Forest fire spreads to over 100 hectares in Whanganui

Source: Radio New Zealand

Fire and Emergency said the fire ripped through cutover pine forest across several gullies. RNZ / Alexander Robertson

A large fire in the Lismore Forest near Whanganui last night has spread to about 100 hectares.

Firefighters and helicopters will be back in full force on Monday morning, trying to contain a massive forestry blaze near Whanganui.

The fire in Lismore Forest began late on Sunday afternoon and spread to more than 100 hectares last night.

Fire and Emergency said it ripped through cutover pine forest across several gullies.

It said no homes in the area have been evacuated.

One crew has been patrolling through the night to put out spot fires.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Waving, tooting, flashing lights – what are modern road manners?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Being a good driver isn’t just about following the road rules, sometimes it’s the little things that count.

Polite gestures, like flashing your hazard lights when another driver lets you in, or a wave when they let you pass, are all part of road etiquette.

But with lives getting busier and roads more chaotic, is road etiquette dead in Aotearoa?

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Gates to be installed at popular Kai Iwi Lakes amid long-running tensions

Source: Radio New Zealand

Lake Taharoa is the Kaipara District’s most popular swimming and boating spot. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

An electronic gate is to be installed at one of Northland’s most popular – and ecologically precious – lakes in the hope of keeping out a hugely destructive aquatic pest.

The move comes amid long-running tension between groups who want Kai Iwi Lakes, about 35km north of Dargaville, permanently closed to power boats, and those who want continued access to a prime waterskiing and jetskiing destination.

Once the gate is operating, holiday makers will have to certify their boats have been cleaned before they can be launched in the near-pristine lake.

While the boat-access debate has been simmering for years, the stakes have risen sharply since the invasive freshwater gold clam arrived in New Zealand.

The clam is now found throughout the Waikato River and was last month discovered in Lake Rotomanu, near New Plymouth.

That lake is now being drained in a desperate bid to eradicate the fast-breeding pest and find out how far it has spread.

The intense blue of Lake Taharoa as seen from a campground hilltop. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

The gold clam, originally from Southeast Asia, has caused havoc with ecosystems and water infrastructure around the world and has never been successfully eradicated.

Last week’s unexpected vote by the Kaipara District Council to allow a boat-ramp gate at Lake Taharoa has been welcomed as a compromise offering at least some protection, especially after hours.

Lake Taharoa is the largest of the three Kai Iwi lakes and the only one where power boats are still permitted. It also has two council-owned campgrounds which can take a combined 500 guests.

It’s often described as “the jewel in the crown” of Northland’s summer tourism industry.

The boat ramp is monitored by biosecurity staff but only in the peak summer months from 8.30am to 4.30pm.

Northland Regional Council biosecurity manager Nicky Fitzgibbon said her organisation had wanted stronger measures to keep the gold clam out – but she was pleased the district council had acknowledged their concerns.

An electronic gate will be installed at the Lake Taharoa boat ramp later this summer. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

Once the gate was installed, boaties would have to complete an online cleaning checklist before they were given an access code.

Fitzgibbon said the gate, which would rely on self-certification, was not a “golden solution”.

It was, however, a way of encouraging people to do the right thing.

“It’s going to take a multitude of different actions. We really need our communities to get in behind us and look after the freshwater spaces they love. They need to make sure their gear, their boats, their life jackets are clean before they go to these places.”

Fitzgibbon said the gold clam was called an “ecosystem engineer” because of its ability to alter the habitat it lived in.

“They can have up to 400 babies a day so they’re highly reproductive. They basically smother everything and get into pipes and clog up infrastructure, so they become very expensive for people who have to clean them out. And they can out-compete our native biodiversity for food and space. They’re really, really tricky little creatures.”

Fitzgibbon said dune lakes like Kai Iwi Lakes were rare worldwide.

They were home to threatened species such as galaxiid fish and a plant so rare it had no common name – despite that, Trithuria inconspicua was still voted New Zealand’s Plant of the Year 2024.

If gold clams did spread to Kai Iwi Lakes, the result would be “devastating” for biodiversity, recreation and cultural values, she said.

Fitzgibbon said the focus had been on power boats because many came from outside the area and they were harder to clean, with ballast tanks and spaces that could trap water and carry young clams.

RNZ paid a visit to Lake Taharoa to gauge holidaymakers’ views on the gold clam threat, and find out what brought them to the area.

Lucy Thurston, from Sydney, said she chanced on the campground during a Northland road trip.

“From the second we got here we were all squealing in the car with excitement, just seeing the crystal blue water. It feels so magical out here,” she said.

Sixteen-year-old Alex Gamman, from the Bay of Plenty, said the lake was beautiful and she’d hate to see it disrupted by pests.

Sisters Alex, 16, and Jasmine Gamman, 18, enjoy a family holiday at Lake Taharoa. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

“I love the lake. Me and my family come here every year. It’s good to go swimming and spend some time away from devices and just get out and about.”

Howard and Anne Frost, from Te Awamutu, said they had spent six weeks camping at the lake every summer for more than a decade.

