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ABC listen에서 제공하는 콘텐츠입니다. 에피소드, 그래픽, 팟캐스트 설명을 포함한 모든 팟캐스트 콘텐츠는 ABC listen 또는 해당 팟캐스트 플랫폼 파트너가 직접 업로드하고 제공합니다. 누군가가 귀하의 허락 없이 귀하의 저작물을 사용하고 있다고 생각되는 경우 여기에 설명된 절차를 따르실 수 있습니다 https://ko.player.fm/legal.
Sunday Extra presents a lively mix of national and international affairs, analysis and investigation, as well as a lighter touch.
ABC listen에서 제공하는 콘텐츠입니다. 에피소드, 그래픽, 팟캐스트 설명을 포함한 모든 팟캐스트 콘텐츠는 ABC listen 또는 해당 팟캐스트 플랫폼 파트너가 직접 업로드하고 제공합니다. 누군가가 귀하의 허락 없이 귀하의 저작물을 사용하고 있다고 생각되는 경우 여기에 설명된 절차를 따르실 수 있습니다 https://ko.player.fm/legal.
Sunday Extra presents a lively mix of national and international affairs, analysis and investigation, as well as a lighter touch.
The founders of Australian Wrongful and Arbitrary Detention Alliance have a unique and unenviable qualification in common. Sean Turnell, Kylie Moore-Gilbert and our guest today Cheng Lei all experienced wrongful and arbitrary detention in a foreign country. Cheng Lei has written about her life and the experience of being deprived of her freedom in the book she calls a “ Memoir of Freedom ”.…
The Australian Native Food Festival has been in the works for many years, delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic. But finally, more than 20 First Nations vendors will gather as part of the festival's market. Several talks and demonstrations will also be taking place.
The Rocky Horror Picture Show was released in American cinemas on 26 September 1975 and despite disappointing early performance, the sexually adventurous satirical sci-fi musical has been running ever since … thanks to its uniquely devoted fan base.
18-year old Nila Ibrahimi fled her home in the days after the Taliban retook the city in 2021. She now gives a voice to Afghan girls and women who are suffering severe repression at the hands of the Taliban. Nila won the 2024 International Children’s Peace Prize and will present this year’s Gandhi Oration at the University of New South Wales. Guest: Nila Ibrahimi, human rights activist.…
Robotics and farming. That’s the subject of an address given in Perth earlier this week by Salah Sukkarieh , Professor of Robotics and Intelligent Systems at the Australian Centre for Robotics, which is part of Sydney University.
Japan could have its first female Prime Minister next week, as 5 candidates compete in a leadership contest for the ruling Liberal Democratic Party. A snap general election was called after the last Prime Minister, Shigeru Ishiba, stepped down. One of the key considerations in the election is which candidate is best placed to deal with US President Donald Trump whose tariffs are crippling Japan’s car industry. Guest: Roger Pulvers, playwright and commentator on Japanese politics.…
Europe is closely watching Moldova’s parliamentary elections which will help determine if the former Soviet republic continues on its pro-western path or falls back under Moscow’s orbit. Russia has been accused of election interference using information warfare, illicit financing, cyber-attacks and a plot to incite riots. Guest: Linnea Wickman, Swedish MP and election observer.…
Vivian Pham started writing her novel, The Coconut Children , when she was 16. After publishing in 2020, she was asked to convert it into a stage play . At the time, she had never watched a contemporary theatre performance. Now, it's set to be the largest production of Belvoir's season. Set in a south-west Sydney Vietnamese-Australian community in the late 90s, the Coconut Children was inspired by her father's experience fleeing Vietnam at 17 years old. Guest: Vivian Pham, author of Coconut Children.…
Monash University academics Dr Daniel Heller and Dr Farid Zaid noticed their students were increasingly unwilling or unable to discuss controversial or uncomfortable conversations and were instead staying silent in class, while a minority of voices on the extremes dominated debates.
In 2024 a record 13,350 million students sat for China's gaokao university entrance exam. Chinese students start preparing for the test in primary school and the result can determine the course of the rest of their lives.
Gary Stevenson used to be a successful trader, making millions of pounds betting on the economic downfall of the economy. But his real success has come from leaving the world of high-flying traders and starting a YouTube channel, Gary's Economics, in which he breaks down the causes of financial inequality and offers bold solutions on how to restart the entire western financial system. Guest: Gary Stevenson, Inequality Economist, YouTuber and author of The Trading Game: A Confession . Gary Stevenson will be touring Australia in Feb-Mar 2026 .…
Malawi, the fourth poorest country in the world, went to the polls on the 16th September for their general election. The two main Presidential Candidates have both served as President of Malawi previously and been accused of corruption in the role. As food prices skyrocket, fuel becomes a scarce commodity and a country largely reliant on rain-fed crops struggles with drought and natural disasters, Malawians wait in anticipation for the election results. Guest: Charles Pensulo , independent journalist based in Blantyre, Malawi…
Sir Gibuma Gibbs Salika is Papua New Guinea's longest-serving judge on the country's Supreme Court. He was only a young man when PNG achieved independence on 16 September 1975, and has graciously joined Julian to reflect on the last 50 years. Guest: Sir Gibuma Gibbs Salika, Chief Justice of the National and Supreme Court of Papua New Guinea…
This week Federal Attorney General Michelle Rowland introduced the Freedom of Information Amendment Bill to Federal Parliament. The Centre for Public Integrity says the bill continues "a worrying trend of prioritising government efficiency over transparency”.
