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In this episode of The Greener Way, we're speaking with Jack Latimore. Jack is the Aboriginal affairs journalist at The Age. He is a Birpai man with family ties to Thungutti and Gumbaynggirr nations.Later this year, Australian citizens will be asked to vote on in a referendum to recognise Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in the Constitution by establishing an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice.The Vote on Voice is being widely debated and many institutions including key Australian business and investors have either publicly come out in favour of the vote, or are mulling whether to publicly take a stance.Jack discusses discuss how he approaches covering this historic time for The Age, how he establishes sources within Indigenous communities and how people can better educate themselves as they consider how to vote later this year.More information:The Quarterly Essay – Megan Davis, Voice of Reason On Recognition and Renewal: Quarterly Essay 90 (https://www.quarterlyessay.com.au/)Elements of Indigenous Style: A Guide for Writing by and about Indigenous Peoples, Gregory Younging (https://www.amazon.com.au/Elements-Indigenous-Style-Writing-Peoples/dp/1550597167)Truth-Telling: History, sovereignty and the Uluru Statement, Henry Reynolds https://www.newsouthbooks.com.au/books/truth-telling/
Chair: Jack Latimore Journalist Paul Daley has long been preoccupied by the myths of white Australia and the collective amnesia when it comes to our shameful national past. His latest novel, Jesustown, set in the mid-20th century in a remote Aboriginal community, is a study of the multi-generational effects of Australian colonial violence. He talks to Jack Latimore about why Jesustown had to be a novel and what fiction can contribute to truth. Event details: Mon 06 Mar, 12:00pm on the West Stage
When the Fourth Estate is doing its job properly, it acts as a watchdog on the government of the day and is a guardian of the public interest. That's why Insiders – the ABC's flagship political discussion program – is vital viewing for citizens who care about the democratic process. Join David Speers and a couch full of the country's most astute analysts, including Laura Tingle, Jack Latimore and Samantha Maiden, to dissect the week in politics at this special live Insiders event. The Premier of South Australia, Peter Malinauskas, will be Speers' special guest as the political interview of the week. Mike Bowers of Talking Pictures fame will be joined by one of our finest cartoonists to remind us why laughter is essential. Join us for an evening of political analysis and insight. Event details: Mon 06 Mar, 6:30pm on the West Stage
Chair: David Nolan Australians are now engaged in a national conversation about a change to the constitution to recognise Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people as the First Nations of Australia and create a Voice to Parliament. It's been a struggle of decades - first in 1967, for the right be counted in the census, and now to be consulted about policies that impact First Nations people. In the lead up to the referendum, Natalie Ahmat, Jack Latimore and Jodan Perry, three of our leading Indigenous journalists, discuss the challenges in covering the Voice, meeting audience expectations and battling audience fatigue. Event details: Sat 04 Mar, 2:30pm on the East Stage
Later this year, Australians are expected to vote in a referendum on the Voice to Parliament - a proposal that aims to enshrine an Indigenous voice in the constitution. The Voice has become a hotly debated topic in politics. But what do Indigenous people think of the proposal? Over the last few months, Birpai man and reporter for The Age and SMH, Jack Latimore has been trying to answer this question. He has spoken to dozens of Indigenous people - from capital cities to remote communities - to hear their perspectives on the Voice to Parliament. Today he joins audio producer Julia Carr-Catzel to discuss what he found - and what's next for the Voice.Subscribe to The Age & SMH: https://subscribe.smh.com.au/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This All Come Back Now is the first anthology of speculative fiction by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander writers, spanning bush horror, ghost stories, time travel and post-human futures. Hear from a panel of contributors as they discuss how their work is rooted in Indigenous ways of being, knowing and becoming, and what the toolkit of speculative fiction allows them to explore in terms of kin and Country, memory and future thinking. The editor of the anthology, Mykaela Saunders, sits down with Evelyn Araluen, Merryana Salem and Jack Latimore. Sydney Writers' Festival podcasts are available on all major podcast platforms. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe and rate our channel.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
