Boxing Day shoppers clog Auckland motorways

Source: Radio New Zealand

State Highway 16 full of slow moving morning traffic as the sun rises. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

Anyone catching a flight to Auckland Airport on Friday should allow extra travelling time as bargain hunters heading to shopping hot spots clog up the city’s motorway network.

It will take 45 minutes to drive from the central city to the Manawa Bay shopping Outlet Centre near the airport. The trip would usually take less than half an hour on a good traffic day.

Auckland Airport said there were some temporary road closures in place on Boxing Day. Nixon Road was closed and access along Jimmy Ward Crescent from the south was closed. Tom Pearce Drive remains open.

Traffic was also building on State Highway 1, near the Mt Wellington Highway off-ramps, as shoppers head to the country’s biggest mall, Sylvia Park and the newly opened Ikea furniture store.

It was also busy on both State Highway 20A and State Highway 20B around Auckland Airport.

New Zealand Transport Agency advised people to plan ahead, and allow extra time for traffic.

Sylvia Park centre manager Shahyad Asdollah-zadeh expected it to be a huge day.

“If the last fortnight’s been any indication, we’ve had some really good numbers through the mall… The morning just so far to date has been good. So look, expecting a big day, which will be great for our retailers and customers.”

Asdollah-zadeh expected foot traffic through the mall to be higher than last year.

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

RNZ’s best videos to watch over summer

Source: Radio New Zealand

123RF

Looking for something a bit different to watch this summer break? RNZ has you covered.

There are more than 100 series and films available to watch in our video section, from current affairs and documentaries to kids’ shows and comedy.

Here are some of the highlights to check out, curated by us for you.

Popular Documentaries

From visionary director Katie Wolfe comes The Haka Party Incident, an unflinching documentary of a forgotten history retold from every side.

Or if literature is more your thing, try Joy, Full and Fearless, which follows the trauma and triumph of Joy Cowley’s astonishing life as New Zealand’s prolific, widely published and celebrated author of children’s fiction.

Untold Pacific History is a dynamic and often provocative account of NZ’s relationship with the Pacific, while Cutting the Curve is a bold docuseries on fashion, power, and visibility in an era of diet drugs and shrinking ideals.

Check out the full playlist of popular documentaries here.

RNZ

Hidden Gems

A collection of some of the best bits you might have missed this year, including This is Wheel Life, a look into the lives of Soph and Indy, the quadriplegic-carer-cousin duo.

Marauders promises glorious handycam footage from the Fat Freddy’s Drop 2003 debut European tour, while NZ Hip Hop Stand Up tells the stories behind some of the most influential tracks in Aotearoa hip hop.

Crown Lynn: A Māori Story is a riveting slice of New Zealand history, telling the iconic story of Crown Lynn pottery and the generations of Māori families that worked there.

Check out all the hidden gems here.

RNZ

Comedy Picks

Need a laugh?

Alice Snedden’s Bad News is an eight-episode docu-comedy about political and social issues confronting 2020 Aotearoa.

The Citizen’s Handbook is a 10-part video and podcast comedy series and civics class for all New Zealanders, created by the award-winning team behind the popular satirical web show White Man Behind a Desk, and starring Robbie Nicol.

Meanwhile, in each episode of ConspiraSeries, Bubbah gets first-hand insight from the locals, while motion graphics and animation visually represent the subject matter, whether it be the Te Anau moose, the flying spaghetti monster chilling over Mt Vic or the penis-shaped aviation patterns in Canterbury.

Find more of RNZ’s best comedy videos here.

RNZ

Tamariki

Get your young ‘uns into RNZ! Check out Music with Michalsing, dance, laugh, and play while learning music.

Or perhaps they’d like Bigsies and Littles – two penguins exploring everyday life, finding big meaning in little moments – or Josh Thompson’s My Favourite Dead Person, a sketch show for kids that honours New Zealand history by telling some of our incredible, funny, inspiring, and outrageous stories, while highlighting what makes them unique and relevant to our special corner of the world.

What Will I Be Today? is a vibrant, imaginative pre-school series that celebrates curiosity, creativity, and cultural diversity.

And The Aotearoa History Show tells the story of New Zealand and its people from its geological origins to modern day.

More of RNZ’s original kids’ shows can be found here.

RNZ

Natural history and science

Want to spend summer filling your brain with facts? RNZ has you sorted.

In Our Other Islands, Troy Kingi, one of NZ’s most-beloved musicians, embarks on a journey to explore the fascinating “other” islands of Aotearoa, delving into their histories and legends, chatting with the locals, and enjoying some delicious kai.

In My Cyclone Gabrielle, four award-winning Kiwi filmmakers capture the aftermath of the storm from where they live, in some of the worst-affected regions of the country.

Antarctica in a Warming World exposes the continent’s dramatic climate shifts, from melting ice to rising seas, showing how changes at the world’s edge threaten Earth’s shared future.

