Mediawatch

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.

Hosted and produced by Colin Peacock and Hayden Donnell

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All episodes:

Midweek - Stuff's C-bomb rocks the House, NZME truce, social media ban boosted

Midweek - Sunday Star Times C-bomb dropped on ministers rocks the House, and the issue that sparked it - gender pay equity. Also - the government's move to ban social media for under-16s got big backing this week - and the possible truce in the NZME boardroom battle.
New episode
The column last Sunday that caused a storm in the House - eventually.

Sudden surge of concern about social media, NZME compromise, sport on screen

An entire generation's grown up with little regulation of their digital world. But this week there was a sudden surge of political concern about social media for teens. Also: NZ Rugby’s in the red even though its income from TV's topped $100m. But netball’s got no broadcaster beyond this year for its top comp. Is it a warning for sports that need TV money to pay players?
The PM and National MP Catherine Wedd on TikTok announcing her Members Bill to restrict use of social media platforms to people over 16.

Midweek - Compromise at NZME, politics podcast self-destructs, email scoop angst

A new compromise candidate emerges to lead NZME - along with some undisclosed outsourcing. Also: 1News scoop about Erica Stanford's emails draws fire from talk radio, a politics podcast podcast's sudden self-destruction - and NZ climbs media freedom ladder by default.
Steven Joyce

Bootcamp calls based on bad stats, election assumptions, NZME boardroom battle update

Media assumptions about election outcomes were upended in Canberra and Canada this week - and guessing the result of upcoming ones in Wellington and the Vatican suddenly seem risky. Is picking political winners now a fool’s game? Also: cranky calls for military service based on bad stats - and the latest on that bitter boardroom battle at NZME.
Supporters for Canada's Prime Minister and Liberal Party leader Mark Carney celebrate as results are announced during an election party in Ottawa.

Doco lifts the lid on Destiny, Pope farewelled, US media party falls flat

A controversial documentary series by TVNZ’s John Campbell - which didn’t quite kick off like it was meant to. Also: 'Peoples Pope' farewelled, US media's annual White House party fall flat.
John Campbell's new five-part documentary on Destiny Church.

The health of health reporting; Peters' RNZ 'threat,' media freedom’s dark day

The health sector throws up stories of serious crisis almost daily, but journalists find hard data hard to get. Also: media freedom worries increasing around the world - and Winston Peters' 'threat' to RNZ.
Rachel Thomas leaves the job of health reporter at The Post pondering the problems of reporting the crisis-hit sector.

Midweek: surreal Pope coverage, spiky RNZ interview, identical eye-witnesses

Pope Francis's death prompts breaking news weirdness, Winston Peters butts heads with RNZ, identical Aussie twins go viral with synchronised eye-witness account, a Wellington councilor's on-the-record outburst - and a housing headline excluding renters
Pres. Trump acknowledges the death of Pope Francis with the First Lady and the Easter Bunny.

Jailed journo’s life on screen, Christian broadcaster beats the slump

Jailed journalist Peter Greste tells Mediawatch about the worst times in his life up on the big screen in 'The Correspondent.' Also - the country’s main Christian broadcaster Rhema is bucking the trend of media contraction - even though its target market's shrinking and appealing to a broad church is tough in these polarised times.
The Correspondent, starring Richard Roxborough as the jailed journalist Peter Greste.

Midweek: Polk folk, Facebook whistleblower faces US Senate, lobbying lid-lifting

Does TV doco Polk live up to the hype - or live down to the claims of tabloid clickbait? Also - further feedback on 'trust in news', new unofficial register lifts the lid on lobbying a little.
A big call from Three, the broadcasters of the three-part doco series 'Polk'

Trust in news slump stalls, Canada pushes back

Another year - another drop in trust in the news here, according to the biggest annual survey of it. But the slump seems to have stalled and some outlets have even gained trust this time round - though we’re still world leaders in ‘news avoidance.’ Mediawatch looks at all this - and talks to a Canadian confronting the same trends there.
The Otago Daily Times proudly proclaims its leading status in the AUT's annual Trust in News in Aoteroa New Zealand.

Midweek: MediaWorks bought up, Herald goes positive, Green MP speaks out, fake wolf news

An outdoor ad company buys the country's largest radio network, NZME launches a positive news campaign - and Hayden launches an unauthorised theme tune. Also -Green MP Benjamin Doyle speaks out about a toxic online campaign against them that garnered widespread media coverage - and dire fake news about wolves.
The Herald has put its positive news campaign 'On The Up' on the front page this week.

Duopoly apathy, ad income slump, local paper paper row

Just two companies have carved up most of our grocery bills for years. The government says change is coming - but many in the media don't seem to believe it;s possible. Also - our media’s slumping share of ad income, and local papers' paper dispute.
Nicola Willis' plan to get grocery prices down on the front page of the Herald.

Midweek: Green in the gun, NZME update, Stuff falls foul of BSA

Green MP's social media spark controversy - and claims the media ran shy of the story. Also: NZME's bitter battle for control rumbles on, and the broadcasting watchdog sanctions Stuff for a ThreeNews scoop that fell short on fairness, balance and accuracy.
Green MP Benjamin Doyle's social media posts lead the 6pm news last Monday.

Green shoots and dire data, NZME angst, easiest scoop ever

Are media confusing us with claims of green shoots in the economy at the same time as headlining more dire data? Also: the epic security fail at the top of the Trump regime that gave a journalist the easiest scoop he'll ever get - and the battle for control of NZME ramps up with a flurry of letters.
Liam Dann asks the question in the Herald on Sunday last weekend.

Midweek: NZME board battle goes postal

Billionaire Jim Grenon's letter-writing spree as he tries to take control of NZME's board & a click-driven incentive scheme at the company. Also - more journalists are killed in Gaza & an Oscar-winning filmmaker assaulted; Stuff quietly drops a disclosure commitment from its AI policy.
The Weekend Herald reports the power play prompted by a billionaire investor.

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