logo
Amanda Knox - Free: Memoir reflects on meeting Monica Lewinsky and public shaming

Amanda Knox - Free: Memoir reflects on meeting Monica Lewinsky and public shaming

NZ Herald02-05-2025
Before Italy, I was only vaguely aware of that ancient stereotype that all women secretly hate one another, that we are incapable of true friendship. Some call it 'venimism'; others refer to 'mean girls'.
In 1893, the Italian criminologist Cesare Lombroso wrote that, 'Due to women's latent antipathy for one
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Waves took them both: Mother's account in Lampedusa boat tragedy
Waves took them both: Mother's account in Lampedusa boat tragedy

NZ Herald

time5 hours ago

  • NZ Herald

Waves took them both: Mother's account in Lampedusa boat tragedy

It is believed one of the boats started taking on water, causing people to climb on to the other boat, which then capsized. At Lampedusa's cemetery on Thursday evening, where many of the bodies are being kept, some women came and left flowers, and prayed for the dead. 'It seemed fitting, at least to stop by and say a prayer for these people who were seeking a better life,' said Donata, a holidaymaker visiting the island who declined to give her family name. 'They did nothing, and they died,' she told AFP. 'Waves took them both' An Italian helicopter had spotted a capsized boat and several bodies in the water on Wednesday about 14 nautical miles off Lampedusa. One Somali woman lost her son and husband, according to an account reported by the Corriere della Sera newspaper. 'I had my son in my arms and my husband beside me. I don't know how, but we found ourselves in the water. The waves took them both away from me,' she said. Lampedusa, 145km off the coast of Tunisia, is often the first point of arrival for people trying to reach Europe in leaky or overcrowded boats. But it is also a tourist hotspot, famed for its white sand beaches. On Thursday, it was filled with holidaymakers visiting for Friday's Ferragosto public holiday, with pleasure boats using the same port as the vessels searching for the missing. Deadly crossing Two of the survivors were taken by helicopter to Sicily for treatment, while the other 58 were being cared for in the reception centre on the island, according to the Red Cross. Twenty-one of them are minors and 'generally in good health', said Imad Dalil, the Red Cross official who runs the reception centre. He said the majority of the survivors are Somali, with a few Egyptians. Bags containing migrants' belongings at the harbour of Lampedusa. Photo / Stefano Rellandini, AFP Around 95 people were on the boats, UN officials reported initially, but ANSA said it appeared there may have been more, perhaps 100 to 110 people. Filippo Grandi, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, had earlier confirmed the toll of 27 dead. 'Over 700 refugees and migrants have now died in 2025 in the Central Mediterranean', which the UN judges to be the world's deadliest maritime migrant crossing, he wrote on social media. 'All responses – rescue at sea, safe pathways, helping transit countries and addressing root causes – must be strengthened,' he said. Despite the tragedy laying bare the risks, the migrant boats kept coming. Four others were intercepted off Lampedusa overnight, according to the Red Cross, while more migrants arrived during Thursday. More than 260 people were being held in the reception centre waiting for processing as of Thursday evening, ANSA said. Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni offered her 'deepest condolences' to the victims and vowed to step up efforts to tackle migrant traffickers. Her hard-right Government took office in 2022 vowing to cut the number of migrants crossing the Mediterranean to Europe. More than 38,500 people have arrived on Italian shores so far this year, according to interior ministry figures. This is slightly up on last year but well below the 100,000 reported by the same time in 2023. - Agence France-Presse

Auckland mum initially refuses to share ice cream with son - the video goes viral
Auckland mum initially refuses to share ice cream with son - the video goes viral

NZ Herald

time6 days ago

  • NZ Herald

Auckland mum initially refuses to share ice cream with son - the video goes viral

Rebecca Foster initially refused to share her ice cream with her son after he just ate his own Listening to articles is free for open-access content—explore other articles or learn more about text-to-speech. Auckland mum initially refuses to share ice cream with son - the video goes viral An Auckland mum has gone viral on social media after she shared a video of her eating ice cream while her son had a tantrum, capturing a relatable moment in parenting. Posted to TikTok yesterday, the 26-second clip shows Italian-Kiwi mum of two Rebecca Foster in a parked car with her 4-year-old son and baby strapped in the backseat. Foster begins to eat a Propitious Mango Ice Cream - a viral product from China that resembles a real mango and is available in New Zealand - as her son helplessly cries out in envy. But her son had just eaten an Oreo-flavoured ice-cream. 'You can tell by his very clean mouth,' the text on the video reads as viewers see a chocolaty smear around the boy's mouth.

New Book Tells The Story Of The Manapōuri Hydro Project
New Book Tells The Story Of The Manapōuri Hydro Project

Scoop

time01-08-2025

  • Scoop

New Book Tells The Story Of The Manapōuri Hydro Project

The Middle of Nowhere captures the project's danger, isolation and camaraderie through the voices of those who lived it. The book's author, oral historian Rosemary Baird, became interested in the Manapōuri project while researching her PhD thesis at Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha | University of Canterbury. 'That piece of research was about trans-Tasman migration. One of my first interviewees, Frank, had worked at Manapōuri. He talked about the dangers and hardship of life there and he was a born storyteller. I was hooked,' says Dr Baird. Existing histories of the hydro scheme focused on technical aspects of large-scale electricity generation, or on the more widely known 'Save Manapōuri' conservation campaign that ran from 1969 to 1972. Dr Baird believed an oral history would add a diversity of voices and experiences to this important chapter in Aotearoa New Zealand's history. She recorded 18 life histories with members of the Manapōuri hydro community, a multicultural group that included Italian, English, American and Croatian workers, as well as Māori and Pākehā. Readers will recognise the name of another born raconteur, Tim Shadbolt, former Mayor of Waitemata City and Invercargill, who worked at Manapōuri as a young man. Collectively, these stories paint a vivid picture of work in the harsh Fiordland environment: frosts thick enough to immobilise heavy machinery; ever present water and damp, above and below ground; and perilous working conditions that claimed 18 lives and injured many more. Recollections also shed light on the personal, political and social dimensions of life at Manapōuri. They touch on class hierarchies, attitudes surrounding ethnicity, sexuality and gender, women's lives in the isolated community, and responses to the conservation campaign. Evocative photographs, including many from the interviewees' personal collections, enrich this portrait of an era. Dr Baird believes the range of experiences explored in the book will connect with a wide audience, especially as many New Zealanders have personal links to the project. 'When I was researching it, I'd hear: 'My dad was a Ministry of Labour inspector at Manapōuri,' or 'I worked for the company that supplied the pipes.' Thousands of people were employed there and for their descendants these stories will contain a lot of insights.' Dr Rosemary Baird will be sharing Stories from the Manapouri Hydro Project in conversation with Liz Grant on Friday 29 August as part of the WORD Christchurch Festival 2025, proudly supported by Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha | University of Canterbury. The Middle of Nowhere: Stories of Working on the Manapōuri Hydro Project by Rosemary Baird is published by Canterbury University Press, RRP $55, flexibound, 240 x 170mm, 272pp, ISBN 978-1-98-850346-2. It is available in bookstores and through Canterbury University Press. About the author: Rosemary Baird is a Senior Outreach Advisor at Heritage New Zealand Pouhere Taonga. She has a doctorate in oral history from Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha | University of Canterbury and loves social history, heritage places and personal stories.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store