Player FM - Internet Radio Done Right
309 subscribers
Checked 6d ago
추가했습니다 seven 년 전
RNZ에서 제공하는 콘텐츠입니다. 에피소드, 그래픽, 팟캐스트 설명을 포함한 모든 팟캐스트 콘텐츠는 RNZ 또는 해당 팟캐스트 플랫폼 파트너가 직접 업로드하고 제공합니다. 누군가가 귀하의 허락 없이 귀하의 저작물을 사용하고 있다고 생각되는 경우 여기에 설명된 절차를 따르실 수 있습니다 https://ko.player.fm/legal.
Player FM -팟 캐스트 앱
Player FM 앱으로 오프라인으로 전환하세요!
Player FM 앱으로 오프라인으로 전환하세요!
들어볼 가치가 있는 팟캐스트
스폰서 후원
T
The Big Pitch with Jimmy Carr


It’s the very first episode of The Big Pitch with Jimmy Carr and our first guest is Phil Wang! And Phil’s subgenre is…This Place is Evil. We’re talking psychological torture, we’re talking gory death scenes, we’re talking Lorraine Kelly?! The Big Pitch with Jimmy Carr is a brand new comedy podcast where each week a different celebrity guest pitches an idea for a film based on one of the SUPER niche sub-genres on Netflix. From ‘Steamy Crime Movies from the 1970s’ to ‘Australian Dysfunctional Family Comedies Starring A Strong Female Lead’, our celebrity guests will pitch their wacky plot, their dream cast, the marketing stunts, and everything in between. By the end of every episode, Jimmy Carr, Comedian by night / “Netflix Executive” by day, will decide whether the pitch is greenlit or condemned to development hell! Listen on all podcast platforms and watch on the Netflix Is A Joke YouTube Channel . The Big Pitch is a co-production by Netflix and BBC Studios Audio. Jimmy Carr is an award-winning stand-up comedian and writer, touring his brand-new show JIMMY CARR: LAUGHS FUNNY throughout the USA from May to November this year, as well as across the UK and Europe, before hitting Australia and New Zealand in early 2026. All info and tickets for the tour are available at JIMMYCARR.COM Production Coordinator: Becky Carewe-Jeffries Production Manager: Mabel Finnegan-Wright Editor: Stuart Reid Producer: Pete Strauss Executive Producer: Richard Morris Executive Producers for Netflix: Kathryn Huyghue, Erica Brady, and David Markowitz Set Design: Helen Coyston Studios: Tower Bridge Studios Make Up: Samantha Coughlan Cameras: Daniel Spencer Sound: Charlie Emery Branding: Tim Lane Photography: James Hole…
Our Changing World
모두 재생(하지 않음)으로 표시
Manage series 2410779
RNZ에서 제공하는 콘텐츠입니다. 에피소드, 그래픽, 팟캐스트 설명을 포함한 모든 팟캐스트 콘텐츠는 RNZ 또는 해당 팟캐스트 플랫폼 파트너가 직접 업로드하고 제공합니다. 누군가가 귀하의 허락 없이 귀하의 저작물을 사용하고 있다고 생각되는 경우 여기에 설명된 절차를 따르실 수 있습니다 https://ko.player.fm/legal.
Dr Claire Concannon follows scientists into the bush, over rivers, back to their labs and many places in-between to cover the most fascinating research being done in Aotearoa New Zealand.
…
continue reading
662 에피소드
모두 재생(하지 않음)으로 표시
Manage series 2410779
RNZ에서 제공하는 콘텐츠입니다. 에피소드, 그래픽, 팟캐스트 설명을 포함한 모든 팟캐스트 콘텐츠는 RNZ 또는 해당 팟캐스트 플랫폼 파트너가 직접 업로드하고 제공합니다. 누군가가 귀하의 허락 없이 귀하의 저작물을 사용하고 있다고 생각되는 경우 여기에 설명된 절차를 따르실 수 있습니다 https://ko.player.fm/legal.
