Daily Bulletin

Men's Weekly

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How predictable are the Oscars? More than you might think

  • Written by Stephen Woodcock, Senior Lecturer in Mathematics, University of Technology Sydney
imageIf the bookies are right - and they usually are - La La Land and Emma Stone will be dancing home from the Oscars. Summit Entertainment

This week, most of the major figures in film-making will gather in Hollywood for the 89th annual Oscars ceremony. You can bank on seeing a few painfully inane red carpet interviews, several fawning acceptance...

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Netanyahu's visit prompts Australia to rethink its relationship with Israel

  • Written by Dashiel Lawrence, Fellow, University of Melbourne
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Benjamin Netanyahu will become the first sitting Israeli prime minister to visit Australia when he arrives in Sydney today. Yet the significance of this is likely to be overshadowed by a protest from a group of prominent Australians.

Calls for the Australian government to recognise the Palestinian state, as well as an ambiguous response from the...

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No animal required, but would people eat artificial meat?

  • Written by Clive Phillips, Professor of Animal Welfare, Centre for Animal Welfare and Ethics, The University of Queensland

Futurists tell us that we will be eating in vitro meat (IVM) – meat grown in a laboratory rather than on a farm – within five to ten years.

IVM was first investigated in the early years of this century and since then criticisms of farm animal production systems, particularly intensive ones, have escalated.

They include the excessive use...

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More Articles ...

  1. Tax and dividend: how conservatives can grow to love carbon pricing
  2. What's most likely to kill you? Measuring how deadly our daily activities are
  3. Why algorithms won't necessarily lead to utopian workplaces
  4. Government losing the argument on energy, according to poll
  5. Trump and the cycle of dehumanisation
  6. How we kept disease-spreading Asian Tiger mozzies away from the Australian mainland
  7. Trainspotting on stage brings a disturbing reality vividly to life
  8. Mount Isa contamination 'within guidelines' but residents told to clean their homes
  9. There are some difficult questions to ask Netanyahu, but boycotting his visit won't answer them
  10. APRA fiddles on bank risk while Rome burns
  11. Which supplements work? New labels may help separate the wheat from the chaff
  12. Labor's climate policy could remove the need for renewable energy targets
  13. Bystanders often don't intervene in sexual harassment – but should they?
  14. PewDiePie, new media stars and the court of public opinion
  15. WestConnex audit offers another $17b lesson in how not to fund infrastructure
  16. Morrison's tanty over bankers hiring Anna Bligh was arrogant and absurd
  17. Australia's march towards corporatocracy
  18. The anatomy of an energy crisis – a pictorial guide, Part 2
  19. Explainer: trickle-down economics
  20. FactCheck Q A: was it four degrees hotter 110,000 years ago?
  21. Response from a spokesman for Jacqui Lambie for a FactCheck on climate change
  22. Health Check: are naps good for us?
  23. Diminishing city: hope, despair and Whyalla
  24. Emotional fallout: Little Emperors brings China's one-child policy to the stage
  25. Imaging study confirms differences in ADHD brains
  26. Should Victoria introduce a swifter model of sentencing family violence offenders?
  27. Why small business tax cuts aren't likely to boost 'jobs and growth'
  28. Australia needs to reboot affordable housing funding, not scrap it
  29. New study shows more time walking means less time in hospital
  30. The 20th century saw a 23-fold increase in natural resources used for building
  31. Wary of human-animal hybrids? It's probably just your own moral superiority
  32. Guide to the classics: Alice Pung on Robin Klein's The Sky in Silver Lace
  33. Women also sexually abuse children, but their reasons often differ from men's
  34. US president shoots the messengers. SAD!
  35. WA ReachTEL: Liberals gain to move to tie
  36. The Death of President Trump
  37. The bitter consolation of imitation
  38. Game therapy: serious video games can help children with cerebral palsy
  39. The Great Wall fails to bring down the barriers in a lacklustre Chinese-US epic
  40. Bush democracy wins out but council mergers continue in Sydney
  41. Work councils could be the future of Australian industrial democracy in an ABCC world
  42. Australia emerges as a leader in the global darknet drugs trade
  43. VIDEO: Michelle Grattan on the omnibus bill
  44. Netanyahu visit historic – and potentially fraught – for Australia
  45. Words, Tweets and Stones in the Political Correctness Wars
  46. How we do FactChecks at The Conversation
  47. Essays on health: reporting medical news is too important to mess up
  48. Australians believe 18C protections should stay
  49. Australia's electricity market is not agile and innovative enough to keep up
  50. Friday essay: the female werewolf and her shaggy suffragette sisters

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Why More Aussie Tradies Are Moving Away From Paid Ads

Across Australia, a lot of tradies are busy. There’s no shortage of demand in industries like plumbing, electrical, landscaping, and building. But being busy doesn’t always mean running a smooth or...

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