Tuesday, June 02, 2015

Nine to Noon Scheduled interviews and reviews this week

Nine to Noon with Kathryn Ryan
Nine to Noon episode archive

Scheduled interviews and reviews

Tuesday 2 June


9-10am
  • Specialist orthodontists express concern about general dentists straying into their patch - is your family dentist qualified to fit braces?
  • Northland College in Kaikohe says 'ill equipped, unventilated, and unsafe'  buildings are still compromising students' education. This is despite an ERO report calling for urgent action three years ago. 
  • Education researcher, Keith Ikin on the importance of improving adult Maori literacy
  • US Correspondent Susan Milligan
10-11am
  • The Qatari plot to buy the FIFA world cup. Award winning investigative journalist Heidi Blake on her book The Ugly Game: The Qatari Plot to buy the World Cu. The book is based on a cache of hundreds of millions of documents from a FIFA whistleblower. They reveal that Mohamed bin Hammam, the Qatari member of the FIFA executive when the organisation choose Qatar, had paid bribes on an almost industrial scale to football officials round the world in the years leading up to the vote.
  • Book Review: Church of Marvels by Leslie Parry
  • Reading: A Surprising Thought One Morning a short story by Christopher Horan told by Jane Waddell
11-12am
  • Politics with Matthew Hooton and Matthew Hooton
  • Co-founder of meat substitute company Sunfed Meats Shama Lee - turning vegetable protein into "meat"
  • Media commentator Gavin Ellis on the big Fairfax restructuring and the resignation of music journalists from the NZ Listener.

Wednesday 3 June


9-10am
  • News and current affairs
  • The QE 2 Trust: Why are farmers and landowners,  including world famous ones, signing up in their droves to covenants with the QE 2 trust?
  • Australia correspondent Bernard Keane

10-11am
  • Game Developer and tech entrepeneur, Mark Major talks about his latest project to raise awareness of the plight of the Maui dolphin
  • Book Review: What She Left by T  R Richmond
  • Reading: Tale of a Redundant Miner a short story by Paul Maunder told by Patrick Evans
     
11-12pm
  • Marty Duda's musical artist of the week: Florence and the Machine
  • Legal commentator
  • Arts commentator, Courtney Johnston

Thursday 4 June


9-10am
  • News and current affairs
  • St David's church fights for its future, as are many around the country due to the cost of quake strengthening.
  • UK Correspondent Kate Adie
10-11am.
  • Dr Erin Griffey, the Head of Art History at The University of Auckland and curator of Rembrandt Remastered Exhibition. She is an international authority on seventeenth-century portraiture.
  • Book review: Early Warning by Jane Smiley
  • Reading: Reverse Living by Catherine Chidgey read by Miranda Manasiadis
11-12am
  • New Technology with Sarah Putt
  • Parenting: Sarb Johal on resisting pester power, and managing the consequences of saying NO to your kids.
  • Film reviewer, Dan Slevin

Friday 5 June


9-10am
  • News and Current Affairs
  • US Lawyer Bryan Stephenson, founder of the Equal Justice Initiative, pushing for fairer treatment for  minorities in the US justice system.
  • Woodville picture framer Kevin McIntyre on his gallery celebrating the work of former local resident born Gottfried Lindauer.
  • Pacific Correspondent, Mike Field
10-11am.
  • New Zealand mountaineer Lydia Brady, the first woman to summit Mt Everest without oxygen.
  • Book Review: Children's books with John McIntyre.
  • Reading: Reverse Living by Catherine Chidgey read by Miranda Manasiadis
11-12am
  • New Music with Grant Smithies
  • Sports with Brendan Telfer.
  • The Week that Was - Radar and Gemma Gracewood.

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