What it’s like to be made redundant by the Ministry of EducationThe Spinoff summer reader, Tuesday December 24Ahiahi mārie, welcome to The Spinoff’s “not quite” Daily summer reading list, published twice weekly throughout the festive break and brought to you by Resene. Today on The Spinoff: How Dominion Road became the country’s go-to place for Chinese food; a definitive ranking of nuts; why you can’t pick up your own dropped phone on the plane; remembering the transformative fourth Labour government; and Craig Parker looks back on 1990s Shortland Street megastardom; But first: An anonymous Wellingtonian on being one of the thousands of public servants who lost their jobs this year. It is a Friday. I’m in the middle of an online Teams hui working out the finer details of a series of workshops we’ll be presenting next week. It’s a normal work day at 10am. Someone has just cracked a joke about how much money they’ve been saving by drinking instant coffee when the email comes in. “Oh, did you get an email?” Everyone stops talking. We check our inboxes. The Spinoff needs to double the number of paying members to continue providing the kinds of great reads we bring you in this newsletter over the summer. Please read our open letter about the future of The Spinoff and sign up to be a member today. Juggernaut: Toby Manhire on the ghosts of 1984 Making a splash: Is this the most impressive select committee submission ever? ‘We were as famous as Tom Cruise’: Craig Parker on 90s Shortland St fandom Finding Joy: The fascinating and painful life of Aotearoa’s most prolific writer Why can’t I pick up my own dropped phone on a plane? ‘We’d never move back’: Nadia Lim and Carlos Bagrie on swapping the hustle for the harvest Survive to 25 (December, that is) A hater and an enthusiast review The Royal Free by Carl Shuker All I want for Christmas is modern day slavery legislation Pretty much every common nut in Aotearoa, reviewed and ranked Sharing is caring! If you enjoyed today’s roundup, please share with your friends and whānau. |
What it’s like to be made redundant by the Ministry of Education
13:01
0