AFL players at the centre of the Hawthorn racism scandal will now have the chance to be heard by Victoria's first nations truth-telling commission. It follows reluctance from families to speak before the AFL's own investigation into racism and mistreatment of players at the club. Indigenous affairs journalist and Birpai man at The Age, Jack Latimore joins audio producer Julia Carr-Catzel to discuss how a truth-telling commission may better serve affected players.Subscribe to The Age & SMH: https://subscribe.smh.com.au/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
AFL players at the centre of the Hawthorn racism scandal will now have the chance to be heard by Victoria's first nations truth-telling commission. It follows reluctance from families to speak before the AFL's own investigation into racism and mistreatment of players at the club. Indigenous affairs journalist and Birpai man at The Age, Jack Latimore joins audio producer Julia Carr-Catzel to discuss how a truth-telling commission may better serve affected players.Subscribe to The Age & SMH: https://subscribe.smh.com.au/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The passing of acclaimed singer songwriter Archie Roach on the weekend has prompted a national outpouring of grief and tributes. Archie Roach, a Gunditjamarra and Bundjalung elder hailing from Mooroopna in Victoria's north, was just 66.His musical legacy is vast: from his debut studio album Charcoal Lane, which included the heartbreaking track “Took the Children Away”, to his career-spanning anthology My Songs, released in March this year.As Australians reflect on the life of an extraordinary elder and songman, the country is being asked to support a new path forward that would bring Aboriginal Australians into the Constitution.Roach passed away on Saturday, the same day Prime Minister Anthony Albanese spoke at the Garma cultural festival in Arnhem Land.Albanese called on Australians to unite behind his proposed wording to enshrine an Aboriginal Voice to Parliament within the Constitution. Today on Please Explain, Indigenous affairs journalist and Birpai man, Jack Latimore joins Bianca Hall to discuss Archie Roach's legacy, and the Uluru Statement from the Heart.Subscribe to The Age & SMH: https://subscribe.smh.com.au/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The passing of acclaimed singer songwriter Archie Roach on the weekend has prompted a national outpouring of grief and tributes. Archie Roach, a Gunditjamarra and Bundjalung elder hailing from Mooroopna in Victoria's north, was just 66.His musical legacy is vast: from his debut studio album Charcoal Lane, which included the heartbreaking track “Took the Children Away”, to his career-spanning anthology My Songs, released in March this year.As Australians reflect on the life of an extraordinary elder and songman, the country is being asked to support a new path forward that would bring Aboriginal Australians into the Constitution.Roach passed away on Saturday, the same day Prime Minister Anthony Albanese spoke at the Garma cultural festival in Arnhem Land.Albanese called on Australians to unite behind his proposed wording to enshrine an Aboriginal Voice to Parliament within the Constitution. Today on Please Explain, Indigenous affairs journalist and Birpai man, Jack Latimore joins Bianca Hall to discuss Archie Roach's legacy, and the Uluru Statement from the Heart.Subscribe to The Age & SMH: https://subscribe.smh.com.au/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week, Michael Gleeson, Caroline Wilson and Greg Baum discuss Cyril Rioli's experiences at Hawthorn and racism in the AFL. Plus, the teams that can take positives from their losses in round three, the pressure on Port Adelaide coach Ken Hinkley, worrying signs for the Tigers and much more. Got a question about your club? Send it to realfootypod@theage.com.au for our hosts to answer. To read Caroline Wilson's initial report on Cyril Rioli, click here. https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/the-only-club-i-wouldn-t-put-my-hand-up-for-right-now-why-hawks-legend-cyril-rioli-has-stayed-away-20220331-p5a9n9.html To read the Hawks' apology to the Riolis, click here. https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/racism-is-unacceptable-hawks-issue-apology-to-cyril-and-shannyn-ah-sam-rioli-20220402-p5aa90.html To read Jack Latimore's column about the trope at the heart of Rioli's retirement, click here.https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/can-t-you-afford-thread-the-trope-at-the-heart-of-cyril-rioli-s-retirement-20220401-p5aa44.html To read Jake Niall's piece on what the Rioli story says about Jeff Kennett and Sam Mitchell, click here.https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/the-upshot-for-kennett-sam-mitchell-and-hawthorn-from-rioli-story-20220402-p5aaaz.html To read Michael Gleeson's column wrapping the round of footy, click here.https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/four-points-a-weekend-of-reckoning-at-hawthorn-20220403-p5aafw.html Support the show: https://subscribe.theage.com.au/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On Let's Talk Boe Spearim chats with two guest the … Continued
A legendary actor has died, there is an ongoing push for stronger heritage protection, and the far-right has been co-opting indigenous interests - 'blackfishing'.
