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7am

Schwartz Media7ampodcast.com.au
A daily news show from the publisher of The Monthly and The Saturday Paper. Hear from the country’s best reporters, covering the news as it affects Australia. This is news with narrative, every weekday.
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Episodes

Jess Hill on how to stop domestic violence

Jess Hill hasn’t been sleeping much lately. For the past three months, she’s been working on a plan to try to end violence against women and children. Now, that plan is out. The rapid review looks beyond the education campaigns that we have come to understand as domestic violence prevention and calls for a complete overhaul to the way the government responds to men killing women. Today, journalist and co-author of the rapid review Jess Hill on what’s in the report and whether we’re going to see ...

Aug 27, 202415 minEp. 1330

Are Hezbollah and Israel gearing up for all out war?

It was the biggest escalation between Hezbollah and Israel since October 7. On Sunday, Hezbollah launched hundreds of rockets and drones at Israel while Israel said it hit more than 40 targets in Lebanon – and isn’t done yet. The attacks come as talks of a ceasefire between Hamas and Israel continue with no sign of an outcome. Today, world editor of The Saturday Paper and editor of Australian Foreign Affairs Jonathan Pearlman on whether the Middle East is headed for all-out war. Socials: Stay in...

Aug 26, 202416 minEp. 1329

‘We’re always going to fight’: Victoria’s groundbreaking path to Treaty

After the resounding defeat of last year’s referendum on the Voice to Parliament, the path towards Truth and Treaty has appeared to be on shaky ground. But history has been made in Victoria, with the state’s Indigenous representative body formally confirming it is ready to negotiate with the government on a state-wide treaty. The process is being led by the First Peoples’ Assembly of Victoria, an elected body representing Victoria’s traditional owners and all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islande...

Aug 25, 202415 minEp. 1328

Read This: It’s Not Roxane Gay’s Job to Make People Happy

Roxane Gay is a prominent American author, professor, and cultural critic known for her unflinching honesty, quick wit, and razor-sharp intellect. She has gained acclaim for her essays, fiction, and memoirs that explore identity, gender, race, and body image. This week on Read This , Roxane joins Michael for a conversation about what it means to be a public intellectual and how this has shifted throughout her career. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....

Aug 24, 202428 minEp. 1327

Jon Faine on why the ABC's boss just quit

The ABC’s Managing Director David Anderson announced his shock resignation yesterday afternoon, after being reappointed for his second term in the role late last year. Anderson said stepping down was “the right time for me and the right time for the ABC”. The decision comes just months after Kim Williams took up his new role as chair with big plans for renewal inside the ABC. Today, ABC veteran Jon Faine on what this means for the future of the national broadcaster and who might be next in the M...

Aug 22, 202414 minEp. 1326

Elon Musk’s secret plan to buy Trump the presidency

In 2022, Elon Musk said Donald Trump was “too old” to be president, and Donald Trump called Musk a “bullshit artist”. In the relatively short time since, Elon Musk has endorsed the former president and offered him some free publicity by interviewing Trump on his website X. It’s now been revealed that Elon Musk has also been working behind the scenes to fundraise for Trump’ presidential campaign for months, raising millions of dollars while going to great lengths to keep his involvement secret. T...

Aug 21, 202415 minEp. 1325

QANTAS crash: How Alan Joyce lost a $9 million bonus

Alan Joyce was once hailed as a saviour of perhaps Australia’s most iconic business. The former CEO of QANTAS was championed by his board and well known in the Australian business community for his support of social justice causes throughout his 15 years in the job. So, it’s been a dramatic fall from grace. Joyce has now left his successors with a reputational mess after a series of bad decisions that left customers furious. And he’s had his bonus cut by millions. Today, reporter Marc Moncrief o...

Aug 20, 202415 minEp. 1324

Peter Dutton's Palestinian ban is textbook Peter Dutton

The treatment or mistreatment of refugees fleeing to Australia has been the wellspring of Australian politics for almost a quarter of a century. This time, it's Peter Dutton with his call for Palestinians fleeing Gaza to be banned from coming to Australia. The language is designed to wedge the government by making them look soft on national security. It comes at a time when ASIO has called for politicians to dial down the heated and divisive rhetoric consuming national conversations, with fear i...

Aug 19, 202417 minEp. 1323

After the 'no' vote: Advance’s plan to destroy the Greens

The hard-right group behind the “No” campaign, Advance, is amassing a multi-million dollar war chest to take down its next opponent: the Australian Greens. Advance has called the Greens the “single biggest threat to freedom, security and prosperity in Australia” – and they have big plans to target their voters ahead of the next election. Today, special correspondent for The Saturday Paper Jason Koutsoukis on who is behind Advance and why they believe they can flip progressive women to the hard r...

Aug 18, 202418 minEp. 1322

Read This: All Bruce Pascoe Needs Is a Biro

It was 2014 when Bruce Pascoe went from being a prolific, yet relatively unknown writer, to public enemy #1 in Australia’s culture wars. That was the year that Bruce published his now infamous book, Dark Emu , and its re-examination of accepted historical accounts of pre-invasion Australia. On this episode of Read This , he joins Michael for a discussion about his new novel Imperial Harvest and shares why he still believes we need the messiness of democracy. See omnystudio.com/listener for priva...

