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Confession box: Doris de Pont
Doris de Pont on why we should celebrate NZ fashion - and scooter rides with a broken hip.
Doris de Pont on why we should celebrate NZ fashion - and scooter rides with a broken hip.
Post film festival blues? Never fear, there's still gold on the silver screen.
Calum Henderson tries to understand the "genius" behind TVNZ on Demand's BossBabes.
A steak (and seafood) dinner for the ages at Auckland's oldest restaurant.
Ashleigh Young on looking good - and what really matters when it comes to makeup.
Ruth Spencer on the origins of some strange and wonderful fashion trends.
Quentin Tarantino on a Hollywood love story and being the happiest man around.
Tom Augustine picks the good, the bad and the ugly from the NZIFF's second week.
Tom Augustine talks with film-maker Mark Albiston about his film, Billy and the Kids.
We might be intrigued by the past - but do we really want to live there?
There's a new Ramsay in the kitchen - and the apple doesn't fall far from the tree.
Steve Braunias ventures out for the night and is left wondering why he bothered.
Getting better with age? NZ's top female stars tell us about staying on top.
On the eve of next tour, RNZ Ballet's Patricia Barker explains why she's greedy for more.
Michele Manelis talks with Taylor Schilling about Orange is the New Black, and freedom
Calum Henderson reviews Secret Obsession - and is a believer
The best parts of the Coromandel are the hard-to-reach sea caves.
Times: Meet the two millennials behind the raunchy podcast for women.
Ashleigh Young on why sharing comfortable silences - boring moments - are a sign of life.
Hayley Sproull on why she's proud of teaching Omani soldiers to march like NZers.
The fall-out could be unpredictable - play's moral-dilemma leaves audiences gasping.
Tom Augustine wraps up week one of the NZ International Film Festival.
Karl Puschmann suffers imposter syndrome at a rare whisky tasting. But gets over it.
Calum Henderson reviews Shortland Street's winter season premiere
It's almost impossible to have nothing to do now, and that's a pity, says Joanna Mathers.
Claire Trevett on the desperate reality of buying a house.
Everyone told her she couldn't sing. But Lavinia Spalding had other ideas.
Times: One week on from Wimbledon, former Centre Court star Martina Navratilova talks.
Four words for the disbelievers: cream bun but better.