Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-27 of 27
- Back Roads is taking viewers to some of Australia's most interesting and resilient communities. The towns chosen for the programnme are full of colourful characters whose grit and good humour continues to uplift and inspire.
- After a near death experience, five Boys, all devoted AC/DC fans, make a pact to bury their best friend next to the grave of Bon Scott. 12 years later, having gone their different ways, they come together to fulfill the promise.
- A young girl's view on belonging and loss.
- Atlantis Untold is the story of an unexpected journey by brother and sister Jack and Skye Noble, who are forced by circumstances to try to conquer the opposing forces of an inner world. Decending deeper and deeper into unknown spheres, the two travelers are guided by unexpected forces of light and hindered by relentless forces of darkness, until their struggle brings them to the legendary City of Atlantis.
- In 2001 tons of ashed human bones were found in Melbourne, contaminated by Strontium 90, a toxic residue of nuclear weapon tests in Australia and around the world.
- Digging deep in search of underground water; A five-year project to fix the world's longest fence; Aged care options closer to home for regional Australians; The orange police protecting a precious crop.
- He's from one of Australia's most prominent family business dynasties. Now Peter Holmes a Court, the eldest son of Janet and the late Rober Holmes a Court is aiming to make his own mark in the corporate world. Holmes a Court's unashamed ambition is to create the world's largest cattle company, and like his late father, his approach is already making waves. Let's profile the man who aims to be Australia's new cattle King.
- Property owners in Australia are no strangers to the tough times of drought. After all why else would Australia be known the world over as a wide brown land? But for all the problems associated with unreliable rainfall, some graziers have been able to successfully beat the odds and triumph over a lack of water. In some of our arid zones wool producers have been relying on a native plant which hasn't always been feted in scientific circles, but they say the hardiness of saltbush speaks for itself.
- As family farms are passed down from one generation to the next, so too are any problems brought on by years of working the land. Today we look at one farmer in Western Australia who is turning such an inheritance into an asset. He's found a way to make his salt ravaged land pay by building a series of salt ponds and growing trout.
- The saleyard - for many it's just as much a social meeting place as a site where livestock is bought and sold. But the saleyard is about to undergo a transformation - and soon it'll have just as many barcode scanners as the local supermarket. Electronic identification is here to stay and your local saleyard may never be the same.
- Agriculture is about 10 per cent of the world's trade but about 90 per cent of the world's trade problems. Our next report has been provided by the BBC's Panorama program. It highlights the hypocrisy of the European Union and the United States in particular when they complain about not getting access to other countries because of trade barriers. Australia is a victim of these trade practices. Among many barriers, we cannot get our beef into Europe and we cannot get our sugar into America. But the countries that suffer most from unfair trade practices are those that can afford it least.
- Jatropha Gossypifolia, commonly known as 'bellyache bush', is a particularly nasty species. Bellyache bush is one of the northern pasturelands most invasive, indestructible weeds and has choked beyond use, thousands of fertile hectares. It has killed numerous livestock and has made an inestimable number very, very sick.
- Victorian Farmers Federation president Paul Weller and Greens Senator Bob Brown go head-to-head in this week's Landline debate.
- Landline takes a look at a herd of Angus cattle that are a long way from home - in St Petersburg, Russia.
- 2013–202152mTV EpisodeNeil Oliver takes to the air on an RAAF training mission to seek and destroy submarine invaders and Emma Johnston dives deep into the stunning underwater caverns of the Limestone Coast to understand their formation.
- Robe, SA, is a seaside safe-haven known for helping others and having a generosity of spirit. Local farming families offer their holiday houses to war veterans and give them a free weekend in their stunning town.