An acting legend has died, and there's still a push for better protection for indigenous cultural sites. What now for The Solomons, after riots and unrest. And American/Australian scholar Ethan Blue tells a powerful and disturbing story of US deportation.
Jack Latimore is an Indigenous affairs journalist at The Age. … Continued
This weekend The Age will launch an important new series of stories about Truth Telling. Our series seeks to understand the impact of colonisation on Indigenous Victorians, how Indigenous peoples survived to tell their own stories, and to forge their own future on a path towards the nation's first Treaty. With many Indigenous languages already lost or dormant as a result of colonisation, the importance of preserving language, and for all Australians to learn it, has come into sharp focus. Today on Please Explain, Indigenous affairs journalist Jack Latimore joins Nathanael Cooper to discuss the importance of language. Subscribe to The Age & SMH: https://subscribe.smh.com.au/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This weekend The Age will launch an important new series of stories about Truth Telling. Our series seeks to understand the impact of colonisation on Indigenous Victorians, how Indigenous peoples survived to tell their own stories, and to forge their own future on a path towards the nation's first Treaty. With many Indigenous languages already lost or dormant as a result of colonisation, the importance of preserving language, and for all Australians to learn it, has come into sharp focus. Today on Please Explain, Indigenous affairs journalist Jack Latimore joins Nathanael Cooper to discuss the importance of language. Subscribe to The Age & SMH: https://subscribe.smh.com.au/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Jack Latimore from NITV joins Boe on Let’s Talk yarn … Continued
Take It Blak podcast co-hosts Jack Latimore and Shahni Wellington discuss heritage protection laws, rascist place names and the 30th anniversary of the final report of the Royal Commission into Aboriginal deaths in custody; the return of the NITV flagship current affairs program, The Point; upcoming stories for NITV News; and chat with country music legend and proud Gumbaynggirr/Bundjalung man Troy Cassar-Daley about healing on Country and his latest album, The World Today.
Jack Latimore's update on Indigenous news and issues. Trevor Todd tells the story of Edith Cowan's centenary as Australia's first female member of Parliament. Lisandro Claudio examines the rise of authoritarianism in South-East Asia and discusses liberalism and the push back against the autocrats.
Jack Latimore's update on Indigenous news and issues. Trevor Todd tells the story of Edith Cowan's centenary as Australia's first female member of Parliament. Lisandro Claudio examines the rise of authoritarianism in South-East Asia and discusses liberalism and the push back against the autocrats.
Jack Latimore's update on national Indigenous news and issues. Amnesty International's Nikita White discusses human rights in Saudi Arabia and the case of Loujain al-Hathloul- the woman who dared to drive. Ethan Kross, an expert in controlling the conscious mind, tells us about the voice inside our head and how to harness it.
Jack Latimore has been following the story of Collingwood, racism and Eddie McGuire very closely but he has also been following what Anthony Albanese has been saying about the frontier wars with an equally eagle eye.
Jack Latimore's update on national Indigenous news and issues. Amnesty International's Nikita White discusses human rights in Saudi Arabia and the case of Loujain al-Hathloul- the woman who dared to drive. Ethan Kross, an expert in controlling the conscious mind, tells us about the voice inside our head and how to harness it.
Join Jack Latimore and guests Paul Daley & Jodan Perry as they discuss the fallout from the Collingwood FC Do Better report, Eddie McGuire's legacy, institutional racism, and what changes to expect with the 2021 season of NITV's current affairs program, The Point.
