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We can connect 10 things related to New Zealand herald (Newspaper), TAPUHI, Economic conditions, and New Zealand Cartoon Archive to the places on this map.
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Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-:'Ditch weight to maintain height - any pilot will tell you tha...

Date: 2012

From: Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-: Digital cartoons published in New Zealand Herald

By: New Zealand herald (Newspaper)

Reference: DCDL-0020738

Description: A pilot leans out of his aircraft grinning as he throws canisters of staff overboard. He is ditching weight to maintain height. Context: Reference to the restructuring and redundancies in many organisations but particularly in the public sector as the government tries to reduce the deficit. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

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Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-:'It followed you home and you want to keep it, right?' 20 Augu...

Date: 2011

From: Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-: Digital cartoons published in New Zealand Herald

By: New Zealand herald (Newspaper); Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-

Reference: DCDL-0018998

Description: Prime Minister John Key forces a large green kiwi money box with 'Compulsory Kiwisaver' printed on it onto a defenceless man saying 'It followed you home and you want to keep it, right?' Context: KiwiSaver's $1000 dollar kickstart bonus could be axed if the Government decides to automatically enrol all workers in the scheme. Prime Minister John Key is proposing the idea of 'soft compulsion' - everyone would be signed up automatically, but can choose to opt out. (3News: 3 August 2011) Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

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Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-:Disaster chef's challenge- Budget dining. 16 May 2011

Date: 2011

From: Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-: Digital cartoons published in New Zealand Herald

By: New Zealand herald (Newspaper)

Reference: DCDL-0019321

Description: Finance Minister, Bill English, is represented as a chef who has created a 'Double downer' that is 'ugly, indigestible and tastes of despair which means it must be health food, right?' The burger has printed on it 'Kiwisaver cuts' and 'Interest on student loans'. Context: Refers to the 2011 budget. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

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Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-:Food prices. 2011

Date: 27 December 2011

From: Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-: Digital cartoons published in New Zealand Herald

By: New Zealand herald (Newspaper)

Reference: DCDL-0019097

Description: The scene is a sunlit beach with crowds of people. However danger lurks as a shark's fin representing 'food prices' appears in the sea. Context: The escalating price of food during the economic downturn. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

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Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-:Citizens of a make-believe state... 18 April 2011

Date: 2011

From: Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-: Digital cartoons published in New Zealand Herald

By: New Zealand herald (Newspaper)

Reference: DCDL-0019329

Description: The cartoon shows an 'Aotearoa passport' costing $370.00 and a 'New Zealand passport' costing $300m a week. The first passport refers to a scam that involves overstayers paying up to $370 for Aotearoa citizenship certificates, which promise to absolve the holder of all responsibilities under "Pakeha law", including paying taxes to the New Zealand Government. The man behind the scheme, calls himself Chief Tupai. The second passport refers to the mount of money being borrowed by the government each week. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

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Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-:'No, the fuel rise was last week's exceptionally freakish one-...

Date: 2011

From: Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-: Digital cartoons published in New Zealand Herald

By: New Zealand herald (Newspaper)

Reference: DCDL-0019090

Description: Two men swim in floods representing 'Food price rise' as the rain pours down. One of them says 'No, the fuel rise was last week's exceptionally freakish one-off event.' Context: People are so used to 'freakish' events that the 'food price rise' seems relatively normal. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

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Crichton, Anna, 1957- :[Chimp with round table.] 10 June 2011

Date: 2011

From: Crichton, Anna, 1957- :Digital cartoons

By: New Zealand herald (Newspaper)

