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The series aired 12 episodes between July 4 and September 26, 2013 on Tokyo MX and later aired on ABC, BS11 and TV Aichi. The series was streamed with English subtitles by Crunchyroll. [1] A second season, Free! - Eternal Summer, aired 13 episodes between July 2 and September 24, 2014 and was simulcast by Crunchyroll and Funimation. [2]
Shizuru is a first-year student at Iwatobi High School and a new member of the Iwatobi High School Swim Club following the departure of Haruka and Makoto. He is an excellent swimmer, but generally of a dour disposition who suffers from motion sickness. In Final Stroke, Shizuru is seen as a continuing member of the Iwatobi High School Swim Club.
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 Weekly with Charlie Pickering is an Australian news satire series on the ABC.The series premiered on 22 April 2015, and Charlie Pickering as host with Tom Gleeson, Adam Briggs, Kitty Flanagan (2015–2018) in the cast, and Judith Lucy joined the series in 2019. [1]
In November 2019, the Nine Network announced that Langdon will host Today with Karl Stefanovic from January 2020. [13] In 2021, Langdon was announced as the host of the brand new Nine Network entertainment parenting program titled Parental Guidance. [14] [15] She returned to the show for a second season which premiered in 2023. [16]
Karl Stefanovic (Serbian Cyrillic: Карл Стефановић; born 12 August 1974), also spelt Karl Stefanović, is an Australian television presenter and journalist for the Nine Network. Stefanovic is currently a co-host of the Nine Network 's breakfast program Today and presents for 60 Minutes .
The director of news and current affairs at Seven West Media, Anthony De Ceglie addresses the Melbourne Press Club, discussing a range of topics, but mainly calling upon the Albanese government to scrap a commercial broadcasting tax introduced six decades ago, which costs the three commercial TV networks $45 million a year combined.
[12] [13] In April 2015 Swimming Australia president John Bertrand issued an apology to former swim students who were victims of sexual abuse. [14] Allegations against various swimming coaches were reported as first aired in the media up to ten years earlier; [13] [15] [16] and new cases were alleged following the Royal Commission hearings. [17]