Go here for the full natural history and science playlist.

Musician and composer Don McGlashan speaks to Guyon Espiner in studio for ’30 with Guyon Espiner’ season 4. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

2025 Releases

RNZ’s newest video content includes some of the shows already mentioned, and more – including 30 With Guyon Espiner, a series of 30-minute interviews with prominent Kiwis, completely raw and unedited.

Bird’s Eye View focuses on four feathered friends who love to ponder and debate the bizarre behaviours of humans in their natural habitat, while Shine On Katherine Mansfield introduces a cast of Kiwi characters inspired by her writing, her short stories, and her tempestuous life.

The All Goods Race is a fast-paced, feel-good reality adventure that throws two of Aotearoa’s biggest social-media personalities, Torrell Tafa and Terewai “Trexx” Kopua, into the ultimate test of resilience, humour, and Kiwi spirit as they race across the motu.

Back to Timor follows the journey of four Kiwi military veterans who return to East Timor 25 years after serving as peacekeepers there. The big question for them: did they make a difference?

And that’s just scratching the surface! Check out all RNZ’s 2025 releases here.

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

Teenager charged after person shot in Christchurch

Source: Radio New Zealand

He is charged of wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

A man is due to appear in court on Friday after a person was reportedly shot in Christchurch.

The police received multiple calls just after 6.30pm on Thursday about a man being chased by others on Amyes Road in Hornby.

One of the people was reported to be carrying a gun.

Officers found one person with a suspected gunshot wound in hospital that isn’t considered life-threatening.

A 19-year-old man was arrested at a house on Amyes Road.

He was charged of wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm.

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

Domestic violence experts warning of increase in abusive partners using tracking devices

Source: Radio New Zealand

Experts say there is an increase in abusive partners stalking their exes with small tracking devices. 123RF

Domestic violence experts warn they are seeing an alarming increase in abusive partners stalking their exes using mini tracking devices and mobile phone apps.

The social service Help at Hand, funds technology to help reduce family violence and its general manager Gavin Healy said the majority of the refuges they deal with report tracking devices are a problem.

“They’re being found everywhere, they’re being found slipped in handbags, kids teddies if they know there’s a toy the kid brings everywhere with them they’ll stick it in there, back of the car,” he said.

Help at Hand general manager Gavin Healy SUPPLIED

“We’ve also come across a situation where someone had access to the PlayStation and was actually able to turn the camera on the other side to see what was going on when the kids were playing.”

Healy said in a recent survey of 778 survivors of domestic voilence, 38 percent were fearful their former partner was tracking them digitally and 20 percent reported their ex had taken control of their social media, bank accounts or codes.

He said digital tracking was also occurring via phone apps.

“We’re just getting our heads around it and the perpetrators are streaks ahead but the data’s definitely there to show that this is becoming a really significant issue.”

Healy said Help at Hand was in the initial stages of working with organisations on the frontline to help them identify and reduce digital tracking.

Eclipse aims to prevent family violence and train those working in the sector, its director Debbs Murray is herself a survivor of domestic violence.

Debbs Murray, author of One Soul, One Survivor supplied

She said they began offering a technology family violence workshop mid-2025 because of the prevalence of digital harm.

“We’re actively training our frontline now about it…It is a whole new form of coercive control in itself, it’s brutal.”

She said mini tracking devices were used but so were everyday household devices.

“Anything that can be controlled by an app can be used as a form of coercive control or family violence tactics,” Murray said.

“If you imagine that the primary victim’s sitting in their home and suddenly the curtains start opening and closing or the wifi’s shut down or the power’s turned off.”

She said children’s toys could be used to track whereabouts, and pets.

“I heard a story about a woman who was tracked down by her predominant aggressor through a microchip in a cat,” Murray said.

“Anything that’s got cameras on it, children’s toys there’s pet dispensers that have cameras on that can be used to surveil and monitor. It’s so big.”

Women’s Refuge this year found more than 80 percent of people using their services had experienced digital abuse through their phones and other technology and 56 percent had been tracked and had their movements monitored.

Its principal policy advisor Dr Natalie Thorburn said mobile phone apps were most commonly used.

“While occasionally we do have perpetrators who will use things like air tags or other associated GPS technology that are separate from their phones to stalk, to monitor, to keep an eye on their victims, most of the time it actually happens just as effectively using everyday technology,” she said.

“The apps you already have on your phone, the ones that you use on a regular basis, those things are actually far more likely to be maliciously utilised by perpetrators than any of the new technology.”

Thorburn said it was concerning.

“As our lives become increasingly digitally mediated, so does the forms of violence that we experience so it’s the same kind of violence, but just enacted through a different mechanism,” she said.

“It does make perpetrators’ ways of abusing people more efficient and give them greater reach and that’s kind of the terrifying part of it.”

