POPULARITY
Long-time farmer, Graham Puckle, has opened up on the wild conditions in his local town of Hopetoun in rural Victoria, as well as the new emergency services levy.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
It's a big trip for the three! But where's the gig? Woomelang - how to you say that? More about The Debrief Original theme music by Kit Warhurst. Hear the making of The Debrief theme song. Artwork created by Stacy Gougoulis. Co-produced by Nearly Media Support podcasts you listen to via Lenny.fm Looking for another podcast? The Junkees with Dave O'Neil & Kitty Flanagan - The sweet and salty roundabout! Junk food abounds! Confessions - laugh along with Sam Petersen and friends as he reads outrageous confessions from people you'll never meet.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
International Graphite (ASX: IG6) chief executive officer and managing director Andrew Worland joins Small Caps to discuss the companies complimentary Springdale graphite mining project at Hopetoun and battery processing facility at Collie. The company is making strong progress at both projects which are been developed to fulfil growing demand in the global battery metal and electric vehicle markets. The Springdale project was named Australian Resource Discovery of the year in 2023 following a 240% increase in the mineral resource estimate (MRE) announced in September. The MRE saw the total Springdale mineral resource estimate grows from 15.3 million tonnes at 6.0% Total Graphitic Carbon (TGC) to 49.3 million tonnes at 6.5% TGC, making it one of the largest graphite deposits. At Collie, 200km south of Perth, International Graphite recently installed a new graphite micronising plant which will used for testwork on graphite concentrates prepared from drill core from Springdale. This will assist in qualification of the Springdale graphite material. Articles:https://smallcaps.com.au/international-graphite-new-course-groundbreaking-minerals-wa-project/https://smallcaps.com.au/international-graphite-eyes-progress-dual-development-programs-western-australia/ For more information on International Graphite:https://smallcaps.com.au/stocks/asx-ig6/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
January 1st, 1901, the Commonwealth of Australia was created - but who was going to be the first Prime Minister? The choice seemed obvious to everyone except the person actually making it. This is the story of the Hopetoun Blunder, a political controversy where the first Governor-General of Australia wasn't sure what he was doing and caused the nation a load of confusion and one unlucky politician the impossible task of forming a caretaker government with only two weeks before the deadline of federation. Support the channel on patreon here: https://www.patreon.com/AuspolExplained Like Auspol Explained on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Auspol-Explained-107892180702388 Get a copy of the script here: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1v-NuV4HzAj30FuXxc9nGlKOl1yIF-kDY/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=102352521871694219008&rtpof=true&sd=true Auspol Explained would like to acknowledge the Whadjuk Nyoongar people and their Elders as the owners and custodians of the Land that the episode was recorded and edited on. This Land was stolen and never ceded. It always was and always will be Aboriginal Land.
Sammy White delivered the Southern Mallee Giants footy report on the Flow Friday Sports Show this week alongside Wayne the Flowman. The Flowman joked about being 'shirtfronted' by the Giants boys in Hopetoun during the week whilst he was fulfilling his duties as the MC on the ground at the Speed Mallee Machinery Field Days.
Sammy White chatted with The Flowman about all things Southern Mallee Giants footy including their strong home ground advantage at Hopetoun. Flowman found time to accuse Sammy of not putting up for the bar tab at the local public house.
... he also nearly got into a fight in the sleepy WA town of Hopetoun. Clearly it's been a big week. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
... he also nearly got into a fight in the sleepy WA town of Hopetoun. Clearly it's been a big week.
