Program Guide
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Bangalow Farewells Frank Scarrabelotti
THE BYRON SHIRE ECHO Advertising & news enquiries: Mullumbimby 02 6684 1777 Byron Bay 02 6685 5222 Fax 02 6684 1719 [email protected] [email protected] Available early Tuesday at: http://www.echo.net.au VOLUME 22 #02 TUESDAY, JUNE 19, 2007 22,300 copies every week REFILLED EVERY WEEK Bangalow farewells Frank Scarrabelotti Left, Frank Scarrabelotti at the age of 108 in his garden shed. Above, the family farewells Frank at St Kevin’s Church, Bangalow. Photos Jeff Dawson Frank Scarrabelotti, one of Banga- nity into his last decade, from dairy meet the team and wish them good low’s much loved identities, died on farming to rugby union to music. luck. Frank clearly remembered the Tuesday last week at the grand age In his 107th year he and his wife Bangalow team that played in the of 109. Around 300 people turned Nell led the parade for the annual fi nal in 1910, and was able to iden- out for the requiem mass last Fri- Bangalow Billycart Derby, albeit in tify most of the players by name day at St Kevin’s Church, Banga- a car. and the positions they played. low. He was widely regarded as one When Bangalow Rugby Union Ballina MP Don Page paid tribute of life’s true gentlemen. Club played in their fi rst grand to Mr Scarrabelotti in a press release: Born near Coraki on August 4, fi nal since the club was reformed in ‘Frank was highly respected and 1897, Frank was enthusiastically 2003, at the age of 108 Frank came very well liked by all who knew involved in the life of the commu- down to the Bangalow Hotel to continued on page 2 Van Haandels take the reins of iconic Beach Hotel Hans Lovejoy According to current owners ‘The Beach Hotel supported John and Lisa van Haandel’s tor’s future plans are and how it The long anticipated sale and John and Delvene Cornell, they many local good causes as a pub other business interests include will affect the community. -
Editable Food Film Catering
EDITABLE FOOD FILM CATERING m. 0410 507 534 t. 03 9808 5885 f. 03 9808 2263 e. [email protected] CREDITS: Film & Television / Drama: WINNERS AND LOSERES SERIES 3 Seven Network Operations LTD T.V Series Line Producer: Chris Page March 2014- April 2014 TIME OF OUR LIVES SERIES 2 Time Productions T.V Series Production Manager: Jenny Barty January 2014-February 2014 CUT SNAKE Cut Snake Productions Feature Film Line Producer: James Grandison November 2013-December 2013 HOUSE HUSBANDS 2 Playmaker1 SPV T.V Series Line Producer: Esther Rodewald April 2013-June 2013 OFFSPRING 4 Southern Star Productions T.V Series Line Producer: Peter Muston February 2013-March 2013 WINNERS & LOSERS SERIES 3 Seven Network T.V Series Line Producer: Chris Page January 2013-February 2013 MR & MRS MURDER Freemantle media Australia Pty Ltd T.V Series Producer: Andy Walker October 2012-December 2012 PAPER GIANTS 2-MAGAZINE WARS Southern Star Productions T.V Series Assoc Producer: Jane Lindsay August 2012-September2012 THE HUNTER Brown Cab Productions Short Film Prod Manager: Pauline Clague May 2012 PLEASE LIKE ME Please Like Me Productions T.V Series Line Producer: Annie Flynn March 2012-April 2012 Bookings. Freelancers Promotions 613 9682 2722 Film & Television / Drama cont: OFFSPRING 3 – 2 ND UNIT Southern Star Productions T.V Series Line Producer: Ross Allsop February 2012-March 2012 WINNERS AND LOSERS Series 2 Seven Network Ltd T.V Series Line Producer: Amanda Crittenden November 2011-January 2012 LOWDOWN Series 2 Highwire Films T.V Series Production Manager: -
Melissa Doyle AM
Melissa Doyle AM News Presenter, Co-host, MC Melissa Doyle is one of the best-known and trusted voices and faces of Australian media. A highly successful journalist with more than 30 years’ experience, Melissa has been nominated for multiple Silver Logies as Most Popular Television Presenter, voted one of the ‘most real celebrity mums’ and regularly polls in the top 50 of Readers’ Digest’s Most Trusted. In 2016, Melissa was made a Member of the Order of Australia, recognising her “significant service to the community through representational roles with a range of charitable groups, and to the broadcast media”. Talented, smart and warm-hearted, Melissa is an exceptional host and MC for corporate and community events. More about Melissa Doyle: Melissa graduated from Charles Sturt University with a degree in Broadcast Journalism, before beginning her career as a television news reporter and weather presenter at WIN TV Canberra in 1990. Three years later she moved to Prime TV in Canberra as a reporter and co-host of the evening news. In 1995, Melissa joined the Seven Network in the Canberra bureau at Parliament House before moving to the Sydney newsroom. Melissa joined Sunrise in 1997 and co-hosted Australia’s favourite breakfast program until August 2013, taking it from humble beginnings to Number One. During that time, Melissa covered significant events including the Beaconsfield mine disaster, the Royal Wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton, Olympic Games in Sydney, Athens, Beijing and London, the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee, the Queensland floods, Victoria’s Black Saturday bushfires, multiple federal and state elections, the Inauguration of Barack Obama and the election of Pope Francis. -
Stephen Harrington Thesis
