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SBS Gujarati Australian update: 7 May 2025

SBS Gujarati Australian update: 7 May 2025

SBS Australia07-05-2025
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 . You can also enjoy programs in 10 South Asian languages, plus content in English. It is also available on
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Former Wiggles chief executive Luke O'Neill sues children's group under Fair Work Act
Former Wiggles chief executive Luke O'Neill sues children's group under Fair Work Act

News.com.au

time41 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

Former Wiggles chief executive Luke O'Neill sues children's group under Fair Work Act

The former chief executive of The Wiggles – who left after just over a year into his role – has lodged Federal Court proceedings against the popular children's entertainment group. Luke O'Neill was named the children's music sensation's first chief executive last year, according to aNb Media, with his role focusing on 'expanding The Wiggles' digital footprint, developing new products and expanding the commercial operations of the business'. Mr O'Neill had worked as a consultant with The Wiggles since mid-2023 prior to stepping into the new role. His LinkedIn profile states he finished the role in August 2024. In a Federal Court application filed earlier this week, Mr O'Neil has lodged proceedings under the Fair Work Act against The Wiggles, the group's leader Anthony Field and its general counsel Matthew Salgo. The application has been made under the Fair Work Act alleging 'dismissal in contravention of a general protection'. The Fair Work Commission's website outlines general protections laws prevent employers from dismissing employees for specific reasons – such as taking long periods of sick leave or if they are fired for making a complaint under workplace rights. Details of Mr O'Neill's application and complaint against The Wiggles and the other respondents is not known. Mr O'Neill's legal team Wotton Kearney declined to comment when contacted by NewsWire. A hearing date has not been set and defences have not been filed by the respondents. In a statement, a Wiggles spokeswoman said: 'This relates to a current legal proceeding and as such we will not be commenting on it.' Mr O'Neill's role as chief executive involved 'ensuring that The Wiggles can continue to self-fund innovative, educational and entertaining content and extend distribution to reach larger audiences than ever before', aNb Media stated when he took on the role. 'The Wiggles have always been pioneers in delivering high-quality, educational, and entertaining content for children,' Mr O'Neill told the outlet in 2023. 'I am thrilled to lead the team as we explore new opportunities in the digital and commercial spaces and expand our global presence. Together, we will continue to create memorable experiences for children and families around the world.' Kate Chiodo, who has worked in various roles with The Wiggles, was appointed the new chief executive in May.

Renowned film critic and presenter David Stratton dies
Renowned film critic and presenter David Stratton dies

