60 Minutes

In 2007, with of course the infamous “the worm” incident.
Story from ACA the following day:

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Sunday

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Caps of tonight’s live program:

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Im so sick of all these shows with the coronavirus animation backgrounds in red.

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Sunday 5 April

It’s odd how often it’s red in Australia. I’ve seen overseas news where it’s blue or green. Is it scarier in red?

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Today is the only one in Australia which I’ve seen using green, but also sick of seeing so much red. Enough already

Another live program tonight:

Sunday 12 April- 7pm
Another special live edition this week.

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Sunday 19 April-

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Nine will air an exclusive interview with convicted drug smuggler, Cassie Salisbury on Sunday following her release from jail.

Also tonight:

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Sunday
Inside the COVID-19 ICUs

Where cameras have never been allowed, until now. Sunday on 60 Minutes, the life and death reality inside the COVID-19 ICUs at Australian hospitals. The patients battling to survive and the healthcare heroes fighting to save them.

Plus
https://twitter.com/60Mins/status/1253611047258214400?s=20

We are the virus

Sunday 3 May

Sunday Telegraph reporting that Nine are looking at saving money in its news devision. 60 minutes costs $20 million a year and they’re looking at either axing it altogether or continue in a format that audiences may not recognise.

These networks just don’t get it. News is something the streaming services don’t offer. They should be bolstering their news and current affairs output not ripping it apart.

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Terrible if so.
60 Minutes has really had a good rating boost over the last few months.

That would leave Seven and Nine out of investigative journalism essentially.

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Sunday 3 May
https://twitter.com/60Mins/status/1254998779519959040

https://twitter.com/60Mins/status/1255777140764635136

Plus:

Trading Blows
It was an almighty slap. A few days ago Australia was described as chewing gum on the boot of China that needed to be scraped off on a rock. The insult came from an influential Chinese newspaper editor who is backed by the ruling Communist Party. Australia’s crime? The Chinese think we’re troublemakers because the Morrison government is calling for an independent inquiry into the origins and spread of coronavirus. It’s fair to say Canberra’s relationship with Beijing is currently fractured, but understanding why China is so defensive, not to mention petulant, can be difficult because the regime is so suspicious of the western media. However, in an exclusive and at times robust interview with Tara Brown, Professor Chen Hong, head of the Australian Studies Centre in Shanghai, argues the Chinese case.

Reporter: Tara Brown
Producer: Thea Dikeos

How does it manage to have five stories in just over one hour?