PUBLIC KNOWLEDGE BEYOND JOURNALISM: INFOTAINMENT, SATIRE AND AUSTRALIAN TELEVISION STEPHEN HARRINGTON BCI(Media&Comm), BCI(Hons)(MediaSt) Submitted April, 2009 For the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Creative Industries Faculty Queensland University of Technology, Australia 1 2 STATEMENT OF ORIGINAL AUTHORSHIP The work contained in this thesis has not been previously submitted to meet requirements for an award at this or any other higher education institution. To the best of my knowledge and belief, the thesis contains no material previously published or written by another person, except where due reference is made. _____________________________________________ Stephen Matthew Harrington Date: 3 4 ABSTRACT This thesis examines the changing relationships between television, politics, audiences and the public sphere. Premised on the notion that mediated politics is now understood “in new ways by new voices” (Jones, 2005: 4), and appropriating what McNair (2003) calls a “chaos theory” of journalism sociology, this thesis explores how two different contemporary Australian political television programs (Sunrise and The Chaser’s War on Everything) are viewed, understood, and used by audiences. In analysing these programs from textual, industry and audience perspectives, this thesis argues that journalism has been largely thought about in overly simplistic binary terms which have failed to reflect the reality of audiences’ news consumption patterns. The findings of this thesis suggest that both ‘soft’ infotainment (Sunrise) and ‘frivolous’ satire (The Chaser’s War on Everything) are used by audiences in intricate ways as sources of political information, and thus these TV programs (and those like them) should be seen as legitimate and valuable forms of public knowledge production. -
Music on PBS: a History of Music Programming at a Community Radio Station
Music on PBS: A History of Music Programming at a Community Radio Station Rochelle Lade (BArts Monash, MArts RMIT) A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy January 2021 Abstract This historical case study explores the programs broadcast by Melbourne community radio station PBS from 1979 to 2019 and the way programming decisions were made. PBS has always been an unplaylisted, specialist music station. Decisions about what music is played are made by individual program announcers according to their own tastes, not through algorithms or by applying audience research, music sales rankings or other formal quantitative methods. These decisions are also shaped by the station’s status as a licenced community radio broadcaster. This licence category requires community access and participation in the station’s operations. Data was gathered from archives, in‐depth interviews and a quantitative analysis of programs broadcast over the four decades since PBS was founded in 1976. Based on a Bourdieusian approach to the field, a range of cultural intermediaries are identified. These are people who made and influenced programming decisions, including announcers, program managers, station managers, Board members and the programming committee. Being progressive requires change. This research has found an inherent tension between the station’s values of cooperative decision‐making and the broadcasting of progressive music. Knowledge in the fields of community radio and music is advanced by exploring how cultural intermediaries at PBS made decisions to realise eth station’s goals of community access and participation. ii Acknowledgements To my supervisors, Jock Given and Ellie Rennie, and in the early phase of this research Aneta Podkalicka, I am extremely grateful to have been given your knowledge, wisdom and support. -
Birchip-Watchem Reflects on All of Us Have Reasons for Wanting Safer Roads
DONALD BIRCHIP Phone: 5497 1222 Phone: 5492 2735 Fax: 5497 1407 The Buloke Times Fax: 5492 2863 Email: Email: [email protected] birchipblc@ [email protected] Est. 1875 bigpond.com Published Tuesdays and Fridays PRICE (inc. G.S.T.) $2 PP331336/0000 1 Friday, August 6, 2021 For the Shire of Buloke, and the districts of Birchip, Charlton, Donald, St. Arnaud, Watchem and Wycheproof Postponed Round to Go Ahead: Who Will Win Respect Cups? The annual Respect Cup Round between Wycheproof-Narraport and Charlton will be played this weekend. Promoting respectful rela- receive a commemorative drivers of family violence. tionships and non-violence, medallion following their Data from the Crime the Respect Round is an ini- matches. Statistics Agency shows that tiative of the Wycheproof The Demons’ “A” grade violence against women is an Community Resource Cen- netballers will fight to hold on ongoing issue in the Buloke tre’s “A Mount of Prevention” to the cup for another year as Shire, with total family vio- project. they go up against a strong lence incidents in the year The cup round, which has Navies side, while Charlton’s ending 2020 increasing by been postponed since June senior hockey players hope to 49% on the previous year. due to the COVID-19 lock- secure the cup again in 2021. Furthermore, there were down, will not include an Presentation 157 offences recorded by evening program, due to The Respect Round local police of breaching fam- Covid-19 restrictions, nor will evening program was to in- ily violence orders, 19 of it include the seniors footy, clude a presentation by Cul- those criminal incidents. -
Dear Chris, Media Watch Is Looking at the Coverage of the Queensland Floods and While We Are Examining Some of the Slip Ups, We
From: Willis, Chris Sent: Monday, 7 February 2011 12:06 PM To: Jo Jarvis Subject: RE: Media Watch question to channel 7 Response from Chris Willis: The network sent an additional 60 people – reporters, producers, technical staff – to Brisbane to assist in the coverage. That is in addition to the Brisbane news staff of 50 and the Sunrise staff who were already in place covering the floods. We also sent a significant amount of equipment – helicopters from Sydney and Melbourne, satellite dishes and links from around the network – to assist in live coverage. Additional staff were rostered in Sydney to cope with demand for satellite space and live feeds coming from Queensland. In addition to the people sent to Brisbane, extra people brought into each newsroom in the network to assist in preparing stories for coverage of the floods. Re the signing. Our camera operator at the EMQ did not hear the request and focussed on the premier, as is the normal practice. Our normal communications with him failed. He had his mobile were switched off during the news conference. However, we were able to contact him after the news conference. From that point, the signer was included in all news conferences. Chris Willis Director of News | Sydney Seven Network (Operations) Limited Dear Chris, Media Watch is looking at the coverage of the Queensland floods and while we are examining some of the slip ups, we’d also like to acknowledge the massive effort news organisations dedicated to this event. If you have a moment to spare from overseeing the coverage of Cyclone Yasi, we’d very much appreciate a short note telling us how many reporters and what resources you outlaid for the coverage of the floods in SE Queensland. -
The Besieged Polis Citizen Insecurity and Democracy in Latin America
Organization of American States The Besieged Polis Citizen Insecurity and Democracy in Latin America Kevin Casas-Zamora JUNE 2013 Table of Contents Acknowledgments . iii Disclaimer . iv Chapter 1—On the Relationship between Citizen Insecurity and Democracy . 1 Introduction . 1 What do we understand citizen insecurity to be? . 2 How does the state of citizen insecurity affect democracy? . 4 How does the state of democracy affect citizen insecurity? . 11 Where to now? . 13 Chapter 2—Anatomy of an Epidemic: Violence and Citizen Insecurity in Latin America . 15 Introduction . 15 The objective dimension: crime and victimization . 16 A look at factors associated with the objective dimension of insecurity . .24 The subjective dimension: fear and perceived insecurity . 31 Findings and final reflections . 36 Chapter 3—Can We Live Together? Citizen Insecurity as a Threat to Democratic Coexistence – with Consuelo Amat . 38 Introduction . 38 The variables and the model . 39 Analysis and results . 44 Findings and final reflections . 50 Chapter 4—The Wounded Leviathan: Crime, the State, and the Erosion of the Monopoly on Legitimate Violence . 53 Introduction . 53 The proliferation of private security services . 54 The persistence of lynching . 62 Areas of contested sovereignty . 66 Findings and final reflections . 73 Chapter 5—There Is a Way Out: Some Proposals to Address Citizen Insecurity in Latin America . 75 Bibliography . 93 Appendix . 105 Cover photos credit: Carol Garcia/SECOM, accessed via Fotos GOVBA on Flickr, available under Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license The Besieged Polis: Citizen Insecurity and Democracy in Latin America Latin America Initiative at Brookings ii Acknowledgements any people collaborated in the preparation of this study . -
Birchip Midweek Bowls Supported by the St
DONALD BIRCHIP Phone: 5497 1222 Phone: 5492 2735 Email: The Buloke Times Fax: 5492 2863 [email protected] Email: [email protected] birchipblc@ Est. 1875 bigpond.com Published Tuesdays and Fridays PRICE (inc. G.S.T.) $2 PP331336/0000 1 Friday, March 12, 2021 For the Shire of Buloke, and the districts of Birchip, Charlton, Donald, St. Arnaud, Watchem and Wycheproof • Left to right, Dr. Anne Webster, Mark Gepp, Ali Cupper and Cr. Daryl Warren, at the Wycheproof Early Learning Centre. New Dawn for Wycheproof Early Learning The Wycheproof Early Learning Centre has officially opened, positions, the new Wychep- members from returning to contemporary buildings in roof Early Learning Centre work. It is a wonderful result Birchip, Donald and Wyche- marking a new dawn for the community. has been welcomed by the for local families and an im- proof, with projects under Mark Gepp (Member for The addition of the Early Government Department of Wycheproof community, and portant investment in the fu- way in Charlton and Sea Northern Victoria), Dr. Anne Learning Centre complements Industry, Science, Energy and is already being well utilised. ture of the town and the area. Lake to give each of the five Webster (Member for Mallee), the Wycheproof P-12 College, Resources through the Drought “The project has long All Levels major towns in Buloke ap- and Ali Cupper (Member for giving the town an education Communities Programme – been held as a top priority for “Council has advocated propriate early learning cen- Mildura), were all on hand to precinct that can take its chil- Extension ($500,000), the Wycheproof,” said Buloke strongly for investment from tres. -
