
Newsweek on the market
At a time when people don't want to wait a minute for information, let alone seven days, does a weekly news magazine have a future?
At a time when people don't want to wait a minute for information, let alone seven days, does a weekly news magazine have a future?
A pregnant Bernice Mene wears nothing but a hibiscus and a smile on the cover of this week's New Zealand Woman's Weekly.
Two police officers were arrested on New Year's Day and charged in relation to a drinking incident.
Just because readers have got used to reading papers online for free, it does not follow that they have a right to do so, writes Stephen Glover.
The oft repeated predictions of the demise of newspapers are ill founded, says a local publisher.
Despite her carefully cultivated "woman of the people" image, Oprah Winfrey takes a dim view of any outsider impertinent enough to wonder what makes her tick.
An NZ watchdog says Fiji's new media decree targets members of the public as well as journalists and editors.
ASB Business and Sunrise will be replaced by repeats of Campbell Live and US sitcoms, it has been revealed.
A financial adviser surprised me once by asking if journalists had a code of ethics.
TV3 political editor Duncan Garner not only likes to ask the questions, he's mastered the art of not answering questions from politicians.
A Pakistani newspaper editor who twice interviewed Osama bin Laden explains why he believes the world's most wanted man is still alive.