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1-43 of 43
- When a man wakes up in the Australian outback with no memory, he must use the few clues he has to discover his identity before his past catches up with him.
- A thief operating along the highways of rural Australia gets caught in the crossfires of an ongoing police investigation after he mugs a serial killer.
- A sports writer becomes a single parent in tragic circumstances.
- After a vivid dream, Maude Ashton returns to Adelaide, certain she now knows the whereabouts of her missing twin sister.
- Ron, a young man in his late teens or early 20s, but emotionally younger, has no visible, employable assets, yet rails at his status in life -- blaming everyone for the fact that his dreams are not coming true.
- After a near death experience, five Boys, all devoted AC/DC fans, make a pact to bury their best friend next to the grave of Bon Scott. 12 years later, having gone their different ways, they come together to fulfill the promise.
- Early in 2017, Gulpilil was diagnosed with lung cancer. His doctors estimated six months for him but David, being David, was always likely to defy the odds. And he continues to do so with probably his last great work, My Name is Gulpilil.
- A small Australian town is stricken by unusual occurrences; electrical faults, violent and psychotic human behavior.
- Australian madness via the visitors-from-hell mixed with love, lust and a bloody good shiraz.
- Set in 1939 Australia, two brothers embark on a 500 mile journey on foot across New South Wales following a dream. A chance encounter with a fellow traveler changes the course of their journey and ultimately, the course of their lives.
- Policeman (Bill Hunter) discovers a suitcase full of drug money during the normal course of his duties. The temptation to keep the money leads to an ever deepening set of circumstances.
- A rowing eight from Murray Bridge, South Australia, overcome prejudice, age, injury and poverty to represent Australia at the 1924 Paris Olympics.
- An overview of Australia's railways in the early 1960s, before gauges across the country were standardised, stressing the importance of the rail network to Australia's rural areas and to the nation's progress.
- Classroom film, depicting a young boy and his mother taking a train ride.
- In 1924 eight men travelled from rural South Australia to Paris for the race of their lives.
- In 2010 Australia was facing the worst drought in recorded history. At the end of the river in the Coorong, Ngarrindjeri Elder Uncle Moogy grew tired of watching his ancestral home die, and so united a group of different Aboriginal River Nations in a 2300-kilometre pilgrimage to dance the spirit back into the river and into themselves. By the time they had finished the drought had broken and what followed was the wettest wet season in living memory with floods throughout the basin.
- Discover the breadth of Ngarrindjeri culture along the Murray River, its vast Lower Lakes, the world-renown wetlands of the Coorong and the breathtaking coast, as their Elders share what it means to be Ngarrindjeri.
- Discover the connections between her art, Ngarrindjeri weaving and belonging in this portrait of Ngarrindjeri artist, painter and sculptor Betty Sumner.
- Discover the connections between art, survival and family in this portrait of Ngarrindjeri potter and painter Lyn Lovegrove Niemz.
- Rising pet ownership putting pressure on the food supply chain; Fighting fruit flies from the cloud; School students helping to save an endangered native fish; plus developing alternatives to pesticides for cotton.
- Like banks and post offices, medical practices are starting to disappear from towns across rural Australia. Doctors are leaving the country, fed up with having to battle all levels of government for adequate facilities and tired of working long hours with little support. In New South Wales, services have been squeezed even further as doctors are forced to pay thousands of dollars in indemnity insurance to cover rising litigation costs. But still there's a steady stream of patients needing care and so some communities are taking extreme measures to secure a permanent GP. Julie Limb takes a look at the problems GPs face in the bush.
- After a lifetime of collecting, former scientist Ken Plomley has reluctantly decided to part with his treasures. Among them are some of the rarest and valuable books on early Australian agriculture. The jewel of his library is an 1826 book on agriculture and grazing in New South Wales, by James Atkinson. It cost Ken 50 pounds back in the early 1960s. The winning bidder in Melbourne on April 16, will likely pay more than $30,000. They may be antiquarian, but Ken's agricultural books make some surprisingly sharp observations about farming in the fledgling colony.
- Carbon credit concerns about agriculture; Livestock with a difference - farming rats; A remarkable journey from Cambodian refugee to successful mango farmer; plus Connecting the world's Punjabi community with farming.
- What's a man to do when he decides he's tired of making a living fishing the cold, dangerous seas of the Southern Ocean? For Dave Williams, it meant moving into aquaculture. His main criteria was that the business be profitable, and that he be warm and safe. After considering several options, he decided to go pearl farming in Queensland. Landline caught up with him as he harvested his first crop.
- There is something appropriate about buffalo being one of the enduring symbols of the top end. They're often as wild and untamed as their natural habitat and some of the territory's more colourful characters. Yet there's a soft side to these animals. Over the past few weeks an animal wrangler from the Gold Coast has committed himself to bringing out the best in buffalo taming and training them for an important overseas goodwill mission.
- Sunday November 20 was the last program in the regular schedule for Landline 2005. Over the summer break, from November 27, 2005 through to February 5, 2006, we'll be featuring many of the most popular Landline stories from the past year in the regular Landline timeslot. On behalf of the Landline crew we wish our viewers a very merry Christmas and a happy and healthy 2006. Thank you for your continued support and we look forward to bringing you the 16th year of Landline, starting February 12, 2006.