Dan Rennie speaks to Federal Member for Warringah, Zali Steggall … Continued
Join NITV Online’s Take It Blak podcast with host Rae Johnston and guests Jack Latimore and Rhanna Collins as we discuss our feelings about January 26 - but also how we tackle it as a news organisation, as journalists, and as Aboriginal people.
This podcast is recorded on the lands of the Dharug, the Boon-Wurrung and Wurundjeri of Kulin nation, and the Dharawal. We pay our respects to elders past and present and acknowledge the elders of tomorrow.This land was stolen and sovereignty was never ceded, Australia owes a debt that can never be repaid and must come to terms with the historic and ongoing genocide of the First Nations. There is no revolution without Treaties.G'day listeners, it's been a while between drinks. We recorded this in May 2020, just as the true severity of COVID was hitting everyone for the first time. It's taken a while to get this edited, largely due to some personal issues on my end - in addition to the general fatigue that comes with the global shutdown. I managed to outsource the editing of two other episodes we recorded at that time, but now that I've managed to pull myself out of the single worst mental health episode I've ever experienced, we should be back up and running soon.With this finally done, we're hoping to get a few more episodes recorded in the coming months.On a personal note, I would like to offer my deepest apologies to Jack Latimore, who was kind enough to give us his time, I'm sorry this took such a long time to publish.- DeanG'day voters and welcome to the show notes for the seventh episode we recorded in 2020; we are 3 White Guys + Guest, a political podcast for a cynical nation.Our plus guest today is Birpai-Dunghutti journalist, writer with the Guardian and editor with NITV, Jack Latimore.Links:twitter.com/LatimoreJacktwitter.com/NITVfacebook.com/NITVAustraliaNITV HomeTake It Blak PodcastRoyal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody RecommendationsRoyal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody Full ReportFull shownotes available at shutupandreadthis.com
A year of extraordinary events, issues, crises, achievements, strength and perserverance is given a Blak perspective from the NITV News crew. Hosted by Natalie Ahmat, this episode of Take It Blak podcast first aired nationwide as a 54 minute NITV News special that included Rae Johnston, Jack Latimore, Jodan Perry, Rachael Hocking, Keira Jenkins, & Sarah Collard.
We look back at the year with a sharp-eyed, but bemused, panel. They put a light touch on what was, in many ways, a dark year.
Visual artist Fiona Foley and Hip Hop artist Birdz join Take It Blak host Jack Latimore to discuss Country and the impacts of colonisation on Badtjala lands and peoples, and on Queensland and Australia more broadly, including the Endeavour, the Act, dispersals, Blak resistance and the enduring connection of place.
BW + BL pass the mic to First Nations creatives from music, screen, comedy and podcasting.Writer and podcaster Jack Latimore interviews rising hip hop star Birdz. And show business couple -- Kodie Bedford, Mystery Road screenwriter, playwright and filmmaker -- and Bjorn Stewart, actor, comedian, writer and director -- interrogate each other about their pop culture passions.Show notesBirdz drops new single for Looky Looky here comes CookyTake it Blak podcastKodie Bedford's production, CursedNAIDOC Week 2020- Always was, always will beTrump books the Four seasons... LandscapingAlec Baldwin farewells Trump
BW + BL pass the mic to First Nations creatives from music, screen, comedy and podcasting. Writer and podcaster Jack Latimore interviews rising hip hop star Birdz. And show business couple -- Kodie Bedford, Mystery Road screenwriter, playwright and filmmaker -- and Bjorn Stewart, actor, comedian, writer and director -- interrogate each other about their pop culture passions. Show notes Birdz drops new single for Looky Looky here comes Cooky Take it Blak podcast Kodie Bedford's production, Cursed NAIDOC Week 2020- Always was, always will be Trump books the Four seasons... Landscaping Alec Baldwin farewells Trump
How has the meaning of NAIDOC changed over the years? NITV's Jack Latimore joins Phillip to discuss NAIDOC, the Djab-Wurrung protests and why is the NT government fast-tracking a proposal for a liquor megastore in Darwin. MUSIC; "Carry On" by Daphni