“We think it is a beautiful, beautiful part of New Zealand. Crystal-clear water, soft white sand, and a temperature that even I can swim in, occasionally,” Howard Frost said.

The couple said they brought a jetski and an inflatable kayak but those were only ever used in Lake Taharoa, so could not spread the gold clam.

Howard Frost said he would struggle to support a total ban on power boats.

Howard and Anne Frost, from Te Awamutu, have spent six weeks every summer at Kai Iwi Lakes for more than a decade. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

“If people could be honest and good [about cleaning their boats], it is a lovely place for recreational purposes like boating.”

Anne Frost said many visitors would stop coming to the lakes if power boats were banned.

“Most of the people coming into the campground have a boat or jetski. They’re not going to come if they can’t bring their boat. So how’s that going to affect the revenue for the council?”

However, Howard Frost said they supported measures to keep the clam out.

“I would give them 10 out of 10 for trying to stop it, and I believe they should. Whether it will eventually get in here or not I don’t know, but it’s better to have tried and failed than to have never tried at all.”

The original recommendation debated by Kaipara District councillors at last week’s meeting in Mangawhai would have refused the regional council’s request to install the gate.

The council, which owns the 540ha Taharoa Domain, has in the past resisted restrictions at Lake Taharoa.

The Ministry of Primary Industries, which has national responsibility for biosecurity, has been reluctant to get involved, citing fears of a boatie backlash.

However, district councillors instead voted unanimously to allow the gate to proceed – on the condition the regional council covered the costs of both installation and upkeep.

The regional council had already committed to paying for the gate, estimated to cost $40,000, but had proposed the district council pay for maintenance.

Nicky Fitzgibbon said the maintenance costs would pale compared to the economic impact of a gold clam infestation.

“We understand they don’t want to contribute to the cost, but for us, protecting our waterways has always been one of our core functions and priorities. The cost of this clam to our rural economy, our infrastructure and environment is really serious, and it’s not considered eradicable if it becomes established here.”

Te Kuihi kaumatua Ric Parore, a member of the Taharoa Domain Governance Committee, said his hapū had long wanted power boats banned from the lake.

As well as the biosecurity risk, the hapū also had concerns about petrol pollution, with the ban on refuelling jetskis or boats on the water sometimes ignored.

The spread of gold clams to Lake Rotomanu was “a very worrying sign”.

Parore said gold clams reproduced so rapidly they could smother everything.

A gold clam billboard on the way to Kai Iwi Lakes. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

“They just mount up. They can be six feet deep, 10 feet deep. Anything else that’s in there is history.”

Parore said regional council biosecurity staff did “a great job” over summer and said the gate could help when the boat ramp was unmanned.

However, it would still rely on trust, and some visitors could be reluctant to wait in a queue or fill out forms when they wanted to set up their tents and launch their boats – especially if they had a car full of tired kids.

“I think it’ll help but it still depends on people. If they want to cheat the system, they can.”

Local business owner Rodney Field has long opposed a power boat ban, saying it unfairly picked on one type of boat when any watercraft could spread the clams.

He even offered nearby land for a hot-water boat washing station – high temperatures are needed to kill gold clam larvae – and campaigned on the issue in this year’s council elections.

Field was acutely aware of the threat posed by gold clams, having seen the effects first-hand in Lakes Tahoe and Powell in the USA.

He supported the gate because it reduced the problem of people arriving after-hours or outside the peak summer months, when there was no one present to check boats had been washed prior to launching.

However, the gate would rely on self-certification, so it still relied on trust.

Field said government agencies had been too slow to act against the gold clam threat, given it was first found in the Waikato River in May 2023.

“Knowing what we know from America, why has it taken so long for protection of New Zealand lakes and rivers? They thought they could just put a CAN (controlled area notice) in place to stop boats leaving the Waikato and use the trust model. Well, the trust model doesn’t work, and that’s been proven because it’s now in Lake Rotomanu in Taranaki.”

Staff from the Northland Regional Council, Te Roroa and Te Kuihi will monitor the Lake Taharoa boat ramp from 8.30am-4.30pm daily, starting on December 19 and including Christmas Day. The council plans to install the gate later this summer.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Couple who were forced to leave son behind in NZ hope for a Christmas miracle

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealander Gorka Zozaya is leaving for Europe four days after Christmas, to comply with INZ rules, but his 21-year-old son Enzo will stay in NZ. Supplied

An immigration lawyer says authorities need to crack down on unscrupulous ‘ghost’ agents – not victimise migrants who were defrauded by them.

New Zealander Gorka Zozaya, 52, and his Chinese wife Weili Fu, 46, are leaving for Europe four days after Christmas, to comply with INZ rules.

His 21-year-old son Enzo will stay as he in his second year of a computer science degree at Waikato University.

Gorka Zozaya says it’s a ‘horrible situation’ to be leaving NZ and his adult son, but the couple would otherwise be separated. Supplied

Fu’s second visa application was rejected after INZ discovered her documents were different to the ones submitted by an agent in China, when she first visited New Zealand as a tourist.

