Ahiahi mārie, welcome to The Spinoff Daily.
Today on The Spinoff: A brief timeline of Cook Strait ferries, Geoffrey Palmer on rapid reforms and the complaint comedy of Jerry Seinfeld comes to Auckland.
“Dozens of councils, including Porirua, Wellington, Auckland, Gisborne and Christchurch, have used a sinking lid policy. The concept seems clear in principle: the number of machines gradually decreases, meaning no venue, charity or community group is immediately defunded. Instead, there’s time to adapt. ‘It’s a long-term strategy – we can’t get rid [of pokie machines] overnight,’ says Tamatha Paul, the Green MP representing Wellington Central. She was a Wellington councillor in 2021 when the authority voted to put a sinking lid on pokie machines. ‘We want to minimise the presence of the temptation [to gamble].’ But do fewer machines mean less money gets spent overall – or just that more money goes into the same machines? After all, in spite of the sinking lid, Porirua’s pokies are making more money than ever.”
A brief timeline of Cook Strait ferries
Geoffrey Palmer on rapid reforms: ‘You should learn from history, not repeat it’
Pharmac budget boost goes beyond National’s cancer drug promise –
‘It’s about going into the unknown willingly, and troubleshooting along the way!’
Award-winning director and actor Anapela Polataivao ONZM takes us on a journey of creativity and courage in our first Art Work story. From Wild Dogs Under My Skirt to the upcoming Red White and Brass, she shows us how embracing the unknown is key to groundbreaking theatre. Discover her inspiring insights on commitment and creativity on The Spinoff now.
Review: Jerry Seinfeld brings complaint comedy to Spark Arena
I love Invercargill – and its poetry festival, too
The cost of being: An out-of-work theatre-maker on the benefit
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