Book Reviews | Gordon Campbell | News Flashes | Scoop Features | Scoop Video | Strange & Bizarre | Search

 


HARD NEWS 08/06/01 - Mmmmm ... Meat!

Approved: kiwifruit
Subject: HARD NEWS 08/06/01 - Mmmmm ... Meat!


HARD NEWS is first broadcast in Auckland on 95bFM around 9.30am on Fridays and replayed around 5.15pm Friday and 10am Sunday on The Culture Bunker. You can listen to 95bFM live on the Internet. Point your web browser to http://www.95bfm.co.nz. You will need an MP3 player. Currently New Zealand is 12 hours ahead of GMT.

HARD NEWS is also available in MP3 form from mp3.net.nz and in text form at http://www.scoop.co.nz. You can subscribe to the 95bFM Hard News mailing list at http://www.95bfm.com/hardnews.php


GOOD DAY MEDIAPHILES ... bugger the politics. Bugger the news. There's a game of rugby on. A real one, evoking traditions that were alive before Rupert Murdoch was born.

Yes, it's the New Zealand Maori versus the Wallabies and it's huge. Who needs the Super 12 anyway? The Maori have a big, strong pack and - this could be good - Carlos Spencer at fullback. The chaps will be around watching it on the big screen tomorrow night and I'll be cooking my Jamie Oliver lamb shanks. Mmmm ... meat. Organic, too!

News, if you must: the future Michael Cullen's Big Giant Super Scheme now depends on New Zealand First. The Greens have decided that they will not support it in Parlaiment. I know I bag the Greens a bit - someone's got to - but we can have no complaints here. They had a conference, they had a vote, they announced the result and they did some more of that silly-looking square dancing. No mucking about.

I fear - well, we all do, really - that the same will not be the case now that Winston's in the area. What mad project will form the price of his support? The super scheme itself is in some trouble. While the prospect has barely touched the general public, Cullen's own Budget may have done for it.

You could look at the borrowing tucked away in the budget as merely the rolling over of some maturing health sector debt - or you could look at it as Cullen borrowing the $600 million he is saving for our retirement. And if there isn't cash to save with, what show of cash for hospitals or company tax cuts? The All Black fullback isn't the only Cullen on a gammy leg.

But none of the critics appears to have a better idea - not one that will capture the imagination of the public anyway. The Greens and National are essentially taking the view that it'll probably be alright when the baby-boomers retire. And Winston can't get past that idea of individual accounts. It is not out of the question that, by the time he's finished, we may be presented with a scheme not unlike the one that we, the grumpy public, overwhelmingly rejected three years ago.

It might have been different. The Kirk government's super scheme would by now have been an unholy mess - a great hairball of a thing; controversial and endlessly altered. But it would have been paying out under its own steam.

Anyway, over to Texas, where George W. Bush's 19-year-old daughter Jenna has picked up her second underage drinking bust. But for a technicality, it would have been her third, and she'd have been facing six months jail under the insane and punitive measures against youth her Dad introduced as Governor of Texas. Yes, really. A 20-year-old who asks for a glass of wine in a restaurant can expect to be sent for alcohol counseling, first offence.

But what was truly bizarre was the Whitehouse spin doctor seeking to blur Jenna's culpability by repeatedly referring to her as a "child". She's 19. Her father has executed people younger than that.

Whatever social problems dropping the drinking age has caused here, it certainly hasn't hurt the economy. Bars and restaurants led out this week's booming retail numbers.

But they might have been quiet on Tuesday night, if the ratings for Havoc are any guide. Through the roof, apparently. And it deserved to be. It didn't all come off, but gee it's good to have some fresh ideas on the telly. And, more to the point, some funny ideas. How on earth did Rob Harley manage to labour his way through a documentary on New Zealand TV comedy -or the lack of - recently without once even mentioning Havoc?

So, anyway, I'm interviewed in The Listener this week, about Mediawatch. Sort of. I would have hoped that out of an hour's pleasant conversation there might have been something more interesting than an NBR item about me that nicked its only good line from a letter to Metro about something I never said in the first place. But apparently there wasn't. I must try harder.

Still, congratulations are in order for the author of the original letter, Guy Eller, whose line about Hard News being a "weekly application for a job with the Labour Party", whilst not being entirely original, has certainly got legs.

Guy might be a glum little chap from Kingsland - and he still apparently can't tell the difference between me and Chris the Lawyer - but on this showing he deserves further opportunities. I wonder if NBR would be clever enough to pay him to write something, rather than just nicking his best lines.