The agency refused to give her a character waiver to allow her to stay with her husband, and told RNZ that applicants should be on the lookout for fraudulent agents.

Zozaya, a senior solution architect with a technology company, said his wife had always dreamed of travelling to New Zealand, and made the ‘fatal’ decision to apply through an agent recommended on Chinese social media site WeChat, sending him her documents and photos.

“And this Chinese agent just said, ‘okay, just leave it with me, don’t worry about anything, you don’t need to do anything else’,” said Zozaya. “And In a month’s time, this Chinese agent came back to her with an email, saying, yes, we’ve got your visa and it’s all ready to go. So she only received the visa, only the outcome of the application. She didn’t see what this Chinese agent sent to Immigration New Zealand.”

She flew to visit a niece in Malaysia and onto Auckland. The couple’s paths crossed in a Hamilton food court, he said. “I used to actually go there quite often, and then I suddenly saw this beautiful lady. And then we somehow connected and we just happened to be at the same food court a few times. And then we decided to talk a little bit. And then at the end of August is when we started going out.

“We felt like teenagers again. We developed such a strong connection that I asked her, ‘actually, would you like to move together to my house?’ The relationship is just incredible. She’s an amazing person. She’s an amazing lady inside and out.”

When they discovered that INZ had turned down her next temporary visa application, and the reason why, ‘this is where the whole nightmare started,’ he said.

But they were determined to be together, and got married in February.

“I bent my knee and I asked Weili to get married. We were completely in love and I said, let’s do the move. And I know that we are going to be living together until we go to the other side, I just love her to pieces.”

Their appeal to INZ over their visa had failed, and their last throw of the dice was asking the associate minister for a special direction. Instead of the minister, a delegated INZ staff member refused the request in October.

“And obviously, that was the last resort. That was the last step on this journey. And then they suggested that we needed to leave the country.”

INZ continues to say she was responsible for the original documents, and he maintains INZ should have recognised they were fraudulent when she applied. “The bad side of that is if she didn’t get the visitor visa, that means that I would not be married to her now. But anyway, the destiny is destiny.”

Moving to Spain

Associate Minister of Immigration Chris Penk said delegated decision-makers are used on his behalf ‘to help manage the high number of requests received by my office on a day-to-day basis’.

“Although I did not determine the outcome of this request, I follow the established practice of not commenting on the factors involved in individual cases in order to protect the privacy of all those concerned.”

The couple hope that they can continue their fight from Spain, where Zozaya was born before he moved to New Zealand 22 years ago. He counts himself lucky he has dual citizenship.

“I don’t want to leave her. So it is this drastic. And I’m leaving 22 years of living in New Zealand. I’m leaving my son. My job is going to be affected. It’s just a really, really stressful time for us. But I’m willing to follow the law, right? We want to show Immigration New Zealand that we want to follow what they are suggesting. But I’m not going to leave my wife alone.”

Gorka Zozaya, 52, and his Chinese wife Weili Fu, 46, are booked to leave before New Years, but hoping for a reprieve. Supplied

They have flights booked for 29 December, and will then reapply for her visa from Spain, while Enzo Zozaya will stay in New Zealand. His mother and father never married, and she moved to Australia.

“He has been feeling quite unwell recently. Weili and I are his only family here in New Zealand, and we see each other almost every day. He asked me to promise that, no matter what happens, we will return – and I gave him that promise.”

“We only want to just live our lives like anybody else, like a happy married couple. We love each other so much, it’s just incredible. I’m not a teenager, I’ve been single for more than 50 years. So we have something special, really special.

INZ warning

“I’m trying to be positive. If life gives you lemons, you just make lemonade. So that’s what we are just doing – every step, every day. I’m waking up every day trying to come to the office and keep going, right? And just moving next step, next step, next day, next day.”

The couple provided a privacy waiver so INZ could comment. The agency said it understood it was a ‘very difficult situation’ for them and their son. Its regional operations director Dominic Forde confirmed it found different documents were used in the two visa applications, and said providing false information was a criminal offence.

“Any fraudulent activity, including the provision of false or misleading information by an applicant or their agent, undermines the integrity of the immigration system.

“All visa applicants must ensure that all information and documents presented are genuine. To make an application, all applicants sign a declaration stating that the contents of their application are true and correct and acknowledge the consequences of providing false and misleading or fraudulent information to an immigration officer. “

Fu said she never signed the visitor visa application.

“Applicants must also inform INZ if there is an agent acting on their behalf so we can check if that agent is licensed or exempt.”

“If an applicant, or someone acting for them, provides false or misleading information any future visa applications require the applicant to be granted a character waiver, or the application may be declined on the grounds of not meeting character requirements.”

“A delegated decision-maker declined to intervene in Ms Fu’s case in October 2025.” Under immigration rules, the minister or delegate is not required to provide reasons for their decision.

He said visa applicants should ensure their immigration help comes from a lawyer or licensed adviser, and advised people to complain to the IAA if they are concerned about their agent – although that only applies to licensed advisers.

