Culture
TV & radio
At 28 minutes, The Sign is Bluey’s longest-ever episode. Is a movie next?
The 28-minute special, which features the possible sale of the Heelers’ house and a wedding, could be a test run for bigger things in the future.
- by Nicole Elphick
Latest
★★★½
Streaming
It’s men’s rights v woke culture in Heartbreak High’s second season
It’s fast times at Hartley High as the gang get back together. But with all the partying, sex and scandal, how does anyone ever get any schoolwork done?
- by Karl Quinn
Remember Seinfeld’s controversial finale? Curb Your Enthusiasm just fixed it
Did comedy mastermind Larry David engineer the perfect finale? Not quite. But it was pretty, pretty, pretty good.
- by Thomas Mitchell
Australia takes on the world in an Olympic-year Lego challenge
Master builders from Germany, France, Denmark and the US will face off against Australian teams in the new season of the popular Lego Masters.
- by Ben Pobjie
She bagged a prized interview with Prince Andrew. Now it’s a Netflix movie
Sam McAlister, the Newsnight booker played by Billie Piper in Scoop, has a theory on why the prince agreed to do it.
- by Benji Wilson
Reality TV has never felt as radically uncomfortable as this
In an era where reality TV rarely offers much in the way of reality, Jerrod Carmichael Reality Show finds the star comedian using TV cameras as a weapon.
- by Robert Moran
Yellowstone Inc: How a cowboy show became a money machine
But Kevin Costner may not be onboard for the next season.
- by Stephen Armstrong
Netflix’s latest film is a condemnation of Prince Andrew’s relationship with Jeffrey Epstein
Netflix’s dramatisation of Andrew’s train-wreck BBC interview lets both sides have their say.
- by Craig Mathieson
Chilling show means you’ll never think of Fleabag’s Hot Priest the same way
Forget the sunny setting of 1999’s The Talented Mr Ripley – this gritty new version, filmed in black and white, is as noir as it gets.
- by Kylie Northover
Official Teaser for Stan's Hotel Cocaine
From the creator of Godfather of Harlem and co-creator of Narcos comes the story of a man at the epicentre of the Miami cocaine scene.
Three feminists and a comedian hosted an event. It went horribly wrong
The event featuring Clementine Ford, Antoinette Lattouf and Yumi Stynes was billed as a feminist forum about love and relationships. It quickly went off the rails.
- by Karl Quinn