Claire Coleman is a Noongar writer, born in Western Australia and now based in Naarm. Her family have been from the area around Ravensthorpe and Hopetoun on the south coast of WA since before time started being recorded. She has written three works of speculative fiction to date - Terra Nullius: A Novel (2017), which was shortlisted for The Stella Prize, among many other awards, The Old Lie (2019) and Enclave (2022). Her acclaimed non-fiction book, Lies Damned Lies: A personal exploration of the impact of colonisation was published in 2021. Claire has appeared on The Garret before. You can find a detailed discussion of Terra Nullius here, as well as a discussion recorded live at the Ubud Writers and Readers Festival in 2019 here. About The Garret Read the transcript of this interview at thegarretpodcast.com. You can also follow The Garret on Twitter and Instagram, or follow our host Astrid Edwards on Twitter or Instagram.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Travel writers Will Yeoman and Mogens Johansen look forward to a bumper wildflower season and reflect on exploring Western Australia as the world destination it is, often in the company of expert guides or knowledgeable locals. Along the way, we visit small WA towns such as Hopetoun and Coorow.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this special feature episode of The Pod Well Travelled, Will Yeoman travels to Hopetoun in Australia's South West to spend time with the ladies of the Southern Scribes, and with others who attended a series of workshops as part of the inaugural Readers & Writers Esperance. Warning: contains sounds of eating delicious homemade pumpkin soup.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
www.2tm.com.au
There are few intergenerational figures in a music scene that sees bands come and go on a weekly basis. Chief among those that are, however, are Al Grigg and Tom Wallace. Best friends since college, the pair first played together as part of 2000s indie wunderkinds Red Riders, before transferring their guitar-loving and hook-wielding expertise over to the garage-rock world with Palms circa 2011. Here, they lay out their life in music, both on and off the road, on the line in their most in-depth interview to date. Whether you came up circa the Hopetoun or circa the Oxford Art Factory, there's some long lines down these palms well worth tracing. Intensity Sunshine is out now via Ivy League/Mushroom. Stream the EP and purchase a physical copy here: https://palms.bandcamp.com/album/intensity-sunshine Special thanks to Lulu Rae and Brain Drain PR. Produced and edited by Paul McWhirter. Additional editing by David James Young. Follow Palms on Facebook: @palmsmusic Follow Palms on Instagram: @palmsmusic Follow Palms on Twitter: @palmsmusic All My Friends Are in Bar Bands is part of the Not For Print podcast network. Follow us on Instagram: @notforprintpods For updates on Bar Bands, as well as other podcasts and writing endeavours, follow David on: Facebook: @davidjamesyoungwrites Instagram: @djywrites Support David and the podcast on Patreon: http://patreon.com/davidjamesyoung This podcast was recorded on Gadigal land and edited on Wurundjeri and Tharawal land. www.allmyfriendsareinbarbands.com Support David on Patreon: http://patreon.com/davidjamesyoung See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Flowman Wayne Phillips pays his respect to Hopetoun's Doughy Robins, the reigning premiers Parrakie in Pinnaroo and Border cricket, and previews the Mallee Footy league
The Friday Night Sports Show catches up on the summer sports wrapping up in the Wimmera and Mallee in western Victoria, including lawn bowls, tennis, cricket and more - plus previewing local winter sports.
2020 has been a breakthrough year for Cass Hopetoun. In January she won the Tamworth Songwriter's Association talent quest before releasing her debut single ‘Shots' independently in March. In April she signed to Compass Bros Records. In May she opened for Casey Donovan at Australia's first ever pandemic drive-in concert, performed live on Channel 7's Sunrise and ‘Shots' reached #4 on The Music Network Country Airplay Chart. In September Cass's follow up single ‘Typical Bride' peaked at #1 on that same chart. Typical Bride also hit the #1 spot on 2TM's Top 20 and #3 on KIX Country's Hottest 20 charts. Both singles were added to full rotation on CMC/CMT respectively and to Spotify and Apple Music playlists. Cass stumbled upon her talent for song when a friend “dragged her along to the choir” as a young student in Sydney's Blue Mountains. She learned piano, took singing lessons and idolised Delta Goodrem but the song writing of Dolly Parton and Brandy Clark soon became her driving influences. Her latest single 'Fortune Teller' was produced by Matt Fell and recorded at his Love Hz Studios in Sydney. It was inspired by a 2019 trip to New Orleans. “I went to a fortune teller,” recalls Hopetoun, “and just knew I had to write about one. I wanted to capture the New Orleans vibe – all those jazzy and mysterious flavours that the streets of the French Quarter have to offer. The song evolved into being about people who they think they know what's best for you. This is me telling them to mind their own business.” Cass's debut album, produced by Matt Fell, will be released in 2021. Songs featured in this episode: Fortune Teller Shots Typical Bride Connect with Cass: Website Facebook Instagram Spotify YouTube
In this episode we introduce you to Cass Hopetoun, the 2020 Tamworth Country Music Talent Winner. We talk about Cass's latest release ‘Fortune Teller' and ‘Typical Bride' & ‘Shots' as well as finding out Cass's background in musical theatre. We find out how the music video to ‘Shots' was filmed and of course we talk about what is next for Cass.