‘Punishing the victim’

Their lawyer Maricel Weischede said this was not an isolated case.

“Why does Immigration New Zealand continue to penalise migrants who are themselves victims of unscrupulous ‘ghost’ agents? We are increasingly seeing situations particularly involving offshore operations where vulnerable people are misled, misrepresented, and left bearing the full weight of the consequences. There is a genuine concern that this pattern may be occurring at scale in parts of China, and yet there appears to be little appetite to confront it, potentially due to tourism and economic considerations.”

Zozaya said his wife did not know the agent was putting forward false documents to get her visa approved.

“Of course, we believe that she’s allowed to stay because she was not responsible for it. It was completely a scam by this agent. He’s gone. We tried to contact this person, and this man disappeared. We are devastated. And we’ve been fighting saying that we didn’t see any of those documents. It was not her doing. And they kept saying that, well, she’s responsible for that.”

The stress involved in leaving his home of 22 years, his son and job in an international company supporting New Zealand firms – “I’m one-of-a-kind, if I may say” – is compounded by the uncertainty of whether INZ will approve a subsequent visa, or whether it will be a permanent move.

“I know that they need to follow the law. They need to follow what is right in terms of the government law and all that, but the personal side is also critical, right? They need to look at the situation from a global point of view. So who you are, what is your character, who is your husband, who are your friends, what type of person are you?

“I’ve been reading in the news that there is a lot of buzz going around that skilled migrants and skilled people are leaving New Zealand. So [I am] another one of those who are now feeling horrible and then saying, ‘okay, maybe we need to go somewhere else’.”

Nevertheless, they want to return here, as most of Zozaya’s adult life has been spent here and staying close to his son is very important to them.

“Weili came to New Zealand to fulfill a childhood dream-to experience a different culture and learn English for a few months. She never imagined that she would find love and make New Zealand her home.

“We only want to just live our lives like anybody else, right? Like a happy married couple.”

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Government urging passport renewals as more than 1.3 million set to expire over two years

Source: Radio New Zealand

More than 1.3 milllion passports were set to expire in the next two years. 123RF

With a massive surge in passport applications expected next year, the government is urging people to renew early to beat the rush.

Internal Affairs Minister Brooke van Velden said with the anniversary of 10-year passports coming up, more than 1.3 million were set to expire in the next two years.

She said about 622,000 people were set to renew next year and about 759,000 the year after, and called for people to get that done.

“We’re expecting quite a large surge above what we had in some previous years … we’re urging all people who haven’t checked their passports for quite a while to give your passport a look, check if it’s expiring quite soon, and make sure that you get your application in time.

“If you can get in early, that will certainly help us to smooth the demand over the year … it’s a reminder for everybody that a lot of countries out there do require you to have a passport that’s valid for up to six months upon your return back to New Zealand.”

She said the government had succeeded in reducing processing times for all passports down from 25 days in 2023, to just three days.

The government was not expecting wait times to exceed the 10-day timeframe set as an expectation, she said.

“We’re expecting to see a lot more demand, but we’re doing our best to try and keep those wait times low.”

She said it was easy and secure to renew a passport online at passports.govt.nz.

“The other thing is, if you do want really efficient service, the department says don’t use selfies, make sure you do get a proper photo taken, so that you can use that three day time. If a selfie is taken and it’s not accepted, that will just delay your application.”

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

The 25 best TV shows of 2025

Source: Radio New Zealand

What a great year for telly 2025 has been. There were so many good shows coming out so consistently that it sometimes felt hard to keep up. As a TV fan, this has been a nice problem to have.

You’ll probably notice some perceived big omissions, like Stranger Things (Netflix) and Pluribus (Apple TV+), which were ineligible for inclusion due to not having completed their run at the time of writing.

Happiness

What: A cynical Broadway director finds himself stuck in his hometown of Tauranga and reluctantly staging a musical production with his old amateur-theatre group, his ex-girlfriend and, horror of all horrors, his mother.

We say: This local musical-comedy was the feel-good hit of the year.

Watch: ThreeNow

The Four Seasons

What: Three couples navigate their various midlife crises while attempting not to ruin each other’s shared seasonal holidays.

We say: Tina Fey’s all-star dramedy zipped and zinged with keenly observed one-liners, a flair for the absurd and a melancholic reflection on mid-life malaise.

Watch: Netflix

The Righteous Gemstones

What: The three bratty Gemstone kidults finally get their chance to lead the family’s mega-church empire, but the unshakable faith in their abilities proves woefully misguided.

We say: The final season of Danny McBride’s religious comedy involved jetpacks, shootouts and unholy amounts of cocaine. A biblically funny farewell.

Walton Goggins in The Righteous Gemstones.

Supplied

Watch: Neon

The Beast in Me

What: A best-selling author befriends a high-profile, suspected murderer in order to write a book about him. What could possibly go wrong?

We say: Claire Danes and her trembly chin were meme-d on pretty hard, but this textbook thriller was as unputdownable as a good book.

