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7.11 Russian spy poisoning: UK vs Russia

Sir Tony Brenton and Stephen Dalziel

Sir Tony Brenton and Stephen Dalziel Photo: Supplied

Russia analyst Stephen Dalziel, right, and former British Ambassador to Russia, Sir Tony Brenton, discuss the diplomatic fallout between the UK and Russia following the poisoning of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia Skripal in Salisbury.  

7.30 The House

This week our parliamentary programme looks at the system for petitioning Parliament - which has gone online.

7:45 Wynn Flaten: Seven years of Syria conflict 

Syrian children at a refugee camp

Syrian children at a refugee camp Photo: World Vision

Wynn Flaten, World Vision's Syria crisis response director

Wynn Flaten, World Vision's Syria crisis response director Photo: Supplied

This week marked seven years since the start of the conflict in Syria. World Vision has released a report on the impact the conflict has had on children. Their Syria crisis response director Wynn Flaten discusses what's happening to the youngest victims of the war. 

7:53 Mike King: I Am Hope tour

Mike King is riding the length of the country on a 50cc scooter for I Am Hope.

Mike King is riding the length of the country on a 50cc scooter for I Am Hope. Photo: Stephanie Creagh

Mental Health advocate Mike King is travelling from Bluff to Cape Reinga with seven others, riding 50cc scooters. Along the way he's talking to young people about mental health in the "I am Hope Tour".  King and his group started their journey on March 1 and on March 18, they're half way. Mike King talks about what they've achieved so far.  

8:10 Insight: Dangerous daycare

Painting and tricycle at early childhood centre

Photo: RNZ Insight/John Gerritsen

Early childhood enrolments have boomed in recent years, but cracks are starting to show in the system and early childhood teachers warn that our youngest children at risk. For this Insight, RNZ education correspondent, John Gerritsen, talks to teachers about shortcomings they see every day in some early childhood services.

8:37 Ernest Rutherford’s progeny Mary Fowler

Dr Mary Fowler, great granddaughter of  Ernest Rutherford, whose Nobel medal she is holding.

Dr Mary Fowler, great granddaughter of Ernest Rutherford, whose Nobel medal she is holding. Photo: University of Canterbury

A letter Ernest Rutherford wrote to the grandfather of RNZ listener Kathryn Clarke, in 1925. It's now at the Canterbury Museum.

A letter Ernest Rutherford wrote to the grandfather of RNZ listener Kathryn Clarke, in 1925. It's now at the Canterbury Museum. Photo: Supplied

Dr Mary Fowler has science in her DNA. She's the great granddaughter of  Ernest Lord Rutherford, First Baron Rutherford of Nelson, the New Zealand scientist considered the father of  nuclear physics. But Mary Fowler has paved her own path despite the genes; she's an award-winning geophysicist and Master of Darwin College in Cambridge. She was in NZ recently to open the new $220 million Rutherford Regional Science and Innovation Centre at the University of Canterbury.

9:06 Mediawatch

This week: Canadian journalist and author Cory Doctorow urges us to free up NZ's copyright rules - and the owner of the NBR says he's aiming for 10 times as many paying subscribers. Plus Labour's summer camp scandal.
Produced and presented by Colin Peacock

9:37 Game on for Weta’s Hayley Gray

Not a bad workspace: Weta Gameshop.

Not a bad workspace: Weta Gameshop. Photo: Supplied

Weta Gameshop executive producer Hayley Gray.

Weta Gameshop executive producer Hayley Gray. Photo: Supplied

Hayley Gray is executive producer of Weta Gameshop, a division of Weta Workshop five years in the making. Weta Gameshop will be officially launched on March 19, after teaming up with Mixed Reality developers Magic Leap. Their first game will be Dr Grordbort’s Invaders. Hayley Gray,  who divides her time between Wellington, Sydney and Florida as Weta Gameshop’s lead production and business strategist, explains what Weta has been up to.

Mixed Reality with Magic Leap

10:04 Alex Ross: an ear for music

Alex Ross, author of The Rest Is Noise.

Alex Ross, author of The Rest Is Noise. Photo: Supplied

Alex Ross is the music critic for The New Yorker and the author of The Rest Is Noise: Listening to the 20th Century. He will appear at the Auckland Writers Festival which runs from 15-20 May and talk about his latest work, on composer Richard Wagner. Alex Ross is also undertaking an eight-centre tour with Chamber Music New Zealand with mezzo-soprano Bianca Andrew and modern music ensemble Stroma.

10.35 From comical to musical: Swamp Thing

Michael Barker, left, and Grant Haua are blues duo Swamp Thing.

Michael Barker, left, and Grant Haua are blues duo Swamp Thing. Photo: Supplied

Michael Barker of Swamp Thing

Michael Barker of Swamp Thing Photo: RNZ/Dan Cook

The music of Blues roots duo Swamp Thing delves into various territories - from good old blues jams, to swamp pop and Americana. Michael Barker and Grant Haua formed Swamp Thing in 2010 and have three studio albums and one live to their name - Balladeer (2012), Primordium (2014), Let's Get Live (2016) and Rumours and Lies (2017). Michael Barker talks about how the group has evolved and plays two songs, “Rotten” and “By Your Side” For this interview he’s joined Brett Adams of The Bads. Swamp Thing will perform at the Bay of Islands Music Festival on 31 March.  

11:05 Mark Mitchinson: the hit, the High Road

Mark Mitchinson as washed-up rocker Terry Huffer in High Road.

Mark Mitchinson as washed-up rocker Terry Huffer in High Road. Photo: Supplied

Mark Mitchinson in High Road

Mark Mitchinson in High Road Photo: Supplied

Emma Thompson in High Road

Emma Thompson in High Road Photo: Supplied

Local comedy webseries The High Road has run for three seasons online and collected plenty of awards along the way.  It follows the life of a washed-up British rock star Terry Huffer, played by Mark Mitchinson, living in Piha. The online series was made with a budget of $423 but was so popular that NZ on Air has contributed $100,000  to get it reworked for TV. Now The High Road has become Lightbox's first step into the game of commissioning content - and has been adapted by writer Justin Harwood and lead actor Mark Mitchinson. It will screen as 30-minute episodes on Lightbox from 30 March, five years on from the original webseries. Mark Mitchinson explains and reveals how he get got star British actress Emma Thompson on board.  

11:30 Jason Isbell: Americana and ditching alcohol

Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit

Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit Photo: Supplied

American musician Jason Isbell’s music has been described as alternative country or southern rock, but he prefers to not put a label on it. Isbell has won four Grammys  - the most recent was for his latest album with his band the 400 Unit - he won Best Americana album for The Nashville Sound and best American Roots song for "If We Were Vampires".  Isbell is playing at the Auckland Town Hall on 27 March. He talks about his music and how Eleanor Catton’s book The Luminaries helped him through his recovery from alcoholism.