
Mediawatch
RNZ New Zealand
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.
Location:
Wellington, New Zealand
Networks:
RNZ New Zealand
Description:
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.
Twitter:
@MediawatchNZ
Language:
English
Website:
http://www.radionz.co.nz/
Email:
mediawatch@radionz.co.nz
Episodes
Midweek - Shocker coppers, BBC bloodbath, Te Pāti Māori meltdown
11/12/2025
Two top BBC bosses quit in wake of Trump editing scandal, Police top brass blasted by damning IPCA report, Te Pāti Māori meltdown prompts more media criticism.
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
Duración:00:23:26
Saving the marriage between journalism and the people, Duke of Yuck
11/8/2025
Surveys say our trust in the news is slipping seriously, but the latest one asks Kiwis why and what might get it back, and an RNZ editor’s new book zeroes in on how to repair the relationship. Also: the downfall of the ‘Duke of Yuck’ yields unexpected local angle.
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
Duración:00:41:36
Midweek - Police v Stuff, Dame Noeline's media blitz, NBR bails up its own customers
11/5/2025
Police back away from taking Stuff to court - but issue a warning. Also: Dame Noeline Taurua blows the Silver Ferns saga open again with a media blitz on Monday, and NBR goes legal on its own subscribers.
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
Duración:00:22:28
OTT on CGT, punching below our weight on media freedom, big rejig in Māori news
11/1/2025
Labour bit the bullet on capital gains tax this week, but the political point-scoring was a zero-sum game. Also: a big rejig of Māori news & current affairs funding - and while our leaders have been on the world stage, we’ve been accused of punching below our weight on global media freedom.
Read more about this episode of Mediawatch on the RNZ website
In this episode:
00:45 The media have been telling us for years any political party offering a CGT is DOA at the polls. How did they react this week to Labour saying they’ll do that next year?
8:00: New Zealand’s leaders have been talking up our country in Asia and in northern Europe this week, but this week we were cellar dwellers in a new ranking of develeped nations supporting media freedom around the world. New Zealander Melanie Bunce, director of the Centre for Journalism and Democracy in London, explains why.
21:03 A big rejig of funding for Māori news and current affairs means less spent on the established TV news programmes and more on news from the regions and digital-first content, available via a new national news hub. Te Māngai Pāho’s The long-serving kaihautu Larry Parr explains the plan.
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
Duración:00:37:53
Midweek - severe storms test media, netball keeps media at bay, AI gives voice to the dead
10/29/2025
Severe storms bring the best out of media - but climate change mentions raise hackles. Also: netball's top-brass keep exasperated media out of their internal business - while the Silver Ferns do the business on the court, and RNZ's new podcast 'Nark' uses AI to give voice to the dead.
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
Duración:00:21:10
Hearts and minds battle on ‘mega-strike,’ Talley's v TVNZ in court
10/25/2025
Lawyers went toe-to-toe in court for weeks over a series of TVNZ news scoops about health and safety - and the broadcaster’s own newsgathering. What can we learn from this high-stakes defamation case? Also - the government fired up a confrontational PR campaign to tell the public this week’s ‘mega-strike’ was about politics, not pay. Did the media get the memo?
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
Duración:00:38:33
Midweek - loud calls to call off the broadcasting watchdog, sorry - but not sorry
10/22/2025
One complaint to the BSA has the PM claiming 'overreach' and his minister pledging reform - while politicians and lobby groups call for the watchdog to be put down. Paula Penfold ponders personal impact of reputation-ruining scoops.
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
Duración:00:19:16
Pāti-political rift plays out in media, what counts as broadcasting and who decides?
10/18/2025
The broadcasting watchdog has told alternative online outlet The Platform it can consider complaints about it - just like TV and radio. Part of the problem is out-of-date media laws. Mediawatch asks the media minister and his opposition counterpart: what counts as broadcasting these days? And how should it be accountable? Also: how Te Pāti Māori’s tensions played out very differently in different media.
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
Duración:00:42:03
Midweek - Gaza ceasefire, Platform v watchdog, Metro moves, self-selected polls
10/15/2025
Media coverage of the Gaza ceasefire, Platform's Plunket pushes back on broadcast watchdog, Metro magazine 'restructures' its full-time staff - and should self-selected polls be allowed in news?
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
Duración:00:21:11
Netball’s PR nightmare, online harm examined again
10/11/2025
Netball’s a national sport - and it's natural the media want to know if something’s going wrong at the top. But have media made the game’s current coaching drama worse- at the worst possible time? Also - what to do about online harm was aired in a Parliamentary inquiry this week. But was the purpose of this to prevent regulation that could make it safer?
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
Duración:00:39:44
Midweek - Winston's window stoush, Māori news funding, RNZ ins-and-outs, Graham Bell
10/8/2025
Row over Gaza protest targeting foreign minister's house gets political - and an actress is cut from an ad. Also: RNZ picks new audio chief as two stalwarts depart, Police Ten-7 star Graham Bell, quake clarification for Emile.
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
Duración:00:20:53
Seismic shift on quake-prone properties; ‘Not now’ on Palestinian statehood, current affairs catch-up
10/4/2025
The rules are changing for earthquake-prone buildings - and many in the media are praising the savings. But the devil is in the details. Also: how the media responded to our position on Palestinian statehood - and a year and a half after huge cuts to TV current affairs, what’s left - and what next?
SHOW NOTES
Read more about this episode of Mediawatch on the RNZ website
In this episode:
1:07 Owners, councils and the government all celebrated the savings from new rules on earthquake-prone buildings this week - along with many in the media.