Claire Danes and Matthew Rhys in The Beast in Me.

Supplied

Watch: Netflix

The Studio

What: An earnest movie producer given the top job at a failing Hollywood studio struggles to balance financial reality with his artistic pretensions.

We say: Seth Rogen’s frazzled, farcical love letter to the movie business was a comedic blockbuster and takes home the award for Funniest Show of the Year.

Watch: Apple TV

Earth Oven with Temuera Morrison

What: Mixing travel and cooking shows proved a winning recipe for this documentary series, which explored how various cultures have adapted the hangi style of cooking.

We say: A show like this rests entirely on the charms of its host, and good old Tem is a charming fella.

Supplied

Watch: Neon

Mobland

What: A street-smart fixer attempts to prevent all-out war between two London crime families as tensions escalate in brutal, bloody fashion.

We say: Thanks to its machine-gun pace, a delicious heel turn by Helen Mirren, an unhinged Pierce Brosnan and Tom Hardy’s compellingly gruff performance, this crime-thriller was one of the most watchable shows of 2025.

Tom Hardy as Harry Da Souza in Mobland.

Supplied

Watch: Prime Video

South Park

What: Long-running satirical cartoon series that was about four school kids, but is now a deep dive into the toxic and overly sexual relationship between Donald Trump and Satan.

We say: The only good to come out of the second Trump presidency is the fire it lit underneath South Park‘s creative team. Gleefully defiant and joyfully obscene in its skewering of 47 and his cronies, current affairs has never been so funny. Or so brutal.

Watch: SkyGo

What: Every decision is life or death in this realistic medical drama that spends a single day with the doctors and interns working inside an emergency trauma unit.

We say: Intense, stress-inducing and painfully realistic, The Pitt was the antithesis of relaxing viewing. But its tight writing and strong ensemble cast made for compellingly traumatic viewing and amply demonstrated why we shouldn’t be cutting healthcare funding.

Noah Wyle (middle) returns to the hospital in new medical drama, The Pitt.

Supplied

Watch: Neon

What: Long-running reality show where a group of randoms marry people entirely unsuited to them.

We say: So much scandal enveloped this doozy of a season that there were police investigations, court cases and media speculation about whether it could continue. With so much jaw-dropping crazy on display, least of all from a Kiwi bride, as a viewer, you couldn’t help falling in love with its gossipy lowbrow charms.

Watch: ThreeNow

Task

What: The FBI and a dangerous biker gang separately hunt down the ordinary family man who has been violently robbing the gang’s drug houses.

We say: Mark Ruffalo led this atmospherically bleak, character-driven crime drama that was emotionally heavy and utterly compelling. It used its genre framework to examine themes of guilt, revenge, fatherhood and how desperate circumstances can set off a sprawling spiral of deathly consequences.

Task; HBO

Watch: Neon

Sean Combs: The Reckoning

What: A shocking and damning four-part documentary detailing the rise and fall of disgraced rapper Sean “Puff Daddy/Diddy” Combs.

We say: With Combs’ long-time antagonist, rapper 50 Cent, funding this doco, it could have been a sensationalist tabloid-style affair. It’s not. Instead, this exposé is a through and meticulous look at the life and deviant times of the rap mogul. Rare and unseen footage and testimony from those who had dealings with him, it’s not always an easy watch, but it is an essential one.

Watch: Netflix

Black Rabbit

What: The reopening of New York’s hottest restaurant/lounge reunites two estranged brothers, whose self-destructive natures and terrible decision-making set them on a collision course with a deadly crime boss and their personal moral codes.

We say: Stars Jude Law and Jason Bateman are almost too good as the thoroughly unlikable and toxic brothers in this edgy and intense crime-drama.

Watch: Netflix

The Rehearsal

What: Comedian Nathan Fielder’s subversive cringe comedy reached soaring new heights with season two’s meticulous examination into the laugh-a-minute topic of aviation safety.

We say: Wildly unique, defyingly absurd and frequently brilliant, Fielder doesn’t push you out of your comfort zone; he hurls you out of a moving plane. In lesser hands, his bizarre concept would crash and burn, but Fielder’s genuinely mindblowing commitment to the bit ensures he sticks the landing.

Nathan Fielder in The Rehearsal.

HBO

Watch: Neon

The Good Life

What: Comedian Mike Birbiglia’s latest special sees him reflecting on side-splitting topics like mortality, parental failings and serious illness.

We say: Birbiglia’s comic style is that of a storyteller, rather than a zing-machine. He expertly crafts narratives that blend sharp humour with emotional gut punches. The Good Life is a good time.

Watch: Netflix

Taskmaster NZ

What: Five comedians battle it out in a series of bizarre tasks that test their creativity in a chaotic attempt to impress the ever-judgemental Taskmaster.

We say: The fresh, fun and funny challenges tested the inventiveness and unpredictable energy of its contestants, making 2025’s season one of the strongest yet.

