| 
 
 Ahiahi mārie, welcome to The Spinoff Daily in partnership with the Brain Drink, Ārepa. Today on The Spinoff, Charlotte Muru-Lanning asks if we should be concerned that so many New Zealanders still aren’t eligible for a second vaccine booster, Stewart Sowman-Lund compiles the cases for and against National’s proposed “boot camps” for youth offenders and Chris Schulz meets a miracle-working music therapist. “New Zealand was the first foreign media foray for a young and tenacious Rupert Murdoch. In January 1964, he sailed across the Tasman and toured New Zealand with friends in a Morris Minor. The 32-year-old, then steadily building his Australian portfolio from a single newspaper in Adelaide, happened on the news that Lord Thomson, a powerful UK-based Canadian press baron, was seeking to purchase a controlling stake in Wellington’s Dominion newspaper. Murdoch decided to take him on.” Live Updates: Boot camps would be back under National The cases for and against National’s youth offender ‘boot camps’ The Side Eye: ‘Tough on crime’ is dead (From July 2018) With Covid case numbers back on the rise, why get a second booster? The creative qualification fostering big ideas for an urgent world When we think of advertising, we tend to focus most on its less appealing qualities. But in the right hands, with the right guidance, could it become a force for good? James Borrowdale talks to the brains behind Auckland’s Media Design School’s Graduate Diploma of Creative Advertising, the one-year course popularly known as AdSchool. How music therapy can work minor miracles The mystifying case of Taiaroa Head’s stolen albatross eggs Being a Pacific person in New Plymouth during the Rugby League World Cup First, you have to accept the existential threats of the future are real | 
The Rupert Murdoch protection bill
20:00
0








