Good Food Guide 2022 primed for release
By Jonas Lopez in Media News on Monday, 29th November 2021 at 12:48pm
Nine is bringing back the Good Food Guide for 2022.The 100-page glossy insert (pictured) is being bundled in with tomorrow’s editions of metro sheets Sydney Morning Herald and The Age, with the content either angled to NSW or Victoria’s commercial dining scene. Myffy Rigby is editing the Sydney edition with Michael Harry taking care of the Melbourne title.
Much of the new Good Food Guide will have more features and reviews of suburban dining establishments, to reflect the rise of food entrepreneurs within the local communities as a result of changes triggered by the pandemic.
SMH chief reviewer Terry Durack and The Age’s Gemima Cody are leading the pack of reviewers for the Good Food Guide. However, pandemic protocols in both states have seriously affected the review team’...
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Upfront: Housing tax bombshell, Taylor draws tax line, Migrants told “no welfare”..
By Staff Writers in Media News on Thursday, 14th May 2026 at 5:51am
Budget tax shake-up puts housing and investors in the firing line
The federal budget’s changes to negative gearing, capital gains tax and other concessions are being framed as a structural reset that could redirect investment towards new builds, but also risk short-term price volatility and fierce political backlash. Several papers argue the burden will fall unevenly—particularly on younger Australians—setting up a generational fight over who pays and who benefits. Covered by: Sydney Morning Herald, Australian Financial Review, The Australian, The West Australian, The Age.
Taylor’s budget reply: bracket indexation and a new tax-war battleline
The Coalition is moving to make tax bracket indexation a centrepiece of its pitch, arguing it would stop “bracket creep” and provide predictable relief, in contrast to Labor’s offset-heavy approach. With both sides tying tax to housing affordability and cost-of-living, the coverage signals the budget reply as the opening salvo of
In PR: Cole is Stellar, Council gig marks return to Parra, New PR Substack
By Staff Writers in Media News on Wednesday, 13th May 2026 at 6:28pm
Cole takes over in Stellar rebrand
Hayley Cole has taken sole ownership of Stellar Communications and will shift to a more personal, focused model, rather than the traditional agency structure.
“Communications has changed significantly over the past decade," Cole said. "Technology has created efficiencies and changed the pace of the industry, but thoughtful strategy, strong relationships and experienced judgement have become even more valuable as a result. Clients increasingly want direct access to senior people who understand their category deeply and can help guide communications with clarity and long-term perspective.”
Under its new identity as Stellar PR (stellarpr.com.au), the agency will focus on hospitality, travel and leisure, and currently boasts a client roster that includes Elysium Noosa Resort, Manly Pacific Hotel, Bathers’ Pavilion, Cafe Sydney, Maestro Hospitality’s Cibaria, a’Mare and Ormeggio venues, The Boathouse Group and The Bathhouse Group
“We’ve
TODAY’S TEN: NEET cancelled after leak, fuel hike fears grow, Goa land scam explodes and more
By Staff Writer in Media News on Wednesday, 13th May 2026 at 3:21pm
Wednesday, 13 May 2026
#1 · Front Page · Breaking news / Investigative
NEET-UG cancelled after 'paper leak', 23L students hit, CBI to probe case
By Nandini Vaish, Krishnadas Rajagopal · The Times of India · Page 1
The NEET-UG examination has been cancelled following a confirmed paper leak scandal affecting approximately 23 lakh students who had appeared for the test. The CBI has been handed the investigation into the leak, which has triggered a major political and institutional controversy over the integrity of India's medical entrance examination system.
The story combines breaking news with a detailed string-of-controversies timeline, deploying multiple named sources and tracing the institutional failures that led to the cancellation — going well beyond a simple announcement. Its framing of the downstream consequences for 23 lakh students gives it genuine analytical weight.
#2 
Social media takedowns in WB, TN trigger fresh debate on press freedom
By Suganthi Marimuthu in Media News on Wednesday, 13th May 2026 at 3:02pm
Questions around press freedom and online speech have surfaced in West Bengal and Tamil Nadu after recent government-linked takedown actions targeting social media content critical of political leaders and parties.
The developments come shortly after newly formed governments in both states publicly assured support for press freedom and journalist safety during and after the election period.
In West Bengal, award-winning journalist and Millat Times CEO and Editor-in-Chief Shams Tabrez Qasmi said content shared by him on X regarding post-election clashes in Kolkata was flagged by the Kolkata Police.
In a post on May 9, Qasmi wrote: “Received an email from X with a Kolkata Police letter flagging a video I shared on recent post-election clashes in Kolkata. The letter seeks action against the news content. The same video was shared by many others, including TMC MP Sagarika Ghose.”
He further criticised the move, stating: “Appalled at this attempt to silence independent journa
After COVID, health journalism got smarter and harder
By Pavithra in Media News on Wednesday, 13th May 2026 at 2:37pm
When COVID-19 overwhelmed India, health journalists suddenly found themselves at the centre of public life.
They were no longer simply reporting on hospitals, seasonal outbreaks, or government health schemes. They were decoding scientific studies, verifying WhatsApp rumours, tracking oxygen shortages, explaining vaccines, and translating rapidly changing medical information into language millions could understand.
In many ways, the pandemic permanently changed health reporting in Indian newsrooms.
Before COVID, health journalism was often treated as a specialised or secondary beat with limited newsroom attention. The pandemic pushed it into mainstream coverage, forcing journalists to balance speed, science, public anxiety, and misinformation all at once.
It also changed what audiences expect from health reporting today.
Lifestyle journalist Saumya Rastogi says the transformation was immediate and overwhelming.
“Before COVID, health reporting was often treated as a niche
Upfront: Housing tax bombshell, Budget war erupts, Oil-shock budget gamble.
By Staff Writers in Media News on Wednesday, 13th May 2026 at 5:31am
Budget detonates housing tax shake-up: negative gearing, CGT and trusts in the firing line
Labor’s 2026 budget proposes winding back investor tax concessions—limiting negative gearing and the capital gains discount and tightening trust arrangements—while redirecting benefits to wage earners via a new offset and housing affordability measures. It sets up a defining political fight over “broken promises” versus intergenerational fairness, with the Coalition and investor groups expected to campaign hard against it. Covered by: The Age, Sydney Morning Herald, The West Australian, Herald Sun, Daily Telegraph, Sydney Morning Herald.
“$77bn tax grab” vs “fairness reset”: the budget’s battle lines harden
Conservative and tabloid front pages frame the budget as a sweeping tax hike and a betrayal of earlier assurances, while others argue it’s a necessary rebalancing away from wealth and toward work. The rhetoric matters beca
Behind the Satya Nadella ANZ media tour - what journos thought
By Will McLennan in Media News on Wednesday, 13th May 2026 at 7:30am
Microsoft’s AI Tour recent stops in Sydney and Auckland, including a rare visit from CEO Satya Nadella, were designed to show the company’s deep commitment to Australia and New Zealand, according to Microsoft’s Head of Communications for ANZ, Dan Chamberlain.
He told Influencing that the reason behind Nadella’s visit was to highlight this commitment and “also opening up a broader industry conversation about AI scepticism – and addressing it head on.”
“There are fair questions being asked about value, readiness, trust, and impact. Our job was to move that conversation beyond abstract promise and into practical evidence: how organisations are shifting from pilots to AI blueprints, and turning experimentation into repeatable patterns that can lift productivity, improve services, and create new capability across the economy.”
He explained that for media and creators, the company designed a program that included interviews with global and local executives, and custom
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