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The tag is cut: how will the Trump-Turnbull spat damage the alliance?

  • Written by Alan Tidwell, Director, Center for Australian, New Zealand and Pacific Studies, Georgetown University
imageAustralia must think differently about its relationship with the US under Donald Trump.Reuters/Carlos Barria

When former prime minister Paul Keating said last year it was time to “cut the tag” and loosen the bonds of the Australia’s alliance with the US, who would have thought the man wielding the knife would be Donald Trump?

The p...

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Twelve myths about e-cigarettes that failed to impress the TGA

  • Written by Simon Chapman, Emeritus Professor in Public Health, University of Sydney

Australia’s Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) last week rejected an application to liberalise the scheduling of nicotine (see from page 71).

This prompted the predictable round of protests from proponents of e-cigarettes who have long touted them as the next public health wonder of the world, even as important as antibiotics.

But unlike...

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Deb Wilks: Corporates need to stump up for the arts

  • Written by Tess Sanders Lazarus



Australian arts industry veteran and founder of Cluster Arts, Debbie Wilks is calling on Australian businesses to add sponsorship and support of Australian arts organisations to their brand mix instead of just focusing on the more common areas such as sport.  If anyone knows the arts sector, it is Debbie Wilks.  Her company is one of only two organisations in the country that works with Australian artists, circuses and stage shows to assist them to showcase and tour their productions across Australia and overseas. 

"Australia's arts sector is considered one of the best in the world," said Ms Wilks today.

"Some of our stage shows and human circuses are spending more time out of Australia touring overseas than they are performing in Australia.   Our artists and stage productions are considered the best in the world.

"Other countries are poaching our talent on a daily basis.   

"It is a reach shame that our artists often don't get the exposure they need and deserve. 

"Australian businesses need to step up to the plate and start recognising and supporting the talent we have here in Australia. 

"Because we are traditionally a very sporting nation, and sports tend to get a lot of coverage, many corporates and businesses do not look any further than sport when investing in the community.   But the arts sector offers extraordinary value for businesses.   

"Artists bring people together, they lift audiences, they provide a sense of escape from the stress of life, and they often focus on some of the most important issues facing communities in a way that brings a valued and tempered voice to the discussion.  

"Like sporting events, the arts sector also offers significant branding and community engagement opportunities.   Some stage shows tour across the country for months at a time, visiting rural and regional towns.  

"Quite a number of shows offer businesses the opportunity to buy dedicated VIP seating, have their branding on marketing materials and even have their branding discreetly incorporated into the show.  They also offer to undertake backstage tours to see the set and meet the artists.   These are experiences that money can buy and it also helps to support the artists.

"The problem is that artists typically are not good at selling themselves however we are seeing a new breed of artists coming into the arts sector that are switched on and they are keen to engage with the business community.

"I strongly encourage businesses to look to the arts instead of, or as well as sport.   

"Across the arts and entertainment sector, 18.38 million tickets were sold to live performance events in Australia in 2015.  People are attending performance events, so there is no excuse for the business sector not to be seeing the sector as a brand building opportunity."

Cluster Arts assists the arts sector and also works with businesses to help them to find the right fit for sponsorship and community partnerships. 


ClusterArts.com.au

Hissstory: how the science of snake bite treatments has changed

  • Written by Peter Hobbins, ARC DECRA Fellow, University of Sydney
image

Summer is traditionally Australia’s snake bite season, when both snakes and people become more active. The human death toll is now admirably low, but it wasn’t always so.

Although colonial statistics are highly unreliable, in 1882-1892 about 11 people died from snake bites across Australia a year. Since then, the continent’s...

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More Articles ...

  1. Declining sport viewership shows why we should keep it on free TV
  2. Meet El Niño’s cranky uncle that could send global warming into hyperdrive
  3. The world is watching Australia’s decline in schools education. We know how to fix it, but the parents must listen
  4. Australia on the move: how GPS keeps up with a continent in constant motion
  5. From clean cut kids to Christian comics to Riverdale: the Archiverse revolution
  6. If we are reaching neoliberal capitalism's end days, what comes next?
  7. Newspoll shows Coalition trailing 46-54% at start of new parliamentary session
  8. Snapchat's IPO filing does nothing to justify its US $25 billion valuation
  9. Three ingredients for running a successful environmental campaign
  10. Joe Hockey lobbies Trump's right-hand men over refugee deal
  11. WA Newspoll: 54-46 to Labor with One Nation at 13%
  12. High Court confirms Rod Culleton is not a senator – so what happens next?
  13. Joyous, comic and grim: the best new Indigenous playwrights
  14. How storytelling drives finance and economics
  15. Eight podcasts to get between your ears this year
  16. Maybe moderate drinking isn't so good for you after all
  17. Vital Signs: time to shift the goalposts on investor lending again?
  18. University vice chancellors say Trump order threatens global research
  19. To resist Trump’s tyranny, just don’t comply
  20. Will the diplomatic aggravation and reputational damage to Turnbull and Australia have been worth it?
  21. Growth of women’s football has been a 100-year revolution – it didn't happen overnight
  22. The legal minefield of 3D printed guns
  23. How do you know if your child is ready to start school?
  24. Hard work, not 'Confucian' mentality, underpins Chinese success overseas
  25. Friday essay: trace fossils – the silence of Ediacara, the shadow of uranium.
  26. ADHD: claims we're diagnosing immature behaviour make it worse for those affected
  27. Grattan on Friday: Malcolm Turnbull should walk away from the refugee deal
  28. New coal plants wouldn't be clean, and would cost billions in taxpayer subsidies
  29. The government is right to fund energy storage: a 100% renewable grid is within reach
  30. Sensible reform to finance affordable housing deserves cross-party support
  31. Turnbull's $1.75 million donation is bad news for Australian democracy
  32. Turnbull’s energy game-changer
  33. Do vegetarians live longer? Probably, but not because they're vegetarian
  34. US embassy says refugee deal stands, but Trump casts new doubt in tweet
  35. Finding flow: learning Ruby on the job
  36. Why do we need a phonics test for six-year-olds?
  37. Make housing affordable and cut road congestion all at once? Here's a way
  38. What's the benefit in making human-animal hybrids?
  39. Educating Australia – why our schools aren't improving
  40. Work hour limits need to change for better mental health and gender equality
  41. Hugh Mackay: the state of the nation starts in your street
  42. Fornication, fluids and faeces: the intimate life of the French court
  43. Dietary guidelines don't work. Here's how to fix them
  44. Why we can't spin a silken yarn as strong as a spider can
  45. Turnbull's right: we need cheap, clean and reliable power – here's how
  46. Turnbull finally reveals his Liberal donation was $1.75 million
  47. Turnbull's energy policy vision: heavy on direction, light on action
  48. Sobering health stats in latest Productivity Commission report
  49. Turnbull believes in timely disclosure of donations – just not his
  50. When the drugs don’t work: how we can turn the tide of antimicrobial resistance

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