BW + BL pass the mic to First Nations creatives from music, screen, comedy and podcasting. Writer and podcaster Jack Latimore interviews rising hip hop star Birdz. And show business couple -- Kodie Bedford, Mystery Road screenwriter, playwright and filmmaker -- and Bjorn Stewart, actor, comedian, writer and director -- interrogate each other about their pop culture passions. Show notes Birdz drops new single for Looky Looky here comes Cooky Take it Blak podcast Kodie Bedford's production, Cursed NAIDOC Week 2020- Always was, always will be Trump books the Four seasons... Landscaping Alec Baldwin farewells Trump
BW + BL pass the mic to First Nations creatives from music, screen, comedy and podcasting. Writer and podcaster Jack Latimore interviews rising hip hop star Birdz. And show business couple -- Kodie Bedford, Mystery Road screenwriter, playwright and filmmaker -- and Bjorn Stewart, actor, comedian, writer and director -- interrogate each other about their pop culture passions. Show notes Birdz drops new single for Looky Looky here comes Cooky Take it Blak podcast Kodie Bedford's production, Cursed NAIDOC Week 2020- Always was, always will be Trump books the Four seasons... Landscaping Alec Baldwin farewells Trump
Boe chats with two brothers from NITV this morning on … Continued
This NAIDOC Week special episode sees the legendary singer-songwriter Archie Roach yarn with Take It Blak host Jack Latimore about the release of his latest album, The Songs of Charcoal Lane; the 30th anniversary of his classic debut album; challenging institutions and demonstrating for change; and what it's like to find himself on the cover of Rolling Stone magazine as one of the 50 all-time great Australian artists.
Dan Rennie catches up with NITV’s Jack Latimore to cover … Continued
Protesters interrupted the Origin Energy AGM over the fracking that has started in the Beetaloo Basin. Meanwhile in Canberra, hearings continue into the destruction of the ancient rock shelves at Juukan Gorge by Rio Tinto. And in Jabiru, the community looks towards a future without the Ranger Uranium Mine which will close in 2021. Jack Latimore from NITV joins the program to look at these and other hot issues facing Indigenous communities across Australia.
Alyawarre singer-songwriter Leah Flanagan takes Take It Blak host Jack Latimore through her deeply personal new album that explores and celebrates her Aboriginality, as well as her Italian and Irish heritage; how to write a good song; and the impact of the coronavirus pandemic on the Australian music industry.
All the President's Minutes is a podcast where conversations about movies, journalism, politics and history meet. Each show we use the seminal and increasingly prescient 1976 film All The President's Men as a portal, to engage with the themes and the warnings of the film resonating since its release. For minute 98, I welcome back digital editor at NITV and co-host of the Take it Blak podcast, Jack Latimore. Jack and I discuss that the culture of Watergate "blooded" the next generation of Republicans, being sure that FBI agent Joe is using this interaction with Bernstein to intensify surveillance and the symptoms of conspiratorial lockdown thinking in Melbourne, Victoria. ------------------- About Jack Latimore ------------------- Digital Editor at Nation Indigenous TV (NITV) News. Birpai. Writer. Co-host & producer for the Take In Blak podcast. *Twitter:* @LatimoreJack ( https://twitter.com/LatimoreJack ) *Outlet:* *NITV* ( https://www.sbs.com.au/nitv/ ) *,* *Take It Blak* ( https://open.spotify.com/show/4NfjDCoFY2htheukuID1F3?si=tB6D9KSBTwSy1RP9suLTGQ ) Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/one-heat-minute-productions/donations Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands
Climb into your swift suit and join Take It Blak hosts Jack Latimore, John Paul Janke and Keira Jenkins as they flashblak to the 2000 Sydney Olympics to discuss the iconic sporting moments, the lead up, the protests, the cultural significance, the nostalgia, the blackfullas involved on and off the track, the actual track, and other lesser known Bla(c)k histories surrounding the Games of the XXVII Olympiad.
Sexy black man Steven Oliver joins Take It Blak co hosts Shahni Wellington and Jack Latimore to yarn about national narratives, learning the guitar, Songlines, Michael Jackson, Science, Time and writing and presenting the new NITV documentary, Looky Looky Here Comes Cooky. Go on, have a good doris.
