Time Masters is an Australian children's game show hosted by Tony Johnston from 1996-1998 on the Seven Network, in 3 seasons at the beginning Tony would meet the two teams of two schoolkids. In 1998, the show ended and renamed the show Wipeout also hosted by Johnson.
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An ABC Health Series that encourages kids to know themselves, like themselves and be themselves. These eight programs explore issues that concern young people and present a range of skills to help them manage their lives. The series has been researched and developed with the assistance of state and territory curriculum offers in the field of personal development, health and physical education.
Being Me
Lyndey Milan's Taste of Ireland
Plumpton High Babies
Great Temptation is an Australian game show that aired on the Seven Network in 1970 until 1975, It hosted by Tony Barber and co-hosted by Barbara Rodgers.
Great Temptation
Play Along with Sam is an Australian pre-school television series which airs on Nick Jr. from 6 May 2013 at 10am. It is presented by Sam Moran.
Play Along with Sam
Divorce Court is a 1967 Australian TV series made by NLT Productions.
Divorce Court
The Midday Report is an Australian midday news programme that has aired on ABC1 since February 2005. The program also airs on ABC News 24.
The Midday Report
The Dulux Show was an Australian television game show which aired in 1957. It was hosted by Jack Davey, and produced by Sydney station ATN-7, also airing in Melbourne on station GTV-9. Contestants competed for the chance to win a plane trip to a location like London or San Francisco. As the title suggests, it was sponsored by Dulux paint. As was also the case with many American series of the era, early Australian television series sometimes featured the name of the sponsor in the title.
The Dulux Show
Huey's TV Dinners
Face Australia
The Norman Lindsay Festival
Australian documentary series which premiered in 1989 on Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
Talking Pictures
The Italians
Take That was one of the earliest Australian television series. It debuted in 1957 and ran to 1959. As was often the case with early Australian television, it aired only on a single station, in this case HSV-7. Take That was a comedy series, one of the earliest such series produced for Australian television, and is sometimes considered to be Australian's first sitcom. The series was produced by Crawford Productions, who also produced several other 1950s-era series like the game show Wedding Day and the children's series Peters Club. Cast included Philip Stainton, Irene Hewitt, Frank Rich, Keith Eden, and Joff Allen. The archival status of the show is not clear; Although Kinescope recording existed, many early Australian broadcasts of the period were not recorded.
Take That
The Family Business is a 1989 Australian sitcom about two sisters and their husbands who live near each other.
The Family Business
The Praxis Discussion Series was established by the World Bank office in Sydney, Australia in order to provide a forum to discuss ideas, approaches, initiatives and policy pertinent to international development. Launched in January 2009 in partnership with Australian public affairs television channel A-PAC, the series aims to stimulate debate and promote the exchange of ideas. A one hour panel-style program, the show is recorded once a month at the World Bank office. Each session features three specialists on a select topic relating to international development. To coincide with the World Bank's work in the Pacific region, a World Bank representative is usually a part of the panel, joined by two other guest speakers providing different perspectives on the issue at hand. Recognising a gap in the development conversation, Praxis opened its doors to one and all, allowing the general public to sit alongside representatives from Australian government departments, civil society and non-government organisations, and the private sector, as well as various academics and students, in order to tackle development issues from a variety of perspectives. With the deadline for achieving the Millennium Development Goals coming up in 2015, such discussions are becoming increasingly important. Interactivity is valued above all else, and every audience member has the opportunity to have their say and question the views of the panelists.
Praxis Discussion Series
Memoirs
Football Quiz
Jazz Meets Folk
Guthy-Renker Australia
The Dismissal
This is the story of an Indigenous man who should be as famous as Ned Kelly. In 1894, Jandamarra led a rebellion against invading pastoralists in defence of his people's ancient land and culture.
Jandamarra's War
Surprise Surprise Gotcha is an Australian hidden camera practical joke television series. Hosted by radio personalities Matt Tilley and Jackie O, the series commenced on the Nine Network on 18 September 2007.
Surprise Surprise Gotcha
Luke Nguyen celebrates the Australia-Vietnam relationship, travelling through Vietnam and meeting Australians who represent the spirit of the relationship, cooking with Australian produce, and enjoying regional Vietnamese dishes.
A taste of Australia in Vietnam
Million Dollar Minute is an Australian quiz show that airs on the Seven Network. It premiered on Monday, 16 September 2013. The show is hosted by Grant Denyer and airs at 5:30pm on weeknights, replacing Deal or No Deal as the primary lead-in into Seven News. Million Dollar Minute is filmed at Global Television Studios in Melbourne and occupies the same studio as Deal or No Deal.
Million Dollar Minute
A spin-off television series titled Australia's Funniest Home Videos: World’s Funniest Videos premiered on 7 April 2009 on the Nine Network, followed by the return of advertising clip show Commercial Breakdown. The show features clips predominately from the American version of Funniest Home Videos, and is hosted by former Australian rules footballer Shane Crawford and former MTV VJ Lyndsey Rodrigues. The show was cancelled after its third episode.
AFHV: World’s Funniest Videos
Whose House Is It Anyway? (AU)
Dockside
The Singing Office
Couch Potato
West Coast Kids
Commonwealth Jazz Club is a 1965 music television miniseries which was co-produced in Australia, Canada and the United Kingdom.
Commonwealth Jazz Club
Saturday Date
NRL Scoreboard
Country Call
Couchman Over Australia
Strike It Lucky
The Worst Day Of My Life
Teen Scene
Four For The Show
The 40's In Swing Time
Ford Superquiz
Letter Charades
Letter Box
Casino 10
No Thanks, I'm On A Diet
Earthwatch
Wine Lovers Guide To Australia
Happening
South Pacific Adventures
Around The World With Brian Adams
It Pays to Be Funny was an Australian television comedy game show. In Sydney it aired on station ATN-7, while in Melbourne it aired on GTV-9. The half-hour show was hosted Bob Dyer, who had previously hosted a version for radio on the Macquarie Radio Network. A discription in a 1957 edition of The Age newspaper said the television series "puts contestants though amusing situations with worth-while prizes as their reward", According to a different edition of The Age, one of these "situations" was having the contestant attempt to milk a cow In one television episode, Jack Davey appeared and gave Dyer a meringue pie in the face, and then "kissed" him In another episode, a contestant named Mr. Martin had a water balloon poised above his head, while his wife tried to figure out what a man named Steve Petrovich was doing by pantomime. Failure to determine this would result in Mr. Martin having the water balloon dropped on him Although kinescope recordings were likely made to allow the series to air on both stations, it is not known if any of these recordings of the television version still exist, and there is the possibility the series may be lost. However, it is known that transcription copies exist of the radio version at the National Film and Sound Archive