16:09 How the media responded to the announcement at the UN of our position on Palestinian statehood - long after it was actually decided.
25:05 It’s been a year and a half since huge cuts were made to TV current affairs on local TV. Miriama Kamo and Mark Crysell of TVNZ’s now-defunct Sunday show about what happened after that, what’s left - and what’s next.
Learn more:
Guests: Mark Crysell, Miriama Kamo
If you have any thoughts for us - or ideas for us to follow up - get in touch. E-mail mediawatch@rnz.co.nz. You’ll also find us @MediawatchNZ on X.
Follow Mediawatch and listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or any podcast app to make sure you never miss an episode.
Find more RNZ Podcasts at the new section of the RNZ website at rnz.co.nz/podcasts
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
Duración:00:35:26
Midweek - Watchdog rules on coverage of teen tragedy, Black Fern feedback & US golf goofs
10/1/2025
The Media Council rules RNZ lacked balance reporting the tragic tale of a transgender teen. Also - RNZ cuts arts and culture programming on air, more blowback on Black Ferns coverage claims and US golf fans shame themselves on TV
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
Duración:00:22:14
Short-term focus on long-term problems; Trump vs media; tackling taboo topics without grievance
9/27/2025
Bad news about the economy piling up - and piling pressure on the politicians in charge of it. But are the media shining light in the right places? Also - Trump vs Kimmel and free speech, two stalwarts of TV current affairs promising to tackle taboo topics to increase the peace, not polarisation.
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
Duración:00:36:28
Midweek - Trump vs comedy & free speech, TVNZ & RNZ's trust, Black Ferns blowback
9/24/2025
Trump's aggression puts media on the back foot; good news for RNZ on public trust - and for TVNZ after a spot check for bias; blowback for the Black Ferns after lack of coverage claims; local current affairs and drama back on TV
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
Duración:00:20:53
News desert warning, pros & cons of property, Ferns falter, more Phillips fallout
9/20/2025
Hardly a news bulletin or newspaper goes by without stuff about houses and property. But what kind of coverage is it? And what effect does it have? Also - a former editor warns news deserts are creeping up on us, the Ferns falter - and media doing the right thing for the Phillips family. Social media? Not so much . . .
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
Duración:00:39:13
Midweek - Kirk's killing, rugby (over)reactions, more Phillips fallout
9/17/2025
Charlie Kirk's killing prompts strong reactions - even at this distance; 'historic' beating for All Blacks - and more muted coverage of winning Black Ferns; more media fallout from the sad Marokopa saga.
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
Duración:00:17:23
Fugitive family & public interest, Te Pāti Māori v MSM, AI news to save newsrooms?
9/13/2025
After fugitive father Tom Phillips' violent death, media made judgements about the public interest, the interests of the children - and what interested the public. Also: Te Pāti Māori seems to be disengaging from non-Maori media - and an ex-RNZer pioneering automated news to boost newsrooms.
SHOW NOTES
Read more about this episode of Mediawatch on the RNZ website
In this episode:
0:00: After the hunt for Tom Phillips came to a violent and deadly end this week, the media had to make quick judgments about what was in the public interest, the interests of the children and the public appetite for details.
0:00 Te Pāti Māori won the Tamaki Makarau by-election with a candidate who made a name for herself as a TV journalist, but has distanced itself from non-Māori media during and after the campaign. It's also criticised the conduct of unnamed reporters - and made claims of other bad behaviour, but failed to back it up.
0:00 AI doesn’t have a great reputation yet for getting it right, but ex-RNZer Peter Fowler who’s pioneering automated news powered by AI reckons it can be a force for good - or even survival in smaller New Zealand newsrooms.
Learn more:
Guests: Peter Fowler
If you have any thoughts for us - or ideas for us to follow up - get in touch. E-mail mediawatch@rnz.co.nz. You’ll also find us @MediawatchNZ on X.
Follow Mediawatch and listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or any podcast app to make sure you never miss an episode.
Find more RNZ Podcasts at the new section of the RNZ website at rnz.co.nz/podcasts
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
Duración:00:36:59
Midweek: Fugitive father saga ends, row over doco and access, left v right
9/10/2025
Media go big on the epic - but tragic - tale of fugitive father Tom Phillips; angst over over exclusive access for doco makers- and a columnist's criticism of Mediawatch.
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
Duración:00:15:17
Exaggerating Amazon, end of the ‘foreign ban,’ RNZ flags change in music and arts
9/6/2025
Amazon investing billions and creating hundreds of jobs in tech here made breathless headlines earlier this week. But it turned out to be old news - and less than previously announced. How did that happen? Also: how the media handled the end of the ban on foreigners buying flash homes here - and more changes at RNZ.
Read more about this episode of Mediawatch on the RNZ website
In this episode:
00:50 The PM and Amazon teamed up to announce billions of dollars invested and hundreds of jobs created here. Great news - but old news.
17:55 RNZ’s proposing changes to music, arts and culture coverage which would cut back production of some radio programmes - and close the youth-focused digital platform Tahi.
25:15 How the media handled the end of the ban on foreign buyers - or should that be overseas active investors? - picking up high end homes here
Learn more:
Guests: Peter Fowler
If you have any thoughts for us - or ideas for us to follow up - get in touch. E-mail mediawatch@rnz.co.nz. You’ll also find us @MediawatchNZ on X.
Follow Mediawatch and listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or any podcast app to make sure you never miss an episode.
Find more RNZ Podcasts at the new section of the RNZ website at rnz.co.nz/podcasts
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
Duración:00:30:36