Watch: TVNZ+

The White Lotus

What: Darkly cynical anthology series about awfully rich people being increasingly awful on holiday. Frequently involves murder.

We say: Changing its iconic theme tune was the only misstep the third season of this popular satirical dramedy made. It ramped up the misanthropy and the horrifying sex and featured one of the most WTF-disturbing monologues of all time.

Watch: Neon

The Ridge

What: A troubled Scottish doctor flees to Aotearoa to escape her problems, but runs headfirst into much bigger ones when her sister turns up dead in a secretive and suspicious rural town.

We say: Aotearoa’s remote communities continued to be a source of fear for cityfolk. Brooding, atmospheric and ominous, this local mystery-thriller proved compelling viewing with its difficult themes and morally complex characters.

Watch: Neon

Vince

What: An on-air wardrobe malfunction derails the life and career of an egotistical and obnoxious Breakfast TV host on a mission to clear his name and get back on the telly.

We say: Jono Pryor played against his nice-guy image by going full jerk in this comedy that was finely calibrated to cram in as many gags as possible.

Watch: ThreeNow

Andor

What: Morally and politically complex spy thriller set in the Star Wars universe that highlighted the mundane bureaucracy keeping fascism in power.

We say: A grimly sophisticated and grounded study of revolution that just happens to take place in the fantastical Star Wars universe, while also largely ignoring the tropes of its setting. Absorbing viewing.

Watch: Disney+

The Chair Company

What: An investigation into his faulty chair leads an anxious office worker into a vast and bizarre corporate conspiracy where his own sanity is on the line.

We say: Tim Robinson’s wild, chaotic sketch-comedy style seemed unlikely to work in a full narrative series, but it’s been ported across seamlessly, losing none of his trademark absurdity, awkwardness or extreme cringe. Bizarre and unpredictable but very funny, if you can stomach it.

Watch: Netflix

Black Mirror

What: Unsettling anthology series that is single-mindedly focused on freaking you about the technological advances hurtling our way.

We say: The bleak techno-horror of this long-running Twilight Zone-inspired series proved as disturbing as ever, with episodes offering dystopian twists on healthcare, cyber-bullying, the evolution of AI and many unhappily ever afters.

Watch: Netflix

Here We Go

What: Chaotic mockumentary-style sitcom about a dysfunctional British family where life’s small challenges escalate in delightfully absurd ways.

We say: This is a brilliantly funny portrayal of frazzled family life, where things like using theme-park vouchers before they expire becomes an epic undertaking. Suitable for all, but especially relatable for parents.

From left: Alison Steadman, Jim Howick and Katherine Parkinson in Here We Go.

TVNZ+

Watch: TVNZ+

Under His Command

What: Veteran broadcaster John Campbell’s fearless investigative expose into the controversial Destiny Church and its leader Brian Tamaki.

We say: A chilling deep dive into the politically far-right, religious organisation and its coercive methods of control and manipulation, made more powerful by the testimonies of those who were able to escape. Essential.

Watch: TVNZ+

Severance

What: A high-concept, ultra-stylish sci-fi thriller about employees who undergo a surgical procedure to separate their work and personal memories, only to uncover unsettling truths about the mega-corp and themselves.

We say: This second season of this masterfully mind bending series ramped up the tension, deepened its mysteries and had more twists and turns than a drive through the Coromandel Peninsula.

Dichen Lachman in “Severance,” now streaming on Apple TV+.

Apple TV+

Watch: Apple TV+

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Infrastructure Commission calls for government business cases, budget submissions to be public

Source: Radio New Zealand

Infrastructure Minister Chris Bishop said transparency was important and he would consider all the Commission’s recommendations RNZ / Mark Papalii

The Infrastructure Commission wants all government business cases, budget submissions and advice about infrastructure investments made public by default.

A select committee report out last week shows the Commission warned MPs transparency “really matters” for public confidence, but “has not been very good over a long time period”.

The Commission is due to hand over the first National Infrastructure Plan to ministers by the end of the year.

The plan sets out what roads, hospitals, schools, pipes, and power the country needs over the next 30 years, what’s planned for the next 10, and how to bridge the gap.

A draft released in July included four transparency recommendations:

Infrastructure Minister Chris Bishop told RNZ transparency was important and he would consider all the Commission’s recommendations.

“We’ll be looking to be as transparent as possible within the confines of two things. One is traditional budget secrecy, and then the second is commercial confidentiality. If we’re dealing with billions of dollars of taxpayer money, people also expect the government to get good deals and to make sure that there’s commercial tension when it comes to negotiations.”

He said there was some transparency in the system already but there was always more that could be done.

“The biggest thing that I get frustrated by and I know the public gets frustrated by is cost overruns and time delays, so there’s a long history across multiple governments, frankly, of projects blowing out in cost and taking much longer than people think,” he said.

Bishop was hopeful his changes to the system, which included scaling up the Infrastructure Commission to develop the National Infrastructure Plan and the associated pipeline of projects – published quarterly – would help make more projects uncontroversial.

