A shaky Christmas homecoming in Christchurch
Sarah Green headed home to Christchurch for Christmas, where she experienced a city still receiving some unwelcome reminders of its devastating September earthquake.
Sarah Green headed home to Christchurch for Christmas, where she experienced a city still receiving some unwelcome reminders of its devastating September earthquake.
How did four La Trobe students turn their university assignments into ABC Radio National pieces? Find out here.
The Harry Potter films are now the highest grossing movie franchise of all time but can the seventh installment live up to expectations? Sarah Green reviews.
Sarah Green headed home to Christchurch for Christmas, where she experienced a city still receiving some unwelcome reminders of its devastating September earthquake.
How did four La Trobe students turn their university assignments into ABC Radio National pieces? Find out here.
The Harry Potter films are now the highest grossing movie franchise of all time but can the seventh installment live up to expectations? Sarah Green reviews.
Sarah Green was eight years old when she saw her first musical, Jesus Christ, Superstar. The costumes, the lyrics, the atmosphere — she thought her love was unconditional. Until she met Xanadu the Musical.
Sarah Green headed home to Christchurch for Christmas, where she experienced a city still receiving some unwelcome reminders of its devastating September earthquake.
How did four La Trobe students turn their university assignments into ABC Radio National pieces? Find out here.
The Harry Potter films are now the highest grossing movie franchise of all time but can the seventh installment live up to expectations? Sarah Green reviews.
Every year people are killed because they don’t fit societal norms. So why isn’t this investigated by the media? Sarah Green reports.
On the Transgender Day of Remembrance, Sarah Green interviews two trans* people about their journeys and the issues faced by trans* folk in Australian society today.
When West Side Story hit the stage in 1957, audience were challenged by the musical’s defiance of conventions. In 2010, it still pushes the boundaries. Sarah Green reviews.
It’s been reported that young New Zealanders are doing a great job cleaning up after last week’s devastating natural disaster. But as Sarah Green writes, it shouldn’t take an earthquake for young people to receive some positive press.
What do journalists and politicians have in common? They’ve both learned a valuable lesson from Election 2010. Sarah Green reviews ABC Managing Director Mark Scott’s keynote address at the Melbourne Writers Festival.
As Melbourne celebrates its 175th birthday, Sarah Green looks at what the next 175 years might bring.
One week out from the Federal election, Labor and the Coalition are still united in their opposition to same sex marriage but is the Australian public behind them? Sarah Green reports.
Knight and Day won’t win any points for originality but it has its entertaining moments. Sarah Green reviews.
Concerned about the future of journalism or interested in being a part of it? Then check out New News 2010 which runs this Thursday and Friday in Melbourne. Sarah Green looks at some of the program highlights.
When you think of street art the last thing that comes to mind is doilies hanging from trees. But as Sarah Green finds out, Melbourne’s newest graffiti artists are armed with knitting needles rather than cans.
Clara Law’s ‘Like a Dream’, which is screening at the Melbourne International Film Festival, has stunning shots of Shanghai and a moving soundtrack. But, Sarah Green wonders, is it enough to make up for its irritating narrative?
Michael Skoler believes that heritage media has much to learn from Web 2.0. A recent piece he wrote for Harvard’s Niemann Reports has been selected by Sarah Green for our list of the the ‘100 articles every journalist should read about journalism’.
Upstart is one year-old this Saturday. Co-founders Lawrie Zion and Chris Scanlon look back on the first twelve months of an experiment that’s resulted in dozens of students and journalists publishing more than 500 items on the site.
When he founded the world’s first journalism school in 1908, Walter Williams had a few things to say about his mission. Sarah Green has selected this creed for inclusion in our list of ‘100 articles’ every 21st century jouralist should read about journalism.
After stints in two regional newspapers, Kimberley Nichols decided that daily journalism wasn’t for her. But the skills she learned have turned out to be useful in her current role in beyondblue, as she explains to Sarah Green in this Working Journalist profile.
‘Journalism ethics, to remain relevant, must undergo a radical change – a philosophical revolution in how it sees itself and understands its values.’ So says Stephen J. A. Ward in his new journalist creed, which has been selected for our ‘100 articles’ project by Sarah Green.