Dr Claire Concannon follows scientists into the bush, over rivers, back to their labs and many places in-between to cover the most fascinating research being done in Aotearoa New Zealand.
…
continue reading
662 에피소드
모든 에피소드
×One from the archives! By the 1990s Chatham Island tūī had all but disappeared from the main island. Slightly different to their mainland counterparts, these songbirds had survived on nearby Pitt and Rangatira islands. So a local conservation group decided to try bring them back. In this episode from 2010, Alison Ballance joins the ‘tūī team’ tasked with moving 40 birds from Rangatira island back to the main island. From now on Our Changing World will arrive in your podcast feed first thing on a Tuesday morning! Sign up to the Our Changing World monthly newsletter for episode backstories, science analysis and more. In this episode: 00:00 – 02:30 Introduction and background info 02:30 – 12:14 Catching tūī on Rangatira Island 12:15 – 12:24 Team has caught 40 birds 12:25 – 24:46 Moving the birds to main Chatham Island 24:47 – 25:55 Update on the birds… Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details…
Smoke explosions. Fire tornadoes. Burning couches. It all happens in the fire lab: a purpose-built facility where researchers can safely set stuff on fire and study how it burns, for science. New Zealand experiences 4,500 wildfires every year, with the risk ramping up due to climate change. We visit the fire lab to watch a large gorse bush go up in flames and learn how this helps us prepare for future wildfires. Sign up to the Our Changing World monthly newsletter for episode backstories, science analysis and more. In this episode: 01:54–09:39 – Watching a gorse bush burn in the fire lab 10:45–12:43 – Burning couches, smoke explosions and fire tornadoes 12:44–19:08 – Mini burn experiments and how research is preparing for wildfires of the future 19:08–23:32 – Kate's experience as a wildland firefighter in Canada… Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details…
How do you go about dissecting the world’s rarest whale? In December 2024, images from a concrete room in Mosgiel, just south of Dunedin, spread around the world as a team of people spent a week doing a scientific dissection on a spade-toothed whale that had washed up five months before. Claire Concannon joins them to find out what’s involved, what they have learned, and how the arrangements between local iwi and visiting scientists enabled knowledge sharing. Sign up to the Our Changing World monthly newsletter for episode backstories, science analysis and more… Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details…
O
Our Changing World


For nearly 30 years, researchers have been banding black petrel fledglings before they make their maiden migration to Ecuador. Only a handful of birds have ever come back. RNZ’s In Depth reporter Kate Newton travels to Aotea-Great Barrier Island to meet the birds, and the dedicated team trying to figure out the mystery of where they go. Sign up to the Our Changing World monthly newsletter for episode backstories, science analysis and more… Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details…
O
Our Changing World


Each year, five Prime Minister’s Science Prizes are awarded in the most prestigious New Zealand science awards. We explore the AgResearch science that got the top recognition this year and catch up with two of the other winners. Science Communication prizewinner Professor Jemma Geoghegan talks about the hundreds of interviews she’s done about viruses, and Future Scientist prizewinner Rena Misra explains her project exploring how a plant-fungus combination could have the potential to help clean up stormwater. Sign up to the Our Changing World monthly newsletter for episode backstories, science analysis and more. Guests: Professor Jemma Geoghegan, University of Otago Rena Misra, Epsom Girls’ Grammar School in Auckland Dr Linda Johnson, Endophyte Discovery Team, AgResearch In this episode: 00:06–02:05: The main science prize was awarded to a group who have discovered a way to protect pasture ryegrass from pests. 02:06–02:57: The winners of the Science Teacher Prize and the MacDiarmid Emerging Scientist Prize. 02:58–19:33: Interview with Science Communication prizewinner Professor Jemma Geoghegan of the University of Otago about viruses and pandemics. 19:34–26:10: Interview with Future Scientist prizewinner Rena Misra of Epsom Girls' Grammar School in Auckland about a fungus-plant symbiosis that might help clean up stormwater… Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details…
