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Recent items from Sunday Morning
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Why are restaurants so noisy?
11:30 AM.Loud music, whooshing coffee machines, clanging cutlery and raised voices fill the air in many restaurants. Professor Carl Hopkins discusses why noise can be so uncomfortable. Read more Audio
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Report from the Vatican: Conclave set to begin
11:05 AM.The papal conclave forms to start the selection process for a new pope on Wednesday and Cardinals from around the globe have been gathering at the Vatican. Read more Audio
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Barrie Cassidy on the results of Australia's Federal Election
10:40 AM.Australia's incumbent PM Anthony Albanese re-won his seat in the 2025 Federal Election last night, ending a heated election which saw opposition leader Peter Dutton run a very "Trumpian" campaign. Read more Audio
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How the CIA's book smuggling helped lift the Iron Curtain
10:09 AM.During the Cold War the CIA managed to smuggle ten million books across the Iron Curtain. The banned titles included Hannah Arendt, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, George Orwell, and Agatha Christie. Read more Audio
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Best Song Eva: Portia Woodman-Wickliffe
9:40 AM.Black Ferns legend Portia Woodman-Wickliffe joins Jim to talk about what lured her out of retirement, and she also chooses her Best Song Eva. Read more Audio
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Calling Home: Jude Fleming from Warren, NSW
8:30 AM.Award-winning contemporary landscape artist Jude Fleming lives a six-hour drive from Sydney in Warren, population 1365. Read more Audio
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The Sunday Morning Quiz
8:25 AM.Quiz master Jack Waley-Cohen is back with his Sunday Morning quiz. Read more Audio
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What the UK local elections mean
8:15 AM.How important were the UK local elections? Not very, you might suppose at first glance, but global media have covered them assiduously. Read more Audio
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Canada Elections 2025: Is early voting muddying the waters?
11:50 AM.With less than one week to go before their election day, Canadians are voting early in record numbers - but what does this mean for pollsters and predictions? Read more Audio
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Kiwi aid worker returns to Syria after fall of Assad
11:30 AM.Although Kiwi agency ReliefAid has been delivering aid to Syrian families since 2015, founder Mike Seawright had been prevented from entering the country under the dictatorial regime. Read more Audio
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Sarah Garfinkel: Interoception - your untapped sixth sense
11:06 AM.The ability to count your own heartbeat could be the answer to lowering anxiety and managing other conditions like PTSD, psychosis and even some aspects of autism. This skill is called interoception.
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My Latest Track: Priya Sami
10:40 AM.Priya Sami (Trip Pony, The Sami Sisters, Dateline) joins us to introduce the brand-new single from her latest project, Bub. Read more Video, Audio
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Graydon Carter: The glamorous heyday of print magazines
10:20 AM.In his early years as editor of Vanity Fair, Graydon Carter's budget had no ceiling. It was a time of lavish parties, unchecked expense accounts, hugely expensive photographers - and it was the last… Read more Audio
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Irish writer Colm Tóibín on new book 'Long Island'
9:38 AM.Colm Tóibín's latest book Long Island returns to the world of his novel Brooklyn, a book that was so popular in Ireland that one every 150 people bought a copy. Read more Audio
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Calling Home: Alan Duncan from Prince Edward Island
8:37 AM.Prince Edward Island is a place where the winters are cold, the beaches are long, lobster is affordable, and there's an abundance of potatoes. Read more Audio
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The Sunday Morning Quiz
8:25 AM.Quiz master Jack Waley-Cohen is back with his Sunday Morning quiz. Read more Audio
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The Pope's legacy in his homeland of Argentina
8:15 AM.Argentinian writer and Journalist Marcela Mora Y Araujo joins Jim to discuss the Pope's legacy in his homeland, his huge passion for football, and whether or not his family were able to make it to… Read more Audio
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The power of labyrinths for meditation
11:36 AM.The Reverend Dr Lauren Artress first realised the power labyrinths at the height of the AIDS crisis, when she was Canon at San Francisco's Grace Cathedral. Read more Audio
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Should websites have 'safety ratings'?
11:05 AM.Should websites help protect users safety and privacy by having safety ratings, as we do for cars, appliances and even restaurants. Netsafe's Sean Lyons joins Jim to discuss. Read more Audio
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A cultural history of bagpipes
10:27 AM.From the Roman Empire to Russian Tsars and the Scottish Highlands, Richard McLauchlan's new book The Bagpipes: A Cultural History explores the instrument's huge impact across the centuries. Read more Audio
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Is it time to ditch your phone case?
10:06 AM.When he bought his new iPhone, BBC technology correspondent Thomas Germain was keen to join what he calls the "case-free cult". Read more Audio
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Can singing help treat persistent pain?
9:40 AM.Music is well-known to lift the spirits, but a pilot programme led by the Welsh National Opera suggests it can help people suffering with chronic pain. Read more Audio
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We need to talk about the elephant in the closet!
8:40 AM.During his 32 years as a sales executive at Ford in Detroit, Mike O'Brien collated an incredible spreadsheet of mixed metaphors and malaprops uttered in company meetings. Read more Audio
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Rebecca Hayter: High heels and gumboots
8:15 AM.In her book, Rebecca Hayter candidly tells of her adaptation to a new way of life - where she struggled but ultimately developed new skills and gained confidence. Read more Audio