“It’s broken down by central and local government, the private sector is in there as well … it’s broken down by regions, broken down by amount … 80 percent I would say – probably even higher – of the projects on that list no one’s going to disagree with.

“What I’m trying to do is tilt the system towards having a debate around the stuff on the margins, rather than the bulk of the pipeline.”

Infrastructure New Zealand chief executive Nick Leggett said successive governments tended to politicise individual projects, and argued better transparency would help.

“The more we can share, the more we can have transparently available for the public and for other parties in Parliament to see and understand why decisions are made, the better.

“We’d get better value for money, we’d get faster delivery over time, and we’d see I think real discipline at sticking to that infrastructure pipeline.”

Although constraints may be valid in some cases, Leggett said those excuses should not be overused.

“Where there are commercial terms that shouldn’t be made public that’s appropriate to keep it safe but we hide behind the veil of secrecy and commerciality far too often.”

Leggett pointed to a 2023 Infometrics report estimating New Zealand could save up to $4.7b a year by reducing infrastructure uncertainty, and New Zealand’s position in the bottom 10 percent of OECD countries for getting value for money out of infrastructure funding.

He said the main reason project costs and delays tended to ‘blow out’ was because of changes made between the first business case being signed off and the final design being approved.

“And after, usually, the final design is approved there are massive changes in scope – but we never look back at that. And if you made things more transparent up front, it would be easy to see that when things are slowed or changed during the design or the building process … why costs eventually end up blowing out.

“There’d be a better discipline among the system and politicians generally at getting it right and getting value for money and not changing scope halfway through.”

Opposition parties were also on board.

“Labour has always supported more government transparency, and is open to hearing further from the commission about improving transparency in infrastructure,” Labour’s Infrastructure spokesperson Kieran McAnulty said in a written statement.

“National has announced a number of major transport projects for example without saying how it plans to fund them.”

Green Party Infrastructure spokesperson Julie Anne Genter said the party would urge the government to accept all transparency recommendations.

Green Party Infrastructure spokesperson Julie Anne Genter RNZ / Angus Dreaver

Like McAnulty, she criticised the government’s Roads of National Significance projects – highlighting a speech from Bishop last month that warned of “challenges” delivering the roads and hard choices ahead of how to pay for them.

The costings National previously used were criticised in the lead-up to the election.

Bishop was also unafraid of a little finger-pointing, saying the previous Labour government’s $35b to $45b proposal for a second Auckland harbour crossing had only gone through a high-level indicative business case.

“The numbers were frankly pie in the sky and it was really just an announcement dreamed up for a photo op. Now, that sounds like I’m being a bit political, but that is actually just the reality.”

He said the coalition recognised a second harbour crossing would be the biggest infrastructure project in New Zealand’s history, so had a barge in the harbour to do geotechnical work.

The government would make decisions about whether a bridge or tunnel would be best next year, and would engage with the opposition to ensure the project progressed in case of a change of government.

“We won’t be going around saying ‘Well, we’re going to do this and it’s going to cost Y because the reality is, you actually don’t know the costs of how much things actually cost until you’ve gone out and done commercial procurement and got your funding envelope sorted.”

Genter said an independent costings unit – which the Greens had previously campaigned on – could be one way to ensure all political parties were more realistic in their spending promises.

The coalition will have 180 days from when the plan is delivered to come up with a response.

Nick Leggett will be hoping the heat of an election campaign does not disrupt what seems like a rare show of political consensus on the need to fund infrastructure – and keep the public informed.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Would you pay an extra $1m for the right postcode?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Many Auckland areas have a difference of more than $1m in median value across the border between them. File photo. nataliacatalina/123RF

If you are hankering after an exclusive suburb, but your budget can not quite stretch to it, you might be able to get a good deal on the area next door.

Property data firm Cotality has produced research showing the suburbs with the biggest median difference in house price from their neighbouring suburbs.

The data only covers houses, not apartments or townhouses.

It found that Mount Wellington and Remuera had the biggest difference. Remuera had a median value of $2.358 million, and Mt Wellington $1.059m – creating a difference of $1.298m in median value across the small shared border between the two.

Epsom and Three Kings were next, with a difference of $1.045m. Mt Eden and Mt Roskill followed, at $1.009m.

Ben Lomond and Sunshine Bay, Queenstown were in fourth place, with a median difference of $1 million.

St Heliers and Glen Innes, back in Auckland again, took the fifth spot with a difference of just over $970,000.

Head of research Nick Goodall said there was a known division in Auckland’s eastern bays. “If you’re in those coastal suburbs or slightly inland that’s an expected difference.

“St Heliers is going to have lots of amazing coastal properties and Glen Innes has none of them. Anywhere where a suburb is coastal and adjoining a suburb that is not will have differences.”

Goodall said he only used each suburb once. If he had counted Remuera multiple times, Remuera and Ellerslie would be the second-biggest difference, with a jump of $1.057m.

He said there would be less difference between a non-coastal part of a mostly coastal suburb and a neighbouring area.

“If you look at the inner part of St Heliers, I would say property values there are quite similar to Glen Innes. The ones on the coast will be dragging up the median value.”