With its steep sides, forested slopes and heavy rainfall, Fiordland has interesting ecosystems both above and below the water. Below the surface of the inner fiords, a variety of sponges, corals, and other filter-feeding animals cling to the cliff-like reefs. Claire Concannon heads to Doubtful Sound with a research team who are habitat-mapping the fiords to better understand what’s there, and how things are changing over time. They are also investigating the resilience of its iconic black corals to local landslides and marine heatwaves. Sign up to the Our Changing World monthly newsletter for episode backstories, science analysis and more. Guests: Professor James Bell, Victoria University of Wellington Miriam Pierotti, Victoria University of Wellington Amber Kirk, Victoria University of Wellington Learn more: Read the article that accompanies this episode: Studying Fiordland's iconic black corals Our Changing World visited Professor James Bell at the Coastal Ecology Lab in 2023 to learn more about sponges. The 2022 marine heatwave mentioned here led to one of the largest ever recorded sponge mass bleaching events . In Antarctica giant glass sponges also live in quite shallow waters, under the sea ice. Eva Ramey and Dr Alice Rogers are also involved in a project to study the movement of sharks in Fiordland . Professor James Bell has investigated ‘middle’ light zone habitats around Aoteaora. Learn more and check out some videos in his recent article on The Conversation . Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details…
O
Our Changing World


Cooper’s orchid is New Zealand’s rarest and most elusive, with fewer than 250 plants left in the wild. It belongs to the group of potato orchids, which grow mostly underground as tubers – except for a brief period every few years when they push out a leafless stick with a few flowers. This largely subterranean lifestyle already presents a challenge, but saving this species is even harder because, like all orchids, the Cooper’s orchid can only produce seedlings with the help of the right soil fungus. After years of lab experiments to produce in vitro seedlings, botanists are now ready to boost dwindling wild populations. Guests: Dr Carlos Lehnebach, botany curator, Te Papa Tongarewa Dr Karin van der Walt, conservation advisor, Ōtari Wilton’s Bush Jennifer Alderton-Moss, plant conservation researcher, Wellington City Council Learn more: Read the article that accompanies this episode: Rare orchids reintroduced into the wild . Alison Ballance talked to Carlos Lehnebach about why some orchids smell like mushrooms and how that helps them to fool insects. This Critter of the Week episode focuses on the helmet orchid ( Corybas dienemus ), another rare native orchid that likes cold, damp and windy places. In this interview, Jesse Mulligan talks to Fred Clarke, a Californian orchid breeder who created the acclaimed black orchid After Dark . This Critter of the Week episode discusses the copper beard orchid ( Calochilus herbaceous ), which is threatened by habitat loss and climate change. Sign up to the Our Changing World monthly newsletter for episode backstories, science analysis and more. Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details…
Kākahi are a keystone species in lake and river ecosystems, keeping the water clean by filtering one litre of water every hour. These native mussels once blanketed lakebeds across Auckland – but recent surveys found an alarming decline and disappearance across many lakes. A team of scientists and divers have mounted a rescue mission for one of the last remaining kākahi populations, trying to keep the mussels safe from invasive fish through all the steps of their complicated – and fascinating – life cycle. Guests: Madison Jones, Senior Healthy Waters Specialist, Auckland Council Belinda Studholme, Senior Biosecurity Advisor – Freshwater, Auckland Council Ebi Hussain, Submerged Environmental and Aotearoa Lakes Andrew Simpson, Global Dive Learn more: Read the article that accompanies this episode: A rescue mission saving rare freshwater mussels . Meet the bullies – the native freshwater fish that host the kākahi in their parasitic stage – in this 2023 episode recorded by Claire at Zealandia , where the fish have been translocated. Alison Ballance covered the translocation of kākahi into Zealandia back in 2018. Wondering how the perch and other pests ended up in Lake Rototoa? Black Sheep has the details in the episode Invasive: the story of Stewart Smith . Sign up to the Our Changing World monthly newsletter for episode backstories, science analysis and more. Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details…
O
Our Changing World