In 1943, Australian Attorney-General Doc Evatt sent UK Prime Minister Winston Churchill... a platypus. Why? For diplomacy, of course! When it inevitably perished two days before arriving in Liverpool, our guest, in the Journal of Environment and History, wrote “Winston’s death cannot have come as a terrible surprise: he was travelling in the middle of the war, constantly under threat by German U-boats.5 He was also a platypus.”. GUEST: Dr Harrison Croft, recently awarded a PHD from Monash University.…
Dr Kate Marvel was named by Time Magazine one of 15 Women Leading the Fight Against Climate Change in 2019. She was described as someone who “cuts through misinformation about climate change with storytelling”. She is a former cosmologist with a Ph.D. in theoretical physics from Cambridge University. Her professional focus now is modelling climate change.…
Brisbane is about getting ready for the dance battle of the year, when Brisbane Festival hosts the 7th year of the sequin-infested, hairspray-recommended, tongue-in-cheek dance competition -The Common People Dance Eisteddfod. Creator of the event, Neridah Waters, shares how the Eisteddfod started and why she welcomes Rock Eisteddfod Rejects from all over Brisbane into the Common People community. Guest: Neridah Waters, co-founder of the Common People Dance Project and director of the Common People Dance Eisteddfod .…
Experts say we’ve seen a mainstreaming of once-fringe conspiracy beliefs , fuelled in part by the pandemic and amplified by social media. So what do they tell us about Australian society?
A hoard of treasure found in the lowlands of Scotland has re-written what historians know about the Viking-age in Britain. Containing silver and gold as well more usual items, from as far away as the West Asia, the highlights of the Galloway Hoard, and the story of their uncovering, are on display at the Museum of Melbourne. Guest: Adrian Maldonaldo, Researcher of the Galloway Hoard at the National Museum of Scotland .…
Flash drives for Freedom is a long-running initiative by the Human Rights Foundation which has smuggled 140,000 donated USB drives, SD cards and micro SD cards into North Korea, filled with information, entertainment and educational content to counter regime propaganda.
The 'Right to Hunt' is at the centre of a controversial new bill being debated in NSW parliament at the moment. Introduced by the Shooters, Fishers and Farmers Party, the bill seeks to, among other things, enshrine the rights of hunters into NSW legislation. Stephen Bendle joins us to discuss what the potential implications are of the amendment and what his organisations objections are to the bill. Guest: Stephen Bendle, Convenor of the Australian Gun Safety Alliance and a senior advisor for the Alannah and Madeline Foundation.…
The most common map of the world is one that was created in the 16th century known as the Mercator projection. Now the African Union has joined a campaign to update this map with a new one which much more accurately represents the size of Africa in the world. Does the size of the African continent represent a 400 year disinformation campaign? Guest: Lerato Mogoathle, Head of Communications, Africa No Filter Link to the Correct the Map Campaign…
This week the Tweet is the Pilotbird. It's chocolate-brown in colour, and it measures about 18 centimetres. And although it's a secretive bird, that bright and clear call will alert you to its presence. Legend has it that the Pilotbird's call was a useful guide, or 'pilot', for hunters who were looking for larger, plumper, Lyrebirds! And back in 2014 our Tweet of the Week quizmaster Matthew Crawford spoke with the sound recordist David Stewart... Matthew asked for a favourite recording - one which would make a good challenge in Tweet of the Week. And Dave chose that one: his own recording of the Pilotbird. Thank you, Dave, for a life time of work devoted to recording sounds of nature - work that will outlive all of us. David Stewart, who recently died in Queensland.…
Podcaster and broadcaster Josh Szeps has made a career out of making uncomfortable conversations comfortable. He has worked in America on programs like HuffPost Live and in Australia he worked with Mike Carlton early in his career and hosted the afternoon show on ABC local radio. He now hosts his own podcast Uncomfortable Conversations. Guest: Josh Szeps, host of the podcast Uncomfortable Conversations.…
It was on the 24th August 2006, that the International Astronomical Union changed the definition of planet which meant that Pluto lost its status as the 9th planet in our solar system. On this auspicious anniversary we talk to the astronomer who made the discovery that lead to Pluto's downgrading. Guest: Mike Brown, author of How I Killed Pluto and What it Had it Coming…
George Orwell wrote the book Animal Farm during WW2 as he tried to come to terms with his disappointment in the harsh reality of life in the Soviet Union under Stalin. The themes of overturning an authoritarian government made the book the perfect story for the CIA to be using for propaganda. Over a period of a few months in 1955, they distributed 260,000 copies of the novella behind the iron curtain in an attempt to encourage a revolution. The book celebrated its 80th birthday on 17 August 1925. Guest: Charlie English, author of The CIA Book Club - The Best Kept Secret of the Cold War (Harper Collins)…