12 September 2019
Official Visit to Switzerland 7 – 12 September 2019 The Honourable Annastacia Palaszczuk MP Premier of Queensland and Minister for Trade Page 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS PROGRAM.............................................................................................................................................. 3 SATURDAY 7 SEPTEMBER 2019 ................................................................................................................................. 3 SUNDAY 8 SEPTEMBER 2019 .................................................................................................................................... 3 MONDAY 9 SEPTEMBER 2019 ................................................................................................................................... 4 TUESDAY 10 SEPTEMBER 2019 ................................................................................................................................. 5 WEDNESDAY 11 SEPTEMBER 2019 ............................................................................................................................ 6 THURSDAY 12 SEPTEMBER 2019 ............................................................................................................................... 6 DELEGATES AND MEMBERS .............................................................................................................. 7 OFFICIAL PARTY MEMBERS ....................................................................................................................................... 7 AUSTRALIAN -
GLOBAL STUDY on HOMICIDE Homicide, Development And
GLOBAL STUDY ON HOMICIDE Homicide, development and the Sustainable Development Goals 2019 Booklet 4_COVER.indd 3 04/07/2019 10:40:12 UNITED NATIONS OFFICE ON DRUGS AND CRIME Vienna GLOBAL STUDY ON HOMICIDE Homicide, development and the Sustainable Development Goals 2019 © United Nations, July 2019. All rights reserved worldwide. This publication may be reproduced in whole or in part and in any form for educational or non-profit purposes without special permission from the copyright holder, provided acknowledgement of the source is made. The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) would appreciate receiving a copy of any publication that uses this publication as a source. Suggested citation: UNODC, Global Study on Homicide 2019 (Vienna, 2019) No use of this publication may be made for resale or any other commercial purpose whatsoever without prior permission in writing from UNODC. Applications for such permission, with a statement of purpose and intent of the reproduction, should be addressed to the Research and Trend Analysis Branch of UNODC. DISCLAIMER The content of this publication does not necessarily reflect the views or policies of UNODC or contributory organizations, nor does it imply any endorsement. Comments on the report are welcome and can be sent to: Division for Policy Analysis and Public Affairs United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime PO Box 500 1400 Vienna Austria Tel: (+43) 1 26060 0 Fax: (+43) 1 26060 5827 Homicide, development and the Sustainable Development Goals PREFACE The Global Study on Homicide is a search for solutions. By bringing together the available data, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime seeks to shed light on different phenomena, from lethal gang violence and the role of firearms to links with inequalities and gender-related killings, and in this way support targeted action. -
Chapter Nine: the Main Event – Round Three – 1981-1990
Chapter Nine: The Main Event – Round Three – 1981-1990: Introduction: This chapter concludes the examination of the inextricable melding of Television Audience Survey Ratings, Financial Returns and Local ‘Live’ Production. While there was still intense rivalry between TVW7 and STW9, other forces were coming into operation in the succeeding period from 1981-1990. In this decade both TVW7 and STW9 were subsumed by much larger corporate entities. At the level of programming this led to a notable decline in local ‘live’ production, as a result of national networking and a corresponding diminution of community responsibility. During this period there were to be big changes in the structure of what can be termed the era of the two ‘family television’ companies in Western Australia. The chapter examines the events that led to TVW7 becoming part of the Robert Holmes a’ Court Bell Group, the retirement of Sir James Cruthers (considered by many to be ‘the Father’ of Perth television) and the sale of STW9 to the Bond Corporation. Another development, the introduction of the Aussat Satellite System was to have a huge impact on program transmission and in conjunction with Networking, perhaps deliver the mortal blow to the local ‘live’ television industry. The chapter concludes with the first two years of a three-station System in Western Australia’s capital city, when NEW10 went on air in 1988. Examination of the correlation between audience ratings surveys and Company profitability continues and so are their combined deleterious effects upon the former showcases of the two original stations, their respective Production Departments and the wealth of output from their in-house studios.