kerwin, political systems with Brian Roper (A Nation's Administration), religion with Paul Morris from Victoria University (Prayers), energy with Ralph Sims (Ignition) or economics with Neville Bennett (Dollars and Sense). At 21:06 the Tuesday Feature is a documentary, recorded panel discussion or recorded lecture series; this may be the same as the Sunday Feature at 16:06 the following Sunday. Charlie Gillett's World of Music from the BBC World Service airs at 23:06, followed by Bedtime Story.
An arts focus is evident throughout Wednesday's programme. Music and interviews air until At the Movies, a long-running film review programme hosted by Simon Morris, at 19:30. At 20:45, after Windows on the World, Crumnp hears jazz reviews from Fergus Barrowman (Offbeat), music history with Wayne Mowat (Hit Parade), arts news with Emma Bugden (Gallery), classical musical reviews with Kate Mead (The Podium) DVD reviews with Miles Buckingham (Small Screen Cinema) and poetry with Chris Price (A Leaf of Words). Theatre hour Curtain Call after 21:00 includes Garrison Keillor's Radio Show; the Jazz Hour after 23:00 includes Round Midnight, Jazz Footprint, and Jazz at Lincoln Center.
Thursday evenings have a science theme. Music and interviews lead up the long-running Spectrum series, a documentary series about ordinary people in New Zealand. After Windows of the World, Crump dedicates the 20:45 to 21:00 timeslot to science. He speaks to Jean Fleming on human biology (Body Parts), Erick Brenstrem on world weather (Barometer), Alan Gilmore on astronomy (Starry Starry Night), Craig Stevens on oceanography (Salty Water), Hamish Campbell on geology (Hot Rocks) and Dennis McCaughan on mathematics (Primarily Numbers). At 21:06, Radio New Zealand's half-hour weekly science and environment programme, Our Changing World, is aired, followed by music and interviews until 22:00. The Music Mix, a programme about contemporary music, airs at 23:06.
Friday evening's programme has a more laid-back, music-centred style. Music leads up to 19:40 when a timeslot called Flash includes brief reports like NZ Society, music report The Vault and Asian Report. The second hour, Spotlight, includes music interviews and excerpts from recorded concerts. In the third hour Country Life, Radio New Zealand's weekly rural news and current affairs programme, premieres; it is rebroadcast at 07:06 on Saturday mornings. At 23:06 the programme's final hour of the week, Friday Finale, is dedicated to music performances and short music documentaries.[11]
On public holidays, during a four-week Christmas and summer break, or on days when Crump is on leave, Chris Whitta or Warwick Burke present.
Overnights
Vicki McKay and Lloyd Scott present RNZ National's six-hour overnight variety magazine, The All Night Programme, every morning from midnight. Each hour features a four-minute bulletin from Radio New Zealand News and the latest weather forecast issued by MetService. The timeslot includes repeats of Kim Hill and Wallace Chapman interviews, and Radio New Zealand programmes Insight, Spectrum, One in Five, Te Ahi Kaa, Waiata, Ideas, Playing Favourites, The Sampler and An Author's View. Other programmes are sourced from the BBC World Service, including Discovery, The Strand, Digital Planet, The Forum and World Business Report.
Saturdays
Saturdays on RNZ National begin with two pre-recorded programmes - children's story hour Storytime after the 06:00 news and rural news and current affairs programme Country Life after the 07:00 news. Storytime, produced by RNZ Drama, consists of excerpts from New Zealand children's fiction titles being read by New Zealand actors.[12] About fifty children's stores are read for the programme every year[13] by the likes of Robyn Malcolm and Lloyd Scott.[14] Country Life, presented by Susan Murray and Dempsey Woodley, with production assistance from Carol Stiles and Cosmo Kentish-Barnes, is Radio New Zealand's rural affairs programme. It combines coverage of stories covered in Midday Report Rural News with documentaries and reports.[15]
National's flagship weekend programme is magazine Saturday Morning, currently hosted by Kim Hill and produced by Mark Cubey. The show, previously hosted by Brian Edwards as Top of the Morning (1994–1999) and John Campbell as Saturday Morning (1999–2002), covers science, literature, music, current issues and other topics.[16] The programme is defined as "entertainment" by Radio New Zealand; it therefore has no relationship with RNZ News and has no obligation to be impartial.[17]
Between 12:00 and 14:00, Simon Morton presents and Richard Scott produces consumer programme This Way Up - a programme about "the things we use and consume". The programme covers how things are invented, designed, manufactured and consumed, with particular emphasis on technology and food production. A Funky Chicken Farm, a Backyard Bee Hive and a Veggie iPlot have been set up by Morton and Scott since the programme was started in 2006, and the programme regularly updates how each of these is going. Since 2009, television spin-off Use as Directed, also hosted by Simon Morton, has been broadcast on TVNZ6.[18]
Between 14:00 and 17:00, Emma Smith presents music programme Music 101. Emma Smith, Kirsten Johnstone and Sam Wicks co-produce a programme about music and music events both in New Zealand and around the world. The programme includes interviews with contemporary musicians and people in the music industry, live sessions, recorded concerts and requests of commercial and non-commercial music alike. Trevor Reekie's behind-the-scenes show Access All Areas, and selections from Nick Bollinger's music review show The Sampler and contemporary music show The Music Mix are included; a half-hour live recording or music documentary airs after 16:00. Music 101 draws its name from National being on a frequency of approximately 101FM in most markets. .[19]
Music 101 is followed by two hours of news programming and five hours of music programming evening Saturday evening. Political affairs programme Focus on Politics and Pacific Islands affairs programme Tangata o te Moana air after 17:00; Great Encounters provides a selection of the most popular interviews from the past week after 18:00, Phil O'Brien hosts music and comedy programme Saturday Night from 19:00 to 2400.[20]
Sundays