Claire Concannon spoke to RNZ's climate correspondent Eloise Gibson for the last episode of the Voice of the Sea Ice series. Listen to the full interview between Eloise and Claire in which they talk about the Paris Agreement, New Zealand's international climate commitments, and what we can do as individuals. Sign up to the Our Changing World monthly newsletter for episode backstories, science analysis and more. Guests : Eloise Gibson, RNZ climate correspondent Learn more : Read Eloise’s recent analysis about New Zealand’s international climate targets , or New Zealand's glacier loss . Eloise has also recently fact checked Winston Peters on climate accord , reported on our 2035 Paris Agreement target and delved into the recent uptake of solar demand in New Zealand. The Climate Action Tracker website keeps tabs on the targets and pledges of different countries and monitors whether they are on track to keep the world below 2 oC of warming (compared to pre-industrial temperatures). Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details…
Human-induced climate change is impacting Earth’s global systems, including ice melt in Antarctica. What is the world doing to combat it? Signed in 2016, the Paris Agreement is the current global plan to tackle it. Countries pledge different emission reduction targets and then produce their workings and homework about how they are going about it. Where does New Zealand fit in? Are we doing our bit as a nation? And should we be bothering with individual actions or is that simply a bait-and-switch tactic by those who want to delay real change? Guests: Eloise Gibson, RNZ climate correspondent Dr Jess Berentson-Saw, Director of Narrative Research and Strategy, The Workshop Learn more: Read the article that accompanies this episode: Is New Zealand doing its bit in combating climate change? Read Eloise’s recent analysis about New Zealand’s international climate targets , or listen to this episode of The Detail . Eloise has also recently fact checked Winston Peters on climate accord , reported on our 2035 Paris Agreement target , and delved into the recent uptake of solar demand in New Zealand. The Climate Action Tracker website keeps tabs onthe targets and pledges of different countries and monitors whether they are on track to keep the world below 2 °C of warming (compared to pre-industrial temperatures). The Workshop have published a cheat sheet on ‘How to talk about climate change’ . This series was made with travel support from the Antarctica New Zealand Community Engagement Programme. … Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details…
O
Our Changing World


In February 2025, the world hit a new low for global sea ice extent. Arctic sea ice has been declining for several decades now, but Antarctic sea ice had been holding steady, until recently. With low summer sea ice extents for four years in a row, it appears that Earth’s warming has kicked Antarctic sea ice into a new regime. Claire Concannon speaks to scientists to understand what this means for Antarctica, what this means for us, and how they feel about it. Guests: Dr Natalie Robinson, NIWA Dr Jacqui Stuart, Victoria University of Wellington Dr Greg Leonard, University of Otago Dr Daniel Price, University of Canterbury and Kea Aerospace Dr Inga Smith, University of Otago Dr Michelle LaRue, University of Canterbury Learn more: Read the article that accompanies this episode: A time of change for Antarctic sea ice . Read about the recent State of the Global Climate Report . The world’s biggest iceberg recently ran aground , but to get up close and personal, listen to the Voice of the Iceberg miniseries. The world is also experiencing ice loss from its glaciers. New Zealand’s glaciers have shrunk by 29% since 2000 . Listen to The annual snowline survey to learn how our glaciers are monitored. This series was made with travel support from the Antarctica New Zealand Community Engagement Programme. Sign up to the Our Changing World monthly newsletter for episode backstories, science analysis and more. Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details…
