fbpx
Wikipedia

Investigate (magazine)

Investigate was a current affairs magazine published in New Zealand. It had a conservative Christian editorial standpoint and published a number of controversial articles. Many of the more notable articles were critical of policies and members of the centre-left Fifth Labour Government of New Zealand which governed from December 1999 until November 2008. It was edited by Ian Wishart. New New Zealand First MP Richard Prosser used to write a column called Eyes Right in the magazine, and his book Uncommon Dissent has been heavily promoted by the group. In June 2015, Investigate ceased print publication and announced that it would become a solely online publication; citing declining circulation and sales at supermarkets.[1]

Investigate
The cover of the October 2006 issue of Investigate.
EditorIan Wishart[1]
CategoriesNewsmagazine
FrequencyMonthly[1]
Circulation8,278[1]
First issueJanuary 2000[1]
Final issueJune 2015 (print)[1]
CompanyHowling at the Moon Publishing Limited
CountryNew Zealand
LanguageEnglish
Websitewww.investigatemagazine.com

History edit

Investigate magazine was established by Ian Wishart and his wife Heidi in January 2000.[2] The first issue was published in February 2000. In 2011, Investigate magazine underwent a radical redesign into a "HIS/HER" format with content being divided into separate male and female sections. This redesign received mixed responses from its readership base.[1]

Agent Orange production in New Plymouth edit

In October 2000, Investigate published a story of alleged chemical contamination in New Plymouth by the Dow Chemical Company's local subsidiary, which had produced the herbicides 2,4,5-T and 2,4-D at their factory in the city.[3] In January 2001 Investigate then published an interview with a former senior executive of the chemical company who confirmed not only that the two herbicides had been mixed to produce the defoliant Agent Orange for Britain's use in the Malayan Emergency and the U.S. use in the Vietnam War, but also that surplus drums of the toxic substance had been buried on nearby land now covered by a housing subdivision.[4]

The magazine then obtained a file kept by a former senior hospital matron in the 1960s and 70s, documenting dozens of bizarre birth defects in local children often associated with dioxin poisoning. The magazine published those pictures in its April 2001 issue.[5] A Ministry of Health report in 2004 found increased levels of dioxin in the blood of long-term residents of the area, but with no clear indication that this had increased rates of disease.[6] A larger study in 2008 of former workers in the Dow factory showed low levels of dioxin in their blood and no link between dioxin and health issues.[7]

John Tamihere Interview edit

The 4 April 2005 issue of Investigate contains an interview with then Labour MP John Tamihere. In the article Tamihere makes a number of allegations, including accusing Prime Minister Helen Clark of being unable to deal with emotions, that Labour deliberately lost the 1993 general election, and that it is "very dangerous" to be in the Labour Party if "you're a free and independent spirit". He also is recorded as making insulting remarks about Michael Cullen, Steve Maharey, the gay MPs of the Labour Party, and about women in leadership generally.[8]

Alleged links with the Exclusive Brethren edit

Former Prime Minister Helen Clark claimed that rumours about her husband's sexuality reported by Investigate were connected to the Exclusive Brethren, after members of the church hired a private investigator, Wayne Idour, to follow Labour MPs and their spouses, and a letter to the editor from a member of the church was published in the Dominion Post referring obliquely to allegations published by Investigate.[9] Idour is one of the sources for Investigate's May 2007 story about police corruption.[10] Wishart responded by calling Labour's allegations a "baseless conspiracy theory", and said he had previously accounted for all his investigations into Labour MPs, and the Exclusive Brethren had not contributed in any way. "I wouldn't know an Exclusive Brethren person if I fell over one," he said.[11]

Preachers of Hate edit

The March 2007 issue contains an article entitled Preachers of hate,[12] alleging that Islamic terrorists have infiltrated New Zealand's Muslim community. The article was condemned as "negative stereotyping" in an open letter penned by political activist Grant Morgan and signed by well over a hundred New Zealanders, including many academic, religious and community leaders.[13] A follow-up article alleged that some of the signatories had not actually read the magazine article, despite signing the letter condemning it.[14]

Richard Prosser's 'Wogistan' article edit

Prosser has written the 'Eyes Right' column in Investigate magazine for 10 years.[15]