Legislation to make stalking a specific criminal offence has passed its third reading in Parliament and will come into force in May 2026.

The legislation amends the Crimes Act to make stalking and harassment punishable by up to five years in prison.

“The new stalking law will make it a lot easier to identify those examples of tracking, monitoring, spying behaviour basically as stalking, especially in an intimate partner scenario where there’s reason to be fearful of someone’s response,” Thorburn said.

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

Not Only Fred Dagg: Lorin Clarke reflects on her father’s legacy

Source: Radio New Zealand

When Lorin Clarke told her mum, Helen, she was making a documentary about her late father, John, his “partner in every regard” warned that it couldn’t just be a story of how great he was.

But Not Only Fred Dagg But Also John Clarke reveals John, who left school at 15, created the beloved comedy character Fred Dagg as a young man and later became a satirical writer and TV personality in Australia, was a pretty great New Zealander.

Lorin says she wanted the film to show people who saw John or his black-singleted ’70s alter-ego on TV and thought ‘I feel like I know that guy’, they were not wrong – “It’s the same thing that you’re seeing that we experienced as a family with him. That’s unusual, I think, for somebody to be how they are,” she tells Culture 101.

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

The Ashes live: Australia v England – fourth test, day one

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow all the cricket action, as the fourth in the five-test series between archrivals Australia and England gets underway at the MCG in Melbourne

Australia swept to an 82-run win in the third Ashes test at Adelaide Oval to retain the urn with two matches to spare.

After eight-wicket defeats in Perth and Brisbane, England have lost the Ashes in three matches for the fourth consecutive tour, while losing 16 of their last 18 tests in Australia.

First ball is scheduled for 12.30pm NZT.

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Philip Brown

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

Man charged after Hornby incident

Source: New Zealand Police

Attributable to Detective Sergeant Luke Vaughan:

A man was due to appear in court today following an incident in Hornby yesterday evening.

Police received multiple calls shortly after 6:30pm reporting a male being chased by others on Amyes Road, one with a firearm in their possession.

Several vehicles in the area then fled the scene.

Police went to the hospital, where one person was found to have a suspected gunshot wound which is not considered life threatening. Officers also spoke to several other people at the hospital.

Further enquiries led Police to another location of interest, and scene guards remain there and at Amyes Road.

There will remain a police presence in these areas while we work to determine exactly what happened.

A 19-year-old man was arrested at an Amyes Road property last night, and is due to appear in Christchurch District Court today on a charge of wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm.

If you have any information that may help, and you have not yet spoken to Police, please contact officers on 105 and reference file number 251225/8572.

ENDS

issued by the Police Media Centre

Andrew Bayly and the fight for Antarctica

Source: Radio New Zealand

Andrew Bayly went to Antarctica in 2012. Supplied

Andrew Bayly still remembers the “visual assault” of Antarctica, the piercing blue clarity and scale-bending brightness.

The National MP tells how he once convinced his companions to join him on what he thought would be a short trip to climb a nearby peak. They borrowed skis, promised they would be back for lunch and set off.

Instead, the trek stretched for hours, across a crevasse field and then up a seemingly endless slope. The mountain turned out to be 12 kilometres away.

“We didn’t get back to the base until late that night,” Bayly laughs. “It was just meant to be a little stroll.”

Bayly was there for a full month in 2012, climbing mountains, including the continent’s tallest peak, Mount Vinson, and another never-before-climbed – the mountaineer’s “holy grail”.

“It was only three of us. We were miles from anyone,” he says. “You know that if you’re in trouble, you’re really in trouble.”

More than a decade on, the landscapes have stayed with him, fuelling a personal affinity for the continent and a determination to protect it.

Group photo of attendees at the Antarctic Parliamentarians Assembly in Wellington. Supplied

In December, Bayly brought politicians, diplomats and officials from overseas to Wellington for a two-day meeting, the third Antarctic Parliamentarians Assembly.

Roughly 40 guests – representing nearly 20 nations – came to hear from scientists, compare notes and take home a clearer sense of what is happening at the bottom of the world.

From ice to influence

Antarctica is governed by a treaty signed in 1959, designating it a natural reserve devoted to peace and science. It explicitly prohibits military bases, weapons testing and new territorial claims.

But that is not to say the continent is free from pressure.

Tourism has surged in recent years. More than 120,000 visitors travelled south last season, six times the numbers seen two decades ago.

“We want to welcome tourists. We want people to go to Antarctica,” Bayly says. “The question is: how do you do that in a sustainable way?”

Fishing remains a concern, too. The krill fishery reached its annual catch limit this year for the first time, forcing its shutdown three months ahead of schedule – a warning sign that pressure is rising.

The tiny shrimp-like crustaceans are fundamental to the ecosystem as a primary food source for whales, penguins and seals.