Rukuhia and Temple View were another notable addition to the list, with a $913,018 difference. Although they have a shared border, they are in two different territorial authorities – Waipa and Hamilton City.

Goodall said buyers were sometimes driven by suburbs. “We talk about them as being vanity suburbs. If you live on a border of, say, Khandallah, you might say you live in Khandallah and if you’re selling you might put Khandallah on it – now the official address won’t be Khandallah but the fact it has it in the listing might attract more people than if it was the suburb next to it.

“If you’re on the border with a suburb that’s known to be more expensive and has a good reputation you take advantage of that. Some of these that are genuinely adjacent, if you’re at the border you might tell people it’s a different suburb than it actually is.”

Wellington salesperson Mike Robbers said the majority of buyers were probably not “laser focussed” on one suburb.

“Especially first-home buyers – they tend to just want a house that ticks enough boxes that’s within their price range. But perhaps 30 percent of buyers only want one or two suburbs – for example those who work at the hospital will often only consider Newtown or Mount Cook, whereas Weta staff will typically only be looking in Miramar or Seatoun. We also find a certain percentage of buyers will point blank refuse to consider certain suburbs, for various reasons.”

Infometrics chief executive Brad Olsen said there was a combination of demand pricing, in terms of people wanting to pay more for certain areas, and the features of an area.

“Some areas have more of a focus around school zones, the likes of Epsom and Remuera I would think would be more about the school zones.

“You’ve got other areas – parts of Glen Innes for example relative to St Heliers – St Heliers has got some pretty nice, pretty big houses and a lot more character sort of stuff. Glen Innes has got a bit more building that been going on in recent times by the looks of it.

“Sometimes you’ve got straight up amenity. Who’s got really nice views, where are the views and the opportunities.”

Sometimes there could be components of what the land was being used for, he said. “The likes of Rukuhia versus Temple View, there’s various lifestyle blocks that are going to be generally more expensive. That’s near the airport… the likes of Temple View is a lot more focused on a certain specific set of houses for a faith-based community out there. It depends what you’re wanting and what you might get in that area, what services are around, how much new development might be there, how much heritage protection, what views and other amenities… that does have a pretty big influence on average prices.”

Auckland suburbs neighbouring value difference. Supplied

Christchurch suburbs neighbouring value difference. Supplied

Wellington suburbs neighbouring value difference. Supplied

Dunedin suburbs neighbouring value difference. Supplied

Hamilton suburbs neighbouring value difference. Supplied

Tauranga suburbs neighbouring value difference. Supplied

Supplied

Rank City/Town – (Territorial Authority) – Suburb 1 – Suburb 2 Suburb 1 Median Value Suburb 2 Median Value Value Difference

1 Auckland Remuera Mount Wellington $2,358,265 $1,059,843 $1,298,422

2 Auckland Epsom Three Kings $2,341,523 $1,296,191 $1,045,332

3 Auckland Mount Eden Mount Roskill $2,125,543 $1,116,214 $1,009,330

4 Queenstown-Lakes District Ben Lomond Sunshine Bay $2,229,203 $1,228,633 $1,000,570

5 Auckland Saint Heliers Glen Innes $2,107,994 $1,137,795 $970,199

6 Queenstown-Lakes District Kawarau Falls Lower Shotover $2,508,607 $1,585,969 $922,637

7 Waipa District/Hamilton City Rukuhia Temple View $1,636,825 $723,808 $913,018

8 Auckland – Rodney Redvale Stillwater $1,868,508 $964,233 $904,276

9 Auckland – North Shore Takapuna Wairau Valley $1,863,290 $1,010,494 $852,796

10 Auckland Saint Marys Bay Freemans Bay $2,868,511 $2,043,429 $825,082

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Live: Twelve confirmed dead in Bondi Beach shooting

Source: Radio New Zealand

Twelve people were killed when gunmen opened fire at a Jewish holiday celebration at Sydney’s Bondi Beach on Sunday.

Australian officials described as a targeted anti-semitic attack.

One of the suspected gunmen was also killed, and a second is in critical condition.

Authorities said far more people would have been killed were it not for a bystander, identified by local media as fruit shop owner Ahmed al-Ahmed, 43, who was filmed charging a gunman from behind, grappling with him and wresting a rifle from his hands.

Follow the latest updates in the liveblog at the top of this page.

Police work at the scene of the Bondi Beach shooting. AFP / Saeed Khan

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Five injured after two-vehicle crash in rural Waikato

Source: Radio New Zealand

Five people have been injured – with one in a critical condition. AFP / Andri Tambunan

Five people have been injured – with one in a critical condition – following a two-vehicle crash in rural Waikato on Sunday evening.

St John ambulance was called to the crash in Parawera, at the intersection of Monckton Road and Arapuni Road, about 9.42pm.

It said one person was airlifted to Waikato hospital in a critical condition, and two others were also taken to Waikato hospital with serious injuries.

Two patients with moderate injuries were assessed at the scene.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand