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Indigenous programming attracts few national advertisers. Getting more Indigenous content on TV screens requires a dedicated Indigenous TV channel such as NITV, which is finally due to go to air within two months.
The Barcelona Football Club has broken with tradition and gone against the corporate grain of modern sport, making a gesture that will boost efforts to improve the lives of many underprivileged children around the world.
DIY programs bulge with all manner of handy hints, as happy hosts clamour to offer their free-to-air advice. But scratch the surface, and even a friendly face can turn ugly on you.
Are they utopian or can they be realised? Matthew Klugman reports.
Theatre critic Geoffrey Milne took time off this summer to write two books on Australian theatre. What has drawn him into theatres more than 100 times a year over the past three decades—as a journalist and as a theatre historian? His excuse is that his university teaching demands close acquaintance with actual performances. But that’s not the whole story.
Boycotting global brands, Jon Greenaway puts Muslim colas to the (taste) test.
Lucille Hughes discusses the state of the Australian film industry
Juliette Hughes interviews Fr Joseph Nguyen Cong Doan SJ.
Reviews of the films Monster, The Cat in the Hat, The Barbarian Invasions, and Capturing the Friedmans.
Last month, Communications Minister Helen Coonan put industry interests ahead of those of listeners when she announced a comparatively distant launch date for digital radio, and said it is highly likely current analogue services will never be switched off.
Madeleine Byrne takes to the streets of Hong Kong for a pro-democracy march
Reviews of the films Letters to Ali, Coffee and cigarettes and The Village.
49-60 out of 65 results.