Kathleen Hallgarten currently lives in Hopetoun, Victoria, in the Australian Outback. Before moving to Australia, she lived and taught in New Jersey, Florida, Texas, and Alaska. Her mother raised her with a “can do” attitude, and she loves giving that message over to her students with care and respect! She also teaches online through PalFish Teacher. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/moshe-fried/support
In this episode Jaguar meets the team behind Edinburgh’s FLY. A brand which has become an avid promoter of the Scottish electronic music scene by helping bring through some of the country’s most exciting talents, and mixing them with the biggest names in the scene. Jaguar meets founder Tom Ketley who started his career in the nightlife industry whilst at University and has since developed FLY into one of the UK’s most influential house and techno nights, with its weekly Friday club show and biannual festivals at two stunning locations – Hopetoun House and Princes Street Gardens. We hear from former residents about how the brand has helped them craft the skills which they’re now displaying on a global stage. Discussions of future plans for a camping festival in Scotland are shared and we find out why a council cleaner with a ride-on street sweeper kept FLY alive… Featuring interviews with Theo Kottis, Jasper James, Denis Sulta and Big MizFor more from Red Bull Music AAA and forthcoming episodes with Annie Mac Presents, fabric, Sink the Pink, The Warehouse Project and Boomtown visit http://win.gs/RedBullMusicAAA
4 eme jour bien rempli !
4 eme jour bien rempli !
Hopetoun Brown performing live from bFM Breakfast Club. Thanks to NZonAir Music and Ellen Melville Centre.
Nick Atkinson (Hopetoun Brown) Interview by Jamie Green on Radio One 91fm Dunedin
Nick Atkinson (Hopetoun Brown) Interview by Jamie Green on Radio One 91fm Dunedin
Nick Bollinger tunes into two-man band, and ex-Supergroove horn section, Hopetoun Brown, aka Nick Atkinson and Tim Stewart.
Nick Atkinson (Hopetoun Brown) Interview by Chris Armstrong on Radio One 91fm Dunedin
Nick Atkinson (Hopetoun Brown) Interview by Chris Armstrong on Radio One 91fm Dunedin
Mine To Keep by Wendy Hudson Book Clips Welcome to Book Clips, the mini podcast where authors and narrators give you a taste of a book with a short snippet. In this episode we hear a reading from Mine To Keep by Wendy Hudson Synopsis Erin Carter is alone. Plagued by childhood nightmares since the loss of her mother, she embarks on a journey to trace her father, hoping to find some semblance of family and put the darkness to rest. A tentative thread leads her to Hopetoun, in rural Scotland, and the welcoming Cornfield Castle. There she meets Abigail Miller, the castle chef, who quickly becomes her tour guide and search partner. Along with Abigail’s brother, George, they decipher village gossip from truth, fact from folklore, and offer Erin sanctuary within the castle walls. But when Erin’s nightmares start to close in, can she defeat them and learn to live again? Get This Book On Amazon (link works for Amazon US, UK and Canada) Wendy Hudson Online Website Facebook Twitter Contact The Lesbian Talk Show Website Email Become A Patron You can find all our Book Clips episodes here
Nick Atkinson (Hopetoun Brown) Interview by Jamie Green on Radio One 91fm Dunedin
Nick Atkinson (Hopetoun Brown) Interview by Jamie Green on Radio One 91fm Dunedin
In this episode, guest host Hannah Donnelly explores Indigenous speculative futures with Claire G Coleman, author of the recently released 'Terra Nullius', and Maddee Clark, who is writing their PhD on Indigenous speculative fiction and futurism. Hannah Donnelly is a writer, DJ and the creator of Sovereign Trax. Her work experiments with future tense, speculative fiction and Indigenous responses to climate change through stories of cultural flows and water systems. Sovereign Trax is an online space promoting First Nations music through energising decolonization conversations and community in music. Hannah is currently working at Next Wave as an associate producer. Claire G Coleman is a writer from Western Australia. She identifies with the South Coast Noongar people. Her family are associated with the area around Ravensthorpe and Hopetoun. Claire grew up in a Forestry’s settlement in the middle of a tree plantation – where her dad worked, not far out of Perth. She wrote her black&write! fellowship-winning manuscript Terra Nullius while travelling around Australia in a caravan. Maddee Clark is a Yugambeh freelance writer living in the Kulin Nation. They are a Ph.D student researching Indigenous speculative fiction and futurism. Links to works discussed and recommended Claire G Coleman's 'Terra Nullius', published with Hachette https://www.hachette.com.au/claire-coleman/terra-nullius Maddee Clark's 'Coded Devices', published on the Next Wave website http://2016.nextwave.org.au/essays/coded-devices/ A review of Hannah Donnelly's 'Sovereign Apocalypse' by Ellen van Neerven in the Lifted Brow https://www.theliftedbrow.com/liftedbrow/sovereign-apocalypse-zine-two-a-review-by-ellen