
SBS Gujarati Australian update: 26 May 2025
SBS Gujarati is a part of SBS South Asian, the destination channel for all South Asians living in Australia. Tune in to SBS Gujarati live on Wednesdays and Fridays at 2pm on SBS South Asian on digital radio, on channel 305 on your television, via the SBS Audio app or stream from our website . You can also enjoy programs in 10 South Asian languages, plus SBS Spice content in English. It is also available on SBS On Demand
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News.com.au
29 minutes ago
- News.com.au
What to watch on TV and streaming this week: Mix Tape, Fubar, The Survivors
We've sifted through the latest offerings from TV and streaming platforms to find the best shows you should be watching this week. MIX TAPE Thursday, Binge This is certainly proving to be a big year for Teresa Palmer. Hot on the heels of Last Anniversary and ahead of her performance in the ABC drama The Family Next Door, Palmer stars as the acclaimed novelist Alison Connor in this four-part miniseries. Raised in Sheffield, England, Alison has made a shinier life for herself in Sydney as the devoted wife of a successful doctor (Ben Lawson) and mother of two girls. When her first love, Daniel (Jim Sturgess) unexpectedly reaches out online, it reignites the spark that was extinguished decades earlier when Alison left Sheffield without warning. Told across two timelines, the current day where Alison and Daniel are reconnecting through sharing music and memories online, and the 1980s where their younger selves (played by Florence Hunt and Rory Walton-Smith, pictured) are falling in love by exchanged audiocassette of their favourite songs, this is a heartwarming romance that is punctuated by a killer soundtrack. FUBAR Thursday, Netflix Having successfully rescued his daughter Emma (Monica Barbaro) and reunited with his ex-wife Tally (Fabiana Udenio), CIA agent Luke (Arnold Schwarzenegger) finally has everyone he loves – and a few extras – under one roof. With their covers blown the team (along with Tally's deflated former fiance) are all residing together in the one safe house as Luke and his daughter again join forces to face a new enemy. This season The Matrix's Carrie-Anne Moss joins the fun as a German operative who has a history with Luke. Not ideal given the aged spy's wife is back in the picture and now across what he really does for a living. It's a fun update on True Lies that allows Arnie to do what he does best: save the day while delivering charmingly cheesy lines with complete seriousness. THE SURVIVORS Friday, Netflix About to hit the big time as Benedict's mysterious love interest in the fourth instalment of Bridgerton, Yerin Ha stars here in a rather less flashy role as Mia. A new mother who was something of a wallflower at school, Mia returns home on the arm of the town's former golden boy, Kieran (Charlie Vickers) for the first time since a devastating storm claimed the lives of three people. The couple's return coincides with another shocking death, reopening old wounds for the entire community. A slow-burn thriller that will keep you guessing with its plot twists, Ha and Vickers shine alongside a stellar ensemble of local talent. Robyn Malcolm who plays Mia's embittered and passive aggressive mother-in-law and Catherine McClements as the devastated mother of a missing teenager are particularly brilliant. ECHO VALLEY Friday, Apple TV+ AS the old saying goes, a mother's love knows no bounds. And that's certainly the case for Kate (Julianne Moore) who continues to open up her heart, her wallet and her home to her drug-addicted daughter Claire (Sydney Sweeney) even though it always ends badly. Despite this destructive vicious cycle, Kate wants to believe her daughter is getting better. And so, even when Claire turns up on the doorstep covered in someone else's blood, the devoted Kate is ready to do whatever it takes to come to the rescue (again). With terrific performances from Moore and Sweeney as well as Fiona Shaw and Domhnall Gleeson, this is a tautly scripted, psychological thriller. ROMCON: WHO THE F**K IS JASON PORTER? Friday, Prime Video IF you thought Dirty John – the violent conman portrayed by Eric Bana in the 2018 Netflix drama – was the scariest guy to ever hit the modern dating scene, wait until you cop a load of Jason Porter. Jason (aka 'Jace' the hunky tradie) used online dating apps to woo lonely and insecure women and rip them off. This two-part true crime docuseries details how Heather Rovet (pictured) discovered Porter wasn't the man of her dreams and exposed his web of lies and manipulations. Featuring dramatic recreations and interviews with his victims, this miniseries exposes the dark side of online dating. TRAVELS WITH AGATHA AND SIR DAVID SUCHET 7.30pm, Saturday, SBS 'I really feel like I am back in time with her now,' an almost reverential David Suchet exclaims as he retraces Agatha Christie's steps more than 100 years after the famed author set off on her globetrotting adventures to Egypt, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Canada and Hawaii. First stop for Suchet is Torquay, Christie's hometown and where fans gather annually to honour her life and work. While there, he talks to a local expert about Christie's 1926 disappearing act when the writer (mourning the death of her mother and her impending divorce) went AWOL for 11 days. After playing Hercule Poirot for 25 years, Suchet feels a special connection with Christie and is eager to discover more about the woman behind the books. CALL THE MIDWIFE 7.30pm, Saturday, ABC It's time to bid a warm farewell to the midwives for another season just as Miss Higgins (Georgie Glen) finally gets to say hello to the son she gave up for adoption and Trixie (Helen George) hits rock bottom. Sadly, the meeting between mother and son may have come too late as one of them faces a health crisis. Meanwhile, Shelagh (Laura Main) is also facing a trying family reunion when her adopted daughter's biological mother suddenly expresses an interest in making contact. Despite her angst, Shelagh puts a brave face on the situation for the sake of the child. It's the sort of tear jerking stuff that has kept viewers tuning in year after year. LITTLE DISASTERS 9PM, Sunday, ABC Apart from Martine McCutcheon's performance in Love Actually it's rare to see an Eastenders regular sharing the screen with a Bonafide Hollywood A Lister. And yet here we have Jo Joyner trading drinks at the Old Vic with Phil Mitchell and co for sneaky Pinot Grigios with Diane Kruger (pictured) in this six-part drama. Joyner plays a strung-out ER doctor named Liz who is forced to call social services when Jess (Kruger) her glamorous friend from mothers' group, turns up at the hospital with her injured baby. Unable – or perhaps unwilling – to explain how the screaming child hurt herself, Liz suspects her seemingly perfect friend might be keeping a dark secret. A blend of Desperate Housewives and The Cry, this six-part series is a riveting whodunit that examines the societal pressures and judgments that most mothers face. DOC 8.50PM, Tuesday, Seven Ever since her car accident, amnesiac doctor Amy (Molly Parker) has been trying to pick up the pieces of her life (rediscovering her bedside manner along the way). Now, having passed her exams, Amy is finally able to get back in her white coat and treat patients without supervision. Eager to prove she's up to the job, the passionate physician challenges a specialist diagnosis which causes her protégé TJ (Patrick Walker) to second guess Amy's new (more hopeful) approach to medicine. It's enough to make Amy question herself too especially now that a panicked Richard (Scott Wolf) is doing whatever he can to avoid the truth about his malpractice coming out. TOWARDS ZERO Britbox While there's no moustache-twirling Poirot drawing on his 'little grey cells' or doddering Miss Marple asking seemingly innocuous questions, this three-part miniseries has all the other hallmarks of a great Agatha Christie mystery. It opens with a salacious society divorce, the celebrated tennis player Nevile Strange (Oliver Jackson-Cohen) being accused of cheating on his wife Audrey (Ella Lily Hyland) with a glamorous young sports fan, Kay (Mimi Keene). The tension between the trio forms the backdrop for the mystery that will unfold — and initially baffle Inspector Leach (Matthew Rhys) during a weekend away at the home of a wealthy invalid (Anjelica Huston). IN CASE YOU MISSED IT … MASTERS OF SEX Now streaming, Tubi STARRING two criminally underrated actors – Michael Sheen and Lizzy Caplan – this series chronicles the early lives and careers of real-life sexologists William Masters and Virgina Johnson. Set in the 1950s and 60s, William (Sheen) is a socially awkward yet renowned fertility expert who enlists the help of his personable and savvy assistant Virginia (Caplan) to recruit participants for his study of sex and sexuality. While working on their covert research, the two opposites attract much to the dismay of William's wife, Libby (Caitlin Fitzgerald). Much like Mad Men, this sophisticated drama explores a period of social, political and cultural change through a unique lens.

News.com.au
an hour ago
- News.com.au
Tears as Ten president addresses staff at The Project after axing, 100 jobs impacted
Close to 100 jobs are expected to be impacted and more than 50 shed when Network Ten winds up production on The Project this month. Ten president Beverley McGarvey apologised while addressing the program's shocked staff at their Melbourne offices on Monday, explaining the network was cancelling the show because after 16 years on air 'it just doesn't stack up any longer'. According to insiders as many as 100 jobs overall will be impacted by Ten's decision to drop the show, which is broadcast six nights a week and has production offices in both Melbourne and Sydney. Among these are program hosts and panellists including Sarah Harris, Waleed Aly, Hamish Macdonald and Steve Price. In a four-minute address to staff McGarvey confirmed Ten management had been contemplating cancelling the program 'for years'. She said this was due to younger audiences drifting away from free-to-air television. The audience that remained, McGarvey said, weren't 'as well served by The Project as (audiences) were back in the day'. 'It's really just evolution and we didn't think we'd ever have this problem,' she told stunned – and teary – staff. 'We didn't think we'd be here for 16 years but as you all know those younger demographics in particular who really made the show … thrive in the beginning have just evolved and they're watching different platforms and they're watching different services. 'For those reasons, unfortunately the show just doesn't stack up any longer.' McGarvey explained the reason the network had decided to cancel the program mid year. 'Honestly it's not a decision that we've made lightly,' she continued. 'It's something we've thought about for a really long time. And I mean years. We have worked over the years to try and change things a little bit and evolve things – as you have all done – and unfortunately we're at the point now where it just doesn't make sense.' The program will broadcast its last program on Friday June 27 because, McGarvey said, it was just too hard to change audience viewing habits in November or December. 'The reason to do it in the middle of the year is that it's just very difficult to do anything at the end of the year, in summer. It's harder then and it's harder for audiences to make changing habits.' She said network executives did not expect ratings to 'quadruple' when a replacement 'extended national news' program is launched as an alternative in the 6pm timeslot. 