Brian Robinson is a contemporary artist originally from Waiben (Thursday Island) in the Torres Strait. His work explores imagery drawn from ancestral iconography of the Zenadth Kes (Torres Strait), and he uniquely interweaves this with images from popular culture and science fiction. Guest: Torres Strait Islander Artist, Brian Robinson . His exhibition, Ur Wayii , is currently on display at the Australian National Maritime Museum in Sydney.…
Paul White's work has taken him to some of the world’s most volatile conflict zones and humanitarian crises. Since the mid-2000s, he’s been on the ground in countries like Iraq and Nepal, working with refugees, displaced communities, and Indigenous peoples. Guest: Paul White is a Senior Protection Adviser for the UN’s ProCap organisation, living in Kabul Afghanistan.…
Professor Georgina Long has led global breakthroughs in immunotherapy and targeted therapies, transforming advanced melanoma from a disease with no effective treatment into one where long-term survival and even cures are possible. Her pioneering research and international collaborations continue to set the standard for how cancer is understood and treated. She joins Sunday Extra to share how this breakthrough research has fundamentally changed patient care. Guest: Professor Georgina Long AO, Medical Director of Melanoma Institute Australia (MIA), and Chair of Melanoma Medical Oncology and Translational Research at MIA and Royal North Shore Hospital, The University of Sydney.…
In 2023, Jack Toohey created a cut through viral video on the subject of Australian house prices. Now he's written a book about the housing crisis, climate change, persistent gender inequity and other social ills, making the case for choosing hope over apathy.
Papua New Guinea marks 50 years of Independence and to mark the 50th anniversary a new economic history of PNG since independence has just been released. It’s called Struggle, Reform, Boom and Bust . Guest: Maholopa Laveil, lecturer in Economics at UPNG’s School of Business and Public Policy.
A relative state of calm has returned to Kathmandu with the swearing in of Nepal's new interim Prime Minister, Sushila Karki. The new leader takes her place after a week of civil unrest that saw the burning of government buildings and the deaths of dozens of protester. Guest: Surendra Phuyal, Nepalese journalist based in Kathmandu.…
Dr Grainne Cleary is a wildlife ecologist who is one of Australia's most enthusiastic bird lovers. But in writing her new book 'Why Birds Sing', she realised even the experts among us still have a lot to discover when it comes to the complex world of bird song. Guest: Dr Grainne Cleary , bird expert and author of Why Do Birds Sing .…
“Cooking for Seamus” is a TV cooking project funded by Screen Australia. The uniqueness of this show comes from the fact that Seamus, the judge of this cooking show, is an Angus bull with a rare palsy condition.
Peter Shmigel's story began in New York City where he grew up steeped in the culture of his Ukrainian refugee parents. His life has since included stints as a Western Sydney builder, a member of an underground resistance group, CEO of one of Australia’s leading suicide prevention service, political advisor and now correspondent for the Kyiv Post newspaper.…
It’s the Ornate Burrowing Frog! As their name implies, these frogs spend much of their life, particularly in dry times and during the day, buried underground. They emerge to call and breed, and are known to form huge choruses with other species after heavy rains. After they breed, you'll find foamy clumps of eggs left behind. Thanks to Dr Jodi Rowley and the Australian Museum Frog ID Project .…
Antarctica is at the frontline of witnessing the effects of climate change and Dr Chen Zhao is one of the lead researchers mapping how the Antarctic ice-sheets are affected by global warming, and the potential consequences of this on rising sea-levels. The importance of her work has now been recognised by the Australian Institute of Policy and Science , who named her one of two 2025 Young Tall Poppys of the Year. Guest: Dr Chen Zhao , glaciologist and ice-sheet modeller with the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies at the University of Tasmania.…
Large language models (LLMs), like ChatGPT, are usually trained on Standard American English. But with all the dialects of English that exist outside of this - how do LLMs understand emotive language from non-American English speakers, especially when it comes to good old Aussie sarcasm. Guest: Aditya Joshi, Senior Lecturer in the School of Computer Science & Engineering at the University of NSW.…
People on the internet love to like, in fact clicks on 'Like' buttons "now add up to over 160 billion per day - roughly equivalent to every person on the planet, from toddler to great- grandparent, clicking a Like button 20 times daily on average”.
Dr. Arne Rubinstein has spent more than 30 years helping parents and teenagers through the complex transition into adulthood through his Rites of Passage Institute, which seeks to empower young adults and their communities through positive, healthy transitions focusing on personal growth and resilience. He has now been acknowledged for his work by The Fathering Project with the award for the 2025 Australian Father of the Year. Guest: Dr. Arne Rubinstein, CEO and Founder of the Rites of Passage Institute and recipient of The Fathering Project's Australian Father of the Year Award for 2025 .…
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