Why it's time to take George Christensen seriously
George Christensen is hurtling down the Bruce Highway, the end of the world as we know it on his mind.
George Christensen is hurtling down the Bruce Highway, the end of the world as we know it on his mind.
In her new retelling of Shakespeare's Taming of the Shrew, the Pulitzer-Prize winning author "liked being rude to people, vicariously".
In lieu of TV, you can watch penguins. The food's great, but you’re 3000 kilometres away from your partner. Here's what life is really like in Antarctica.
What happens when an atheist sets out to compose a Mass?
A destructive blaze north of Sydney rages for days. Tim Elliott follows the investigation to find out if the inferno was deliberately lit.
TV chef and paleo diet champion Pete Evans eschews dairy and grains - but also sunscreen and fluoride - and his unusual advice goes out to 1.5 million Facebook followers.
In World War II London, a four-year-old boy's mother disappears without a trace. Years late, not even knowing her name, he begins to search for her.
Anne Aly is the first Muslim woman to be elected to federal parliament, a global counter-terrorism expert – and she’s destined to become a leading voice in public life.
As Schoolies week kicks off, emergency specialists are using hard-core methods to deter adolescents from risk-taking behaviour,
While the Test team is in disarray, James Sutherland is driving unprecedented growth in the game.
The daughter of a former thoroughbred breeder confronts the brutal reality faced by racehorses who've outlived their usefulness.
Her Instagram presence is too perfect for some, but this beauty writer, entrepreneur and novelist has reasons for focusing on the "shiny, fun stuff".
She fell in love with pro-wrestling on TV as a teenager. Now she's at it six days a week.
From revving sessions to poetry readings, occasional nudity to mullet-cutting, the annual Deni Ute Muster celebrates a slice of ’Straya.
Infidelity has become big business: but can marriage survive one partner's urge to "feel alive again"?
Lessons learnt from a day watching the (fantastically biased) American cable news networks.
A whiff of something unsavoury brings a mother and daughter closer together. But first there are taboos to air, crisp linen to buy and exercises to do.
University students in Texas now have the right to carry concealed firearms on campus, a trend that has the police deeply worried.
The young Queen Victoria was nervous before her 1840 wedding to Albert, but what she described later was quite at odds with her era’s killjoy puritanism.
Wilderness, waterfalls, wildlife, wonder: the pristine Kimberley region is not only vast, but largely undiscovered.
James Dack clawed his way from a housing commission terrace to become Australia's top real estate agent. Why did he quit?
Di Morrissey seems to have it all: a big house, doting partner, a legion of fans. Well, everything but a literary award …
Amy is Rugby Union’s first full-time female referee. Her twin brother Paul set up the first school for teaching English on Nauru.
How do you pass a hand-holding couple on a narrow walkway?
After my parents migrated to Australia from Hong Kong, they did what migrants tend to do so well: they bred. Prolifically. They weren't religious, just enthusiastic.
A sense of obsessiveness has driven this tireless chronicler of surf culture, whose collection has Tim Elliott green with envy.
Dim sims. Off-key soap stars. Stilted gags from breakfast-TV hosts. The things an Aussie Christmas is made of.
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