And while we're at it, did anybody else think that Hamish Low's prize-winning essay from the Auckland Writers' Festival competition - it ran in the Herald the morning after the Budget - was funnier and sharper than any of the Herald's yoof columnists have ever been? Plainly, we do not hear often enough from unemployed wasters from Mt Eden. Somebody give Hamish a job in journalism before he winds up copywriting at Colenso.

Or worse, ends up like me: "In real life, Mr 'Hard News' Brown is anything but," it says in The Listener. "He lives in a quiet West Auckland suburb, near the beach, with his partner and two kids. He is pushing 40." So not only am I a dodgy Labour voter, I'm dull, domesticated and old.

Sucked in! I'm actually a 29-year-old closet gay investment banker with a timeshare in Pauanui! All that stuff about Point Chev was just a cover story.

And Point Chev's not all that quiet anyway. Why, just last weekend, a man who had walked all the way from Newmarket on a broken leg and was in the advanced stages of amphetamine pyschosis popped round to visit my neighbour. There was assault, willful damage and a lost dog, in rapid sequence. We're keeping it real here in the inner west, I can tell you.

And I might be pushing 38 - which makes me a nipper round National Radio - but I can still go out. And, Lord, I believe I will. Whilst extending maximum respect to Greg Churchill and Steve lawler, I think I'm a rock and reggae guy tonight. The plan would be Pluto at the Kings Arms and then down the hill for some Roots Foundation. Nice. And you know what? I just might stay up all night - G'bye!

*** ADVERT ***

Find Writers, Post Jobs, Get Results - Quickly!

*newsletters *web site content *press releases *user manuals *advertising copy *editing & rewriting *research * reporting *commentary *proofreading *speechwriting *software guides *training materials * technical writing *authors PLUS 800+ jobseekers in writing and communications. Free to post jobs for a limited trial period.

http://www.writerfind.com/nz

*** SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS ****

© Scoop Media

 
 
 
 
 
Top Scoops Headlines

 

Gordon Campbell: On The Skycity Convention Center Blowout & A Negative MBIE Review

If the government really did have good tidings of great joy you can bet it wouldn’t be strewing them about at Christmas time – which is, traditionally, the dumping ground for terrible news that the government fervently hopes the public will be too distracted to notice. And so verily this Christmas Eve we learn of (a) the explosion of costs to the taxpayer... More>>

Syed Atiq ul Hassan: Eye-Opener For Islamic Community

An event of siege, terror and killing carried out by Haron Monis in the heart of Sydney business district has been an eye-opener for the Islamic Community in Australia. Haron was shot down before he killed two innocent people, a lawyer and a manager ... More>>

Jonathan Cook: US Feels The Heat On Palestine Vote At UN

The floodgates have begun to open across Europe on recognition of Palestinian statehood. On 12 December the Portuguese parliament became the latest European legislature to call on its government to back statehood, joining Sweden, Britain, Ireland, France ... More>>

ALSO:

Fightback: MANA Movement Regroups, Call For Mana Wahine Policy

In the wake of this years’ electoral defeat, the MANA Movement is regrouping. On November 29th, Fightback members attended a Members’ Hui in Tāmaki/Auckland, with around 70 attending from around the country. More>>

Ramzy Baroud: The Mockingjay Of Palestine: “If We Burn, You Burn With Us”

Raed Mu’anis was my best friend. The small scar on top of his left eyebrow was my doing at the age of five. I urged him to quit hanging on a rope where my mother was drying our laundry. He wouldn’t listen, so I threw a rock at him. More>>

ALSO:

Don Franks: Future Of Work Commission: Labour's Shrewd Move

Lunging boldly towards John Key, shouting 'Cut the crap!' - Andrew Little was great, wasn't he? Labour's new leader spoke for many people fed up with Key's flippant arrogant deceit. Andrew Little nailing the Prime minister on lying about contacting a rightwing ... More>>

Asia-Pacific Journal: MSG Headache, West Papuan Heartache? Indonesia’s Melanesian Foray

Asia and the Pacific--these two geographic, political and cultural regions encompass entire life-worlds, cosmologies and cultures. Yet Indonesia’s recent enthusiastic outreach to Melanesia indicates an attempt to bridge both the constructed and actual ... More>>

Valerie Morse: The Security State: We Should Not Be Surprised, But We Should Be Worried

On the very day that the Inspector-General of Intelligence and Security released her report into the actions of people the Prime Minister’s office in leaking classified Security Intelligence Service (NZSIS) documents to right-wing smearmonger Cameron ... More>>

Get More From Scoop

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Top Scoops
Search Scoop  
 
 
Powered by Vodafone
NZ independent news