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Business Today (Australia Plus TV 2006–2014) Capital Hill (ABC News 24 2010–2015) The Daily Edition (Seven Network 2013—2020) The Dalley Edition (Sky News 2014–2016) Difference of Opinion (ABC 2007) The Drum (ABC 2012–2023, ABC News 2010–2023) Entertainment Tonight Australia (Nine Network 1999) Eric Baume's Viewpoint (TCN-9 1959–1961)
Home is an Australian children's television series first broadcast on the ABC on 11 April 1983. It follows the stories and adventures of children living at the fictional Westmere children's home . The series featured a revolving cast with story arcs running across two to six episodes, although some characters appeared in more than one story arc.
The series was then shown on TV2 as five half-hour episodes every week at 6.00pm, Monday to Friday, all year round (as opposed to four half-hour, or, two one-hour weekly episodes, for approximately ten months, as broadcast in Australia) from Monday 10 February 1986 until Friday 22 July 1988.
The series dealt with the fictional homicide squad of the Victorian Police force and the various crimes and cases the detectives are called upon to investigate. Many episodes were based directly on real cases, although the characters (including the detectives) were fictional. 510 episodes were produced and aired from 20 October 1964 [2] to January 1977, a total of 12 years and 6 months ...
Luke's Kingdom is a 1976 Australian TV series set in colonial Australia. Directors included Peter Weir and writers included Elisabeth Kata and Tony Morphett. [1] It was co-produced with Trident Television, the then owners of Yorkshire and Tyne Tees Television, and aired in 1976 on Nine Network in Australia and ITV in the United Kingdom.
The show and cast won and were nominated in several categories at the 2007 AFI Awards, including: [5] Winner: Best Guest or Supporting Actor in a Television Drama – David Ngoombujarra; Nominated: Best Telefeature or Mini Series; Nominated: Best Direction in Television – Richard Frankland (for episode 'Home Is Where the Past Is')
Ken James (born 16 November 1948) is an Australian former actor and celebrity chef. He is most widely known for his role in children's TV show Skippy the Bush Kangaroo as Mark Hammond to which be became known locally and to international audiences [1] After his debut in Skippy, James continued to work in film, television and theatre for another 36 years.
Most episodes were directed by Ted Gregory, a longtime Crawford studio director, with Jones supervising a lean and mobile film unit. The series became extremely popular rating in the top-ten most popular programs in Australia for 1967, and had a run of 65 one-hour episodes. It also achieved a limited number of international sales. [4]