Claire recommends Follow the Rabbit Proof Fence by Doris Pilkington Garimara https://readingaustralia.com.au/essays/follow-the-rabbit-proof-fence/ The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith by Thomas Keneally https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/432556.The_Chant_of_Jimmie_Blacksmith Benang by Kim Scott https://www.fremantlepress.com.au/products/benang-from-the-heart Maddee recommends Fiona Foley https://www.mca.com.au/collection/artist/foley-fiona/ The Tribe http://www.tribeworld.com/ The Swan Book by Alexis Wright http://giramondopublishing.com/product/the-swan-book/ Heat and Light by Ellen van Neerven http://giramondopublishing.com/product/the-swan-book/ Nicole Watson http://rightnow.org.au/interview-3/interview-with-nicole-watson/
The future is far and near. Listen to children articulate their predictions, hopes and fears about the future.Recorded in Beverley, Merredin, Hopetoun, Harvey & Mandurah.Created by Maybe ( ) TogetherProduced by Performing Lines WA You can subscribe to Small Voices Louder through itunes!Search for "Small Voices Louder" in your iphone podcast app or follow this link: https://itunes.apple.com/au/podcast/small-voices-louder/id1230331144
How would you describe wisdom? Listen to children grapple with this concept and explain what they see as wisdom. Recorded in Beverley, Merredin, Hopetoun, Harvey & Mandurah. Created by Maybe ( ) TogetherProduced by Performing Lines WA You can subscribe to Small Voices Louder through itunes!Search for "Small Voices Louder" in your iphone podcast app or follow this link: https://itunes.apple.com/au/podcast/small-voices-louder/id1230331144
Worrying: we all do it. Listen to children's insights on what worrying is. Recorded in Beverley, Merredin, Hopetoun, Harvey & Mandurah.Created by Maybe ( ) TogetherProduced by Performing Lines WA You can subscribe to Small Voices Louder through itunes!Search for "Small Voices Louder" in your iphone podcast app or follow this link: https://itunes.apple.com/au/podcast/small-voices-louder/id1230331144
A fish has a three second memory. What is important for one to remember? Listen to children tell a fish their answers. Recorded in Beverley, Merredin, Hopetoun, Harvey & Mandurah.Created by Maybe ( ) TogetherProduced by Performing Lines WAYou can subscribe to Small Voices Louder through itunes!Search for "Small Voices Louder" in your iphone podcast app or follow this link: https://itunes.apple.com/au/podcast/small-voices-louder/id1230331144
Two neighbouring towns in the south of Western Australia are described by its children.Recorded in Beverley, Merredin, Hopetoun, Harvey & Mandurah.Created by Maybe ( ) TogetherProduced by Performing Lines WA You can subscribe to Small Voices Louder through itunes!Search for "Small Voices Louder" in your iphone podcast app or follow this link: https://itunes.apple.com/au/podcast/small-voices-louder/id1230331144
What would children change in the world? Listen to children tell us what they'd change.Recorded in Beverley, Merredin, Hopetoun, Harvey & Mandurah.Created by Maybe ( ) TogetherProduced by Performing Lines WA You can subscribe to Small Voices Louder through itunes. Search for "Small Voices Louder" in your iphone podcast app or follow this link: https://itunes.apple.com/au/podcast/small-voices-louder/id1230331144
Love. Love. Love. Children provide their insights to what love is.Recorded in Beverley, Merredin, Hopetoun, Harvey & Mandurah.Created by Maybe ( ) TogetherProduced by Performing Lines WAYou can subscribe to Small Voices Louder through itunes!Search for "Small Voices Louder" in your iphone podcast app or follow this link: https://itunes.apple.com/au/podcast/small-voices-louder/id1230331144
What's the difference between adults and children? Listen to children from Regional WA describe their noticings... Recorded in Beverley, Merredin, Hopetoun, Harvey & Mandurah.Created by Maybe ( ) TogetherProduced by Performing Lines WA You can subscribe to Small Voices Louder through itunes!Search for "Small Voices Louder" in your iphone podcast app or follow this link: https://itunes.apple.com/au/podcast/small-voices-louder/id1230331144
Peter Hallam is a farmer from Hopetoun in Victoria's Mallee. Peter briefly discusses how the season is finishing off in 2015 and how that impacts on his plans for the 2016 season.
In this series Clare Balding revisits some of her favourite walks and walkers from past programmes. Here she travels to the Hopetoun Estate, just west of Edinburgh to meet up with a group of women she first met twelve years ago. The Monday walkers have been together for over twenty five years, when they first met Clare, their average age was early sixties, now it's mid seventies. They explain that although walking still keeps them fit, they do now tailor their routes to take account of the passing years. A wee dram may still be part of their days outings but skinny dipping is accepted as a past pleasure. Producer: Lucy Lunt.
The 2nd in our podcast series is all about our first Governor General Lord Hopetoun