Aug 17, 202428 minEp. 1321

‘It’s not 1800-phone-a-friend’: the failed promise of therapy apps

“I didn’t have a boyfriend to text anymore so might as well text a therapist,” a millennial podcast host tells her audience while recommending they seek out counselling. Online therapy services like BetterHelp are some of podcasting’s biggest advertisers, promising to address the barriers that prevent people from accessing face-to-face therapy. Now, the American company is expanding its app into Australia – recruiting Australian psychologists while capitalising on the failings of a mental health...

Aug 15, 202418 minEp. 1320

Linda Reynolds, Brittany Higgins and the rise of political defamation

Brittany Higgins has now been at the centre of three court cases. First, there was the criminal trial of Bruce Lehrmann - which was aborted with no findings made against him. Lehrmann later sued Network 10 and journalist Lisa Wilkinson, claiming that they defamed him by identifying him as a rapist. The court found that he did, to a civil standard, rape Higgins. Now, Higgins’ former boss, Senator Linda Reynolds, is suing her for a series of social media posts claiming that she was uncaring and un...

Aug 14, 202418 minEp. 1319

Inside the illegal underground schools for Afghan girls

Three years ago the Taliban regained control of Afghanistan. From his new home in Adelaide, Australia, Hazara human rights activist and photographer Muzafar Ali watched warlords returning to the places he had loved but had been forced to leave. He saw Western journalists describing a place they didn’t know and didn’t really understand. So last month, Muzafar returned to Afghanistan at great personal cost to document what life is like there. He found a network of underground schools where girls a...

Aug 13, 202416 minEp. 1318

Labor’s plan to put young people into aged care

Neale Radley was in his early 40s when he dived off a houseboat and hit a sandbar, becoming a high-needs quadriplegic. With no family members able to look after him, he was faced with limited options and ended up in aged-care. Now, a clause in the government’s New Aged Care Act could mean that more younger people will end up in aged-care, potentially unwinding decades of work to prevent this from happening. Today, Neale Radley on the reality of living in aged-care as a younger person and The Sat...

Aug 12, 202416 minEp. 1317

Imane Khelif and the scrutiny of female athletes’ bodies

This year’s Olympics has been phenomenal for women in sport. Paris 2024 also set a milestone as the first Olympics to achieve full gender parity on the field of play. But these achievements have been overshadowed by the abuse levelled at two female boxers who both clinched their first olympic medals over unfounded speculation about their sex. One of the boxers, Imane Khelif, has spoken out several times in the face of it all. The saga is fuelled by a current moral panic about ‘fairness’ in women...

Aug 11, 202417 minEp. 1316

Read This: Eric Beecher Is a Media Mongrel

In this episode of our sister podcast, Read This , host Michael Williams speaks with journalist, editor and media proprietor Eric Beecher about his new book The Men Who Killed the News . Eric has worked for some of the most well-respected newspapers in the world, including the Sydney Morning Herald and the Wall Street Journal. He’s currently the head of Private Media, which runs the website, Crikey . See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....

Aug 10, 202431 minEp. 1315

Is Australia failing to teach kids to read?

It’s been called a forever war: the fight over how to teach children to read. For decades, an outdated method has lingered in Australian classrooms as states protect schools’ right to teach how they wish. Following a recent report from the Grattan Institute that found a third of Australian children couldn’t read well, state governments are finally picking a side and mandating the best way to teach reading. Today, associate editor of The Saturday Paper Martin McKenzie-Murray on why “vibes-based l...

Aug 08, 202414 minEp. 1314

Battle of the VPs: Tim Walz v JD Vance

In the weeks since he was announced as Donald Trump’s running mate, some of JD Vance’s past remarks have resurfaced. He is now at the centre of a number of bizarre rumours and jokes. They’ve been picked up by some Democrats, who are labelling the two men on the republican ticket as ‘weird’. Kamala Harris has chosen the man who started the ‘weird’ line of attack, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, as her running mate – 17 days after Harris herself became the presumptive Democratic nominee for president...

Aug 07, 202419 minEp. 1313

Who decides the future of Gaza?

Hardly any foreign journalists have been into Gaza since Israel’s bombings began. The Economist ’s editor-in-chief Zanny Minton Beddoes is one of the few who has. On a recent trip, Zanny visited the streets of Jerusalem, the Knesset, Gaza and the West Bank, and spoke to dozens of people about what will happen to Gaza when, or if, the fighting stops. Now, an end to conflict in the Middle East seems further away than ever. Iran’s supreme leader has vowed to retaliate against Israel after the head ...