Co-hosts Shahni Wellington and Jack Latimore are joined by First People's Assembly of Victoria co-chairs Geraldine Atkinson and Marcus Stewart, and North West delegate Jason Kelly, to discuss the role of Truth-telling on the pathway to treaties, transitional justice, reparations programs, truth commissions, federal treaty, Reconciliation, racial profiling and white privilege in policing, and the functions of the First People's Assembly.
All the President's Minutes is a podcast where conversations about movies, journalism, politics and history meet. Each show we use the seminal and increasingly prescient 1976 film All The President's Men as a portal, to engage with the themes and the warnings of the film resonating since its release. For minute 71, I join Digital Editor at NITV News, Birpai man and co-host & producer for the Take It Blak podcast, Jack Latimore. Jack and I discuss that he wishes he'd come up with the concept for this show, the guilt of the Australian media in elevating racist voices, black lives matter and slogans for a changed Australian National Day. ------------------- About Jack Latimore ------------------- Digital Editor at Nation Indigenous TV (NITV) News. Birpai. Writer. Co-host & producer for the Take In Blak podcast. *Twitter:* @LatimoreJack ( https://twitter.com/LatimoreJack ) *Outlet:* *NITV* ( https://www.sbs.com.au/nitv/ ) *,* *Take It Blak* ( https://open.spotify.com/show/4NfjDCoFY2htheukuID1F3?si=tB6D9KSBTwSy1RP9suLTGQ ) Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/one-heat-minute-productions/donations Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands
Take it Blak hosts Jack Latimore and Rhanna Collins are joined by National NAIDOC committee co-chair John Paul Janke to talk about this year's theme, Always was, Always will be; the history of NAIDOC Week; NAIDOC Week in the time of COVID-19; NAIDOC gala balls and dances; and other things NAIDOC related. All that and a little bit more on episode 11 of Take It Blak.
Join NITV Online's Take It Blak hosts Jack Latimore and Keira Jenkins as we talk poetry and protest with guests Evelyn Araluen Corr and Ellen Van Neervan. We examine the newly released poetry anthology from UQP titled, Fire Front; Desert Pea Media's anthology, Homeland Calling; Evelyn's own soon-to-be-released collection, Dropbear; Ellen's already released (and increasingly celebrated) collection, Throat; plus we hear from Fire Front editor Alison Whittaker, and Raelee Lancaster reads Haunted House. There's also the street demonstrations, systemic racism and crows (like actual crows talking on the podcast. Yup). All that and more on episode 9 of Take It Blak.
The Growing Up in Australia anthologies are significant collections of well-known and new voices telling their own stories. Editors and contributors to anthologies about diverse Australian childhoods discuss their experiences and the ways writing can re-shape the world we live in. Jack Latimore, Alice Pung, Sara Saleh and Ahmed Yussuf in conversation with Benjamin Law.
Join us as we discuss the coronavirus pandemic and what COVID-19 means for our mobs and broader society, the importance and social responsibility of your efforts at 'flattening the curve', best hygiene practices, self-isolation and video games, working from home, the numerous closures, postponements and suspensions of stuff, the Prime Minister's handling of the virus crisis, community concerns and questions, the threat to remote and regional First Nations communities, and this week's announcement of the Victorian Stolen Generations Redress Scheme. All that and more, on episode seven of the Take It Blak podcast, with co-hosts Rae Johnston and Jack Latimore.
Join Jack Latimore on the road at WOMADelaide 2020 for a discussion of revolutionary music, protest songs, political resistance, solidarity projects, collaborative partnerships, festivals and pathways into the music industry for emerging First Nations artists. All that and more, on the sixth episode of NITV News Online’s podcast, Take It Blak, featuring guests Ian Scobie, Leah Flanagan, Mr Berliku Lian Timor, Robbie Thorpe, Zvi Belling, & MC One-Sixth.