Sundays, like Saturdays, begin with two hours of pre-recorded programming. Storytime′s second weekly hour begins at 06:08 Sundays; Hymns and Weekend Worldwatch did follow another news update at 07:04. Hymns is a 25-minute compilation of hymns performed and recorded in New Zealand churches which is presented and produced by Mark Bushell. Maureen Garing, the previous host, died in 2011. From 30/03/2014 Hymns is going over to RNZ's sister station Concert at the later time of 7.30am.Weekend Worldwatch finished its run 23/03/2014
From 07:00 to 12:00, Wallace Chapman presents and Christine Cessford produces an entertainment programme of interviews, regular features, documentaries and music, Sunday Mornings. In the 8 to 9 hour a repeat of RNZ News current affairs programme Insight is followed by the day's first feature interview. In the 9 to 10 hour media review programme MediaWatch is followed by a second feature interview. In the third hour the Sunday Group panel to discuss topical issues until 10:40; Trevor Reekie's short music programme Hidden Treasures and reading of listener feedback round out the hour. In the final hour the academic timeslot Ideas explores "a range of philosophical, social, historical or environmental ideas", taking the form of a studio discussion, a documentary presented and produced by Jeremy Rose, a broadcast of The Forum from BBC World Service, or a broadcast of another documentary.[21]
From 12:00 to 16:00, arts journalist Lyn Freeman and film and music reviewer Simon Morris present and produce Standing Room Only (formerly the arts on Sunday), with Christine Cessford as their roving reporter. After the half-hour Spectrum series has aired in its traditional 12:15 timeslot, the rest of the afternoon is dedicated to art, theatre, film, comedy, literature, dance, entertainment and music. An arts news summary and two interviews or reports precede a news update and Simon Morris' movie review programme At the Movies at 13:00. An additional three interviews or reports lead up to a news update and a half-hour interview with a comedian about their favourite comedy at 14:00. A further three interviews or reports fill out the end of the third hour until the 15:00 news and a Sunday Theatre feature.[22]
From 16:00 to 20:00, the 4 til 6 programming block includes a variety of specialist programming. After the 16:00 news, the Sunday Feature is an hour-long local or international documentary. Philosophy and spirituality programme Touchstone and Maori music programme Waiata follow the news at 17:00; A weekly Māori magazine show Te Ahi Kaa follows the news at 18:00. The final hour includes disability affairs programme One in Five with Mike Gourley, and BBC World Service arts programme The Strand.[23]
Oral historian and archivist Jim Sullivan presents two hours of history and historic music between 20:00 and 22:00 each Sunday evening, called Sounds Historical. Sullivan plays material from Nga Taonga Sound & Vision (formerly Radio New Zealand Sound Archives), plays oral histories he has recorded in the past, interviews New Zealand historians about their research, and asks listeners to contribute their own memories.[24] At 22:00 the ten-minute News at Ten bulletin is followed by a repeat airing of MediaWatch from Sunday morning.[25]
Stations
RNZ National's programming is distributed via several means. RNZ National was the first network in New Zealand to incorporate the Radio Data System in its FM signal. Some FM stations are 101FM state-owned public service frequencies and some are owned by non-profit community organisations. Radio New Zealand National still broadcasts its FM signal in mono, but the on-line service is available in stereo.[26]
RNZ-owned frequencies
These are the RNZ-owned frequencies of RNZ National:
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Other broadcasting methods
These are the community-owned frequencies and other broadcasting methods of RNZ National:
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References
- ^ "Dominion Post, Retrieved March 29th 2014".
- ^ "Radio New Zealand tops Ratings for 2012". Radio New Zealand. Retrieved 27 April 2013.
- ^ "Radio New Zealand About Us". 28 November 2011.
- ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Programmes A-Z: Morning Report". 1 January 2008. Retrieved 17 September 2009.
- ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Nine to Noon". 1 January 2008. Retrieved 17 September 2009.
- ^ "New Zealand Listener Meets Jim Mora". 1 January 2008. Retrieved 17 September 2009.
- ^ "Jim Mora Screentalk". 15 July 2012. Retrieved 12 November 2014.
- ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Matinee Idle". 1 January 2008. Retrieved 17 September 2009.
- ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Wayne's Music". 1 January 2008. Retrieved 17 September 2009.
- ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Checkpoint". 1 January 2008. Retrieved 17 September 2009.
- ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Nights". 1 January 2008. Retrieved 17 September 2009./about
- ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Storytime". 1 January 2008. Retrieved 17 September 2009.
- ^ "Radio New Zealand Drama". 1 January 2008. Retrieved 17 September 2009.
- ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Storytime". 1 January 2008. Retrieved 17 September 2009.
- ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Country Life". 1 January 2008. Retrieved 17 September 2009.
- ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Saturday". 1 January 2008. Retrieved 17 September 2009.
- ^ "Plunket argues Radio New Zealand discriminated against him". 1 January 2008. Retrieved 17 September 2009.
- ^ "Radio New Zealand National: This Way Up". 1 January 2008. Retrieved 17 September 2009.
- ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Music 101". 1 January 2008. Retrieved 17 September 2009.
- ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Schedule". 1 January 2008. Retrieved 17 September 2009.
- ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Sunday". 1 January 2008. Retrieved 17 September 2009.
- ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Arts on Sunday". 1 January 2008. Retrieved 17 September 2009.
- ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Schedules". 1 January 2008. Retrieved 17 September 2009.
- ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Sounds Historical". 1 January 2008. Retrieved 17 September 2009.
- ^ "Radio New Zealand National: Schedule". 1 January 2008. Retrieved 17 September 2009.
- ^ http://fmscan.org/net.php?r=m&m=s&itu=NZL&pxf=RNZ+National
External links