
NZ scientists feel the heat from US budget cuts
As budgets are slashed, scientists must make a better case for funding.

Why ‘you are what you eat’ is one of the most dangerous food myths around
It sounds like common sense, but 'you are what you eat' reveals troubling food myths.
Politics

Greg Dixon’s Another Kind of Politics: Putin calls Trump’s invasion of USA “genius move”
Greg Dixon runs a satirical eye over the week in local and international politics.

Danyl McLauchlan: 50 years of superannuation and still we get it wrong
With superannuation, politicians face looming disaster they cannot avoid but cannot solve.

Happy Birthday, Mr President: Trump’s special day to coincide with a day of protests
Grassroot groups are fighting back against the US President's audacious power grabs.
Opinion

Why travel with PMs is not for the faint of heart
The complicated relationship between NZ Prime Ministers and planes.

Law & Society: Retroactive laws, real-time consequences
What remedies are there for legislative overreach?

Russell Brown: The multi-million-dollar cost of a 50km future
For Simeon Brown, cars going as fast as possible everywhere was a kind of holy mission.
New Zealand

NZ scientists feel the heat from US budget cuts
As budgets are slashed, scientists must make a better case for funding.

Listener weekly quiz: June 11
Test your general knowledge with the Listener’s weekly quiz.

Ko Witi tōku ingoa: Esteemed NZ author’s te reo immersion
At 80, one of our most celebrated authors decided it was time to learn his language.
Enterprise & Tech
Health

Why ‘you are what you eat’ is one of the most dangerous food myths around
It sounds like common sense, but 'you are what you eat' reveals troubling food myths.

Marc Wilson: How the 2025 Budget disappointed those working in mental health
New initiatives identified, but the big issues were skirted around.

NZ leads breakthroughs in MRI brain research
MRI innovation could predict dementia and guide brain surgery.
Life

Weekend wine guide: Kiwi Bordeaux-style wines give French counterparts a run for their money
Michael Cooper pitches Bordeaux and NZ wines against each other in a blind taste-test.

The Good Life: The strange charm of stuffed lions and other taxidermy tales
Inside a quirky taxidermy museum hidden in South Wairarapa.

The curious story of EM Forster and his flying fish of literature
Had EM Forster seen a flying fish, he might have recognised how they inhabit two worlds.
Culture

Ko Witi tōku ingoa: Esteemed NZ author’s te reo immersion
At 80, one of our most celebrated authors decided it was time to learn his language.

Out, damned text: Why it’s time to retire Shakespeare from NZ schools
Single-minded and monocular focus on Shakespeare limits ideas of what great literature.

Feats of clay: New book pays tribute to a supreme collector and the items he gifted Te Papa
The collection of Walter Cook reflects the evolution of design from 1880 to the 1970s.
Entertainment

The new old thing: Two musicians make a return to the spotlight
Music from a pair of 60-somethings proves as vital as ever.

Hart to Hart: The latest actors to play one of Roger Hall’s great characters compare notes
Sir Roger Hall's latest Dickie Hart play opens in Auckland & Christchurch.

French Film Festival Aotearoa encompasses love, friendship and family
Three films from this year's French film festival reviewed.
Books

Book of the day: New Skin by Miranda Nation
Nation's first novel about med school lovers owes a sizeable debt to Sally Rooney.

Buster, biology and hormones: Why Dr Eric Espiner is still in the lab at 91
At 91, endocrinologist Eric Espiner remains fascinated by how the body works.

Book of the day: Aftertaste by Daria Lavelle
Debut novel is an inventive exploration of grief, memory and the power of food.
Crime

Justice with heart: Steve Braunias spends a day at NZ’s court for the mentally ill
Our one specialist court assessing whether a defendant is mentally fit to enter plea.

Eyewitness doubts continue to haunt Scott Watson case 25 years after conviction
Eyewitnesses to solve crimes is a standard policing procedure, but how reliable are they?

No DNA, no CCTV, no chance: The 50-year hunt for what really happened to Mona Blades
Reassessing evidence in the Mona Blades case and the orange Datsun that led NZ astray.
World

Happy Birthday, Mr President: Trump’s special day to coincide with a day of protests
Grassroot groups are fighting back against the US President's audacious power grabs.

Jane Clifton: Blood on the tracks
European public transport is generally excellent, commuter etiquette is not.

Jane Clifton: If taniwha trouble you, be glad we don’t have Irish fairies
A new book offers practical advice on navigating the world of fairies.
Sponsored Stories

This contemporary Redcliffs home maximises its view of the estuary
A home on a Christchurch estuary provides its owner with an outlook that’s always changing

10 things we learnt from listener.co.nz stories this week
Peacekeeping, population and why cannabis could cure insomnia.

10 things we learnt from listener.co.nz stories this week
The former PM who helped solve a violent crime to 11 words to say before you die.