Nurses.
Screen Australia has announced $2.3 million of documentary production funding for eight projects through the Producer Program and two projects through the Commissioned Program.
Nurses is a 10-part series from ITV Studios Australia about the nurses in NSW, from director/producer Lisa Storer, producer Lexi Landsman and executive producers Ben Ulm and Steve Bibb.
Outback Ringer series 2 is a seven-part series from Ronde Media for the ABC by series producer Liam Taylor, series director (field) Tom Lawrence, producer Jess Brown and executive producer Ben Davies. They are joined by producer Cian McCue.
There are also other feature documentaries -although it isn’t clear if these are for television- about Australian music icons John Farnham, Ruby Hunter and Archie Roach, and legendary racehorse WINX; as well as
Segments: Breaking And Entering: Emma Donovan Talks New Single, Album And Working With The Putbacks — Triple R 102 7FM, Melbourne Independent Radio
rrr.org.au - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from rrr.org.au Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Wuigada is a dedicated space where First Nations musicians can share and celebrate music made by other First Nations musicians with PBS audiences.
Wuigada was named and developed by the highly acclaimed indigenous singer songwriter, Kutcha Edwards. Wuigada in Mutti Mutti means to sing .
In this edition of Wuigada we hear from
Richie Guymala of Black Rock Band. Black Rock Band are rising rockstars out of remote West Arnhem Land producing a unique rock fusion of traditional and contemporary music in both Kunwinjku and English. Black Rock Band celebrate their connection to country, fighting for social justice and the future they want to see for the next generation.
Spray-paint artist Jaz Mishap had a vision.
“I was shown Drewery Alley and I immediately thought of coming at night and seeing a mystical shrine at the end of the alleyway with candles flickering, embedded in the artwork,” recalls the Chinese-Australian muralist and multidisciplinary creative.
Musicians Ben Andrews and Mindey Meng Wang and artist Jaz Mishap.
Credit:Joe Armao
A brick wall is quite the mood board. Add a musician, TBA, carrying some fresh-pressed vinyl, and it’ll feel like Melbourne is getting its grooves back. But who the hell was going to pay for all this?
As it happens: the City of Melbourne and the Victorian government, in a match made in a pandemic. The two have come together to create a joint venture called Flash Forward, funded out of Working for Victoria, a $500 million pot earmarked for local governments to employ Victorian jobseekers – especially those who lost work due to COVID-19 restrictions.