Join us as we discuss the Indigenous All Stars, the ongoing online bullying of nine-year-old Murri boy Quaden Bayles, the axing of the national anthem, the power of the War Cry and Haka, the media representations of Rabbitoh star Latrell Mitchell, and what's in store this season on the return of NITV's Over The Black Dot. All that and more on the fourth episode of NITV News Online’s podcast, Take It Blak, co-hosted by Jack Latimore and (this week) The Dot's Jodan Perry and NITV Radio Executive Producer Kerri-Lee Harding.
Barkindji artist Kent Morris joins Take It Blak co-host Jack Latimore to discuss The Torch Project, an initiative that goes into prisons and communities in Victoria to provide First Nations people with cultural connection, healing and the opportunity to make art.
Human rights lawyer and principle solicitor of the National Justice Project (NJP) joins Take It Blak co-host Jack Latimore to discuss racial profiling in policing, the New South Wales Police Force's Suspect Target Management Plan, and the NJP's CopWatch community education strategy.
Join us as we discuss the over-representation of Blackfellas in the prison system, art and healing, documentary film making, and that #TooStrongForYouKaren moment in Mildura on the third episode of NITV News Online’s podcast, Take It Blak, co-hosted by Jack Latimore and Rae Johnston: this week featuring film-maker Alex Siddons and our new NITV Radio Executive Producer Kerri-Lee Harding.
Join us as we discuss Black History Month, Bryan Stevenson, truth-telling, memorials and more on the second episode of NITV News Online's brand new podcast, Take It Blak, co-hosted by Jack Latimore and Rae Johnston: featuring Living Black's Karla Grant and NITV multi-platform producer Ross Turner.
Join us as we discuss the issues surrounding January 26 on the first episode of our brand new podcast, Take It Blak, co-hosted by Jack Latimore and Rae Johnston: featuring Beau Spearim, Clare Land, Prof. Marcia Langton, and Celeste Liddle.
Tuesday Breakfast - 18 September 2018with Ayan and Anya (we miss you Lauren and George!) 7.00 am Acknowledgement of Country 7:02 am Welcome to show and general chit-chat 7.10 am Queenie Bon Bon is a political comedic writer, performance artist, pleasure-provider and fantasy maker. She chats to Anya about her upcoming performance Welcome to the Mystic Hole at the Melbourne Fringe Festival. 7.20 am Carly Dober talks to Ayan about her upcoming podcast in(sane), which focuses on the lived experience of people experiencing mental health issues and peer support - in(sane) launches on 20 September 2018.7.45 am Jack Latimore, Goori writer and researcher based in Melbourne, and reporter and columnist for Guardian Australia and the Koori Mail, joins us in the studio to chat to Anya about his contribution to the recently published anthology Growing Up Aboriginal in Australia. 8.00 am Arrernte First Nations writer-performer Declan Furber-Gillick joins us in the studio to talk to Anya about his upcoming show BIGHOUSE DREAMING at the Melbourne Fringe Festival. Holding an unflinching and unapologetic queer blak lens to the contradictions of the Youth Justice System, Bighouse Dreaming interrogates Australian masculinity both black and white and questions the scope of law, family, culture and the helping professions. 8.15 am Jessy from Lentil as Anything joins us in the studio and chats to Ayan about food wastage, the objective of Food without Borders, the ethos of Lentil as Anything and how we in the community can get involved. Fin. Songsartist: Jennie Lena song: Who's Loving You (cover) artist: India Ariesong: Videoartist: Mojo Jujusong: They Come & They Go artist: KRS-onesong: Sound of da Policeartist: DRMNGNOW song: Australia Does Not Exist artist: Cardi B song: Bodak Yellow
What does solidarity look like in a fractured time? Should we distinguish between activism and organising? Is there a place for allies? Jack Latimore hosted Black Lives Matter leaders in Melbourne, where mutual lessons emerged from encounters with Indigenous leaders and communities of colour. Jack is a Goori journalist and researcher, who is invested in the full participation of all people in political and cultural decision-making. In this episode, he reflects on the Black Lives Matter model, some of the positive things taking shape in Australia, and the work that still needs to be done. 'We need to get smart about the work we want to do, or the endpoint that we desire,' he says. He highlights 'the obligation to listen to other voices'. Music: Aces High by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)licensed under CCBYA 3.0.