'We're not doing it because we absolutely believe that suddenly the audience is going to quadruple at that time. It's really about servicing the audience in the timeslot that exist in this environment from a fee-to-air point of view,' she said. The Ten president acknowledged the news of the show's cancellation would be 'difficult' and 'tough' for staff to hear. 'I know it's really hard to hear and today's a really tough day but I think more than any other show that the network has ever had that The Project did a lot of great things,' she said, reading the room. 'It did a lot of great things for the media landscape but I think more broadly it did great things for Australian culture and not many shows resonate in the way that The Project did. And that meant, for all of us, it was very high profile, people liked to talk about it. 'It's a click-baity show and you guys had to live through that. But I think more than anything there's a lot to be proud of and we're really proud of the show and we're really sad this day had to come and it's just a reality that it did. 'You guys have done a wonderful job in a very tough environment and I think the show has always had integrity which sets it apart from many other things and that's been amazing. 'Because of all those reasons, the show getting cancelled after 16 years is much more difficult than shows that we normally cancel after three seasons or five seasons or 10 weeks or whatever it is, so we appreciate that this is difficult and you'll need time to think about it.' McGarvey said it had been difficult to give staff 'short' – just under three weeks – notice. 'It's difficult to give you short notice. It's almost more difficult to keep going when you know that you're not going to be going forever so we've landed on that (June 27) date. 'I want to thank you all for all your work, not just recently but over the years and thank all of the team at Roving, all of the various on-screen talent we've had over the years because you all work hard and they really bear the brunt of the good bits but also the hard bits of the show and we appreciate that and really thank them and also hope that you're all proud that you were part of something that properly changed Australian media. I'm very sorry.'

News.com.au
2 hours ago
- News.com.au
Delta Goodrem hits back at US actor who ‘completely humiliated' her with viral dancing video
Delta Goodrem has opened up about the moment she went viral after a US actor 'completely humiliated' her by calling out her 'unrhythmic' dancing abilities on social media. The Aussie singer, who was 30 at the time, was attending Beyoncé and husband Jay Z's On The Run tour at Pasadena's Rose Bowl Stadium in LA in August 2014, where she was sat nearby White Chicks star Marlon Wayans. As she danced away at the gig with close friend and Aussie TV personality Renee Bargh, Goodrem had no clue the actor had been filming her on his phone to later post to his followers on Instagram. 'Man I got the most UNRHYTHMIC WHITE WOMAN dancing next to me at the jay and bay concert... This b***h dancing to AC/DC,' he would later caption the video. Speaking on The Life of Bryony podcast this week, Goodrem said she only found out about the video when she woke up the next day to many alerts on her phone. 'I look at my phone and I just start scrolling and scrolling. I'm like, 'What the?'' she recalled. 'It's never ending and I'm like, 'What's happened?' and I start getting scared. Something's happened and I don't know what's happened.' The Aussie singer said an email from her mum and a quick Google search clued her in on the video and the 'derogatory comments' Wayans had made about her. 'At this point, my heart was just like... I was just destroyed,' she nervously laughed. 'And then I see just all of this vitriol of this moment.' 'I didn't cope well when I first saw it in the morning. I was pretty upset. I was crying and I was just extremely [clutches chest], just because it had been a pile-on... I was just dancing in my chair!' After the tears dried, Goodrem said she was done wallowing and began to workshop ways to recover. And because she's not a 'woe is me kind of person', she decided to find the funny out of the situation. 'I was like, 'OK, let me take this on.' And I love Seinfeld so I thought I'm going to [post] the clip of Elaine and put up that I had a blast last night.' The video posted to Twitter was from an iconic scene in the sitcom where Elaine (Julia Louis-Dreyfus) is told her dancing 'stinks' by her quirky mate Kramer (Michael Richards), but she continues to dance anyway. After posting the clip, Goodrem instantly felt 'the air went out straight away and the positivity flipped' online. Now, 11 years later, she believes the moment actually changed her for the better. 'There's always been that little bit in me that was a little bit shy to dance,' she shared. 'That freedom that that moment gave me, it's like if someone keeps pressing on a certain point where they're like, 'You can't dance.' And you're like, 'You know what? Awesome.'' 'Now I could dance in the street, I could dance right here. I could show you all my dance moves. I have no fear when it comes to dancing. 'All because I'd been completely humiliated. Thank you, now I can do an entire dance routine in my shows. I love it. I am ready to go!' For his part, Wayans refused to apologise when fans called him out for shaming Goodrem. 'Ok so let me start by saying suck it long, hard and til y'all mouths hurt to all these sensitive a** people,' he tweeted at the time. 'Secondly, I ain't apologising for a joke… I love that all these people calling me racist cuz I stated a fact. She can't dance. Apparently neither can u. Now f**k outta here,' he continued. 'One day people are gonna understand... I simply don't give f**k. And I refuse to succumb to this new world order if not having an opinion. All comedians, say what u say and let it be said. Never say sorry for a fact, just say f**k off. Be you, be true.'