UNLIMITED

New Zealand Listener

A Sense Of Mischief

“I CAN’T LIKE OLIVES,” KIM HILL ONCE said, emphatically, enigmatically, and somehow weirdly memorably. That utterance summed up her idiosyncratic appeal. The horrid olives made their appearance on her first Saturday morning show in 2002. In a review of that first show, I wrote that she talks about food the way a visitor from another galaxy might. “I would have thought mint and basil would argue with each other,” she went on to proclaim.

Presumably, her observations of olives and those battling herbs were apropos of … something. But perhaps not. She is the queen of the non sequitur.

Her last show will be on November 25. “Bit of a day, yesterday,” she said of her departure announcement. It was like attending

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener1 min read
Willing Hands
This summer, thousands of Kiwis will give their time, energy and goodwill to conservation projects around the motu. Pest traps will be laid and monitored, weeds pulled and many tasks done for the greater good of whenua and people. Here, volunteers ga
New Zealand Listener2 min read
Blow Your Mind
First, let’s consider how we humans have spent 99.9% of our time here on Earth. We started off deeply immersed within the natural world, surviving and thriving as tribal communities. For context, it is estimated that, for the majority of human histor
New Zealand Listener2 min read
Bbq Beats With Bite
by Mokotron Songs needn’t say something of merit or weight, but those that provoke or challenge often offer more than mere escapism. In this season – inundated by numerous local singles promising South Pacificinspired roots reggae with elements of s

Related Books & Audiobooks