8:15 Errol Morris: tabloids and truth
8:45 Yves Smith: the US economy
9:05 Frank Bowden: pathogens
9:40 Brad Argent: genealogy
10:05 Playing Favourites with Paul Wolffram
11:05 Fiona Campbell: art on the road
11:50 Chris Bourke: music history
Producer: Mark Cubey
Wellington engineer: Shaun Wilson
8:15 Errol Morris
American documentary filmmaker Errol Morris is noted for his use of monologue-style interviews, cinematic editing, and extensive use of re-enactments. His films, including The Thin Blue Line (1988), A Brief History of Time (1992), and The Fog of War (2003) delve into the subjective nature of truth. His new film, Tabloid, about a former Miss Wyoming who became a newspaper headline sensation in 1970s England, is screening at this year’s New Zealand International Film Festival (in Wellington, Dunedin, Christchurch and Hamilton). His new book, Believing Is Seeing: Observations on the Mysteries of Photography (The Penguin Press, ISBN: 9781594203015), will be published in September.
8:45 Yves Smith
Yves Smith is the editor of Naked Capitalism, which provides finance-related and economic news and analysis, and is the fourth most visited business and economics blog on the web, and the author of ECONned: How Unenlightened Self Interest Undermined Democracy and Corrupted Capitalism (Palgrave Macmillan, ISBN: 978-0230620513).
9:05 Frank Bowden
Frank Bowden is foundation Professor of Medicine at the Australian National University Medical School and director of the Canberra Sexual Health Centre. He is a specialist in the field of infectious disease, and the author of Gone Viral: the Germs That Share Our Lives (New South, ISBN: 978-1-742-23273-7)).
9:40 Brad Argent
Brad Argent is content director for Australia and New Zealand at Ancestry.com.au, which is part of a global network of websites offering members access to millions of searchable family history records.
10:05 Playing Favourites with Paul Wolffram
Paul Wolffram is an ethnomusicologist, photographer and film maker currently working at the Victoria University of Wellington Film Programme, and the director and producer for video production specialists Handmade Productions Aotearoa. His new documentary, Stori Tumbuna: Ancestors’ Tales, about the Lak people in the rainforest of Papua New Guinea, will have two screenings in Wellington at this year’s New Zealand International Film Festival (31 July, 3 August).
11:05 Fiona Campbell
Philanthropist Fiona Campbell worked for a number of dealer galleries before joining forces with Rob McLeod and Gerald Barnett to create the Real Art Roadshow, a touring contemporary New Zealand art collection that brings art to school students in geographically isolated or challenging locations. The concept and history is explained in Real Art Roadshow: the Book (Craig Potton, ISBN: 978-0-473-15294-9), featuring colour plates of each of the 126 works in the collection, plus over 15 essays and a foreword by art commentator and collector Hamish Keith.
11:50 Chris Bourke
Chris Bourke is the author of Blue Smoke: the Lost Dawn of Popular Music in New Zealand, 1918-1964 (Auckland University Press, ISBN: 978-1-86940-455-0), which won the General Non-Fiction award, Book of the Year award, and People’s Choice award, at the New Zealand Post Book Awards 2011.
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Saturday Morning repeats
On Saturday 30 July 2011 during Great Encounters between 6:06pm and 7:00pm on Radio New Zealand National, you can hear a repeat broadcast of Kim Hill’s interview from 23 July with travel and fiction writer Paul Theroux.
Preview: Saturday 6 August
Kim Hill’s guests will include Rebecca Cann, Luke Wood, and the Yeastie Boys.