The Advertiser

timean hour ago

  • The Advertiser

Renowned film critic and presenter David Stratton dies

Veteran film critic David Stratton, whose partnership with Margaret Pomeranz made him a beloved figure on Australian TV screens, has died aged 85. His family announced his death on Thursday, telling the ABC he died peacefully in hospital near his home in the Blue Mountains. "David's passion for film, commitment to Australian cinema, and generous spirit touched countless lives," his family said. "He was adored as a husband, father, grand and great grandfather and admired friend." Stratton retired in 2023 because of ill health, after a celebrated career as a film critic, writer, educator and historian that spanned 57 years. An English migrant who arrived in Australia as "ten pound Pom" in 1963, Stratton worked for SBS from 1980 as their film consultant and introduced the SBS Cinema Classics on Sunday nights. His best known role was co-hosting the long-running SBS TV program The Movie Show with Margaret Pomeranz, from 1986 to 2004, when they moved to the ABC to co-host At the Movies with Margaret and David. They retired from the show in 2014. He wrote six books and lectured in film history at the University of Sydney's Centre for Continuing Education until 2023. He also served as a jury member at many prestigious international film festivals throughout his career. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese celebrated Stratton as someone who had shared his love of film with the country "with dry humour and sharp insight". "All of us who tuned in to At the Movies respected him for his deep knowledge and for the gentle and generous way he passed it on," he posted on social media. Stratton's family issued a special request to moviegoers, asking that they celebrate his "remarkable life and legacy" by watching their favourite movie, or David's favourite movie, Singin' In the Rain. "David's family would like to express their heartfelt gratitude for the overwhelming support from friends, colleagues, and the public recently and across his lifetime," his family said. Details of a public memorial service are expected to be announced soon. Veteran film critic David Stratton, whose partnership with Margaret Pomeranz made him a beloved figure on Australian TV screens, has died aged 85. His family announced his death on Thursday, telling the ABC he died peacefully in hospital near his home in the Blue Mountains. "David's passion for film, commitment to Australian cinema, and generous spirit touched countless lives," his family said. "He was adored as a husband, father, grand and great grandfather and admired friend." Stratton retired in 2023 because of ill health, after a celebrated career as a film critic, writer, educator and historian that spanned 57 years. An English migrant who arrived in Australia as "ten pound Pom" in 1963, Stratton worked for SBS from 1980 as their film consultant and introduced the SBS Cinema Classics on Sunday nights. His best known role was co-hosting the long-running SBS TV program The Movie Show with Margaret Pomeranz, from 1986 to 2004, when they moved to the ABC to co-host At the Movies with Margaret and David. They retired from the show in 2014. He wrote six books and lectured in film history at the University of Sydney's Centre for Continuing Education until 2023. He also served as a jury member at many prestigious international film festivals throughout his career. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese celebrated Stratton as someone who had shared his love of film with the country "with dry humour and sharp insight". "All of us who tuned in to At the Movies respected him for his deep knowledge and for the gentle and generous way he passed it on," he posted on social media. Stratton's family issued a special request to moviegoers, asking that they celebrate his "remarkable life and legacy" by watching their favourite movie, or David's favourite movie, Singin' In the Rain. "David's family would like to express their heartfelt gratitude for the overwhelming support from friends, colleagues, and the public recently and across his lifetime," his family said. Details of a public memorial service are expected to be announced soon. Veteran film critic David Stratton, whose partnership with Margaret Pomeranz made him a beloved figure on Australian TV screens, has died aged 85. His family announced his death on Thursday, telling the ABC he died peacefully in hospital near his home in the Blue Mountains. "David's passion for film, commitment to Australian cinema, and generous spirit touched countless lives," his family said. "He was adored as a husband, father, grand and great grandfather and admired friend." Stratton retired in 2023 because of ill health, after a celebrated career as a film critic, writer, educator and historian that spanned 57 years. An English migrant who arrived in Australia as "ten pound Pom" in 1963, Stratton worked for SBS from 1980 as their film consultant and introduced the SBS Cinema Classics on Sunday nights. His best known role was co-hosting the long-running SBS TV program The Movie Show with Margaret Pomeranz, from 1986 to 2004, when they moved to the ABC to co-host At the Movies with Margaret and David. They retired from the show in 2014. He wrote six books and lectured in film history at the University of Sydney's Centre for Continuing Education until 2023. He also served as a jury member at many prestigious international film festivals throughout his career. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese celebrated Stratton as someone who had shared his love of film with the country "with dry humour and sharp insight". "All of us who tuned in to At the Movies respected him for his deep knowledge and for the gentle and generous way he passed it on," he posted on social media. Stratton's family issued a special request to moviegoers, asking that they celebrate his "remarkable life and legacy" by watching their favourite movie, or David's favourite movie, Singin' In the Rain. "David's family would like to express their heartfelt gratitude for the overwhelming support from friends, colleagues, and the public recently and across his lifetime," his family said. Details of a public memorial service are expected to be announced soon. Veteran film critic David Stratton, whose partnership with Margaret Pomeranz made him a beloved figure on Australian TV screens, has died aged 85. His family announced his death on Thursday, telling the ABC he died peacefully in hospital near his home in the Blue Mountains. "David's passion for film, commitment to Australian cinema, and generous spirit touched countless lives," his family said. "He was adored as a husband, father, grand and great grandfather and admired friend." Stratton retired in 2023 because of ill health, after a celebrated career as a film critic, writer, educator and historian that spanned 57 years. An English migrant who arrived in Australia as "ten pound Pom" in 1963, Stratton worked for SBS from 1980 as their film consultant and introduced the SBS Cinema Classics on Sunday nights. His best known role was co-hosting the long-running SBS TV program The Movie Show with Margaret Pomeranz, from 1986 to 2004, when they moved to the ABC to co-host At the Movies with Margaret and David. They retired from the show in 2014. He wrote six books and lectured in film history at the University of Sydney's Centre for Continuing Education until 2023. He also served as a jury member at many prestigious international film festivals throughout his career. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese celebrated Stratton as someone who had shared his love of film with the country "with dry humour and sharp insight". "All of us who tuned in to At the Movies respected him for his deep knowledge and for the gentle and generous way he passed it on," he posted on social media. Stratton's family issued a special request to moviegoers, asking that they celebrate his "remarkable life and legacy" by watching their favourite movie, or David's favourite movie, Singin' In the Rain. "David's family would like to express their heartfelt gratitude for the overwhelming support from friends, colleagues, and the public recently and across his lifetime," his family said. Details of a public memorial service are expected to be announced soon.

