CRUISE DOWN TO COAST : NEW NIGHT, NEW SEASON

It’s back! Māori Television music series COAST makes a live return to Māori Television’s studios on Thursday nights at 9.00 PM, starting this Thursday April 7 at 9.00 PM.

COAST is Māori Television’s urban music show dedicated to showing a diverse range of live studio performances, field reports, interviews and artist profiles over an exhilarating 1.5 hours.

Switching from Friday nights to Thursday nights in its new season, the show is now taking a new direction to appeal to the younger generations by screening on Thursday nights – aka ‘The New Friday’!

COAST welcomes back its studio audience for the return of its live show with a hot premiere line-up including Savage, No Artificial Flavours, Open Souls, Tha Feelstyle, DJ Logikal and the Dziah Dance Crew.

Also back for a second bout is seasoned host Brent Mio. Brent doubles as the national promotions co-ordinator and radio personality for leading Auckland radio station Mai FM and has his finger on the pulse when it comes to all things fresh and musical.


Brent is joined this season in the presenter seat by new face Kara Rickard. Kara – the granddaughter of Eva Rickard – makes her debut as a television host coming off the back of working at Auckland-based production company Butobase. Well versed in the Māori language and the youngest female kyokushin black belt in Aotearoa, Kara brings spunk and energy to this season’s line-up on COAST.

Broadcast from the purpose-built state-of-the-art studio with walls that open out onto the street, COAST is calling all to the dance floor!

Cruise down to Māori Television at 9-15 Davis Crescent, Newmarket and get your groove on with the return of COAST – live and direct every Thursday night at 9.00 PM.

PROGRAMMES COMING UP


THE WORLD FOOTBALL SHOW – Monday April 4 at 9.30 PM

For your essential fix of soccer madness, don’t miss THE WORLD FOOTBALL SHOW – featuring the best in news and events in the soccer world from the New Zealand and international arena.

PĒPI – Tuesday April 5 at 8.00 PM


A shock announcement causes heartache and tears for Elle Mae and her whānau while Tania and Eraia celebrate the impending arrival of pēpi with their friends and whānau.



KETE ARONUI – Wednesday April 6 at 9.30 PM

An art series which showcases talented Māori artists from a wide range of arts. Featuring Leon Wharekura, the YMCA Tauranga art classes and the Mana Moko Studio.

FESTIVE SOUNDS FROM AFRICA – Thursday April 7 at 8.30 PM


The unique music styles and rhythms from Africa feature on Māori Television this week – including renowned musicians Vushi Mahlasela and Pops Mohammed.


MĀTUA WHĀNGAI – Friday April 8 at 9.30 PM


The final of Tau Henare’s chat show screens tonight with a light-hearted look at the great generation gap and an interview with Willie Jackson.

OCEANIA – Saturday April 9 at 8.30 PM


In the series final, pay a trip to Indonesia to visit with the 81-year-old High Priestess of Bali as she presides over ceremonies, clears black magic from the past lives of new born babies and oversees the processes of purification.

RADIANCE – Sunday April 10 at 9.00 PM

Sunday Feature Film : An Aboriginal mother's funeral brings disparities among the surviving daughters into vibrant relief. Adapted from Louis Nowra's play, this balanced appreciation of the emotional burdens of the past results in a poignant and thought-provoking feature film.

 

Getting to Air

Our daily schedule is:

     
Monday to Friday   10.00am - 11.00am
Monday to Friday   4.00pm - 11.30pm
Saturday & Sunday   4.00pm - Midnight
     
Monday to Friday   4.00pm - 11.30pm
Saturday & Sunday   4.00pm - Midnight

Tuning in to Māori Television

Viewers can tune in to Māori Television in five ways:

Via the UHF frequency

To receive Māori Television via the UHF frequency, viewers need to have a UHF aerial and be within the coverage area.

Via Satellite

If viewers are not within our UHF coverage area, they can access Māori Television via satellite by purchasing a satellite dish and receiver from their local television aerial installation service.

As a SKY Digital subscriber

SKY Digital subscribers will find Māori Television on Channel 33 of their SKY remotes. They can tune in to Channel 33 now to catch highlights of programmes on Māori Television.

As a SKY UHF subscriber

SKY UHF subscribers will find Māori Television on button 6 of their SKY remotes.

Via Saturn TV
If you receive Saturn TV, you can tune into Māori Television through channel button 33. Saturn Customers please: leave your decoders switched on to be able to receive this channel.

For More Information

Check our website www.maoritelevision.com or for guidance on how to tune-in call 0800 MA TATOU ( 0800 62 82868 )

Māori Television
9-15 Davis Crescent

Newmarket
AUCKLAND
  Māori Television
P O Box 113-017
Newmarket
AUCKLAND
Tel:   + 64 9 539 7000
Fax:   + 64 9 539 7199
Email:   info@maoritelevision.com
DISCLAIMER
While Māori Television has taken every care to ensure that the information contained in this e-panui is complete and accurate, it does not represent or warrant the accuracy or completeness of any information in this e-panui or that this information is suitable for your intended use. Māori Television accepts no responsibility or liability arising from or in connection with your use of this e-panui and the information contained in it. Kia ora.

Issue 56, 4 April 2005

  1. Cruise down to COAST : new night, new season
  2. Programmes Coming Up
  3. Getting To Air
  4. Tuning in to Māori Television
  5. More Information


HITTING THE OUTBACK CAMEL STYLE

Get up close and personal with Australia’s “ships of the desert” – the camels of West Queensland – and the people who seek to tame them this Tuesday night at 8.30 PM.

Between 1840 and 1860, thousands of camels were imported from India to work for settlers in Australia’s central deserts.

The camels which feature on TREK – AN AUSTRALIAN CAMEL ODYSSEY are descendants of those first imported specimens which thrive all over central Australia.

Paddy McHugh’s been working with Australia’s camels for the past twenty years, transforming them into racing athletes worth a million dollars. In the process, he’s also been helping to turn amateur camel racing into a professional and competitive export industry.

His recent creation – Boulia Desert Sands – has become the most professional camel racing event in the Australia. The event brings together some of Australia’s most colourful characters including a grandma camel racer, two outback cowboys keen to have a go and the tourists out to discover what life was like for the desert’s early settlers.

“I wanted this to be a journey to celebrate how it was 100 years ago,” says Paddy. “To feel what it was like when the Cobb & Co coaches were rattling along the same route and camels were the work-horses of the desert ".

For the local desert people, the Boulia Desert Sands race has brought their communities closer together and given them a sense of pride.

"The people are moving away, people are forgetting what is happening out here and a lot of the wealth of Australia comes from the Outback,” says Paddy. “Not much is getting spent out here or into understanding what this part of the world is about. If we lose that, the outback will have a lot of problems."

TREK – AN AUSTRALIAN CAMEL ODYSSEY discovers what it means to feel a part of Australian desert landscape and what is involved in bringing a camel from the wild to compete in a race.

TREK – AN AUSTRALIAN CAMEL ODYSSEY screens on Māori Television on Tuesday April 5 at 8.30 PM.

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