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Morning Report Essentials for Monday 12 May 2025

Morning Report Essentials for Monday 12 May 2025

RNZ News11-05-2025

children technology 5 minutes ago
In today's episode, National has announced it is stepping up its commitment to pursue a ban on social media for under-16s, The New Zealand TV series, After the Party, has missed out on a BAFTA, at the awards which took place in London, and we cross the Tasman to get the latest from Kerry-Anne Walsh.

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The 21-year-old gearing up for a bellringing marathon
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Dylan Thomas ringing bells at Wellington Cathedral of St Paul, 2020. Photo: Lisa Doyle When you think of bellringing in an old cathedral, the first thing that comes to mind probably isn't today's youth - but here to flip the script is 21-year-old Dylan Thomas. Dylan is the Ringing Master at Wellington Cathedral of St Paul and he's gearing up to take part in a historic peal attempt next week to mark the end of Matariki. The peal, is basically a marathon of three and a half hours of non-stop bellringing, with each bell being struck over five thousand times. Dylan speaks with Paddy Gower about his hopes of keeping the tradition of bell-ringing alive.

Super Netball goes global in deal with Whoopi Goldberg's AWSN
Super Netball goes global in deal with Whoopi Goldberg's AWSN

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Super Netball goes global in deal with Whoopi Goldberg's AWSN

Sunshine Coast Lightning celebrate with coach Noeline Taurua after winning the 2018 final Photo: DCimages | Daniel Carson Australia's Super Netball league will be broadcast to more than 65 countries over the next three years after Netball Australia struck a deal with Whoopi Goldberg's All Women's Sports Network (AWSN). Netball, one of a few sports created exclusively for women and girls, is the most popular participation sport for females in Australia with Netball Australia estimating there are up to a million players across the country. \Grace Nweke of the Swifts warms up ahead of the round two Super Netball match between NSW Swifts and Melbourne Mavericks at Ken Rosewall Arena on 12 April 12, 2025 in Sydney. Photo: Jason McCawley / Getty Images The professional Super Netball league, which was launched in 2017, has eight teams and 41 of its games, including the playoffs and finals, will now be broadcast on AWSN. "This breakthrough deal puts netball on screens across the globe and cements our place at the forefront of women's sport," Netball Australia chief executive Stacey West said in a statement. "AWSN shares our vision of taking women's sport to new heights. Together, we're creating a platform for our athletes and game to shine like never before." Co-founded by Oscar-winning actor and comedian Goldberg, AWSN was launched late last year as the first global media channel dedicated exclusively to showcasing women's sports. "I am so proud to be thanking you for joining us on AWSN," Goldberg said in a video message to Super Netball released by Netball Australia. "I see that your fans are really loving you, so we want to make sure that we put you everywhere in the world so that everybody knows about you." - Reuters

Light trail to celebrate Matariki goes on display
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RNZ News

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Light trail to celebrate Matariki goes on display

Auckland's Te Ara Rama Matariki Light Trail. Photo: Supplied A reflective light trail celebrating Matariki is on display for two weeks in the Auckland CBD, stretching for two kilometres from Myers Park to the waterfront. Auckland Council said the trail is guided by light and sound effects created by Māori artists, celebrating wai (water) - including the waters of Te Waihorotiu stream, the Waitematā Harbour and the life-giving value of rain. It said the trail is designed to allow people to pause and reflect on the rich history of the city centre. The trail begins with a stairway at Myers Park, designed by Tessa Harris (Ngāi Tai ki Tāmaki), with patterns depicting pātiki (flounder), accompanied by the sounds of Waimahara. Turning on to Queen Street, a series of art installations tell the ancient stories of place - including Hotoriu - a nine-metre kaitiaki that symbolically guards the ancestral river, and the Waharoa (archway) in Aotea Square by artist Selwyn Murupaenga. The area carries the historic footprints of local Māori tribes who have thrived in the space for hundreds of years. Towards the harbour, a Kawau Tikitiki (a cormorant/shag) is suspended in flight above the street, and anyone visiting the area can walk beneath Te Wehenga between Fort Street and Shortland Street. Meanwhile, the downtown part of the light trail begins at Te Komititanga, the public square by Britomart train station. A brand new trail of light installations and lightboxes links Te Komititanga along Galway Street to Takutai Square and Māhuhu ki te Rangi Park (near Spark Arena). In Takutai Square, a light and sound installation by Arama Tamariki-Enu, Angus Muir and Catherine Ellis depicts patterns mimicking the star-like shapes of the Matariki cluster. An accompanying soundscape brings the sounds of the foreshore and forest before the modern city was founded. The Tūhono light projections in Takutai Square will play every evening from Thursday 19 June to Thursday 10 July, with a seven-minute light and sound sequence every quarter-hour from 5pm until 10pm. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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