Reference: DCDL-0018061

Description: The cartoon shows a chimpanzee holding a round table on its head with one hand and scratching his head with the other. Context - Drawn to illustrate Deborah Hill-Cone's article on Kiwi psychology. She says 'I don't think New Zealanders feel we deserve to be a wealthy country. It is hard to change that view'. She goes on to suggest that Roger Kerr and the Business Round Table - 'The grunty think tank has been too clever. It has stuck to the granola end of policy - monetary policy settings and all that crunchy stuff - rather than following the vogue for behavioural economics'. Ted Klontz, a behavioural psychologist, suggests that when people are confused or under threat they resort to behaviour deriving from the lower parts of their brain, the mammalian or the reptilian levels. (Deborah Hill Cone in the NZ Herald, July 6 2011) Title supplied by cataloguer Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

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Crichton, Anna, 1957- :[Floating orange squeezers] 8 July 2011

Date: 2011

From: Crichton, Anna, 1957- :Digital cartoons

By: New Zealand herald (Newspaper)

Reference: DCDL-0018283

Description: The scene shows dozens of orange squeezers that look like little boats floating on a Japanese lake beneath blossom. Context - The cartoon was drawn to accompany an article by Deborah Hill Cone which suggests that New Zealand needs an evil plan for world domination. She goes on to say 'Charlie's had one. They sold their cordial company to Japanese brewer Asahi for lots of clams. Mwaah-ha-ha. But instead of hailing the company's founders as evil geniuses, the sale seems to have prompted the usual rending of garments and unrelenting self-bollocking.' (Source - www.nzherald.co.nz - July 19 2011) The sale refers to the news that 'Asahi Beverages looks almost certain to become the new owner of Charlie's Group after the major shareholders said yesterday they had agreed to sell their combined 52.17 per cent stake to the Japanese brewing giant'. (Source - nzherald.co.nz July 5 2011) Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

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Crichton, Anna, 1957- :[Bill English, economy, prisons and drug legalization]. 31 May 2011

Date: 2011

From: Crichton, Anna, 1957- :Digital cartoons

By: New Zealand herald (Newspaper)

Reference: DCDL-0017971

Description: Shows a naked, but for a marijuana leaf, Minister of Finance, Bill English, sitting in a deckchair in a sinking ship called 'HMS New Zealand' looking very relaxed and smoking marijuana. Context - The cartoonist writes that this is a 'caricature of Bill English saying the country was on it's way to economic recovery oh yeah'. The cartoon was drawn to accompany Nick Smith's article 'Pipe dreams not just for potheads' published in NZHerald Business Friday 3 June 2011. Nick Smith writes 'Bill English describe New Zealand's prison system as a fiscal and moral failure'. He continues 'Pot growers should not be in prison, despite their repeated misdemeanours. It's such an egregious example of English's fiscal and moral failure that the Finance Minister really should get on board Norml's bandwagon'. And continues 'English wasn't stoned; at last there appear to be genuine signs of economic recovery... No, the only stoner element in English's environment is his Alice-in-Wonderland dilemma: should he eat the cake labelled "government spending" and grow the economy, or drink the bitter bottle labelled "medicine" and shrink it?' (NZHerald 3 June 2011) Title supplied by cataloguer Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

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Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-:The week. 16 March 2013

Date: 2013

From: Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-: Digital cartoons published in New Zealand Herald

By: New Zealand herald (Newspaper)

Reference: DCDL-0028727

Description: Cartoon shows four panels depicting news stories from the week. One shows a man sitting at the beach reading a newspaper with the headline, 'More Greek-style summers ahead'. The man thinks to himself, "Great, we'll have weather to match our economy". Another panel shows a Fijian military commander holding a bloodied morning star weapon who says, "We've got no rule of law and we're proud of it, but don't let that spoil your next Fiji holiday". The third panel shows a man protesting same-sex marriage, holding a sign that says, "No to gay marriage' and who wears a shirt reading, 'God hates fags'. He tells two men wearing tuxedos who hold hands as they walk to the registery office to "Stop persecuting me!" The final panel shows newly elected Pope Francis, who wears a dirty cloak labelled, 'secrecy'. The Pope says, "Maybe its time to change old habits". Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

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