In his February 2013 column, Prosser stated; "If you are a young male, aged between say about 19 and about 35, and you're a Muslim, or you look like a Muslim, or you come from a Muslim country, then you are not welcome to travel on any of the West's airlines."[16][17] Prosser further stated that the rights of New Zealanders' were being "denigrated by a sorry pack of misogynist troglodytes from Wogistan, threatening our way of life and security of travel in the name of their stone age religion, its barbaric attitudes towards women, democracy, and individual choice". Prosser wrote that "Abdul" should not be allowed to fly, and should instead "go ride a camel".[18] It subsequently emerged that Prosser's column was written after a pocket-knife he was carrying had been confiscated by airport security.[19][20] NZ First leader Winston Peters initially said that he would not apologise for Prosser's conduct, that he had been writing in his capacity as a columnist, as opposed to an MP, that Prosser stood by his statements, and that he had spoken to Prosser about the article as the article "lacked balance".[21]

Subsequently, Prosser came under criticism from the Government and Opposition parties for the content of his article. Prosser stated that his intention had been to draw attention to the issue of passenger profiling at airports, and stated that his writing style was intentionally one of a "shock jock". He initially refused to apologise,[22] but later admitted his article lacked balance, apologising for the offence that he had caused. He stated he would not continue to write for Investigate.[23][24]

Press Council complaints edit

The New Zealand Press Council has made two rulings concerning Investigate. The first, in 2001, concerned a complaint by the Immunisation Advisory Centre about two stories on vaccine safety. The complaint was not upheld, and the council noted that "Campaigning magazines such as Investigate aim to jolt readers into looking at things differently, and use hard-hitting tactics. It was unfair of the magazine to headline Dr Sinclair’s response to Simon Jones article: gutter journalism scares parents: health authorities, implying she had used that derogatory term in her response. However, the Press Council does not think that, taken overall, the Investigate articles go beyond what is acceptable in this adversary style of journalism."[25] The second upheld complaints by Air New Zealand about an article in the September 2007 issue of Investigate magazine headlined on the cover: "Exclusive. Air NZ’s secret flights. Why our state-owned airline is flying US troops into war". The Press Council criticised the lack of opportunity Air New Zealand had to respond to Investigate's allegations, saying "The editor conceded and apologised for one mistake, and sought to minimise others. Those mistakes, however, would likely have been amended or at least challenged had the magazine referred its story to the airline. The editor’s explanation for not doing so reveals a regrettable lack of faith in Air New Zealand that serves neither journalism nor the airline well. Good journalism demands fairness and the editor’s allegation that taking such a step would have led to his scoop effectively being sabotaged is disturbing."[26]

