The Detail

Join The Detail team six days a week as they make sense of the big stories with the country’s best journalists and experts.

A Newsroom production for RNZ, supported by NZ On Air

On air:

Monday - Saturday at 4.30am, encore on weeknights at 10.15pm on RNZ National

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Kiwi grit on ice

Skins, snow and scrutiny: How the 2026 Winter Olympics is unfolding for our athletes 
Zoi Sadowski-Synnott of New Zealand competes in the Women’s Snowboard Big Air on day two of the X Games Aspen 2026.

'A warning shot' on the east coast

Weeks after the January floods wreaked havoc on the east coast, The Detail visits two towns to see how locals are holding up - and what the future holds
Tani Atkins-Waitoa and her crew deliver lunches to the workers around Te Araroa.

Our place in the world

Where does New Zealand sit in a new world order that ditches traditional international rules and favours the mighty over the tiny? 
US President Donald Trump reacts at the "Board of Peace" meeting during the World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting in Davos on January 22, 2026. US President Donald Trump will show off his new "Board of Peace" at Davos on January 22, 2026 burnishing his claim to be a peacemaker a day after backing off his own threats against Greenland. Originally meant to oversee the rebuilding of Gaza after the war between Hamas and Israel, the board's charter does not limit its role to the Strip, and has sparked concerns that Trump wants it to rival the United Nations. (Photo by Mandel NGAN / AFP)

Pharmacist fears for "the last bastion" of communities

As more and more discount chain pharmacies open, locally owned and operated chemists worry their customers won't get the high level of care that saves trips to GPs, and EDs
Pakuranga pharmacist Vicky Chan says government funding has not kept pace with other costs and she has to work harder to keep her business viable by offering extra government-funded services such as sleep clinics. Photo: Sharon Brettkelly

Election 2026 - the policies, the politics, the peculiarities

Once the election date is announced, politics can disintegrate into a toxic mess. Don't expect this year to be any different.
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Finance Minister Nicola Willis speak to media following Luxon's State of the Nation address in Auckland.

The treasure's in the tales

The real treasure hidden in the wrecks of some 2500 ships buried along New Zealand's coasts isn't jewels or gold bars - but the stories of the people who were on board
The S.S.Tasmania hit a rock off Table Cape, Mahia Peninsula in 1897.

A Kiwi on Ukraine's frontline

New Zealander Khol Gillies was fighting in Ukraine when he was badly injured, and he spent days in a bunker waiting to be evacuated
A soldier from a Ukrainian 2S22 Bohdana 155 mm self-propelled howitzer crew of the Striletskyi special forces police battalion of the National Police in the Zaporizhzhia region walks along a trench at a position in the Pokrovsky direction, Donetsk region, Ukraine, on January 23, 2026. (Photo by Dmytro Smolienko/Ukrinform/NurPhoto) NO USE RUSSIA. NO USE BELARUS. (Photo by Dmytro Smolienko / NurPhoto via AFP)

Playing Tetris with an ever-growing prison population 

The record number of prisoners are bouncing between facilities around the country, stretching court resources and rehabilitation programmes
Mt Eden Prison

Slash, storms and the fight over responsibility

Extreme weather may be the trigger for deadly and devastating slash, but the lines on who is responsible for prevention and clean-up are blurred
Flood damage in Punaruku, Te Araroa on the East Coast.

Changing our disaster focus

The floods keep coming, and we keep rebuilding. Is there a better way to cope with increasing numbers of infrastructure-wrecking storms?
The Gisborne District Council says flooding and slips have severely impacted Onepoto, Wharekahika and Te Araroa.

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