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WALAO! Hosts Oto and Jaycee played 3 hours of of choonz on Waitangi day!
Thanks to The Beer Spot!
Beth and Charlotte fill in for Huia on Waitangi Day, thanks to the Tuning Fork!
Sara covers the show for Waitangi Day to deliver a wide variety of waiata + heaaaps of archive tracks :)
Featuring Shli
This mix was conjured up pre-summer, looking forward to some outdoor parties. It starts off on more of a bassy tip then drifts into more techno territory. Full of low-end, but still atmospheric and trippy was the brief.
Covering for Sofia, it was loads of fun, thanks for listening
Happy Rāpare! It's a short week, so Rosetta and Milly have you covered with plenty of tunes ahead of your long weekend, and even some Laneway throwbacks!! E whai ake nei, coming up on the show i tēnei ata: Isthmus'n That with Desley Simpson, Natural Ange - and plenty of giveaways to Splore and BADBADNOTGOOD! Whakarongo mai nei.
Thanks to eighthirty coffee roasters!
At the top of the show Thursday host Emma Gleason chats to Muroki about his new album Amber Skies and upcoming tour, while later on she's joined in the 95bFM studio by Psycho Gab bassist Orlando Cooper to discuss the band's new single 'Compass'.
Thanks to The Tuning Fork
Orlando Cooper, bassist for Tāmaki-based neo-soul band Psycho Gab, stops by the 95bFM studio to talk to Thursday host Emma Gleason about their new song 'Compass' (number two in this week's top 10) and how they shot the video on Super 8 film. Tomorrow he and the band head to Shipwrecked music festival.
Thanks to The Tuning Fork
Natural Ange is back for 2026! Rosetta and Milly chat with her about types of flour to support the gut, getting back into work routines, and recovering from big festivals/nights out - just in time for Laneway! Whakarongo mai nei.
Deputer Mayor Desley Simpson is back on the airwaves for 2026 with Rosetta and Milly - catch their kōrero every second Thursday at 8:10am. Today, Rosetta and Milly chat with Desley about what's been happening in Tāmaki over the summer and the newly announced Flood Research Project. Whakarongo mai nei!
much to liv's delight we are talking about another braided river bird this wiki! yeah that's right my skuxxes, it's the freaking wrybill, the ngutu pare!!! we love this bird so much and u better love her too cos otherwise piet will b mad XD
link to piet's notes on the wrybill here!
For over a decade, the rules regulating diagnoses and treatment options available for those with ADHD have been demanding with high costs and requiring access to specialists with long waitlists.
New changes will now see GPs able to diagnose and prescribe medication to those 18 and up.
To understand what these changes will mean, I spoke to Professor of General Practice and Primary Care at the University of Auckland Dr Bruce Arroll.
Thanks to Northern Rocks Bouldering Gym!
This week on the Wednesday Wire...
For our weekly catchup w/ the Green Party, Host Manny spoke with MP Ricardo Menéndez March about the Civil Defence Payment for disaster victims, the state of the economy, and Waitangi Day.
They then spoke to Professor of General Practice and Primary Care Bruce Arrol, on the changes being made to ADHD diagnosis and access to medical treatments.
Producer Theo spoke with the spokesperson for Ka Lāhui Hawai’i, Healani Sonoda-Pale, on the seventeen-member delegation to Waitangi from Hawai’i, and solidarity between Māori and Kanaka Maoli.
They then spoke to Public Health Medicine Specialist Dr Sainimere Boladuadua on the Pacific shift in global health she and her colleagues have proposed.
This week, political, cultural, and community leaders have been gathering in Waitangi to commemorate the signing of Te Tiriti.
However, recent attacks on Te Tiriti, Te Reo Māori, and Te Ao Māori by the New Zealand coalition government are front of mind for many.
Ka Lāhui Hawai’i, a Kanaka Maoli initiative calling for self-determination and self-governance in Hawai’i, have sent a seventeen-member delegation to show solidarity with Māori.
To understand the demonstration of indigenous solidarity this delegation represents, as well as the ongoing colonial attacks on indigenous peoples across the Pacific, Producer Theo spoke to the spokesperson for Ka Lāhui Hawai’i, Healani Sonoda-Pale.
Colonisation continues to deeply affect the Pacific, with the production of health inequities tied closely to the unequal power dynamics still inflicted on Pacific nations by external high-income countries.
A recent article by a group of women academics and health professionals based in Fiji, Tonga, Sāmoa, and Aotearoa New Zealand has called for a reimagining in how global health is approached in the Pacific.
This proposed shift would see greater sovereignty exercised by Pacific nations in research and health, and a pluralistic worldview reflecting Indigenous Pacific knowledge systems.
To understand the state of global health in the Pacific, the reimagining her group has proposed, and the role that Aotearoa New Zealand can play, Producer Theo spoke to Public Health Medicine Specialist Dr Sainimere Boladuadua.
It was just two weeks ago, following weather warnings and torrential rain, that flooding and slips across Northland, Coromandel and Bay of Plenty wreaked havoc, cutting off communities, damaging houses, and taking at least lives.
Since the disaster, the Green Party has been advocating for the activation of the Civil Defence payment, a fund put aside to provide a modicum of support to get people back on their feet. Last week, the government announced its activation.
The quality of our lives, the affordability of our food, the pay of our jobs, the success of our enterprises and arts, all summed up in the words “state of the economy”. In the run up to the election, where kiwi’s will get their say on if we feel the current government has been good kaitiaki of our economy or not, the measures of its success are becoming increasingly fought over. What measure’s are thought to be important may well impact who gets to govern us over the next THREE years.
Finally, this Friday we celebrate ONE HUNDRED AND EIGHTY SIX YEARS since the signing the te Tiriti o Waitangi or the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840 that laid the foundation for the creation of the New Zealand state today.
For our weekly catchup w/ the Green Party, Host Manny spoke with MP Ricardo Menéndez March about the state of the economy, and how we commemorate Waitangi day, but began by asking him about the government's activation of the Civil Defence Payment that he had advocated for.
Ata mārie! E whai ake nei, coming up on your Rāapa Breakfast show with Rosetta and Milly: we continue our coverage of the Auckland Pride Festival with director Hāmiora Bailey, Charlie and Josh from Yumi Zouma come up to the studio for a kōrero about their new album, and Cam is up for a special early From The Crate this week! Whakarongo mai nei.
Thanks to eighthirty coffee roasters!
Cam is up specially on a Wednesday - so that you don't miss out on the fabulous new releases out on the shelves at Southbound this Waitangi weekend! Whakarongo mai nei.
IDK - CLOVER (Feat. Joey Valence & Brae)
J Mascis + The Fog - Tell the Truth
Courtney Marie Andrews - Keeper
Josh and Charlie from Yumi Zouma are in town, and up in the bFM studio chatting to Rosetta and Milly about their new album No Love Lost To Kindness. Whakarongo mai nei!