Shift to online publication edit

In June 2015, Investigate's editor Ian Wishart announced in the magazine's June/July 2015 editorial, entitled "The famous final Scene", that the magazine would be ceasing all print publication. The editorial cited several factors including plummeting circulations (13,500 in its heyday to 8,278 copies in early 2015), declining magazine sales in supermarkets, and a shift towards online advertising in the wake of the Global Financial Crisis of 2008. The magazine's management had also toyed and ultimately rejected a plan to increase the price from NZ$8.60 to NZ$15.90. Due to high traffic on its website (averaging two million pageviews a month), Investigate magazine had decided to shift all operations online. Besides the website, Investigate magazine also operates Facebook and Twitter accounts.[1] However, the website is now only sporadically updated and seems to be little more than an aggregator website for news stories from more mainstream news websites. Investigate appears to have shifted to a new website called "InvestigateDaily"[27]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Ian Wishart, "Editorial: The Famous Final Scene", Investigate, June/July 2015, p, 2.
  2. ^ "Company profile". Investigate. Retrieved 12 March 2016.
  3. ^ "The poisoning of New Zealand". Investigate.
  4. ^ "Agent Orange". Investigate.
  5. ^ Table of contents. Investigate.
  6. ^ "Ministry releases blood dioxin report". Ministry of Health. 15 March 2005. Retrieved 3 February 2009. [dead link]
  7. ^ "New health study eases dioxin concerns". University of Otago. 16 April 2008. Retrieved 3 February 2009. [dead link]
  8. ^ "The full monty - John Tamihere interview". Investigate.
  9. ^ "Clark fury grows at alleged slur campaign". The Sydney Morning Herald. 19 September 2006.
  10. ^ "Idour denies being tape source". Television New Zealand. 14 May 2007. Retrieved 5 October 2011.
  11. ^ "Labour denies hiring private eyes to go through Nats' rubbish". The New Zealand Herald. NZPA. 23 September 2006. Retrieved 5 October 2011.
  12. ^ "Preachers of hate May 24, 2007, at the Wayback Machine". Investigatemagazine.tv.
  13. ^ "Leaders abhor mag's negative Muslim stereotyping". Scoop.
  14. ^ "The rise of the neo-coms December 5, 2008, at the Wayback Machine". Investigatemagazine.tv.
  15. ^ "Columnist to Stand for NZ First". Voxy. 6 October 2011. Retrieved 14 February 2013.
  16. ^ NZ First MP: Ban Muslims from flights New Zealand Herald, 12 February 2013.
  17. ^ . 3 News NZ. 12 February 2013. Archived from the original on 6 June 2013. Retrieved 4 March 2013.
  18. ^ "Parties coy on Coalition with NZ First after MP's "Wogistan" rant". TVNZ. Retrieved 15 February 2013.
  19. ^ "Editorial: The man revealed". stuff.co.nz. 18 February 2013. Retrieved 14 February 2013.
  20. ^ . 3 News NZ. 12 February 2013. Archived from the original on 28 March 2014. Retrieved 4 March 2013.
  21. ^ Andrea, Vance. "MP's "Wogistan" rant too extreme". Retrieved 15 February 2013.
  22. ^ . 3 News NZ. 12 February 2013. Archived from the original on 28 March 2014. Retrieved 18 February 2013.
  23. ^ Vernon, Small. ""Wogistan" MP should resign - Islamic leader". Retrieved 15 February 2013.
  24. ^ Burr, Lloyd (13 February 2013). "Prosser says 'sorry'... kind of". 3 News NZ. Archived from the original on 13 April 2013. Retrieved 18 February 2013.
  25. ^ New Zealand Press Council, Case Number: 847 IMMUNISATION ADVISORY CENTRE AGAINST INVESTIGATE MAGAZINE, . Archived from the original on 6 February 2013. Retrieved 11 August 2013.
  26. ^ New Zealand Press Council, Case Number: 2023 AIR NEW ZEALAND AGAINST INVESTIGATE MAGAZINE, . Archived from the original on 5 February 2013. Retrieved 11 August 2013.
  27. ^ "Where news breaks first". Investigate. Retrieved 22 April 2018.

External links edit

  • "Investigate Magazine". Investigate. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
  • "Where news breaks first". Investigate. Retrieved 22 April 2018.

