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Officially launched as The National Today Show, [1] Today is Australia's longest running morning breakfast news program. [2] The show premiered on 28 June 1982. The original hosts, Steve Liebmann and Sue Kellaway , spent four years together before Liebmann left to present the evening news for Network Ten in Sydney.
The series results in part from the popularity of YouTube and is described as "capturing life's most outrageous moments caught on tape". [1] But what makes this show different, according to Hall, is that many of the videos produced are short films produced by aspiring Spike Lees. [2] A number of the short films come from shortbrain.tv.
The television and multimedia subject matter of the sketches, pace, style, and devices were real points of difference from predecessor sketch-comedy shows of the time, particularly earlier shows such as The Mavis Bramston Show, The Naked Vicar Show, Australia You're Standing In It, The D-Generation, and The Comedy Company, Fast Forward was more ...
Australia's Naughtiest Home Videos is a controversial one-off special spin-off to Australia's Funniest Home Videos which aired on the Nine Network on 3 September 1992. It was a highly explicit special, depicting videos of sexual situations and other sexually explicit content, and was hosted by Australian radio personality Doug Mulray .
Henry Lawson C.J. Dennis, poet and humourist of the Australian vernacular. The "Australian sense of humour" is often characterised as dry, irreverent and ironic, exemplified by some of the works of performing artists like Barry Humphries and Paul Hogan and by character creations such as mock-talk-show hosts Norman Gunston (Garry McDonald) and Roy and HG (John Doyle and Greig Pickhaver).
20 to One (known as 20 to 1 before 2016) is an Australian television series on the Nine Network from 2005, that counts down an undefined "top 20" of elements or events of popular culture, such as films, songs, or sporting scandals. The format mixes archival footage of the listed events with comments from various Australian celebrities.
Nazeem Hussain is an Australian comedian, actor, television and radio presenter. [1] He is best known as the creator and star of two television comedy shows, Legally Brown and Orange Is the New Brown. He has also has multiple comedy specials including Nazeem Hussain: Public Frenemy (2019) on Netflix and 'Hussain in the Membrane' (2022) on Youtube.
The cast of the show came from a series of stage shows called The 3rd Degree, the first shows of which were co-produced by John Pinder, [1] and also Laughing Stock Productions, which featured selections from Australian university revues, and consists of Heath Franklin, Jordan Raskopoulos, Dan Ilic, Felicity Ward, James Pender, Caroline Fitzgerald, and Becci Gage.