Skip to main content
Advertisement
Advertisement

Daily Cuts - Filming sustainably: More feasible than you’d think

A group of students from NTU decided that they wanted to make their final year project filmmaking process more green. Asia First’s Arnold Gay and Andrea Heng speak with Terry Tan, producer and Diyana Amir, director of the film “Paper Planes, Don’t Always Soar”, who tell us about the changes they made on set and how they convinced their 25-man crew to take the leap with them.

Daily Cuts - S1E60: China scraps quarantine

China is set to reopen its borders to international travellers, ending quarantine requirements from early next month. We speak to Joy Soh, a Singaporean living with her family in Beijing on her reaction to the news.

Resume Pause 11 mins

Daily Cuts - S1E59: The True Victims Of Today's Online Scams

Singapore Today speaks with Dr Reuben Ng, Lead Scientist (Data and Technology), Institute for the Public Understanding of Risk, National University of Singapore about a study that finds those aged below 25 more likely to be fooled by scams than those aged over 65.

Resume Pause 8 mins

Daily Cuts - S1E58: HEALTHIER SG

The Health Ministry launched the Healthier SG blueprint earlier this year, in a bid to get Singaporeans to take charge of their own health.  Singapore Today speaks to Associate Professor Michael Dunn from the Centre for Biomedical Ethics at the NUS Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, who says careful thinking on the implementation of Healthier SG is needed, to ensure people are not judged through the prism of their health status.

Resume Pause 10 mins

Daily Cuts - S1E57: NLB's Book Bugs

Cultivating young book worms - Singapore Today speaks Siti Aisyah Abdul Nasir, Deputy Head for Children & Teens services at the National Library Board, to find out more about what's in store for the NLB's Book Bugs events this December school holidays.

Resume Pause 8 mins

Daily Cuts - S1E56: Diabetes Prevention Through Coffee

Singapore Today speaks with Dr Jiaxi Yang from the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at NUS Medicine about a new study that has found drinking coffee regularly after childbirth may keep type 2 diabetes away from women who had diabetes during pregnancy.

Resume Pause 10 mins