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1-50 of 53
- When a man returns to his beach side hometown in Australia, he is humiliated in front of his teenage son by a local group of surfers who claim ownership over the secluded beach of his childhood.
- Professional hit-man Charlie Wolfe finds himself in three tales of murder, blackmail and revenge after a botched contract assignment.
- My Kitchen Rules is an Australian reality television cooking competition that first aired on the Seven Network in 2010. In each series, several teams of two compete against each other for the chance to win a cash prize.
- Join comedian Bill Bailey in the massive State of Western Australia, one of the most surprising and extraordinarily beautiful places on the planet.
- In the 70s two brothers battle killer waves, conservative society and ruthless bikers to kick-start the modern surf industry.
- The lives of two working class Australian families who come to live together at One Cloud Street, over a period of twenty years, 1943 - 1963.
- Responding to the coming out of her transgender teenager, Nina battles with the choices that she and her family have to make. But timing is everything.
- Young Sam is forced to confront his feelings of resentment for his family members after a crisis hits his family during night camping in the forests of Tinglewood.
- Through the lens of a young woman battling endometriosis, this meditative documentary explores the lessons of resilience and surrender that can accompany living with the insidious chronic disease affecting 190-million women worldwide.
- follow renowned chefs Neil Perry, Ben Shewry and Peter Gilmore on a culinary journey across Australia as they source fresh local produce and create a menu set to impress some of the world's toughest critics.
- A circus family on the way to a circus festival. They find a Crypocurrency wallet that belongs to some rich Swiss Aristocrats who send out a cleaner.
- Lukey & friends go on remote adventures across Australia. Sailing in Gippsland. Hiking the Great Ocean Walk. Gold hunting & Surfing in WA. Then home via Ularu. Talking, love, money, religion, the universe, politics, depression and life.
- Maya's in a rut. Her prolific career as a famous painter has yet to materialize. Real artists speak honestly from the soul. They have a unique perspective on the world due to their tortured, unstable existences. Maya is surrounded by people who pretend they are someone else, and even more unfortunately, she is completely normal. Something has to change.
- Phee is a student finishing her university film project. However, a new girlfriend and strange visions distract her from the task. Her brother, with whom she shares a close relationship, helps her sort through her fears, enabling her to examine previously unexplored parts of her life.
- The film commemorates fifty years of the Seaview Road Boardriders between 1964-2014. The film features footage from the late 1960s right through to the year 2014.
- A 15,000 mile, 6 month journey for an incredible look at Australia. Just over the next wave and down a dirt track is a country you've never known. And people who have lived there forever.
- Shane Gould is one of a kind: a superstar swimmer who turned her back on the pool at the peak of her career in search of a simpler life. Shane and Julia revisit her school and the Margaret River home she escaped to.
- Perth police are caught in the middle of a fierce neighbourhood battle. Friends of a drunk teenage girl have a good reason to report her to the police in Margaret River. A street in suburban Perth becomes the target of a major raid when police suspect that it has a drug laboratory.
- Poh's on the road in WA's Margaret River region with one-time TV chef and good food lover, Ian Parmenter. Ian has invited her to his backyard, the wonderful mecca of the Margaret River region.
- After a week as Ian Parmenter's guest in Western Australia's Margaret River, has Poh finally become a country girl? She certainly mixes it up with the local Alpacas and proves a dab hand at catching freshwater marron.
- If you had to name Australia�s favourite fruit it would have to be the banana. We eat millions of them every year and although we usually associate banana growing with Queensland and northern New South Wales the most productive plantations in Australia are in western Australia. The bananas from the west are grown in tightly packed plantations and as a result they are not as large as their eastern cousins but some clever marketing has turned a negative into a positive.
- When Jeannie Gunn wrote the quintessential tale of life in the top end against all odds, she called it We of the Never Never. The Northern Territory even coined the "never never" phrase to attract tourists, though for the past century it may have just as easily summed up your chances of getting to Darwin by train. It seems you should never say never. The project that has been sidetracked more often than a shunting yard loco, has finally got the greenlight and $1.2 billion to make it happen.
- Recently Landline brought you a story on goat meat - Now here's a story about new hope for goat fleece.
- Less than three years ago pork producers in this country were talking about the death of their industry. Rising imports from Canada and Denmark had brought growers to their knees; many forced to start killing their stock, as it was not viable to send them to market. But desperate times in another country, Malaysia, have brought a new prosperity to the pork industry that is now enjoying record prices as well as a massive jump in exports to Asia. Julia Limb looks at the changing fortunes of Australia's pig farmers.
