Annabel McAleer
Home » Blog » Annabel McAleerIs it okay to say 'retarded'?
By Annabel McAleer • November 26, 2008 • 0 comments
Comedy site Cracked.com has revealed the seven "most retarded" ways celebrities have tried to go green, from Jennifer Aniston's attempt at water conservation to Sheryl Crow's frankly disturbing attitude towards toilet paper. More …
Imagine all the people
By Annabel McAleer • November 11, 2008 • 0 comments
Amazing what can change in a week, eh? Two elections down, and the world's got two dynamic new leaders poised to make all of our hopes and dreams come true. More …
Just don't drop your clothes
By Annabel McAleer • October 21, 2008 • 1 comments
What do you get when you cross a washing machine with a toilet? More …
It's nearly Movember
October 17, 2008 • 1 comments
Women, brace yourselves for a sharp increase in the number of mustachioed males around the country ... Movember is nearly upon us.
Men, register on www.movember.com ... and enjoy that smooth upper lip while you can. More …
In my name
By Ann.a.bel • October 15, 2008 • 0 comments
Is Black Eyed Peas frontman Will.i.am the new Bono? Do we really need a new Bono? Do those full stops make him cool or is it the hair? More …
The Sweden Files: clean cars
By Annabel McAleer • October 14, 2008 • 0 comments
With 700,000 cars in the city of Stockholm (population: 1.3 million), the Swedes love driving almost as much as New Zealanders. But by the end of the year, some 90,000 of those cars will be driving ‘clean’, using alternative fuels or emitting less than 120 grams of CO2 per kilometre. Here’s how Stockholm did it. More …
The Sweden Files: clean water
By Annabel McAleer • October 13, 2008 • 1 comments
If there’s an international convention to prevent the spread of invasive marine species, it would be reasonable to assume New Zealand had signed it. But there is—and we haven’t ... yet. More …
The Sweden Files: 16 is the magic number
By Annabel McAleer • October 11, 2008 • 1 comments
Sweden has set itself 16 ambitious environmental objectives, and one big goal: fix everything ... in one generation. Here's a closer look at those 16 objectives. More …
The Sweden Files: Nobel week
By Annabel McAleer • October 11, 2008 • 0 comments
It’s Nobel Prize week, and today was the biggie: the Nobel Peace Prize. Last year, it was awarded jointly to the International Panel on Climate Change and Albert “you can call me Al” Gore. This year, it went to someone who has had substantially less airtime: Martti Ahtisaari. More …
The Sweden Files: day three
By Annabel McAleer • October 9, 2008 • 0 comments
The problem with solar energy is that when the sun goes, so does your power. But it won’t always be that way. The housing development of Anneberg in Danderyd, north of Stockholm, has found a way to turn summer sun into winter heat. More …
The Sweden Files: day two
By Annabel McAleer • October 8, 2008 • 1 comments
The first official day of the programme, and I get up to speed with European and Swedish politics. More …
The Sweden Files: day one
By Annabel McAleer • October 7, 2008 • 0 comments
Sweden has a lot of be proud of: Stockholm, the so-called capital of Scandinavia, is a beautiful, bustling city surrounded by water so clean you can drink it; its people have an aesthetic sense so ingrained that even the street benches are covetable; and environmental awareness is so strong that McDonalds serves organic beef and milk.
That’s why I’m here, on an environmental study tour with a group of environmental journalists from around the world. More …
Election media
By Annabel McAleer • October 3, 2008 • 0 comments
A great WWF report, political takedowns and more Hollywood starlets than hanging chads in 2000... More …
Sun spots and mosquitoes
By Annabel McAleer • October 1, 2008 • 1 comments
The sun enters a new cycle, summer arrived (for a day or two), and it's mozzie time in Auckland. Anyone got any eco-friendly repellent ideas? Are those automatic insect repellent sprays an environmental crime ... or a forgivable transgression for the seriously itchy? More …
Consider the lobster
By Annabel McAleer • September 29, 2008 • 0 comments
The novelist David Foster Wallace died this month; his essay about the Maine Lobster Festival is worth revisiting. More …
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