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1-21 of 21
- In the hot barren trenches of a remote Ottoman territory WW1 battlefield, a battle worn Imperial Force of Australian soldiers discover something sinister behind enemy lines.
- A small town detective investigates a murder after the ghost of a missing man appears.
- After being kidnapped and forced to endure an entire night's worth of pain and suffering, Lachlan tells his story of how he narrowly escapes a new Jigsaw copycat killer.
- A Spartan warrior travels across the land with his child in hopes of completing an important task.
- Humorous wine review show featuring Jason "Sampy" Sampson and a team of co-hosts. Reviews feature the look (of the bottle), the color, the nose, the taste and the verdict.
- Five years after the Rabbit Calicivirus Disease (RCD) escaped quarantine on Wardang Island off South Australia, rabbit numbers across Australia have almost halved. But the virus has not been effective in all areas and more needs to be done to control them.
- The Year of the Outback is a calendar of events highlighting who and what's in the outback, but it also aims to encourage Australians to celebrate it and think about what the outback means to the country's future. One event held in Blackall near Longreach late last month aimed to draw urban Australia's attention to the agricultural produce from western Queensland. It also alerted outback producers to the opportunities to brand and value-add their produce, whether it be honey, dates, crayfish, figs, beef or mutton.
- Saffron is the most expensive spice in the world. By weight it's worth more than gold. Prized for its intense colour, aroma and flavour, the dried stigmas from the crocus flower are used in Middle Eastern and European cooking. Twelve years ago a Tasmanian couple decided to try growing saffron, even though no-one had ever managed to grow it south of the equator. After a devastating false start they've established themselves as Australia's only saffron suppliers.
- Organisers have always hoped the Year of the Outback would be more than the sum of its parts. At last count there's been some 700 community events and festivals organised across the country. Many of them aimed at bridging the divide between urban and rural Australia and celebrating the distinctive, often isolated and challenging lifestyle that few in the bush would swap for anything.
- Each year thousands of stockmen and women choose to take a little time away and pack up their families and horses to go campdrafting. One of the big meets was in Cloncurry last weekend and Landline went along for the ride.
- All the movers and shakers in Australia's beef industry have been in Rockhampton for the past week, taking part in Beef Expo 2003. They had a lot to talk about live exports, SARS, the rising dollar, the sale of Stanbroke and, of course, the growing trend towards the branding of beef. These days the triennial event is not so much a cattle show but a stock take. Last years drought put a dent in cattle numbers.
- The man at the centre of the political storm about Queensland Local Government reform the Premier, Peter Beattie, who is standing firm on the issue. Mr Beattie spoke to Mark Willacy.
- This week Landline heads to the Sydney's Royal Easter Show. It's always a massive logistical operation getting exhibits and livestock here from all over the country but especially tricky after the prolonged drought in New South Wales and the recent equine influenza upheaval. Anne Kruger discusses this year's show with Peter King the Chief Executive of the Royal Agricultural Society of New South Wales.
- A rampaging firebomber sparks a terrifying chase through residential streets. Melbourne officers are stunned by what they find inside a suburban drug den. A police intervention leaves a driving couple over the moon.