Otago University Critic Te Ārohi Magazine Cuts: 'Sliced Down to Size' with Critic Lite Amid Funding Squeeze

Otago's Oldest Student Magazine Faces Uncertain Future

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The Storied History of Critic Te Ārohi at University of Otago

New Zealand's oldest student publication, Critic Te Ārohi, has been a cornerstone of University of Otago life since its founding in 1925 by medical student Francis Bennett. Originally launched as The Critic, it replaced a newsletter called Te Korero and quickly established itself with an ethos of open criticism, as articulated in its first editorial by Douglas Archibald Campbell. 70 75 Over the decades, it evolved from a newspaper to a magazine format in 2001, adopting a compact A4 size by 2002. The addition of Te Ārohi—a Māori term meaning 'the critic'—reflects its cultural integration, honoring New Zealand's bicultural context where te reo Māori (the Māori language) plays a vital role in university discourse.

Published weekly during term time by Planet Media Dunedin Ltd. on behalf of the Otago University Students' Association (OUSA), Critic boasts a print run of 5,000 copies with an estimated readership of 20,000—nearly 87% of Otago students engage with each issue. Its near-99% campus pick-up rate underscores its physical presence in student flats, libraries, and common areas. As a member of the Aotearoa Student Press Association (ASPA), it has dominated awards, clinching Best Publication 13 times since 2005, including 2025—its centennial year celebrated with a book launch on February 27. 70

The magazine's editorial independence is enshrined in an OUSA charter, with the editor-in-chief appointed annually on a fixed-term contract. This autonomy has enabled bold investigative journalism, from hazing exposés to campus policy critiques, launching careers in media across Aotearoa New Zealand.

Historic cover of Critic Te Ārohi magazine showcasing its evolution over 100 years

2026 Changes: From Full Issues to 'Critic Lite'

In early 2026, Issue 2 marked a pivotal shift: alternating between 36-page full editions and 16-page 'Critic Lite' versions weekly, down from traditional 48–60+ page weeklies. This 'sliced down to size' format responds to mounting pressures, with print news sections often displaced online to Critic's website and Substack (@criticmag). 75 Co-editors Hanna Varrs and Gryffin Blockley explained the compromise preserved weekly drops—featuring headlines, puzzles, centrefolds, culture, and horoscopes—while reserving depth for fortnightly features. 'We fought to keep weekly publication,' they noted, lamenting ad errors that exacerbated content trims but praising supporters.

OUSA offered a single large fortnightly issue, declined to maintain rhythm. Production for 3,000 copies highlights escalating print costs: paper imports, staff wages, distribution, software, and insurance amid Aotearoa's economic strains. 72

OUSA's 2026 Budget Squeeze and Critic Allocation

OUSA's 2026 budget allocates $338,212 to Critic—a $21,640 (approx. 6%) cut from 2025—within Student Media's $695,479 (including Radio One). Despite this, staffing rose $5,000, bolstering editorial capacity. Overall, OUSA anticipates a slim $1,047 surplus, up from cost-of-living hits, with university Student Levy Agreement (SLA) funding at $5,165,088 (up $521,000). 74 73

  • Total Critic Budget: $338,212 (2026) vs. prior higher
  • Cut Reason: Printing adjustments for sustainability
  • Offsets: Events up $47,819; Student Support up $36,800

President Daniel Leamy framed it as nonprofit realities: 'Challenging financial environment... yet strong editorial retained.' OUSA pledges feedback-driven reviews. 73

Editorial Team's Resilient Response

Varrs and Blockley expressed 'sadness and frustration' but optimism: 'Lite* will bring laughs, quality content, and art.' They pivot to digital—videos, social media—while treasuring print rituals like flat-wall centrefolds. Deeper investigations gain breathing room, reflecting diverse Ōtepoti (Dunedin) student voices. 'Print is our kaupapa (purpose),' they affirm, inviting feedback. 75

This mirrors adaptation trends: physical mags persist for tactile engagement, supplemented online.

Outcry from Former Editors and Alumni

Joel MacManus, former editor now at The Spinoff, decried it a 'political decision' singling out Critic: 'Reduces importance... quality drop outweighs savings.' He urges OUSA rethink, noting ample funds elsewhere. Green MP Francisco Hernandez, ex-OUSA president, linked it to government tertiary underfunding. 72 73

Student Petition Gains Momentum

Organized by Liam Calder, 'Save Critic Te Ārohi' has 413 signatures, demanding full restoration. It champions Critic's voice, training ground for journalists, and 87% readership, warning cuts stifle emerging talent. 71

Student Media Struggles Across NZ Universities

Otago's woes echo nationally. Auckland's Craccum faces 22% ($33,000) cuts for 2026, prompting independence bids. Victoria's Salient, Canterbury's Canta grapple similar funding crunches amid levy consultations and rising costs. ASPA highlights collaboration needs as print viability wanes. 63

  • Craccum (Auckland): Worst-funded per student
  • Salient (Victoria): Levy debates
  • Canta (Canterbury): Adaptation pressures

Government underfunding exacerbates, per critics.

Implications for Student Journalism Training

Beyond pages, cuts impact hands-on experience: sub-editing, design, sales—vital for media careers. Critic's alumni thrive at Stuff, RNZ, Spinoff. Reduced scope limits opportunities, especially amid NZ's journalism shortages. OUSA's student support investments help, but media literacy suffers.Crafting a strong CV from such roles boosts higher ed jobs prospects.

OUSA and University Outlook

Leamy welcomes input: format/page reviews yearly. Not ruling out reversals if finances/student demand align. Otago's SLA hike aids, but sustainability key. Digital hybrids offer paths forward.

Otago University Students' Association building in Dunedin, New Zealand

Future Prospects and Student Action

Optimism tempers concern: Lite* trials success, potential full revival. Students: contact OUSA reps, sign petitions, engage socials. Explore rate my professor for journalism courses, NZ university jobs. As NZ higher ed evolves, preserving voices like Critic ensures vibrant campuses.

Browse higher ed jobs or career advice for media paths. For Otago roles, check Dunedin opportunities.

brown and white concrete building near green trees during daytime

Photo by Don T on Unsplash

Frequently Asked Questions

📄Why was Critic Te Ārohi downsized in 2026?

OUSA cut funding by $21,640 to $338,212 due to rising print costs and economic pressures, leading to alternating 36/16-page issues.

📰What is Critic Lite?

A 16-page weekly edition focusing on headlines, puzzles, culture; deeper features fortnightly, with online supplements at critic.co.nz.

🏛️History of Critic Te Ārohi?

Founded 1925, NZ's oldest student mag. Weekly 5,000 copies, 20k readers, ASPA award-winner 13x. Centennial 2025.

💰OUSA's reasons for cuts?

Print production for 3,000 copies unsustainable amid cost-of-living crisis. Staffing up $5k, but overall trim for viability.

Student and alumni reactions?

Petition 400+ signatures; ex-editor Joel MacManus calls 'mistake'. Editors optimistic but sad.

🇳🇿Similar issues at other NZ unis?

Yes, Craccum (Auckland) 22% cut; Salient, Canta face pressures. National student media funding crunch.

🎓Impact on journalism training?

Reduces hands-on roles; hurts emerging careers. Links to higher ed career advice.

🔄Can it be reversed?

OUSA open to feedback; reviews format yearly based on finances/student input.

📢How to support Critic?

Sign petition, contact OUSA, advertise.

💻Digital future for student mags?

Shift to online, socials, videos; print for engagement. Explore media jobs in NZ unis.

📊OUSA total 2026 budget context?

$5m+ SLA from uni; surplus $1k. Prioritizes support services amid pressures.