Penguins that return to the ice in the middle of winter to lay their eggs. Seals that use cracks in the ice to keep their pups safe. And fish that have antifreeze proteins to survive in the icy cold waters... Antarctic life is tough, and full of surprises. Scientists are keen to piece together the Antarctic food web puzzle to better understand the interconnections, and to enable smart conservation decisions. Guests: Arek Aspinwall, University of Canterbury Dr Michelle LaRue, University of Canterbury Professor Steve Wing, University of Otago Learn more: Read the article that accompanies this episode: How Antarctic seals and penguins rely on sea ice . Meet other seals and penguins with Peregrin Hyde on his journey to South Georgia Island as part of an Inspiring Explorers expedition. In ‘Best Journey in the World’ from the Voices from Antarctica series, Alison Ballance travelled to Cape Crozier with a team from NIWA studying the emperor penguins. This series was made with travel support from the Antarctica New Zealand Community Engagement Programme. Sign up to the Our Changing World monthly newsletter for episode backstories, science analysis and more. Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details…
What’s it like to live and work on the frozen ocean? A team of researchers is camping out on the sea ice to investigate the small critters that live on the bottom of the ice, and among the sloshy platelet ice layer just below it. From microalgae to krill, these tiny organisms hold up the big complex food web of Antarctica. Scientists are keen to understand these communities, and how they might shift as the sea ice cycle changes. Guests: Dr Natalie Robinson, NIWA Dr Jacqui Stuart, Victoria University of Wellington Dr Greg Leonard, University of Otago Lizzy Skelton, University of Canterbury Dr Aimee van der Reis, University of Auckland Salvatore Campanile, Victoria University of Wellington Learn more: Read the article that accompanies this episode: What lives in Antarctic sea ice? Dr Natalie Robinson spoke to The Detail in 2023 about the unprecedented sea ice conditions of that year Alison Ballance's Voices from Antarctica series from 2020 explores what it’s like to live and work in Antarctica. This series was made with travel support from the Antarctica New Zealand Community Engagement Programme. Sign up to the Our Changing World monthly newsletter for episode backstories, science analysis and more. Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details…
O
Our Changing World


Step out on the sea ice just outside New Zealand’s Scott Base with researchers studying the physics of its annual cycle. Each year a massive patch of ocean around Antarctica freezes and then melts again come summer – Antarctica’s heartbeat. In winter, the ice effectively more than doubles the size of this already massive continent, and it plays a huge role in controlling our planet’s climate. Guests: Dr Inga Smith, University of Otago Antonia Radlwimmer, University of Otago Professor Wolfgang Rack, University of Canterbury Learn more: Read the article that accompanies this episode, Monitoring and measuring Antarctica's heartbeat . Listen to Physics on Ice from 2021 with Emeritus Professor Pat Langhorne and Dr Inga Smith. Alison Ballance's Voices from Antarctica series from 2020 explores what it’s like to live and work in Antarctica. This series was made with travel support from the Antarctica New Zealand Community Engagement Programme. Sign up to the Our Changing World monthly newsletter for episode backstories, science analysis and more. Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details…
O
Our Changing World


Welcome to Antarctica - a land of ice, extremes, and ambition. From historic expeditions to modern day science projects, Antarctic exploration is a unique, and dangerous, experience. We meet one researcher involved in an epic journey across the largest ice shelf in Antarctica, mapping a safe route through a crevassed landscape for others to follow. Plus, we learn about the different types of ice found in this vast, frozen landscape. Guests: Dr Daniel Price, University of Canterbury and Kea Aerospace Ngā Taonga Sound and Vision archival audio Learn more: Read the article that accompanies this episode. Daniel did the route-finding for the SWAIS2C project. Veronika Meduna flew out to the camp in the 2023/2024 season to report on their activities. Daniel has spoken to Morning Report about Kea Aerospace ’s work developing a solar-powered aircraft Hear about other ongoing research in Antarctica from the latest research season, including investigating new methane seeps , and giant glass sponges . Learn more about living, and working, on the ice in the 2020 podcast series – Voices from Antarctica . This series was made with travel support from the Antarctica New Zealand Community Engagement Programme . Sign up to the Our Changing World monthly newsletter for episode backstories, science analysis and more. Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details…
플레이어 FM에 오신것을 환영합니다!
플레이어 FM은 웹에서 고품질 팟캐스트를 검색하여 지금 바로 즐길 수 있도록 합니다. 최고의 팟캐스트 앱이며 Android, iPhone 및 웹에서도 작동합니다. 장치 간 구독 동기화를 위해 가입하세요.