- The Australian wild dog has long been the curse of the landholder. Even with a constant vigil throughout the pastoral regions of mainland Australia, wild dogs still cause havoc. Stock losses annually total hundreds and thousands of dollars and landholders across the eastern seaboard believe dog attacks are increasing. And there's a disturbing new trend emerging of wild dog attacks on humans. Reporter Tim Lee visited the remote high country regions of Victoria and New South Wales for this special Landline report.
- The Australian show jumping championships is held in a different state every year. Usually it goes goes to a royal show, but this year it went to a small rural show in Queensland. It's the second time in five years that Gympie has snared the prestigious event, with the country's top riders giving it a big tick.
- The cane toad's economic impact might be hard to determine, but it is renowned for harming many of our native animals, especially frogs. Since the toad's introduction to control another pest flopped, there have been several attempts to find a way to get rid of it. They too have been unsuccessful but only now are scientists at the CSIRO confident they will soon have the answer.
- Australia has a very proud tradition of producing top rodeo riders. We've had many world champions and many Aussies compete successfully on the tough but lucrative American rodeo circuit. Where do these good rivers come from? They don't just happen - in fact many start at rodeo school.
- Exotic fruits such as custard apples, Buddha's hand citron, Inga beans and carambolas are unlikely to ever match apples and oranges for mass-market appeal. But if one NSW mid north coast producer has his way, Australians will soon be able to taste up to 120 exotic varieties see how they're grown and learn about where they're from.
- The beef industry's Funding Steering Committee is calling for the cattle levy by be lifted by $1.50. Through June and July producers will vote whether to accept the increase but in the meantime, Meat and Livestock Australia is mounting a strong campaign for a 'yes' vote. Heading up their case is committee chairman Don McDonald who told Landline he was confident producers would accept the increase. The Australian Beef Association�s Linda Hewitt outlines why the group is opposing the increase.
- With wild fish stocks fast running out aquaculture looms as one of Australia's biggest growth industries and you'd think governments would be keen to support new players. But a south coast mussel farmer who is leading a push to develop shellfish production in the Jervis Bay Marine Park, claims he's being swamped by red tape.
- Few other industries have grown at such a speed as the Australian Wine Industry. The eighties and nineties were periods of extraordinary domestic and export growth. But a couple of years back, some experts warned of major problems ahead and now those warnings are reality, too many grapes, too many wineries. Let's take a quick look at the industry's extraordinary growth and its current status.
- Britain has confirmed its first case of H5N1-type bird flu, sending shockwaves through the poultry and egg industries.
- It is a bush tradition, a much loved social event and a place of good-natured competition. But in Queensland there are warnings that country shows are under threat from a State Government plan to amalgamate some rural shires.
- Australia's only wild pheasant hunt takes place on King Island. Hunters rate it the world's best, but this year fewer hunters came and they found fewer birds to shoot. Now the island's Game Bird Association and the wildlife authorities that manage the hunt are at loggerheads about what to do next.
- Ernie takes in 360-views of Augusta from an iconic lighthouse, Narelda learns the fascinating history of whaling in Eden and Aaron connects with a Cape York local making an impact in her community.
- Presenter Anne Kruger interviews National Farmers Federation's manager Denita Wawn about the critical skills shortage in the bush.
- These days reality television has turned everyone from weight watchers to wannabe singers and dancers into overnight celebrities. The genres even helping farmers find wives. Now it's hoped the same sort of approach may convince more city doctors to consider a tree change and relieve Australia's chronic shortage of medicos in rural and remote areas.
- The British Labour Party has lost a by-election for the first time in more than 20 years with a swing against it of 18 per cent.
- It is 150 years since Australian Rules football first took shape in a rough and tumble game between two posh Melbourne schools. Since then Aussie rules has evolved and spread to every corner of the country and overseas. But for indigenous communities in Central Australia it's much more than a game.
- Over 2,000 delegates at the International Poultry Convention in Brisbane this week have been in discussions over the future of their massive global industry. Keynote speaker Professor David Farrell from the University of Queensland, spoke with Anne Kruger.
- 2016–202352mTV EpisodeNarelda experiences Wilsons Promontory by sea, Bianca spends a day with football star Jada Whyman, and Ernie inspects the craftsmanship of furniture maker in Margaret River.