David Stratton's iconic reviews throughout his film career, from favourites to 'scathing' critiques
David Stratton's iconic reviews throughout his film career, from favourites to 'scathing' critiques

ABC News

timean hour ago

  • ABC News

David Stratton's iconic reviews throughout his film career, from favourites to 'scathing' critiques

For a film critic juggernaut like David Stratton, movies were not just his career — it was at his very core. For decades he was staple for Australian audiences, reviewing silver screen features alongside Margaret Pomeranz on various movie review shows. NOTE: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised this article contains the name and image of a person who has died. The late actor's family has granted permission to use his name and image. His family announced his death on Thursday afternoon, saying he died peacefully in hospital near his Blue Mountains home. He was 85. Prior to his death, Stratton said his obsession with film came from his grandmother. "Monday to Friday, four times a week [we went to the cinemas]," he said in an interview with Margaret Throsby on ABC's Special Features. "It was everything … There's something about the smell of a cinema. I love the still photographs, the posters outside." The renowned film critic reviewed tens of thousands of movies during his illustrious career, but even he had his favourites. Asked many times over the decades to rank his all-time winners, the beloved film critic often admitted his cherished top pics would be in the hundreds. In 2010 Stratton published his book My Favourite Movies, where he reviewed and dissected his personal favourites from the last century. Above all was the 1952 classic romantic comedy and musical — Singin' in the Rain, directed and choreographed by Gene Kelly and Stanley Donen. "I've seen Singin' In the Rain — I don't know — 50 or 60 times," Stratton told Desert Island Flicks at ACMI in March 2010. He recounted meeting Gene Kelly at a screening of the film in Sydney, and then being invited to visit him at home while on a visit to Los Angeles. A champion of Australian film and theatre, Stratton's all-time favourites included many homegrown movies. Newsfront, released in 1978, centred around a newsreel cameraman threatened by the onset of television in post-war Australia. "Newsfront is my number 1," Stratton told Screen Australia. "And it always has been — ever since I first saw it and I saw it in a rough cut." He described the 1975 film Picnic at Hanging at Rock as "an extraordinary revelation" and a huge critical and commercial success. Set on Valentine's Day in 1900 at an exclusive girl's school, the haunting tale has been retold across stage and screen in the decades since its release. The 2005 drama Good Night and Good Luck is set during the early days of broadcast journalism in the USA in the 1950s, and stars George Clooney. "The film beautifully evokes the early days of television, but though it's in black-and-white, there's nothing monochromatic about Clooney's passion for his subject or the importance of his message," Stratton said in a review. Both he co-host and Pomeranz gave the movie five stars. The 2013 Australian drama Charlie's Country, which stars the late legendary actor David Gulpilil, was another of Stratton's favourites. "I think Charlie's Country makes me cry every time I see it," Stratton told Screen Australia. "The scene where Gulpilil's hair is cut, is the most moving scene in any Australian film. I think it's so sad. And it's so important that film." Stratton was not afraid to be scathing in his reviews where necessary. He described Paul Hogan's Western comedy film Lightning Jack, released in 1994, as "feeble, slapstick", giving the film just one-and-half stars. In reference to another of Hogan's films — the latter instalments of Crocodile Dundee — Stratton said "one of Hogan's best friends should have advised him not to make [it]". Perhaps his biggest shift from the culture, was his review of the 1997 Australian classic, The Castle. "I'm afraid it wasn't for me, Margaret," he told his co-star on At The Movies. "I thought it was patronising towards its characters, I didn't find it funny." He added: "It's very rough [technically]. I'd give it one and half [stars]." Twenty seven years later, he told The Daily Telegraph he had seen The Castle in years since and said, "I appreciate it much more". There were some films that were not worth a single star in Stratton's expert view. Of the 2012 American teen comedy Project X, Stratton said "it is not a film made for mature audiences", and he took aim at the plot line's "sexist" tone. As for 2005 horror film Hostel, Stratton described it as a "squalid" production of "gloating ugliness". Reflecting on his film critiques to ABC Radio Melbourne in 2024, he said: "I don't enjoy being scathing. I want to be honest." "I love them [movies], and I have always loved them, all my life. There seems to be a certain lack of inspiration, ideas in films." In the wake of news of Stratton's death, ABC managing director Hugh Marks reflected on Stratton's "extraordinary career". "Incredible insight, a love of the craft of movie making and a respect for his audience, David was a credit to our industry. "He made an enormous contribution to the ABC that we will remember fondly." Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said: "All of us who tuned in to 'At the Movies' respected him for his deep knowledge and for the gentle and generous way he passed it on. May he rest in peace."

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