New women’s footy mag at Herald Sun
By Jonas Lopez in Media News on Wednesday, 15th January 2020 at 1:20pm
The Melbourne Herald-Sun is shining a new light onto the women’s footy circuit with a new annual magazine called Women’s Footy.
Slated for release on 22 January, the 68-page Women’s Footy will highlight the upcoming AFLW season. It will showcase content for current players and women who want to enter the game, including tips on tactics and physical fitness.
Issue No 1 (pictured) has Carlton’s Tayla Harris and Richmond FC’s Katie Brennan on the cover. They are slated to take on each other at the season opener on 7 February at Ikon Park.
Herald-Sun magazines and partnerships editor Erin Miller will be on duty as Women’s Footy editor.
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Upfront: Big Tech levy showdown, AUKUS delays alarm, Tax tweaks backflip?.
By Staff Writers in Media News on Wednesday, 29th April 2026 at 7:50am
Albanese moves to slug Big Tech for news — and risks a Trump blowback
The Prime Minister has unveiled a “News Bargaining Incentive” that would levy major platforms on Australian revenue unless they strike funding deals with local journalism, setting up a fresh showdown with Meta, Google and TikTok. Beyond media sustainability, the policy has geopolitical bite: it risks being framed in Washington as a digital services tax and could provoke retaliation from President Donald Trump. Covered by: The Age, Sydney Morning Herald, Australian Financial Review, Herald Sun, Courier Mail, The Advertiser, Sydney Morning Herald, The Australian, The Age.
AUKUS warning lights flash as UK inquiry flags delays and funding gaps
A British parliamentary inquiry has warned the AUKUS submarine program is vulnerable to UK funding shortfalls, delays and weakened political leadership — raising questions about timelines and Australia’s long-term deterrence plan. The coverage und
TODAY’S TEN: Manipur unrest review, SC-AIIMS abortion row, RIL’s mega data centre push and more
By Staff Writer in Media News on Tuesday, 28th April 2026 at 3:05pm
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Tuesday, 28 April 2026
#1 · News · In-depth feature
Home Secretary reviews security situation in Manipur amid unrest
By Vijaita Singh · The Hindu · Page 10
Union Home Secretary Govind Mohan reviewed Manipur's deteriorating security situation amid fresh killings, including two children, and new conflict zones between Kuki and Naga communities. The review flagged a security vacuum created by the withdrawal of 8,500 Central Armed Police Forces for West Bengal election deployment, and discussed the relocation of Kuki-Zo insurgent camps and possession of looted police weapons by a militant faction. Since April 7, eleven people have been killed in the state.
The story draws on senior government sources to reveal specific operational details — troop numbers, social media takedowns, named officials at a video-conference review — that go well beyond a routine conflict
NDTV’s new hire has four paws
By Meena R. Prashant in Media News on Tuesday, 28th April 2026 at 2:51pm
A golden retriever walked into NDTV’s Delhi newsroom and no one complained about the distraction.
Oscar, introduced as the organisation’s first-ever “Chief Bark Officer,” spent a day among journalists more used to deadlines than dog treats. What followed was less of a gimmick and more of a quiet reset.
“While he was mostly here for the head pats and the occasional treat, he accidentally gave us a masterclass in mental health,” NDTV posted on X, a line that quickly caught on, drawing over 146K views.
Behind the humour was a deliberate idea. For NDTV, improving morale didn’t need another structured intervention because sometimes it just needed presence.
Purva Misra, Chief People Officer, NDTV Group, framed it simply: “Sometimes, it just requires four paws and a wagging tail. We introduced Oscar as our Chief Bark Officer because we believe the best productivity tool is not a piece of software but the unconditional support and stress relief that a companion like him
The new language of brand communication: India’s blend of creativity, data and global thinking
By Suganthi Marimuthu in Media News on Tuesday, 28th April 2026 at 2:24pm
In an era of shrinking attention spans and fierce competition, brand communication is undergoing a reset. Globally, loud messaging is giving way to clarity, trust, and insight‑led storytelling. While markets like the UK and Europe lean on minimalism and precision, India’s communication landscape is more complex — shaped by scale, cultural diversity, and rapid digital growth.
Manoj Gupta, Global Lead – Branding & Communication, recalls a standout campaign in the automotive aftermarket space:
“The mechanic is the final brand ambassador. We repositioned the brand from a product supplier to a trusted performance partner, integrating influencer advocacy (mechanics), regional storytelling, and ground‑level engagement with a strong digital amplification layer.”
The initiative delivered double‑digit growth, stronger channel loyalty, and higher brand recall. Gupta notes:
“Authentic storytelling combined with last‑mile influence can outperfo
Lizzies Winners 2026 John Costello Best Business Technology Journalist, Joseph Brookes
By Will McLennan in Media News on Tuesday, 28th April 2026 at 1:49pm
InnovationAus’ Joseph Brookes believes his winning entries at this year’s Lizzies were good examples of reporting that goes beyond the news cycle.
Brookes was awarded John Costello Best Business Technology Journalist at the Samsung Australian IT Journalism Awards.
“[The entries] are the amalgamation of relationships that you build up with people, sources and the experts you speak to. It’s always going on in the background,” Brookes told Influencing.
Brookes' winning entries included “‘Failure on top of failure’: Welfare systems on the brink,” “Australia’s Top Secret cloud and the battle for sovereignty,” and “Ed Santow’s decade of wrestling with AI ethics.”
Brookes said the award meant a lot.
“You look around at people like Cam Wilson at Crikey, Josh Taylor at The Guardian, my colleague, Justin Hendry – they do incredible reporting. So to have a place
Lizzies Winners 2026: Len Rust Best Business Technology Media - iTnews
By Will McLennan in Media News on Tuesday, 28th April 2026 at 1:45pm
iTnews has taken out the inaugural Len Rust Best Business Technology Media category at this year’s Samsung Australian IT Journalism Awards.
iTnews Associate Editor Andrew Colley accepting Len Rust Best Busines
The publication won for work that included an item penned by Editor-In-Chief Ry Crozier titled, “How NAB unwound Teradata's 'tentacles' to decommission it.”
Associate Editor Andrew Colley wrote “BoM never planned to end reliance on 'legacy' site,” while Freelance Journalist Juha Saarinen wrote “Melbourne dev finds gift card PINs can be brute-forced.” Former Associate Editor Eleanor Dickinson penned “Defence vacates Global Switch a year ahead of lease expiry.”
Accepting the award on behalf of the publication, Colley told the Lizzies crowd, “I don’t know what to say. This really belongs to the [iTnews] team. I’ve been at [iTnews] for six months and I’ve been really impresse
Epitome: The quiet expansion of Australia’s surveillance state
By Nigel Bowen, Will McLennan in Media News on Tuesday, 28th April 2026 at 11:49am
Tuesday, 28 April, 2026 | There’s a type of tech story that’s time-consuming to put together and that rarely makes the front pages. These stories are about the quiet expansion of systems that government agencies use to collect and analyse citizens’ data.
For obvious reasons, neither national governments nor intelligence agencies are keen to highlight just how extensively your personal data is monitored. But the occasional FOI request from a media outlet is successful, which inevitably results in more disturbing news about just how much information the powers-that-be have on everybody.
That’s certainly the case with two recent articles from Crikey’s Cam Wilson and Bernard Keane.
Wilson’s piece, Calls, messages, police records: How Palantir helped an intelligence agency analyse 42 million data points on Australians, starts by examining a Palantir training manual obtained through FOI. It shows how analysts can ingest and connect phone calls, SMS, met
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