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If memory serves
What's behind a reality show about an eatery with waiting staff living with dementia?
Endeavour's final voyage
How the second actor to play Inspector Morse said goodbye to the role.
There goes hymning Simon
Has the veteran singer-songwriter come down with an elegy?
Remembering a rock remedy
Veteran independent record label pioneer SIMON GRIGG on how the late Barry Jenkin changed New Zealand music.
Just the job
The new comedy by the acclaimed Indian Ink Theatre Company employs a choir of temps to show what it's like to be a faceless worker in the office of an international corporation.
A school for scandal
Catherine Chidgey's latest novel is a twisty, ideas-rich portrait of 1980s adolescence, and much more besides.
Rise of the taskmasters
For people with busy lives and no time for personal tasks, help is at hand for a price.
Good to know
If we had a more balanced curriculum, we would encourage more young Māori to flourish at school, says a leading educator.
Dicing with the demon
If Canadians are being told two standard alcoholic drinks a week is the safe limit, why is NZ's guidance at least five times higher?
Waves of calm
If the popular perception of surfers and surfing is of gnarly youths taking on the elements, there's another side to the pursuit.
Extraterrestrial litterbugs
After trashing Earth, we now risk doing the same to space, writes PETERSINGER, with AGATA SAGAN, in the second of three essays.
Voice for change
The power of music drives new NZ Opera head Brad Cohen, and it's something he's keen to share.
Restoration drama
When Auckland flooding wiped out her entire wardrobe, former fashion editor STACY GREGG grasped the opportunity for reinvention.
Underwater treasure
Growing seaweed promises rich dividends for farmers, our environment and our health.
A disease for the ages
When Claire Turnbull's grandmother died aged 93, her family found diet pills and diet shakes in her kitchen. To Turnbull, it was no surprise. Though her grandmother was never formally diagnosed with an eating disorder, it was obvious she lived with one her whole life.
Stars in her eyes
Leah Albrow finds meaning in life by gazing at the cosmos, writes CAITLIN SYKES.
Phooey to prurient tutting
It's hard to account for the unending fuss over one-time New Zealander Phillip Schofield.
Up you, Pompidou
Norman Kirk's Ban-the-Bomb protest 50 years ago marked a sea change in foreign policy, writes DAVID BARBER, who was on HMNZS Otago.
Festival of plenty
Arthouse greats, Kiwis and Cannes are on the NZIFF roll
Reginald is such a tease
Reginald regards me as a member of his flock, one that requires dominating
Sonic boon
In his new work, Nathaniel Otley is steering clear of the traditional
Book your seat now
What TVNZ+'s move into sport means for fans on the couch
Just reminiscing
Nostalgia and cardigan pop loom large in these local releases
In her natural habitat
Why Forest & Bird boss Nicola Toki has paired with comedian Pax Assadi on a new series about the country's most endangered species
Under pressure
Stories of loss and recovery in two new wildlife guides
Sense & sensibility
Susan Sontag’s essays are fresh and unflinching, despite their age
Curses and blessings
Abraham Verghese’s elegant and sweeping family saga has its roots in his mother’s childhood memories
Mystery man
Pioneering author Walter Mosley has made a career out of defying expectations
A KiwiGPT?
Working with systems providers could help to beat cost barriers as generative AI moves to the next level
Now, tell me what you see
Inkblots have an enduring fascination as a psychoanalysis tool, especially when out drinking in Prague