Andrew Bayly at the South Pole. Supplied

“Certain nations really want to have a go at fishing out the krill,” Bayly says. “So, how do we protect ourselves against that?”

And then there is the unmistakable effect of climate change.

On the Antarctic Peninsula, the area of ice-free “greening” has jumped from 86 hectares to nearly 1200 over four decades – the size of a large sheep and beef farm, now exposed land rather than ice.

Research teams are drilling through kilometres of ice to pull up samples that may hold climate records stretching back more than a million years.

“They’re going to farm out all those core samples to … research people around the world, whoever wants them. So, you know, how do you collaborate?”

Bayly says those big questions of conservation and collaboration dominated discussions among the parliamentarians, many of whom arrived with limited knowledge of Antarctica.

“When they go back to their home, we want them to be strong advocates… in an informed way,” he says.

Among the speakers was mountaineer Peter Hillary, a moment Bayly says resonated with those visitors familiar with the legacy of his father, Sir Edmund Hillary.

“They love our connection to Antarctica,” he says. “They know we’ve got a leadership position.”

The next assembly is already in motion, scheduled for 2027, with Bayly asked to chair the steering committee. Several nations have already put up their hands to host: Norway, China, Italy, Argentina, and potentially more.

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

Thousands of unwanted Christmas gifts already for sale on Trade Me

Source: Radio New Zealand

A survey found most people are not offended if a gift is on-sold. Unsplash/ Kira auf der Heide

More than 4500 unwanted Christmas gifts had already been listed for sale online by 8:30am on Boxing Day, according to Trade Me.

Interesting listings include De Walt power tools listed by someone who prefers Ryobi, a large Kathmandu jacket gifted to a “tall skinny young man who never wears a large” and a bag of Licorice Allsorts gifted to someone who does not eat sweets.

The company’s spokesperson Millie Silvester said bargain hunters were also out in force.

“Boxing Day is a prime time for Kiwi to head to Trade Me to scope out the presents that didn’t make the cut,” she says.

“Last year, we saw almost 60,000 searches for ‘unwanted gifts’ on the 26th itself, and this year is already looking similar with over 10,000 searches yesterday – most before Christmas dinner had even been served.”

A recent Trade Me survey showed the trend of receiving lacklustre gifts continues.

“The data shows a significant number of New Zealanders, 42 percent to be exact, typically unwrap at least one present they didn’t want,” Silvester said.

“It’s become a bit of a tradition for Kiwi to list their unwanted Christmas pressies on Trade Me.

“This year, our survey found that one in four Kiwi (25 percent) are planning to list any duds they get. We’re expecting to see thousands more of these items pop up over the next few days.”

She also said that sellers shouldn’t feel guilty, as most people are not offended if a gift is on-sold.

Trade Me survey also showed that over half of New Zealanders (51 percent) were fine if a gift they gave was sold on, with only 5 percent saying they’d be upset.

“We think this shows that people just want their loved ones to be happy with their gift, even if that means swapping it for something they’ll get more use out of.”

The company also said a massive 70 percent of Kiwis will pretend to like a gift they were not happy with.

Silvester said including the words “unwanted gift” in the tile will help attract bargain hunters and clear, well-lit photos would also make a difference.

“A good backstory can help your item sell, but if you’d rather keep the sale on the quiet, it’s best to avoid any details that might identify you to the person who gave you the present,” she said.

“It’s also best to avoid listing handmade or highly personalised items, as they can be tricky to sell.”

The company’s survey found that popular choices of dealing with unwanted presents also include donating them to charity, regifting, or stashing them in a cupboard to be forgotten.

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

Parking hard to find as Boxing Day sales begin

Source: Radio New Zealand

Shoppers at Sylvia Park, Auckland, on Boxing Day 2025. Ke-Xin Li / RNZ

Bargain hunters have started their Boxing Day shopping early to avoid crowds and traffic.

Auckland woman Lara finished her shopping at Sylvia Park shortly after the mall opened at 9am.

“I only went to Lush, so I went really early to be on time for Lush. The parking was fine because I got here about 8.30am to be in time.”

Lush opened at 9am, but Lara said there was already a long queue from 8.30am.

Shoppers at Sylvia Park, Auckland, on Boxing Day 2025. Ke-Xin Li / RNZ

Shoppers arriving after 9am said it was hard to find parking.

But the mall was not as busy as in previous years, some said.

Patrick, who arrived at the mall at 9.30am, said it seemed less crowded than in previous years.

“I’ve been here a couple of times on a Boxing Day – I’d say this year around has probably less people around.

“I’d probably say it’s more towards the cost of living that affected everybody’s opportunity to come here.”

Shoppers at Sylvia Park, Auckland, on Boxing Day 2025. Ke-Xin Li / RNZ

People should prepare for stormy, wet weather, as they head out on Boxing Day, MetService warned earlier.

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