Jack Latimore is a Goori man of the Birpai nation. He's a journalist and researcher who covers indigenous affairs, media, culture and politics and his work has appeared in The Guardian, Indigenous X, Koori Mail, The Citizen, medium, SBS and Overland. In the past week we've marked Sorry Day and the 50th anniversary of the 1967 Referendum and witnessed 300 Indigenous leaders gather in Uluru for a summit on what constitutional recognition for Australia's First Peoples might look like. Here I ask Jack what he made of the summit's Statement from the Heart, how recognition and/or treaty could work and media representations of Indigenous peoples, from First Contact to Stan Grant to Bill Leak's cartoons. Listen To Love is on Audible Problematic is coming to Edinburgh Fringe 2017 SAVE THE DATE: June 22nd for a charity gig for Refugee Legal at Howler Bar in Melbourne @LatimoreJack @IndigenousXLtd jacklatimore.online Jack's writing for The Guardian Article: Noel Pearson's model for recognition wins support Article: Five factors that will shape the outcome for Recognise at Uluru Article: Indigenous Leaders Call For A Treaty In The Landmark "Uluru Statement From The Heart" Article: Uluru forum to pursue Makaratta instead of symbolic recognition Jack's piece on First Contact Jack's piece on the ABC's Recognition: Yes Or No Jack's piece on Bill Leak's cartoon Nyunggai Warren Mundine's piece on Bill Leak's cartoon This week's Q&A: 1967 and Mabo - Moving Forward John Newfong on wikipedia Cause of the Week: Indigenous X (indigenousx.com.au), Seed Mob (seedmob.org.au) & Koorie Youth Council (yacvic.org.au)
It's celebrated as Australia Day. But if you're from the aboriginal community, the day has a much different meaning.Celeste is Arrernte woman, unionist, writer, activist and she blogs at Rantings of an Aboriginal Feminist. One of the key organizers of the Invasion Day March in Melbourne this year, Communication Mixdown talks with Celeste about her unanticipated enthusiasm for utilizing social media, and the importance of social media for indigenous community activism.Then, Indigenous writer and researcher with the Centre for Advancing Journalism at Melbourne University, Jack Latimore explains his current project for improving the quality of Indigenous representation and participation in the mainstream media-sphere, and talks about his work at IndigenousX.
The Greens MP for Melbourne Adam Bandt joined me for the first ever live instalment of LIASYO. Recorded in Collingwood on Sunday afternoon at the Easy Street Concert Hall in Collingwood, Melbourne, this discussion examines how Adam, the only Greens MP ever elected to the House of Representatives, is feeling at the end of what has been, largely, a shitty year for progressive causes. An eternal optimist, Adam picks apart Turnbull's legacy, parliament's effectiveness, Trumpism, neoliberalism, the future of the Greens and how progressives can get better at winning. He even manages to find some good news in all of this. AND he tells a great story about getting a voicemail from Tony Abbott. AND he tells us what he admires about Christopher Pyne. This will be the final ep for the year, I'm going to have a break and cry more and drink beer and get sunburnt and think more about the revolution. Never fear: the show shall return in 2017. Thanks for everything, y'all. My 2017 stand up show Problematic is coming to Perth, Adelaide, Hobart, Brisbane, Melbourne & Sydney Boundless Plains To Share is coming to Sydney, Perth, Adelaide, Brisbane & Melbourne Article: Why First Contact was a ratings opportunity for SBS and a bonanza for bigots by Celeste Liddle Article: When Indigenous Australia becomes entertainment, everybody loses by Jack Latimore @adambandt adambandt.com Article: People Ask Us Why We Protested In Parliament For Refugees. We Ask, Why Didn't You? by Mara Bonacci, Sam Castro, Kat Moore & Kerry Woodward Article: Greens in radical new drug legalisation push by Adam Gartrell Article: Without some serious soul-searching, the Greens will never move beyond the 10% plateau by Osman Faruqi Cause of the Week: Sea Shepherd Australia (seashepherd.org.au)