Behind The Lines - The Guardian Australia
- Autor: Vários
- Narrador: Vários
- Editor: Podcast
- Duración: 21:59:43
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Sinopsis
Come behind the scenes at the Guardian Australia newsroom. We talk to our journalists about the stories theyve written and how they came to write them. If there are particular articles youd like us to discuss, please do get in touch
Episodios
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Kristina Keneally: what has Malcolm Turnbull got himself into? - Behind the Lines podcast
08/07/2016 Duración: 23minHe’s still going to be prime minister, but Malcolm Turnbull did not get the election result he wanted. So how can he recapture political momentum? Kristina Keneally joins Bridie Jabour and Miles Martignoni and suggests at least one way the PM can stamp his authority on the Coalition again. Plus why we should keep a very close eye on the monthly poll ratings for ‘preferred prime minister’ to find out Turnbull’s fate.
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Lenore Taylor and Katharine Murphy on a 'strange, upside-down' election – Behind the Lines podcast
02/07/2016 Duración: 37minJoin an all-star cast of Guardian contributors as we unpack how election night went. Lenore Taylor, Katharine Murphy and Gabrielle Chan discuss what the result means for Malcolm Turnbull and Bill Shorten. Election analyst Ben Raue takes a close look at where the numbers stand. Michael Safi discusses the resurrection of Pauline Hanson’s One Nation party and Elle Hunt takes us through the defining image of the day: a sausage sandwich
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Gay Alcorn in Indi: voices from a divided electorate – Behind the Lines podcast
01/07/2016 Duración: 19minGay Alcorn travels to the Victorian seat of Indi, which independent Cathy McGowan won from Liberal party MP Sophie Mirabella in 2013. Can McGowan repeat her success or will the electorate return to Mirabella, or possibly Nationals candidate Marty Corboy? Voters in the electorate talk about what matters to them, who will they vote for and why More coverage: Will Indi hold on to the power of one?
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Attack ads: do they actually work? – Behind the Lines podcast
28/06/2016 Duración: 26minKristina Keneally joins Gabrielle Jackson and Miles Martignoni to discuss election ads and slogans, what you should be doing in the last week of the campaign, the best and worst performers so far, and why Scott Morrison could be Australia’s next PM
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Is spending billions more on education a price worth paying? – Behind the Lines podcast
22/06/2016 Duración: 25minLucy Clark joins Gabrielle Jackson and Kristina Keneally to discuss the education policies on offer at this election, why the Gonski funding plan now divides the major parties, and how that debate means some critical questions are being ignored
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How to show 'the stench of death' on the Great Barrier Reef – Behind the Lines podcast
15/06/2016 Duración: 19minMichael Slezak, Guardian Australia’s environment reporter, joins Gabrielle Jackson, Nick Evershed and Lucy Clark to talk about how we revealed the full story of coral bleaching on the Great Barrier Reef for our ‘Reef on the brink’, series and why the fate of the reef should be centre stage during the Australian election
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Van Badham: don't fall for the same old neoliberal election ads – Behind the Lines podcast
13/06/2016 Duración: 25minVan Badham joins Gabrielle Jackson and Miles Martignoni to discuss inequality in Australia and what the economic policies being presented this election cycle might mean for everyday Australians • Is Australia egalitarian? Ask the worker sacked for using a Post-it note • It’s time Australians looked more closely at our privileged ruling class
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David Marr: Shorten would be a good Victorian premier, but would he make a good PM?
07/06/2016 Duración: 26minDavid Marr joins Behind the Lines podcast regulars Bridie Jabour and Michael Safi to discuss the the election campaign so far. Is the Labor leader doing well, or is the bar just set very low? Is there even a bar anymore?