investigate, magazine, this, article, possibly, contains, original, research, please, improve, verifying, claims, made, adding, inline, citations, statements, consisting, only, original, research, should, removed, february, 2009, learn, when, remove, this, mes. This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed February 2009 Learn how and when to remove this message Investigate was a current affairs magazine published in New Zealand It had a conservative Christian editorial standpoint and published a number of controversial articles Many of the more notable articles were critical of policies and members of the centre left Fifth Labour Government of New Zealand which governed from December 1999 until November 2008 It was edited by Ian Wishart New New Zealand First MP Richard Prosser used to write a column called Eyes Right in the magazine and his book Uncommon Dissent has been heavily promoted by the group In June 2015 Investigate ceased print publication and announced that it would become a solely online publication citing declining circulation and sales at supermarkets 1 InvestigateThe cover of the October 2006 issue of Investigate EditorIan Wishart 1 CategoriesNewsmagazineFrequencyMonthly 1 Circulation8 278 1 First issueJanuary 2000 1 Final issueJune 2015 print 1 CompanyHowling at the Moon Publishing LimitedCountryNew ZealandLanguageEnglishWebsitewww investigatemagazine com Contents 1 History 1 1 Agent Orange production in New Plymouth 1 2 John Tamihere Interview 1 3 Alleged links with the Exclusive Brethren 1 4 Preachers of Hate 1 5 Richard Prosser s Wogistan article 1 6 Press Council complaints 1 7 Shift to online publication 2 See also 3 References 4 External linksHistory editInvestigate magazine was established by Ian Wishart and his wife Heidi in January 2000 2 The first issue was published in February 2000 In 2011 Investigate magazine underwent a radical redesign into a HIS HER format with content being divided into separate male and female sections This redesign received mixed responses from its readership base 1 Agent Orange production in New Plymouth edit In October 2000 Investigate published a story of alleged chemical contamination in New Plymouth by the Dow Chemical Company s local subsidiary which had produced the herbicides 2 4 5 T and 2 4 D at their factory in the city 3 In January 2001 Investigate then published an interview with a former senior executive of the chemical company who confirmed not only that the two herbicides had been mixed to produce the defoliant Agent Orange for Britain s use in the Malayan Emergency and the U S use in the Vietnam War but also that surplus drums of the toxic substance had been buried on nearby land now covered by a housing subdivision 4 The magazine then obtained a file kept by a former senior hospital matron in the 1960s and 70s documenting dozens of bizarre birth defects in local children often associated with dioxin poisoning The magazine published those pictures in its April 2001 issue 5 A Ministry of Health report in 2004 found increased levels of dioxin in the blood of long term residents of the area but with no clear indication that this had increased rates of disease 6 A larger study in 2008 of former workers in the Dow factory showed low levels of dioxin in their blood and no link between dioxin and health issues 7 John Tamihere Interview edit The 4 April 2005 issue of Investigate contains an interview with then Labour MP John Tamihere In the article Tamihere makes a number of allegations including accusing Prime Minister Helen Clark of being unable to deal with emotions that Labour deliberately lost the 1993 general election and that it is very dangerous to be in the Labour Party if you re a free and independent spirit He also is recorded as making insulting remarks about Michael Cullen Steve Maharey the gay MPs of the Labour Party and about women in leadership generally 8 Alleged links with the Exclusive Brethren edit Former Prime Minister Helen Clark claimed that rumours about her husband s sexuality reported by Investigate were connected to the Exclusive Brethren after members of the church hired a private investigator Wayne Idour to follow Labour MPs and their spouses and a letter to the editor from a member of the church was published in the Dominion Post referring obliquely to allegations published by Investigate 9 Idour is one of the sources for Investigate s May 2007 story about police corruption 10 Wishart responded by calling Labour s allegations a baseless conspiracy theory and said he had previously accounted for all his investigations into Labour MPs and the Exclusive Brethren had not contributed in any way I wouldn t know an Exclusive Brethren person if I fell over one he said 11 Preachers of Hate edit The March 2007 issue contains an article entitled Preachers of hate 12 alleging that Islamic terrorists have infiltrated New Zealand s Muslim community The article was condemned as negative stereotyping in an open letter penned by political activist Grant Morgan and signed by well over a hundred New Zealanders including many academic religious and community leaders 13 A follow up article alleged that some of the signatories had not actually read the magazine article despite signing the letter condemning it 14 Richard Prosser s Wogistan article edit Prosser has written the Eyes Right column in Investigate magazine for 10 years 15 In his February 2013 column Prosser stated If you are a young male aged between say about 19 and about 35 and you re a Muslim or you look like a Muslim or you come from a Muslim country then you are not welcome to travel on any of the West s airlines 16 17 Prosser further stated that the rights of New Zealanders were being denigrated by a sorry pack of misogynist troglodytes from Wogistan threatening our way of life and security of travel in the name of their stone age religion its barbaric attitudes towards women democracy and individual choice Prosser wrote that Abdul should not be allowed to fly and should instead go ride a camel 18 It subsequently emerged that Prosser s column was written after a pocket knife he was carrying had been confiscated by airport security 19 20 NZ First leader Winston Peters initially said that