Aug 06, 202421 minEp. 1312

‘Find some courage’: David Pocock on Labor’s flawed gambling laws

They’re hard to miss: the number of gambling ads flooding our screens and devices everyday. They’ve become such an inescapable part of sport that a parliamentary inquiry was formed, which looked at the impacts the ads have on the community. In the final months of her life, Labor MP Peta Murphy was the chair of that inquiry – and after hearing from the gambling industry, dependent sporting codes and families impacted by gambling addiction – her position was unequivocal: all ads for online gamblin...

Aug 05, 202415 minEp. 1311

The Train family murders: A new age of radicalisation

It was supposed to be a routine call out when four police officers attended a property in regional Queensland just before Christmas in 2022. The young officers approached the house, looking to do a routine welfare check, when they were fired on. After a siege that lasted hours, six people were killed, including two constables. In the weeks that followed, media reporting focused on the strangeness of the town, and the strangeness of the Train family: two brothers and the woman that had been both ...

Aug 04, 202417 minEp. 1310

Read This: Alexis Wright Is the 2024 Miles Franklin Winner

In this episode of our sister podcast, Read This , host Michael Williams speaks with the winner of the 2024 Miles Franklin Award, Alexis Wright. Her epic novel Praiseworthy , also won the Stella Prize and has been described as “an astonishing feat of storytelling and sovereign imagination. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Aug 03, 202433 minEp. 1309

'I have eyes, but I don't see': The community groups helping refugees settle

At Sydney Airport on a muggy night in November 2022, a group of volunteers from Sydney’s northern beaches crowd inside arrivals waiting to greet a family they had never met. Known as the ‘Manlygees’, they’re there to welcome a Kurdish family originally from Syria who had spent the past decade in a refugee camp in Iraq. They’re part of an ambitious pilot program introduced in 2022, called the Community Refugee Integration and Settlement Pilot, or CRISP, in which a sponsoring community acts as the...

Aug 01, 202420 minEp. 1308

The end of ‘Twiggy’ Forrest's hydrogen dream

It wasn’t so long ago that renewables pundits glowingly described hydrogen as the “Swiss Army knife” of renewable technologies, able to be turned to almost any purpose. But more recently, the gas has become an expensive and painful point of political debate, with many experts tempering their praise. Now, one of hydrogen’s biggest backers, mining magnate Andrew Forrest, has announced he is scaling back his green hydrogen projects. Today, national correspondent for The Saturday Paper Mike Seccombe...

Jul 31, 202416 minEp. 1307

Inside Ghislaine Maxwell's sex trafficking trial

When Ghislaine Maxwell was sentenced to twenty years jail for sex trafficking crimes, journalist and writer Lucia Osborne-Crowley was there in the courtroom. She watched on as Ghislaine Maxwell – a British socialite, and close associate of Jeffrey Epstein – waited to hear her fate. And she listened as her victims testified to the harm inflicted by Maxwell’s predatory actions. But the more Osborne-Crowley learned, the more she came to understand the trial as a sham. Many other unnamed, powerful a...

Jul 30, 202414 minEp. 1306

These PwC executives still haven't been held accountable

It was one of the biggest corporate scandals the country has ever seen when it was revealed that PwC had used confidential government information to enrich itself and its corporate clients. Since then there have been two parliamentary inquiries, an AFP investigation, nine investigations by the tax practitioners board, one internal review and an investigation by the international arm of the company. Yet important questions remain unanswered. Today, special correspondent Jason Koutsoukis on the ke...

Jul 29, 202414 minEp. 1305

Zoe Daniel on what it costs to win an election

The historic teal wave at the last election delivered the two major parties their worst electoral results ever. So, perhaps it’s no surprise that the government looks set to introduce new laws that could make it harder for newcomers to compete. The minister responsible says he wants to address the “growing threat of big money in politics.” The rules could include a requirement that all donations over $1000 be disclosed and made public in real time, with caps on the amount that can be donated. A ...

Jul 28, 202415 minEp. 1304

Read This: How Geraldine Brooks Became a Novelist

In this episode of our sister podcast, host Michael Williams speaks with Pulitzer Prize-winning author Geraldine Brooks. She shares her life sentence and reflects on how her upbringing provided the essential building blocks for a career as a writer. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Jul 27, 202428 minEp. 1303

'I sued the government over climate – but I'm not done'

Climate activist Katta O’Donnell sued the Australian government for failing to disclose how much climate change would impact the value of government bonds. It was a world-first case, she was a law student at the time and she won. But the experience left her feeling more disillusioned than ever and determined to find another way to make change. Today, Katta O’Donnell on why she believes direct action is the way forward on climate. Socials: Stay in touch with us on Twitter and Instagram Guest: Kat...

Jul 25, 202416 minEp. 1302

Why Labor supports private school tax breaks

Recently, Mike Seccombe has been looking into the divide between Australia’s richest and poorest schools – to find out why this gap keeps widening. And what he found was a broken system. Rich parents are able to get huge tax breaks by donating to opulent building projects at their kids’ private schools. It’s a practice that goes way back – and many argue – is outdated. Today, national correspondent for The Saturday Paper and a proud state school boy, Mike Seccombe, on why we need an overhaul of ...

Jul 24, 202415 minEp. 1301
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