TO NEW ZEALAND EDGE
GLOBAL COMMUNITY
"Back yourself, Give it a
go, Anticipate, Draw, Back Up, Re-invent, Challenge, Change." Lloyd
Jones, The Book of Fame.
This dictum might apply to the
theory of the New Zealand Edge as much as it does to the 1905 All Blacks
Jones gives collective voice to here. The phrasing has the tone and urge
of a coach's pre-match changing room rap, but it might just as easily sit
as mantra on the laboratory wall of a Rutherford, Sheppard, Britten or
Lye. Time magazine (18 Aug) magnificently features a New Zealand special
exploring our edge in a 50 page rave. The cover copy is compelling
affirmation: "Cool Kiwis: why it's suddenly hot on the edge of the
world" Check out this and other stories of z-mentions in the
international media in newzedge below.
Along with newzedge we bring
you two features on edge thinking manifest: the Aquada and the All Blacks.
The Aquada - like the Hamilton
Jet, McLaren F1 racer, Britten superbike, even Pearse's gorse-bush bound
prototype aeroplane - continues the
edge tradition of engineering and design solutions geared to speed. A
development of inventor Terry Roycroft's thinking outside the square by
entrepreneur Alan Gibbs, the revolutionary James Bond-style sports vehicle
with the amphibian edge can reach up to 100mph on land, and on the water
retracts its wheels and uses a jet to plane along the surface at speeds of
over 30mph. Gibbs: "This is new in the way that helicopters were new
or Harrier jump jets were new." Launched on London's Thames to
international media attention we bring you its story here:
http://www.nzedge.com/hot/ar-aquada.html
And we republish nzedge
co-founder Kevin Robert's commentary on the All Blacks progress through
2003 in his monthly column for NZ Rugby Monthly magazine. The All Blacks
tradition is a legacy of thinking inside the rectangle - a creative space
100x50m in parameter. Within these confines generations of players wearing
the black jersey embossed with the silver fern have played with pride and
worked out innovations, (from the willie-away to 1905 classics like the
fullback wearing a sun-hat and running outside the wing), to form one of
the most impressive records in international sport. Kevin follows the
efforts of the 2003 edition to create the legacy in the modern era.
http://www.nzedge.com/hot/rugby/index.html
Newzedge:
http://www.nzedge.com/media/index.html
* Time comes to the edge: "Cool Kiwis: Why it's suddenly hot on the
edge of the world."
* Evers-Swindell twins win back-to-back double sculls titles at World
Rowing Champs in Milan
* Alan Gibbs' revolutionary Aquada launched on The Thames, London
* Flight of the Conchords lead nz-battalion to Edinburgh Fringe Fest
* Nobel Laureate Alan MacDiarmid made Royal Society fellow and U.Texas
Distinguished Chair
* Blockbuster with brains: NY Times on P Jackson and The Rings
* Zambesi fashions 'quirky, cerebral and dark' into an international
brand' in FinReview
* ABs celebrate test centenary with Bledisloe and Tri-Nations wins
* Dr Matthew During trials gene therapy Parkinson's cure
* The Australian surveys the Pacific with focus on NZ
* Geoff Sewell's Amici Forever signs 6m pound opera/rock recording deal
* Hayley Westenra is prodigal and Pure on debut international release
* Legendary Lance O'Sullivan hangs up his saddle
* NZer John Austin to head World Bank
* Professor Malcolm Grant to head University College London
* Music: Good-shirt equals good music in Rolling Stone; Keith Urban is the
new face of country; D4 lure young and hip to baseball; Carla Werner the
"female Jeff Buckley"; Datsuns put the brakes on; Clean
Anthology essential guide to Flying Nun front-runners; and Pacifier
rediscover their live edge
* Peter Lynd claims space-time Einstein philosophical breakthrough
* Scoop new-media guardian of fifth estate during Iraq War
* Wallpaper and Lomu retreat to Waiheke's Delamore Lodge
* Art: Pound's persona praised in Sydney; Billy Apple notable name;
Michael Stevenson treks it to Venice
* Wine: Cloudy Bay's legacy celebrated in Yomiuri and CNN; Lawson's Dry
Hills top mile high drop; Sam Neill's Two Paddocks keeps it real
* Aotearoa destination du jour in Sun-Herald 2003 travel top-10s
* PM Helen Clark keynote speaker in Korean War 50th Anniversary
* Nuclear-free remembered on 30th Anniversary of Norman Kirk protest
* Fisher&Paykel clean up as export exemplar with US whiteware alliance
* Wellington writers Wilkins and Knox mix fine yield of international
review, nomination and publication
* Virionyx extends NZ biotech edge with drugs to find antibody and
antiviral treatments for SARS et al.
* AJ Hackett dragon dances atop China's Macao Tower
* Billy Bowdon's expressive umpiring style is the "next
generation" according to BBC
* NZ traffic solution: eco-buses ease Tokyo congestion; Hardings'
responsive cats-eyes make roads safer
* Anna Paquin interviewed in Independent; Keisha Knight-Hughes Whale Rider
acclaim continues
* Te Papa exhib on Japanese influence on western fashion Vogue-reviewed
* Business/economy: NZ rich-list out; Telecom profits up; Air NZ goes
express; unemployment at OECD low
* Research: unemployment = depression and malnourishment = fat
And more: Hokey Pokey pondered; kiwifruit juice good as green export; John
Clarke's latest book serves it up; Sarah Kate-Lynch kitch(en)- lit a hit;
Tony Martin directs a Bad Egg; same-sex Civil Union Bill proposed;
Geraldine Brophy keeps up the laughs with the Viagra Monologues; NZ
scientists promote inter-polar understanding, Steve Richards and Scott
Dixon race across the globe. . .
http://www.nzedge.com/media/index.html
As the Time feature, the
Aquada, and All Black winger Joe Rokocoko swiftly demonstrate: "New
forms of life emerge on the margins, away
from the deadening effects of the centre. The excitement is on the wing,
not in the scrum."
Get it wide.
_______________________________________________________
Brian Sweeney
Publisher, Producer
THE NEW ZEALAND EDGE
http://www.nzedge.com
mailto: brian@nzedge.com
POSTSCRIPTS:
The New Zealand flag seems
destined to die another day. And that's not soon enough for the latest
alternative design to be posted to our forum on visual culture. Designed
by Melbourne-based Mike Lloyd, his view is simply that every day under the
old red white and blue increases the gap between where our identity is now
and where we could have been.
http://www.nzedge.com/hot/nz_visual_language_responses2.html
Get the Jive: the 20th
anniversary gig of Rick Bryant and the Jive Bombers is at the Kings Arms,
59 France St Newton Auckland Sun 21 Sept. Glory days of the Gluepot and
the Cricketers Arms revisited with the big band R&B/soul sound led by
the Godfather of New Zealand music.
Stand Up and Shout! Alastair
Fergusson has interviewed 15 nzers who have achieved fulfilment in their
lives. Common themes: developing a passion and believing in yourself; not
being afraid to stand out in a crowd nor being afraid of making changes in
your life; accepting failure as a means to learning and progress and
cultivating positive, constructive thoughts.
http://www.standupandshout.biz
Pacific photography - the first
two galleries of global contributions to the nzedge - sponsored Tranmsit
image galleries are up. Help frame the edge from where you're looking and
win a Lomo camera; winner of the first Lomo is Helen Varley-Jamieson from
NZ.
http://www.transmit.co.nz/glogallery.php
AND check out http://www.whopperchopper.org.nz
for the international pirates convention - a unique south seas' summertime
seaside event.