he would not apologise for Prosser s conduct that he had been writing in his capacity as a columnist as opposed to an MP that Prosser stood by his statements and that he had spoken to Prosser about the article as the article lacked balance 21 Subsequently Prosser came under criticism from the Government and Opposition parties for the content of his article Prosser stated that his intention had been to draw attention to the issue of passenger profiling at airports and stated that his writing style was intentionally one of a shock jock He initially refused to apologise 22 but later admitted his article lacked balance apologising for the offence that he had caused He stated he would not continue to write for Investigate 23 24 Press Council complaints edit The New Zealand Press Council has made two rulings concerning Investigate The first in 2001 concerned a complaint by the Immunisation Advisory Centre about two stories on vaccine safety The complaint was not upheld and the council noted that Campaigning magazines such as Investigate aim to jolt readers into looking at things differently and use hard hitting tactics It was unfair of the magazine to headline Dr Sinclair s response to Simon Jones article gutter journalism scares parents health authorities implying she had used that derogatory term in her response However the Press Council does not think that taken overall the Investigate articles go beyond what is acceptable in this adversary style of journalism 25 The second upheld complaints by Air New Zealand about an article in the September 2007 issue of Investigate magazine headlined on the cover Exclusive Air NZ s secret flights Why our state owned airline is flying US troops into war The Press Council criticised the lack of opportunity Air New Zealand had to respond to Investigate s allegations saying The editor conceded and apologised for one mistake and sought to minimise others Those mistakes however would likely have been amended or at least challenged had the magazine referred its story to the airline The editor s explanation for not doing so reveals a regrettable lack of faith in Air New Zealand that serves neither journalism nor the airline well Good journalism demands fairness and the editor s allegation that taking such a step would have led to his scoop effectively being sabotaged is disturbing 26 Shift to online publication edit In June 2015 Investigate s editor Ian Wishart announced in the magazine s June July 2015 editorial entitled The famous final Scene that the magazine would be ceasing all print publication The editorial cited several factors including plummeting circulations 13 500 in its heyday to 8 278 copies in early 2015 declining magazine sales in supermarkets and a shift towards online advertising in the wake of the Global Financial Crisis of 2008 The magazine s management had also toyed and ultimately rejected a plan to increase the price from NZ 8 60 to NZ 15 90 Due to high traffic on its website averaging two million pageviews a month Investigate magazine had decided to shift all operations online Besides the website Investigate magazine also operates Facebook and Twitter accounts 1 However the website is now only sporadically updated and seems to be little more than an aggregator website for news stories from more mainstream news websites Investigate appears to have shifted to a new website called InvestigateDaily 27 See also editBehind the Exclusive BrethrenReferences edit a b c d e f g h Ian Wishart Editorial The Famous Final Scene Investigate June July 2015 p 2 Company profile Investigate Retrieved 12 March 2016 The poisoning of New Zealand Investigate Agent Orange Investigate Table of contents Investigate Ministry releases blood dioxin report Ministry of Health 15 March 2005 Retrieved 3 February 2009 dead link New health study eases dioxin concerns University of Otago 16 April 2008 Retrieved 3 February 2009 dead link The full monty John Tamihere interview Investigate Clark fury grows at alleged slur campaign The Sydney Morning Herald 19 September 2006 Idour denies being tape source Television New Zealand 14 May 2007 Retrieved 5 October 2011 Labour denies hiring private eyes to go through Nats rubbish The New Zealand Herald NZPA 23 September 2006 Retrieved 5 October 2011 Preachers of hate Archived May 24 2007 at the Wayback Machine Investigatemagazine tv Leaders abhor mag s negative Muslim stereotyping Scoop The rise of the neo coms Archived December 5 2008 at the Wayback Machine Investigatemagazine tv Columnist to Stand for NZ First Voxy 6 October 2011 Retrieved 14 February 2013 NZ First MP Ban Muslims from flights New Zealand Herald 12 February 2013 NZ First MP Muslim men shouldn t fly 3 News NZ 12 February 2013 Archived from the original on 6 June 2013 Retrieved 4 March 2013 Parties coy on Coalition with NZ First after MP s Wogistan rant TVNZ Retrieved 15 February 2013 Editorial The man revealed stuff co nz 18 February 2013 Retrieved 14 February 2013 No apology over Muslim statements 3 News NZ 12 February 2013 Archived from the original on 28 March 2014 Retrieved 4 March 2013 Andrea Vance MP s Wogistan rant too extreme Retrieved 15 February 2013 No apology over Muslim statements 3 News NZ 12 February 2013 Archived from the original on 28 March 2014 Retrieved 18 February 2013 Vernon Small Wogistan MP should resign Islamic leader Retrieved 15 February 2013 Burr Lloyd 13 February 2013 Prosser says sorry kind of 3 News NZ Archived from the original on 13 April 2013 Retrieved 18 February 2013 New Zealand Press Council Case Number 847 IMMUNISATION ADVISORY CENTRE AGAINST INVESTIGATE MAGAZINE New Zealand Press Council Archived from the original on 6 February 2013 Retrieved 11 August 2013 New Zealand Press Council Case Number 2023 AIR NEW ZEALAND AGAINST INVESTIGATE MAGAZINE New Zealand Press Council Archived from the original on 5 February 2013 Retrieved 11 August 2013 Where news breaks first Investigate Retrieved 22 April 2018 External links edit Investigate Magazine Investigate Retrieved 22 April 2018 Where news breaks first Investigate Retrieved 22 April 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Investigate magazine amp oldid 1215439507, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.