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Kristina Keneally: the truth about election tax cut promises – Behind the Lines podcast
07/06/2016 Duración: 34minKristina Keneally joins Gabrielle Jackson and Miles Martignoni to discuss the election campaign at the halfway stage, including the claim that Labor once supported corporate tax cuts, Scott Morrison’s aggressive language in a press conference, why Malcolm Turnbull’s father is the focus of a new campaign ad and why a double dissolution may work well for independents
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Richard Ackland: 'Where is George Brandis?' – Behind the Lines podcast
01/06/2016 Duración: 15minWhy has the attorney general been absent from the campaign trail ? Richard Ackland joins Bridie Jabour to discuss this and why Australia’s legal aid funding is so low that it’s actually costing taxpayers more
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Kristina Keneally on why the leaders' debate doesn't matter – Behind the Lines podcast
30/05/2016 Duración: 27minKristina Keneally joins Bridie Jabour and Gabrielle Jackson to discuss the latest face-off between Malcolm Turnbull and Bill Shorten, the protests against Mike Baird and the coverage of Amber Heard’s domestic violence case against Johnny Depp
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David Marr on the one thing that's stopping the Coalition from ruling forever – Behind the Lines podcast
24/05/2016 Duración: 24minDavid Marr, Bridie Jabour and Michael Safi discuss the ‘elephant poo’ the Coalition has been cleaning up since Peter Dutton’s remarks on refugees, and what the marriage equality debate says about parliament
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NBN raids: how independent are the federal police? – Behind the Lines podcast with Kristina Keneally
23/05/2016 Duración: 31minKristina Keneally joins Bridie Jabour and Gabrielle Jackson to discuss the Australian federal police raids over alleged NBN leaks, what they mean for the election campaign, whistleblower protection, freedom of press, and why an independent agency like the AFP is still strongly tied to the government
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David Marr asks: could Bill Shorten win? And why is everyone so scared of the Greens?
18/05/2016 Duración: 23minOn this weeks’ Behind the Lines podcast David Marr talks to Bridie Jabour and Michael Safi about the Labor leader’s chances, Malcolm Turnbull’s weaknesses and how this election is shaping up as a repeat of 2013
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Women in politics in a world ruled by middle-aged white men – Behind the Lines podcast
16/05/2016 Duración: 31minKristina Keneally, Bridie Jabour and Gabrielle Jackson discuss gender imbalances in Australian politics, vocal fry, quotas and why having more women in any organisation is better for everyone, male and female
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How to understand the numbers flying around election 2016 - Behind the Lines Podcast
12/05/2016 Duración: 22minGuardian Australia’s data and interactives editor Nick Evershed tells us what you can read into polls – and what you can safely ignore. Plus he discusses the state of data journalism across the world – and how robots are starting to write the news
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How is everyone going to survive an eight-week election campaign? – Behind the Lines podcast
09/05/2016 Duración: 32minFormer New South Wales premier Kristina Keneally joins Guardian staffers Bridie Jabour and Gabrielle Jackson to discuss the truth about life on the campaign trail – whether you’re a politician or a journalist. The threesome also chew over the first hours of this year’s campaign, and discuss Malcolm Turnbull and Bill Shorten’s strengths and weaknesses
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Why journalists are locked up for the budget - Behind the Lines podcast
03/05/2016 Duración: 14minAs Scott Morrison delivers the 2016 federal budget, laying the ground for the Coalition’s election campaign strategy, Lenore Taylor and Katharine Murphy discuss what it’s like being locked in a room trying to extract the real meaning from the budget papers in the short space of time before they become public
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'Superannuation is a giant rip-off' and other election pitches - Behind the Lines podcast
01/05/2016 Duración: 32minAt a special live event Bridie Jabour and her panel discuss what would happen without superannuation, whether a banking inquiry is justified and just what Clive Palmer’s re-election pitch might sound like
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Paul Farrell on the 'surprising and disturbing' police investigation of his work – Behind the Lines podcast
19/04/2016 Duración: 14minGuardian reporter Paul Farrell speaks to Bridie Jabour about what it feels like when you find out the Australian Federal Police asked to access your metadata