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What the picker changes
  • Top topics digest — the cards score the selected period against the prior 4 weeks.
  • 12-week heatmap & outlet matrix — show the 12 weeks ending at the selected week (they slide back with the picker, they aren’t a fixed snapshot).
  • Per-topic volume / alias drift — same 12-week trailing window, anchored on the selected period.
  • Coverage gap quadrant — scores the selected period against the 12 weeks before it (not including it).
  • Anomaly cards — only show alerts the detector fired during the selected period. Quiet weeks legitimately show none.
What stays as-is
  • Outlet orientation strip / lean colours — context-only, drawn from the last 12 weeks of activity regardless.
  • Co-occurrence graph — recent-activity anchored, not picker-driven.
  • Source & topic profiles — all-time data for the topic; the picker doesn’t affect them.
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Topic

National Anthem Usage

5 items · 5 aliases · peaked week of 3 May 2026 · first seen 12 May 2026

The post jokes about individual freedom to opt out of singing the national anthem, criticizing what it sees as overly demanding or performative community expectations.

Volume by source orientation Methodology →

Stacked weekly counts; colour by lean. “n/a” covers government and iwi-Māori sources where lean isn't applicable.

Alias drift

How this topic has been named, week by week. A new alias winning out is usually a framing shift.

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In the press Methodology →

How the news corpus has covered this same topic over the last 12 weeks. 2 articles from RNZ, Stuff, NZ Herald, ODT, 1News, Newsroom and The Spinoff. Click through to the press view for the full panel.

12-week press volume 2 articles
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Heard on radio

Verbatim segments from politicians speaking on podcasts and radio shows about this topic. Sourced via the voice-reference library — each speaker has been confirmed manually from their voice clip. Click play to stream the original audio from the publisher, pre-seeked to the moment the quote starts.

  • Yes, fantastic place. They can go too fast. Switzerland, where my sister lives, there's three levels, so they have local, state and federal testing. And until about 2003, at the local level, they actually had a vote in a community hall where you were there and people would decide whether they want you to be in the country or not by putting their hands up, which I think is a bit brutal. But they have an assessment of not just proficiency in one of their three languages, but also they expect you to do. be assessed at government level as well as at local level as being a good part of the society and respecting the norms and practices. I think New Zealand... Could look at more fundamental things like the English test is a very thin test at the moment and we could perhaps expect people to have a bit more robust English to be able to become a citizen or even just being able to sing the national anthem at the current citizenship test. Yeah well my wife became a citizen, she's originally from Japan and I stitched her up and told her that she had to be able to sing the anthem in Maori and English to be able to become a citizen. So she assiduously learned it for, you know, the two, three months going in. And then on the day when they were saying there was quite a lot of mumbling when you get to the anthem part, and she was really worried because she thought lots of people weren't going to pass the citizenship test. It was disappointed if there wasn't actually a singing test individually at the end of it.
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Sample framings

Up to 12 framings spread across orientations. Each framing is a short phrase the topic extractor generated to characterise the piece's stance — not a quote from the source. Click through to read the original.

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How the public reacted

Social-media signal on the same topic, drawn from the social lens. Engagement is likes + 2×shares + 3×replies, the same weighting used across the digest cards. View on /social →

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