![<i>All in a day's work: </i> Did Henry jump, or was he pushed?](/pf/resources/images/placeholders/placeholder_l.png?d=794)
<i>All in a day's work: </i> Did Henry jump, or was he pushed?
The Henry situation is interesting from an employment law perspective for two main reasons.
The Henry situation is interesting from an employment law perspective for two main reasons.
John Key says no Govt pressure was put on TVNZ over the Paul Henry fiasco and he is pleased the presenter decided to resign.
Radio "shock jock" Iain Stables has been involved in a physical altercation at Auckland airport.
Paul Henry's racist comments finally caught up with him yesterday when he resigned from TVNZ after meeting the state broadcaster's chief executive.
Fairfax Media has been issued a formal warning by the Commerce Commission after it claimed the GST rate hike was behind its Dominion Post cover price increase.
The Independent looks at a vanishing breed - the investigative journalist.
News website The Daily Beast and Newsweek, an icon of the American magazine industry, are thinking about a merger.
Australian magazine under fire after cover story details prove to be largely fictitious.
You can't just presume that people know or care about your company, let alone try and find out what they do.
Paul Henry's racist slurs were vile, but weeding out Henry may not be enough to clean up the rot at TVNZ.
In a move set to raise concerns about the newspaper's independence, Fiji Times publisher Dallas Swinstead said editor-in-chief Netani Rika had quit because of perceptions he was anti-government.
Breakfast host Paul Henry has said he "sincerely apologises" for the comments he made about Sir Anand Satyanand, but some are questioning whether the apology went far enough.
A regular contributor has quit Breakfast after host Paul Henry urged the PM to pick a Governor-General who 'looked more like a NZer' than Sir Anand Satyanand.
The real question is about Television New Zealand and its cynical use of racial comments to boost publicity and profits.
4G mobile phones are set to disrupt households' cable television - and possibly their neighbours' sets as well.
New Zealand chef de mission Dave Currie has become resigned to last-minute bungling from organisers.