‘ARE YOU NOT ENTERTAINED’ productions presents Pub Politics ep 1, ep 2 and ep 3
Comrades, brothers and sisters, ‘ARE YOU NOT ENTERTAINED’ productions presents Pub Politics 2019 live from The Chapel Bar.
Commentary examining neoliberalism, economic inequality, and the political forces shaping modern New Zealand society.
Comrades, brothers and sisters, ‘ARE YOU NOT ENTERTAINED’ productions presents Pub Politics 2019 live from The Chapel Bar.
Deputy Leader of the National Party, Paula Bennett.
Leader of the ACT Party, David Seymour.
Green Party spokesperson on Drug reform, Chloe Swarbrick.
President of NORML and TDB cannabis blogger, Chris Fowlie.
To debate the referendum and the need for any cannabis reform we have:
Deputy Leader of the National Party, Paula Bennett.
Leader of the ACT Party, David Seymour.
Green Party spokesperson on Drug reform, Chloe Swarbrick.
President of NORML and TDB cannabis blogger, Chris Fowlie.
Did you use to like ‘BackBenchers’? Imagine that but with a lot more swearing and abuse!
Look, I get that as someone with an education over 16 with basic reading skills, I am not the target audience for this slop, but TVNZ managed to fill a room with a cheering audience who all looked like they had drunk their body weight in Red Bull, so maybe lowest common denominator lite entertainment is the glorious new future of public television?
Anyone who thinks we don’t need a wealth tax, yet wants to continue living in a safe society, really needs…
Hands Off Our Tamariki : a Rally to Demand the Halting of State Abuse of Māori Tamariki And Whānau In…
Syrians in New Zealand speak about the uprising against the Assad government, the violence that has followed, the role of foreign governments in the conflict, and what New Zealanders can do to help.
‘In Out of the Inferno, Meurant proves there’s only one way to tell the unvarnished truth about the country he loves – write fiction.’ Christ Trotter: political commentator & editor.
There has been a lot of discussion recently on Stuff.co.nz about the 25 year history of Once Were Warriors, that quintessential New Zealand film that went beyond the shaggy dog antics of Goodbye Pork Pie and Came a Hot Friday or the dystopia of the Quiet Earth or Sleeping Dogs or the pure creepiness of Vigil and The Navigator to enshrine itself as a chapter of our cultural history that to this day still resonates with all the fury of its opening night.