Russell Campbell takes you back to a time when Hollywood stars were glamorous, Broadway musicals set toes a-tapping, and there was no such thing as reality TV.
Golden Sounds of Stage and Screen is an hour-long celebration of the golden age of entertainment, an oasis of heart-warming good cheer in your busy day.
Tune in for memorable music and vintage comedy from yesteryear.
Huge thanks to the Regent Theatre Trust.

Sheila Shuttlebus – it’s a funny name, but then, Sheila’s a funny woman.
Every Monday at 11am, Sheila brings you half an hour of amusing musings on the lighter side of everyday life. The writing’s biting and the verse gets worse – think Pam Ayers, but with a broad Lancashire accent. It’s all designed to give listeners a bright start to their day.
On Heritage Matters, members of Southern Heritage Trust take a look at what makes Dunedin the nation’s heritage capital.
Veteran broadcasters Dougal Stevenson and Bill Southworth join Jane Edwards, Ann Barsby, Keith Scott and Ann Barrowclough to explore the wonderful stock of historic buildings, and stories of early European settlement, Maori life in past centuries and tales of gold.
A new episode airs every second Monday at mid-day, with replays on Sundays at 7pm.
Heritage Matters is supported by the Centre for Research on Colonial Culture at the University of Otago.
Email heritagematters@
Tarn Felton from the Dunedin Collaboration Against Family Violence presents interviews and advice from representatives of organisations working in our community to assist families affected by family violence.
Find out how you can access services to help address family violence in your life, and gather information about how you can help prevent family violence in our community.
More information about how you can help free our community from family violence can be found at:
http://www.familiesfreefromviolence.org.nz/
This show is supported through a community grant from the Dunedin City Council.
Join Douglas MacMillan every Sunday afternoon at 2 for an hour of music and song from the Celtic nations and beyond. Replayed on Wednesdays at 11am
In traditional and modern styles, and in languages both native and adopted, hear the Celtic World brought right to your home through the magic of radio.
Collaborative Voices profiles community organisations and their people in a way that actively demonstrates how organisations are working.
In recent years agencies engaged in providing community services have been gaining a greater profile. The scale and contribution of the not-for-profit sector to our community and country is significant.
For instance, Statistics New Zealand has released figures that confirmed there were 97,000 non-profit organisations operating in New Zealand, employing 105,000 paid employees and supported by more than 430,000 volunteers. Just under 26,000 of these are charities registered with the Charities Commission.
Keeping the community sector up-to-date about topical issues is the key purpose of Collaborative Voices. It’s a regular, informal conversation on air with someone or about something as a way of keeping people informed.
The programme is an initiative of Community Newtorks Aotearoa(CNA).
Created by Access Radio Wellington.
Presented by Ros Rice (CNA).
Richard Stedman seeks to delight with the unexpected as he traverses the music and the artists of the past 70 years, blending the early with the recent and opening the door to the soundtrack of a lifetime.
This show is proudly supported by Summerset at Bishopscourt

Vanakkam Tamizha celebrates the richness of Tamil language and culture, and uniting Tamil communities.