Former Federal Treasurer Josh Frydenberg presents a Sky News Australia documentary examining the alarming rise of antisemitism in Australia and its impact on our country and our democracy.
"Rudigo" is a thought-provoking mini-series that explores the blurred lines between reality and surrealism. The story follows Rudigo, a young man haunted by his mischievous cousin, a traffic cop. As Rudigo navigates his daily life, his cousin appears, causing chaos and disrupting his attempts to focus. The series raises profound questions about existence, identity, and the power of perception, leaving the viewer questioning what is real and what is just a product of Rudigo's imagination.
Ye Xiyan, heir to the Ye Group, survives a car accident and is rescued by tea garden owner Lu Mingyu. Pretending to have amnesia, she is mistaken for a normal girl and unknowingly gets engaged to him. Their peaceful life is disrupted when Cui Zihao questions her identity, and Lu Mingyu’s past as a bodyguard resurfaces. As conspiracies unfold, they must unite to protect their love and overcome the crisis.
A female lawyer with connections to much of the Danish underworld decides to break away from her old environment. She becomes a mole for a group of journalists, and with a hidden camera, she starts exposing everything from bikers to lawyers and major businesspeople.
Hosted by comedian Jay Pharoah, families must work together as each contestant faces a quiz where each wrong answer results in a massive ball rapidly descending and knocking them into a pool below; the final dry family member plays the final round for a $100,000 grand prize.
Roots So Deep (you can see the devil down there) is a 4-part documentary series about inventive farmers and maverick scientists building a path to solving climate change with hooves, heart and soil. Can an underutilized way to graze cattle, that mimics the way bison once roamed the land, help get farmers out of debt, restore our depleted soils, rebuild wildlife habitat and draw down huge amounts of of carbon? Cattle have been seen as eco-villains for a long time. What if they can help us revive rural economies and ecologies?